Violet and Letters

On Monday night, I was looking for something to watch and I finally got around to watching Violet Evergarden. I kind of knew what I was getting into when I decided to do it, but damn if it wasn’t even more affecting that I thought it would be. If you can make it through the thirteen episodes of the main series without at least wanting to blubber like an infant, you have to hand in your humanity membership card.

Violet Evergarden is probably best known (in the West) as an anime series produced by Kyoto Animation. It was based on a light novel of the same name (except in Japanese) by Kana Akatsuki and illustrated by Akiko Takase. It tells the story of an orphan – Violet – raised as a living weapon to fight in a war and never really socialised. She’s essentially a sociopath without the negative aspects; she can’t empathise with others because she’s never been taught or shown what emotions really are. She loses her arms in the war but her world seems to have some fairly crazy technology because they manage to replace her lost arms with fully functional metal ones. Having known only life in the military, Violet now sets out to make her way as an ‘Auto Memory Doll,’ essentially a ghostwriter for the many people who can’t write or those who want a letter written that they don’t have to skills to write themselves. Violet has to learn emotions and empathy in order to do her job, and that’s basically the journey we go on with her as the series unfolds.

That dry synopsis does not do justice to the rollercoaster ride you go through when watching this series. Apparently, the novel handles the sequence of events differently, which is a bit of an issue for the series. In the novel, you uncover Violet’s backstory slowly; she starts out as a letter writer with metal arms, and only as the story progresses do you uncover why she is as she is. The series frontloads the backstory, at least to some extent. The first three episodes have Violet collected from hospital and set her up in the role of an Auto Memory Doll. Only in the third episode do we get a hint at the way the rest of the series will largely play out.

Most of the episodes in the series are technically told from the viewpoint of one of Violet’s clients. Violet is hired to write something for someone, and we are shown how she overcomes whatever hurdles she has to in completing her contract, how she develops as a person in doing so, and how what she does affects those around her. Simple, right? Nothing new. Stories of personal development are two-a-penny. True enough, but when you combine the writing, the animation, and the soundtrack, Kyoto Animation have elevated Violet Evergarden into a true masterpiece of emotional manipulation. I hate it when characters are given thorough development and background just so you’ll empathise with them when something terrible happens to them. That’s one of my pet peeves with season three of Overlord. I should probably hate Violet Evergarden, but the manipulation doesn’t seem forced this time and it will get you in the feels every single time. Episode 10, in particular, will pull out your heart, stuff it in a blender, and reduce it to mush. I’m tearing up writing this because it’s giving me flashbacks. One of the reviews I’ve seen online said (paraphrased), ‘What it took Clannad forty episodes to do, Violet Evergarden can manage in twenty-three minutes.’ Clannad is one of those famously tear-jerking anime I refuse to watch. I guess I was kind of suckered into Violet…

Anyway… It’s pushed me to try to make this recurring idea I’ve had work. I want to write a book about a truly inhuman character; a character who doesn’t think like a human. Violet’s not really like that, but that’s the story I wanted to make work after watching it and I might have figured out a way to make it work. We’ll see. It’s going to take some development. The current working title, by the way, is Professor Orson’s Mechanical Daughter. So, make of that what you will.

And if you’d like to have your heart torn out by a cute anime girl with metal arms, Violet Evergarden is available on Netflix in all regions (I think). Look for the ‘Violet Evergarden Collection,’ which includes the series, a 35-minute ‘special’, and ‘Eternity and the Auto Memory Doll,’ a 90-minute movie. There is also another movie which was put out in cinemas and will hopefully turn up on Netflix eventually (though having read the synopsis on Wikipedia, I don’t think I want to put myself through that!). I do recommend watching at least the main series and the special unless you really do only read my books for the action and sex scenes. But have a box of tissues nearby when you do.

13 responses to “Violet and Letters

  1. I went to see “Violet Evergarden; The Movie” in the cinema last Thursday (1st). It certainly played with my hear strings but all in all I would say that it provides a thorough conclusion to the story of Violet in a way that doesn’t really leave many threads open which if very rare to get in an anime story.

  2. Cecil Montague's avatar Cecil Montague

    You wish to write a book about someone who doesn’t think like or relate to humanity at all? So a book about a Cabinet Minister then? Interesting idea. 🙂

  3. I will say I get to keep my card, I watched all 13 episodes on Netflix . I loved it and to be honest I look forward to season two. I’ve never watched anime before today. Thanks for the idea especially since there wasn’t anything on the telly.

    • Unfortunately, there’s no season two. There’s the special and the two films. The second film basically brings Violet’s story to a conclusion. I won’t spoil it by saying how it concludes (I haven’t seen it myself, just read the synopsis), but it ends.
      I’m glad you liked it. I’d hate to recommend something (since I don’t do it much) and have someone hate it.

  4. I watched the series a while ago.
    I liked it for the most part – you’re right in how it gets emotional in pretty much every episode without seeming overly contrived. (The episode where she parachutes in to write a letter for the dying soldier, and how his family reacts when they get it … wow.)
    My biggest issues were the Major’s older brother, the Navy Captain. He was hellbent throughout the entire series as seeing Violet as a vicious war dog, not even remotely human. If there was a sociopathic monster in the show, it was definitely him. How many times did he refer to Violet (even when she was a little girl) as a tool to be used, and once used up to be abandoned on the battlefield like any other broken weapon.
    Yikes!
    And her mechanical arms were a bit too fantastical for the tech level of the world, which seemed to be similar to ours post-WW1. But it’s anime, so I don’t hold to the same reality standard I would in “real” sci-if.

    Looking forward to whatever you dream up next.

    • There’s one scene, a flashback, on a boat which, IIRC, was from the brother’s viewpoint. It shows a young Violet covered in blood and holding a bayonet/sword/knife thing. From that and another remark of his, I get the feeling he dumped her on the Major because she slaughtered a bunch of sailors under the Captain’s command. Why she wasn’t just killed however, would be an open question. Maybe he wasn’t quite as bad as he seems, even back then.
      Her arms do seem too fantastic for the setting and I’m not really sure they add that much to the character. How she lost the original ones is a bit contrived too, tbh. That said, like you said, it’s anime.

  5. It’s been a while but I vaguely remember that – there were several battlefield flashbacks of her going all River Tam on the hapless highly trained soldiers. I loved how her post-war reputation was such that the “bad guys” always immediately stopped fighting her the moment she showed up and fearfully whispered such things as, “Don’t shoot her, idiot!! Do you know who is she is?!?!”
    It does beg the question of Violet’s origin story … who trained the little girl, turned her into the impossibly proficient emotionless killer and turned her loose on the Captain’s sailors? There are flashbacks to the battles throughout the war but none about her original training, which must have been traumatic as hell.

    Ahh, anime. The only place where a young girl with a bayonet/sword/knife thing can take out numerous trained warfighters and we all shrug and say, “Well yeah, of course she did.”

    • She goes through basic training after the Major gets her, but she’s already pretty lethal then. As far as I’m aware, her origin is never explained.

  6. I really like Violet and enjoyed it specially that it does deal strongly with the after effects of war.

    On the story Idea,. I got one for you. Perhaps write something that’s based around an alien character looking at or trying to understand or interact with known characters. Such as Aneka or Fox. As that may be an interesting side story.

  7. Thanks for the review of Violet Evergarden, I hadn’t heard it it before as I have not watched much new anime for years now. Used to watch anime a lot in years past though so I guess it’s time to find something I might like.

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