![]() Ganta is making money at his part-time job, and Isaki shares with him that her parents have given the go-ahead for them to stay at her grandmother’s home close to where they’d need to set the base for the photos for the competition, as her grandmother isn’t staying there. ![]() The main conflict of the episode is, as to be expected, resolved with relative ease, though it presents new issues in its wake. Similarly, due to Kanami’s commitment to athletics, the show highlights the tan lines that would exist due to her outdoor activities. As the group changes into their bathing suits, Isaki chooses to don a tee-shirt over hers, as we get a peak of the scar from her childhood surgery. The details of the sequence are superb too. Instead, she throws a tantrum, frustrated at her friend’s inability to sense the moment’s significance, happy to play in the ocean and draw in the sand. Meanwhile, Isaki is living out the beach day as her friends, led by the brazen Motoko, who believes this is one of their first debuts as “adults,” looking to shed the ease of childhood. Ganta and Shiromaru make for a fun dynamic, as always, as the latter’s decision to hire the former gives them time off to catch up on sleep and relax in the heat wave. While so many teenagers naively express similar thoughts, with Ganta, there’s the sense of wanting to be able to own his responsibility rather than having to allow people to step in when he’s often self-reliant by nature of trying to protect his father. Earlier, he made an off-the-cuff remark about envying adults. She’s confused, though, referencing the expensive camera he owns, forcing his hand in divulging that with his mom no longer around, his dad often feels the need to overcompensate with excessive purchases, something he’s trying to avoid by getting the part-time job. Shiromaru continues to be a scene stealer in this regard, as she notes his desperation as well as her fatigue and offers to hire him at the arcade she runs. His determination belies his stoicism, as he suffers a failed interview and refuses to ask his father for money. Following the meteor shower viewing party cancellation, the goal is to attend a training camp so he can hone his skills and submit a photo for a local competition. Refusing to be deterred, he decides - with Ukegawa’s help - to apply for a part-time job to raise the money himself. Due to how new they are, the student council can’t allocate funds to them, despite a low point that sees Ganta begging. While Isaki contends with a domineering older sister who lounges around all day and passes basic chores off to Isaki, Ganta deals with the hardships of running a club in its infancy. ![]() “Altair and Vega” doubles down on the relative confines of their lives by offering further glimpses into Isaki’s ( Konomi Tamura) and Ganta’s ( Gen Satô) home lives. They’re simply trying their best, and it’s their relative plainness, accentuated by the animation and character design, that make them so lovable. ![]() Despite some of their greatest efforts, they’re not cool by the standards set by other series, happy to play and run around at the beach, still young enough looking that younger boys think they have a chance. Insomniacs After School Episode 9 both gets to be their take on the classic beach episode while simultaneously a reminder that these teenagers are just barely outside of their adolescence. Despite not being the flashiest of all the seasons of anime currently airing, Insomniacs After School remains, along with Skip and Loafer, one of the best series in recent memory, to accurately depict the lives and energy of teenagers. ![]()
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