The Summer Hikaru Died Episode 9 Review: A Heady Discussion And A New Ally
After a painful weeklong break due to a scheduling conflict with a Japanese television station, The Summer Hikaru Died is back with another gripping episode that delivered everything the show excels at: nuanced characterizations, unsettling body horror, gut-punch moments, and quite a bit of queer longing. As multiple storylines finally converged, we got a climax likely to make you lose your head.
Events begin in the aftermath of last week’s apparition attack as Miss Kurebayashi continues to prove herself a powerful force in this escalating conflict with the world of the dead. Perhaps most importantly, we get a more thorough look at her previously alluded-to backstory; her deceased husband returned to the world of the living in the form of an impurity, which she believed she could coexist with. Then it attacked her son.
While the sequence likely could have used a bit more time to breathe, it gave us yet another example of how this series is fundamentally about people struggling with grief. Here, Kurebayashi holds on to the vestiges of her husband, with the apparition becoming so entangled in their daily life that her son credits the spirit for helping him play his legally distinct Pokémon game. It’s only when this ghost does something that Kurebayashi knows her husband would never do, physically harm their son, that she sees she’s been projecting her grief onto the apparition and that she must move on. Of course, it’s a circumstance that has at least a few parallels to Yoshiki and Hikaru’s arrangement.
However, a clever touch here is that while Kurebayashi has the type of narrative setup that would normally position her as an antagonist whose negative experience around similar circumstances gives her the opposite outlook of the main characters, instead, she’s able to realize the nuance of the situation because she’s an empathetic person.

She almost instantly realizes that Hikaru 2.0 is different from his predecessor and that Yoshiki has largely made peace with this: at this point, Yoshiki’s desire to protect the new Hikaru is less because he’s unable to move on, and more because of the bond he’s formed with his eldritch boyfriend. While his grief over his dead friend is still fresh, the fact that he lays out a grave for Hikaru 1.0 in this episode shows that he is slowly coming to terms with this loss (while also pointing out the tragic reality that only Yoshiki knows this truth, because everyone else thinks Hikaru is still alive).
As a result, Kurebayashi agrees to help the pair, marking the first person outside these two who understands the full picture and is still on their side. What an ally! “They’re good kids,” Kurebayashi affirms after winning over Hikaru’s trust with treats.
Unfortunately, though, she drops the frightening reality that if Yoshiki continues to “mix” with the world of the dead, he may be unable to ever return to the world of the living. Until now, this situation has been represented by the handprint on Yoshiki’s arm, but it’s still somewhat ambiguous what this means metaphysically; is “mixing” representative of being emotionally attached to Hikaru? Spending time with him? Or is it a symptom of the times Hikaru has consumed Yoshiki after transforming into Unknowable Goo mode? Regardless, it’s yet another problem to be anxious about in a whole host of them.

These circumstances also set up another big issue, which is that Hikaru’s continued presence in the village is putting everyone’s lives at risk. Even with Kurebayashi’s support, it’s clear that this burden weighs on both boys. We continue to see Hikaru take steps towards understanding the value of a human life, especially related to how this situation affects Yoshiki, but this comes with the unfortunate side effect of him realizing how his desire to exist is indirectly causing harm to the community he wants to be a part of. As a result, he offers to return to the mountain.
But in this episode’s mandated deeply romantic moment, Yoshiki says that this idea sucks, actually: instead, they’ll save both the village and Hikaru. Moreover, he affirms that Hikaru doesn’t need to become “more human,” he just needs to understand and respect the human desire to not get murdered.
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