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That corpse was Sakeki-kun, wasn’t it? And that Sakeki-kun was doing a handstand… In other words, it’s a sheep! Ah! Ogino-san… This is a child’s learning tool, you see. Look… Yoki Yokikesu. Moreover, the upside-down half of Sukekiyo was submerged underwater…
Ah!
I’ve always thought that it’s impossible no matter how you look at it.
>>2
It is mentioned in the work.
Only Matsuko did this part.
“Because the nameless person was doing a handstand with their upper body buried.”
In other words, it’s Toshiaki.
It doesn’t make me say “Ah!” at all.
What do you mean?
Judgment items?
I thought it was a collage because there are puzzles and lines.
>>11
I’m too poisoned here…
>>12
I think there is a difference in perception between now and then in that regard…
First, that guy is Shizuma Taro.
“Ax is quite a terrible name, isn’t it?”
>>16
It’s Matsuko, Takeko, and Umeko!
>>20
It’s not rare…
(It seems like a fun flow typical of a bulletin board is starting to happen…)
>>22
(Is it a good flow…?)
Everyone only knows the world around them.
Ki
A
I
To
People who split firewood would probably use it.
It’s normally sold at Yoki.
At that time, there were probably many more people using axes than there are now…
If Tono-san and Max-san were here, would they have been buried from the neck down?
>>27
Mr. Ono…
>>57
This is just a murder case!
Look… Judge.
In other words, it’s Doraemon.
In the first place, it is mentioned in the story that there are three heirlooms: Yoki, Koto, and Kiku…
It doesn’t matter whether I know or not.
There’s something called Yokikotokiku… and it’s clearly explained within the story.
Let’s read! The original work, Inugami Family.
Last time was the chrysanthemum dolls and the strings of the koto, so well…
This is also the result of my mom using her incredible brain to somehow solve it…
Also, since the police had temporarily seized all axe-related things in the neighborhood because it was already known that axes were really dangerous, I was like “Ah!” when this happened…
It seems that it’s so childish that it’s often called kid’s play…
Well, it’s not exactly a detailed plan…
Well, it’s often overlooked in movies and most adaptations.
The Dog God family has a strong Sukekiyo power when visualized, but the beautiful boy who was the shrine priest’s page becomes romantically involved with the shrine priest’s wife, who was in a sham marriage, and awakens to true love.
The shrine priest forgave the two because he was a hardcore homosexual, or something like that.
I think it’s a waste that the Inugami family story is just casually glossed over.
>>38
We can’t do anything but let it flow, can we!
>>41
Well, but the gruesome bullying of the Inugami daughter and the revenge against it, as well as the unfolding where she ultimately cannot become Sukeyasu, are the most important factors…
>>38
So that’s what the story was about…
In Tsunoda Jirou’s comic adaptation, it was simply shown that an axe was struck into the top of the head.
Perhaps they thought it was impossible after all.
But Sabe-san can’t openly be with the one true love, so he’s building up stress.
I have multiple lovers and have made many unappealing daughters.
The arrangement of the chrysanthemums and the koto is done properly because it was done by Sukekiyo (not Sukekiyo).
The axe killed Sukekiyo (not really), and in desperation, I acted without thinking.
It’s said that the haphazard names of “Matsu,” “Take,” and “Ume” lack love.
I am Shizuma Aonuma.
It’s the flow of having done it, so it’s the momentum.
>>47
After the high laugh, it’s the scene with the familiar Sukekiyo, so it definitely has a strong feeling of an immediate two-panel drop.
Wasn’t the murder carried out by fake Sukekiyo, while the real Sukekiyo assisted in the setup?
Yoki is far less known compared to the masakari.
It’s not an exaggeration to say that anyone who is Japanese knows about the masakari (an axe).
>>49
If Kintaro were to carry Yoki…
Even though it’s a story of love and hatred, I wonder who is to blame in the Inugami family…
>>50
Isn’t it the source…?
>>50
That’s an old man.
>>50
I think the air in the countryside might not be good.
>>55
Way of speaking!
They say a great detective is also a great narrator, but that’s overdoing it.
The reason for such a forceful child’s trick was that it was such a sudden murder, so there was a need to create a sense of connection to other murders.
My husband, whom I married, is a serious homosexual and doesn’t make a move on me.
The beautiful rural Japan before the war, where the villagers whisper behind the back of the shrine’s wife, saying she doesn’t give birth to children properly…
The problem with “diagnostic murder” is that it can appear to be an act of disruption aimed at observers.
I am perplexed by Shizuma, who reveals their true nature and immediately falls into a two-panel situation.
With that backbone, not killing…
>>61
In the original story, due to the revelation of being related to Tamayo-san, this person becomes unable to do anything for a whole month…
In adaptations, there are also cases where Sakei or Saruzō take over and do this instead.
The White Masked Sukekiyo is only generally known for dying in a way that looks like a failed jump, yay!
In places like Gokumon Island, many people are at fault, but in the case of the Inugami family, the blame is generally concentrated on one person, right?
In the case of Kindaichi, the mystery-solving of Gokumon Island is quite A-chamo, but I wonder how the remake version is doing…
>>67
In recent years, there is an impression that they are intentionally passing it off as crazy through cautionary notes and such.
…Torchic?
So why did we go through the trouble of recreating what is often asked?
>>69
What was it again? The one who first brought it up was Shizuma.
Blaming it on the curse of the Inugami family’s heirloom, or committing a killing that a woman’s frail arms couldn’t accomplish.
I feel like it was something like scaring Sakisei by saying I’ll make you look away from the real culprit.
I vaguely remember, but
>>69
When Sukekiyo’s (not Sukekiyo’s) mother went through a terrible experience, she uttered a curse towards the daughters, so it was played on that.
…seemingly to cover for the real culprit, Sukekiyo (Sukekiyo) made it appear as if he had twisted it.
I wonder why they thought it would be a good idea to reveal their identity and provoke a murderer…
>>72
I feel good because I won…
Did someone die in the lake? To sink a grown adult so that only their feet are sticking out.
It’s quite difficult, and if you’re not careful, everything could sink and the discovery would be delayed, and the outline would also fail.
>>74
I forget if it was in the original story, but wasn’t the lake frozen?
I wonder if it was standing until it froze.
>>74
Since it is plunged into a frozen lake, it is probably held moderately by the ice.
Otherwise, I would be stuck in the mud at the bottom of the lake.
If you can instantly recall the names of the three brothers other than Sukekiyo, you can be considered a fan of the Inugami family.
>>75
I remember Suketake because the sound of the name is interesting.
I wonder who the last person is.
In a recent remake, the true mastermind was revealed to be Sakiyo, written by Yasuko-nyan.
>>76
In the end, it’s all up to interpretation, so it’s hard to tell which one it was.
Isn’t that not just a mastermind?
I liked the portrayal of Shizuma feeling a sense of motherhood towards Matsuko more than that in the NHK version.
>>73
The lover’s name is Matsutake Ume, and each of the children is also named something ridiculous, so the naming is really quite careless.
It’s a masterpiece, isn’t it?
Is it the Inugami family that an otaku learns to read “axe” as “yoki”?
I think it originates from either Tomino’s alias or Onodani Minoru.
I hate mysteries where the old man who caused everything is fading away and everyone is being tossed around by it, making everyone unhappy!
?
Is this the work that has been adapted into a movie three times, with a different culprit each time?
>>87
Huh? Really?
It has a bit of a detective vibe, but isn’t Kōsuke Kindaichi just someone who makes deductions after the fact and just leaves a mess?
>>88
Stopping a murder case is not the detective’s job…
Mom… know shame.
The Inugami family ended up being resolved somehow, but isn’t it messed up if the real Sukekiyo doesn’t come back?
>>92
If he hadn’t come back at all, it would have ended around the time Sabu died.
If I had come back sooner, it would have ended with Wakabayashi either dying or not dying.
Was it common knowledge back in the day?
It’s not a criminal case file, but in horrific murders, when you look back after uncovering the perpetrator’s background, you realize they often acted with quite a bit of momentum.
Basically, there are too many patterns where the truth is revealed only after everything is over, leading to the culprit’s death as the conclusion!
It’s a work from a time when splitting wood was more familiar than it is now…
The Inugami family is a novel from about 50 years ago, so it’s perfectly normal for people today not to know that “Yoki” refers to an axe.
Kindaichi is a person who solves the mystery of why this incident occurred; he is not a character who prevents and resolves incidents beforehand.
>>99
Well, I was asked to prevent the Gateway Island incident, but I ended up being killed in vain…
A lawyer who dies first is generally forgotten.
The term “yoki” itself refers to smaller or narrower types of axes within the broader category of axes, so it could be considered a general noun, especially when axes were common in everyday life.
Furthermore, it is natural for the police and Kindaichi to understand that the axe and chrysanthemum are important items in this incident, so it doesn’t even raise any questions.
I have used a chainsaw to cut down trees before, but…
I think cutting wood with an axe-like tool is surprisingly hard work.
Moreover, I can’t even imagine transporting trees using human power after cutting them down from the mountain without any machines.
Use a horse.
Sakiyo otter… → Real Sakiyo otter…
I don’t understand the meaning of “become,” but it’s terrible.
That Sakei is indeed Sakei, but the fact that it’s not actually Sakei is really awful.
Since Shizuma thought that Sakiya was gone, he had no choice but to seek revenge.
It’s because of Sakiya, but it’s not entirely Sakiya’s fault, you know…