Mr. Hat'n'Clogs (post: 1475826) wrote:Maybe this is one of Naruto's problems. It gives hints to a lot of potentially awesome things but ultimately fails to deliver when it comes to the mystery. We gets hints of Kisame, a man with history, someone who was a master to the fearsome Zabuza, Butcher of the Mist. We see him trash Asuma and Guy but he ultimately ends up an irrelevant character who gets dispatched by someone else that he has no connection to. He ultimately could have been something really awesome and a fearsome opponent, but ultimately ends up being unimportant.
I agree this is one of Naruto's many flaws. Perhaps it's a flaw inherent to this "long-run shounen" genre, in which, to make compelling the characters that you are introducing 5 years after the series started, you can only measure them against old, well established characters.
I'm going to say that I don't buy that villain structure. While Gaara was portrayed as a genuine and pretty well done antagonist, it was already established by the time we knew Gaara was bad news that Orochimaru was an important villain. Similarly, Itachi has always been in the background as this man of mystery, but a very present and real threat. Pain, on the other hand, shows up much later and we hadn't really seen enough of him and just kind of shows up. Yeah, I know he'd been there at Akatsuki meetings but, I dunno, it was better when the Akatsuki were these people shrouded in mystery. Kisame and Itachi had a great introduction that spoke a lot about the Akatsuki but ultimately I don't think it paid off all that well.
Man, I'm not even sure what I'm going off about, but I think the Gaara>Orochimaru>Itachi steps were much different in execution than the latter parts of the chain. Even though it did switch some focus, we already knew who these new villains were and why they were important, as opposed to "Oh, Itachi's dead, bring out the new villain." Sure, we'd seen Pain before and I'm not saying Kishimoto pulled him out of his butt but even before we made the transition between Gaara and Orochimaru we knew who and why Orochimaru was important. Pain was just kind of in the background before coming into the limelight, same as Madara.
Check it carefully, I was myself surprised when I noticed the pattern as I was answering you:
Gaara appeared at the start of the Chuunin exam arc and was established as very dangerous and highly murderous, also, part of a plan of the Sand Country to most likely overtake Konoha. He was the nemesis to defeat. Shortly after, Orochimaru appeared and his methods and real motivations remained for a little time, shrouded in mystery becoming a looming but uncertain threat. When the fight against Gaara started, Orochimaru showed his hand and by the time that fight ended, checking out Gaara from the villain list, Orochimaru had taken the stage as the nemesis. Then,
immediately after, Itachi appeared, the new mysterious and uncertain threat.
Long time after, Oroshimaru was vanquished and Itachi became the nearest threat (at that time even Naruto was thinking about fighting Itachi, if only to increase his chances of saving Sasuke)]first time in the series[/B] there's no hint of an additional, more dangerous villain to follow Madara (except, perhaps, Sasuke himself?)
In other words, there hasn't been a time before when you could tell "this villain must be the big bad final boss" because there was always hinted there was something else to come. If Kishimoto truly intended to make Orochimaru the last, true villain, why did he introduced Itachi and the Akatsuki
right after Orochimaru has made his big move into villainhood?
You are highly overestimating Kubo Tite's writing, which makes Naruto look like Fullmetal Alchemist in comparison. Heck, he's even admitted to making up the entire thing as he goes along.
Oh, no. I'm fully aware of the shortcomings of Kubo Tite, I only mentioned Bleach as an example of a story that had not foreshadowed any kind of continuation to follow after its longest, most epic arc in contrast to Naruto where several hints of a much larger conflict and mythology going on than "snake dude killed my boss and kidnapped my best friend" were provided early in the story.
But back to Naruto. I'm going to go ahead and say that Naruto could definitely benefit from being shorter. I know it's a hugely popular shonen or whatever, but so was Rurouni Kenshin, which told a much better story in half the volumes. If Watsuki had continued to introduce new villains and conflicts it would get old and lose the sense Kenshin once had.
Yeah, there's a discussion to be had about a shounen manga's lenght. I'm obviously not going to pretend that Kishimoto planned carefully the 10+ years of Naruto's story before starting writing it. Several things would have to be made as it went, for example the characters that fleshed out each faction and the corresponding fights. However, that doesn't necessarily mean that he planned a shorter story and simply kept going after what he had planned once it proved popular. It's not farfetched to think that he came up with Madara as the final villain when he created the Sharingan along with the rest of Naruto's underlying mythos, especially if you take in account that the final ability of the Mangekyu Sharingan is to control the Nine Tails, which happens to be the main plot device of the series. (Note that the Mangekyu Sharingan and the Uchiha secret tablets were introduced very early to the series, even before The Quest for Tsunade's arc.)
Also, I'd like to point that, as amazing as it was, the Enishi arc in Rurouni Kenshin is very clearly something Watsuki came up with on the run. The Kyoto Arc wasn in itself a pretty satisfactory end to the series. If you are willing to forgive Kenshin for extending its life beyond its initial limits, I'd encourage you to forgive Naruto as well.
I know Naruto is much longer, but I'm not sure it actually has that many more characters than Kenshin; it's longer because while Kenshin & co. basically plowed through the enemies shortly after they were introduced (excluding, obviously, the main villains) while you get tons of back- and/or side-story attached to almost every secondary villain in Naruto (see Sasori, Hidan or Deidara.)
I think you could have Naruto grow in power in a better way than constantly surpassing the highest tier only to have a new tier. I mean, wouldn't it be more interesting to see Naruto slowly grow and mature than constantly surpassing everything. Part one started out by doing a pretty good job of this as he matched increasingly skilled opponents that were still consistent with the tiers of the universe. Haku, Kiba, Neji, and Gaara were all signs of improvement in Naruto has he had to learn to apply himself in new ways to fight his foes and grow as a character. Notice that with as much growth as Naruto had in the entirety of Part One(do not mention the Kabuto fight because that was dumb even if the Rasengan is a pretty cool move) he still wasn't close to the level of Kakashi, even though we could see him now at the level of a skilled chunin. I think having Naruto slowly but steadily climb up the ranks is better than just a training arc to bump him up a tier so he's suddenly one of the most powerful people in the universe.
I can agree too that Naruto's power growth in the second part has been almost exponential which is an inferior development when compared with the way his growth was presented in the first part. I'll even dare to say that this was due a mistake in pacing by Kishimoto: He started all slowly and nice, but he had these enemies in mind that were terribly powerful, (indeed, they needed to be more powerful than, say, Kakashi; otherwise why not simply have Kakashi deal with them? But the series is called "Naruto" and Naruto is the one we want to see beating the baddies,) so if he wanted Naruto to even be able to be at the same level of those antagonists, he couldn't keep the pace he has keeping until then.
I believe his greater mistake was to have Naruto grow close to nothing in the three-year parentheses; almost everyone else had become able Juunin and the only thing Naruto had to show was... a bigger Rasengan? I can only guess that Kishimoto wanted to be able to show that at that point, Sasuke was absurdly more powerful than Naruto; however, that came at the price of having Naruto stretch his power exponentially just in two separate short training stages to be able to match him (and the other people at his level) by the time the series ends.
Also, just because a trope is expected doesn't mean it has to be used. In FMA Ed and Al gradually get better at fighting because they continue to do it, but most of their prowess comes from using their brain the whole time. They don't really have any exponential curves in strength to become suddenly able to fight the homunculi when before they couldn't.
Yeah, that's true; you can always do better than that. I was just trying to point that Naruto's flaws are not unsightly unexpected and even above the average of the genre.