I don't know if you've ever read purple haze feedback, but it continues the themes of part 5, ties up loose ends, and continues Fugo's story really well.
Araki's love of Italy really is palpable. I took a trip there in 2019 and there were moments in part 5 where I lost my mind because I had stood exactly where the characters were.
Narancia's death is also very powerful due to it being the only time Giorno cries. Someone who is most of the time hiding his emotions with a poker face.
By that point Giorno has grew out of his fear, of his trademark tremble, as Oceaniz puts it. He has lived two major deaths by now: Abbacchio and Buccellati. While he kind of tried to impress Abbacchio at some point (and got our goth police trusting him in the end), he, scared, mourns his demise, because even if Abbacchio was reluctant to trust him from the beginning, Giorno knew that he needed Abacchio to at least accept him in order to make the group dynamics work. Knowing that he can't even do a single thing to change Abbacchio's death leaves him with his instinctive paralysis, his childish fear, all exposed. But the loss of Buccellati is a whole lot more to process. Being the only one that actually knows what Giorno wants, and being the first person Giorno is open about that dream with, being the one that gives Giorno the chance to start everything, Buccellati's corpse-like situation is unavoidable, and Giorno learns this important lesson by heart. He can't change death. No matter how much he tries with Gold Experience, how many parts he can create, he will never be able to make people come back, no matter how important they are to him, or how cruel their destiny was. When Narancia, who was, once again to quote Oceaniz, an innocent child, gets hit by Diavolo's cruelty, in a way that's not only cruel but full of cowardice, Giorno has reached this point where he understands that death is part of life. He expresses his feelings through his tears, and prepares himself to move on. And what comes with the cruel and coward act of a cruel and coward murderer is not a revival, it's not changing what already happened: it's making him pay for his cruel and coward actions, in a way that's both just and ironic.
@@ginshuhime I don't know where you see the fear in Giorno. Plus, While Giorno has hints about Bruno, he hasn't really gone through his death. Plus I don't think he has outgrown his inability to cry until that moment. He went through abuse and crippling negligence, but he eventually broke to the point where he didn't even cry. And up to the point with Narancia, he never has since.
@@grandbean9031 Anime cut it, but at the end when GER disappears right before the “Don Giovanna” ending scene, Giorno straight up starts shaking. The manga also didn’t have Giorno crying for Narancia. Because trembling is Giorno’s way of “crying,” it’s basically finally processing what had happened during that week and breaking down.
I think is heartbreaking when you realice that Giorno not crying is a sequel of the child neglect he suffered. Real babies and infants who are ignored by their parents often learn to stop crying to get their attention since they realice it is futile. Whenever I see giorno tremble i can’t help but to cry for him
*Hastely bites freshly microwaved Hot Pocket *Gets rejected by the Hot Pocket *My burnt tongue prevents me from reaching the true taste of the Hot Pocket It all makes sense thanks to Part 5.
this is the reason i love jojos so much, araki doesnt just throw references or words in to make it sound cooler, he truly thinks of the meaning behind them and applies them perfectly. i think we should all thank araki for giving us this.
It's not like ready player one where the retard writing the books just throws in references to 80s media while screaming "LOOK AT THE THING! DON'T YOU RECOGNIZE THE THING? please clap ;-;"
For me Giorno *does* have development but in a very, very understated way, especially compared to his teammates. He has a righteous goal, but the path to achieving it is inherently fraught with sacrifice. He definitely *logically* understands this, and states this fact a few times, but I think deep down, he's a kid in denial of that. His first wake up call was when the janitor died, the first victim in Gio's journey: his actions have consequences. Afterwards we see that in nearly every battle, he's determined to win and save his allies at his own expense. Vs Black Sabbath - injures his hand grabbing the arrow to save Koichi and risks shattering his legs; Vs Soft Machine - uses himself as bait to clue in Zucchero's Stand and force Abbacchio to act; Vs Illuso - prioritizes saving Fugo and infecting himself to do so.... etc. To the point that Mista had to remind Gio of his own preaching, that "victory means they defeat the enemy AND all get out alive." Gio was trying so hard to absorb as much damage as he could without dying himself, so that his friends survive--because to him, that is victory. But Giorno learns that his vision of victory is idealistic. He knows sacrifices will be made, but those are dealt through the enemy, right? He tries so hard to keep his team alive, inspiring them to take drastic measures that will ultimately let them survive, but in the end they still lose their friends. I think the car ride conversation with Bucciarati was especially telling--Giorno had a hard time accepting that GE has failed to save Bucciarati. And in the end, Bucciarati reminded Giorno that in the midst of loss, victory was indeed theirs. I think part 5 is a story about Bucciarati gaining a (literal and metaphorical) second life, and Diavolo facing the karma of his abuse of power. But it's also about Giorno confronting the consequences of his righteous goal. That's why GE cannot create new life from things still living, there is no new life without death.
It's an explanation I never heard before. I've never even thought before about Giorno's own struggles The interesting thing is that in the end the ones surviving the story are the ones who have come to peace with sacrifices. It's Polnaref, who had no choice but to accept it, Giorno with his character development and Mista, who knew about the sacrifices necessary from the very start
I finally got around to watch this and I'm actually shocked since I actually planned to write an essay about Vento Aureo but you basically brought up EVERYTHING I wanted to say about it. Especially the part about Diavolo being a passive/reactive force while the gang is the active force. There is a VERY interessting thing I realized about Sleeping Slaves while watching this video and I dunno if you missed it or just didn't mention it. I always found it weird that Rolling Stones only showed Bruno's face in the beginnng but not Narancia's and Abbacchio's and that it only happened after Mista crushed the rock. Then it hit me. Let's pretend that, in Sleeping Slaves, Mista doesn't destroy the rock, but Bruno also doesn't die from Rolling Stone, let's also additionally pretend that Fugo doesn't return to the mansion to give Mista the tape recorder/cushion Mista's fall. Fugo goes to investigate Luca's murder and which either leads to him killing Giorno or coming up with nothing. It doesn't really matter and you'll see why soon. Since Giorno is either dead or no intentions of joining Passione, he doesn't take the test. Which in turn means Polpo is still alive, well-fed and ready to receive a very special mission from the boss. Since Polpo is definetly not in the state to protect and deliver a girl to the boss he will just give the job to one of his most trusted underlings which is... you guessed it, Bruno and his gang. So Bruno receives their first mission from the boss, without having to search for Polpo's treasure and skipping the Soft Machine and Kraftwerk fights. So what about La Squadra? How will the gang defeat them without Giorno? The answer is, they won't defeat them, in fact they won't fight them at all. If you remember reason why La Squadra chose to target Bruno's gang in the first place was because they didn't attend Polpo's funeral and since this didn't happen La Squadra are left in the dark about Trish's whereabouts. Which means, all the obsticals that are thrown at the gang, every single conflict entire first half of Golden Wind... all of this simply doesn't happen. Except for one single thing a fate that is litterly carved in stone. Bruno delivers Trish to Diavolo and with no one to revive him, dies a pointless death trying to protect his values. In Sleeping Slaves Scollipi says to Mista that breaking the stone allows him to change the course of fate. And it does. Breaking the stone cannot save Bruno from death but denying him the rocks path for a quick and peaceful end, allows him to meet a rugged path filled with hardships, sacrifices but also salvation. Giorno is that path. His very existence in the story of Golden Wind reshapes the fate of the people around him. HE IS THE THE EMBODIMENT OF THAT RESOLUTE FATE ITSELF! Giorno was the reason the gang had to fight Zucchero, Sale the Hitmen Team and the Boss' guard and even if he didn't want it, Giorno is also responsible for the deaths of Narancia and Abbacchio. But Giorno also allowed the people around him to grow as people and allow them to fight for a good cause and together their resolve allows Giorno to obtain the artifact that dethrones destiny's false crimson ruler and make Giorno the true king of fate. In the beginning you mentioned how Diavolo was less of a person but more of conceptual force of nature and the same thing can be said for Giorno except that he retains his humanity. So yeah, that whole thing with "The son of god beating the devil" symbolism definetly goes deeper then meets the eye at first. TL;DR GIORNO IS LITTERLY JESUS AND HERE IS WHY
The moral of Vento Aureo is "You can't change your past. You can't even change your future. All you can change is your present, so devote all your resolve to that."
But, um.. changing the present would also change the future, wouldn't it? Lol I appreciate your attempt at being profound, but I don't know if that really makes sense
@@derekwalter4238 He means directly. You cannot literally go forward into the future and change it (i.e if you were gonna be murdered on some day but save yourself), but changes you make in the present can indirectly affect your future.
"even though mista is the character he gets along best" -shows the of giorno healing mista. giving naranchia the impression its something waayyy different
It's really saddening that part 5 is such an underrated gem. It is the perfect culmination of Araki's genius writing and the hatred for it in the west is unfortunate. Luckily it is getting its well deserved praise in Japan.
Fun fact it’s always widely been the most popular part in Japan since the manga Edit: just to be safe I’ll say “one of” the most popular parts but yea look into it it’s pretty interesting. It’s only overseas that it’s been under appreciated
@@carrotlordguy6315 the entirety of jojo has been memed to death, it's still quite popular and no one hurts from liking it, what exactly would make part 5 into this jojoke epicenter?
Underrated gem? no it’s not what I would call underrated. It is probably one of the most overrated one (from what I’ve seen) part 5 isn’t really my favorite part. I have some problems with it but I know other people have other opinions so I wouldn’t like to say anything that might be considered as controversial. Anyways back to my point I still wouldn’t say it is underrated as from what I’ve seen and what I’ve experienced more people like part 5 as I see it as some people have a sort of unfairness towards it because some of the people or more of them like it because they had found out about it from Giornos theme I understand some or more of the people like it besides that but from what I’ve seen that’s what happens to me
Apart from copyright, that was the part I was most worried about because I suck major ass at music theory, used to always get bottom scores back in school lmao but glad you liked it my guy!
I was about to comment about this myself till I found this comment. I'm not a music education major but choir and music has always been a major part of my life and the way you set it up as a symphony really compliments the story and musical references araki is so fond of.
I’ve always felt that Giorno’s character is reflective of this quote, “I’m no longer accepting the things I cannot change. I’m changing the things I cannot accept.” I loved this video. It’s lovely, well-thought out, and really resonates with me.
Canti ?? From my understanding, stoicism is about accepting the things you cannot change, which are kind of everything except yourself. Though by changing yourself you do change the influence you have on everything around yourself.
One thing I love is how rolling stones is a stand that could give a swift end to whoever it targets, essentially skipping the journey of fate and in turn putting it against them. By Mista and Bruno destroying the stone they accept the long journey of fate and are finally able to fulfill their internal will to defeat Diavolo and change the organization forever, which wouldn't have been possible if Bruno died and never met Giorno. They accepted the long road and took no shortcuts to achieve their truth.
This is honestly a life lesson. All my life, I've been running blindly, assuming that I'd be okay while giving almost everything I do minimal effort. I kind of feel like Diavolo, and here's why. As a child, I was told by teachers and the educational system that I was gifted with a high IQ. Instead of working my hardest to shine brightly, I decided to use my so-called intelligence to merely get by without doing any hard work. My grades fell as the years went on. My classmates in the gifted program excelled and got accepted to quality schools with scholarships. I paid all my earnings for a semester of community college and ended up failing all of my classes. I had no resolve, no sense of discipline, and no sense that my actions had real consequences. The whole time, I believed in an unchangeable fate and blamed my failures on fate. Now, the so called prodigy works at a supermarket unloading trucks while his classmates are on their way to becoming doctors and lawyers. Yet this video did not fill me with despair, it filled me with hope. Thanks to Araki's writing, and your resolve to analyse his themes, I understand a lesson that I had failed to grasp at every other opportunity in life. The only reason I am telling you all of this is because I want to show you how much you've impacted me, changed my outlook, and perhaps even changed my destiny as a whole. Thank you.
@@francesco8572 Honestly, when I read that, I started just laughing uncontrollably, thinking, "it's not funny, it's not funny," as I kept chuckling to myself
I thought golden wind was the first chapter due to the weird way crunchyroll has their format set up. I watched and didnt feel lost at all. The story was good enough that the fact that these men had stands didnt even seem weird or out of place. I was immediately drawn to giorno and bucciaratis characters. The fact that I didnt need years of manga and anime knowledge to not only enjoy, but understand is what alone makes this series so perfect to me.
The reason part 5 is the best to watch standalone is cause it’s practically a spin off Koichi is a bit confusing but only for the beginning I guess there’s Polnareff but then you don’t even have to watch the last part though part 5 is to part 3 is what part 4 is to part 2 but a lot more similar
Honestly that's how I got into JoJo in the first place. I ended up watching Part 5 first because it was airing on Toonami at the time. When I finished Part 5 first in it's entirety I was never confused what was going on because what it was trying to represent in narrative, characters, and themes fits perfectly as a standalone story. Never the need to question what a Stand is, what's a Joestar and why Giorno is related, what does that arrow do, because they're all demonstrated by their themes of resolve and overcoming fate and pushing forward. Knowing all the stuff that happened in Parts 1-4 after finishing Part 5 makes the JoJo experience feel more like "Oh I totally get it now," and it makes Part 5 a whole lot better when watching it again after knowing the knowledge of the pervious parts.
I was really shock with the fact that Vento Aureo was being called one of the worst parts, this was the best Jojo part for me with the best Jojo Characters and the best Jojo Story also for me, theres so much to nitpick in this part, cause people didn't understand the part, the fact that most part 5 hates stemmed from bad translation and they still stand their grounds against this part suprises me, out of all the Jojo part which are very good tbh this part was a showcase of how Araki Perfected his Art. He was able to perfectly execute a amazing story that follows a great theme. I really hate the fact that some people dont like this part, not like have it as their favorite but don't like its story and something.
Same! I think part 5 is wonderful, I really love the characters, setting, theme...etc, I don't really understand why people think Giorno is "boring." His personality is just more subtle than the other Jojo's but that doesn't make necessarily make him "bad." In fact, he's my favorite Jojo
@@johnwarosa2905 I guess the hate is because of the ending but I think it was a good transition to introduce new characters, no matter how sad it was :(
a small detail that made my heart melt: when the taxist in Sardegna said "ajò" to Doppio, which is part of the sardinian dialect meaning "let's go". I've lived in Sardegna for a year and I miss it dearly, that hit right in my weak spot
I’m in love with the JOJO in-depth analyses that the JJBA community has been producing over the years. From analyzing Jotaro’s overall character to analyzing DIO’s psyché, then also finding the symbolism used in each and every Part of the series(Stone Ocean being one of my favorites). They’re all so great and it’s probably some of the best stuff to have come out of this community, in which this video is included. Of course no community/fanbase is perfect, but it’s content like this that really allows this one to shine
I was a little disappointed that you never touched so much on the purpose behind how the story is staged. Trish as the focal point of the story is extremely significant. When you start part 5 and learn just how Giorno is connected to the story, we gain an expectation: the story will bring that aspect full circle. Giorno's identity as the son of the series biggest monster has to be capitalized on at some point, right? But no. Beyond the initial staging and, as you stated, the personality traits he shares with both of his fathers, Giorno has no idea by the end who DIO was or Jonathan or even his identity as a Joestar. He never meets any of the other JoJos, unlike every other JoJo we've seen before. There's no acknowledgement of that legacy. Really, it subverts all of those interesting plot beats, but not for no reason. DIO is dead. Any intrigue of this narrative occuring with Giorno died with him. So, we can't explore Giorno's relationship with his father. That's what Trish is for. Trish is intended to be an exploration, thematically, of Giorno as DIO's son. We could easily imagine a fairly similar character arc occuring for the two were DIO still alive. I see them as very similar characters with similar potential.
@@theflashgordon193 giorno and trish have a bit in common. They grew up without a father, said father was a murderous time-manipulating villain, but also has a 'good' side (jonathan/doppio) and they both awoke their stand powers at 15. There's a few more points but those are the main ones
Nope, the reason why DIO wasn’t brought up back again is because this is the story of Giorno, not DIO. Simply put, They showed us DIO in the beginning to make us doubt that Giorno is good just like how Koichi and Jotaro doubted that DIO’s son would be good, it was just done to get us to think like other characters do.
The other thing about the Chocolata fight is that GIrono generally doesn't curse and is pretty polite and formal, so that when he calls the former a piece of ****, you knew he was about to let fly and inflict the worse punishment imaginable. Which is just mere foreshadowing for Diavolo. Because at least Chocolata had an end to his punishment, even if he experienced it for hours potentially, the punishment Girono had for the boss would quite literally never end. Loved this video! Thanks again! The description of Diviolo is beautiful.
I think the only time he ever cursed before (at least the dub, the og sub is lost to netflix) is when BIG was eating his arm and he thought he was gunna die.
Damn, this video is art in itself. Made me shed a tear at the end. I'm tired of people saying that part 5 is one of the weaker ones and that Giorno is the worst Jojo when everything is exactly the opposite. Even though my favourite character overall is Kira, VA is hands down the best chapter.
Fate is, and will always be right. Sadly that doesn't mean everyones gonna ride that last train home. We can only remember the actions that Mario did that makes him special, and hope that he will be cleaning them stairs in heaven.
I read that he was in a really bad place mentally, something about having a friend turn against him or something and so he couldn't bring himself to have the group fight a former team member.
@@GhettoFabulousLorch that would have been crazy, the weakest link comes back as one of the strongest blockages could have killed off someone too making it have a even heavier impact
I clicked on this video only expecting an analysis, a celebration of Golden Wind. Yet I walk away with a life lesson, one that was shared with us with a brilliant man,who was ultimately taught this lesson by an equally brilliant one, Hirohiko Araki. Golden Wind is to me more than an anime, its the celebration of the human spirit and its driving force to actively chase our own ambitions with resolve in hand. Thank you Oceaniz for a wonderful condensed explanation and metaphor for one of my favorite fictional stories ever told. Thank you Araki for creating such a beautiful, unique, and eternal story which we all have come to love and share that love with our fellow jojo fans. Thank you David Productions for making sure that all the love and magic Araki put into Golden Wind was kept and even masterfully exacerbated to a level fitting of a truly Golden Experience. But most importantly I would like to thank fate itself, for allowing a Japanese manga artist write a story about Italian gangsters using western references to create a story celebrating fate and the the immovable human spirit who either may chose to accept or deny fate, in order to reach our own version of truth. P.S. I loved your inclusion of Gangsters Paradise towards the end, a perfect song to a perfect ending to a perfect video.
abachios death scene always breaks my heart. seeing the crew lose one of their own hurts bad. and a large part of it is naranchias va. he is such a great crier
Interesting fact: When watching the scene where Narancia mourns Abbachios death, he goes through all the stages of grief In short Araki a whole writing G
That fact alone was probably the thing that made me cry even harder than I already was in that whole sequence. To see Narancia, a boy who's practically still just a kid, just completely break down in the face of a dear friend's death made my heart break for him.
@@harnanmylvaganam6311 go rewatch the scene and read his words while he’s breaking down while remembering to stages of grief... or don’t because that’s too much work and I wouldn’t
You literally just clarified and confirmed why I almost without hesitation think Vento Aureo is my favorite part and possibly my favorite story in fiction. It is filled with Araki's heart and mind down to even where it takes place. I honestly think saying Vento Aureo is the worst part is insulting Araki as a person as this is one of his highs in his career as a mangaka.
I mean, his stand makes him a huge liability. If he took more time in learning how to control it and in turn learn self-acceptance, he would have been on that boat.
@@MechWarrior894 I feel that, asides from what you mention, nobody takes into account that Fugo *is* a logical thinker, in spite of his anger issues, and he made the choice that he felt it was more logical in order to survive. I mean he's just sixteen, and has lived a life where the depravity and greed of the people around him has forced him to survive on logic alone, because rage and anger are something he loathes from himself. He's so torn and conflicted because only rage has delivered some sort of justice when someone wrongs him, and that is not logical at all. What would be so wrong about him being scared? I've seen a lot of people calling him a wuss for not going with the gang, but that was the whole point of Buccellati giving them the choice to join him or not. He didn't want them to die. He didn't earn their trust to lead them to their fall. Fugo being scared is only natural. They were all either scared (with good reason) or simply unaware of the real danger of this adventure, except for Giorno and Buccellati.
The music in 46:30 is Golden Experience Requiem from Vento Aureo OST The link is here and Oceaniz actually answered, but his answer was buried in the comments so for those who find so hard for this. ua-cam.com/video/vEcpWUf6STc/v-deo.html
I’ve been looking for this song for forever, but never scrolled far enough into the comments section to find it. I guess I tried to skip to the results without putting in the effort.
I'll kinda be disappointed if this isn't a rickroll, since, knowing UA-cam, if it's the actual OST it's probably been deleted by now, and no way I'm coming back to this video and scrolling back down here after I find out to confirm results.
When I watched Golden Wind, I really liked it for a reason I couldn't quite identify, a reason unique to it when compared to other jojos. The theme for Gorno Giovanni was playing in my head, and I knew it had something to do with the manefestation of a dream against tremendous odds. Something I have been dealing with for months now, and I must say resolve and the willingness to face reality head on is your best bet at making any change. Those who are afraid to face the truth that shortcuts won't work will either lose sight of what they really need to do or they will give up on even attempting thier dream. The few that have what it takes to do great things must completely overcome the fear of failure, as Gorno has demonstrated no matter how bad the situation got. He always had his mind on success. Avoiding ruin isn't enough. Fear strengthens of the chains of fate and makes you it's puppet. Resolve is accepting what you fear, so you are able to move past it and pursue your dream. This is how you re-write your destiny, as long as you have the persecerence to follow through. This video lays it out, and hopefully other people who didn't quite pick up on the theme of Part 5 and disliked it can have a chance to get it. Believe it or not, watching Part 5, this video and writing this comment helped make this crystal clear to me. It feels like nothing is holding me back. It feels like there is a blank canvas for me to write on. What I decide to do with it is another topic.
Wemikouss g This comment section is a gold mine. I just finished part 5 yesterday and had the tune in my head all day. I have my own hadships to deal with and Giorno does give me life - as in resolve to face reality head on. May your soul find it’s aim.
I could cry watching this. I cried. Take everything from my mouth especially about Giorno. I am tired of people hating on him, calling him boring and bland, not the main JoJo, and even didn't have a goal, like gdi, it stated clearly that he wanted to be a Gang-star!!! He sees Bruno as the first step to achieve his dream. He even said I, Giorno Giovana, have a dream. How could there are people who said he didn't have a goal? His blood himself, the fact that he is a son of two people who opposed each other as one, already made Giorno so interesting for me. I also love how he understands biology and animals so much. That I have a headcanon he spent his lonely childhood by reading encyclopedias. I just want him to meet Jotaro and make them talk about Dolphins, gdi.
I think he’s great, but all that bickering is mostly mama Bruno’s fault. Mama Bruno is too good a character, more fleshed-our, because he emotes more. Gio is more reserved most of the time. Gio pales in comparison a little
How is nobody talking about how he is the only youtuber who gives a damn about pronounciation and doesn't say "gIornoh Giovahnah oh sorry guys i cant pronounce it". this makes me very happy.
One of the things that bothered me during the final arc was how the arrow always refused to pierce Diavolo. I kept thinking how he had succeeded in his endeavors, and that there seemed to be no reason as to why he was rejected. Putting it into the resolve context helped me realize that the arrow went to Giorno, the beacon of resolve. Great video that helped me better appreciate Part 5
It was because Buccelati forced Diavolo to return to his body, thus his soul (aka king crimson) could not do anything. It effectively wasn't there to be pierced by the arrow.
One of the best videos that I ever seen it encompass so much about history, literature, art, and philosophy. It's truly amazing and inspiring! Thanks for sharing!
Someone: "Man, this assignment is going to take me forever to finish, guess i'll take a shortcut and ask someone else for the answers" Fate: "I'm about to end this man's whole career"
I may be a year late to this. I got into JoJo in the beginning of 2020. I am not even kidding, but the instant connection I have with this part is absolutely legit. I’ve watched JoJo from the very beginning. I loved them all. But if I was to be honest, Part 1 and Part 2 were Seasons that I would choose to not usually watched again the second time. Part 3, probably around twice. Part 4 is the same. But man, Part 5. I don’t know what it is that has made be become drawn to Vento Aureo So much. It has been a full year and a bit now, and I am still obsessing over JoJo. ESPECIALLY because of Part 5. I have watched it in Sub, Dub, mini clips and fan dubs. It’s wild! The fact that in had also legitimately been to Italy in mid 2019 for a trip with family, I wasn’t expecting that I could recognize various places that the Characters were in. I feel like out of all parts, Part 5 just...resonates with me the most. It’s hard to explain why, but I just roll with it!
Amazing video! I just now understood that Giornos personality reflects his stand´s ability. Becouse the main trait of every living thing on this earth is their determination to live, against all odds, even in the worse conditions imaginable, life finds a way.
I watched it all the way through and there were no ads. I'm going to keep clicking on this video until they come up. Then I'll keep clicking some more. Amazing vid.
I expected a mere 20 minutes but I got passionate hour-long analysis of what might be my favorite part. Your fiery love reminds me of a quote from The Wise Man's Fear: "In many ways, unwise love is the truest love. Anyone can love a thing BECAUSE. That's as easy as putting a penny in your pocket. But to love something despite. To know the flaws and love them too. That is rare and pure and perfect." You've outdone yourself, sai.
Part 5 Golden Wind is my favorite part. It has the best characters, best music, and the best fight scenes. I loved each and every character in this part. We got a backstory for all of them which fleshed out their character and made me feel more of a connection with them. That's why I cried or at least teared up at all three major deaths in this part especially Bucciarati's death. Bucciaratis death is the most beautiful death in Jojo. Him ascending towards the sky while being surrounded by angels, welcoming him into heaven accompanied by the song "Ascension" which is the perfect name for the piece. It never ceases to make tear up or have chills. Everytime I hear it I just close my eyes and envision Bruno ascending into the sky. Truly an amazing song. Same goes for Giorno's theme. I know it's a meme song and is usually accompanied with something funny but it is actually an amazing song. I like to call it the "Bohemian Rhapsody of the anime world" because that's really what it is. There are so many different elements to the song such as rap (kinda) at the beginning, and the saxophone, and guitar are all great. And there is even an operatic portion in the song. And of course the famous piano towards the end really brings it all together as a whole. Again, another amazing song. I really liked the fight scenes as well. Especially the 7 page muda. I don’t really have anything to say about it but I just like the fact that it's the longest barrage in the series and is very satisfying to watch. The other fights were all really unique and interesting and I felt like the characters grew during each fight. I know some people complain that Giorno wasn't in a lot of fights even though he is the main character. But I think I prefer this because it gave each character a time to shine and I like to think that it shows their teamwork and friendship and how Giorno can't achieve his dream on his own. I've never seen such detail and deep symbolize in a Jojo part or any anime for that matter. For example, at the very end of the part where they show Giorno becoming the new mafia boss it shows a table with polnuraff (sorry if I misspelled) on it. It has three items. A bottle of wine, a zipper, and a vase with white flowers. The bottle of wine represens Abbacio which drank that same brand of wine when they were sitting outside the restaurant after they betrayed the boss (I think baccio is another word for "wine god" but I'm not a 100% sure on that). The zipper represents Bucciarati of course and is from his right shoulder. And the white flowers represents Narancia because when Narancia died Giorno used Gold experience and surrounded him with white flowers. This level of symbolize blows me away. Araki is truly brilliant. This part is an overall master piece and is a work of art.
@@illuminoeye_gaming ah yes, Japan and its Crazy Noisy Bizarre Town, filled with people who have punch ghosts, serial killers with explosive cats protecting them and people made of rocks who sell very expensive fruits
JoJo Bizarre Adventures Vento Aureo is a beautiful mixed story and is my favorite part, and anime this year. Its theme is one of the best ones I’ve ever seen.
I dont think people give bruno enough credit for his fight against the boss he is utterly destroyed but he gets a hit in and outsmarts the boss more than once also I much prefer fugo not joining over betraying the group im glad araki went for the version we got
THIS COMPLETELY BLEW ME AWAY! ONE OF THE BEST VIDEOS I EVER WATCHED! IT HELPED ME SO MUCH TO UNDERSTAND PART 5, JOJO'S AND LIFE IN GENERAL! THANK YOU SO SO MUCH!
Got dam this is probably my favorite video essay Ive ever watched on this website. It didnt even feel like an hour passed by. You understood everything about golden wind and didnt reach or sound like you were making up fanfiction. It was just a complete and thorough explanation of the story and the themes told by it, and its really beautiful. I mostly understood the themes, but this really cleared it up for me and made me realize a lot of connections I didnt notice, like how Abbacchio's afterlife scene was referencing how Diavolo skips to results instead of going through eith what fate had for him. This was also a really personal video to me, and in turn, part v is now more personal to me than it was before. I had already related a lot to Fugo, and even Diavolo, being someone who'd rather avoid fate and isolate myself from everything, like my own problems. But this explanation really inspired me to stop that habit and go through the hardships that life might throw at me. In a way that another parallel I have with Fugo lol. Being inspired by Giorno in Purple Haze Feedback to not run from fate and face it head on. Even something as small as writing this comment, since I usually don't express my feelings a lot, let alone pour my heart out online. I might seem like some weeb rambling right now but fiction is just that important to me and always has been, I dont give a fuck what anyone thinks about that lmao. Thank you for this video, it was beautiful and really meaningful to me. Id LOVE to hear your take on Purple Haze Feedback or just Fugo as a character in general btw.
the weird thing is how part5 tells you to fight fate and part6 has everyone who fought fate die. Pucci winning for me is a better ending than emporio pulling weather report out of his ass.
@@danielfletcher706 you need to understand how fate work in jojo to accept the ending of the part six. I suggest you watch hamon beats video that explains the fate concept more clearly. because ever since part one to DIO's goal in part six, fate is always been a consistent theme in jojo.
This is without a doubt the greatest analysis, and I guess my personal favourite UA-cam video ever. Thank you, the story of Vento Aureo has had a big effect on my life.
I feel the exact same way dude, just finished golden wind last night and I’m still in awe of the amazing writing and overall story telling. The characters, themes, and setting are all just amazing to me, such a beautiful story and has had a big effect on my life too in terms of how I view myself how
I was on Reddit and saw a thread called "why is part 5 so hated" and somebody answered this "The reasons I have most commonly seen are: Giorno is a bland, weak protagonist with no development, and is op, and should have more connection to Dio Diavolo is a bland, weak antagonist with no development Everyone outside of Bruno and Mista is boring Fights are too long The final fight is bad and GER is dumb Gold Experience pulls abilities out of no where The ending is bad, and the Rolling Stones arc is boring and/or unnecessary Just to be clear, these aren't my opinions, just the ones I see most often. I disagree with all of them and think they are dumb, #Part5BestPart" YALL SERIOUSLY DONT KNOW HOW TRIGGERED I AM ESPECIALLY FOR THE ROLLING STONES AND EVERYONE ELSE IS BORING!!! Every part 5 hater can be summarized with Diavolo's downfall; skipping to the results and glossing over the deep, important and inspiring topics that part 5 so subtlety puts into a simple plot.
@emerus I completely agree in the grand scheme of things these subtle nods to italy's history is more showing the genius of araki but it doesn't really make up for the plot falling off like half way through
@@mind-o_o-4533 It's as story about fate and resolve more than Italy. You obviously don't get it lol. The story holds up perfectly because the themes are consistent and strong. Not your definiton of a 'good story' but the objective one.
Honestly It was sad seeing a stand that we got to know so much become an emotionless husk, even attacking its previous owner, and then end up being destroyed.
@@harnanmylvaganam6311 thats what makes chariot requiem so powerful though. I feel like if polnareff died during the king crimson fight and his soul never possessed the turtle the ending would be a lot better
The ending really gave me some motivation to do better in life, to be something better, and to embrace fate and humanity. Thank you, never expected this level of depth to a Jojo analysis but it’s great.
I know you've been working on this so I was excited to see what you had in store, little did I know I was about to experience a masterpiece! Time to not do anything!!!
Timestamps for Mobile Users:
0:01 Intro
1:56 Chapter 1: Stage - Setting & Themes
5:20 Chapter 2: Actors - Diavolo & Giorno
12:34 Chapter 3: Overture - Beginning, Black Sabbath, Meeting the Gang, Softmachine, Kraftwerk
18:36 Chapter 4: Accelerando - La Squadra
22:13 Chapter 5: Sforzando - King Crimson & Betrayal at the Boat
27:54 Chapter 6: Crescendo I - Clash/Talking Heads & Notorious B.I.G
30:27 Chapter 7: Lacrimosa - Metallica & Abbacchios Death
37:16 Chapter 8: Crescendo II - Green Day & Oasis
46:29 Chapter 9: Requiem - The Requiem plays quietly & Gold Experience Requiem
1:01:48 Epilogue - Sleeping Slaves
1:08:38 Conclusion
1:12:56 Credits
*_KONO BOSS BABY DA_*
Why have timestamps when each one is too brilliant to miss?
Thought the Sabbath time stamp was called "being black"
Amazing vid bro!
I don't know if you've ever read purple haze feedback, but it continues the themes of part 5, ties up loose ends, and continues Fugo's story really well.
"Polnareff has missed his last train home"
...how could you do this to me?
That line gave me a sheer heart attack
@@thedarkanimelord7345 More like a BREAKDOWN BREAKDOWN
@@ruby5884 yare yare dazae
and IIIIIIIIII HOLY SHIT
Will always love yo-
Kergen185 bro i died
I lost it at, “former stardust crusader, and fulltime silver chariot”
Timestamp?
NDYoYo 42:50
Same
Full time stuck in a silver chair
@@wednesdaygeckok.7899 ruined it but i bet you couldn’t help trying to butt in
The madman ends this beautiful essay with an orchestral version of Gangster's Paradise?
DI MOLTO
Gangster's Paradise? Nay, GANGSTAR'S PARADISE
Jeevpants di molto means by a lot
MOLTO BENE
@@FrankieH-79 blame melone and subsequently araki
I'm so happy to see this as a comment. the second I heard it I minimized to make sure someone else had acknowledged this message from the gods.
Araki's love of Italy really is palpable. I took a trip there in 2019 and there were moments in part 5 where I lost my mind because I had stood exactly where the characters were.
Ive never been to Italy, It’s always my parents. I bet that if i go to italy, id probably do the same thing.
If I were to go to Italy I would bring a wheelchair and just place it right next to the colosseum with a plush tortoise on it
Imagine being in opposite order, and being able to see where the characters have been, knowing about it
I just want to go to eat. And possibly live in Venezia idk I like water
i grew up near naples region and the city of naples and rome were 100% recreated perfectly exactly like they are in real life
Narancia's death is also very powerful due to it being the only time Giorno cries. Someone who is most of the time hiding his emotions with a poker face.
By that point Giorno has grew out of his fear, of his trademark tremble, as Oceaniz puts it. He has lived two major deaths by now: Abbacchio and Buccellati.
While he kind of tried to impress Abbacchio at some point (and got our goth police trusting him in the end), he, scared, mourns his demise, because even if Abbacchio was reluctant to trust him from the beginning, Giorno knew that he needed Abacchio to at least accept him in order to make the group dynamics work. Knowing that he can't even do a single thing to change Abbacchio's death leaves him with his instinctive paralysis, his childish fear, all exposed.
But the loss of Buccellati is a whole lot more to process. Being the only one that actually knows what Giorno wants, and being the first person Giorno is open about that dream with, being the one that gives Giorno the chance to start everything, Buccellati's corpse-like situation is unavoidable, and Giorno learns this important lesson by heart. He can't change death. No matter how much he tries with Gold Experience, how many parts he can create, he will never be able to make people come back, no matter how important they are to him, or how cruel their destiny was.
When Narancia, who was, once again to quote Oceaniz, an innocent child, gets hit by Diavolo's cruelty, in a way that's not only cruel but full of cowardice, Giorno has reached this point where he understands that death is part of life. He expresses his feelings through his tears, and prepares himself to move on. And what comes with the cruel and coward act of a cruel and coward murderer is not a revival, it's not changing what already happened: it's making him pay for his cruel and coward actions, in a way that's both just and ironic.
@@ginshuhime I don't know where you see the fear in Giorno. Plus, While Giorno has hints about Bruno, he hasn't really gone through his death. Plus I don't think he has outgrown his inability to cry until that moment. He went through abuse and crippling negligence, but he eventually broke to the point where he didn't even cry. And up to the point with Narancia, he never has since.
@@grandbean9031 Anime cut it, but at the end when GER disappears right before the “Don Giovanna” ending scene, Giorno straight up starts shaking.
The manga also didn’t have Giorno crying for Narancia.
Because trembling is Giorno’s way of “crying,” it’s basically finally processing what had happened during that week and breaking down.
And it's Giorno's body "dying" from being 'impaled by spikes,' followed by him "coming back to life"
Ring any bells
I think is heartbreaking when you realice that Giorno not crying is a sequel of the child neglect he suffered. Real babies and infants who are ignored by their parents often learn to stop crying to get their attention since they realice it is futile.
Whenever I see giorno tremble i can’t help but to cry for him
Gotta love how they’re called Sleeping Slaves and Giorno (meaning “Morning”) is the dawn that wakes them up to fight against fate
Giorno means day, but the metaphor still stands
It's like a burning sunrise
@@sydc3667 in your ayes when you are trying to sleep
I liked your comment now its at 444 likes lmao
Dio. Gorino
Dio. Gorino
Dio. Gorino
Dio. Gorino
Dio. Gorino
Dio Gorino
Digorno
“A mere jester dares to sneer at the Crimson King in his own court”
That floored me, I had to take a break from the video.
yeah that was awesomely put, never thought of it like that.
It finally explain at least one weird outfit, the jester hat
@@matthewcahill4475 What are you talking about it looks sick af :D
Disco The Ray
It’s the getup of a jester, those look like round bells, plus, it seemed to have Risotto entertain Diavolo
Fuckin poetry
*Hastely bites freshly microwaved Hot Pocket
*Gets rejected by the Hot Pocket
*My burnt tongue prevents me from reaching the true taste of the Hot Pocket
It all makes sense thanks to Part 5.
Stab your stand with the requiem arrow and render every hotpocket incapable of reaching true heat.
@@KyngD469 Instructions unclear, accidentally prevented my tongue from ever reaching true taste
@@KyngD469 Instructions clear, now i taste the flavor of hot pocket infinitely
in a way that works with the theme. and i hate that
Let your resolution bite through that hot pocket.
this is the reason i love jojos so much, araki doesnt just throw references or words in to make it sound cooler, he truly thinks of the meaning behind them and applies them perfectly. i think we should all thank araki for giving us this.
It's not like ready player one where the retard writing the books just throws in references to 80s media while screaming "LOOK AT THE THING! DON'T YOU RECOGNIZE THE THING? please clap ;-;"
For me Giorno *does* have development but in a very, very understated way, especially compared to his teammates.
He has a righteous goal, but the path to achieving it is inherently fraught with sacrifice. He definitely *logically* understands this, and states this fact a few times, but I think deep down, he's a kid in denial of that.
His first wake up call was when the janitor died, the first victim in Gio's journey: his actions have consequences. Afterwards we see that in nearly every battle, he's determined to win and save his allies at his own expense. Vs Black Sabbath - injures his hand grabbing the arrow to save Koichi and risks shattering his legs; Vs Soft Machine - uses himself as bait to clue in Zucchero's Stand and force Abbacchio to act; Vs Illuso - prioritizes saving Fugo and infecting himself to do so.... etc. To the point that Mista had to remind Gio of his own preaching, that "victory means they defeat the enemy AND all get out alive." Gio was trying so hard to absorb as much damage as he could without dying himself, so that his friends survive--because to him, that is victory.
But Giorno learns that his vision of victory is idealistic. He knows sacrifices will be made, but those are dealt through the enemy, right?
He tries so hard to keep his team alive, inspiring them to take drastic measures that will ultimately let them survive, but in the end they still lose their friends. I think the car ride conversation with Bucciarati was especially telling--Giorno had a hard time accepting that GE has failed to save Bucciarati.
And in the end, Bucciarati reminded Giorno that in the midst of loss, victory was indeed theirs. I think part 5 is a story about Bucciarati gaining a (literal and metaphorical) second life, and Diavolo facing the karma of his abuse of power. But it's also about Giorno confronting the consequences of his righteous goal. That's why GE cannot create new life from things still living, there is no new life without death.
beautifully expressed. It's the life-death-life circle
It's an explanation I never heard before. I've never even thought before about Giorno's own struggles
The interesting thing is that in the end the ones surviving the story are the ones who have come to peace with sacrifices. It's Polnaref, who had no choice but to accept it, Giorno with his character development and Mista, who knew about the sacrifices necessary from the very start
Underrated comment and analysis
I finally got around to watch this and I'm actually shocked since I actually planned to write an essay about Vento Aureo but you basically brought up EVERYTHING I wanted to say about it. Especially the part about Diavolo being a passive/reactive force while the gang is the active force.
There is a VERY interessting thing I realized about Sleeping Slaves while watching this video and I dunno if you missed it or just didn't mention it.
I always found it weird that Rolling Stones only showed Bruno's face in the beginnng but not Narancia's and Abbacchio's and that it only happened after Mista crushed the rock.
Then it hit me.
Let's pretend that, in Sleeping Slaves, Mista doesn't destroy the rock, but Bruno also doesn't die from Rolling Stone, let's also additionally pretend that Fugo doesn't return to the mansion to give Mista the tape recorder/cushion Mista's fall. Fugo goes to investigate Luca's murder and which either leads to him killing Giorno or coming up with nothing. It doesn't really matter and you'll see why soon.
Since Giorno is either dead or no intentions of joining Passione, he doesn't take the test. Which in turn means Polpo is still alive, well-fed and ready to receive a very special mission from the boss. Since Polpo is definetly not in the state to protect and deliver a girl to the boss he will just give the job to one of his most trusted underlings which is... you guessed it, Bruno and his gang.
So Bruno receives their first mission from the boss, without having to search for Polpo's treasure and skipping the Soft Machine and Kraftwerk fights. So what about La Squadra? How will the gang defeat them without Giorno? The answer is, they won't defeat them, in fact they won't fight them at all. If you remember reason why La Squadra chose to target Bruno's gang in the first place was because they didn't attend Polpo's funeral and since this didn't happen La Squadra are left in the dark about Trish's whereabouts.
Which means, all the obsticals that are thrown at the gang, every single conflict entire first half of Golden Wind... all of this simply doesn't happen. Except for one single thing a fate that is litterly carved in stone. Bruno delivers Trish to Diavolo and with no one to revive him, dies a pointless death trying to protect his values.
In Sleeping Slaves Scollipi says to Mista that breaking the stone allows him to change the course of fate. And it does. Breaking the stone cannot save Bruno from death but denying him the rocks path for a quick and peaceful end, allows him to meet a rugged path filled with hardships, sacrifices but also salvation.
Giorno is that path. His very existence in the story of Golden Wind reshapes the fate of the people around him. HE IS THE THE EMBODIMENT OF THAT RESOLUTE FATE ITSELF!
Giorno was the reason the gang had to fight Zucchero, Sale the Hitmen Team and the Boss' guard and even if he didn't want it, Giorno is also responsible for the deaths of Narancia and Abbacchio.
But Giorno also allowed the people around him to grow as people and allow them to fight for a good cause and together their resolve allows Giorno to obtain the artifact that dethrones destiny's false crimson ruler and make Giorno the true king of fate.
In the beginning you mentioned how Diavolo was less of a person but more of conceptual force of nature and the same thing can be said for Giorno except that he retains his humanity. So yeah, that whole thing with "The son of god beating the devil" symbolism definetly goes deeper then meets the eye at first.
TL;DR GIORNO IS LITTERLY JESUS AND HERE IS WHY
Wahouh I think you deserve more than just a hundred of likes
You just won best comment on UA-cam period.
I finally got around to watch this- KING CRIMSON! -GIORNO IS LITERALLY JESUS
Also DIO literally translates from Italian to god and Diavolo translates to Devil
lupusgirl64 GIORNO TOLD ME TO KILL THE PRESIDENT!
An entire 1 hour special for vento aureo?
Damn that's dedication to this beautiful series...
*Respect*
Excited Cat A 1 hour special that includes Gangster’s Paradise. He did what David Pro wouldn’t.
That's resolve!
He need to do this again but with Steel Ball Run.
Excited Cat Di Molto
Respecc*
The moral of Vento Aureo is "You can't change your past. You can't even change your future. All you can change is your present, so devote all your resolve to that."
But the present is keep moving so you can change the future.Like in the Bites the Dust arc with Rohan Death being change because Hayato
But, um.. changing the present would also change the future, wouldn't it? Lol I appreciate your attempt at being profound, but I don't know if that really makes sense
@@derekwalter4238 He means directly. You cannot literally go forward into the future and change it (i.e if you were gonna be murdered on some day but save yourself), but changes you make in the present can indirectly affect your future.
"even though mista is the character he gets along best"
-shows the of giorno healing mista. giving naranchia the impression its something waayyy different
Yes that is an accurate retelling of specific events in the video…
They certainly get along well ... 😏
🎵Everytime I close my eyes, I wake up feeling so horny..l..🎵
It's really saddening that part 5 is such an underrated gem. It is the perfect culmination of Araki's genius writing and the hatred for it in the west is unfortunate. Luckily it is getting its well deserved praise in Japan.
Fun fact it’s always widely been the most popular part in Japan since the manga
Edit: just to be safe I’ll say “one of” the most popular parts but yea look into it it’s pretty interesting. It’s only overseas that it’s been under appreciated
I think it's cause the way it was memed to death making it one of does thing it hurts to like
@@carrotlordguy6315 the entirety of jojo has been memed to death, it's still quite popular and no one hurts from liking it, what exactly would make part 5 into this jojoke epicenter?
It's clearly the most meaningful/real part of the 5 adaptations
Part 4 was almost like a terrible filler, it was saved through Kira
Underrated gem? no it’s not what I would call underrated. It is probably one of the most overrated one (from what I’ve seen) part 5 isn’t really my favorite part. I have some problems with it but I know other people have other opinions so I wouldn’t like to say anything that might be considered as controversial. Anyways back to my point I still wouldn’t say it is underrated as from what I’ve seen and what I’ve experienced more people like part 5 as I see it as some people have a sort of unfairness towards it because some of the people or more of them like it because they had found out about it from Giornos theme I understand some or more of the people like it besides that but from what I’ve seen that’s what happens to me
As a music education major I love the music references for each chapter, really sells the idea that Vento Aureo is entire symphony
Apart from copyright, that was the part I was most worried about because I suck major ass at music theory, used to always get bottom scores back in school lmao but glad you liked it my guy!
I was about to comment about this myself till I found this comment. I'm not a music education major but choir and music has always been a major part of my life and the way you set it up as a symphony really compliments the story and musical references araki is so fond of.
gangstas paradise being about how he cant change his fate
When Diavolo tried to make a Gangster’s Paradise but in the end only he was admitted to said paradise (because he does not recognize he hurts himself)
I started this like, "Am I really gonna watch a movie length essay about part 5?"
I ended it clapping for you. Subbed.
Same
I actually cried
I’ve always felt that Giorno’s character is reflective of this quote, “I’m no longer accepting the things I cannot change. I’m changing the things I cannot accept.” I loved this video. It’s lovely, well-thought out, and really resonates with me.
Basically stoicism (except the "no longer accepting things I cannot change")
Canti ?? From my understanding, stoicism is about accepting the things you cannot change, which are kind of everything except yourself. Though by changing yourself you do change the influence you have on everything around yourself.
One thing I love is how rolling stones is a stand that could give a swift end to whoever it targets, essentially skipping the journey of fate and in turn putting it against them. By Mista and Bruno destroying the stone they accept the long journey of fate and are finally able to fulfill their internal will to defeat Diavolo and change the organization forever, which wouldn't have been possible if Bruno died and never met Giorno. They accepted the long road and took no shortcuts to achieve their truth.
fun fact:
Lacrimosa is the last part of the requiem Mozart and also the most iconic.
It was also incomplete, ending on a high note.
It needed somebody worthy enough to complete it
1 hour Oceaniz Jojo video
1 hour Jojo episode
A jojo sunday
Son of god beating the devil
Goddamn this day is blessed!
And the special Gucci cast is coming
Dire has a son?
its also my birthday too lol
So close to heaven
What a beautiful duwang
20:50 "catalyst for hardening"
Yeah, that's one way of describing what Giorno did for Mista during and after that scene.
every time i close my eyes
i wake up feeling so horny
Can't get you out of my mind
I would give anything just to make you understand me
I don't give a damn about nothing else Freek'n you all I need
Diavolo is that one player that skips the grind by paying with money to get everything immediately
Morr like the meta slaves that only play the overpower character and then it gets nefrfed that patch and they suck
That is the entire message
@@nechocat1234 Diavolo mained Bayonetta in Smash 4, Giorno mained Jigglypuff
Ethan Hendrickson you trying to tell me Gold Experience is not a high tier like Diddy or Rosa
Diavolo is the one person who doesn't show his work in his math homework.
"Polnareff has missed his final train home." OH GOD, THAT HIT HARD
This is honestly a life lesson. All my life, I've been running blindly, assuming that I'd be okay while giving almost everything I do minimal effort.
I kind of feel like Diavolo, and here's why.
As a child, I was told by teachers and the educational system that I was gifted with a high IQ. Instead of working my hardest to shine brightly, I decided to use my so-called intelligence to merely get by without doing any hard work. My grades fell as the years went on. My classmates in the gifted program excelled and got accepted to quality schools with scholarships.
I paid all my earnings for a semester of community college and ended up failing all of my classes. I had no resolve, no sense of discipline, and no sense that my actions had real consequences. The whole time, I believed in an unchangeable fate and blamed my failures on fate.
Now, the so called prodigy works at a supermarket unloading trucks while his classmates are on their way to becoming doctors and lawyers.
Yet this video did not fill me with despair, it filled me with hope. Thanks to Araki's writing, and your resolve to analyse his themes, I understand a lesson that I had failed to grasp at every other opportunity in life.
The only reason I am telling you all of this is because I want to show you how much you've impacted me, changed my outlook, and perhaps even changed my destiny as a whole. Thank you.
my life is going down a very similar path and vento aureo had a massive impact on me! lots of love & luck to you!!
What the hell??? You got me in a box dude. I hope u and i and ppl like us return to the right path and not waste their gifts.
I'm the same, just that i realized very quickly that it was just my actions that put me here, not fate
Same for me. this story had an important lesson that I wish I had understood sooner in my life.
Good luck on changing your life mate ;)
"A mere jester dares to sneer at the Crimson King in his own court." ..I lost my mind over this!!! Thank you for this incredible video, Oceaniz.
"The Brilliance of Steel Ball Run" video is gonna be longer than Phantom Blood.
It would take him more time to make that video than the time it'd take Araki to finnish Jojolion
Steel Ball Run is the greatest piece of literature and fiction to ever be created
@@samg131 I'm not sure if I would go that far.... but it's definitely a masterpiece
@@Wonder7771 yes he can go that far
4 hours long video
dude they made the italy from jojo into a real country
You deadass rn?
Oh my God, they did! They stole the whole country idea from Araki! Those bastards!
Italy is just one big Jojo reference
This joke is as funny as a push down the stairs in the dark
@@francesco8572 Honestly, when I read that, I started just laughing uncontrollably, thinking, "it's not funny, it's not funny," as I kept chuckling to myself
I thought golden wind was the first chapter due to the weird way crunchyroll has their format set up. I watched and didnt feel lost at all. The story was good enough that the fact that these men had stands didnt even seem weird or out of place. I was immediately drawn to giorno and bucciaratis characters. The fact that I didnt need years of manga and anime knowledge to not only enjoy, but understand is what alone makes this series so perfect to me.
*Clears throat* ParT skIPpER
But u did restart from part 1 right?
The reason part 5 is the best to watch standalone is cause it’s practically a spin off Koichi is a bit confusing but only for the beginning I guess there’s Polnareff but then you don’t even have to watch the last part though part 5 is to part 3 is what part 4 is to part 2 but a lot more similar
@@hachonimity4524 of course haha
Honestly that's how I got into JoJo in the first place. I ended up watching Part 5 first because it was airing on Toonami at the time. When I finished Part 5 first in it's entirety I was never confused what was going on because what it was trying to represent in narrative, characters, and themes fits perfectly as a standalone story. Never the need to question what a Stand is, what's a Joestar and why Giorno is related, what does that arrow do, because they're all demonstrated by their themes of resolve and overcoming fate and pushing forward. Knowing all the stuff that happened in Parts 1-4 after finishing Part 5 makes the JoJo experience feel more like "Oh I totally get it now," and it makes Part 5 a whole lot better when watching it again after knowing the knowledge of the pervious parts.
I was really shock with the fact that Vento Aureo was being called one of the worst parts, this was the best Jojo part for me with the best Jojo Characters and the best Jojo Story also for me, theres so much to nitpick in this part, cause people didn't understand the part, the fact that most part 5 hates stemmed from bad translation and they still stand their grounds against this part suprises me, out of all the Jojo part which are very good tbh this part was a showcase of how Araki Perfected his Art. He was able to perfectly execute a amazing story that follows a great theme. I really hate the fact that some people dont like this part, not like have it as their favorite but don't like its story and something.
Same! I think part 5 is wonderful, I really love the characters, setting, theme...etc, I don't really understand why people think Giorno is "boring." His personality is just more subtle than the other Jojo's but that doesn't make necessarily make him "bad." In fact, he's my favorite Jojo
Now get ready for the stone ocean hate, thats on an entire new level
@@johnwarosa2905 I guess the hate is because of the ending but I think it was a good transition to introduce new characters, no matter how sad it was :(
@@xaesthetictoes4179 it was certainly a great way to end the joestar saga imo
@@johnwarosa2905 part 6 is one of the better parts, id say its better than 1 and 3
a small detail that made my heart melt: when the taxist in Sardegna said "ajò" to Doppio, which is part of the sardinian dialect meaning "let's go". I've lived in Sardegna for a year and I miss it dearly, that hit right in my weak spot
I’m in love with the JOJO in-depth analyses that the JJBA community has been producing over the years.
From analyzing Jotaro’s overall character to analyzing DIO’s psyché, then also finding the symbolism used in each and every Part of the series(Stone Ocean being one of my favorites). They’re all so great and it’s probably some of the best stuff to have come out of this community, in which this video is included.
Of course no community/fanbase is perfect, but it’s content like this that really allows this one to shine
Next video: The Perfection of the JoJo Fanbase
Jackson I’d watch that, tbh.
So THIS is the 1 hour special they meant
no wonder, i was thinking
Holy shit, Vento aureo's theme is literally: "Rome wasn't built in a day"
That’s not funny.
Ok. It’s kinda funny.
sometimes i dont get why do people hate this part. in my opinion, this was the most beautiful part in terms of its art and its message
I said this in different comments, but I’m here after TotallyNotMark’s review on Part 5 since it was underwhelming.
So are we just going to ignore how part 5 is the story of a fake taxi driver stabbing himself and becoming the crime lord of Italy?
Crystal Queen he literally murders a mentally ill man with a stick and a ghost
Fake Taxi?
@@gadellomagnollo1810 episode 1? giogio fools koichi pretending he's a taxi driver and takes his luggage
@@gadellomagnollo1810 yes, what Tsuki said. He's a fake "taxi driver", not a "Fake Taxi" driver.
@@matthewirving4877 Well.... At some point he would meet Dio and die by his hands and die from an old age.
I was a little disappointed that you never touched so much on the purpose behind how the story is staged.
Trish as the focal point of the story is extremely significant. When you start part 5 and learn just how Giorno is connected to the story, we gain an expectation: the story will bring that aspect full circle. Giorno's identity as the son of the series biggest monster has to be capitalized on at some point, right?
But no. Beyond the initial staging and, as you stated, the personality traits he shares with both of his fathers, Giorno has no idea by the end who DIO was or Jonathan or even his identity as a Joestar. He never meets any of the other JoJos, unlike every other JoJo we've seen before. There's no acknowledgement of that legacy. Really, it subverts all of those interesting plot beats, but not for no reason. DIO is dead. Any intrigue of this narrative occuring with Giorno died with him. So, we can't explore Giorno's relationship with his father.
That's what Trish is for.
Trish is intended to be an exploration, thematically, of Giorno as DIO's son. We could easily imagine a fairly similar character arc occuring for the two were DIO still alive. I see them as very similar characters with similar potential.
It also shows again that Giorno overcomes his own fate because it's not about his heritage at all
I don't understand how did trish is an "exploration, thematically, of Giorno as DIO's son"
@@theflashgordon193 had Dio been alive only to find out his son’s wills, he most likely would’ve gone out of his way to murder him as well
@@theflashgordon193 giorno and trish have a bit in common. They grew up without a father, said father was a murderous time-manipulating villain, but also has a 'good' side (jonathan/doppio) and they both awoke their stand powers at 15. There's a few more points but those are the main ones
Nope, the reason why DIO wasn’t brought up back again is because this is the story of Giorno, not DIO.
Simply put, They showed us DIO in the beginning to make us doubt that Giorno is good just like how Koichi and Jotaro doubted that DIO’s son would be good, it was just done to get us to think like other characters do.
I literally put away my assignment to listen to this 1 hour video.
Jojo is truly a blessing in our lives.
Bru, I just did the same thing. My final project for thtr is due tomorrow but this... Mwah! Buenisimo!
y'all reckless... I like it.
The other thing about the Chocolata fight is that GIrono generally doesn't curse and is pretty polite and formal, so that when he calls the former a piece of ****, you knew he was about to let fly and inflict the worse punishment imaginable.
Which is just mere foreshadowing for Diavolo. Because at least Chocolata had an end to his punishment, even if he experienced it for hours potentially, the punishment Girono had for the boss would quite literally never end.
Loved this video! Thanks again! The description of Diviolo is beautiful.
I think the only time he ever cursed before (at least the dub, the og sub is lost to netflix) is when BIG was eating his arm and he thought he was gunna die.
@@wastelandlegocheem Ahhh that's good to know. I just recall him cursing to be particularly unusual.
@@lordbiscuitthetossable5352 it is still unusual but that curse obviously just exclaiming panic or whatever.
The intro: Nothing is perfect.
Ultimate Kars: Are you kidding me?
He still lost.
This is probably the best video about Jojo's that I have ever seen
Damn you pronunciation of Polnareff name is spot on. My little french brain had a rush of dopamine aha.
El Mapache how does polnareff sound in French
@@justaguy6224 Le fameux
This is so true
42:43
Doppiomine*
fate favors
PEOPLE WHO DONT SKIP PARTS!
Jesse Hui... you...
@@oaktharas bastard
@@oaktharas you realize dogs die in almost every part right😂 might as well just not watch jojo
@@oaktharas how you get through Jojo where dogs are dying left and right.
@@oaktharas didn't yellow templance eat a dog too?
Damn, this video is art in itself.
Made me shed a tear at the end. I'm tired of people saying that part 5 is one of the weaker ones and that Giorno is the worst Jojo when everything is exactly the opposite. Even though my favourite character overall is Kira, VA is hands down the best chapter.
Poor Giorno doesn't deserve the hate he gets. Part 5 is awesome
Part 4 is amazing though
@Christina Azarian You have awful taste
@@Python-xs2iv I'm sure that anyone who un-ironically tells someone this is elitist and pretentious.
@@BeegButterBisqit ????
The only gripe I have is that they killed Mario so early I literally shook and cried
P U C C I araki would never
Kind of makes you want to reset the universe to bring him back, doesn’t it?
Fate is, and will always be right.
Sadly that doesn't mean everyones gonna ride that last train home.
We can only remember the actions that Mario did that makes him special, and hope that he will be cleaning them stairs in heaven.
Your profile picture makes me shake and cry too
Say sike please
Fun fact: apparently, Fugo was supposed to reappear as an antagonist sent to kill Bruno's gang, but Araki thought it would be too dark.
I read that he was in a really bad place mentally, something about having a friend turn against him or something and so he couldn't bring himself to have the group fight a former team member.
It's not hard to imagine Green Day being Purple Haze instead.
@@GhettoFabulousLorch that would have been crazy, the weakest link comes back as one of the strongest blockages could have killed off someone too making it have a even heavier impact
@@tametalks6102 honestly would've been amazing (in a bad way i guess?), but still...
The story seamed set up for it, with him refusing to betray the organization and having the "scariest" ability.
I clicked on this video only expecting an analysis, a celebration of Golden Wind.
Yet I walk away with a life lesson, one that was shared with us with a brilliant man,who was ultimately taught this lesson by an equally brilliant one, Hirohiko Araki. Golden Wind is to me more than an anime, its the celebration of the human spirit and its driving force to actively chase our own ambitions with resolve in hand. Thank you Oceaniz for a wonderful condensed explanation and metaphor for one of my favorite fictional stories ever told. Thank you Araki for creating such a beautiful, unique, and eternal story which we all have come to love and share that love with our fellow jojo fans. Thank you David Productions for making sure that all the love and magic Araki put into Golden Wind was kept and even masterfully exacerbated to a level fitting of a truly Golden Experience.
But most importantly I would like to thank fate itself, for allowing a Japanese manga artist write a story about Italian gangsters using western references to create a story celebrating fate and the the immovable human spirit who either may chose to accept or deny fate, in order to reach our own version of truth.
P.S. I loved your inclusion of Gangsters Paradise towards the end, a perfect song to a perfect ending to a perfect video.
"Polnareff has missed his last train home"
man that line hit me
abachios death scene always breaks my heart. seeing the crew lose one of their own hurts bad. and a large part of it is naranchias va. he is such a great crier
Nobody told me that we would have two hours special today
goat comment
No one told us we would see the Son of Dio beat Di...o in our lifetimes
The poem you based your username off is 3 hours long, relax
Chrystian Piedra im pretty sure hes not complaining
@@vocalpercussion on a whole 'nother level, coming from my mind
Interesting fact: When watching the scene where Narancia mourns Abbachios death, he goes through all the stages of grief
In short Araki a whole writing G
why aint there a reply doe
Agreed
All I could think was that Narancia sounded like he was having a temper tantrum.
That fact alone was probably the thing that made me cry even harder than I already was in that whole sequence. To see Narancia, a boy who's practically still just a kid, just completely break down in the face of a dear friend's death made my heart break for him.
@@harnanmylvaganam6311 go rewatch the scene and read his words while he’s breaking down while remembering to stages of grief... or don’t because that’s too much work and I wouldn’t
Oceaniz is the GOAT, making an hour long and beautiful video about Vento Aureo!!!!!!
Yet he didn't include trish hentai
@@Josuh She's 15, calm down lol
I love how he said "It's life. " at the end, symbolizing GER's abilities
You literally just clarified and confirmed why I almost without hesitation think Vento Aureo is my favorite part and possibly my favorite story in fiction. It is filled with Araki's heart and mind down to even where it takes place. I honestly think saying Vento Aureo is the worst part is insulting Araki as a person as this is one of his highs in his career as a mangaka.
It's the worst animated part, but if we're talking about the manga ones too, Jojolion is even worse.
@@ruben7350 lol why do you feel that way?
Rubén bro...? 🤨
That's what we call a fanboy.
@Igor Ktos 2 months and no response
1:05:05 Damn, you're gonna do him like that?
Let's hope that there will be PHF OVA
I'd imagine he would be broken up over Narancia's death.
@@krzysztofcieslewicz962 I highly doubt that will ever actually happen don't bet on it
@@munjee2 I know :(
Fugo is the Embodiment of your parents asking you "if all your friends jumped off of a bridge, would you jump with them."
I mean, his stand makes him a huge liability. If he took more time in learning how to control it and in turn learn self-acceptance, he would have been on that boat.
@@MechWarrior894 I feel that, asides from what you mention, nobody takes into account that Fugo *is* a logical thinker, in spite of his anger issues, and he made the choice that he felt it was more logical in order to survive. I mean he's just sixteen, and has lived a life where the depravity and greed of the people around him has forced him to survive on logic alone, because rage and anger are something he loathes from himself. He's so torn and conflicted because only rage has delivered some sort of justice when someone wrongs him, and that is not logical at all.
What would be so wrong about him being scared? I've seen a lot of people calling him a wuss for not going with the gang, but that was the whole point of Buccellati giving them the choice to join him or not. He didn't want them to die. He didn't earn their trust to lead them to their fall. Fugo being scared is only natural. They were all either scared (with good reason) or simply unaware of the real danger of this adventure, except for Giorno and Buccellati.
@@ginshuhime and he was right. of the ones who went through with the betrayal, only giorno and mista survived.
Part 5 is definitely the best part in my opinion. It was such an amazing journey. Truly a masterpiece.
The music in 46:30 is Golden Experience Requiem from Vento Aureo OST
The link is here and Oceaniz actually answered, but his answer was buried in the comments so for those who find so hard for this.
ua-cam.com/video/vEcpWUf6STc/v-deo.html
I’ve been looking for this song for forever, but never scrolled far enough into the comments section to find it. I guess I tried to skip to the results without putting in the effort.
Dude thanks for commenting this. It was hard finding this.
I'll kinda be disappointed if this isn't a rickroll, since, knowing UA-cam, if it's the actual OST it's probably been deleted by now, and no way I'm coming back to this video and scrolling back down here after I find out to confirm results.
When I watched Golden Wind, I really liked it for a reason I couldn't quite identify, a reason unique to it when compared to other jojos. The theme for Gorno Giovanni was playing in my head, and I knew it had something to do with the manefestation of a dream against tremendous odds. Something I have been dealing with for months now, and I must say resolve and the willingness to face reality head on is your best bet at making any change.
Those who are afraid to face the truth that shortcuts won't work will either lose sight of what they really need to do or they will give up on even attempting thier dream. The few that have what it takes to do great things must completely overcome the fear of failure, as Gorno has demonstrated no matter how bad the situation got. He always had his mind on success. Avoiding ruin isn't enough. Fear strengthens of the chains of fate and makes you it's puppet. Resolve is accepting what you fear, so you are able to move past it and pursue your dream. This is how you re-write your destiny, as long as you have the persecerence to follow through.
This video lays it out, and hopefully other people who didn't quite pick up on the theme of Part 5 and disliked it can have a chance to get it. Believe it or not, watching Part 5, this video and writing this comment helped make this crystal clear to me. It feels like nothing is holding me back. It feels like there is a blank canvas for me to write on. What I decide to do with it is another topic.
Wemikouss g This comment section is a gold mine. I just finished part 5 yesterday and had the tune in my head all day. I have my own hadships to deal with and Giorno does give me life - as in resolve to face reality head on. May your soul find it’s aim.
_Grazie_ , David Productions...
You really gave us... the *Gold Experience* ...
Original
And thus, after that they will give us something..that is really... _Made in Heaven_
@@sculptureofsound2 Actually, everyone says Golden Experience instead, so this at least has the benefit of using the right name.
I could cry watching this. I cried. Take everything from my mouth especially about Giorno. I am tired of people hating on him, calling him boring and bland, not the main JoJo, and even didn't have a goal, like gdi, it stated clearly that he wanted to be a Gang-star!!! He sees Bruno as the first step to achieve his dream. He even said I, Giorno Giovana, have a dream. How could there are people who said he didn't have a goal? His blood himself, the fact that he is a son of two people who opposed each other as one, already made Giorno so interesting for me. I also love how he understands biology and animals so much. That I have a headcanon he spent his lonely childhood by reading encyclopedias. I just want him to meet Jotaro and make them talk about Dolphins, gdi.
Giorno sux
Sean Smith , Yeah GioGio sucks ... Mista
I think he’s great, but all that bickering is mostly mama Bruno’s fault. Mama Bruno is too good a character, more fleshed-our, because he emotes more. Gio is more reserved most of the time. Gio pales in comparison a little
Jesse Hui understandable.
How is nobody talking about how he is the only youtuber who gives a damn about pronounciation and doesn't say "gIornoh Giovahnah oh sorry guys i cant pronounce it". this makes me very happy.
you can say it easily
jorno jovana
Joruno Jovanna
this is hands down the most well crafted and well presented analysis of vento aureo ive ever seen
amazing work.
I always thought that GER's head resembled a crown showing off who is true king of fate.
Same
@@spuart3308 Your username, your profile picture. What does it mean, WHAT DOES IT MEAN!?
@@ceoofhamburgermeat6712 you will never reach the truth
@@spuart3308 wha-
@@spuart3308 holy shit.
One of the things that bothered me during the final arc was how the arrow always refused to pierce Diavolo. I kept thinking how he had succeeded in his endeavors, and that there seemed to be no reason as to why he was rejected. Putting it into the resolve context helped me realize that the arrow went to Giorno, the beacon of resolve. Great video that helped me better appreciate Part 5
It was because Buccelati forced Diavolo to return to his body, thus his soul (aka king crimson) could not do anything. It effectively wasn't there to be pierced by the arrow.
Was because Bucellati forced Diavolo come back to his body too
I feel like part 4-8 is when jojo's_bizarre_adventure truly shines because araki was able to find his footing and style
@@xblade149 idk why, but Pucci (plus relationship with Dio) sold Part 6 for me.
@@f.o.8547 exactly
@Tony Nola Preach brother!
@Evan Kearney ah no I have to disagree the stand battles were amazing and intense.
@@xblade149 especially the final battle. Though the problem with part 6 is prob. The confusing abilities and too much speedwagon like moments.
Someone needs to make a “The Brilliance of The Brilliance of Golden Wind” because this video is amazing. This is like my sixth time rewatching it
One of the best videos that I ever seen it encompass so much about history, literature, art, and philosophy. It's truly amazing and inspiring! Thanks for sharing!
Just... Wow.
That was a godlike video. I know for damn sure that I gotta put Vento Aureo higher on my list of favorite JoJo parts.
It makes me want to do a long ass video on Steel Ball Run.
But I'll probably never be able to make a video that long Q_Q
Someone: "Man, this assignment is going to take me forever to finish, guess i'll take a shortcut and ask someone else for the answers"
Fate: "I'm about to end this man's whole career"
It's a godly life lesson from godamn JoJo. Details may hold the key you don't have because you skipped that part.
for some reason I hear king crimson song when I read this
"I really don't feel like building my own fence, maybe I'll pay someone to do it for me."
Fate: "So you have chosen death."
I also love how this man went ahead and put that requiem track from the old jojo game in its so good
Where?
I may be a year late to this. I got into JoJo in the beginning of 2020. I am not even kidding, but the instant connection I have with this part is absolutely legit.
I’ve watched JoJo from the very beginning. I loved them all. But if I was to be honest, Part 1 and Part 2 were Seasons that I would choose to not usually watched again the second time. Part 3, probably around twice. Part 4 is the same. But man, Part 5. I don’t know what it is that has made be become drawn to Vento Aureo So much. It has been a full year and a bit now, and I am still obsessing over JoJo. ESPECIALLY because of Part 5. I have watched it in Sub, Dub, mini clips and fan dubs. It’s wild!
The fact that in had also legitimately been to Italy in mid 2019 for a trip with family, I wasn’t expecting that I could recognize various places that the Characters were in. I feel like out of all parts, Part 5 just...resonates with me the most. It’s hard to explain why, but I just roll with it!
I’m in a similar situation. Now for the manga.
Amazing video! I just now understood that Giornos personality reflects his stand´s ability. Becouse the main trait of every living thing on this earth is their determination to live, against all odds, even in the worse conditions imaginable, life finds a way.
100% complete bois. We did it. Can’t wait for the 2 hour long video on Part 6.
Swivelboi i guess With all the symbolism SO had no way it’s 30 mins. There is a reason why Araki said it was the peak of JoJo in his eyes.
a guy
“Killed everyone” except for Joseph I guess
Manta Crew but to deny the mountains of symbolism of SO? It has as much as part 5 if not more.
@@1groovigyrl
Kinda...but it's not really that appealing....
P U C C I A N D D I O
Abdega Joseph is eternal, my man will never die
I watched it all the way through and there were no ads. I'm going to keep clicking on this video until they come up. Then I'll keep clicking some more. Amazing vid.
I expected a mere 20 minutes but I got passionate hour-long analysis of what might be my favorite part. Your fiery love reminds me of a quote from The Wise Man's Fear: "In many ways, unwise love is the truest love. Anyone can love a thing BECAUSE. That's as easy as putting a penny in your pocket. But to love something despite. To know the flaws and love them too. That is rare and pure and perfect." You've outdone yourself, sai.
Part 5 Golden Wind is my favorite part. It has the best characters, best music, and the best fight scenes. I loved each and every character in this part. We got a backstory for all of them which fleshed out their character and made me feel more of a connection with them. That's why I cried or at least teared up at all three major deaths in this part especially Bucciarati's death. Bucciaratis death is the most beautiful death in Jojo. Him ascending towards the sky while being surrounded by angels, welcoming him into heaven accompanied by the song "Ascension" which is the perfect name for the piece. It never ceases to make tear up or have chills. Everytime I hear it I just close my eyes and envision Bruno ascending into the sky. Truly an amazing song. Same goes for Giorno's theme. I know it's a meme song and is usually accompanied with something funny but it is actually an amazing song. I like to call it the "Bohemian Rhapsody of the anime world" because that's really what it is. There are so many different elements to the song such as rap (kinda) at the beginning, and the saxophone, and guitar are all great. And there is even an operatic portion in the song. And of course the famous piano towards the end really brings it all together as a whole. Again, another amazing song. I really liked the fight scenes as well. Especially the 7 page muda. I don’t really have anything to say about it but I just like the fact that it's the longest barrage in the series and is very satisfying to watch. The other fights were all really unique and interesting and I felt like the characters grew during each fight. I know some people complain that Giorno wasn't in a lot of fights even though he is the main character. But I think I prefer this because it gave each character a time to shine and I like to think that it shows their teamwork and friendship and how Giorno can't achieve his dream on his own. I've never seen such detail and deep symbolize in a Jojo part or any anime for that matter. For example, at the very end of the part where they show Giorno becoming the new mafia boss it shows a table with polnuraff (sorry if I misspelled) on it. It has three items. A bottle of wine, a zipper, and a vase with white flowers. The bottle of wine represens Abbacio which drank that same brand of wine when they were sitting outside the restaurant after they betrayed the boss (I think baccio is another word for "wine god" but I'm not a 100% sure on that). The zipper represents Bucciarati of course and is from his right shoulder. And the white flowers represents Narancia because when Narancia died Giorno used Gold experience and surrounded him with white flowers. This level of symbolize blows me away. Araki is truly brilliant. This part is an overall master piece and is a work of art.
Normies: Anime only takes place in Japan!
JoJo: *Laughs in basically every part*
>part 4 and 8 lmao
Laughs in *basically* every part
@@illuminoeye_gaming ah yes, Japan and its Crazy Noisy Bizarre Town, filled with people who have punch ghosts, serial killers with explosive cats protecting them and people made of rocks who sell very expensive fruits
Who has ever said that?
Seven Deadly Sind: laughs hard
Shoutout to all my OG Italy boys that like me spent hours defending part 5 back when every western JoJo fan hated it.
"I HAVE THE POWER OF PIZZA AND ANIME ON MY SIDE!"
I used to be one of these western part 5 dislikers... Now I defend Part 6
Never hated it because I'm not a retarded sheep
@@janni9479 it's sad that a lot hates part 6.
I read the garbage translations and thought it was the weakest part in the series, but now, thanks to DP, I was able to arrive at the truth.
JoJo Bizarre Adventures Vento Aureo is a beautiful mixed story and is my favorite part, and anime this year. Its theme is one of the best ones I’ve ever seen.
56:48
"One of the most powerful fictional beings, in all of manga"
That shit gives me goosebumps
I dont think people give bruno enough credit for his fight against the boss he is utterly destroyed but he gets a hit in and outsmarts the boss more than once also I much prefer fugo not joining over betraying the group im glad araki went for the version we got
12:10
The infinite falling of Diavolo.
I love you man
THIS COMPLETELY BLEW ME AWAY! ONE OF THE BEST VIDEOS I EVER WATCHED! IT HELPED ME SO MUCH TO UNDERSTAND PART 5, JOJO'S AND LIFE IN GENERAL! THANK YOU SO SO MUCH!
That orchestral Gangster’s Paradise got me feelin some kind of way.
35:21 is similar to Gyro's lesson 5.
The fastest route is a detour. And it was the detour that was our shortest path
I love how Gangsta's Paradise is playing at the conclusion.
So since I saw that milf, I was destined to die.......Death is almost as undeflectable as emerald splash.
And so Joseph deflected death
falartu because Joseph CREATED the milf
I will bet to kakyoin that you'll be back part 9
ANGEL Florp give me $300 if you’re wrong
I’ll give you $200 if I’m right
@@xtrmsword7127 r/choosingbeggars
You ever just love a jojo part so much you spend 1 hours and 14 mins explaining it
Got dam this is probably my favorite video essay Ive ever watched on this website. It didnt even feel like an hour passed by. You understood everything about golden wind and didnt reach or sound like you were making up fanfiction. It was just a complete and thorough explanation of the story and the themes told by it, and its really beautiful. I mostly understood the themes, but this really cleared it up for me and made me realize a lot of connections I didnt notice, like how Abbacchio's afterlife scene was referencing how Diavolo skips to results instead of going through eith what fate had for him.
This was also a really personal video to me, and in turn, part v is now more personal to me than it was before. I had already related a lot to Fugo, and even Diavolo, being someone who'd rather avoid fate and isolate myself from everything, like my own problems. But this explanation really inspired me to stop that habit and go through the hardships that life might throw at me.
In a way that another parallel I have with Fugo lol. Being inspired by Giorno in Purple Haze Feedback to not run from fate and face it head on. Even something as small as writing this comment, since I usually don't express my feelings a lot, let alone pour my heart out online. I might seem like some weeb rambling right now but fiction is just that important to me and always has been, I dont give a fuck what anyone thinks about that lmao. Thank you for this video, it was beautiful and really meaningful to me.
Id LOVE to hear your take on Purple Haze Feedback or just Fugo as a character in general btw.
This guy: Golden Wind is about fate, and facing it head on
Me: golden wind is about gay strippers with fighting ghosts
Do you mean fighting GOOOOOOLD!
Why can’t it be both?
the weird thing is how part5 tells you to fight fate and part6 has everyone who fought fate die. Pucci winning for me is a better ending than emporio pulling weather report out of his ass.
@@danielfletcher706 you need to understand how fate work in jojo to accept the ending of the part six.
I suggest you watch hamon beats video that explains the fate concept more clearly. because ever since part one to DIO's goal in part six, fate is always been a consistent theme in jojo.
Yes but actually no
This is without a doubt the greatest analysis, and I guess my personal favourite UA-cam video ever. Thank you, the story of Vento Aureo has had a big effect on my life.
I feel the exact same way dude, just finished golden wind last night and I’m still in awe of the amazing writing and overall story telling. The characters, themes, and setting are all just amazing to me, such a beautiful story and has had a big effect on my life too in terms of how I view myself how
I was on Reddit and saw a thread called "why is part 5 so hated" and somebody answered this
"The reasons I have most commonly seen are:
Giorno is a bland, weak protagonist with no development, and is op, and should have more connection to Dio
Diavolo is a bland, weak antagonist with no development
Everyone outside of Bruno and Mista is boring
Fights are too long
The final fight is bad and GER is dumb
Gold Experience pulls abilities out of no where
The ending is bad, and the Rolling Stones arc is boring and/or unnecessary
Just to be clear, these aren't my opinions, just the ones I see most often. I disagree with all of them and think they are dumb, #Part5BestPart"
YALL SERIOUSLY DONT KNOW HOW TRIGGERED I AM ESPECIALLY FOR THE ROLLING STONES AND EVERYONE ELSE IS BORING!!!
Every part 5 hater can be summarized with Diavolo's downfall; skipping to the results and glossing over the deep, important and inspiring topics that part 5 so subtlety puts into a simple plot.
@emerus D-did you watch the video?
@emerus I completely agree in the grand scheme of things these subtle nods to italy's history is more showing the genius of araki but it doesn't really make up for the plot falling off like half way through
@@mind-o_o-4533 It's as story about fate and resolve more than Italy. You obviously don't get it lol. The story holds up perfectly because the themes are consistent and strong. Not your definiton of a 'good story' but the objective one.
@@ethanc.1443 lol no theres no "objectiveley" good story
I still like steel ball run more
The use of Gangster’s Paradise made this video perfect. 10/10
My biggest regret about Golden Wind is how Polnareff's death was treated and what happened to him afterward. He deserved a better end
he's a mafia turtle now what more could you want
@@jadedpotato1574 you do have a point
@@jadedpotato1574 true true
Honestly It was sad seeing a stand that we got to know so much become an emotionless husk, even attacking its previous owner, and then end up being destroyed.
@@harnanmylvaganam6311 thats what makes chariot requiem so powerful though. I feel like if polnareff died during the king crimson fight and his soul never possessed the turtle the ending would be a lot better
The ending really gave me some motivation to do better in life, to be something better, and to embrace fate and humanity. Thank you, never expected this level of depth to a Jojo analysis but it’s great.
Best thing about the Video:
The Your Name Soundtrack in the Intro.
Perfection.
I know you've been working on this so I was excited to see what you had in store, little did I know I was about to experience a masterpiece! Time to not do anything!!!
“Absolute perfection doesn’t exist”
I imagine Giorno covering Requiem’s earholes like a parent rushing to cover their kid’s ears.