Samurai Flamenco
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Alternate Titles:
Silver Spoon
Review:
When Gin no Saji was first announced it made a large buzz in the anime world because it was the first anime to be created by the famed manga artist, Hiromu Arakawa, who brought us the Full Metal Alchemist series. Silver Spoon also benefited from having a recently well known director, Tomohiko Ito, at the helm. Ito is recognized as being the director of the hugely popular Sword Art Online series. A lot of expectations were set up from the start with this anime because of its “all-star” staff, but does it live up to the hype?
Gin no Saji from the outset couldn’t be more different than the aforementioned Sword Art Online and Full Metal Alchemist. The famed creator and director find themselves operating in a very different genre, “slice of life”, more specifically agricultural “slice of life”. There aren’t too many, if any, anime that exist on farms or deal with farm animals so its certainly true that Gin no Saji brings something fresh to the table.
The series takes us through a large number of agricultural and farming lessons that cover such topics as milking cows, dealing with raising chickens, making cheese, making pizza, raising pigs, and of course, coming to grips with the slaughtering of animals to which one may have become attached. Gin no Saji does all these things and it does it with a good blend of humor, character interaction, and generally crisp and refreshing visuals.
All this seems great but throughout the course of the series, viewers might have found themselves wondering, “where is this going”, “what is the conflict”, and “will there be a climax”? Unfortunately, this is a slice of life anime, and this genre often depends on internal character struggle to be the overall conflict of the show, the engine that keeps things moving forward. It should be noted that Gin no Saji doesn’t have a very strong engine. If this anime were a car, it would be a Prius; all about the environment and not so much about moving things along. The series truly lacks the kind of internal struggle that one hopes to see in a slice of life story. Of course the typical theme of “I don’t know what to do with my life”, is present but Hachiken never really convincingly decides where he is going in life. The one main struggle Hachiken has is with befriending the animals he will inevitably be slaughtering. However, after several episodes of dealing with this subject, he repeats his initial mistake at the end of the series by naming yet another piglet. Despite the ironic and humorous names he assigns such as “pork bowl”, one can’t help be feel like, while Hachiken might have learned something, we went in a circle. This anime falls well short of some of its predecessor anime such as Honey and Clover or Hanasaku Iroha in the department of fleshing out internal character struggle.
In addition to the lack of struggle, in a genre that often depends on it, the show is very much a “flat liner” all the way through. The series passes the viewer through episodes that focus on individual tasks such as making pizza and how to properly attach the pumping hoses to the teats of a cow but ultimately there is a huge lack of excitement either external or internal of a character The viewer will find themself waiting for the moment where the series peaks its story, but this moment will come.
So all in all, Gin no Saji is a nice little “slice of life” show that is well made and enjoyable to watch. The characters are generally likeable but it is held back by lack of a punctuated character struggle and an overall engine that drives the story. This anime is set to have a sequel in Winter 2013 so perhaps these developments will occur then.
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Summary:
A workplace comedy about three twenty-something year old’s who have recently begun working in a public service office in an unnamed city in Japan. Our main protagonist, Lucy, took this job to seek revenge over the civil service agent who approved her embarrassingly long name. Workplace gags and the humor that arises with a customer-service oriented job arises among an incredibly quirky office cast.
Original Source:
Servant x Service is based on a comedy manga that started in 2009 and is still ongoing written by Karino Takatsu. They were also the original creator for Wagnaria!! or Working!!
Director:
The director worked on Squid Girl Season 2, Problem children are coming from another world aren’t they?, and Valkyria Chronicles.
Studio: A-1 Pictures
Art/Sound:
I want to get this out of the way upfront. Everything about this anime when it comes to production is what you would likely expect it to be. The character designs are generic, the colors are basic, and the sound is exactly as you expect it would be.
This anime doesn’t thrive on its artistic presentation or style choices. But I would almost argue that if they went to left-field with any of them then it would take away from what the show is.
The animation and sound don’t generally detract either, as I found I almost enjoyed it being more generic so I could really focus on the characters and story.
Review:
I began this show expecting it to be really episodic and random humor. I knew it was based off gag comedy and right off the bat in the first three or four episodes you really begin to feel the original source material. The jokes flow from one to the next and the eccentricities of each of the characters, magnified by their being together, is highlighted in multiple occurrences.
You start out with everything from the playboy slacker, the overly ambitious big-breasted girl out for revenge for her name, and the sweet yet kinda dumb girl. I know, it starts out like just about everything else you’ve ever seen ever. The jokes are often just as predictable. You get the old oba-chan who won’t stop talking and the girl is too sweet to send her away. The playboy doesn’t give up yet is strangely competent when you least expect it. There’s even a joke about a bra breaking that any hilarity aside as a woman who has been in a workplace there’s something genuinely funny embarrassing you get to feel while watching it.
The show really began to surprise me though as it continued because it began to have an overarching story really develop between the characters. Now, this story isn’t anything astounding, life-changing, or morally deep. But, it is a solid story in a slice-of-life comedy show and that alone both surprised and impressed me. As someone who is used to this genre being just fluff on fluff that you can randomly skip around having a building story line that really enhances your enjoyment and understanding of the characters really made the watching experience that much better.
Despite how cliche’d the characters are and gags that are delivered there is something about how they are written in this particular show that makes it stand head and shoulders above others in this same genre. They have the right mix of quirks, tropes, and realism that makes it equally possible for them to be laughed at as well as cheered for.
What really surprised me in the characters and the overall show/story was the progression of romance. In slice-of-life genres I generally expect some romance to be thrown in there. Plus, with comedy, there are just so many things you can do when the element of attraction, dates, and feelings are on the table. But this show does the romance shockingly well for what it is. Yes, it still is that silly workplace comedy. But there is some serious relationship building that occurs in the show that really made it more enjoyable overall.
One thing that I can really applaud this show for is that it had a nice ending. There wasn’t really a hint of “to be continued.” Of course, with this type of genre there is always the possibility that it could go forever. But it had a conclusion that was both satisfying and wrapped up what the anime needed to.
This show reminds me of something that you would see as a fall generic sitcom-esque show appearing in just about any country (of course adjust some gags for each country). It has a quirky cast and every episode has a few gags and a generally larger theme centering around one character and their interactions with one or two other characters. The resolution of that theme ends up progressing the show and carries forward. The romantic relationships shine as much as the comedy come the end of the series and you find yourself enjoying watching the characters interact as much as you enjoy their misadventures navigating their office jobs.
Servant x Service has a really great blend of funny, cute, crazy and realistic that makes it relate-able for lots of people. I thought it was kind of nice to see an anime that I felt was more based toward an older crowd who is entering the workforce and the mixed up insane feelings that come with it all.
There’s normally a glass ceiling for me when it comes to shows in this genre. Romantic, comedy, slice-of-life, but Servant x Service really exceeded my expectations and broke through that a bit. It was everything I expected, yes. It didn’t change my life, no. But I think it is an exemplar in it’s genre and for that it deserves:
4 robotic bunnies out of 5
Alternate Title: Eikyuu Kazoku
Eternal Family
by Dustin Kramer
The opening text crawl of Koji Morimoto’s Eternal Family tells us about six strangers who have been gathered together, had their memories erased, and convinced they are a family. The reason? Science, natch. But in order to pay for the experiment’s operating costs, the scientists sell the surreptitiously recorded footage of the fake fam to a television broadcasting company. The ensuing reality series is a huge hit, and these six deeply disturbed people become stars ignorant of their own celebrity.
Ben is the father; he is an actor by trade and the only family member who has not been brainwashed. Working for the broadcasting company, he carries around a blow-up doll with a hidden camera installed in its gaping mouth. A-ko, the mother, suffers from constipation, an affliction that will contribute heavily to the incident that sets the story in motion. Akiko is the elder daughter; she is a pyromaniac divorcee looking for love. Sasuke is the oldest son; he’s a graffiti artist that huffs paint fumes and occasionally fires his machine gun. Sae, the younger daughter, speaks through a hand puppet. Michael is a baby; he’s always carrying a pair of scissors. A dog named Tamasaburo and a chicken are the titular family’s pets.
One day, after a bad bout of constipation, A-ko causes a plumbing disaster that releases her and the rest of her family into the “real world.” The broadcasting company pulls out all the stops and offers a whopping 200 million yen per family member to whomever can find them. On their brief journey, the unknowing prisoners learn of their renown just before being captured and returned to a state of tabula rasa. In the final moments of the series, Tamasaburo helps his family escape the brainwashing machine. Ben gets fired over this and begins searching for these five strangers he now calls family.
In retrospect, Eternal Family appears to have been much more prescient than a 1997 audience might have expected. Debuting a year ahead of Peter Weir’s The Truman Show and right on the precipice of the reality TV boom of the late 90s, the series seems to understand the morbid curiosity with which TV watchers consume this most cynical of genres. The extreme propensities that each of the family members possess is an apt satire of similar casting choices in shows where the point seems to be “put these people in a confined space and watch them implode.” Mercifully, Morimoto’s story isn’t quite as contemptuous as this. Ben’s final actions cement a much more uplifting sentiment: that family doesn’t necessarily mean blood.
The animation is pretty wacky — a visual cousin of works like Hiroyuki Imaishi’s 2004 film Dead Leaves. A noticeably lacking budget leaves everything a little on the sloppy side, but the art direction by Hiroshi Kato manages to hide the brunt of these issues. The music is all over the place — from barely-there to bombastic, rhythmic action supplements — but nothing about it is very memorable.
In 1997, Studio 4˚C began releasing Eternal Family in 53 30-second installments, and the episodes were collected for a DVD release in 2004. I know I’ve been calling it a series, which it is, but watching it compiled feels much more like a filmic experience. The 30-second segment serial is an experimental format, and just like in the scientific world, experiments can fail. In this case, the format’s victim is undoubtedly the story’s pacing. The need to have something “happen” in each segment makes the whole thing feel choppy and needlessly breakneck when watched uninterrupted. The limited runtime leaves little room for dialogue, therefore necessary exposition doesn’t come across naturally — or at all. I imagine the expository text crawl was a late-game addition when someone on the production crew realized that the thing didn’t make any damn sense. These problems really did a number on my viewing experience, and although it wants to be, Eternal Family isn’t a lot of fun to watch. The total runtime clocks in at just under 30 minutes, so you won’t have to put up with it long.
Koji Morimoto’s Eternal Family is violent, misanthropic, and darkly prophetic. Despite this, it manages to strike a sympathetic chord in its final frames. However, its limitations — both involuntary and self-imposed — encumber its potential for success.
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Alternate Titles:
Glass Mask Desu Ga
Are you the Glass Mask?
Is it the Glass Mask?
Plot:
Maya Kitajima and her rival Ayumi Himekawa are delinquent girls who both want to be the leader of the “Crimson Goddess” gang. And, they do stuff.
Animation:
I’d say this anime looks like a college animation project, but I really don’t want to insult soon-to-be professional animators like that. Maybe this anime looks more like the first time some high school students got Flash and went ZOMG LOOK AT THAT SHIT MOVE. To say it looks like crap would be an insult to some fantastic shits which I have had before that I would much prefer to look at that than this anime.
Review:
This anime is one giant step backwards in the front of three-minute shows. There are 17 episodes for you to torture yourself with, if you really feel like doing so, if you, you know, don’t have anything better to do, like taxes, or chopping your dick off.
There’s no real plot, if there is, you have about zero f**** to give about it because everything else is so awful.
I’m pretty sure it’s supposed to be a comedy… which maybe it could have been, if it had actually made me laugh. But alas the jokes were shitty when you could even tell that they were there. Which normally you couldn’t because you were either going “Oh god someone actually made this.” Or “I gave three minutes of my life to this that I can never get back.” I could be writing a sonnet, gardening, knitting, watching paint dry, or watching a better anime. There aren’t enough things I can say about how sad this anime made me. And that’s why it has such an awful score. So it makes no one sad ever again.
Alternate Titles:
A Letter to Momo
Momo e no Tegami
Review:
by Dustin Kramer
In a narrative, most human emotions are generally considered universal constructs. No one has trouble recognizing when a story is trying to make you sad or happy or uncomfortable. But not all elicitations are so cut-and-dry. When dealing with the topic of grief, storytellers have their work cut out for them. Creating a world in which characters can believably exist and grow is hard enough, but handling one of the most trying and subjective of human emotions can complicate what could otherwise be more or less emotionally ubiquitous. While I love more abstruse takes on the subject — Lars von Trier’s Antichrist or Darren Aronofsky’s The Fountain, for example – there’s something extremely satisfying about the deft handling of the theme in a family film. Seven years in the making, Hiroyuki Okiura’s A Letter to Momo is one such film.
Momo Miyaura’s father has died. Just before an accident at sea took his life, the 11-year-old expressed hatred for her dad in an overreaction to a broken promise. Saddled with the grief of loss and the guilt of a sour last conversation, Momo rifles through her father’s desk in mournful remembrance. There she finds a letter with the words “Dear Momo” written at the top — beyond that, a blank page. Moving to a small island with her mother Ikuko offers her recently downsized family a chance at a new start, but Momo isn’t taking to it well. Having difficulty connecting with local children, she spends her days lazing about the house when she begins hearing voices and seeing ghostly shadows. Eventually these apparitions reveal themselves to be yokai, a kind of Japanese spirit. The ogreish Iwa, the reptilian Kawa, and the minuscule Mame have been charged with watching over Momo’s family while her father’s spirit is in transit to heaven, and only she can see them. However, the benevolent nature of their task is in no way indicative of their moral fortitude. They are proud troublemakers and thieves, constantly in need of sating their curiosity and hunger. When Momo gets her hands on the goblins’ passport to the human world, she achieves the upper hand. The creatures play to her mercy, swearing that they’ll stay in line as long as she doesn’t break the wooden plaque, which would kill them. Until her father arrives at his otherworldly destination, the demons are hers to deal with.
What really stands out about A Letter to Momo is how effectively it can juggle the verisimilitude of Momo and Ikuko’s mourning and the lightheartedness of the monster trio’s antics. In what eventually becomes a celebration of the resilience of the human spirit, each main character’s arc is handled with care, allowing everyone to hit the most resonating notes of truth. Ikuko hides her grief from Momo in the hopes that it will expedite her daughter’s healing process, not realizing that it appears as though she has already forgotten about her husband — something that is very troubling to the young girl. In dealing with the yokai, Momo relearns how to connect with people. Their shenanigans force her into situations where she must be brave, as in a scene where they are being chased up a mountain by wild boars. The whole affair is distinctly Miyazaki-esque, pulling from Japanese legend and folklore to fill out this contemporary tale of a young woman’s path to strength.
Despite its merits, the script is front-to-back predictable in its peaks and valleys and doesn’t offer much in the way of surprises. The movie mostly makes good use of its 120-minute runtime, but cutting a couple of disposable scenes, like one in which it is revealed that a little girl in the town can also see Mame, could have brought the whole thing down to a tight 100 minutes or so.
The main characters are very relatable and well-defined. Momo acts very much her age, that of a girl on the verge of puberty. She’s reclusive, skittish, and a bit disinterested with everything but manages to summon the curiosity and energy of a child when it’s called for. Hats off to the casting director who chose 16-year-old Karen Miyama to portray the 6th grade schoolgirl. Miyama’s young voice brings a necessary truth to Momo’s childishness. She delivers a commendable performance but is perhaps more importantly appropriately cast — something that unfortunately can’t be said about the young actors in Mamoru Hosoda’s Wolf Children. Momo’s relationship with her mother is decidedly sisterly, and Ikuko’s youthful appearance and vocal performance by Yuka is all at once refreshing and tragic considering what the character must be going through. Side characters like the aformentioned girl who can see Mame and the other local children aren’t very fleshed-out. A couple of nice scenes between Momo and her grandfather provide some backstory, but the grandparents don’t really offer much aside from being dialogue stand-ins. However, the amiable mailman who has known Ikuko since childhood and has clearly been carrying a torch for her gets a bit of time to shine. The yokai are the real stars of this movie, constantly providing genuinely funny comic relief and pushing the story forward with their actions. Iwa is a lovable dolt, ignorantly spouting exposition for which is he immediately called out by Kawa (who thinks he’s a lot smarter than he is). Mame manages to walk the line between creepy and cute with surprising finesse. The three of them have quickly become some of my favorite characters in Japanese cinema.
This is a very nice outing by the insanely prolific Production I.G, leaning more toward the realistic side of the animation spectrum style-wise. Those familiar with Okiura’s earlier work Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade should know what they’re getting into visually, although this film is much lighter — both narratively and aesthetically — than that dark, dystopic, sci-fi fairy tale. CGI is used sparingly and blends into the hyper realistic character and background cels relatively well. In a particularly impressive scene at the climax of the film, the three demons call on their spiritual buddies to help Momo out. The myriad creatures creeping, crawling, and oozing out of various nooks and crannies around the small island village are animated in stark contrast to the rest of the film, utilizing a technique anime critic Hope Chapman calls “runny eggs.” The unhinged style, which looks something like an animated napkin doodle, really catches the eye in an otherwise painstakingly animated feature where even the hint of an off-model character or inconsistent color is nary present.
The orchestrated score comes courtesy of Mina Kubota, a composer who has worked mainly on animated television series prior to A Letter to Momo.I first became familiar with Kubota’s work watching the 2013 series Photo Kano, a sub-standard show with great music. Now, after hearing her whimsical, often exciting, and occasionally heartbreaking soundtrack to this film, I can safely call myself a fan.
Mourning a loss isn’t the same for everyone. To Momo it means needing to know that she’s not alone; that it hurts just as much for her mom. To Ikuko it’s about allowing her daughter to heal properly — something that proves to be a process of trial and error. For some it may require a hospitable support network of friends and loved ones. For others, perhaps an abundance of time alone to meditate and self-assess is the best path. While grieving, the rediscovery of laughter can be a revelation. In creating a successful comedic family film about grief and loss, Okiura proves that he understands the disparity and dynamics of these feelings. He ties the whole thing up with a satisfying, albeit predictable ribbon.
Alternate Titles: Dog Days 2
Plot:
Set after the events of the original Dog Days the main character Shinku is re-summoned to the word of Flonyard with his friend Rebecca. His cousin Nanami is also summoned to champion a competing city.
Review:
This anime is awful and pointless.
(Listen to the show for the real, better review 😀 )
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Plot:
Insights into the (actually funny) antics of three high school girls who seem to be completely clueless with life but sincere and in for having fun. Each episode is 3-minutes long and has a series of gags with an overall lose progression of time tying the series together over 12 episodes.
Studio:
It’s a 3-minute episode series, does this really matter?
Ahem…
I mean…
Director:
The director is relatively new to directing… not to anime but to directing. His latest directorial credits include directing the episodes 9-10 arc of Aoi Bungaku and the director of the recent Nerewareta Gakuen movie. This seems to be his first comedy, and three-minute episode formula.
Studio:
Liden Films
Source:
The anime is based off a manga that started in 2011 and is still ongoing. It currently has four volumes out. The manga is a yonkoma manga, meaning comic-strip four panel manga that plays up the gag formula.
Review:
Crabs! I mean… Yeah this anime has a thing for crabs right from the beginning though I don’t really understand why. And beginning, I mean, the opening.
This anime is enjoyable and funny though it doesn’t offer much by it’s nature. The best praise I can give it right off the bat is it made me laugh, and consistently did so up through about halfway through the series. Despite being about younger looking High School girls there was only one notable lolicon moment – involving the rain… and a later shot of swimsuits – and while I suppose they are “legal” at this age they still of course look about 12 so you know that they’re doing.
Around halfway through the series the anime changes and actually begins to follow some loose time-based plot. Which makes sense because it is difficult to string anything else together when you’re dealing with such short chunks of time, but it’s a little sad because it feels like it gets away from what I came here for and what initially kept me coming back – the actual funny moments.
The anime begins to ween off over time and loses the charm it started with. But, unlike a lot of other 3-minute shows it did leave me feeling somewhat fulfilled as it actually delivered on the promise of high-school girl comedy.
It’s not bad but if you were to spend even just 30 minutes on anime – an approximation of time it’d take to get through this – there are much better OVA’s to spend it on. But this is cute, and sweet, so if you’re trying to be an officiant on 3-minute anime then it’s not something you’ll likely resent watching.
At the end of the day I can’t give it a better score than Yama no Susume which is very different but I consider it to be just as good in different ways.
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