Furuta’s last laugh

goodass-hide:

Hello there! With all sorts of character weeks and events coming around, and the manga ending, would you guys be interested in having a character appreciation week for the mischievous boy Furuta? 

 A week rampant with love for one of the most dynamic and unloved characters in the universe of Tokyo Ghoul :re

The event would go on from 6th-12th August and would welcome all sorts of fan art, fan fics, edits, GIFs, cosplay, playlists, mood boards and even meta. All of his personas would be appreciated.
If it has enough interest, @kikajpg and I will make a blog and will give out prompts within a week from now.

It’s high time this boy gets some love.

image

I would love to participate! @mercyandmagic you’d probably be interested as well!

Do you believe Furuta liked Kijima? Kijima’s famous quote (“I don’t value my life. If I were as pretty as you, then maybe I would a little. But I don’t care how an ugly body like mine gets used”) got me thinking about how it mirrors Furuta, specifically how Furuta may not have felt disregard for life had he been loved like Kaneki. :o Both he and Kijima are lead to act the way they do and see the world as they do because of their fates. (this is probably a shallow understanding, sorry ;-;)

(same anon!) Additionally, Furuta and Kijima had something stolen from them: Furuta’s hope to live a normal life, and (this is a stretch) Kijima’s normal life in losing his squad/his appearance. They both then work to tear down those who had wronged them. Kijima dedicates his life to work as an investigator, even taking extreme measures to harming them. Furuta and V crush the Washuu household who bestowed upon them their cruel existence. (again, sorry if this is super shallow understanding ;;)

No worries! You don’t need to apologize at all! It’s also not shallow. It is absolutely likely the case that Kijima’s brutality rubbed off on Furuta. Like, compare him to the other Garden Kids like Hairu, who was partnered with Ui, a decent human being. Kijima would probably not have cared for anyone nor anything, not even himself, which er… does absolutely reflect with Furuta became.

Do I think Furuta liked Kijima? No. I don’t think so at all. I think Furuta hated most people, including himself. Kijima seemed to be similar, and they likely worked together decently but that didn’t mean they had any actual affection for each other. 😦 

Tokyo Ghoul’s Thematic Tightrope

TG has always walked the line between idealism and realism in an absolutely fascinating way, and it’s one of the main things I adore about this series. Both of these themes are explicitly explored through the characters of Furuta and Kaneki, and the reason people are not happy with what has been done with them is not because “I just hate Kaneki but Furuta’s an angel who deserved none of this,” (I LOVE Kaneki) it’s because the themes, depending on the person, may not have been satisfactorily addressed.

The series’ ending conclusion is that it tries to bring these two disparate pieces together in a way that was framed peculiarly, and because of that framing the message ultimately comes across as simplistic and, to some, confusing, because textually, it’s simply inaccurate to say Kaneki fought tragedy but Furuta did not. Instead of emphasizing individual responsibility and choices, the story seems to have emphasized choices made by others.

(It’s great that some find 177 optimistic, and this is not an attempt to convince people it’s not optimistic, but to explain that, even though we all agree Ishida was trying to send a hopeful message, many of us came away with the opposite message instead. It’s not correct to say that the message Ishida intended to say is the message he actually sent, nor is it correct to say that he did not send that message.)

image
image

We all know that TG wants us to live. It’s the most powerful line of the series imo: live, even if it’s not stylish.

image

That’s idealistic, and optimistic. Hence, the series sets up an expectation that it will deliver on this front. And in many ways it does just that. Even when things look hopeless, like when Mutsuki spirals, or when Urie frames out, or when Kaneki breaks into Dragon, these three characters are rescued by their loved ones, rescued from themselves. That’s beautiful.

image
image

However, the framing around Kaneki’s case in particular troubles me. He was told he did not have long to live.

image

We all wanted him to live, and the story granted it to us: he fixed his issue. Good. But fixing his life span came at
the cost of 100 kids’ lives: one hundred traumatized orphans who were experimented upon and legitimately called “100 Kaneki Kens” by the narrative, and the narrative has not explicitly acknowledged this. Which the story could have work… except it contradicts the
story’s earlier themes of having to truly grapple with the wrongs done
to children as the concept of wrongs done to kids has been reflected in just about
every characters’ arc, and even in the worldbuilding, starting from the Doves’ Emergence Arc.

image

The story has always emphasized this theme as highly important and influential for Kaneki personally and for the other characters as well, so if it was emphasized so much, it sets up an expectation in the reader that this should be dealt with explicily rather than never expressly acknowledged. I actually think Kaneki eating the Oggai is a good narrative decision for his lowest point, even if I personally find it triggering. The fact that it wasn’t then acknowledged, however, makes this theme of choosing to protect kids kind of fall apart. It also again stresses the idea of making choices for other people about the value of certain lives over other lives. And yes, Kaneki did not have a choice once in that scenario, but again, that emphasizes the idea that the world doesn’t allow for choices.

image

The story then also has Kaneki choose to kill Rize even though he does not want to (and it’s good that he doesn’t want to), but I don’t think anyone thinks that the way in which it was done was a good narrative decision. I actually haven’t seen anyone saying it was, lol. It would be one thing if he had not just been saved from the same exact situation, but he was. It would be one thing if he tried and then realized he could not. It would be one thing if Rize’s decision to stay at the Torii Gates was given more narrative emphasis rather than her commenting only on Kaneki’s decision, but it wasn’t.

image
image

Keep pressing on no matter what is a fine message, but to press on at the
cost of kids’ lives and the life of a girl in the same circumstances he
was just saved on frames this theme in a very uncomfortable way. Especially since Kaneki’s major flaw is criticizing behavior in other people that he also exhibits (that’s what Shironeki was kind of about).

Additionally, it can be interpreted as sending an “ends justify the means” message which I personally
find morally reprehensible, and, well, there
are lots of implications to Kaneki having to kill 100 orphans and a
woman with little current choice that are deeply unsettling. While I
totally agree that Ishida did not mean to imply what that implies, it
doesn’t change the fact that some of us are going to be more troubled by
how problematic that is than others. Intentions to communicate something important do not necessarily matter if the communication becomes muddled and the receiver hears something other.

I personally
root for Kaneki against Furuta and always have, but the entire framing
of this scene left me with a deeply pessimistic message. Accept the
world, yes, do what you can, yes. But kill or be killed, rather than
asking why anyone needs to die at all? That struck me as contradictory for the rest of the series’ themes. It is true that you cannot save the world, nor can you change it: you can only change yourself. The problem is that the narrative places emphasis on this when it comes to Kaneki’s character, but not with other characters, and allows Kaneki idealism in ways that it does not allow others. Of course, he is the main character, but thinking of himself as the center of everything has always led to disaster for him within the story. And it is not actually Kaneki’s choices that saved him, speaking textually. 

It’s Touka’s. It’s Tsukiyama’s. It’s Hide’s. And it’s Furuta’s. They saved him.

I don’t think anyone would say Touka’s love for Kaneki is not idealistic. Most people would not wait three years and dig their husband out of a Dragon. I’m not saying this is bad in any way at all, mind you. I love Touken and think it’s beautiful, but I am saying it’s idealistic. And that’s good, but it sets certain expectations: namely, if Kaneki is on the receiving end of a lot of peoples’ idealistic forgiveness and belief that he can and will choose to make better decisions in the future (Hide, Tsukiyama, the Qs, etc. all share this perspective), it makes sense that we would expect him to then share this idealistic perspective with others, even if in they end they do not take it. But he does not. And this is actually not something new. He admitted to Takizawa he only cared about his loved ones (which is fine! But if you put yourself in a position where you are responsible for those people multiple times, as he has and as Ayato called him on, that’s less fine),

and he did not save Eto (the clowns presumably did) when he’d promised to: and she wasn’t trying to kill him then. She was lying there dying in front of him and had just saved Touka and everyone else and told him so. So it’s hard to see this Rize thing as growth when he’s done it before.

Again, this is where the rushing comes in: if Kaneki had offered this to Rize and she expressly rejected it, or if this was emphasized more in the Torii Gate scene, it could have worked, but it was truncated. To have the conclusion of “some people do need
to die” (which is Kaneki’s conclusion) told to us from Kaneki’s perspective rather than shown (especially when Rize’s issues tend to be about precisely not being allowed to share her perspective), and not explored when TG has a
habit of exploring its themes until Moon Hell, means that the themes ultimately come across as muddy. Is it Rize’s choice to die tragically? Or Kaneki’s to kill her? We’re supposed to see it as Rize’s most likely, but it simply isn’t clear, and to have it not clear when Kaneki is making a choice about someone else’s life is putting the onus on other people rather than on individual responsibility. 

Continuing along those lines, the story early on tells us that connection is important. Interactions are chemical reactions; people are forever changed by them. People like Yamori, Arima, Furuta, and Rize, who do not connect with people, die without redemption (Eto is an exception, for… some reason. I’d say this is an inconsistency). However, the story also shows us that connection is hard. That’s a realistic view of connection, in that Kaneki struggles to connect with people and has actually deliberately severed himself from connection multiple times: first with Anteiku, then with the Qs, etc. It’s always been framed as something sad, because he doesn’t believe he can be loved, and Kaneki’s struggles to maintain connection are realistic and for me, highly relatable. However, the way in which people respond to his struggles to connect is idealistic and indeed beautiful, but also creates a dissonance with its contrast. It is honestly hard for me to believe that literally not one person would have expressed frustration or sorrow over Kaneki becoming Dragon, rather than just sorrow for him. That is not realistic. It’s beautiful in its idealism, but contrasts in an awkward way with the realism of Kaneki’s own struggles. It again puts the onus on other people rather than on oneself, which doesn’t work if we’re supposed to be interpreting Kaneki’s choices as what makes the difference. Such idealism also doesn’t work with Kaneki’s ultimate “kill or be killed” conclusion with the rushed pacing and framing the latest chapter had.

The conclusion of “I need to kill the Oggai/Rize to save everyone I love” struggles thematically because it is this entire mindset that has run the cruel world TG inhabits. The CCG agents (not the Washuu) kills ghouls to save the people they love. Like, I think what makes TG so interesting is that we can all relate to the notion that if there were terrifying people who had to eat humans to live, the world would not respond with empathy. The ghouls kill humans to stay alive and keep their loved ones alive. Essentially? While ghouls and humans may now be working together, that basic philosophy has remained the same. Making choices for other people about the worth of their lives is how this Tokyo runs in TG.

A lot of people find that pretty pessimistic. You can interpret that as “well, we can’t change the world, but we can still find happiness”–except TG has always offered a solution: changing the world via empathy. Empathy, putting yourself in the place of another. It’s what Touka offers Mado as a solution in the Dove’s Emergence Arc, and then she kills Mado because again, it’s kill or be killed there.

image

And yet the narrative does not let her off for this, because she deeply regrets it. So the scene in 177, without Rize being afforded a chance, suggests a cycle that is unbreakable, that the cage cannot be broken, and if you try to break it, you become a villain. The three characters who tried the hardest to break it are Furuta, Eto, Arima. That’s… an issue, especially when the story begins with this:

image

The only character who has tried to break that cage, who tried for revolution, is Furuta. Claiming that Furuta wanted to make things worse and Kaneki only wanted
to make things better is a false ditchotomy. 
Kaneki only wanted a world that he could live in.

image

This is the entire point
of Kaneki hiding in the 24th ward arc. He would have probably stayed in
the 24th ward forever if he could rather than actually confront the
others. He admits as much inside his head: he had no plan, no intention
of fixing the world for ghouls and human, he only wanted a world where
he could belong, where he was needed and therefore he only acted on what
was directly in front of him. Maybe that’s the point, maybe he was never supposed to be born for love and revolution, but then I think it’s odd that everyone reading it thought it was supposed to be about freeing ghouls… because the story did set up those expectations.

This is in comparison to Furuta who has spent his entire life trying to
break the system from within, who dedicated his whole life to one
plan. All of Furuta’s actions are making things worse with a purpose.
We see exactly why this is necessary because every single person within
the CCG is simply so accustomed to the cruel way things are that they
barely even react. Torturers like Kijima and Tokage run free
with no repercussions. Saiko has consent forms for a life-altering
surgery signed by her mother and not her. Mutsuki is given a knife, and
then turned into a living weapon when they show both a predisposition
for violence and also come from a horrifically abusive family. The
entirety of the CCG is built on compliance.
They literally needed to be pushed to that extreme in order to break
free. The Oggai are the CCG’s method of taking child soldiers. The Washuu which control everything were slaughtered by Furuta who then went
on to replace them, and show exactly everybody how the Washuu acted in
his personality as “Kichimura.” Dragon literally drags humans into a
conflict that ghouls have been living and born into their entire lives,
and humans have the privilege of just treating like it’s an urban
legend.

All of these are targeted strikes against the system.

Kaneki, on the other hand,  broke quinques and hoped for the
best.

Kaneki’s successes are all built explicitly on the back of Furuta’s work. If Furuta had not done
the dirty work Kaneki never would have even survived as king because
Furuta did all the dirty work for him. He never had to confront the CCG
because Furuta dismantled it for him from within. He never had to
destroy the Washuu because Furuta already took care of that and he did
it much better than both Marude and Hide.

Kaneki
wanted to talk to the Washuu. He had no plan.

image
image

When Furuta was not
directly challenging him, the only thing Kaneki did was move to save
investigators. When Furuta was directly challenging him, he hid to the
24th ward and then slowly starved to death. When Kaneki was presented
with the exact same limited life span problem Furuta dealt with his
entire life, Kaneki didn’t fight tragedy. He distracted himself. Kaneki
only fixed his lifespan because of something Furuta did once again:
because Furuta provided him the Oggai to eat.

Furuta acts, Kaneki reacts. That’s been consistent throughout the entire narrative. The fact that the story suggests that acting is wrong in Furuta’s case (and it hella is! Nothing he does is excusable, but his motivations=dismantle the system so that no one has to suffer what he suffered) and that it’s right in Kaneki’s case (his motivations=protect his loved ones from suffering) is… well, the line between them is really thin. Not wanting to do something (like Kaneki has seldom ever wanted to hurt anybody) doesn’t change the fact that he has, in fact, hurt someone, and as Yoshimura says, “the act of taking a life is always evil.” To have the significant choice of Kaneki’s, the choice that’s supposed to exemplify him taking responsibility, being to kill someone who has no choice, is strange.

You have to accept the world and decided not to twist it yourself. In theory, I like these messages from Kaneki and Amon. In practice, the framing of the story with pushing aside other themes and Kaneki still committing an action the story has always described as wrong against someone experiencing the exact same thing he just went through, makes it hard. It’s a tightrope between just what the difference between Furuta and Kaneki actually is, and I personally can see why people buy this chapter as inspirational, and why people do not.

You think Furutas arc is better than Kaneki’s? What is his arc really? He’s always been the same and that’s why I think he died.

I do. Furuta’s arc is a tragedy. Tragedies end with the characters’ succumbing to their flaws but it doesn’t mean they don’t have arcs. An arc is basically: character has a goal. Characters flaws inhibit them from getting their goal. Character either changes to overcome their flaws or digs in and succumbs to them. Furuta digs in and succumbs.

The reason I think fruit’s arc is better done than Kaneki’s–and this is my opinion and ppl are welcome to disagree!–is that Kaneki’s flaws were precisely what I love about him as a character, but post OEK the story starts rushing and his flaws get swept under the rug rather than explicitly dealt with, like eating the Oggai, whereas until that point his issues were explicitly dealt with and addressed. That’s why kaneki dropped from like third to ninth in my fave character list though I still adore him and still love him more than I love Furuta because of my emotional attachment. I can’t relate to the concept of the entire world coming together to save someone who just killed thousands; it just didn’t strike me as emotionally realistic whereas Furuta’s emotions seemed more realistic to me the past few arcs. This is my opinion and I’m entitled to it and others are more than entitled to disagree!

What do you think about that white line over black after Furuta says “I know it will?” It’s too crooked to be a flatline or a closed eyelid, but something about it just indicates ‘death’ to me.

Hey friend! Yeah, it’s an interesting artistic choice. I agree with you that it likely isn’t a flatline or a closed eyelid, but it does seem indicative of death somehow.

image
image
image

What I like about it is that it trends loosely upwards, which I think somehow fits the scene before it, wherein Furuta remembers that he is human, that he is not a villain, and steps outside of that villain role and remembers what he wanted in a normal life. Even looking back on his childhood (Furuta looked like he was in the Torii Gate place where Rize and Kaneki used to be? But also it looks like it could be a memory of the Sunlit Garden) and knowing he never did become old, he says “It definitely will [be fun].” I saw that, plus the line trending upwards, as an expression of well, perhaps not everything is nihilistic, perhaps he was not just a villain, that there is humanity in him, and he clung to that in that moment and it lifted him up, somehow.

Edit: maybe it’s trending downwards, I can’t tell. 😛 My bad! But it’s still kind of peaceful and hopeful, imo.

This might be a weird question to ask for tg where these types of roles are explicitly toyed with, but who’re your favorite tg antagonists and why?

I love Furuta, Eto, and Arima, but my favorite is Furuta because of how complex his character is. He’s incredibly complex but also heartbreaking, because he’s a child at heart but he’s also doing incredibly evil things. 

A good antagonist doesn’t exist just to be defeated though (that’s a Marvel villain haha) but rather exists to provoke growth in the protagonist and reveal exactly how they need to grow. Furuta did that really, really well over the past 143 chapters. He highlighted both Kaneki’s flaws and thereby Kaneki’s strengths, and he also did the same for the CCG as a whole, Ui, Arima, etc. Furuta might have been the moon but his shadow acted more like a sun in showing us what the characters needed to grow away from, and Kaneki did (and Ui too). 

I love, love, love how Kaneki and Furuta were both motivated by how they both believed they did not deserve love, but for Kaneki it became I will die a hero and make them love me! and Furuta I will die a villain and make them pay.  That’s a fascinating opposition imo. But of course, Furuta’s greatest strength was his awareness and how he pointed out the hypocrisy of others–but his own flaws which he shared with Kaneki exploded and consumed him in doing so. Basically take the plank out of your own eye, and he could not do that in the end because he did not want to be anything but a villain. 

But Furuta again realized he was a person before he died, and that made his death resonate imo. He did not die a villain. He died someone remembering his dream, and comforting himself with memories of his days before he let his bitterness consume him.