Jose and Henrietta
While Jose and Henrietta dominated the introductory episodes, they have taken a back seat while the other fratello were explored. However, they were not ignored, and in every episode their all-important dynamic was further developed.
The crux of the matter is that if he is to be a good person while not opposing the agency, then there must be a reason for it. His solution is to convince himself that taking Henrietta was not the wrong choice for her wellbeing, or at the very least that he has made up for it. If it were otherwise, if in fact he has delivered her to yet more misery, he remains unjustified. Therefore, as a surrogate to addressing the root problem, he focuses on pleasing her, putting an unnatural stress on his expectations and the appearances he maintains.
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However, the necessities of the agency demand Jose must train her as well. But he does so poorly. What began as negligence, the result of reflexive withdrawal from an unpleasant reality, became an active effort to prevent Henrietta from becoming upset. Handling her with kid gloves, he proves that not only is he morally superior to the other trainers, but that she is better off under his guidance. That there may be a cost to this does not factor in; maintaining his narrative is too important.
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The final result is a selective blindness toward Henrietta. He relies on her facile contentment to support himself now, and must turn his gaze from any troubling signs to the contrary. It is a paradox that having become so preoccupied with appearances, constantly monitoring her behavior in order to curtail it, he has lost the ability to take joy in her heartfelt affection, knowing in his own heart that he does not warrant it.
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Her worries have only become more urgent, for growing inside Henrietta is a feeling which did not come from Jose's designs. More than filial, her affection has taken on a very specific and vibrant form: romantic love. Seeing him as the ideal man, she adores him with all the sincerity that the first love of a besotted little girl affords.
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As the series continues, this interplay will only become more important, for even if Jose's suggestion is incoherent it contains a grain of truth. Henrietta is not normal, but she is a flowering young woman undergoing all the dramatic changes her age would indicate. Yet she is a programmed assassin as well. Not one or the other, not one being her true nature and the other an excisable addition, but both simultaneously. And with Jose inexplicably at odds on the subject, Henrietta is left to navigate these two halves herself.
Rico
Rico is the second girl to be explored, and stands in contrast to Henrietta's hopeful vehemence with her saddening exposition of abandonment. Her relationship presents a conundrum: why does she not rebel against Jean, though aware of his contempt for her and the horrors he forces her to commit? To merely say "the conditioning" is not enough and requires a further investigation of her character.
Her need for attachment now transferred to Jean, she looks to him for this unfilled connection. It does not matter if her mind knows he will never love her; he is in a sense her father now, and she cannot conceive of him as entirely evil no matter what he does. Indeed, given the way she regards herself his mistreatment is only natural and entirely deserved. His disdain provides affirmation of her lowly existence.
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In order to maintain control without love Jean intentionally isolates her to ensure that he is her only option. By being alone she cannot know what it is like outside her prison, left to believe that even if Jean doesn't care for her, nobody else would either. It is his most malevolent aspect, that he recognizes what drives Rico and sees it only as a method to leverage his authority more fully.
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As such, Emilio's death is not just a collateral accident. To be forced to kill anybody who might rescue her is precisely what Jean intended when he gave her that order. Hope weakened his power over her and that is not tolerable. Such a cost is, by definition, acceptable to him.
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Rico functions as the canary in the coal mine, and though she will never openly remark on her torment her condition bears witness to the place that produced it. No matter how they are justified, fear and pain are the accoutrements of the agency. If the mistaken belief such were a necessary evil survived the first two episodes, it died with Emilio. What is left is a residue of senselessness, and a reminder that on the other side of Rico's blank stares and mirthless smiles there lies tragedy unspeakable.
Triela and Claes
Triela and Claes are the two older girls at the agency. They are roommates, best friends even despite their differing personalities. In both of them is found a depth of character which does not reveal itself until long after introduction. As such, Bambola and Promessa are not comprehensive explanations of who they are but guides to how best understand them going forward.
This would perhaps seem overbearing, imposing her will on those around her out of self-satisfaction, but this does not match the facts. Never does she gloat, and her I-told-you-so's are always mitigated by fondness. Indeed, she even obscures the extent of her help, yet another behavior that is undertaken out of principle rather than inherent shyness or self-deprecation.
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Hiding underneath both her care and her confusions is yet one more layer to her personality. At her core, Triela lives with an abiding loneliness. She is not the same as the people around her, and is confronted with questions they do not comprehend. The other girls look up to her, each in her own way, but they do not quite understand who their big sister is.
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All of this presents one final conundrum: none of the above is an explanation. It only describes how she acts, not why she does or how she came to be this way; Bambola is set in the present, and even she dismisses her origins. Why does she give everything to others if it does not fix her loneliness, or garner acclaim, or get her what she wants? Why would she forgive Mario, a man who had wronged her beyond measure, without expectation of recompense? That, for now, remains the true mystery.
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Claes' personality is deeply influenced by loss. Her life began happily, protected and cherished in a paradise she did not know she inhabited. She naturally sank her roots in and drank deeply of the love she enjoyed. Then a nameless catastrophe struck and robbed her of everything, delivering to the agency a child broken in body and mind.
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Like Henrietta, her past has left an indelible impression. Even with her memories erased, Claes can never forget that the world has repeatedly stolen from her that which she valued above all else. It has aged her, and leaves her haunted with the fear that everything she loves will be turned to ash in cruel caprice.
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Yet if solitude were her only purpose, she would merely be cold. What counterbalances this is her promise, a reminder that she is to be the gentle Claes who follows her conscience as well. Along with her self-control, her principles are everything to her, for without a handler to follow they are all that give her existence meaning.
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Claes is still a girl in progress. Brilliant, willful, and intent on her own values, she is an admirable person. But there remains something missing. To understand is to see her sitting quietly somewhere with a book when she is suddenly surprised to find that the space next to her is empty, and she does not know why she believed it would be otherwise.
Abutment
With the primary cyborgs introduced, some observations can now be made. Each is a unique individual, a girl who has come to the place she is at through her own path. How they express themselves, romantically, compassionately, intellectually, and even with self-hatred are as divergent as their own lives.
It would seem such a simple thing, yet it is inexplicably denied. It is not their fault they are in this situation, controlling neither the source of this desire nor the means to satisfy it. Whether they ever achieve this happiness is beyond their power, and when occasionally fate deigns that they do it is so easily taken away. There is something perverse in how misaligned such yearning is with reality.
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Which returns to the question: will these girls ever receive what they so desire? Despite his struggles, Jose still holds out hope for Henrietta. Hilshire showed that there remains potential in these men, and Raballo pointed the way, demonstrating that they all contain the foundations for change. That there is a path out of this place is not beyond possibility.
←Episode 5
Triela's monologue in her room as Rico appears at the door with a bloody lips seems to have some significance here:"Jean wants a tool. Jose wants a little sister. What does he want me to be?"
ReplyDeleteSurely Claes understands that she once had another life at the Agency, but she seems incurious and accepting. Is this part of her commitment to self-reliance, one wonders?
A detail unmentioned in the anime, though referred to in the manga: in order to divorce Claes from her former life with Raballo yet allow her to remain in the cyborg dorm, all the other girls' memories were tampered with, erasing their memories of Claes's handler and even of the bookish girl's existence before her repurposing.
Claes is a curious case in the anime. They specially insert a set of lines about this being the only life she's ever known, which has implications for later in what the anime does with her.
DeleteBut I had wondered about how the memory of Raballo was dealt with; that always seemed like a minor plot hole.