Madoka Magica Episode 9: I'd Never Allow That to Happen: Difference between revisions

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File:Sayaka battle music in Ab minor.jpg|a transcript of the musical sheets seen in episode 9 that someone created
File:Sayaka battle music in Ab minor.jpg|a transcript of the musical sheets seen in episode 9 that someone created
File:Sayaka witch form.jpg|Sayaka's witch form. The armor could be a reference to the von Seckendorff family's knightly heritage.
File:Sayaka witch form.jpg|Sayaka's witch form. The armor could be a reference to the von Seckendorff family's knightly heritage.
File:Close up Sayaka coats of arm and the Seckendorff family coats of arm.png|comparison between Sayaka's coat of arms and the Seckendorff family coats of arm
File:Kamijou silhouette background.png|a silhouette of what looks like Kamijou with his back turned holding a violin
File:Kamijou silhouette background.png|a silhouette of what looks like Kamijou with his back turned holding a violin
File:Revolutionary Girl Utena and Madoka.png|The image on the left is from Revolutionary Girl Utena, the image on the right is from Episode 9 with Sayaka and Kyouko
File:Revolutionary Girl Utena and Madoka.png|The image on the left is from Revolutionary Girl Utena, the image on the right is from Episode 9 with Sayaka and Kyouko

Revision as of 09:08, 4 March 2011

I'll Never Allow That
そんなの、あたしが許さない
First airing 3 March 2011
Script Gen Urobuchi
Storyboard Noriko Shichishima
Episode director Masahiro Mukai
Animation Director Miyuki Katayama

Summary

Sayaka becomes a witch and Kyouko enters her maze, holding Sayaka's now soulless body. Homura saves Kyouko and while they are walking off, they meet Madoka, worried upon seeing Sayaka's body. Homura explains everything to Kyouko and Madoka.

When Madoka is crying alone in her room, Kyuubey enters and explains everything in detail to her. He reveals that he is a member of an extraterrestial, emotionless society, worried about the total energy in the universe lowering due to entropy[1]. Puella Magi and witches are a way to counter this, creating energy from wavering emotions of young girls. As Kyuubey and his peers are emotionless, they are unable to produce such energy themselves. Because of this, they also don't understand the concept of human morals. Madoka is saddened and angry because of all those revelations she has just heard.

Kyouko is maintaining natural heat of Sayaka's body using her magic. She asks Kyuubey whether it is possible to recover Sayaka's Soul Gem. He dodges the question, saying that nobody ever tried it before and due to the very existence of Puella Magi is contradictory, such achievement wouldn't surprise him.

The following day, Hitomi attempts to speak to Madoka but Madoka avoids her. Kyouko makes Madoka skip school, with a quest to rescue Sayaka instead. She explains her plan to ignite human emotions in the witch whom Sayaka became, by having her best human friend talk to her. Madoka agrees, and they go to witch-Sayaka's maze. Madoka tries talking with Kyouko protecting her, but with no effect. Kyouko commits suicide, also killing the witch, while Homura (who went out from school and entered the maze to protect Madoka) takes fainted Madoka out.

The episode ends with Homura and Kyuubey talking in Homura's house, with Kyuubey revealing that rescuing Sayaka was in fact impossible, but he didn't stop Kyouko from doing so to make Madoka become a Puella Magi, given that Homura alone will not be able to win against Walpurgis. Homura says that she won't allow it.

Footnotes

  1. What Kyuubey is describing is called Heath-death: In an alternate theory, the heat-death of the universe is when the universe has reached a state of maximum entropy. This happens when all available energy has moved to places of less energy. Once this has happened, no more work can be extracted from the universe. Since heat ceases to flow, no more work can be acquired from heat transfer. This same kind of equilibrium state will also happen with all other forms of energy. Since no more work can be extracted from the universe at that point, it is effectively dead.

Runes

See Runes of episode 9

Speculah and Observations

A comparison between Madoka's bedroom and Bokurano.
  • Per the image at the right, the chairs seen in Madoka's bedroom may be a homage to Bokurano, a manga and anime series that deconstructed a children's mecha anime called Zettai Muteki Raijin-Oh. In Bokurano, children are called by a strange man and an evil-looking mascot character to pilot a giant robot and defend their world from invaders from an alternate time-line. If they lose, the loser's universe is destroyed. They are also told by the mascot only after the first battle that the robot's fuel source is the life of the person who pilots -- in other words, each of them will only be able to pilot one time. Accordingly, the first pilot slumps down and dies right after the end of his battle. The chairs in Bokurano are reflections of the personalities of the selected pilots, drawn from their memories and manifested in the robot's cockpit. After a pilot dies, their vacant seat remains.

Images

External links

Episodes
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Episode 8 I Really Am An Idiot Madoka Magica Episode 9: I'd Never Allow That to Happen I'll Never Allow That Episode 10 I Can't Trust Anyone Anymore