“The Man They Called a Magician” starts with a scene straight out of a mobster movie. Some mooks in trenchcoats bust in with tommyguns blazing and ice this john, ya dig? But when they knock off to get friendly with some dames the punk that oughta be sleepin’ with the fishes gets up and is totally fine, see? Myeh.
After the Untouchables-esque cold open, we cut to the heroes protagonists likable characters jerks we’re following for some reason (and also Jigen) in a state of relative repose – Lupin is fishing in his underwear, like you do, while Jigen engages in target practice alongside the metallic love of his life. That beatnik they kidnapped to do the opening theme has finally mellowed out from the torture the producers inflicted on him, and sets the scene with a (more, somehow) mellow version of the one-word title song.
Jigen’s suit is having one of its fuzzy phases
Despite being on fire when Lupin rescued her, Fujiko’s stockings survive.
As well as the pink, cylindrical….I’m gonna say padding?Either that, or the world’s largest birth control pills
As well as the pink, cylindrical….I’m gonna say padding?Either that, or the world’s largest birth control pills
Meanwhile, this is happening:
Either Lupin is triple jointed, or Jigen took the time to make a cute little bow
There’s a cute homage to this little scene in The Woman Called Fujiko Mine, except there Lupin is cooking dinner to woo Jigen into working with him. That’s not why I’m pointing the scene out, though. Little moments like this immediately put episode two on a much stronger foot than the first one. We see these two at ease with each other rather than just giving and following orders with a side of snark.
Rather than have him hamfistedly introduce her as His Lover, we get the idea that Lupin cares about Fujiko because he’s taking the time for a small gesture like making a nice dinner, despite them being at a safe house in the middle of nowhere. There’s the barest hint of goofiness in his squid terror (Lovecraft would approve), and his putting an overly-long stemmed flower in his lapel. The Worst Line of Dialogue I Refuse to Let Go even gets a minor redemption later on (but not enough for me to stop harping on it). Moments like these give the character a human face, which is ten times as important if you’re going to have him go out and perform inhuman acts. And Lupin doesn’t leave nearly the mound of corpses in his wake here that he did at the race track.
The world of Green Jacket, sadly, has no effective dentistry
To be fair on this one, you do see Lupin give a small shout of concern after seeing his partner (and maybe childhood friend, if you feel like cherry-picking manga factoids) hogtied in the last episode. But timing and execution is everything. Last time Lupin just kinda…got distracted by something shiny? If he came back and rescued Jigen, the director couldn’t be bothered to show us. Here there’s an immediate threat to contend with, and Lupin still waits for Jigen to say he’s fine before turning his gun on the intruder. And now, for this moment at least, I like Lupin. A character doesn’t need to be a sparkling paragon of virtue, but they do need to have flaws and people/things/ideals they care about. It makes them compelling, rather than the lead weight we’re reluctantly tied to.
The intruder goes by the name of Pycal, and he enters with the dramatic proclamation that he’s “come to take her.” In lieu of a screenshot, let me describe to you this odd little man. He looks like he has hollow bones and weighs as much as a wet towel, has probably never slept, and is rocking the emo swoop 30 years before its time. Lupin, being a prideful speechmaking guy, starts in on all the reasons this tiny birdman isn’t allowed in. Pycal walks right past in the middle of Lupin’s snark routine, which Lupin doesn’t appreciate.
Then Pycal sets him on fire, and goes right on up the stairs.
Should’ve worn an asbestos-proof suit
Not one to take inevitable damselization lying down, Fujiko has some firepower prepped. Pycal slaps Fujiko for sensibly shooting at him with a machine gun and kidnaps her. Then he sets Lupin’s romantic dinner on fire, because the writers assumed we didn’t yet have a reason not to like him.
Our heroes (title under review) rush to the rescue and talk about where they might look for Fujiko, when this happens:
Why do I feel like they’ve had this conversation before, but drunk?
Pycal menaces Fujiko and tells her to ‘give it to him,’ because the tension of this episode revolves around using vague wording in lieu of actual compelling mystery. We flash back to Pycal asking the same thing the day before. Fujiko alludes to a romance between them, Pycal threatens to set her on fire. Fujiko’s all ‘you can’t bring yourself to do it,’ which is a pretty good bluff for most shows. But this is Monkey Punch-following Lupin, so Pycal totally does it. And now we know how Lupin rescued her…not immolated, somehow. Nor was the thing she stole. Logic at the door, people.
Trapped in an enclosed space with a poor substitute of Sparky Sparky Boom Man, Fujiko goes the attempted seduction route. It works, but at what price?

The most disturbing stripper face ever, that’s what
But it’s okay! It turns out he’s only hanging her by her arms over the waterfall. In her underwear. That’s much more wholesome! She reveals that she hid ‘it’ in the dashboard of Lupin’s SSK. Clearly she hasn’t seen the opening, and doesn’t know how much Lupin hates his car. Whatever ‘It’ is, it isn’t going to last a day.
Back in the alleged car en route to a rescue, Jigen discovers the ‘it,’ which is actually three tiny slides. This is intriguing enough that the boys halt their very important rescue to stop, acquire a projector, drive all the way to an undisclosed location, and look at them. The slides each have lines and scientific writing on them, with white spots on one corresponding to black spots on the other slides. It is an impenetrable mystery for the world’s most brilliant thief (who has not, may I remind you, stolen anything in either of these episodes).
I’m not saying it was aliens, but…
Lupin and Jigen hightail it, resulting in one of those rare early lines (taken right from the manga) that actually make me laugh. Lupin puts on a boastful face, and then…
“Me, run away? Let’s do it.”
The pathetically defeated tone in Yasuo Yamada’s voice is what sells it. Run they do, only to find they were followed across hill and dale. Pycal is not only right on top of them, he’s now floating in midair. Were it not several years too early, I would be convinced the writers had been watching too many slasher movies. More screaming, flailing, and escaping.
Back at the cabin of solitude Fujiko has escaped, leaving a goodbye note for Pycal. We see Fujiko driving away with tears in her eyes, and I’m honestly not sure what they were going for with this. Because in their shared screen time he kidnaps, tortures, and possibly rapes her, and she pretend seduces him only to attempt murder as soon as his guard is down. Was I supposed to buy an actual romance here? Because you’re doing it wrong. And, break for confused coffee discussion.
Part two opens with Lupin jarring Jigen out of his duties as Lounge King, heir of sofas everywhere, by way of flamethrower. Because as we’ve established, Lupin’s kind of a dick. Anyway, he exposits to the audience Jigen that the magical flamey finger was actually a sophisticated back-mounted blowtorch (presumably immune to jostling from the heavy artillery) and the floating was just conveniently placed invisible glass. Then he acts like he’s going to shoot Jigen in the face with his newfound powers.
SO MANY SOFAS UNLOUNGED ON
Fujiko visits, looking for the slides, and Lupin jumps out a window trying to get to her (don’t ask). The ensuing head trauma allows him to piece together the solution to the microslides, thus joining the audience ten minutes in the past. Fujiko shows up yet again as the sun dramatically sets, and warns Lupin to be careful when facing Pycal. Then she sends Pycal a message to warn him about the duel, because apparently we were indeed supposed to believe she loves both of them. I sure am invested in her dilemma, what with all the development I was able to see.
Alright, let’s take care of this now. I love Fujiko. I really do. In the hands of the right writer (Yamamoto and Okuda, Miyazaki, even some of the specials) she’s a fun counterbalance to Lupin and a fascinating character in her own right. But she’s also the least consistently written of the five main characters, which has its roots in these early episodes/chapters. Monkey Punch originally set up a gag in the manga where every one-off female character was named Fujiko Mine. So when she became just one person, that left a wasteland of abandoned personalities and backstories, as well as a character without a real sense of identity (at another time I will enact a lengthy tongue bath over what a great year 2012 was for the character).
In the last episode she was a coy traitor. Here she’s a lovelorn bystander. Next time she’ll be a singleminded treasure hunter. It’s not that these traits are necessarily mutually exclusive, but there’s no guiding light. Does she love Lupin, or is he an easy stepping stone to her personal gain? How often does she use sex appeal versus her wits? Is she a cold manipulator, or self interested but still a team player, never leaving Lupin in a mess he can’t work out of? These have all been true over the history of the franchise (never mind her multiple physical redesigns). It makes her easy to single out as a weak point in the writing even for casual fans, which is a shame for a character that has the potential to be so great. But I digress. There’s not really a solution to be found on this one besides picking and choosing your writers. Isn’t that depressing.
Back at the part of the plot that involves semi-convincing conflict, Pycal is ready to react to Fujiko’s words and goes rushing off to a Field in the Middle of Nowhere. Apparently he owns a plane, because it was the ‘70s and why not. He takes the trouble of flying it to Lupin’s location, then jumping out and landing on the roof of Lupin’s en route car. Apparently he really is a magician, because in the next shot he’s made it into the back seat, and none of the windows appear to be broken.
Also, Lupin has a second index finger instead of a thumb. Somebody call Ripley’s
Turns out that even with magical invincibility sunscreen (did I spoil it?) a bullet to the back of the skull will still knock you silly. So Lupin sinks to the bottom of the sea in his ruined car. There, he hallucinates mermaid-Fujiko breaking up with him and squid-Jigen saving his brain-rattled hide. There’s probably some delightful symbolism about Jigen’s help being represented by the thing Lupin’s supposed to be terrified of (his own fear of weakness and growing reliance on versus ordering of Jigen, perhaps?) while Fujiko and her words of affection are an unattainable mythical creature, and the fact that Jigen’s the one who comes to his aid while repeating his ‘women can’t be trusted’ schtick. But I’m more perplexed as to how Jigen pulled him out from the totally sunken car despite still being (in reality) on the extremely elevated highway above where Lupin crashed.
SYMBOLISM. Or possibly just drugs
Because it’s only happened twice before, back at Pycal’s cabin we have yet another instance of Lupin Explains it All: the slides are a formula for a godmode sunscreen that deflects heat and bullets, though unfortunately it doesn’t last very long. And because Pycal doesn’t understand the Ozymandias school of expositing, he tries once again to use his flamethrower on Lupin. So our hero gets to give the remainder of his speech ON FIRE, looking more than a little like an avenging devil. For being probably accidental, there’s a lot of good fodder for evil!Lupin here.
At this rate I’ll need a counter for ‘terrifying Lupin faces’
Back to vacation home we go, using the show’s first egregious foray into recycled footage as Jigen lays waste to an identical target to the one from the start of the episode. Inside, Lupin (still not understanding no-means-no) is dumped via vase to the head, and Fujiko drives off once it’s clear he doesn’t remember the formula. She’s also clever enough to set up the invisible wall behind her car, and watching Lupin run into it is the funniest thing in the whole episode, in a glorious Wile E. Coyote sort of way. Jigen and Lupin contemplate life, the universe, and everything as the episode ends.
I don’t really have a joke for this. it’s just a nice moment of quiet, well juxtaposed against the flashy slapstick of moments before and the explode-a-thon of the episode as a whole
Look, I’m not saying every episode needs to follow an unshakeable format. That’s a trap the franchise falls into on its own, alas. But these are the first bits of animated Lupin a viewing audience is seeing, and they have no idea what it is they’re in for after two episodes. There’s no connecting story arcs, no similar themes beyond ‘wow, isn’t Lupin a cool guy,’ and no conceivable idea of what the overall goal is beyond puttering around blowing up boring people. A show’s got to have at least one of these. Just one, just a hook to keep the audience coming back out of a burning desire to know what will happen the following week. After this episode the first director was officially out on his ear, the producers seeing the warning signs as well. I’d like to say it’s a shame, but the next episode is actually worse than this one, so they may have been onto something.
NEXT TIME: Unconnected things involving more explosions happen on an island somewhere, Lupin romps through fields of flowers, and the science is extremely confused. Hope to see you there!
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