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Koi Kaze

Review of Koi Kaze

9/10
Recommended
April 14, 2013
2 min read
14 reactions

Before discovering Koi Kaze, I wanted to watch something relevant and serious about incest. Not that I love it, but I wanted to mull over it, because even today incest is rejected without any reason. Incest issue is for me the best exemple of unjust social exclusion, based on traditional arguments which can't be tolerated in our societies. So I searched a little bit until I found someone speaking of Koi Kaze. I decided to watch it, and I'm not disappointed. Koi Kaze speaks about incest by following two characters, Koshiro and Nanoka, and tells their story, in a total realistic way. This anime is a romance,but a romance which conserve the obstacles and the difficulties of a such relation. The psychology and the evolution of the characters are in consequence simply brillant and realistic, even sometime crude.
The author really made a good story, by putting the characters front of their fate. They have to make choices, they have to realize that they are different and that people won't accept them. They even have to accept themselves who they are, and understand why their difference isn't bad.

This anime show us of what an incest relation is made of, and why people who judge it like something immoral are taking the wrong way. It learns us that you can't judge someone just because traditions tell it to do so. When two people fall in love, why should they hide? If they consent, then nobody should denigrate them: each person has his own story.

Koi Kaze is beautiful, tells a truth that is important to know and which can be useful to prevent ourselves to judge too quickly regardless the context. Meaningful and poetic, I have no shame to say I cried when I've seen it.

Mark
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