Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context YMMV / IrresponsibleCaptainTylor

Go To

1* AdaptationDisplacement: Most Western fans' introduction to the series was the anime, not the more expansive light novels that were only released in Japan.
2* AlternateCharacterInterpretation: ObfuscatingStupidity or just regular stupidity? [[EpilepticTrees Who knows]]?
3** No, really. This trope is invoked and the tree is actively cultivated by the characters themselves. [[spoiler: Summed up nicely by one of the final scenes, where Tylor clumsily tosses a dart behind his back, only to have it hit a dead bullseye.]]
4** By the end it seems like it has to be a little bit of both. Even if he were a genius, Tylor stumbles onto situations powered by sheer blind luck while enough hints are dropped that it's hard to buy into him just being a lucky idiot.
5** The issue with the hints above is not exactly helped by how some actions of Tylor are ''explicitly'' strokes of genius (like realizing [[spoiler:Harumi is a spy]] ''right away''), while others are ''explicitly'' strokes of dumb luck (like how he survives his [[spoiler:execution by firing squad]]). That means that every hint CAN be taken both ways with canon to back the interpretation up.
6** The "intentional" part is further reinforced during the episode where [[spoiler:Yuriko and Azalyn go into his mind to disable the mind control chip, and meet his subconscious. One of the aspects explicitly says "it's better to pretend to be a fool than risk being tortured, you know?"]]
7** There is an old Japanese house-wife tale that idiots ''never'' catch colds, and just about any anime sticks with the principle. Tylor once suffered a cold for a whole episode. Breaking tradition, or a hint?
8* SugarWiki/AwesomeMusic:
9** The music which plays right after Azalyn's BizarreAlienBiology announcement.
10** The William Tell Overture plays during the most epic [[spoiler:game of chicken]] ever in episode 23.
11** Suppe's Charge of the Light Cavalry during Operation: Rescue Yuriko in the final episode.
12* BadassDecay: Yamamoto. In the second episode he's the leader of the forces assigned to the hostage situation, firmly in control of himself. Things go Tylor's way during the hostage situation, ridiculing him. As such he gets assigned to the Soyokaze and thus becomes rather pathetic in his efforts to control Tylor.
13** Yet, he also TookALevelInBadass when he took command after [[spoiler: Tylor got captured by the Raalgon]], deciding to just warp directly in front of the Raalgon flagship and start blasting.
14*** Tylor pokes his BerserkButton...
15* CompleteMonster: [[EvilChancellor Prime Minister Naku Ra Wang]], the chief advisor for Empress Azalyn, seeks to become emperor of the Raalgon Empire. Using the death of her father, he manipulates Azalyn into declaring the United Planet Space Force as an enemy, resulting in thousands of deaths on both sides. Feeling impatient, Wang tries to assassinate Azalyn by setting off an explosive in her room, which places Tylor into a coma. After Azalyn returns from the Soyokaze, Wang manipulates her and the council into commencing an attack on the UPSF headquarters, planning to win the battle, start a war with the UPSF, and increase his reputation as the war's chief proponent. Six months after his plan fails, Wang tries to start another war with the UPSF by hiring both Raalgon terrorists to cause destruction on Earth, and a mysterious third party to destroy Azalyn's home planet in order to stir up both sides. Once the war starts, Wang launches a coup on the Melva, holding Azalyn captive, seizing the throne, and declaring a full-scale attack on the UPSF Spacefleet.
16* CrazyIsCool: Tylor is one of the trope's best examples. No one's clear on whether he's a lucky fool masquerading as a genius, a genius using people's opinions of him as a fool to become a [[TheChessmaster chessmaster]], A MagnificentBastard, or a lunatic whose irrational approach manages to somehow always work.
17* PeripheryDemographic: Creator/JohnRingo apparently loved the series so much as to write[[note]]Together with one Victor Mitchell[[/note]] an even more insane parody of it, a short story "A Ship Named Francis", for the ''Literature/HonorHarrington'' anthology ''In the Service of the Sword''. On the other hand it was a ''much'' crazier and less adjusted ship this time.
18* SpiritualAdaptation: As stated in the Laconic Wiki page, this series is ''Film/PoliceAcademy'': In Space.

Top