The
72nd volume of Gosho Aoyama's Case
Closed,
originally published in Japan as Detective
Conan,
begins with the conclusion to the massive story that covered nine of
the eleven chapters of the previous
volume, which brought Richard Moore, Rachel and Conan to London –
where Conan becomes engaged in a hunt for Sherlock Holmes-themed
clues. A hunt leading him straight to Wimbledon where he has to
prevent the public assassination of the Queen of the Grass Court,
Minerva Glass.
Plot-wise,
the last act of this story is pretty standard for the series with
Conan having to locate the culprit in a capacity-filled stadium,
which has been done before, but the tennis setting provided a way to
make this culprit stick out "like
a sore thumb."
However, the plot played second fiddle here to the main-characters
and particular the story-line between Jimmy/Conan and Rachel.
The
second story begins with Conan and Anita discussing the former's
adventure in England. Interestingly, Anita addresses my complaint
mentioned in my review of volume 71.
I
can see how it made sense to keep Jimmy's predicament a secret from
Rachel when the series began, but, in the story, more than two years
have passed and the secret has become a story-telling device to
create these needlessly complicated personal situations – keeping
Jimmy trapped between Rachel and Conan. Logically, she should have
been told by now. Aoyama will probably resolve this problem by saying
she knew all along and the final panel of the series will show them
with their son who's a carbon-copy of Conan.
Anita
reminds Conan what he has said about not allowing Rachel to get too
close to him, because not being able to be with him would only make
her unhappier. So he can't be in the spotlight and has "to
hide in the wings until the right moment,"
but the brats of the Junior Detective League overheard them and
misinterpreted it as a suggestion to play a game of hide and seek.
One of them knows an abandoned building, scheduled to be demolish,
perfect for such a game. During the game, they get "an
emergency earthquake alert"
on their cellphones and they hear someone knocking out the
emergency-code for "Rescue Needed," which leads them to two shady
looking construction workers. Conan concludes "a
person in need of rescue"
from kidnappers is trapped somewhere inside the mostly empty
building.
Generally,
I dislike kidnapping stories because they're seldom any good, or
memorable, but there are two reasons why this story is one of the
exceptions. Firstly, the clever way in which Conan and the Junior
Detective League used their personalized cellphones to squeeze out of
a very tight corner. Secondly, the identity of the kidnap victim came
as a genuine surprise. I honestly didn't expect that twist!
The
second, complete story of this volume brings Conan, Rachel and Serena
Sebastian to Teitan University, renamed here as Baker University,
where Richard Moore giving a lecture, but "he's
just drooling over college girls"
and a group of Film Majors offers them a more palpable sight – a
haunted house exhibition. Students are working on a horror movie as
their project thesis and want to make it "as
realistic as possible."
So they created a house of corpses and want to test it on the girls,
because Rachel and Serena have seen dead bodies before. The
exhibition does what it intended to do... scaring the girls.
One
of the film students, Anna Tadami, is strapped to an operating-table
and surrounded by dummy surgeons, but, when they walked pass this
scene, she started "trembling
and thrashing her legs."
She shook so hard "it
rattled the bed."
Anna Tadami was dead! There's "an
almond smell"
at her mouth and "the
remains of capsule between her teeth,"
which means suicide as Rachel and Serena saw nobody else standing
around the operating-table. So a quasi-impossible crime with an
obvious murderer, a hack stage-trick and a motive that felt tacked on
resulting in an average story at best.
The
third case is another kidnap story, of sorts, but this time without
Conan, because he's in bed with a serious cold. Conan was supposed to
meet the Junior Detective League at Amy's house to play karuta,
a Japanese card game, but, when Conan is video chatting with them on
his cellphone, a young boy knock's at the door of Amy's department –
screaming that there are "bad
people"
he doesn't know in his apartment. Masao is a boy with a reputation in
the apartment building for playing pranks and telling lies, but cries
he doesn't know the man and woman who introduce themselves as his
parents. And he's dragged back into his apartment. Conan tells them
to call the police, but they decide to investigate Amy's neighbors
for themselves.
At
the heart of the story is a coded message Masao surreptitiously sends
under the nose of the culprits to the Junior Detective League over a
game of karuta,
but this is one of those language-based codes. So practically
unsolvable for most non-Japanese speaking readers. Not a bad story,
but a pretty minor one.
Sadly,
the last chapter is the beginning of new story that will continue in
volume 73 and the premise is intriguing, to say the least! Richard
Moore is hired to protect the matriarch of the Hoshina family, Rukako
Hoshina, who's obsessed with clocks and the ancestral manor house is
ticking to the brim with clocks – even has a clock tower. Rukako
Hoshina received a death threat accusing her disrespecting "the
flow of time"
and she'll die at the time she "came
into this world."
The letter was signed with the moniker, The Guardian of Time. I can't
wait to read the rest of the story!
So,
all things considered, this volume can be summed up as an average
entry with only one good story and the conclusion of the London-case
as its sole standout moment. I don't think it helped either that it
ended with a teaser of a case that already promises to be much better
than the three complete cases that preceded it. Oh, well, here's
hoping for the best in the next volume!
No comments:
Post a Comment