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April 797/488. Since Yang saw right through Reinhardâs plan and warned Bucock in advance about the impending coup dâetat, Bucock is able to stâhaha no just kidding, Bucock does literally nothing and Reinhardâs plan goes off without a hitch. Whoops. What Yang somehow failed to predict is that the leader of the newly established National Salvation Military Council is none other than Admiral Dwight Greenhill, aka Fredericaâs dad. (Hey, we told you LoGH dads suckâŠ) The one useful thing Bucock managed to do was sneak some paperwork through that gives Yang legal authority to quell any hypothetical military coups, so with that in place to ease his conscience Yang mobilizes his fleet toward Heinessen. Meanwhile, Reinhard and Kircheis stand on the bridge of the Brunhilde holding hands for long enough that the other admirals must have felt they were intruding.
The Yang Fleet
âI canât imagine the Yang fleet without Lt Greenhill. Just like I canât imagine the Yang fleet without Rear Admiral Cazellnu or Commodore Schenkopp. Lt Cdr Poplan. Admiral Attenborough. Lt Cdr Konev. Rear Admiral Murai. And so on, many many people. If anyone were missing, it wouldnât work. Admiral Yang must understand that as well as I do. I know this could be called sentimental, but for me the Yang fleet isnât simply an organization. Iserlohn is home, and I think a home should hold a family.â
âJulianâs Iserlohn Diary, p. 284
In the animation of the season one ED (which incidentally is one of my personal absolute favorite things in the show) we see Yang and Julian moving through the stars as though on some cosmic conveyor belt while other members of the fleet pass by and greet them. Weâve watched this scene over a dozen times by now, playing out behind the closing credits of almost every episode, a whimsical vision of the group that would come to live together on Iserlohn.
...Or is it so whimsical?
Near the beginning of this episode, set to an instrumental arrangement of the opening theme (the ED itself would have been too on-the-nose, I guess?), the ED animation comes to life on the walkways of Iserlohn: Julian and Yang moving not through the stars but through the fortress, as first Dusty and then Poplan and Konev chat with Julian, under the smile of Frederica and the disapproving glare of Murai. The sequence culminates with the arrival of the Cazellnus, and we have all the clues to know why this is so important: Finally, for the first time, the entire cast of the ED is united on Iserlohn. The family of the Yang fleet is complete.
The Cazellnus
As heralded by this walkway sequence, the focus of this episode is the personalities and relationships that make up the fleet on Iserlohn. So letâs delve a bit into this ragtag cast of characters that Yangâs chosen to assemble, starting with the Cazellnu family.Â
Total screentime for Hortence ticks up from one second to two! This is for our own protection: If you stare at Hortence Cazellnu for more than an instant at a time, you fall under her thrall and your mental faculties are forever compromised. Thatâs canon* and explains a lot about Cazellnu.
*See diary quote below...
Aww so cute, Julian playing with Charlotte and her little sister the unfathomable hell-demon whose quest to enslave humanity can only be thwarted by discovering and uttering her true name.....
âYang kindly calls me a âmaster of cleaning and tidying.â From his level it might seem that way, but from my point of view Mrs. Cazellnu seems like a âwhite witch.â [...] When I said this in the morning, Yang nodded emphatically. âThat must be true. Sheâs a white witch, and her husband is a dark wizard. After he lost a magical duel, he became her servant forever.ââ
âJulianâs Iserlohn Diary, p. 107
Iâll talk more about Hortence and the dynamics of the Cazellnu family when we do finally get to see her for more than one second at a time; for now letâs focus on Alex Cazellnu himself, whose only real role in this episode is to insult Yang at every opportunity. Ahh the bonds of friendship.
Yang claims to be excited that Cazellnuâs there mainly because he can push mountains of paperwork off onto himâCazellnuâs official post is as some sort of manager of supplies and personnel; but I imagine that for Yang, whoâs been thrust into this position of authority that he never really sought, thereâs something comforting about filling his inner circle with people who donât treat him with reverence. Cazellnu is an old friend who, in some ways, sees Yang more clearly than most people do.
Isnât there a proverb, âchildren and fools tell the truthâ...?
Schenkopp
Hey, isnât that what I said about Yang when I first introduced him? Schenkopp must be reading Icebergs!
Like Cazellnu, Schenkopp has no qualms speaking his mind to Yang; unlike Cazellnu, who sees Yang as more or less an open book, Schenkopp sees him as a puzzle to be solved. Heâs appointed himself Yangâs amateur psychoanalyst, and prods him on issues ranging from Fredericaâs feelings to his political aspirations (or lack thereof) to his wishes for Julianâs future.Â
True to form, Yang responds to this implication that Frederica has feelings for him beyond her role as his adjutant by completely ignoring it and deflecting the conversation to how Schenkopp sees him.
While later on it will be mainly Cazellnu's role to question Yang's decisions about his personal life, it's Schenkopp who questions his political and strategic decisions. Yang's discomfort with the direction of the conversation is very clear on his face.
I've touched briefly before on the fact that Yang is projecting his own feeling of being trapped into the military onto Julian, and that's what Schenkopp is accusing him of here.
Poplan and Konev
âTheir personalities seem to be really different, but every time I catch sight of them theyâre together, so I guess theyâre close.â
âJulianâs Iserlohn Diary, p. 20
We only get a brief glimpse of Poplan and Konev in this episode, but thereâs a ton of character in this short exchange: from their synchronized body language, to Konevâs affectionate smirk as he watches Poplan talk to Julian, to Konevâs roasting Poplan using syntactical terms that Poplan doesnât seem to totally understand. (Konevâs wordplay and love of language is a recurring theme of his character and I totally love it.) Weâve observed their closeness already when Konev calms Poplan down during a stressful battle; here we learn that Konev also does not hesitate to teasingly call Poplan out on his bullshitâin this case, attributing to Julian his own desire for action.
Julian
I agree Julian, that is a really great assessment of the strategic situation.
While Yang is obviously acting as the teacher here (and equally obviously enjoying it), he talks to Julian without condescension; even pointing out the flaws of his original suggestion feels like a sign of respect for him as a serious student of tactics.
The transition from wide-eyed adulation to a much more serious âwhy yes indeed that does appear strategically soundâ face is amazing.
Of course, despite including Julian as a real participant in a conversation about the upcoming campaign, Yang simultaneously still treats him like a kid, ruffling his hair at the end of this conversation just like he did when Julian promised to protect him two episodes ago.
Like a kid or possibly like a puppy, one or the other.
Also mental note: Do not suggest to Julian that Yang might not actually win an impending battleâŠ
âIt pisses me off. Despite flattering him with names like âMiracle Yangâ and âYang the Magician,â when push comes to shove they donât show faith in him. I was so angry, I almost forgot my crucial errand of buying teabags.â
âJulianâs Iserlohn Diary, p. 289
Frederica
TFW youâve just learned your dad has forcibly overthrown a democratic government.
Itâs a rough episode for Frederica. From what we know she seems pretty close to her dad, and perhaps partly because of that she assumes that his role as leader of the coup will throw suspicion on her loyalty.
Lost in translation is the fact that she changes her first-person pronoun, correcting her initial watashi to the more formal/humble shoukan (ć°ćź), which emphasizes her formal role here as a military subordinate.
Of course, Yang is way too practical to punish someone for something her father is doing (especially someone whose job saves him a hell of a lot of work), and as both Julian and Schenkopp predict he has no intention of firing her.
We donât get to see much inside Fredericaâs mind about her reaction to her fatherâs role in the coup, beyond her initial shock; what we do see is overwhelming relief and happiness when she isnât fired. Between her father and Yang, itâs clear where her current loyalties lie.
Interestingly, Admiral Greenhill himself gets this wrong: He assumes that Yang will have fired Frederica and confined her on Iserlohn, which is part of his rationalization to himself for sending the 11th fleet to fight Yangâthey wonât be attacking Frederica because she wonât be there.
...Whoops.
It seems like a minor detail, but Admiral Greenhill failing to predict Yangâs reaction is actually a really nice touch to emphasize the themeâas expressed by Julianâs diary passage that I opened this post withâthat thereâs something a bit different and more personal about how Yang runs his fleet.Â
Stray Tidbits
I hope youâve enjoyed the exclusive Icebergs sneak peek at Julianâs Iserlohn Diary! As I mentioned, the diary, like the novels, is not officially relevant to our analysis, but I really love that the anime team used it to flesh out the dialogue and characterizations in both episode 17 and this episodeâitâs more evidence of just how well they did their homework. (And hey, if you want to read the whole diary in English, write to Haikasoru and tell them you know someone whoâd love to translate it for them.....)
I never found Admiral Greenhill especially interesting through the whole season so far, but I really love the closing scene of this episodeâsomehow it gives me chills every time. Acting to minimize harm in a situation with no good options is a pervasive theme of the show; and as Greenhill tries to explain to his wifeâs grave, he believes that if someone more hotheaded and extremist were leading this coup, even more damage would be done. Itâs an interesting parallel with Yangâs own motives for staying in the military despite opposing the war.
I love how totally useless Bucock was. LoGH is often quite subversive in its plotting, as weâve discussed, and the anticlimax of Yang going to great lengths to warn Bucock about the coup in advance only to have that be irrelevant is both hilarious and realistic.
This guy makes a valid point.
Might that âsomeoneâ be...an octopus?? Come on Hidive subbers, why the censoring?
Next time you shake hands in farewell with someone, try just not letting go for exactly seven seconds. And also look at them with exactly Reinhardâs expression here. Do it. Report back.
You have been blessed with Beautiful Smirking Schenkopp. He will bring you luck in all of your endeavors today.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Anya is LIVE right now
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Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming