HATE FUN? - Uninformed Judgments on Spring Anime Part 10

March 19th, 2008 by Brack

Last one of these posts.

Junjou Romantica

Boys love TV anime based on Shungiku Nakamura’s manga. From the Higurashi director. I suspect this is one of those shows that will be much loved due to the fact there aren’t a lot (any?) out and out boys love anime shown on TV (rather than shows that tease it to let fans’ imaginations do the rest), rather than judged on it’s actual quality.

Itazura na Kiss

Osamu Yamazaki’s series for 2008 is an adaptation Kaoru Tada’s manga. Strange that ANN isn’t listing Minamimachi Bugyousho as animating, as I thought they were Yamazaki’s company and they did a great job with his adaptation of To Terra last year. Yamazaki’s a good director, so I think it all boils down to how hot the source material was.

And that’s your lot. There’s no doubt some series I’ve missed both deliberately (not written about any ‘net shows) and accidentally (I wrote all these posts a fortnight ago and there’s some shows that have surfaced out of nowhere since then).

My overall feeling is that there’s not a lot of shows that feel big and important based on talent alone - Kaiba is probably the only one. There also seems to be less truly objectional shows in this season too. I think we’re seeing the successes of the noitaminA slot and adaptations of “light novels” have a real influence on what is getting adapted.

So here’s a recap what I’m looking forward to catching in rough order of excitedness

Kaiba
Soul Eater
Golgo 13
Gag Manga Biyori
Chi’s Sweet Home

Allison & Lillia
Library War
Himitsu Top Secret
Chiko, Heiress of the Phantom Thief
Itazura na Kiss
Nabari no O
Macross Frontier
Real Drive
Zettai Karen Children
Masked Maid Guy
Kyouran Kazoku Nikki
Net Ghost PiPoPa

That seems a lot, but actually only those first five have me really fired up. I don’t expect to see GMB3 in English anytime soon, possibly not Chi’s Sweet Home either. However the manga is 80% understandable without Japanese knowledge so the anime may be even more so. Only Kaiba, Soul Eater and GMB3 have me excited based on the animation talent involved. However, I’m expecting those other 12 shows I’ve highlighted will contain gems.

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HATE FUN? - Uninformed Judgments on Spring Anime Part 9

March 18th, 2008 by Brack

Himitsu Top Secret

Reiko Shimizu’s mystery manga gets an adaptation from Madhouse. Yet another show with little in the way of amazing staff, however it’s a mystery show and Iwa Ni Hana is excited by it so I will check it. I’m hoping with all these shows directed by folks with little in the way of amazing back catalogues that we’ll get some talent breaking out, though I’ve not got my hopes up though as most have mediocre non-direction credits too.

Library War

This is going in the successful noitaminA slot in April, so I’m expecting a well made series. It’s from Production IG (is that 3 shows so far this spring?) and it’s far more appealing than RS or xxxHolic to me. This is possibly the show where we may get a talent noticed. Director Takayuki Hamana was on Hakkenden, Jin-Roh and Yuasa’s Vampiyan Kids pilot, but has been entrenched in Prince of Tennis lately, only getting out to do the Sisters of Wellber series (are these any good btw?). The noitaminA shows have been successfully filling the gap between otaku fodder and kids/family shows, and this shouldn’t be any different.

BLASSREITER

More Gonzo. More Shadow Monsters. These shadow monsters are people who turn into demons at will. Goddamn it, now I want a new Devilman series more than ever.

As much as I rip on GONZO, at least they actually post trailers themselves on Youtube, rather than paranoidly remove all potential promotion for their product from the site. From watching the BLASSREITER trailer I have to say it looks tech demo-tastic, which is one of GONZO’s many bad habits.

Nijuu Menzou Musume aka Chiko, Heiress of the Phantom Thief

Again BONES are doing two new series concurrently, last year they had Darker Than Black and Skullman running and DtB suffered. This is a co-production with Telecom, who have plenty of swell credits of their own. This is Ranpo Edogawa pillaging along the lines of Detective Conan’s Kaito Kid. The director is Telecom veteran Nobuo Tomizawa who recently did the far better than you’d ever expect, Ramen Fighter Miki, as well as various Telecom works from Japan, the US and beyond.

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HATE FUN? - Uninformed Judgments on Spring Anime Part 8

March 17th, 2008 by Brack

Kaiba

Masaaki Yuasa. Madhouse. WOWOW. Everything is in place for greatness. I’d be happy if this was the only anime I watch all year.

GOLGO 13

Yay! Looks like Answer Studio, who did a decent job on FLAG, are animating. I think it’s Shunji Oga directing, who was asst. director on Golgo 13: The Professional. And the writers are TV veterans that look to have Lupin III projects in their credits. So it’s looking pretty solid right now, the only concern I have is it being on TV Tokyo might mean it gets watered down a little from the manga. Still that one image on the site is reassuring - Golgo stoically walking away from shit blowing up!

Kyouran Kazoku Nikki

This appears to be some kind of moe-tinged nutty sci-fi comedy about really, really weird “family” (Mother is a catgirl, son is a lion, daughter is an alien jellyfish, you know the drill). I have the feeling it will not be anywhere near as a funny as it thinks it should be. I will probably still check it out, as high concept comedies are always interesting just to see if they crash and burn.

By the by, those character designs remind me of Bryan Lee O’Malley’s work somewhat. Especially in facial proportions.

Sugarbunnies

I believe Sanrio did this as a stop motion series a while back, and now it’s a cartoon. I like the character designs on the adult characters, but man those bunnies look depressed on the webpage.

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HATE FUN? - Uninformed Judgments on Spring Anime Part 7

March 16th, 2008 by Brack

Monochrome Factor

Pretty boys fight shadow monsters. This is also pretty much the same plot as the show Neo Angelique Abyss, that I mentioned last post. And there’s yet one more show to come that is said to have shadow monsters.

Oh, Bleach, what have you wrought.

You know what we need right now? A new Devilman series. Preferably directed by Jun Kawagoe.

Uchino 3 Shimai

Anime for normal people! It’s based on a parenting blog. Is this the first televised animation based on a blog?

It also looks like it will be fairly terrible flash animation.

Real Drive

Production IG’s first big show of 2008. This is the second spring season show that Kazuhiro Furuhashi is listed as director on. I’m guessing this is most likely wrapped production already, as it’s likely the show IG want to sell overseas.

Because, it’s yet another Production IG series with some Masamune Shirow input (credited as original creator). I know Shirow’s name helps sell things in the US and UK, but it seems like Production IG go to that well a little too often (along with the Mamoru Oshii well too). It’s probably worth a look, but I found Furuhashi’s Le Chevalier D’Eon rather stiff and disappointing so my hopes aren’t super high.

Glass Maiden aka Crystal Blaze

Talking of shows that have one eye on the international market. Crystal Blaze is Japanese title, Glass Maiden is the international title. Why it has a different English language name for the Japanese title is frankly bewildering.

The show itself looks to be a reunion of staff from Saikano. And it appears to be some kind of reverse engineered Cowboy Bebop (complete with it’s own Corgi) with a extra dash of City Hunter for taste. It doesn’t look terrible, more just desperately US-friendly to the extent of being totally unoriginal.

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HATE FUN? - Uninformed Judgments on Spring Anime Part 6

March 15th, 2008 by Brack

Neo Angelique Abyss

The characters in this look like factory farmed bishounen. The same interchangeable ‘tude, just with different haircuts.

Soul Eater

This looks like another series guilty of the sin of ‘tude, but at least it looks different, and the characters look different from one another. The design has something of graphitti quality mixed with videogame iconography to it that I find charming. Definitely one I’m looking forward to catching, particularly as the dependable BONES are producing and Ouran Host Club’s Takuya Igarashi directs. Yes, this should be one of the good ones.

Vampire Knight

And another bishounen manga adaptation. Lots of these this season it seems. High School, Childhood Friends, Vampires, you know the drill. This looks v. generic, with nothing in the way of staff to make me interested. I understand the Viz release of the manga is rather popular, so I expect this to get similar fan attentions thrown it’s way.

Wagaya no Oinarisama

Here’s the hermaphrodite fox-demon anime you were demanding! From the man who gave you the El Hazard episodes that were no good! And Love Hina!

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HATE FUN? - Uninformed Judgments on Spring Anime Part 5

March 14th, 2008 by Brack

Zettai Karen Children

Based on the manga by Ghost Sweeper Mikami creator Takashi Shiina, this looks like it’s the replacement series for Hayate The Combat Butler, as it shares staff. It is about a military lieutenant forced to babysit three 10-year old psychic girls. Given it’s an anime made in 2008, that scenario is laden with the potential for creepiness, but I liked GS Mikami so Shiina’s getting the benefit of the doubt. The anime character designs have something of a nineties throwback look to them though not quite as clean as Shiina’s own line work.

God… “Nineties throwback”.

It’s worrying that I can use that phrase and have it mean something. With Slayers coming back I’ve a horrible feeling that angular early nineties anime look is going to become anime’s next “retro” look.

Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion R2

More Code Geass. I’ve not actually seen any of the first series as TTGL was filling my mecha quota at the time. I get the impression from fan reaction that it’s more of a writers’ show, with more emphasis placed on the plot and script than the animation, whereas TTGL was very much an animators’ show (the greatness of TTGL’s writing is that it understands what works in animation). I described the last TTGL arc to my brother the other day and he said - “that sounds like the mecha show Tex Avery would make” - which is about right and A VERY GOOD THING. TTGL fans tend to rave about the animation and the emotion of the show, rather than the story. Code Geass fans come across as sci-fi fans first, animation fans second.

Or ravenous CLAMP fans that must consume anything those ladies come into contact with.

Nabari no O

HIGH SCHOOL NINJAS! It’s directed by Speed Grapher’s Kunihisa Sugishima. Hopefully free from GONZO and only having to do 13 eps means they might actually fulfill their promise. JC Staff can manage 13 ep series quite competently, so this might be fun. Same writer (Michiko Yokote) as xxxHolic though. To be fair she has done a lot that I like - Airmaster, Cowboy Bebop, Genshiken, Patlabor - as well as a lot I don’t, so this could be perfectly fine.

Special A

Some sort of romantic comedy based on the manga by Maki Minami. The anime character designs look soulless and devoid of charm. And Gonzo are involved.

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HATE FUN? - Uninformed Judgments on Spring Anime Part 4

March 13th, 2008 by Brack

Kanokon

Our second bog standard anime “love comedy” of the season. And also the second one from XEBEC. How depressing.

Da Capo II Second Season

Well at least they aren’t coming up with new moe shit, I suppose.

Masked Maid Guy

Akai Maruboro’s tale of a giant masked male maid bodyguard is adapted by Madhouse. The actual production staff is underwhelming (a lot Strawberry Panic staff by the looks of things), but the concept is goofy enough that I will probably check it out.

Net Ghost PiPoPa

I’m going to hazard a guess this isn’t gonna get fansubbed. Which is a shame as it’s created by Naomi Iwata, creator of Gregory Horror Show. Shinichiro Kimura directs, seemingly escaping the moe hell he was stuck in.

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HATE FUN? - Uninformed Judgments on Spring Anime Part 3

March 12th, 2008 by Brack

To Love-Ru

Well this looks terrible. Bog standard extraterrestrial home invader love comedy that misinterprets what was actually great about Urusei Yatsura.

Kure-nai

When this was first promoted on it’s website, it had a creepy pic of some young girl character holding the hands of an unseen male character that had all sorts of unsavoury overtones about it. The website seems to have stepped back from that, offering rotating screenshots of various characters and ominous music. Still looks pretty rubbish mind.

The Tower of Druaga ~The Aegis of Uruk~

Videogame tie-in. GONZO produced. Yeah, this is not going to be any good, is it?

Amatsuki

Adaptation of Shinobu Takayama’s tale of getting stuck in virtual reality museums. Kazuhiro Furuhashi (Le Chevalier D’Eon, Getbackers, Rurouni Kenshin) writes and directs. Doesn’t grab me visually nor are there any names on the production I’d watch it for.

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Doug Benson’s I Love Movies on Super Deluxe

March 11th, 2008 by Brack

As much as I’d love the podcast back, this was a fine translation of the bobanddavid.com columns. I just miss the expanded form the podcast gave it.

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Oh! Edo Rocket

March 11th, 2008 by Brack

Boy meets girl. Boy builds giant firework to get girl to the moon.

This ridiculously multi-layered 2007 series from Madhouse based on the 2001 (?) play by playwright (and Gurren Lagann screenwriter) Kazuki Nakashima has been overlooked somewhat in English speaking anime coverage.

I’d hazard a guess it’s down to the somewhat era-specific references it partly leans on to make it’s points. It takes place in Edo in 1842, when the city was under the strict frugality reforms introduced by Mizuno Tadakuni. Mizuno appears as a character, as does Toyama Kinshiro, a character from the historical detective drama Toyama no Kinsan (not sure of his historical existance) and Torii Yozo, another real government figure who also features in the anime Ayakashi Ayashi.

Also the main character and an “anime exclusive” supporting cast member are named after the rival guilds of firework makers that took part in the Sumidagawa Fireworks Festival.

But that density of historical reference shouldn’t put you off. The series is well aware of just how dense and Japan-specific a lot of their references are. They joke at one point that certain gags won’t go over with international audiences. And more importantly, it’s not all about history.

For as well as being dense with cultural references of the era it’s set, the show is accutely aware of both it’s existence as an anime and as an adaptation of a play. It periodically makes reference to it’s own production, breaks the fourth wall to address the audience and has characters interact with the animation in a way to break the fragile illusion of reality it creates.

And it throws gag after gag of varying levels of obscurity, making pop culture references, poking fun at itself, and the anime industry in general (Production IG and Mamoru Oshii in particular get a rather cruel barb thrust their way). Lots of visual, script and audio cues come from who is playing a particular character, there’s FMA, Cowboy Bebop and Gurren Lagann gags that all come up in this way.

But don’t think it’s just an Excel Saga-esque array of obscure references and satire.

There’s a strong story at the core, that takes some surprisingly dark turns early on, and has a great conclusion that has it’s cake AND eats it. However even the story isn’t the point of the show.

The story, the historical references and the pop culture gags and satire are all in service of an overall theme, which is looking at the role of populist entertainment. It draws a comparison between how entertainment, art and craft still flourished under the frugality of Edo at the time and how the frugality of limited budgets effect the way anime is made. And it looks at what cheap, populist entertainment means to the common man, and the motives behind the people who make it.

Assuming this is a relatively fair adaptation of Nakashima’s play (and beyond expansion of the plot, there’s no reason not to - Nakashima shows up to write an episode later on) then the themes of the story closely mirror the intention of Nakashima and Hidenori Inoue’s Gekidan Shinkansen troupe - the creation of a modern equivalent of kabuki, telling lively, relevant and populist stories.

There’s still much of the theatrical origins about the anime - the credits are written using theatrical terms, background paintings are treated occasionally as physical set dressings, one character is played by the actor who played him in the original play, and in one great episode, the characters put on a play recreating the events of previous episodes.

Now I know some people balk at this level of folding in on itself in a cartoon, prefering a straight narrative. I say these people are wrong. Almost straight out the box, animation has been experimenting with it’s own form, with the best of that experimentation being done in popular vehicles. Max Fleishcer’s Out of the Inkwell series from the 20’s had drawn characters, exist as drawn characters within the “real” world rather than characters in their own drawn world. Tex Avery had characters played with what you could do once you acknowledge the cartoon as frames on film. Bugs Bunny would address the audience directly, providing his own commentary on his actions. Breaking the fourth wall and acknowledging your existance as a fictional creation trapped in film is at the heart of animation innovation, and when a cartoon finds a new twist on that, to actually examine it’s own role in culture it should be embraced.

Oh and in the last 3 episodes it even finds room to take a pop at nationalism (Japanese nationalism in particular, but a lot of the points clearly apply to all nationalists).

Mononoke might have been more visually innovative, Denno Coil might have been more nuanced, Tenga Toppa Gurren Lagann might have more thrills per minute, but Oh! Edo Rocket is a little gem that deserves your attention.



2007 was a great year for TV anime, I’ve still got more series I need to talk about (To Terra, Shigurui, Kaiji, Moyashimon).

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