I was referring to this scene in the restaurant when Lilly orders wine.
Hisao: "Alcohol ..."
Lilly: "Only a bit."
To which Hisao thinks:

Probably not all of it. Try to SEE it from her point of view: You're walking, minding your bussiness, thinking what you should say to your boyfriend, and suddenly out of the blue someone takes you down, and you can't even know what's happening, because you're blind.TheGrimAngel wrote:Scene really caught me off guard. But yeah I think it was due to her keeping everything going on bottled up inside and then having that one outburst where she slammed her face on the ground in anger.
In that moment, she realized Kenji had correctly identified her as the leader of the feminist conspiracy and that little "accident" was merely a warning of his upcoming assassination attempt. She knew that she, as a blind girl, wouldn't have much of a chance, and Kenji played with her, like a cat with a mouse. In that moment, she saw (figuratively) the whole conspiracy, the work of her life, blown to bits and pieces. It was the end, and she knew it, and Kenji knew it. There was no need anymore to keep her facade of a uptight lady - for whom? Hisao? A mere bystander in the greater scope of things? He didn't matter.
Everyone has issues. Every. Single. Person. On the earth. You might not immediately see it, but even those happy-go-lucky girls who'd only drink for fun have issues. Hell, I have issues. I've had even bigger issues in the past. I also liked to drink a beer in the weekends. Was I an alcoholic? No. Were my friends, who had issues of their own, alcoholics? No.Prospektor wrote:Don't forget, we're talking about people with issues here
I don't see this. Hisao is more conservative and so perceives her actions through that lens, but she gets drunk once and after that has a glass with (some) meals. That's an unhealthy obsession?Rivan wrote:Have her like alcohol more than she should.
In Japan, Lilly is still technically underaged when it comes to drinking alcoholic drinks. In Japan, legal drinking age is 20 years old. Lilly is younger than that, so technically, she likes alcohol more than she should.Quitch wrote:I don't see this. Hisao is more conservative and so perceives her actions through that lens, but she gets drunk once and after that has a glass with (some) meals. That's an unhealthy obsession?Rivan wrote:Have her like alcohol more than she should.
I think the idea was simply to show that there's more to her than you thought, behind the very conservative mask lies someone perhaps a little more adventurous.
I'm in the UK where under-aged drinking is not unusual at all.Rivan wrote:In Japan, Lilly is still technically underaged when it comes to drinking alcoholic drinks. In Japan, legal drinking age is 20 years old. Lilly is younger than that, so technically, she likes alcohol more than she should.Quitch wrote:I don't see this. Hisao is more conservative and so perceives her actions through that lens, but she gets drunk once and after that has a glass with (some) meals. That's an unhealthy obsession?Rivan wrote:Have her like alcohol more than she should.
I think the idea was simply to show that there's more to her than you thought, behind the very conservative mask lies someone perhaps a little more adventurous.
Also, I'm somewhere in the middle with this, personally. Lilly's tendency might be slightly alarming, but Hisao vastly overdramatizes this, possibly because of a bad first "getting drunk" experience.
With recent generations, it's increasingly common almost everywhere.Quitch wrote:I'm in the UK where under-aged drinking is not unusual at all.Rivan wrote:In Japan, Lilly is still technically underaged when it comes to drinking alcoholic drinks. In Japan, legal drinking age is 20 years old. Lilly is younger than that, so technically, she likes alcohol more than she should.Quitch wrote:
I don't see this. Hisao is more conservative and so perceives her actions through that lens, but she gets drunk once and after that has a glass with (some) meals. That's an unhealthy obsession?
I think the idea was simply to show that there's more to her than you thought, behind the very conservative mask lies someone perhaps a little more adventurous.
Also, I'm somewhere in the middle with this, personally. Lilly's tendency might be slightly alarming, but Hisao vastly overdramatizes this, possibly because of a bad first "getting drunk" experience.