To Be Hero X

Title:To Be Hero X
Overall:Unevaluated
Keywords: , , , , ,
Notables: MIYANO Mamoru
Lin Ling is a minor employee at the advertising firm that handles public relations for the hero known as Nice. After being fired Lin Ling encounters Nice on a rooftop--and Nice promptly leaps to his death. Nice's manager notices that Lin Ling looks a lot like Nice and might serve as a double to hide his unseemly fate. In this world a Hero's extraordinary powers come from the trust and admiration of the people. 'If the people think you are Nice, you are!" she says. But Lin Ling/Nice discover that being a superhero is not all it's cracked up to be.

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Unevaluated Stretch [series:4883#628]
(Four episodes watched):

'This show might just be a winner!' I said to myself while watching episode one. I was surprised by the 3D animation but quickly got used to it. There was a sort of sly, understated humor to the plot (if I'm not imagining things) which left me smiling throughout the show and laughing out loud at times. Lin Ling (this seems to be a Chinese series) is drafted to serve as a hero and quickly adapts to the job. The plot was deeper than most, with Lin Ling's philosophy of just what a hero is and the threat at one point that he may give in to the dark impulses that make a person a villain rather than a hero. The fact that the original Nice killed himself and what happens to Moon, his girlfriend/heroine partner, suggests that there's something funny going on in the Hero business. I wish the rules by which Heroes operate had been made more clear, but with a little research it seems that this show is a sequel of an earlier one that I didn't watch. But if it's as good as this one is looking, then perhaps I will.

'This is ----ing awesome" is what I said to myself at the end of episode two. The shocking fate of Moon that we were shown at the end of episode one turns out to be a dream or something, but that's OK because what actually becomes of her was clever and amusing. She has figured out that this is not the same Nice as she has known for three years, and at any rate their relationship was nothing but an act to please the fans. Their domineering manager, 'Miss J', demands that they come to some sort of understanding and continue to play their parts. Lin Ling/Nice comes up with a tragic end for Moon that will involve his own archenemy, but it turns out that this person has lost a good deal of his mind and won't just be pretending to try to kill Nice. Meanwhile, 'Enlighter', who was behind the fracas in episode one, has figured out what has happened in regards to the true identity of Nice. The plot of this show races forward farther in one episode than most do it three or six. I was left giggling at the promise of more of this premium grade entertainment on the way. This is looking like my favorite show of the season.

Episode three wasn't as good, however. Nice's manager's next goal is for him to break into the top ten Heroes, which will require unseating 'Firm Man', an ex-fireman (I was amused by the manager's cynical remark about 'what does even more harm than violence?'). But it was easy to guess the identity of his nemesis 'Wolf Girl' (each Hero seems to have an anti-hero), and I didn't get why this girl would turn on the man who once saved her life. And why did it matter so much if a statue of Firm Man was destroyed? The first two episodes had seemed to be brilliantly thought-out, but this one didn't make a whole lot of sense. Thankfully, episode four was more like one and two. Enlighter has somehow found Moon and threatens to kill her if Nice won't come and fight him on his terms. Nice wants to do so, but his fans urge him not to take the bait (don't they care about Moon?) which drains him of his superpowers. He goes to meet Enlighter nevertheless, and takes a brutal beating until the fact that the fight is being covered live allows him to regain his abilities. Lin Ling is forced to come clean with the public about his real relationship to the original Nice, however. And Moon's 'rescue' does not do her much good for very long. One thought that occured to me: who is the young but white-haired guy who gets more time than Nice in the OP sequence?

Last updated Saturday, May 10 2025. Created Wednesday, April 16 2025.

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