The Summer Hikaru Died Episode 3 Review: Wilting Sunflowers And A New Status Quo

Sunflowers have quite a number of meanings in flower language. They can represent longevity, loyalty, adoration, and unwavering faith, just to name a few. However, the meaning that feels most relevant to “Denial,” the third episode of The Summer Hikaru Dies, is something different: unconditional love.
It begins with a flashback as a young Yoshiki and Hikaru share a watermelon. Even then, Hikaru was eager to make his friend laugh as he tries to scarf down his slice in one go like a cartoon character. Hikaru’s dad looks on with amusement as the two teary-eyed kids increasingly convince themselves that they’re going to die and become “watermelon men” because they accidentally swallowed the seeds (what kid hasn’t had a watermelon-themed scare), before calmly intervening to get them to stop crying. A garden of pristinely kept sunflowers in full bloom crowds the frame, rounding out the idyllic image.
The scene is framed in a 4:3 aspect ratio, with color grading that captures the feel of an old, worn-out image, like a nostalgic Polaroid left in the sun. And before long, we come to understand that we’ve been placed in the middle of this beautiful summer day to make both us and Yoshiki reflect on just how much he’s lost. As he thinks back on his long history with his dead best friend, the camera keeps cutting to those perfect sunflowers from that perfect afternoon. Then we see them wilting in the sun.
The first two episodes have devoted plenty of time to Yoshiki as he understandably freaks out because, unbeknownst to everyone else in his town, his best friend and closeted romantic interest is dead, with his corpse being puppeteered by a mysterious blob monster from a cursed mountain. As Yoshiki brings a watermelon to Hikaru’s house, the parallels and contrasts between the ideal past we saw in the intro and the horrifying present are enough to shock him out of complacency.
This conflict, where Yoshiki grapples with the multiple layers of messed-up circumstances, remains engrossing, thorny, and complicated. His breakdown is motivated by a few different factors: first, there’s the very real danger of being around this unknown, potentially very dangerous being. It’s a situation that’s even harder to ignore after Mrs. Kurebayashi, a woman with spiritual powers, warned him that he’s in harm’s way in the last episode. The second reason for Yoshiki’s panic attack is how his grief has become entirely irrepressible after witnessing so many summer sights—sunflowers, watermelon, a familiar tatami mat—that remind him of his dead friend. And three, there’s Yoshiki’s continued attraction to Hikaru as he sweats in the summer sun, which leaves him confused and upset due to his internalized homophobia and fear of being seen as different. Together, all three create a rising, corrosive mixture in his stomach that very literally causes him to hurl. CygamesPictures doesn’t skimp on the details; the oppressive summer heat comes across in the lighting as a frenzied montage pushes our protagonist towards his breaking point, where he finally asks Mrs. Kurebayashi for help.
This conversation between Yoshiki and Kurebayashi gives us some important information. It’s heavily implied that this kindly woman has gone through something similar to our protagonist, with her deceased husband “returning” in a fashion that left their son with a permanent scar, and seemingly left a mark where her wedding ring used to be. Kurebayashi further explains that a spiritual balance has been thrown off since the presence from the mountain vanished (the thing possessing Hikaru), unleashing long-necked nightmare creatures and other supernatural beings into their community. Related to this, we discovered earlier in the episode that Hikaru’s father died on the mountain years ago, implying that this creature may be to blame.
This is where things get interesting: while Yoshiki and Hikaru’s forbidden relationship is very much meant to serve as a stand-in for queer relationships, it is also very literally true that this possessed version of Hikaru is quite dangerous, given that we saw him kill somebody in the first episode. Mrs. Kurebayashi seems to be reaching out to Yoshiki out of genuine concern that he doesn’t repeat the same mistakes she made. While the show’s balance between LGBTQ+ metaphor and supernatural thriller remains precarious, it has excelled in both modes so far, something still true as the episode comes to a head.
Because when Yoshiki heeds Kurebayashi’s warning and rebuffs Hikaru at school the next day with the words “Go away creep,” it feels like a double entendre that addresses both this very real danger and Yoshiki’s unresolved romantic feelings. Even more so because their argument is over an unknown phone number contacting Yoshiki (Kurebayashi), causing Hikaru to get agitated like an aggrieved lover. As Yoshiki lays into Hikaru for not actually being his Hikaru, for being a fake, the art style shifts as Hikaru is portrayed in sketchy line art that eventually unravels into a tenuous thread.