Garden of Sinners
A series of 7 movies, each between 1 and 2 hours long, plus a 30 minutes epilogue, based on a series of novels by prolific fantasy author Kinoko Nasu.
Nasu is probably one of the most interesting modern fantasy writers. His most succesful work definitely being Fate/Stay Night and the vast multimedia franchise it eventually spun off into but his library, and by extension his greater connected universe, also include the Tsukihime series, Witch on the Holy Night, DDD and...well, Garden of Sinners is where it started.
GoS is certainly a freshman's work in many regards. What would later become his writing trademarks are definitely already present. Urban fantasy, supernatural romance, rambling philosophical diatribes and a complex cosmology, here for the most part only hinted at, that makes you wonder how a single guy can even come up with all of it. The execution, however, is .. less than consistent and taken as a whole, the Garden of Sinners series is a rollercoaster of quality whose lows ultimately outweigh its highs.
So, Garden of Sinners follows, in a non-chronological order, the relationship between idealistic young man Mikiya Kokuto and mysterious young woman Shiki Ryougi. After becoming fascinated with her in high school, they both end up working at a sort of supernatural detective agency run by chain smoking sorceress Touko Aozaki where they pursue a variety of supernatural mysteries and gradually explore Shiki's and Touko's own secrets as they investigate various mysterious murders.
I could go over it on an episode by episode basis but frankly, I'm too lazy. So I'm just going to say: Garden of Sinners builds up to its first 2 hour movie, where it peaks, and then just sort of declines until really hitting rock bottom in its final movie. The first four movies go back and forth between episodic mysteries, one of which hinged on a... pretty stupid premise and looser, more slice of life episodes that elaborate on Shiki and Mikiya's background, which are actually somewhat charming. It culminates in the two hour Paradox Spiral movie which is far and away as good as it gets.
Paradox Spiral, aside from offering a more substantial, more thoroughly explored mystery and some very sophisticated visual direction and editing, is Nasu's first work to establish what would become consistent aspects of his approach to mages and magic... pardon, "mage craft" and builds a mystery out of it that feels like a satisfying climax to all that's been built up. Set in a cursed apartment complex created as a sinister experiment by two evil mages, both Nasu and the production team at studio Ufotable go all out to create an over the top urban fantasy spectacle, backed with a loose understanding of daoist and hermetic mythology, that feels like something Suda51 would write if he really got into Harry Potter.
It's not exactly very smart, its morals and philosophies are still an exercise of saying as little as possible in as flowery and wordy a way as possible, but it has very fun action and dynamic direction and memorable dialogue. "Magi are an enemy to logic", we are told. They sure are, Nasu. They sure are.
And that's where the series really should have ended. What follows are what's effectively a filler episode at a mage school with a weird incest angle (don't ask) and the finale which... boy, does the whole thing collapse there. Episode 7, "Studies in Murder Part 2" is where Nasu's writing drops the ball and his lack of understanding of topics like medicine, criminology and drugs that reared their head from the very beginning are starting to become an active detriment while he's trying to compensate for how undercooked his philosophical musings on violence and murder are by mulling them over, over and over again, trying to bring out a profundity they simply don't contain. And ending on a note that makes it hard for me to see what their point even was.
It would have been nice if the ending had brought it all together but it did the exact opposite, it made it all come apart. Where Garden of Sinners, at its best, was a fun and atmospheric watch, its finale just fails to formulate a sensible thesis statement. And then there's the epilogue, a 30 minute conversation between the two leads on a snowy roadside which... well, it's another flowery philosophical/metaphysical ramble. I feel like I would have been okay with it if the ending it followed would have been better but it didn't feel warranted. I actually enjoy some of Nasu's overwrought diatribes, although they work a lot better in writing but at that point this story has just lost me.
If the series hat ended at Paradox Spiral I would have probably been overall positive on it, but then it kept going, right into a brick wall. Nasu went on to write things that were overall a lot better than this. It's very well animated and I enjoyed the overall mood but it just didn't amount to anything overall satisfying.