Why do people dislike Ran?
Posted: November 2nd, 2013, 1:51 am
Finally. I've been working on this for a while and had been planning it for some time now. Finally, it is posted. Still a bit nervous like I'm gonna be graded or something. But it is done, and I hope you enjoy. Also, big props to Sonoci. In more ways than one she was extremely helpful.
Ran is one of the more controversial characters of Detective Conan. While she has plenty of fans in the fan community (in Japan or otherwise), she has a good amount of haters as well from what I've seen. So as a diehard fan of Detective Conan, surrounded by diehard fans of Detective Conan, I feel it would worthwhile to explore why she gets the type of reaction she does. I don’t promise this will be some brilliant observation that will change how you perceive fiction or any hyperbole like that, but I will try to make this intelligent, interesting and (hopefully) fair. I hope you enjoy this little essay of mine.
Now first thing I have to address, right up front, is that Detective Conan is probably not the ideal anime to choose to examine the depths of characters. When you think of characters worth taking a close look at in this medium, something like Death Note or Evangelion would be far more likely topics, even for most fans. Detective Conan characters I’d dare say are often borderline secondary or just tools for the story of a case once it comes time to focus on the murder mysteries. However, despite that, they are still very much actual characters that people really get into and I know these characters are genuinely worthwhile and good. But they are definitely more likable and fun rather than particularly (or at least consistently?) complex or creative. At least, that’s how I’d put it. My brief look into Kindaichi was a good example of how Detective Conan’s characters are so much more interesting by comparison. That series clearly has good murder mysteries but what I saw didn't make me care about any character in even the slightest. So even at worst, I really like a majority of the recurring cast of the series and I can safely say that the female lead to my favorite anime that I've been watching since 2008 is worth this essay.
But now let’s just discuss this character. Now, Ran’s personality is not that complicated. At seventeen years old, Mouri Ran is your somewhat average yet endlessly idealistic teenage girl, who does a good job at not being some extreme character. She has patience while still being sad and frustrated because of her scenario where that’s truly tested. She can kick ass without being untouchable or some ice cold, flawless, karate master. She can be intelligent but not close to the levels of convenient know-it-all that this series relies on. This is a good, flawed but not useless, character (at least in theory).
So, despite not being my favorite character or even close, I did like Ran. Nowadays, I’m not sure I can say that. In the past year or two, I’ve just stopped enjoying Ran as a character at all, which is quite a bad thing for the female lead of my favorite anime. Now I have much to discuss before going to the exact point I started to turn against her character, so let’s start with potentially disproving the previous paragraph. Any interesting parts of Ran as a character are often overshadowed by a number of things. A major example is how despite defeating criminals using karate, more often than not she’s not allowed to really show off her skills. Agasa’s inventions are to blame, as Conan gets those shoes specifically because he was disappointed with needing to be saved by Ran in the 2nd episode of the series. In the long run this might not have been the best choice as Ran could have been good as the brawn to Conan’s brains. Even some of the times later in the series where her karate makes a difference she’s joined by, and arguably overshadowed by, the strength of certain other characters’ martial arts. So basically every single time Makoto makes an appearance for example. As that is often seen as one of her more notable traits, this is not a good idea unless being overshadowed is used in the story correctly. Of course it doesn't help that the movies tend to make her role, at least during the climax, as the damsel in distress to be saved by Conan despite Ran’s karate talents, but I feel like that’s a bit unfair considering Gosho did not write those movies. So while that has helped my perception of this, I am not using that to confirm anything about the character. But those movies, along with the animation in the Openings, do still make an impact on people.
However, her ability to kick ass being a bit ignored does not quite compare to her personality in terms of disappointment. To put it bluntly, Ran is not that compelling or interesting really. One of my problems is that her character is too serious. Any legitimate drama of Conan and Ran’s situation has been explored, and they’ve added nothing new to keep you invested. But she’s not allowed to be fun or ridiculous like certain other characters so what scenes she does get are often just boring. Even what little happened in London felt like for a minute it was going to continue beyond that case, but as it has only been mentioned instead of actually followed up on, it just disappoints me and has been a factor that has made me less invested in their silly love story. Sadly it seems like Gosho has run out of ideas in this regard, and it’s suffered because of that. At this point, the only way I could see myself caring again would be for Ran to actually know his identity. Ran actively investigating Conan and leading to this event would solve quite a few problems, which is why at this point I think that’s the direction they should go. Unfortunately, I believe it’s likely that this will happen so late in the series that there won’t be a chance to fully use that concept for story purposes or even as a new status quo for the series.
This leads me to another similar problem, Ran and Shinichi’s relationship. This is something I’d be more willing to forgive if the series wasn't so long and it wasn't considered such an important aspect of the series. Most of these issues are common in the type of series I tend to enjoy; the love interests where they’re too shy to tell their feelings and things always get in the way when they try to do so. Now, while there have technically been confessions in this series (in some ways, the episode 2 confession is actually brilliant) they don’t tend to change the idea that tends to happen in romances in these type of manga/anime. The two people that clearly want to be with each other, but for some reason or another, aren't. Just put the two in a relationship, as an actual couple, and make stories about the relationship instead of having cute moments to replace real development or something that hasn't already been done to death in this series. It isn't like the writing of romance in this series has ever been particularly amazing (not that I would know much on that genre), so as far as I’m concerned it’s gotten pretty bad for me to be sick of this relationship story (though it’s not as bad as that Chiba story, don’t get me started on that lazy waste of time).
I still enjoy Heiji and Kazuha’s relationship, which has somehow had far less development, but it’s because the characters have chemistry. Their interaction is really fun. Yeah, it’s basically just the hot headed guy and tsundere girl couple, but I like that when it’s done well and fun to watch and it is. They are enjoyable to watch and I certainly won’t say Shinichi and Ran haven’t had enjoyable scenes that are comparable but it’s not as frequent. I feel like maybe the issue is that there is a relationship and chemistry as characters between Conan and Ran. The idea is maybe that Conan and Ran know each other better because of their situation and thus it will all work when the identity is revealed. It could be, as Shinichi often is intentionally hiding information from Ran and not being too honest. I kinda doubt it though. Also, can I point out that these are relationship scenes more than they are relationship stories? Just a thought I've had for a while.
Before I go on, I will be a bit fair and talk about some scenes and parts of the story I really like involving Ran. As stated before, I think Ran’s confession scene in episode 2 was brilliant. It made for some great dramatic irony having Conan learn that the girl he likes, likes him back as soon as he is in a situation where he is no longer himself. There are quite a few cute moments in the early years I think really work (I can’t hate Ran between the cute sweater scene and being scared to sleep alone with a bandaged murderer around). Ran suspecting Conan stories are great. Desperate Revival’s sad yet hopeful ending, especially with what happens with Conan and the music is fantastic. Ran in episode 400 is fantastic, using her brain to try to figure out a password to find out if Conan is Shinichi once and for all and her attitude is kinda awesome during it. I’m seemingly in the minority that actually liked the London case and what development there was. There’s AO sort of stuff like OVA 8 or Magic File 5 intentionally (I think?) making fun of Ran’s idealism and love, which almost makes her more likable. Also, while this is 95% because Kid saved this movie and it’s an interesting plot idea, I really liked what they were doing with Kid tricking Ran into thinking that he’s Shinichi in Movie 14. Of course I have to mention Haibara and while I fully admit I love pretty much anything involving Haibara, the almost subtle relationship between Ran and Haibara is really interesting and I hope it plays a major role in the future. This all demonstrates to me that her character can be good but she’s not allowed to be.
With that out of the way, there’s an issue I've been struggling to talk about involving this character and how she is written. That is to say, as clearly as possible, that the writing of Mouri Ran is sexist. Yeah…it’s…kinda sexist. Now before I say anything else, I do not believe that Gosho Aoyama himself is some sexist asshole or whatever. He unintentionally wrote a main female character in a sexist way, which is not exactly new for shonen, or writing as a whole. It is probably difficult and just unlikely for anyone to avoid writing something unintentionally offensive towards the opposite sex if they write so frequently. Considering some of his other female characters, he could certainly be worse. But regardless, that is still an accusation perhaps more serious than anything I've said. So let me try to justify it.
Oddly, for the sake of this essay, it is best I discuss the last thing I've discovered relevant to this first and discuss the first thing I discovered, last. Sonoci was very helpful for this subject so I’ll just quote her:
“It's sad, but Sonoko is more of a complex character than Ran is. Because she's allowed to be herself. Her attitude is not like it is because she's "supposed to" be that way, she's the way she is because she wants to be.”
This is what I think I was missing in trying to make this feel fully justified, as I’m never a fan of things being called sexist so easily. But it is true that the core of this issue is that the writing of Ran is bad enough that she’s not allowed to be written well. The reason for this is simple. Ran is not allowed to BE her own character, she is Shinichi’s love interest and everything she does revolves around him without thought being put into what she wants beyond Shinichi. In a better story this could be resolved in two ways. One of which would be to have Ran become less dependent on Shinichi, either by finding the line between her love being important to her and having her own life or by just flat out getting away from the relationship. The other option would be for the story to acknowledge how worrisome revolving your life around some boy could be. Otherwise, I don’t think she has much of a chance of being a good character as her character is “the idealistic teenager love interest for our protagonist”. That’s not complex, but it is distressingly close to a gender switched equivalent to what Twilight did.
Shinichi himself can come across as a sexist character as well. A major example of that would be the last Eisuke scene where Conan’s identity is revealed to him. Ignoring that Eisuke had known this for a while, Conan reveals who he really is because Eisuke wanted to confess to Ran and Conan refused to let that happen. It implies that Shinichi won’t allow her to deal with that pretty harmless situation. But the thing is that I’m still ok with that scene. Shinichi is jealous at best, sexist at worst but while not intentional I’m sure, that fits pretty well with Shinichi/Conan. He’s always come across as a good guy whose ideals and intelligence can make him kind of a jerk, so him being a bit sexist arguably adds to the character. Not all good characters need to always be good or completely innocent, it keeps things interesting. But the problem is that I honestly believe Ran would be completely ok with all of this, barring maybe feeling a bit bad for Eisuke. Ran would just be happy because of Conan/Shinichi acknowledging his feelings towards her without even thinking about if he actually respects her. In theory, a certain part of the paper airplane case that happens shortly afterwards should at least somewhat contradict that theory, but no, it just comes across to me as out of character the more I think about. That’s a shame as I remember really liking that. Unfortunately, this makes me think that the reason some people think the rare scenes where Ran is legit angry at Shinichi and/or jealous towards some girl (episode 10 being the obvious example) wouldn't happen is because Ran isn't allowed to be that angry or jealous either despite being a teenager in love. That might not be true at all, but it is another thought I just had while writing this.
But that whole Eisuke thing was not why I thought the writing was going sexist places or was all that sexist to begin with. I’m undecided whether I blame this more on this episode hurting my perception of the character that badly or if this was just such a slow point in the series a while after I had fully caught up and needed to wait for new episodes (thus giving me more time to think about individual cases and whatnot). But episodes 592 and 593 (The Tori's Pledge of Monkeys and Rakes) are pretty inexcusable. It was bad enough that the case was boring and forgettable in the middle of a wasteland of story or character development (even by usual standards). But it is so sexist; I need another paragraph just to describe it.
In this story, Ran gets a fortune on a piece of paper that says to be a traditional Japanese woman instead of tomboy-ish and gaudy if she wants the boy he likes to like her back. But that’s no big deal, it’s obvious that she’ll learn to be herself by the end and it’s just a dumb and obvious moral of the episode. But then she figures out to be more like herself…because the piece of paper was actually switched by Sonoko. The fortune meant for her basically said “never give up, be yourself and you’ll find true love!” She then kicks the culprit (who was the one to read it out loud because why not?) so hard that he is knocked out and can be arrested.
I’m sorry, what? What?! Are you kidding me?! That is just awful! This is one of those things I thought was bad at first but the more I thought about it, the more awful it became. That is straight up offensive to women, no other way to look at it. Just to add to this, it’s implied that before she found this out, she wasn’t going to fight back against the guy who was going to attack her with a knife. I’m not even joking. Not only does this suggest that the only way a woman (or a teenage girl) can be herself is if a fortune says it’s ok, it suggests that dying would be preferable to a girl not being ideal for the man she likes. There is no acknowledgment in any form that her dying in this scenario wouldn't fit until the paper is confirmed to be fake. This isn't a story about how Ran is hopelessly obsessed with this, it’s a story about how Ran is the ideal teenage girl for our genius detective protagonist. Ran shouldn't have an opinion in this apparently, just keep following the advice for stupid reasons. Even as someone who would never call himself a huge Ran fan, I’m offended as a fan of the series, good writing and as a person who respects the opposite sex. Again, I don’t think Gosho was trying to be sexist, but that’s how it comes across. It is a really bad portrayal of women/teenage girls and I would say Gosho should have thought way harder about the implications of it. Regardless of that, this makes Ran to look phenomenally stupid. It is literally suicidal, or at least too close to it. You’re gonna die because you believe in a piece of paper that told you a boy won’t like you if you act a certain way? Not only that, but for a boy who Is not even there (as far she knows anyway). Ran…you’re one of those girls that reference Romeo and Juliet but don’t know how it ends aren't you? Thankfully I don’t think the series can top that nonsense. I hope.
There is one last thing beyond that though. I feel like the final thing beyond sexism that’s made me realize that I’m not much of a fan of Ran anymore is that we have a far more enjoyable karate girl. Her name is Sera. Sera is actually fun, has a sense of humor and self-awareness, is really intelligent and can help during the crimes, and can kick ass at least as well as Ran or even Makoto. Her relevance to the plot isn’t high school romance; it’s about her connection to one of the coolest characters of the entire series. This means she’s actually directly relevant to the ongoing plot that, when it’s allowed to be, is arguably the most engaging part of the whole series. However, to be a bit fair, I honestly think Sera is without a doubt, the best and most enjoyable recurring character Gosho has made in a decade, so it would be tough competition either way.
I feel like I should be honest and say that one of the main reasons I wrote this was as a test for myself, to prove that I could write something worth reading that was also a worthwhile piece critiquing a work I genuinely love. No matter what, I won’t be convinced this was good enough even for the small audience that will actually read this, but I should be happy I didn't actually give up on this like certain other projects I wanted to do in my own time and gave up on too easily. I have not even needed a thesaurus! But, I do have other reasons. I wanted to, I suppose, vent my frustrations with Ran as she is the main female character of my favorite anime series and I’m not a fan of hers anymore. I don’t hate Ran, but I am disappointed and I want to believe before the series is over that she can be written in such a way that she’s “redeemed”. Ran deserves better. It’s certainly not impossible, and events of the past couple of years seem to indicate that Gosho does listen to fans. With all that said, I hope that other people can also put their thoughts into reasons why they do or don’t like the character (or other aspects of the series), as I’d like to think intelligent discussion about this would be nothing but a good thing.
Ran is one of the more controversial characters of Detective Conan. While she has plenty of fans in the fan community (in Japan or otherwise), she has a good amount of haters as well from what I've seen. So as a diehard fan of Detective Conan, surrounded by diehard fans of Detective Conan, I feel it would worthwhile to explore why she gets the type of reaction she does. I don’t promise this will be some brilliant observation that will change how you perceive fiction or any hyperbole like that, but I will try to make this intelligent, interesting and (hopefully) fair. I hope you enjoy this little essay of mine.
Now first thing I have to address, right up front, is that Detective Conan is probably not the ideal anime to choose to examine the depths of characters. When you think of characters worth taking a close look at in this medium, something like Death Note or Evangelion would be far more likely topics, even for most fans. Detective Conan characters I’d dare say are often borderline secondary or just tools for the story of a case once it comes time to focus on the murder mysteries. However, despite that, they are still very much actual characters that people really get into and I know these characters are genuinely worthwhile and good. But they are definitely more likable and fun rather than particularly (or at least consistently?) complex or creative. At least, that’s how I’d put it. My brief look into Kindaichi was a good example of how Detective Conan’s characters are so much more interesting by comparison. That series clearly has good murder mysteries but what I saw didn't make me care about any character in even the slightest. So even at worst, I really like a majority of the recurring cast of the series and I can safely say that the female lead to my favorite anime that I've been watching since 2008 is worth this essay.
But now let’s just discuss this character. Now, Ran’s personality is not that complicated. At seventeen years old, Mouri Ran is your somewhat average yet endlessly idealistic teenage girl, who does a good job at not being some extreme character. She has patience while still being sad and frustrated because of her scenario where that’s truly tested. She can kick ass without being untouchable or some ice cold, flawless, karate master. She can be intelligent but not close to the levels of convenient know-it-all that this series relies on. This is a good, flawed but not useless, character (at least in theory).
So, despite not being my favorite character or even close, I did like Ran. Nowadays, I’m not sure I can say that. In the past year or two, I’ve just stopped enjoying Ran as a character at all, which is quite a bad thing for the female lead of my favorite anime. Now I have much to discuss before going to the exact point I started to turn against her character, so let’s start with potentially disproving the previous paragraph. Any interesting parts of Ran as a character are often overshadowed by a number of things. A major example is how despite defeating criminals using karate, more often than not she’s not allowed to really show off her skills. Agasa’s inventions are to blame, as Conan gets those shoes specifically because he was disappointed with needing to be saved by Ran in the 2nd episode of the series. In the long run this might not have been the best choice as Ran could have been good as the brawn to Conan’s brains. Even some of the times later in the series where her karate makes a difference she’s joined by, and arguably overshadowed by, the strength of certain other characters’ martial arts. So basically every single time Makoto makes an appearance for example. As that is often seen as one of her more notable traits, this is not a good idea unless being overshadowed is used in the story correctly. Of course it doesn't help that the movies tend to make her role, at least during the climax, as the damsel in distress to be saved by Conan despite Ran’s karate talents, but I feel like that’s a bit unfair considering Gosho did not write those movies. So while that has helped my perception of this, I am not using that to confirm anything about the character. But those movies, along with the animation in the Openings, do still make an impact on people.
However, her ability to kick ass being a bit ignored does not quite compare to her personality in terms of disappointment. To put it bluntly, Ran is not that compelling or interesting really. One of my problems is that her character is too serious. Any legitimate drama of Conan and Ran’s situation has been explored, and they’ve added nothing new to keep you invested. But she’s not allowed to be fun or ridiculous like certain other characters so what scenes she does get are often just boring. Even what little happened in London felt like for a minute it was going to continue beyond that case, but as it has only been mentioned instead of actually followed up on, it just disappoints me and has been a factor that has made me less invested in their silly love story. Sadly it seems like Gosho has run out of ideas in this regard, and it’s suffered because of that. At this point, the only way I could see myself caring again would be for Ran to actually know his identity. Ran actively investigating Conan and leading to this event would solve quite a few problems, which is why at this point I think that’s the direction they should go. Unfortunately, I believe it’s likely that this will happen so late in the series that there won’t be a chance to fully use that concept for story purposes or even as a new status quo for the series.
This leads me to another similar problem, Ran and Shinichi’s relationship. This is something I’d be more willing to forgive if the series wasn't so long and it wasn't considered such an important aspect of the series. Most of these issues are common in the type of series I tend to enjoy; the love interests where they’re too shy to tell their feelings and things always get in the way when they try to do so. Now, while there have technically been confessions in this series (in some ways, the episode 2 confession is actually brilliant) they don’t tend to change the idea that tends to happen in romances in these type of manga/anime. The two people that clearly want to be with each other, but for some reason or another, aren't. Just put the two in a relationship, as an actual couple, and make stories about the relationship instead of having cute moments to replace real development or something that hasn't already been done to death in this series. It isn't like the writing of romance in this series has ever been particularly amazing (not that I would know much on that genre), so as far as I’m concerned it’s gotten pretty bad for me to be sick of this relationship story (though it’s not as bad as that Chiba story, don’t get me started on that lazy waste of time).
I still enjoy Heiji and Kazuha’s relationship, which has somehow had far less development, but it’s because the characters have chemistry. Their interaction is really fun. Yeah, it’s basically just the hot headed guy and tsundere girl couple, but I like that when it’s done well and fun to watch and it is. They are enjoyable to watch and I certainly won’t say Shinichi and Ran haven’t had enjoyable scenes that are comparable but it’s not as frequent. I feel like maybe the issue is that there is a relationship and chemistry as characters between Conan and Ran. The idea is maybe that Conan and Ran know each other better because of their situation and thus it will all work when the identity is revealed. It could be, as Shinichi often is intentionally hiding information from Ran and not being too honest. I kinda doubt it though. Also, can I point out that these are relationship scenes more than they are relationship stories? Just a thought I've had for a while.
Before I go on, I will be a bit fair and talk about some scenes and parts of the story I really like involving Ran. As stated before, I think Ran’s confession scene in episode 2 was brilliant. It made for some great dramatic irony having Conan learn that the girl he likes, likes him back as soon as he is in a situation where he is no longer himself. There are quite a few cute moments in the early years I think really work (I can’t hate Ran between the cute sweater scene and being scared to sleep alone with a bandaged murderer around). Ran suspecting Conan stories are great. Desperate Revival’s sad yet hopeful ending, especially with what happens with Conan and the music is fantastic. Ran in episode 400 is fantastic, using her brain to try to figure out a password to find out if Conan is Shinichi once and for all and her attitude is kinda awesome during it. I’m seemingly in the minority that actually liked the London case and what development there was. There’s AO sort of stuff like OVA 8 or Magic File 5 intentionally (I think?) making fun of Ran’s idealism and love, which almost makes her more likable. Also, while this is 95% because Kid saved this movie and it’s an interesting plot idea, I really liked what they were doing with Kid tricking Ran into thinking that he’s Shinichi in Movie 14. Of course I have to mention Haibara and while I fully admit I love pretty much anything involving Haibara, the almost subtle relationship between Ran and Haibara is really interesting and I hope it plays a major role in the future. This all demonstrates to me that her character can be good but she’s not allowed to be.
With that out of the way, there’s an issue I've been struggling to talk about involving this character and how she is written. That is to say, as clearly as possible, that the writing of Mouri Ran is sexist. Yeah…it’s…kinda sexist. Now before I say anything else, I do not believe that Gosho Aoyama himself is some sexist asshole or whatever. He unintentionally wrote a main female character in a sexist way, which is not exactly new for shonen, or writing as a whole. It is probably difficult and just unlikely for anyone to avoid writing something unintentionally offensive towards the opposite sex if they write so frequently. Considering some of his other female characters, he could certainly be worse. But regardless, that is still an accusation perhaps more serious than anything I've said. So let me try to justify it.
Oddly, for the sake of this essay, it is best I discuss the last thing I've discovered relevant to this first and discuss the first thing I discovered, last. Sonoci was very helpful for this subject so I’ll just quote her:
“It's sad, but Sonoko is more of a complex character than Ran is. Because she's allowed to be herself. Her attitude is not like it is because she's "supposed to" be that way, she's the way she is because she wants to be.”
This is what I think I was missing in trying to make this feel fully justified, as I’m never a fan of things being called sexist so easily. But it is true that the core of this issue is that the writing of Ran is bad enough that she’s not allowed to be written well. The reason for this is simple. Ran is not allowed to BE her own character, she is Shinichi’s love interest and everything she does revolves around him without thought being put into what she wants beyond Shinichi. In a better story this could be resolved in two ways. One of which would be to have Ran become less dependent on Shinichi, either by finding the line between her love being important to her and having her own life or by just flat out getting away from the relationship. The other option would be for the story to acknowledge how worrisome revolving your life around some boy could be. Otherwise, I don’t think she has much of a chance of being a good character as her character is “the idealistic teenager love interest for our protagonist”. That’s not complex, but it is distressingly close to a gender switched equivalent to what Twilight did.
Shinichi himself can come across as a sexist character as well. A major example of that would be the last Eisuke scene where Conan’s identity is revealed to him. Ignoring that Eisuke had known this for a while, Conan reveals who he really is because Eisuke wanted to confess to Ran and Conan refused to let that happen. It implies that Shinichi won’t allow her to deal with that pretty harmless situation. But the thing is that I’m still ok with that scene. Shinichi is jealous at best, sexist at worst but while not intentional I’m sure, that fits pretty well with Shinichi/Conan. He’s always come across as a good guy whose ideals and intelligence can make him kind of a jerk, so him being a bit sexist arguably adds to the character. Not all good characters need to always be good or completely innocent, it keeps things interesting. But the problem is that I honestly believe Ran would be completely ok with all of this, barring maybe feeling a bit bad for Eisuke. Ran would just be happy because of Conan/Shinichi acknowledging his feelings towards her without even thinking about if he actually respects her. In theory, a certain part of the paper airplane case that happens shortly afterwards should at least somewhat contradict that theory, but no, it just comes across to me as out of character the more I think about. That’s a shame as I remember really liking that. Unfortunately, this makes me think that the reason some people think the rare scenes where Ran is legit angry at Shinichi and/or jealous towards some girl (episode 10 being the obvious example) wouldn't happen is because Ran isn't allowed to be that angry or jealous either despite being a teenager in love. That might not be true at all, but it is another thought I just had while writing this.
But that whole Eisuke thing was not why I thought the writing was going sexist places or was all that sexist to begin with. I’m undecided whether I blame this more on this episode hurting my perception of the character that badly or if this was just such a slow point in the series a while after I had fully caught up and needed to wait for new episodes (thus giving me more time to think about individual cases and whatnot). But episodes 592 and 593 (The Tori's Pledge of Monkeys and Rakes) are pretty inexcusable. It was bad enough that the case was boring and forgettable in the middle of a wasteland of story or character development (even by usual standards). But it is so sexist; I need another paragraph just to describe it.
In this story, Ran gets a fortune on a piece of paper that says to be a traditional Japanese woman instead of tomboy-ish and gaudy if she wants the boy he likes to like her back. But that’s no big deal, it’s obvious that she’ll learn to be herself by the end and it’s just a dumb and obvious moral of the episode. But then she figures out to be more like herself…because the piece of paper was actually switched by Sonoko. The fortune meant for her basically said “never give up, be yourself and you’ll find true love!” She then kicks the culprit (who was the one to read it out loud because why not?) so hard that he is knocked out and can be arrested.
I’m sorry, what? What?! Are you kidding me?! That is just awful! This is one of those things I thought was bad at first but the more I thought about it, the more awful it became. That is straight up offensive to women, no other way to look at it. Just to add to this, it’s implied that before she found this out, she wasn’t going to fight back against the guy who was going to attack her with a knife. I’m not even joking. Not only does this suggest that the only way a woman (or a teenage girl) can be herself is if a fortune says it’s ok, it suggests that dying would be preferable to a girl not being ideal for the man she likes. There is no acknowledgment in any form that her dying in this scenario wouldn't fit until the paper is confirmed to be fake. This isn't a story about how Ran is hopelessly obsessed with this, it’s a story about how Ran is the ideal teenage girl for our genius detective protagonist. Ran shouldn't have an opinion in this apparently, just keep following the advice for stupid reasons. Even as someone who would never call himself a huge Ran fan, I’m offended as a fan of the series, good writing and as a person who respects the opposite sex. Again, I don’t think Gosho was trying to be sexist, but that’s how it comes across. It is a really bad portrayal of women/teenage girls and I would say Gosho should have thought way harder about the implications of it. Regardless of that, this makes Ran to look phenomenally stupid. It is literally suicidal, or at least too close to it. You’re gonna die because you believe in a piece of paper that told you a boy won’t like you if you act a certain way? Not only that, but for a boy who Is not even there (as far she knows anyway). Ran…you’re one of those girls that reference Romeo and Juliet but don’t know how it ends aren't you? Thankfully I don’t think the series can top that nonsense. I hope.
There is one last thing beyond that though. I feel like the final thing beyond sexism that’s made me realize that I’m not much of a fan of Ran anymore is that we have a far more enjoyable karate girl. Her name is Sera. Sera is actually fun, has a sense of humor and self-awareness, is really intelligent and can help during the crimes, and can kick ass at least as well as Ran or even Makoto. Her relevance to the plot isn’t high school romance; it’s about her connection to one of the coolest characters of the entire series. This means she’s actually directly relevant to the ongoing plot that, when it’s allowed to be, is arguably the most engaging part of the whole series. However, to be a bit fair, I honestly think Sera is without a doubt, the best and most enjoyable recurring character Gosho has made in a decade, so it would be tough competition either way.
I feel like I should be honest and say that one of the main reasons I wrote this was as a test for myself, to prove that I could write something worth reading that was also a worthwhile piece critiquing a work I genuinely love. No matter what, I won’t be convinced this was good enough even for the small audience that will actually read this, but I should be happy I didn't actually give up on this like certain other projects I wanted to do in my own time and gave up on too easily. I have not even needed a thesaurus! But, I do have other reasons. I wanted to, I suppose, vent my frustrations with Ran as she is the main female character of my favorite anime series and I’m not a fan of hers anymore. I don’t hate Ran, but I am disappointed and I want to believe before the series is over that she can be written in such a way that she’s “redeemed”. Ran deserves better. It’s certainly not impossible, and events of the past couple of years seem to indicate that Gosho does listen to fans. With all that said, I hope that other people can also put their thoughts into reasons why they do or don’t like the character (or other aspects of the series), as I’d like to think intelligent discussion about this would be nothing but a good thing.