Which endless eight episodes




















So why did they doing it? Did they also did it in light novel? What is the point of "Endless Eight"? Most likely the last arc of the show was originally planned to adapt The Disappearance of Suzumiya Haruhi , but the producers changed their mind well into production, and decided to make it into a movie instead. As a result they had to fill in a seven episodes gap that they already bought the timeslot for, thus this gimmick was born.

They Endless Eight chapter in the novel is only about the very last iteration where Kyon figures out the solution. The point of Endless Eight was to provide a reason for Nagato to do what she did in Disappearance , being the only one to remember the over iterations.

The characters seem to do "the same things over and over again" because they are trapped in what TV-Tropes call a "Groundhog Day" loop. The Wikipedia article on time loops explains it very short and crisp:. Stories with time loops commonly center on correcting past mistakes or on getting a character to recognize some key truth ; escape from the loop may then follow.

The episodes initially aired between It might be a bit far fetched, but I think this is also a play on how cool an endless summer break initially looks to pupils and students for as long as they don't know what to do with all their time until they realize that they are right in the middle of the silly season and that an endless summer break could also mean an endless silly season.

No one knows why director did it or what purpose it served. In the novels themselves, only last "loop" was recorded and the whole thing spanned not even pages. If I were to speculate, then only reason why they did what they did was because number of coincidences during airing of the episodes were so high it was too good to pass on the opportunity.

Also, if they didn't waste 8 episodes of it, then they would need to adapt some other material, which by the time of the show was just "Dissapearance" arc, something that later got much better movie adaptation.

I know an awful lot of people who were terribly annoyed by the Endless Eight sequence if only because it meant losing seven episodes of potential new content , and even now that you can just marathon all eight episodes without having to wait a week inbetween, it's quite a slog.

I can see and admire all the work they put into each episode, and even I still think it was a dicey move. But I've got to say, if you do watch all eight episodes, the rush you get when they finally figure things out and escape the loop is on a whole different level than it would have been if they'd solved it on the first try.

That may have been what the director was trying for. By the time work began on Season 2, there were two more volumes of unadapted short stories - "Rampage" and "Wavering" - in the series, so even if they'd originally planned to use "Disappearance" and decided against it, there technically were other options.

Sign up to join this community. From Puella Magi Madoka Magica to Steins;Gate to even Dragon Ball , the idea of getting stuck in an unending cycle of repetition is one many anime writers love to utilize. In , in the midst of a seemingly unending pandemic and quarantine, it feels as if this trope is more relevant and relatable than ever.

However, when it comes to the one series that truly captures the infuriating nature of experiencing the same events over and over again, no anime does it quite like Haruhi Suzumiya. For example, after expressing her desire to Kyon to meet a time-traveler, alien and esper, three seemingly normal students join her club who are hiding their clandestine identities as the three beings Haruhi had expressed wanting to meet.

Haruhi's powers to alter the world get her and the SOS Brigade in some pretty wild scenarios, but perhaps the most infuriating one is when she traps her friends in a never-ending time loop during the "Endless Eight" arc. The "Endless Eight" is the name given to an eight-episode arc in Season 2, which covers the SOS Brigade's summer vacation after Haruhi unintentionally traps the club into a time-loop to prevent their vacation from ending.

Unfortunately, every time the loop resets, nearly everyone in the club loses their memory of it. The club ends up repeating the events of their summer vacation 15, times before Kyon is able to break it.

However, the anime decided to stretch the loop into eight episodes, each featuring slight variations in animation. Add an image. Encyclopedia Dramatica, Urban Dictionary. View More Editors. Add a Comment. View More Comments. The latest from KYM. Video Definitely Not Despacito. Try to find inspiration within yourself. These 15 posters aren't gonna do it for you. These memes are so cringeworthy it's really painful. What were they thinking posting these? Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Next.

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