"Midnight Sun" is by far one of my faves because it does so much for the series as a whole (foreshadowing, developments, motifs, etc.) while also being largely character-driven
Specifically Mikasa, Eren, Levi - and also Floch, Erwin, Hange, and Armin's characters
The conflict between Eren, Mikasa, Levi, Hange & Floch over who should be saved tell us a lot about these characters, their values & future developments
And despite being pitched as a "strategic" debate, it quickly becomes personal, emotional, even by those claiming otherwise
Very quickly it becomes obvious that despite people claiming they want to save either Erwin or Armin because they're "better for humanity", there's personal feelings involved that makes no one impartial- including Floch, traumatized over the charge and looking for meaning of it:
Eren and Levi even acknowledge this explicitly- which isn't to say that, despite having personal feelings, they don't believe their own words, because given Eren and Levi's faith in and experiences with Armin and Erwin respectively, they have every reason to feel this way
But as is made clear, there's no "bad" choice presented- in that Erwin & Armin are both acknowledged to be strategic geniuses who have significant wins in-series (and also beloved people with loved ones fighting for them)
(The big difference discussed is leadership/experience)
Which only highlights the underlying personal aspects more
Multiple dynamics are given significant weight during the conflict, from more subtle (like Mikasa's newfound respect for Levi making her hesitate & listen despite everything; Levi's care for Armin) to extremely important
Erwin & Levi and EMA are the main dynamics explored
-Eren's insistence on Armin's value, the differences between their "dreams"
-Mikasa's desperation to save one of her childhood friends
-Levi's desire to let Erwin be at peace, not be forced to be a monster
This chapter also sets up many character developments/arcs post-time skip like:
Armin and Hange grappling with the shadow of Erwin's legacy- Hange forced into an unwanted role and Armin's feelings of unworthiness
And Levi's feelings of unfinished business with his vow to Erwin (that kick off his monologue in 136), which he also brings up to Erwin in this chapter (as his last real words to him)
Moreover, Levi's choice here is a precursor to the choice that Mikasa will later make with Eren in the climax of the series.
And also Mikasa's development in this conflict, where she accepts Armin's death for a greater good after hearing Hange's words, that is a precursor to opposing the Rumbling
In terms of overall story importance, this is the chapter that codifies Kenny's words on how "everyone's a slave", emphasizes the importance of Kenny's speech, as Levi relates it to Erwin as a reason for his choice, which relates to how the story deconstructs notions of "freedom"
Hange also has a speech with great importance on the inevitability of loss and how you must keep moving on- a major motif of AoT imo
It's also fitting to me that Hange says this and moves Mikasa given Mikasa's ending and her childhood trauma's impact on her
Levi also thinks back to this chapter within his monologue about whether the OG Survey Corps would support the Rumbling & solidifies his "no regrets", owning his choice & believing in a hopeful future (through the next gen), a major motif for Levi, the Survey Corps, and AoT
Moreover, I like the contrast of Eren's view that Armin's worth saving because he has dreams & Levi accepting Erwin's humanity over Levi's own wants and Erwin's pragmatic value vs. Floch's utilitarian view of Erwin's value (that actually decouples Erwin's life from his humanity)
The value of Erwin & Armin as beloved people wins over the desire to use someone for a purpose
This ties in well with the value of life explored with Zeke & Armin imo
People's lives are worth more than what they can do for you. People are special inherently for having been born
And the chapter name - the sun never sets, which ties to Hange's words triggering Mikasa to think of her memories of Armin as she lets go
And especially with Erwin- someone who lives on in the minds of those who admired him (Hange, Armin) and those whose lives he changed (Levi)
This chapter has such meaning and emotion for me, I didn't even scratch the surface of my thoughts as I wrote this in 10 minutes, but wanted to share part of why Midnight Sun is one of my favorite chapters
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Thread on Levi's story in Attack on Titan and how his conclusion ties together elements since the very beginning and the story's messages
When we first meet Levi, he's presented as aloof and stoic, scoffing at the crowds cheering him
It's easy to assume this is because Levi doesn't care, is arrogant or feels detached from the lives around him
But we're soon after shown who Levi truly is and what drives him
When a nameless comrade is dying in the mouth of a titan, he consoles himself with a final act of defiance: he may lose but the titans will all fall to Levi - before Levi kills the titan & sends help to him
And as he lays dying, Levi grabs his hand and makes a promise to him
Wanted to give my two cents on why Isayama responded to the interview question about characters without backstories by saying he had been thinking on an additional Levi story despite No Regrets and Levi's established manga backstory in "Friends" already existing -
1. No Regrets isn't written by Isayama
While Isayama was involved to a degree and even references it in canon, ultimately this isn't a story from Isayama's words and doesn't capture a lot of what Isayama talks about for his vision of Levi's transition in interviews & canon:
+ those references are limited; like many noticed that Farlan and Isobel aren't featured in Levi's final salute scene among the gathered fallen Scouts
& they never receive more emphasis than say Petra & the first Levi Squad, relegated to the back
Spoiler-less thread analyzing the relationship between Levi and Erwin and how it comes full circle, giving each other what they searching for at the time they needed it the most
Erwin and Levi's relationship is something of a full circle, one built on mutual trust, support, and reliance-
It begins when Erwin offers Levi what he had been looking for but couldn't get himself and ends with Levi giving Erwin what he's seeking all along but couldn't attain
Levi had a void inside him since Kenny left, a question of what was the point of his strength, he was looking for meaning when he met Erwin
Erwin saw his potential, got him out of the slums and shared an altruistic vision with him that allowed him to find his path and purpose
At a high-level, I really appreciate Ymir's character both because of her thematic value but also because I love how what they've been fighting (the titan power) turned out to be the extreme manifestation of many major characters' own demons so-to-speak -
AoT cautions many things that culminate in Ymir's character
So through Ymir it's almost like the personal demons of our characters had manifested through the literal monsters (titans) they faced long before we even knew anything about Ymir, Paths, or the world outside the Walls,
One big motif is the need to move on from the past, not let it define you and find a way to move forward, on a personal level (stop letting your own trauma hold you back), as seen with Mikasa, Reiner, Erwin, Zeke, etc.
It's part of the purpose of Levi's "no regrets" advice
Levi canonically has super strength, can easily kick down a door or backhand half of Eren's teeth out while exhausted, body slam or arm wrestle huge thugs, fought daily just to survive Underground, and beat up adults twice as big as him since childhood
1/
Most of the cast have military training but Levi began fighting when he was extremely young outside of sparring in life-or-death fights
He cut his teeth in dirty fights with grown men as a kid just to survive and he was trained in tactics by Kenny who (then) wasn't using ODM
2/
There's no support to takes that Levi can't fight without ODM/isn't super strong
Isayama commented that irl a 160cm guy couldn't be the strongest but that's why "his is not a normal body"
Levi is smaller to feel relatable and appealing to readers despite being the strongest