Talk:Tomohiko Kazami/@comment-91.47.14.139-20150120185326/@comment-6052796-20150123110453

In regards to the movie one, it's kinda obvious that her death wasn't quite important since all the deaths were being respected on screen rather than just implied off screen. That and since the next Extra was shown in the end pretty much ruining the mystery of who could it be next.

With Misaki Fujioka I'm not doubting that she has other friends, but none of them were in Yomi North at the time. The only Yomi North connections she had were Mei and possibly Takako.

With Yukari it makes sense the same way Reiko's ressurection makes sense. When Kouichi's grandparents were around the same pattern goes: Grandfather hints that Reiko may be dead, Grandmother shuts him up, but uses polite demeanor. The Grandfather has no illusions around him do to his mentality being immune to the calamity so he may have been the only one sensing something not quite right about Kouichi talking to Reiko. The Grandmother on the otherhand seems to be in complete denial, a common practice amongst grieving parents. So in a away she's pretty much saying "Look over there Mikami's not dead, she's talking to Kouichi." And much like Misaki Yomiyama, she was also well loved by the entire class: The male students sans Kouichi think she's hot, the female students especially ones such as Izumi or Takako respect her from student to teacher. So a loss like hers could devastate the class greatly. So with Sakuragi and the actions around her death being more shown, I'm willing to bet students are pulling the same denial stunt. One thing I've noticed about deaths in an anime, is that whenever someone dies and the person that announces it is around, the first reaction is "She/He can't be dead BRING HER/HIM BACK TO ME!!!!" To the person that announced the death as if they are responsible.