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Blog Archives:
It's probably so nasty under there.
Chou Kadou Girl ⅙: Amazing Stranger is about a sentient 1/6th scale anime figurine who lives with a fan of her franchise. Although there are other shows about tiny wives and the people who love them (for example, Nona arguably has more in common with her Frame Arms Girl counterparts), I'm still going to point to Hand Maid May as the best example of this sort of thing. I think it's because I enjoy the two human leads in Hand Maid May (Kazuya and Kasumi), whereas I'm mostly ambivalent about Haruto from Amazing Stranger. His kid sister seems okay, but she's not in the show much. Both Hand Maid May and Amazing Stranger do feature copious amounts of fan service and lots of meta humor, so I guess they also have that in common. I've written about Hand Maid May a fair amount on this site already, so just read those old entries if you're still curious why I seem to like it so much.
The explanation for why Nona sleeps in the refrigerator was not at all convincing.
With regard to Chou Kadou Girl ⅙: Amazing Stranger, it's sort of uneven, but I find some of the gags amusing. I also like the robotic autotuned voice in the OP. More importantly, I appreciate that Nona is not entirely dense, so the show isn't structured around increasingly strained misunderstandings and complex scams. That is a nice change of pace. It also makes her a bit more human. I guess that's technically a sort of racist thing to say about a tiny plastic space...whatever she is, but it is an important part of getting me to care about the events within the show. That was something notable about Hand Maid May—I cared about where the characters were going to end up. Amazing Stranger isn't quite there yet, but hopefully its remaining episodes will provide at least a little more emotional resonance.
Posted in Chou Kadou Girl ⅙: Amazing Stranger, Hand Maid May | Tags: Androids, Anime Figures, Built for Sin, Built for War, Compare and Contrast, Fan Service, Harem Comedy, Legs that go up to her neck, Mecha Musume, OP ED, Season Introduction, Spring 2019 | Permanent Link
Lucky for Potato-kun, Uruka is tsundere, not yandere.
I guess I did know ahead of time that there were two shows with Benkyou ga Dekinai in the title, but managed to forget when the season started. In any event, I had decided to watch Boku-tachi wa Benkyou ga Dekinai (We Never Learn: BOKUBEN) and skip Midara na Ao-chan wa Benkyou ga Dekinai (Ao-chan Can't Study!) based on their descriptions, and because Bokuben at least had some people on the Twitter mildly looking forward to it. Well, I ended up watching the first episode of Ao-chan by accident (it aired first) and decided to stick with it.
Dude is literally sniffing his hand after groping Ao's thighs.
After three episodes of each, I'm going to continue watching Midara na Ao-chan wa Benkyou ga Dekinai and I'm dropping Boku-tachi wa Benkyou ga Dekinai. I was concerned Ao-chan's little goblin father was going to ruin the show for me, particularly after his antics in the first episode, but I'm relieved to discover the show itself is pretty much a straightforward sex comedy about misunderstandings. One key that allows the show to work for me is that both Ao and her love interest are actually already into each other, and probably should be engaging in activities that might inadvertently help address Japan's declining birth rates, but they're both pretty dense. This is a small (but appreciated) departure from the usual formula where both parties are 100-percent pure. Ao-chan Can't Study! might end up being that way too, since—let's face it—anime is fucking chickenshit, but the show is okay for now. It also helps that the episodes are only half-length.
I guess now she can't get married.
Boku-tachi wa Benkyou ga Dekinai, on the other hand, drags. I get the feeling that I would probably be okay with some of its cliches in manga form, because a reader can just blow through at his own pace. But the anime spends entirely too much time on antics I've seen plenty of times before and don't feel compelled to revisit. Most of the show's fans seem to have been fans of the manga first, but I'm not sure how they regard the adaptation specifically. I, for one, could do with less Postmodern Tsundere bullshit. I'm actually even okay with all the characters. I guess even Potato-kun has his own positive qualities, but the show absolutely does not work for me. Frankly, I stopped caring whether these BOKUBEN bonklers manage to study or not. I can't guarantee I won't also tire of Midara na Ao-chan wa Benkyou ga Dekinai too, but for the time being I hope she goes all season not being able to study.
Posted in Boku-tachi wa Benkyou ga Dekinai, Midara na Ao-chan wa Benkyou ga Dekinai | Tags: Bend Her Over a Kotatsu, Compare and Contrast, Dropped Shows, Fan Service, Harem Comedy, Plying Girls, Season Introduction, Sex, Silver Link, Spring 2019, tsundere | Permanent Link
Man, what is it with anime girls and libraries?
I started watching Seishun Buta Yarō wa Bunny Girl-senpai no Yume wo Minai (The Young Pig-Rascal Isn't Dreaming of a Bunny Girl Upperclassman or Rascal Does Not Dream of Bunny Girl Senpai) because it had a bunny girl. True story. Also because its description sounded chuuni as fuck. It turns out it does have a bunny girl and it is, in fact, chuuni as fuck. There are also straightfaced explanations about Schrödinger's cat early on in the show, but I guess that's all right, since everyone heard about it for the first time in some venue or another. I suppose there's no harm in young viewers learning about it for the first time through this anime.
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Posted in Seishun Buta Yarō wa Bunny Girl-senpai no Yume wo Minai | Tags: Autumn 2018, Built for Sin, Fan Service, Hair, Light Novels, Plying Girls, Season Introduction, Superlovely Character Designs | Permanent Link
A ghost with legs? Inconceivable.
The main reason why I started watching Shichisei no Subaru (Seven Senses of the Re'Union) and Yuragi-sou no Yuuna-san (Yuuna and the Haunted Hot Springs) was because both shows featured ghost girlfriends and thus gave me an excuse to pad the Ghost Girlfriends tag on my blog. Besides, Tasogare Otome x Amnesia and Nanana's Buried Treasure were both good, even if Rokujouma no Shinryakusha!? was, uh, not.
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Posted in Shichisei no Subaru, WORSE THAN COSPRAYERS, Yuragi-sou no Yuuna-san | Tags: Dropped Shows, Fan Service, Ghost Girlfriends, Girls With Guns, Harem Comedy, Light Novels, OP ED, Summer 2018 | Permanent Link
At least the apartment she's cleaning is also small.
I think it's been more than 10 years since I last re-watched Hand Maid May. I probably have a disproportionately positive perspective on what is ultimately a 20th century fan-service-laden harem comedy. I can't guarantee I would still hold it in high regard if I were to watch it for the first time now, but I do still remember it fondly. (The impetus for bringing Hand Maid May up again comes from the latest episode of Hataraku Saibou.)
That ladder bridge looks less and less safe as the years go by.
If anything, re-watching Hand Maid May now might help me clarify one aspect that I've always been sort of uncertain about. Namely, how old is Kasumi? Her current English Wikipedia entry describes her as an 18-year-old college student (with no citation), and the current Japanese Wikipedia entry claims she is a student at Kazuya's university (also with no citation). I don't remember this ever being established within the anime itself.
Further proof that Kasumi is right-handed..
It is pretty likely that she is at least out of high school, because there is a flashback in episode eight to Kasumi's graduation, and we never see her in a school uniform outside of those flashbacks. But since (as I understand it), compulsory education in Japan ends with middle school (after completing 9th grade, by U.S. reckoning), it's not impossible (albeit unlikely) that she dropped out to run the apartment complex, coach baseball, and flirt with Kazuya full-time.
Posted in GIRL NEXT DOOR, Hand Maid May | Tags: All-Time Babes, Androids, Anime Figures, baseball, Bend Her Over a Kotatsu, Building Stuff, Built for Sin, Computers, DVDs and Blu-ray discs, Fan Service, GIRL NEXT DOOR, Maids, Summer 2000 | Permanent Link
The matching guitars are actually magic beam rifles. This is not a joke.
P.S. Spoilers.
Seven or eight of the shows I plan to watch during the Summer 2018 anime season are shows continuing from Spring 2018 or sequels. Specifically, Overlord III, One Room 2, and Cinderella Girls Gekijou 3rd Season are sequels, and the shows continuing from last season are Detective Conan, GeGeGe no Kitarou, Major 2nd, Hugtto! Precure, and possibly Piano no Mori.
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Posted in Cinderella Girls, Hugtto! Precure, Major 2nd, One Room, Overlord, Piano no Mori | Tags: baseball, Bedrooms, Bend Her Over a Kotatsu, books, Fan Service, Figure Skating, Gainax, Hanakana Distortion Field, Hanazawa Kana, Legs that go up to her neck, Light Novels, Mahou Shoujo, Season Introduction, Sequels, Short Shows, Shows that never end, Spoilers, Summer 2018, Superlovely Character Designs | Permanent Link
Look, it ain't that bad, okay.
Depending on which corner of the anime fandom you find yourself, I imagine you're either on the side that doesn't believe DARLING in the FRANXX needs defending, or in the camp that doesn't believe it deserves defending. My basic perspective on the show is that it is not capital-G Good, nor is it part of the "bad but has good parts in it" category, but rather that it is a flawed result of some efforts that I genuinely appreciate.
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Posted in DARLING in the FRANXX | Tags: Big Fat Braids, Fan Service, Giant Robots, Haruka Tomatsu, Neon Genesis Evangelion, NTR, Plying Girls, Romance, Sex, Spring 2018, Studio Trigger, war, Winter 2018 | Permanent Link
Have sword, will travel.
I do appreciate that Cutie Honey Universe exists at all. It's been a good year with regard to the return of old (way old) classics. I'm not particularly familiar with the Cutie Honey franchise, but I've seen enough of the original 1973 Cutie Honey anime and Gainax's Re: Cutie Honey OVAs from 2004 to appreciate that Cutie Honey Universe is a faithful re-introduction of the show to modern anime fans. However, although I enjoy it, I suspect that the return of Cutie Honey might work better in theory than it does in practice for general audiences. I don't feel that Cutie Honey Universe is dated, but it does seem anachronistic. That does contribute to its charm, but I can't help but think I should at least finish watching the 1973 series first.
Tarantula Panther, best tarantula, best panther.
The parts that are probably the most jarring to modern viewers are the occasional fan service gags involving Junpei (the little boy) and Danbei (the dirty old man) as they aggressively pursue perverted opportunities to ogle and grope Honey whenever possible. I hesitate to call them gags because they're not presented as if they're supposed to be comedic moments necessarily, but I can't quite call it fan service either because I'm not sure anyone considers the bits titillating. It's probably more accurate to call them tropes or callbacks to the original Go Nagai manga and anime series. Now, I'm not suggesting '70s fan service staples have no place in our upstanding world of the current generation, but I think I would appreciate an effort to present these blatantly gratuitous scenes in creative new ways instead, despite the risk of alienating those fans who insist on preserving original aspects as a matter of general principle.
Posted in Cutie Honey Universe | Tags: Androids, Bad Things Happen to Good People, Built for Sin, Fan Service, Gainax, Mahou Shoujo, Recasting, Sakamoto Maaya, Season Introduction, Spring 2018, Turbo Lesbians | Permanent Link
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