Earlier
this year, I reviewed two, multi-part episodes of Detective
Conan, an anime based on the successful, long-running manga
series by Gosho
Aoyama, entitled The
Cursed Mask Laughs Coldly and The
Case of the Séance Double Locked Room, which Ho-Ling
Wong recommended on his blog – both of his reviews can be found
here
and here.
Ho-Ling had another recommendation for me in the comments, episodes
203-204, as it features "a return of the Cursed Masks most
popular original characters." I finally got around to watching
it.
The
Black Wings of Icarus is a two-part episode, originally aired in
August, 2000, but was
not as grand or elaborate a detective story as
the previous episodes discussed on here. All the same, the episodes
had a solid, well-constructed plot with a minor locked room problem
and a daring alibi-trick that would have made Freeman
Wills Crofts proud.
The moral of the story |
Richard
Moore, Rachel and Conan are spending a couple of days at a remote
hotel, near the mountains, where the twin maids, Minaho and Honami,
who previously appeared in Cursed Masks now work. And they
spot another familiar face at the hotel.
One
of the guests is a well-known actress, Bizen Chizuru, who's staying
at the hotel with her husband, Shiromoto, who has development plants
for the area and this may threaten a nearby mountain plateau –
where there are many "rare butterflies and plants."
Something that worries the hotel manager, Arimori. Chizuru and
Shiromoto are joined later that evening by the president of a drama
production company, Miyabe Kouta, who begs Chizuru to voluntary
relinquish a movie role, because the sponsors want a younger actress
to take her place. This scene ended with Chizuru's biggest outburst
of the day.
Conan
observed early in the episode that "her image is different from
TV and the movies." Chizuru has been adversarial and unpleasant
the moment she crossed the threshold of the hotel, publicly
humiliating her husband, talking down to the staff and shamelessly
flirting with Moore, but getting replaced on a movie angered her. She
makes a veiled threat of suicide and storms off to her room. However,
everything appears to be normal the following morning.
Some
of the hotel guests and staff are going picnicking on the plateau,
while Moore settles down on the coach with a VHS of a Yoko Okina
TV-drama. Moore is given the master keys of the hotel and is left
with the twins, the cook and Chizuru – who remains sulking in her
room. So, when at the end of the day, she still has not shown herself
they decide to go up and take a look, but the door-guard was engaged
and the door had to be forced open. Chizuru is hanging inside from a
ceiling fan.
As
always, Conan subtly drops hints to help Moore and the local police
figure out this is a case of murder clumsily disguised as suicide.
Surprisingly, it was Moore who immediately figured out the,
admittedly, simplistic locked room trick when he sees the scratch
marks on the door-guard. So the locked room is only a tiny aspect of
the story and the meat of the plot is found on the murderer's
Croftian alibi. A seasoned mystery addict can instinctively point out
the murderer, because there are so many tells, but the real challenge
lies in demolishing this persons apparently cast-iron alibi.
Admittedly,
the risky alibi-trick is not entirely believable, mostly the first
part of the trick, but it had glimmer of originality and, somehow,
felt pleasantly old-fashioned – like one of the alibi stories I
read by Crofts (e.g. Mystery
in the Channel, 1931). I still liked it. Conan dismantled the
alibi with such clues as the air conditioning, lighting on the hotel
roof and a white, powdery substance on the victim's dress. So the
plot stuck together pretty well, but, where the story is briefly
lifted to the same heights as Cursed Mask and Double Locked
Room, is when Conan (through Moore) speaks those sad, final lines
to the murderer – ending the episode on a somber note.
So,
on a whole, not as good as the two previously mentioned episodes, but
still pretty good by itself with a daring alibi-trick that will
delight fans of Crofts. I hope you're taking notes, JJ.
I've been watching quite a few of the anime originals the last few months, but like with this episode, I find it hard to write a really meaningful review about them, as they usually do have some good ideas and are in general perfectly fine mystery stories, but they lack something to really go in-depth with the analysis. These two episodes too I thought were entertaining, but I really couldn't figure out what I wanted to write about them.
ReplyDeleteThough I might take a few of them together in one post. My first genuinely new Conan reviews for this year won't come until October (home video release of the 22nd film, and the long-awaited volume 95 after a 10 month wait!), but I might as well fill the time with some of the originals again.
Well, since I'm following your lead with these originals, I would welcome a compilation review of several episodes.
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