Episode 7: コーネリアを撃て
Attack Cornelia!






Oh man, the opening to this one...I've always been impressed with it, and thought it actually would've been a good way to start the series. I was showing Geass to some people and they weren't really interested in much before this; this was the first scene where they actually paid attention and found it moving. A big part of its brilliance is its economical storytelling; it says so much about Charles, about Lelouch, about the nobility, about what happened and what was to come, all in the span of maybe two minutes.

For the sake of completeness, I will summarize: Lelouch, at the age of nine, walks in to see his father. We hear the nobility whispering amongst themselves but see them as still, the picture of reverence. Lelouch calls out his father and asks him why he didn't protect his mother or go to see Nunnally in the hospital. Emperor Charles zi Britannia doesn't care much for that, and tells Lelouch that as long as he relies on Charles for what he needs to live then he is dead. Charles then banishes Lelouch and Nunnally to Japan.

We start into the episode itself with Cornelia promoting Suzaku because she seems to think that he may have an ulterior motive for being a part of ASEEC, and she would prefer to win without the Numbers' help. We also get a brief glimpse of her motivation through Euphie, who recalls Cornelia saying that only those who serve in the military have the right to rule.

Cecile gives Suzaku a pep talk on the value of friendship and then it's over to Ashford, where Shirley confronts Kallen about her "relationship" with Lelouch, which at this point has been entirely built up in Shirley's mind. We then see Milly being pressured into an arranged marriage by her mother.

Cornelia is planning an attack and notices that the conditions are similar to those in Shinjuku. She decides she's going to use this to lure out Zero...I think we can already tell - certainly with the whole of this episode taken into account - that she's leaps and bounds beyond Clovis strategy-wise. Then...
C.C.: Don't do it, it's a trap
Lelouch: I know, but I'll win anyway
C.C.: *gun* You're not going anywhere
Lelouch: *gun to own head* Yes I am, now move (this scene is actually a fascinating look into Lelouch's mind. We see how Charles' words and outlook have really affected Lelouch; despite rejecting the idea that the weak should be abandoned, he never challenged the idea that living a normal life is the same as being dead. Although he only thinks that way about himself, it seems...he never begrudges anybody else for living a normal life, and indeed seems to encourage that for them. Highlight for spoilers: You see it in the way he regards Kallen and her mother, how he thinks of Nunnally and Suzaku and Shirley, etc. On top of this, he even argues with C.C. in R2 15 when she tells him that simply existing/avoiding death is not the same as living...which is the whole reason she understands when Lelouch said he felt dead in the first place.)

Welp, walking right into a trap doesn't work out so well. Oh sure it was okay at the beginning but he was waaaaay too cocky about it, and Cornelia is actually competent. He never even considered that she'd have it all planned out, and he ends up badly beaten and then cornered.

Interspersed with this is our first good look at Shirley's feelings for Lelouch. After getting frustrated by the exchange with Kallen, she ends up confiding in Suzaku about how she initially thought Lelouch was a slacker and a jerk but, upon seeing him casually stand up for somebody else, she decided that she liked him and wanted to be closer to him. Suzaku offers to call Lelouch but when Shirley tries to wrest the phone away from him they topple over together. (This leads to a sort of Shirley/Suzaku-ish moment, which never goes anywhere, but is cute)

Anyway, C.C. came to the rescue, dressing up as Zero and saving Lelouch's behind. It seems to be somewhat of her own volition but (highlight for spoilers)I think we find out between the later episodes and sound episodes that Marianne plays some part in having C.C. look after Lelouch.

Lelouch asserts that the conditions were unfair (*snerk*) and C.C. points out that he should be setting the conditions, not letting his enemy do so. Lelouch thus decides that he needs an army of his own in order to compete, and vows to found one.

Final note: In the preview for the next episode, Lelouch considers Suzaku first as a potential ally in starting his army, before deciding it's impossible because Suzaku is a Britannian soldier. There's an emphasis at this point that Lelouch sees Suzaku as a friend first and not at all as an enemy...of course, this is bound to change.

Next time: 黒の騎士団
The Black Knights
◾ Tags:
Date/Time: 2010-12-24 11:43 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] amelia-seyroon.livejournal.com
Poor lil Lelouch.
Date/Time: 2010-12-24 21:16 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] kiraya.livejournal.com
ffffff Chibilouch is so freakin' cute. (I see the love of capes started at a tender age, heh.)

If this had happened to me at that age I'd have a mega chip on my shoulder, too. Really, though, Lulu, you should've attempted to seek a private audience or something. The amount of secondhand embarassment this sort of family argument in public gives me is just ouch.

I wish we saw Lelouch go around in sleeveless shirts more often. It's a really good look for him.

...I forgot Cornelia promoted Suzaku. I wonder what exactly she means by "he should be satisfied with that" -- assuming he's trying to get ahead for merely his personal gain?

I like this dress of Euphie's far more than the one you see her in 90% of the time.

Oh the propaganda in that history text.

...Cecile's talking about Suzaku's reunion with Lelouch being hitsuzen. Are we suddenly in xxxHolic?

"Just tell me. I won't be shocked." Ahahaha, Shirley, you have no idea. Also it's kind of adorable how she always blows everything out of proportion ("Ticket of Dreams" is seriously my favorite of the sound episodes for that very reason, haha).

Poor Milly. :(

Guh, Cornelia. I know she's pretty racist (and that lipstick really doesn't do much for her, tbh), but...

弱肉強食, hmmmm? I wonder where I've heard that before.

...I wonder what Suzaku was humming there.

Lelouch is being dumb about this Saitama thing, but the gun-to-his-head thing was a pretty good bluff. And that C.C. actually understands... These two have a lot in common, really, and I think I've forgotten a lot of that since my first watching of the series.

...On an unrelated note, a lot of the faces are kind of poorly drawn this episode.

The first time I saw C.C. talking with Marianne I was confused as hell. Now it's kind of cute to watch.

Aww Shirley, you're too sweet and cute and undamaged for this series.

Sorry, Lulu, but Cornelia's got a hell of a lot more experience at this sort of thing than you do. I can't really feel too sorry for him getting his ass handed to him here.

"I wouldn't have lost if the conditions were more equal!" Haha, wow. What an arrogant answer. I'll admit this episode didn't do much to endear Lelouch to me initially -- thankfully that changes later.
Edited Date/Time: 2010-12-25 01:29 (UTC)
Date/Time: 2010-12-26 17:17 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] leizelann.livejournal.com
I always did enjoy this episode because little-Lulu was just too cute for words, and he realized in the end that he needed something more - like his own soldiers who would follow orders - than just Geass to defeat competent opponents like Cornelia.
Date/Time: 2010-12-28 02:02 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] snowdevil-crow.livejournal.com
CC is so hot in the Zero outfit.

Um... yeah, that's all I have to say.
Date/Time: 2010-12-28 07:53 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] drakyndra.livejournal.com
I don't think this discussion post was the best timed, given the Christmas break (and the lack of comments). Perhaps when the next one is made up, someone should link back to this to get the discussion going again?

Lelouch's issues with having a normal life always bothered me a lot. Comparing it to being dead just... ick. There's some really weird subtext to that.

Anyway, I think the fight with Cornelia is pretty central to this episode and what it represent, and that is: Hubris.

Oh Lelouch, you are an intelligent, brilliant, well-read and (somewhat) well educated guy. You of all people should be aware of the perils of hubris and what it leads to, and here you demonstrating it in spades. Overestimating your own skills, underestimating the enemy, taking victory for granted before it's over, not preparing for things going wrong. Seriously, so much hubris.

And a slight digression here: If you go back to Greek mythology, the name of the goddess that meted out justice for those who demonstrated hubris was Nemesis. That's the original source for the word; not another way to say "arch-enemy" but as the agent of divine justice for one's sins.

This old meaning carried over a bit into the grand literary tradition that if a hero (or otherwise protagonist) in a series has a nemesis in the modern sense, it will very often be an enemy that was caused by the hero's own greatest failure, which itself is quite often caused by past hubris. Their nemesis is the one seeking justice for the hero's sins.

Now, plug Lelouch into that summary and see what else comes up.

(Yes, I had Lelouch pegged for a hubris arc from about the second episode. I just kept hoping he'd realise from his failures before they got too big.)

As for the comment about conditions being unfair: No shit, Sherlock. Isn't the entire reason he's trying to bring down Britannia because they are bigoted and unfair? If this was a fair fight, it wouldn't need to be fought at all...

I agree this episode isn't great at showing Lelouch's admirable features.
Date/Time: 2010-12-28 08:53 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] drakyndra.livejournal.com
It's not so much about genre awareness as it is, well, an acknowledgment that Lelouch isn't as good as his ego is telling him. You'd think after a couple of mistakes like this he'd stop attributing it to chance or unfairness he'd get the hint - but it's not until the SAZ disaster that it really slams him in the face. I'd been spoiled so I knew it was coming, but I still hoped he'd work it out...

And then comes the end of R1. Hubris and nemesis.

But yeah, I find failure humanises Lelouch; not always in a flattering way, as this episode demonstrates, but it makes him real in a way that the Do No Wrong Gary Stu guy doesn't.

I think it's really telling that, despite how Ashford is later on played as his haven, the time he was so happy, right now he talks about how desperately he wants to escape it. All he wants is to be happy with Nunnally, and yet when she's around he spends half his time brushing her off... I don't think Lelouch could be satisfied living with stability.
Date/Time: 2011-01-01 11:52 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] carlenne.livejournal.com
I think pretty much the only thing I have to say about this episode is it's funny how I always remember Clovis ordering the massacre of the Shinjuku ghetto and think 'Ok, maybe Lelouch killing him was a good thing' yet never remember Cornelia does pretty much the exact same thing later. Maybe because she got more time to make a better impression instead of being offed early like Clovis :/
Date/Time: 2011-01-04 19:00 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] otakukeith.livejournal.com
CC is so hot in the Zero any outfit.

Fixed. :P
Date/Time: 2011-01-04 19:04 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] otakukeith.livejournal.com
I think it's really telling that, despite how Ashford is later on played as his haven, the time he was so happy, right now he talks about how desperately he wants to escape it. All he wants is to be happy with Nunnally, and yet when she's around he spends half his time brushing her off... I don't think Lelouch could be satisfied living with stability.

This is an amazingly good point. This sort of thing is the reason why (despite quite liking the pairing) I don't think Lelouch/Shirley would ever work out in the long-term: she's too normal.

There may also be an element of "he who fights monsters" in there somewhere: Lelouch finds it harder to live normally when he spends a lot of his time doing crazy freedom fighter stuff.
Date/Time: 2011-01-05 10:47 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] drakyndra.livejournal.com
I think there's a certain amount of "The perfect is the enemy of the good" going on here with Lelouch. He's so fixated on the problems of the world (which he devotes himself to fixing) that he misses the good parts.

And it takes him losing them to really realise how important they were.

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