princess tutu, again
rrrrrrr reading jetwolfās tutu liveblog and it just annoys me so much
like, in some of jetās liveblogs, her takes are perfect and flawless (THE OWL HOUSE), but this one?Ā this one runs right into my PET PEEVE
something that Tutu does which FOR EXAMPLE UTENA WHICH I DISLIKE doesnāt really is that it doesnāt ever let out of its sight that in addition to the mystical supernatural lives the characters are also leading mundane-ish lives as ballet students
note that this version of their life is not ACTUALLY mundane in any way. itās deeply intertwined with the supernatural part (like Mythoās entire unexplained presence and presumably lack of aging, however Rue and Akiru appeared there, the whole animal people thing) and itās also kind of batshit in its own unique way (the CAT MARRIAGE)
and while the āmain narrativeā centers on just Rue, Mytho, Akiru and Fakir, with victims of the week coming and going, with Fakirās father and Edel and her kid and the Raven and Clockula in supplementary roles, the āschool narrativeā involves SO MANY CHARACTERS, who have their own drama going on non-stop
Ahiruās friends who are LIVING FOR THE DRAMA. They are not the āout of unvierseā audience or stand-ins for it! They are certainly PARALLEL to it though because they are... teenage girls who are very into things? Like, this is happening in-universe, and in-universe itās important TO THEM. Ahiru lives very much on the periphery of the school narrative, for all that they donāt really need her to actually do much of anything to write a PASSIONATE TORRID ROMANCE NARRATIVE about her and Fakir and Mytho and whatnot in their own heads. This is different from your regular superhero / magical girl secret identity scenario, where the mundane life tends to also end up with the main character in the center of events, be itĀ because theyāre a snoopy assertive queen as their personality (early Usagi, Cornelia and Irma in WITCH, etc), because they are just an interesting person things tend to happen around (Marinette, Hay Lin in WITCH) or quite despite their best efforts (Peter Parker if Iām remembering right, Usagi when Chibiusa first appears). Ahiru periodically ends up somewhere close to the center of mundane events, like when Rue chose her for a dance partner early on to show off how good she is, but for the most part the mundane drama exists entirely independent of her.
This is important not because it symbolizes something about the main narrative, about the in-universe understanding of a āstoryā that Mytho is a prince in. No, it establishes the outer layer - that that āstoryā is a story in a world that is, in itself, also interesting. That the people TELLING the story and HEARING it also have their own shit going on, and that shit is no less fascinating, and frankly MORE interesting, given Jet is completely not wrong about Mytho being a particularlyĀ flavorless graham cracker.
The story-story and related events (all the Raven drama) playing out is important not so much in itself as by how much it impacts the actual people living in this world. Lily, Pike, Anteaterina, Cat-sensei, the dance troupe with the electric eel leader, Freya, Femio, everyone - the people who do not come from Drosselmeyerās stories, who have their own stories going on but who get drawn into this one, pulled into it, derailed because of how much bullshit is being, quite artificially, stirred up by it.
From this flows the understanding that Fakir, Ahiru, Rue, hypothetically in their imagination also Mytho - they are, in this context, āreal peopleā too, and the story-story again matters not so much for its own sake as for how it impacts THEM. Fakir was the only one who cared about the storyās own premise - that the princeās heart being broken is what seals the raven - but even that was abandoned when the going got good. The story-story is completely unrelated to their goals and motivations: Ahiru wants to be someone who saves the prince, and also to meet the imaginary prince she has drawn up in her imagination (quite possibly not without good reason, but still for herself and for her own sake); Fakir wants to prove heās a good person, to have a duty, to be the knight, but also to not die and to be able to fix things; Rue wants... a lot of things on different levels and on different levels of awareness which is a fascinating thing with her, but for one thing Iād very much call out that as Kraehe in the first half she very much doesnāt want her father to get unsealed.
None of this is in any way related to the original plot - we donāt even find out what the Raven did that pitted him against Mytho, I donāt think. Right now heās the bad guy because heās opposing the protagonistsā CURRENT motivations - because heās trying to corrupt Mytho, because heās being abusive towards Rue, neither of which has any point of reference in the original narrative where thereās no ballet school and no crow princess.
Drosselmeyer only cares about the ballet school narrative to the degree that itās relevant to the āmainā narrative. Heās not getting distracted by asking what the fuck is Femioās deal, he has zero interest in Cat-sensei or Lily and Pike, he seems to have entirely failed to pick up on Ahiruās crush on Rue. This is a limitation in his perspective - he doesnāt care about the characters as much as the showās audience is being pushed to, he doesnāt see as much of them, and he doesnāt really follow all the... supplementary motivations and opportunities they have. Fakirās struggle as a beginning writer and his descendant exists on the ballet school level, and so for a while Drosselmeyer fails to pick up on it entirely.
The ballet school level is, to get back to what annoys me about Jetās analysis, also the level on which Uzura appears. Jet asks about her like Fakirās father making her has to tie in to the main narrative, but it doesnāt!
In the main narrative, Edel was a literal plot device who then went out of control, developed her own agency and ended up saving Fakir and guiding Ahiru and Mytho to him at the end of the first season.
In the ballet school narrative, Edel was a person who was a friend and then died / sacrificed herself for Fakir, but she was a construct, so maybe she can be rebuilt?... She sacrificed herself to save Fakir, OF COURSE his father is going to try to fix her! For reasons completely unrelated to anything Drosselmeyer is interested in, itās just a... human with emotions thing to do.
Note that the main narrative doesnāt feature humans with emotions, not really. The crow princess is just an inexplicable antagonist opposing Tutu even though her goals should technically align (the whole heart shard dance shows this well with how much Kraehe flip flops on what sheās actually doing there - her conflicted feelings about the Raven explain a lot of it, but those belong much more on the ballet school level, Drosselmeyer never acknolwedges those in his own commentary), Fakir is a knight protecting the prince from whatever would be the most dramatic for him to throw himself at (first Tutu, then Kraehe when she establishes herself as a force capable of opposing Tutu and the knight both), Tutu is supposed to confess her love and vanish into a speck of light - we never really find out what her context in the original narrative even was, we just know she was a minor side character, and we know Ahiruās motivations go far beyond Tutuās motivations (see also: her crush on Rue). Mytho is barely more than a doll, but thatās not special: ALL of their roles are exactly as cardboard. The only thing that makes Mytho special is that he doesnāt get an actual person who grew up in the regular world to āplayā him, he stars as himself. Fakir might be a āreincarnationā of the knight but he was born in Ballettown as a regular kid; Rue was literally kidnapped into the story; Ahiru was a duck of all things before getting recruited to be Tutu. Mytho though, Mytho comes directly from the myth.
His ballet school level identity is a cardboard cutout, and that does 0 to stop drama springing around him, and thatās also important: much like how Rueās and Ahiruās and Fakirās motivations are ultimately about themselves as they exist on the ballet school level (Fakir the ballet school student wants to be a hero, Rue the ballet school student wants to continue her ordinary life with as little shenanigans as possible, Ahiru the ballet school student wants to be a hero and to dance with the prince), the ballet school exclusive castās motivations are about themselves too. It doesnāt matter to them that Mytho is cardboard any more than it matters to them that Fakir has the whole knight thing going on or that Ahiru is a duck. They have no way of even knowing those things about them. All they have is the public persona, and thatās perfectly enough for them to incorporate Mytho and entourage into their own personal stories. Pike wanted to rescue Mytho from the tragic story she told inside her own head; Lily wants fuel for the bloodthirsty drama non-stop broadcast on her personal gossip channel; other characters want... a variety of things, often confusing and nonsensical, and all those things exist utterly independently of other people even as they incorporate them.
To try to fold the ballet school narrative into the main narrative the way Jet is trying to do is missing the point quite a bit. That level is SEPARATE and DOESNāT MAP and thatās THE POINT. That the role of the prince fits other people better than Mytho does not mean Mytho is not the prince in the āmainā narrative because that is the story Drosselmeyer is telling and he DOESNāT CARE that other stories also exist and are going on. That they are still going on regardless is an important part of what the show is doing!
Like, the reason Drosselmeyer is a villain is BECAUSE heās pushing his own story, his own interest, on all these people whose lives outside of it he cares not one whit for. Heās engaged with Tutuās suffering; the death of Fakirās parents goes completely beneath his radar. Heās not evil because heās a writer who enjoys tragedy, but because heās a writer whoās pushing his tragedy onto people who do actually exist and have lives independent of his fiction.
Thatās why the ballet school is so weird and dramatic: for all the cardboard nature of Drosselmeyerās story, itās still intriguing and ignites imagination, so it takes Anteaterina, Cat-sensei and Femio to really meaningfully compete. A more mundane setting would have 0 chance to actually catch the audienceās attention, and catching the audienceās attention is important here, getting them to pay attention to and have emotions (even if those emotions are mostly confusion) about things Drosselmeyer DOESNāT.
Jet is wrong )=
P.S. itās worth noting that the ballet school narrative not only has its own fantasy/supernatural elements, but that itās also a false/inserted one for Ahiru: she is originally a duck, being a human tween attending a ballet school is as artifical for her as it is for Mytho. And still the ballet school feels so much more real than Drosselmeyerās story - because it doesnāt have a dictating overarching narrative, itās just comprised of lots of people bringing their own personal drama to the potluck
P.P.S. Jet points out how everyone in the āmainā story is never called out by name, but only by their designations - āthe prince in the storyā etc. Jet thinks it might be because the narrative is playing silly buggers with who is who, and I think thatās because of the ballet school vs Drosselmeyerās story separation. The prince in Drosselmeyerās story is not named Mytho, he is not named anything. Mytho is the name he gets when he drops into Ballettown and is found by tiny Fakir, and he is an emotionless husk of a person but heās still a person and gets a name, unlike the story, in which he might have a whole heroic personality that-we-are-just-not-currently-privy-to but the whole thing is held together by snot, shoelaces and Drosselmeyerās bad writing.










