HoriMiya: Season 2/ Episode 13 “Graduation” – Recap and Review [Finale]
It’s graduation day at Katagiri High School, and while there aren’t tear-filled goodbyes, there are moments for viewers that may bring a tear to your eye.
It’s graduation day at Katagiri High School, and while there aren’t tear-filled goodbyes, there are moments for viewers that may bring a tear to your eye.
While we’ve seen Miyamura in the Hori household, it is further established why he melds so well by revealing how Yuriko and Kyousuke met.
As the second season enters its final episodes, we get an episode that feels more akin to what we got in season 1, as Hori’s insecurities and violent nature are displayed.
It’s Valentine’s Day, and for Sawada, Hori, and Miyamura, it means coming up with something good for their favorite person – and Sawada maybe making a new friend.
The kids’ favorite perverted teacher, Yasuda, is focused on.
Like previous episodes with named characters, what begins to be about them, eventually focuses on others perception of them, with barely any new information or progress in any storyline.
Sawada and Sakura get some notable focus as we peer into their lives – from what makes Sakura’s life joyful to what makes Sawada’s life hard.
After wasting half the episode with a sleepover, we get to see Remi and Sengoku’s relationship have more focus than ever before.
We take a break from your regularly scheduled focus on Kyoko and Izumi to allow Shuu some level of spotlight.
In an episode primarily taking place in the Hori household, we watch the day and day out of Kyouko and Izumi’s relationship and learn how she and Kakeru are bonded, partly by their parents.
While many competitions go down, it is Hori and Miyamura supporting one another despite being on opposite sides that becomes the most entertaining part.
While titled “Cooking Class,” the episode features all the prep for sports day, which will be featured in the next episode.
Set before graduation, this episode gives you more time with the cast than adds any notable details.
The overall goal of Wherever I Look is to fill in that space between the average fan and critic and advise you on what’s worth experiencing.
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