Mega Megane Moé
Hell and Heaven Moéltdown
Hell and Heaven Moéltdown
Nov 13th

It’s a bit late to sum up all the anime currently airing for the fall 2007 season, especially considering the fact that I’ve already written a post evaluating a large amount of them.
So instead it’s time for more fluff as I share some biased opinions, some crackpot theories, and maybe even a few valid comments, about what we should expect from some of these shows as they pass their halfway (or quarter) mark. Feel free to share your own as well.
Inspired by the recently released Myself;Yourself (PS2) OP, which in typical fashion dropped plenty of almost-hints about how the teacher is actually important, and that angry Nanaka is angry (and jealous), among other things. Also, that whoever this KAORI singer is (that did the anime OP as well), that she is very awesome.
Place your bets after the jump.
Read the rest of this entry »
Sep 16th

Nanatsuiro Drops has always been somewhat of a paradox to me.
It’s background is an eroge, which usually means that the anime adaptation will have a generally male target audience. Not necessarily fanservice up the behind like Shuffle or to a lesser note Da Capo, but sometimes just a moe flood of cute characters in shows like Kanon. While the latter show arguably worked just as well for both genders, the fact of the matter is that both types of shows are ones guys don’t mind being caught dead watching.
Now, Nanatsuiro Drops is pretty much straight-up magical girl stuff. Think about it. Eroge + magical girl = confused audience.
Sometimes magical girl shows can work for a male audience, in the case of raw loli-fests (I’m tempted to say Moetan, but I have no actual experience with that show), but NanaDrops pretty much plays the magical girl card straight, at least in the anime.
It seems that the anime has pretty much renounced any tendencies for fanservice or whatnot in favor of attracting a target audience of an age probably not old enough to buy the PC game NanaDrops was based on.
It’s not to say that Nanatsuiro Drops is expressly one of those Not For Guys shows, since magical girl shows have worked for a larger audience in the past; not sure what is the draw of Nanoha, not having watched that, but it has a simply ridiculously huge fanbase, and even old-school, straight magical girl shows like Cardcaptor Sakura (it’s by Clamp, shouldn’t that be enough of a warning to straight guys?) are generally acknowledged to be one of those Top Tier shows. CCS was simply one of those shows that got people into anime.
NanaDrops, though, coming ten years after Sakura’s adventures, may be what some consider “behind the times”. While it may have worked long ago, now tastes seem to have changed away from the sugary, fluffy, heartwarming stuff towards, well, whatever it is you like today. Loli shows, fanservice shows, slice-of-life, moe, dramatic shows…none of these can really fit NanaDrops, which in an era of anime where there are No Girls On The Internet, really just doesn’t click with at least a lot of people in the English anime crowd.
Nevertheless, NanaDrops does have it’s devout supporters, both on AnimeSuki and on local anime blogs. Supposedly it’s not as Magical Girly as it looks, rather turning some typical tropes on its head and generally poking fun at the cliches of the genre. Supposedly the relationship and character development is handled quite well and creatively, unlike the usual “rivals who fall in love” or the “boy meets girl in awkward situation; hijinks and crushing ensue” found in this genre.
But there are always going to be the rabid fans of any series that will stand up for it to the bitter end. Show me a moe harem show and I’ll show you unhealthy levels of adoration. Show a lolicon Moetan and they’ll show you the “merits” of a show like that. So perhaps it’s possible that the fans behind NanaDrops are overhyping it.
As usual, the only way to find out is to watch a show, and thus embarked an second adventure into the cavity-filled sugarland of magical girl shows. Full opinion and perhaps some discussion of the actual show and the first 3 episodes after the jump.
Read the rest of this entry »
Aug 23rd

Fumoffu, etc. as the D.C. train chugs along. It may be a bit dated but there are more of me out there who look for information and recommendation on series from times past, so, uh, this post is for that horde then, as it is.
Now that I’ve got the memes and random in-jokes out of the way (it’s what having Marisa Stole the Precious Thing looping does), Da Capo Second Season is actually a pretty timely watch, as with the anime of the visual novel sequel, Da Capo II (set forever in the future, technically), hitting this fall, it’s a good time to be watching a lot and a lot of D.C.
Unless of course Second Season turns out to be a pile of junk. With second-season-eroge rivals such as Shuffle! Memories however there’s always going to be something worse out there.
But still I find a 2-years-late sequel to a rather concluded anime to be strange – I would like to think that the main character Jyunichi would remain, well, attached to his love of the last season, but it doesn’t seem quite so at the moment.
There’s obviously some plot-related reasons why the centerpiece of last show dissapeared but it just seems like an excuse to open up the field again; D.C.S.S. is fairly newbie-safe and requires very little knowledge of the past season.
Overall D.C.S.S. appears to be a lot of the same from D.C., in that the first few episodes are going to be delightfully slow, bordering on ridiculous. In typical fashion I wrote the preview based solely on the first episode so expect it to be wildly inaccurate, but I do it just to see how opinions change over the course of a show. It’s a strange changwe that happens to all of us; but it’s completely normal…
Spoilers, whining, preview, etc, jump.
Read the rest of this entry »
Jul 31st

There are many reasons to adopt a new series. Perhaps it’s a widely popular one, and you’re curious to see what all the fuss is about. Maybe a favorite voice actor, artist, director, writer worked on this series as well. Maybe you read the manga, or played the visual novel, or just read about the series in a press blurb or something and was intrigued. A figurative dart thrown at a wall?
Sometimes, it’s like that, where you walk into a bookstore, and the first thing that catches your eye is that one thing Mikoto keeps raving about.
And so I sat down with the English release of manga and light novel for an hour.
Yeah, English light novel. Is that a first? Not too familiar with even the Japanese scene for that, but I follow the Haruhi light novels religiously and are kind of jealous that another series gets their novels translated. Oh well, there’s always Baka-Tsuki!
Impressions on Shana after the jump.
Read the rest of this entry »
Jul 14th

Doujin Work is one of seemingly plenty anime now that are based on 4-panel comic strips. True to title, it’s an anime that deals with the messy world of doujinshi – and this series doesn’t shy away from the dirtier (yes, in that sense) aspects of it as well.
Defining aspects include:
- The awesomely named main heroine Osana Najimi (put it together and you have Japanese for ‘childhood friend’), who like many people has a fixation on getting rich quick.
- More interestingly named side casts, like Justice and his…maid-loli-esque-thing Sola/Sora.
- A typical 4-panel animation style with background people being faceless blobs.
- Short, 15 minute episodes – supposedly because the other half of the episode is live-action stuff, similar to the first few episodes of Da Capo.
- Dirty jokes and doujin.
Thoughts and bets after the jump.
In case you’re not familiar with doujinshi, it’s basically the Japanese equivalent, I suppose, of fan comics. Doujins are material that Doujin Work is one of seemingly plenty anime now that are based on 4-panel comic strips. True to title, it’s an anime that deals with the messy world of doujinshi – and this series doesn’t shy away from the dirtier (yes, in that sense) aspects of it as well.
So of course, an official anime that deals with unofficial manga based on anime is quite interesting. Being a 4-panel it’s pretty light and funny stuff, although the material may seem a bit awkward to some. But as long as you’re not too offended by dirty stuff, then this isn’t too bad. It’s all implied anyway, and a good test of the purity of your mind.
The humor is also hilariously ironic in a sense as well, in that a high school girl (which I’m spotting the age of Tsuyuri, Osana’s friend) is drawing hentai doujinshi about…schoolgirls. (The title’s “Bloomers Mandatory”)
Osana’s also an amusing but probably ill-fated character who I can sympathize with in her need to get rich quick. Being a school student in search of a job in order to make anime fanboying ends meet, I can probably say that Osana will suffer the usual fate of being perhaps a little too desparate for money – while I haven’t quite gone to the extreme of selling doujins, I can say that yeah, maybe not every job is worth taking. It will be interesting to see, as the second episode screencaps show, just how Osana gets…acquaintated with the material.
And from there there’s not too much else to say about 4-panel anime, as they really have no sense of direction usually, focusing mainly on quick gags and episode-long (if that) stories.
Coherent Plot – 5:1 odds on ‘Yes’
But I’d still bank towards this story having at least something stringing it together. Osana’s quest for money through doujinshi looks to evolve over the course of the series, and her past ties with Justice look like something that could be explored upon, in addition to the discovery of just who the freaking heck is Sola. Of course the plot isn’t going to get too serious or anything silly like that, but there probably will be a bit of direction to this anime.
Osana’s Success – 4:1 odds on ‘No way in hell’
As for the plot itself, Osana’s adventure is shaped to be rather ill-fated, as would be for any person who charges foolishly into action. Maybe it’s a bit too sitcom-ish but this is screaming “hey, let’s learn life lessons” in a comical manner.
Relevancy of the OP – 3:1 odds on ‘Appears in doujins’
Maybe it’s just me but I’m interested in seeing some of the scenes from the intro expanded on, such as Giant Justice with Eyebeeeeemus. That would make for some entertaining episodes, if some of the doujins were shown in animated format. Or at the least, the still frame manga format shown at the end of episode 1.
Tsuyuri’s State of Mind – 5:1 odds on ‘Relatively sane’
It’s just the eroge anime background of mine that wants to see Tsuyuri have some hidden background. Like, her perverted doujins are representative of a dirty past of hers (hello, Tsukihime) or a sexual outlet for her (”why can’t I ever be raped by tentacle monsters in my P.E. outfit in the gym room while the class watches”). But as usual this ends up in a ‘yeah…but no.’ situation. Tsuyuri probably just has weird tastes, like white guys like me who really like watching shoujo stuff like Cardcaptor Sakura.
That Weird Animated Underwear – 4:1 odds on ‘Never explained’
Seriously. Am I the only one that noticed that weird thing on Tsuyuri’s beret thing and in the ED sequence? It’s disturbing. But it’s seems to be your usual ‘random thing that’s alive that shouldn’t be that is just there to add cute value’…or something. Although, maybe I’m not the only one not into dancing pantsu.
Maybe, Tsuyuri’s being mind controlled by Magical Pantsu. PLOT GET.
OP Sequence Music – 2:1 odds on ‘Awesome guitar-ness’
Well, it is. The animation itself is a bit ordinary and plain, with a few neat sequences (Epic Pencil Grab, Giant Justice, etc) but I really think the music’s not too bad. It’s a bit disconnected, the vocals could be better but the guitar is pretty nifty, especially in the next episode preview thing.
Amusing Perverted Joke Count Over/Under – 9000, Over
lol I so funny. But really, I wouldn’t mind if they keep up the gags like the Tsuyuri’s conversation on the train (a bit predictable, but Osana’s “YURI JA NAI!” at the end really clinched it) and the overall awkwardness of “What the hell are you drawing, Tsuyuri”. I’d prefer it a bit on the subtle side (not like ‘hay look sex jokes lol’), but the way it’s going is good.
Halo Character – 3:1 odds on Tsuyuri
Tsuyuri really looks to carry the show, much like how many people think Konata does for Lucky Star. She looks strange doing what she does, but she’s passionate in what she does (the shiny scenes border on amusing and adorable). Her field of study is also amusingly awkward for…well…a high-school girl (as noted above). And Tsuyuri tilts a bit toward the quiet girl side. Even if they talk quietly, I suppose it counts, because I like it. So my vote’s on Tsuyuri for awesome. Justice has potential as well, though. (male meganekko? so be it…)
-CCY