#adrian rubinsky
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
rubinsky recognizing his sonâs similarity to himself + said sonâs aspirations to overthrow him v. reinhard begging for an enemy..reinhard is calling for strong guys to meet him in a neutral starzone to have mutual combat
#yn.#lotgh#adrian rubinsky#rupert kesserling#reinhard von lohengramm#my unpop lotgh take is that i dont think reinhard has an actual ideology outside of constant warmongering#ofc he has things he may believe#but theres no commitment to them like yang or other charas truly have#reinhard fundamentally wants power.#and he wants the power to not be told what to do#this is also why. reinhard is aâ[is shot]#& if political reforms/overthrow clear the slate for him to have competent enemies? so be it#hes like. meritocracyâąïž and wanting to fight people all day.#bc this episode is also about how cruel reinhard has become post kircheis & how he views his officers as disposable peons.#Literally sent a guy to the shadow realm and destroyed the entire fortress kircheis Redacted on likee. hes not ok#the rosenritter fight on the surface of the fortresses is actually one of the coolest ever i need to do a full rewatch chi#this whole sub-arc of duke lohengramm but not king yet plays on reinhardâs cruelty grief n gayness. all part of one another#yang takes advantage of the fact reinhard is a bachelor w no kids to target his life at this pivotal juncture#hilde going âis reinhard a vessel for obersteinâs machiavellianism?â naw pop rein was always like datđđ«Ł#he just thinks people who dont have any skill or strength are disgusting.#and that. is a lot.#REINHARD WOULD CALL ME A WELFARE QUEENđđđđđđ#Re: when he links with yang.. yang has an ideology & a true desire for a simple life whereas reinhard is living on selfimposed borrowed time#âi want power so i dont have to listen to people i dont like tell me thingsâ#Like. wanting a simple life & to not listen to unsuitable authority is sympathetic!#i think on a fundamental level both of these desires r very easy to sympathize with but sprawl into behemoths & r so⊠so telling#characterization is where this show is the strongest imo my other unpop take ?
25 notes
·
View notes
Text
ngl i love it when adaptions make the antagonist a woman love you female doc ock, love you lesbian adrian rubinsky
2 notes
·
View notes
Photo
âGinga Eiyuu Densetsu: Die Neue These - Sakubouâ The Trilogy Announced for Fall 2022
The official website of the Ginga Eiyuu Densetsu: Die Neue These anime series revealed a teaser visual for a new trilogy titled Sakubou (Strategy) (pictured). The first film will be released on September 30, followed by the second and third films on October 28 and November 25, respectively. The trilogy will only be available for three weeks.
#ginga eiyuu densetsu#die neue these#sakubou#adrian rubinsky#ginga eiyuu densetsu die neue these sakubou#anime#anime film#anime news
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
and then he did
31 notes
·
View notes
Text
The Galaxy: Things are finally looking better around here maybe we can actually live in peace --
Earth Cult:
Rubinsky:
Oberstein:
#smh#yall know what u did#cept Paul#u did nothing wrong#RIP to all the homies#;^;7#fezzanposting#logh#legend of the galactic heroes#paul von oberstein#adrian rubinsky
62 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Alright tumblr, how did I do?
#legend of the galactic heroes#anime#anime memes#lotgh#oskar von reuenthal#paul von oberstein#katerose von kreutzer#adrian rubinsky#bastards
102 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Animation directors chart: Legend of the Galactic Heroes
Full resolution image at https:// imgur.com/rYCq7ne (without space)
#Legend of the Galactic Heroes#ginga eiyuu densetsu#éæČłè±éäŒèȘŹ#animation directors#chart#Reinhard Von Lohengramm#Yang Wen-li#paul von oberstein#Julian Mintz#Siegfried Kircheis#Adrian Rubinsky#Wolfgang Mittermeier#oskar von reuenthal#Frederica Greenhill#hildegard von mariendorf#dusty attenborough#Walter von Schonkopf#anime#ova#comparison
295 notes
·
View notes
Photo
âéè±äŒæăăăă€â  by ăăăł
Illustration Source & Artist
Permission to repost given by the artist. Do not repost without permission.
#Legend of the Galactic Heroes#ginga eiyuu densetsu#logh#lotgh#edwin fischer#oskar von reuenthal#wolfgang mittermeyer#adrian rubinsky#annerose von grimewald#reinhard von lohengramm#siegfried kircheis#julian minci#olivier poplan#ivan konev#andrew fork#dwight greenhill#pixiv art
117 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Fem!Rubinsky Appreciation Post
#*sweats*#holy crap the original manga was a trip#adrian rubinsky#legend of the galactic heroes#logh#ginga eiyuu densetsu#michihara manga#mine
8 notes
·
View notes
Note
I would say youâre similar to Adrian Rubinsky from Legend of The Galactic Heroes but yâall are really only both bald and of unclear ethnicity
I can see it
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
Get a Glimpse of Legend of the Galactic Heroes: Die Neue These Season 4 in New Video
 The battles of Yohishi Tanaka's Legend of the Galactic Heroes: Die Neue These rage on this autumn, as the series prepares to enter its fourth season! The new installment will consist initally of three films, each with a three-week limited screening.
 Season 4, subtitled "Strategy," takes us into (as is said in the trailer) the beginning of the end. This latest trailer gives us a look at Adrian Rubinsky â the manipulative leader nicknamed "The Black Fox of Fezzan." He's looking pretty confident, if you ask us. He's also got some killer facial hair in this remake. See for yourself:
youtube
  RELATED: Legend of the Galactic Heroes: Die Neue These's 4th Season Heads to Theaters in Late 2022
 The new teaser also looks back in on protagonists Reinhard von Lohengramm and Yang Wen-li as the fates of Fezzan, the Empire, and the Alliance intertwine.
 The first chapter of Legend of the Galactic Heroes: Die Neue These -Strategy- will premiere in Japan on September 30, followed by Chapter 2 on October 28 and Chapter 3 on November 25.
 © Yoshiki Tanaka / Legend of the Galactic Heroes: Die Neue These Production Committee
 Source: Comic Natalie
 Watch Legend of the Galactic Heroes: Die Neue These on Crunchyroll!
  ------
Kara Dennison is the book reviewer for Sci-Fi Magazine and a regular features writer for Otaku USA Magazine. Follow her on Twitter @RubyCosmos, and read more at KaraDennison.com.
By: Kara Dennison
0 notes
Text
the signs as legend of the galactic heroes characters
Aquarius - Paul von Oberstein
Pisces - Julian Minci
Aries - Adrian Rubinsky
Taurus - Yang Wenli
Gemini - Walter von Schenkopp
Cancer - Siegfried Kircheis
Leo - Oliver Poplan
Virgo - Wolfgang Mittermeyer
Libra - Annerose von GrĂŒnewald
Scorpio - Reinhard von Lohengramm
Sagittarius - Frederica Greenhill
Capricorn - Oskar von Reuntal
#zodiac signs#zodiac#legend of the galactic heroes#ginga eiyuu densetsu#aquarius#pisces#aries#taurus#gemini#cancer#leo#virgo#libra#scorpio#sagittarius#capricorn
9 notes
·
View notes
Text
âadrian rubinsky but a girlâ is such a powerful concept i dont think ive ever seen a bad implementation of it
5 notes
·
View notes
Text
Episode 29: One Narrow Thread
Early 798/489. Adrian Rubinsky meets with Bishop Degsby of the Earth Cult to discuss his plans to aid Reinhardâs forces in capturing Iserlohn and then assassinate Reinhard to seize power for Phezzan. Degsby points out that under this scheme the Earth Cultâs investment in setting up a puppet government on Heinessen would be a wasted resource, but Rubinsky plans to use his financial control over the Alliance government to manipulate them into backing Yang into a corner. Degsby reminds Rubinsky that he owes the Grand Archbishop for his current position and had better tread carefully. Rubinsky sends his minion Kesserling to Remschild to propose a scheme that will ensure that the Empire and Alliance continue to fight each other, while Admiral Kempf attempts to perfectly sync twelve warp engines to avoid trapping all of Geiersberg fortress in null space. âŠ.....Meanwhile back in the actual show weâve been watching, Yang loses at 3D chess, Julian attempts to drink wine, and Hilda visits Kircheisâs grave.
A Quick Language Rant
âWords are like icebergs floating on the ocean called âheart.ââ This quote provides the guiding philosophy for this project: LoGH is a text that uses the nuances of language, in concert with facial expressions, body language, symbolism, etc., to point the viewer to deeper layers of meaning in the story being told. As a close reading of the queer narratives in LoGH, this blog attempts to tease out and expose these slightly hidden layers. ButâŠ..we are writing in English. Youâre reading this in English. The gifs we reference have English subtitles and no sound. And uhh, how do I put this diplomaticallyâŠ
Every English translation of LoGH sucks.
...Okay thatâs a bit harsh. Translation is fucking hard, especially of such a complicated work, and everyone whoâs put hours and hours and hours into bringing LoGH to the English-speaking world deserves a hell of a lot of gratitude and credit. We never would have been able to watch the show without them. But. When we get into the nitty-gritty details of analyzing a scene, the fact that often none of the existing translations matches the nuance of the Japanese gets in the way. Iâd much rather be plunging into yelling at Cazellnu right now than writing this note, but the conversation between Cazellnu and Yang in this episode is a mess in both sets of subtitles that I have access to, so here we are.
Letâs start with the fansubs, on the leftânotice a couple whole clauses that arenât in the official Hidive subs at all? Care to guess where they come from? Thatâs right, they come directly from the novels, as does the word âperfectâ in Yangâs âperfect parentâ line. Hey, I totally get it, fansubbers, the novels are a fantastic resource for figuring out the kanji or double-checking words that are hard to hear. But the dialogue in the anime is not in fact lifted verbatim from the novels; and while not every difference is super meaningful, we are interested in the intentional choices made by the anime staff, and that makes deviation from the books especially ripe for analysis.
The official subs, which are generally quite reliable, are also unsatisfying in this scene. As Iâll discuss below, the word that Yang uses replacing the novelâs âperfectâ is äșș䞊ăżă«, hitonami ni, an adverb meaning âlike others/as much as anyone else.â The official sub translation makes it sound more like âunder normal circumstancesâ than âlike normal people,â and while thatâs not a life-altering difference, the nuance is relevant to my analysis. And they got the grammar of the sentence in the last gif here backwards; indeed, neither subtitle translation understood what I believe Yang is saying in those lines, but the English translation of the novel agrees with my interpretation. (Not that the novels donât have their own translation problems, which is outside the scope of this blog but also frustratingâŠ)
Phew. What all of this means is that before we can even start writing a post, we have to go through a whole process of triangulating all of the slightly different translations of any scene we want to analyze in detail, making sure that we understand the nuances of the language and can convey them accurately. (Not to mention checking the original LD version to make sure no significant changes were made to the animation in the DVD remaster!) In the case of the conversation between Yang and Cazellnu, the subtitles used in this post are my own synthesis based on the fansubs (modified to reflect the actual anime dialogue) and the translation in the novel (where I believe it to be more accurate).
With that out of the way, we are now ready to plunge into the main battle of this episode, so buckle up for....
Yang vs. Cazellnu!
Thatâs right, weâve seen Yang battle Imperial fleets to improbable stalemates at Astate and Amlitzer, outsmart the commanders of Iserlohn to capture it from the inside, and annihilate one of his own nationâs fleets on his way to defeating the military coup; but how does Yang the Magician handle the most intimidating of all battles: having dinner with a married friend?? Iâve said before that Icebergs is not a relationship advice column, and nor is it, usually, a tips and tricks guide for dealing with pressure from peers to conform to heteronormative expectations, but heyâwhen we have the chance to learn from a Master Tactician, we should take it, right?
...Hmm.
...Well in any case, whatâs fascinating and important about this conversation is that it does have the back-and-forth tension of a battle, with multiple strikes and counterstrikes: Yang employs a wide range of different strategies tactics to parry the various arguments that Cazellnu makes in his quest to convince Yang of his duty to marry. This conversation is key to understanding both Yangâs attitude toward marriage and family, and the way that Cazellnu often speaks explicitly in the voice of the normative pressures society puts on people to fit into the âmarried with kidsâ box. The dynamics of the entire interaction set Yang and Cazellnu up as opponents, and the sum total of Yangâs resistance to all of Cazellnuâs different angles of attack paints a clear picture of his current reluctance to see himself in the role of husband or father.
Yang does indeed provide the first opening to be scolded about marriage, when he takes offense at Charlotte using the suffix -ojichama (an affectionate âuncleâ) in contrast to -oniichama, âbig brother,â for Julian. Keep this moment in mind; Iâll be coming back to it inâŠ*checks calendar* about eight months.
Immediately Cazellnu frames marriage as a societal obligation, and failure to marry as a âluxury.â Aww Cazellnu you romantic you.
In the previous episode we saw Mittermeyer pushed toward a normative marriage by subtle, insidious pressuresâhis upbringing within the context of a traditional family and the (possibly unspoken) expectations from his parents that heâd follow that model; the preponderance of visible heterosexual romance in his society. Weâve seen Yang swept along passively into romantic situations in which he was obviously uncomfortable. But Cazellnuâs line right here is the first time that a character has actually given voice to the institutional heteronormativity of society, actually advocated for it in so many words, actually leveraged it to criticize someoneâs deviation from that norm.
Bantering with a friend in the abstract is way less uncomfortable for Yang than being thrust directly into a potentially romantic/sexual situationâunlike when Lapp pushed him to dance with Jessica or when Jessica threw herself at him, here there is no immediate danger, no specific person to reject or offend. This is an intellectual battlefield. And so Yang does fight back actively, starting with Tactic #1: appeal to historical precedent.
Note that while in his initial grumbling Yang said he wanted to be called oniichama while *still* a bachelor, now that heâs talking in the abstract rather than about himself heâs taking the even stronger stance that people can be productive members of society while *never* getting married. This line of argument makes sense; history is where Yang feels like an authority, and even the syntax of his âshall I make you a list?â reinforces his expertise here.
If Cazellnuâs thesis were that marrying is the only way to be an asset to society, Yang pointing out the existence of plenty of queer peopleâer sorry, âlifelong bachelorsââmaking contributions throughout history would be an effective rebuttal. (No, I donât think that Yang is consciously talking about queerness, but yes I do think the creators are, through him.) But Cazellnuâs thesis is that participating in marriage and reproduction is an obligation on top of whatever other accomplishments someone might have, and Yang bringing up historical precedent opens the door to Cazellnu pointing out that not only is marriage the norm right now, but it has been for much of history.Â
In case you think Iâm just being overly cute with all the battle analogies, it comes directly from the source material: The narration in the novel here contains lines like âAnd the point goes to Cazellnu, Julian thoughtâ and âYang didnât attempt another counterstrike.â
In the anime, however, Yang does attempt one more counterstrike here, which is important because itâs the closest he gets to just saying âbut I donât want to.âÂ
For Tactic #2, Yang complains that he didnât pass thirty on purpose; in other words, Cazellnu may think heâs at an age where he ought to be married, but on the inside he doesnât feel ready for that role. In case there was any suspense about Julianâs feelings on the matter, he is in no rush for Yang to decide he has to get marriedâkeep this line in mind too, as Iâll be coming back to it in a mere six months.
Cazellnu switches the issue from Yangâs feelings to his outward appearanceâa subtle but symbolic shift. If only Yang would suck it up and play the proper role, he would become (outwardly at least) a true adult. The issue of Yangâs desires is casually brushed aside.
This entire exchange is good-natured banterâCazellnuâs intention here, at least on the surface, is to tease Yang, not to seriously condemn him for his choices. But the framework in which people joke is telling; and Cazellnuâs teasing is framed around the assertion that Yang is selfish for neglecting his duty to play the part of husband. Stage one of the battle is interrupted at this point for dinner, and for stage two, during a 3D chess match after dinner, Cazellnuâs joking tone is gone. The topic at issue this time is not just marriage but also parenting; when Cazellnu casually (but correctly) criticizes Yangâs parenting skills, Yang defends himself with Tactic #3: appeal to special circumstances.
Notice that Julian is paralleled to Hortence here in the role of caretaker to the girls. Heâs simultaneously being included by implication in the younger generationâas Cazellnu and Yang discuss Yangâs pseudo-parental role in his lifeâand acting as an adult vis-Ă -vis the younger kids. At the risk of becoming a broken record...keep this moment in mind, as Iâll be coming back to it in the future.
The key to what Yangâs trying to say here is that adverb I mentioned earlier, hitonami ni, which is a deviation from the dialogue in the novel and therefore something the anime staff thought about explicitly. Hitonami is an adjective meaning average or ordinary (literally âin line with peopleâ), so the adverb form means âlike other/most people.â Yang is situating himself as fundamentally outside of the norms that Cazellnu is so fond of imposing: He couldnât be expected to be a parent like normal people, because he didnât grow up with a model of a traditional family and because heâs single.
His upbringing is in the past and outside his control; but being single is (on the surface) a choice that he has madeâbetween the tables full of love letters, and Jessica being none too subtle about her continued interest, and everyone on all of Iserlohn knowing that Frederica has a thing for him, itâs always been clear that heâd have options if he were interested. Itâs not that his point here doesnât standâI agree, the fact that heâs a bachelor who lives alone and has zero interest in or experience with kids did make him a strange choice for Julianâs guardian. But tactically, within this conversation, this was a huge blunder: It opens the door right back up for Cazellnu to continue the marriage guilt trip that was interrupted earlier. And sure enough...
This is such an obvious error that it seems revealing; in Yangâs subconscious, when heâs thinking about why he canât be expected to be a parent âlike most people,â his status as single might feel like something more innate about himself than a temporary circumstance or choice. His shock here is overdone considering the earlier banter. Tactic #4, blaming the ongoing war, is presumably one heâs used before, as Cazellnu is expecting it and doesnât bother engaging with it directly at all, insteadâŠ
...finally delivering his thesis statement on marriage and reproduction clearly. And well, itâs a doozy.
A human beingâs greatest duty is to bring forth new life. Damn Cazellnu. The use of the word âdutyâ (Japanese: 矩ć, gimu) echoes what Poplan started to say to Konev and Julian about a manâs âdutyâ to have sex with women; within the first three episodes of the season weâve had two different characters explicitly describe heterosexual sex and/or reproduction as an obligation. (And throw in the slightly more coded discussion of Mittermeyerâs parentsâ âexpectationsâ about his role in society that preface the depiction of his marriage, as well as Reuentalâs discussion of his own parentsâ unhealthy and unromantic marriage that we havenât even had time to talk about yetâŠ..hmmmm is it possible that a theme is being established here?)
I canât emphasize the importance of these lines enough: This is not passive, silent, subtle heteronormativity. This is Cazellnu voicing a view of the main purpose of human life that positions essentially all queerness as not just unusual or different, but specifically a deviation from the greatest duty of human beings. He is not joking. Heâs not bantering. This is his worldview.
...And it pisses Yang off. Leaning forward in his seat, setting his brandy glass down with a noticeable thud, furrowing his eyebrowsâthis is more visibly angry body language than we usually see from Yang. As for the actual content of Tactic #5, well, as much as I love Yang I have to accuse him of a bit of an obnoxious-Reddit-poster argument style here, completely avoiding what Cazellnu actually said and deflecting the topic to something heâd rather be arguing about instead.
Yang: âYo can we please go back to talking about how much war sucks? I thought I signed up to be on an anti-war show, not to be lectured at about heteronormative social structuresâŠâ
The best I can do to relate this reply to what Cazellnu said is that Yangâs either implying that his own record of causing death as a commander morally disqualifies him from being worthy of participating in the whole creation of new life thing, or possibly questioning the wisdom of bringing new life into the middle of a war. Cazellnu seems to take it to be about Yangâs sins, as he counters withâsomehowâan even more obnoxious view of the point of reproduction.Â
âOkay little Timmy, Iâve caused the deaths of approximately three million soldiers in war, so just be a good boy and go do enough good to compensate for that so Daddy doesnât go to hell, okay?â
Yang is done with this crap by now, and the next gif is a tactical three-for-one: First he points out that for this specific point of Cazellnuâs, about passing along oneâs unfinished ambitions to the next generation, thereâs no need for oneâs protĂ©gĂ©s to be biological children (#6); then without giving Cazellnu time to respond (perhaps by pointing out that this doesnât address his original argument about biological imperative to create life), he adds that this whole discussion is moot in the case that there isnât unfinished ambition to pass along in the first placeâagain positioning himself as outside the scope of Cazellnuâs arguments (#7); and finallyâŠ
...the ultimate maneuver to win any difficult argument: Tactic #8: get up to go pee.
If youâre keeping score, Iâd say that the great undefeated Admiral Yang loses this battle badly. Cazellnu is constantly a step ahead, turning Yangâs arguments back around on him and taking advantage of every opening. Yang is a scholar and a brilliant logical thinker, but you canât fight convictions like âhumans have a duty to reproduceâ or âbeing a bachelor is anti-social behaviorâ with the kind of logic that Yang is practiced in. Heteronormativity is, for Yang, a more difficult opponent than the Imperial army.
Julian
hey-did-we-mention-Julian-has-dual-identities-of-soldier-and-caretaker.gif
The first episode of season two was all about Julian beginning to grow up as a soldier; this episode forms the natural complement by focusing on Julianâs more domestic roles. Back when Julian was first introduced I mentioned that heâs one of the only male characters who embraces more traditionally feminine roles, and in this episode that side of his personality is emphasizedâfrom happily puttering around the kitchen doing laundry and cooking dinner, to helping look after Charlotte and her little sister (henceforth known as Demon Child Cazellnu, D.C. for short, until someone gives me a better explanation for her namelessnessâŠ).Â
Did I say Yang vs. Cazellnu is the main battle of this episode? I should have said itâs second after the epic clash of Gensui vs. the Roomba.
Fun fact: 1600 years in the future everyone has finally gotten over being pedantic about calling it âFrankensteinâs monsterâ!
Itâs not played up in the anime except in background shots like this, but from Julianâs diary itâs clear that, along with Yang, Schenkopp, Poplan, etc., Hortence also serves as a role model and mentor for Julianâhe speaks admirably of her ability to quickly turn her new Iserlohn quarters into a true home, and eagerly seeks out new cooking ideas and tips from her.
Julian is by nature a caretaker and nurturer; itâs as much a part of his identity as his urge to fight to protect the things he cares about. I canât express how fucking cool it is that one of the main protagonists of this show is a teenaged boy whoâs completely comfortable putting on an apron and making stew while the washing machine whirs in the background, who looks up to both soldiers and housewives, who spends the evening playing with two little girls until they fall asleep on his lap. The landscape of fiction is generally not filled with men who are defined by empathy and nurturing. Itâs so badass and so important that Julian embraces these sides of himself, without feeling the need to somehow reject or outgrow them in order to become a Real Man.âą
.....Okay Julian yes you are a badass but please dear god learn how to hold a wine glass.
...and Yang
Icebergs Canon: The reason Julianâs suit and Yangâs pajamas are the exact same color is not the animators being lazy, itâs that both items were gifts from Hortence, who clearly bought them at the same store.
Oooh what is this? Actual backstory about what the fuck Julian is even doing in Yangâs life? One keyword of the storytelling style of LoGH is âpatience,â and the show has taken its sweet time offering any real explanation of their whole deal. From episode 3 we know that Yang is Julianâs âguardian,â that Julianâs father was also a soldier, and that the military has paid for Julianâs schooling, but in typical LoGH fashion weâre forced to try to piece the details together ourselves. Here, finally, weâre given a few more snippets: Julian was sent to live with Yang four years ago, when he was twelve, and the person who had the brilliant idea to entrust Yang with a child was none other thanâŠ
This is the one skirmish of their battle in which Yang is clearly victorious. Even Cazellnu canât come up with a defense of this decision. Seriously, CazellnuâŠ..why.
Poor baffled Yang has absolutely no clue what to do with this small human who showed up at his house and immediately started cleaning up. I love that Yang appears to have repeatedly gotten frustrated while writing something and strewn crumpled drafts all over the room...wtf Yang.
This flashback, which takes place earlier in the episode, complements and reinforces Yang and Cazellnuâs discussion of Yangâs total lack of parental instincts: Although heâs come to care about Julian a lot, he had no enthusiasm for this arrangement when Cazellnu first foisted it upon him. Heâs Julianâs guardian not because he wanted a child, but because Cazellnu, tasked with managing supplies of all kinds, had a surplus of war orphans needing housing and pressured his friend into taking one in.
Back in the present, Julian continues to stress about Yangâs disapproval of his military career, leading to my third-favorite failure of the Yang-Bechdel Test:
Julianâs main reaction to his promotion is to wonder how Yang will react; his pout shows that, doing a bit of Icebergs-style analysis himself, he reads between the lines of Fredericaâs words to understand that Yang did not act pleased.
This tension is underscored again when Yang, rather than toasting to Julianâs promotion, toasts his safe return. Geez Yang, kinda passive aggressive.
This episode is all set-up, laying out clearly the main themes of Julianâs arc that will continue to develop through the season: 1) Heâs awkwardly between child and adultâoffered wine but unable to drink it smoothly; playing together with the girls but in a caretaker role; promoted for his heroics in battle but insecure about Yangâs reaction. And 2) his dynamic with Yang is evolving, with question marks about how exactly theyâll relate as he grows up and about how Yang will deal with the reality of his becoming a soldier.
And of course, weâll be keeping an eye on Gensuiâs evolving dynamic with the Roomba as well.
Stray Tidbits
This breathtaking scene in which Hilda visits Kircheisâs grave is one of the first key signs of how seriously the show takes Reinhardâs grief and the hole that Kircheis left in his life going forward. Naturally weâll be coming back to this moment in the future, so for now Iâll just say, god damn, I have chills.
Worldbuilding alert! Yangâs fleet may be currently stationed on Iserlohn, but lest we forget that it was originally constructed by the Empire, the incredibly fancy paneling of the living quarters is here to remind us. The animators really live and breathe this world and it shows in these details.
Iâd be off-brand if I didnât comment on Hortence Cazellnu finally getting more than a few frames of screen time; but other than being a cheerful hostess and more or less actually knowing how to hold a wine glass (unlike anyone else at the tableâI made fun of Julian but in fact heâs just imitating Yang and Cazellnu!), she remains an enigma. Patience, the Hortence Discourse will come.
And then thereâs Phezzan, back on its anime bullshit... Seriously wtf is this guy and whatâs wrong with his eyes?? Iâm scared.
#Legend of Galactic Heroes#Legend of the Galactic Heroes#author:Rebecca#Alliance#Yang#Cazellnu#Hortence#Charlotte#Demon Child#seriously what is her name#Gensui#Julian#gender#heteronormativity#marriage#translation#dammit Sue#dammit Cazellnu
19 notes
·
View notes