Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Kamen Rider Zi-O Review: Changing An Unstoppable Fate

Yeah, yeah, I know I'm way behind the fandom on this particular season but hear me out: The last rider show (other than Amazons) I finished was Gaim back when it first aired so I figured I was due for another one after so long. I was curious about what I was hearing regarding Zi-O back when it was airing so I thought I'd give it a shot. I'm also going to talk about the ending so be warned...SPOILERS AHEAD! Without further adieu: Rejoice for the birth of a new king!
Premise: Sougo Tokiwa is an ordinary high school student whose one dream in life is to be king. One day, he is approached by a girl from the future who tells him that he will indeed become one. The catch? He will be the king whose rise leads the world to destruction and his iron-fisted rule, Oma Zi-O. On top of that, a man from the future is trying to put an end to him. As if all that wasn't enough to fill the life of a wannabe king, some other mysterious people are also intent on screwing with the past to try and change the future for their own gain.

Characters: 
Sougo was honestly kind of meh for me early on but I actually grew to really like him as the show progressed. He is the usual optimistic type of hero that modern rider tends to use. At first he took on Zi-O's powers with the intent to use them to become king like he always dreamed. Naturally, his tune changes as the show goes on and once he sees the future Tsukuyomi and Geiz say he will create, it is devastating to him to the point where he is willing to give up his dream altogether so no one will suffer by his hand. It was great seeing him come to terms with that and fully develop his own idea of what a king should do in order to protect his friends.
Geiz is the man from the future seeking to stop Oma Zi-O's rise even if it means potentially putting Sougo down. He tries to be this really stoic man with a mission character but the man gets rather goofy. At one point, he outright tried to stab Sougo with a piece of bread. As you'd expect he eventually grows to value Sougo as a friend and a person. After Sougo discovers that he will indeed destroy the world one day, Geiz swears to Sougo that he will put him down when that day comes so Sougo can't hurt anyone. He even admits at one point that he was rather eager to see what kind of future this Sougo would create. For some reason he gets a few secondary rider watches which is weird because he pretty much just uses the watches of the main riders like Sougo does.
Tsukuyomi's goal is to stop Oma's rise by monitoring and guiding Sougo so he doesn't become Oma Zi-O. Other than that, she doesn't have any memory beyond the day she joined the fight against Oma Zi-O. Without getting into that little mystery (gotta keep some things hidden in this review), her plot line is sort of what you think it would be. I find it fascinating that at about the halfway point both she and Geiz ended up swapping positions on whether to kill Sougo or change him and it felt pretty natural given how his powers were escalating. Eventually tho, she realizes there isn't much point in worrying about Sougo going dark and goes right back to being on his side.
Keisuke Watanabe is fantastic as Woz and he honestly turns in the best performance in the show. Woz's enthusiasm is downright infectious to the point where around ep 15, I was doing the pose and mouthing the line myself as he does it to the point where it kind of got engraved in my muscle memory. The character just loves what he does and the actor gets that across perfectly. I can absolutely see why he became a meme during Zi-O's run. The man is utterly dedicated to Sougo and the arrival of Oma Day even if it ultimately doesn't turn out like he originally thought it would. His existential crisis in the Hibiki episode was great. The man was devastated by the thought of not being able to celebrate his overlord's birthday properly.
This show pretty much confirms a feeling I've had about Tsukasa since Kamen Rider Taisen. He is much more enjoyable outside of his own show. Something about Tsukasa's schtick just irritated me during Decade itself. He just feels different in his appearances out of Decade. I used to think he was just a dick but now...well...he is still a dick but a more charismatic dick. It helps that the actor likes the role a lot. Its rather fitting that the last rider to have to gather rider powers was there to see the Heisei era out. I'm curious to return to Decade itself at some point to see if how much I like him now changes how I'll see his show.

Villains: 
The main villains in the show are the Time Jackers and like Geiz and Tsukuyomi, they want to stop Oma's rise. However, they want to replace him with a king of their own choosing, hence the creation of the Another Riders. They're kept pretty mysterious for the most part and that honestly might have been a mistake. The show never really goes into much about Uhr and Hora other than that Schwartz plucked them from another timeline. They also don't seem to understand why Schwartz can do things they can't with their powers either after they find out he can grant people the powers they have. Meaning, Schwartz might have granted them their powers and messed with their memories. With that being said, they're alright villains. Schwartz however is the heavy-hitter of the group and the man with the plan. His actor is great and handles the power hungry maniacal bad guy part extremely well once Schwartz gets to cut loose.
Keisuke Watanabe is one of the few actors I can gush about twice in the same review. He plays a dual role for an entire arc. Granted his other role is an alternate timeline version of Woz with all his mannerisms/enthusiasm and a really neat sinister undertone to him. This version of Woz (White Woz) is a supporter of Geiz thanks to a shift causing an alternate timeline to come into being. While he claims the new timeline is said to be a paradise, White Woz himself pretty much implies that its only preferable to Oma's timeline for a chosen few. The implication gives off the sense that if Oma's timeline is pure chaos, Geiz Revive's timeline is more on the pure order side of things.

The Miraiders: There are 4 riders from alternate timelines that show up in Zi-O: Shinobi, Quiz, Kikai, and Ginga. They're really neat what-ifs that fit perfectly well in a time travel show and I love them overall as a concept. Though two of them are meh and one is mostly only interesting to me because he got a miniseries during Zi-O's run. Fittingly, their suits are also made from reused parts of other Heisei rider suits. Three of the four are also portrayed by past Sentai actors.
The one who is only interesting to me because of the special would be Shinobi. As the name implies, he is a ninja-based Rider. I like his design but after seeing his miniseries, I kinda wished I hadn't. Mostly because it was basically a 3-part episode of a show already in progress. So it introduces some stuff that never actually gets resolved in the miniseries because we'll probably never see the character again. It also says that they passed a law called the Ninja Act as a way solve humanity's environmental impact...by teaching people to throw fireballs for some reason. Its fine for what it is just, I dunno, it teases too much about Shinobi's world even tho Toei likely won't make an actual show for him in 2022. I would've preferred an hour long done-in-one special or movie instead of an episode in 3 parts of a show already in progress. He is played by StarNinger from Ninninger.
Quiz is the rider of 2040 and he is easily my favorite even though I'm not a fan of his design or powers. His helmet is a Ghost helmet, his chestpiece is from an Exaid Rideplayer suit and I think the rest of his suit is too. His powers are just weird and I'm not sure why they went with this design and motif as his quiz show schtick doesn't really have anything to do with his character. The writing for his character is fantastic. He is a man who can't let go of the father he never met. His story is one of seeking closure claiming its so his mother can find peace when really, he needs to know why his father left just as much as she does. I would've loved to get a mini-series for him just to see what his world was like. He is played by Red Buster from Gobusters.
Kikai is rather meh as a character and I can't really think of much else to say about him. He basically exists for two reasons: 1. To show Sougo's powers are becoming strong enough to bring new riders into existence and 2. White Woz's plan to try to end Oma's timeline requires 3 Ridewatches that shouldn't exist. His suit is a retooled Guardian suit from Build. Unlike Shinobi and Quiz, his actor previously portrayed a Sentai villain, Zamigo from Lupinranger vs Patranger. Kikai's human outfit is also one big Kikaider homage. He is pretty much the only future rider (except for Shinobi in his mini-series) whose world is actually expanded on.
Ginga is just pure power incarnate and from way in the future, thats about it. The show doesn't really go into much of anything about him. The closest thing the show gets to saying something about him is one character speculating that he might the universe's counterpoint to the power Zi-O has (Zi-O having the power over time and Ginga having power drawn from the cosmos). He is the heavy-hitting big threat that requires the heroes and the Time Jackers to work together which I suppose is all he really needs to be. His helmet is from a Mage suit from Wizard and the rest of it is from Fourze Meteor Fusion States. I'm really not big on his design though I do like the ufo hat. He is voiced by Tomokazu Sugita (Kivat) which makes him right at home in the Another Kiva episodes of Zi-O.

The Ending: I'm talking about the ending here because it fascinates me. SPOILERS AHEAD! The show gives this feeling that Oma Day (the day when Oma Zi-O ends the world) is inevitable...and to my surprise, it actually was. Oma's rise could be delayed, it could be sped up, but it could not be stopped. It had to happen and the best case scenario was to change Sougo just enough to shift it to less of an apocalypse and more of a rebirth for the world and multiverse. The ending winds up being less about trying to stop Sougo from outright becoming Oma Zi-O and more about him deciding to use that power to save those precious to him instead of using it as a way to rule over others. In the end, it all came down to what kind of king Sougo wanted to be.

Final Thoughts: It takes Zi-O about 13 or so episodes to get going and after that, it gets good and I had a lot of fun with it. Once the show finds its footing, it becomes an enjoyable anniversary show. It homages elements and themes of what it was tributing in the first few episodes, follows up some past loose threads, gives closure to some shows that needed it, and most importantly for an anniversary: It made me want to see shows I hadn't seen before. As a matter of fact, the Ghost episodes made me want to revisit the show and give it another chance (which I do plan on doing at some point). It even made me want to check out Kabuto's first few episodes (that one didn't go so well). While not one of my absolute favorites, I enjoyed it quite a bit. This show pretty much managed to change my opinion of Shirakura.