Final Thoughts - Jujutsu Kaisen 0
Oh, boy. You ever look at a movie's audience score and think you must be taking crazy pills?
Jujutsu Kaisen has emerged as a massive breakout hit for Shonen Jump in the wake of the Demon Slayer manga ending, and for good reason. I have positively compared this property to Yu Yu Hakusho and gave the first season a 9/10, easily placing it among my favorite shows of 2021. The story is excellent thus far, the tone is perfect and all of the characters are likeable and memorable.
Jujutsu Kaisen 0 is...an anomaly, and my opinion of it is not going to be received well.
I have in the past made the comment that some 12- or 13-episode shows I've watched may have worked better as a movie, but this is one of the rare times where a movie really should have been a show, and the entire first half of the movie certainly feels like three episodes of anime that pretty cleanly divide from each other. The villain takes half of the movie to be established, but I have greater sins to discuss regarding him later.
If you accept the weird structure, the first half is actually pretty okay. We get a lot more characterization for some side characters from the parent story and more time to get attached to them, the protagonist Yuta's backstory is goofy but acceptable, and it actually mostly works even for viewers who haven't seen the first season of the TV series.
All of this is completely thrown out the window by the second half, wherein all notion that this film could stand on its own are thrown completely out and the pacing jumps off of a cliff. Given that the source material is a four-chapter manga volume, it is bonkers how much feels totally skipped-over as if they had to cut stuff for the sake of the runtime. Major fights between important characters happen completely offscreen and the emotional moments that have any chance of landing just don't get time to breathe.
The biggest offender here is the villain, who has very nearly nothing at all to do with Yuta. Geto Suguru is, right down to his name, very clearly meant more to be a foil to Yuta's teacher, Gojo Satoru, but despite being a genocidal extremist, he has absolutely no personal beef with the protagonist until the fighting has already started and Geto has hurt Yuta's friends. Yuta, in this moment, self-actualizes out of nowhere and suddenly decides that killing Geto would fully satisfy his character arc somehow.
In terms of screentime, they met for the first time about twenty minutes ago.
The climax then totally abandons the self-contained notion of the story by shoving in an extended scene with several of the side characters from the parent story, who receive no explanation regarding their identity or presence, shoved into the middle of the final fight between Yuta and Geto. This movie already has half a dozen underutilized villain underlings whose plots go nowhere and apparently resolve offscreen as well, but sure, let's cram in a bunch of people who don't belong here for the sake of fanservice.
And the entire time, the movie just repeats through internal dialogue over and over again that all of this is crucial, that this is Yuta's reason for living, is to kill this guy he's barely ever interacted with...and then it's proven correct at the end when his curse breaks for no reason whatsoever.
What could have been an emotional moment between Yuta and his deceased childhood friend is totally robbed of pathos because of how much progression they'd apparently made together offscreen during a series of unmarked timeskips, and the idea that fighting Geto has anything to do with his character arc is extremely flimsy. Yuta himself says he doesn't even know if he disagrees with Geto's genocidal ideals, and he's fighting purely because his friends are hurt, which feels like the movie itself admitting that his motivation just isn't very strong here.
The second half of Jujutsu Kaisen 0 is an absolute disaster of jarring pacing, messy plot construction, and wasted narrative potential. The longer it kept going, the worse the bad taste in my mouth got.
From a productions standpoint, it's a few steps up from the show but anything beyond the one-on-one fight scenes just doesn't match what we saw just last year in the Demon Slayer Mugen Train movie. It's great, it's what I'd hope for from Mappa, but most of it is just above the quality of the show rather than feeling particularly jaw-dropping.
I walked out of the theater feeling pretty upset, honestly. This is such a massive step down from the show I fell in love with, and I have to hope that that's mostly due to 0 actually being written first, when the author had less experience. But seeing the rapturous praise with which this film has been met is leaving me pretty dejected at the thought that this could be a sign of what I can expect for the second season.
My solution? As I said earlier, I just don't feel like this should have been a movie. If the author wanted to expand on this story to this degree, this form factor and limited runtime ended up working against him because of just how much of the ideas have no time to resolve or even be properly established in the first place. This story seems like it would have been better suited to being the first cour of the second season, like how the second season of Yuki Yuna was divided. There's a lot of untapped potential in these characters and the film ultimately doesn't do them any favors.
I'm willing to give this a 5/10, for the solid first half and the enjoyable character moments we did get, but the sour taste in my mouth at the end was unrelated to my choice of movie theater candy.