Posts tagged Series Review

Series Review: Doujin Work


“Young lady…you dropped your ero-hon.”

Chalk another one up for the ‘eh’ pile.

Doujin Work, contrary to appearances, is not a yaoi show; but this sort of perversion makes up a decent amount of this comedy show about a girl trying to strike it big in the doujinshi (fanwork) industry. The connection should be quite obvious for anyone who’s ever been exposed to the dark side of fandom, or, should I say, the internet itself.

But since Doujin Work is a publicly televised show (although that didn’t stop other shows which can be deemed questionable) it naturally has to tone down a bit on the dirtier jokes. But the problem is, for those who read the manga, those are also known as the ‘funny’ jokes.

While the more worksafe content can still manage to be funny at times, and there certainly are moments that will make you laugh, it just seems that these moments are far and few between, even in a short series like this.

And it’s epically short, by any standards. Given that each episode only is half-length, and that the series is only 12 episodes in length, Doujin Work is extremely brief and barely has any chance to make an impact.

Given that many of the jokes get almost painfully drawn out already though, it might be a bad idea to extend the length of Doujin Work. But, perhaps, if it was a longer-lasting show, it would’ve had a large budget which would have saved, in short, a lot of problems with it.

Doujin Work takes on too much and too little at the same time. Likable characters don’t get used enough and unlikable characters get all the attention and stale jokes … when they’re not busy introducting a new character.

Certainly the premise and core characters are amusing, but Doujin Work needs to be sent back to the drawing board for a professional makeover.
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Series Review: Nanatsuiro Drops


“It is a magical story of, ‘A seven-colored first love that encompasses you.’”

A Cardcaptor Sakura for the 21st century.

At first glance Nanatsuiro Drops is one of your standard magical girl shows with a target audience age that can be counted on your two hands. In some aspects of it, it is exceedingly sugary and simplistic.

But delve into the origin of NanaDrops, and you’ll discover, curiously enough, that it was adapted from an eroge, which would seem to suggest quite the contrary to what one would expect from an anime of this type.

Now of course NanaDrops still looks and acts like an anime that has nothing to do with its ero roots. But this isn’t to say that it renounced its background altogether. Somehow it feels that NanaDrops isn’t the type of eroge to be a mindless sex romp but rather one with more of an actual story feel to it, which just happens to have H-scenes.

This isn’t to say that NanaDrops is a deep anime, or a complex one. But it’d be wrong to call it a simplistic anime. It does work the magical girl formula in an innovative way and quite different than what one might expect.

Rather than being focused on the magic aspect of it, there is a larger emphasis on the relationship between characters. It’s a refreshing departure from the “let’s take the whole series to build up to a confession” concept utilized far too often by a lot of romance shows.

Nanatsuiro Drops really is a curious show in that it’s a magical girl show with very little emphasis on the magic. The magical parts of the show really come across as more of a prop towards the development of the two main characters and their relationship together.

And one can even detect a hint of tongue-in-cheek in the magical elements, in the sense that it really feels like Magical Girls for Dummies at times with a real feeling that given the setting, anyone could have been the magical girl, it’s that easy.

It will still be a series twenty times too sweet for someone who can’t handle magical girl shows, and maybe even for someone who can; NanaDrops is the ultimate feel-good story that really has the power to bring a giddy, childlike smile to your face.

The plot is something you’ve probably seen before in some fashion, but the strength in NanaDrops lies in it’s power to throw you into the way-back machine to the good ol’ days of shows like Cardcaptor Sakura; where the characters are pure, the romance innocent, and a mood shining as bright as the sun.

If that’s your thing, Nanatsuiro Drops really is an underrated, seven-colored gem.
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Series Review: Lucky Star


“Which end of a choco coronet do you start from?”

The one thing I can really say about Lucky Star is that it’s not Azumanga Daioh.

Not a good thing.
Not a bad thing.
Just a fact.

Maybe an overstated fact, but one that needs to be said. Both series are arguably very successful slice-of-school-life anime adapted from 4-panel comic strips, yet both take very different approaches to the same formula, and so both work in very different ways.

Even though they have in common a core group of female characters and a large amount of humor, the styles are much different. While Azumanga is a very blunt, straight-forward, physical kind of comedy, Lucky Star relies a lot more on the verbal and sometimes quite subtle kind of jokes that not everyone might understand.

And so that “getting it” factor is one of the decisive factors of Lucky Star, which certainly is more laid-back than it’s insane counterpart. If Azumanga is a bunch of crazy girls in a normal situation, Lucky Star is a bunch of relatively normal girls in a crazy situation.

Lucky Star, amusingly, is like talking with a bunch of friends at school. A lot of it involves sharing a common opinion, whether it be a hobby you like, a teacher you hate, or just some aspect of life that stands out. And if you can manage to sympathize with a bunch of moe characters and their mostly ordinary lifestyles, Lucky Star won’t be too bad.

But if you don’t like wasting time, if you don’t like very thin presentation, if you don’t like a bit of repetition, if you don’t like open endings (as opposed to even Azumanga’s sense of conclusion)… you might want to keep moving. Lucky Star will definitely satiate the hungry anime fan, but for casual viewers or even some of the regulars, it might be better to give this a pass.
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Series Review: Da Capo Second Season

“Do you still think that, in this world, everyone is happy?”

A fitting adage for the second season of Da Capo (not to be confused with the currently airing sequel, Da Capo II) would likely be, “Too many cooks spoil the broth.”

Or perhaps in this case, one cook can spoil the broth for everyone else.

However, to throw out the broth would be rather a waste. Although connoisseurs might turn up their nose at D.C.S.S, certainly the layman who just enjoys eating food (or, watching harem series) will find this effort a passable one, if not a spectacular one.

Da Capo is one of the megaliths of harem shows, with somewhere along the lines of 8 visual novels, 2 mangas, and an anime series essentially 52 episodes strong. As such, it has a pretty die-hard fanbase among the harem lovers.

Unfortunately, this is the audience that will probably be turned off the most by this second season. D.C.S.S follows the great(ly annoying) formula of keeping about half the old characters around while shifting the focus to a new set of characters.

It’s good for keeping things fresh but fans of the series will have likely established strong favorites by the end of the first season (since every girl really did have her moments in the spotlight), and will feel shafted that the focus of the show, admittedly, is on the New Girl, energetic Aisia.

Unfortunately energetic in this sense comes across as annoying, as D.C.S.S. seems like it’s predecessor to be a 13 episode series stretched out to twice this length.

It can work, but the place where the first and second season differ is that while the original shifted around the focus from girl to girl rather frequently, most of the slow episodes in D.C.S.S. focus on said focus girl Aisia and the all-too-frequent trope of Misunderstandings Occur.

Which is good for one episode, bad for ten. D.C.S.S. definitely hits a stride later on but if you’re a fan of any of the ‘minor’ characters you’ll definitely be dissapointed.

The show has definitely a bunch of characters with very likable traits, whether it be a meganekko doujin artist, a shrine maiden, resident ‘boku’ girl, or one of the returning characters from first season, but when you consider that the de facto harem size starts at seven and grows, it really becomes a shame that none of the lesser haremettes get much time to shine.

Nevertheless the drama and the storyline does improve just past the halfway mark, the apparent maturing age for any good harem show, as things begin to Actually Happen. Anything I can really say will be wildly spoileriffic – albeit probably a little bit predictable – but short story shorter there definitely are a few welcome (or unwelcome) surprises in store, depending on your character alignment.

The best way to describe Da Capo Second Season is “more of the same,” which is ironic given that the title alludes to a musical term meaning “to repeat,” which it does very well. If you liked the original story, if you liked the original characters, you’ll like the second season; at least near the end of things when the focus really does return to where it should be.

If you’ve never seen the original, arguably it’s a different series that is often considered better than the second season. A true statement, although certainly the second season is still watchable by many. It’s not a harem show for the ages, but rather a harem show for people who watch harem shows.

(1) Intro segment
2) Jump
3) ???
4) Spoilers!)

A lot of a fan’s enjoyment of D.C.S.S. will depend on one’s ability to accept certain facts, certain things that you’ve seen before in Da Capo, and, true to name, will see again.

The fact is, many people don’t see D.C.S.S. as part of the same universe as the first season. Many expect Jun’ichi to chooose someone different this time, since this show is “new”, and at the beginning Nemu has been taken out of the equation.

This is patently false. In the same way that frequently the couple conflicts near the end of the show (true even in the end of this season!) quite often the ones that are the closest are the ones that are the farthest apart. Love knows no bounds, etc.

While Nemu may not be physically present for the beginning part of the show, she certainly had a presence for a large part of the show. And one has to accept the fact that, since Nemu is present, she is going to win. Period.

This isn’t a dark harem show. Jun’ichi is a nice guy. As friendly as he can get with Kotori, Aisia, Sakura, Mako, Moe, Nanako, Alice, Miharu, Misaki, Yoriko, and Tamaki (no short list), he remains devoted to his actual love (and, yes, sister) Nemu.

Unfortunately Kotori fanboys are the firey type and it doesn’t help that brother-sister relationship are looked at in a strange light, despite the fact that, as in all anime, there is no such thing as Blood Related Siblings. So Nemu, and Nemu winning, could certainly be a turn-off for a lot of the show, especially compared to such idols as Kotori, who I won’t deny certainly deserves more.

The second obstacle is Aisia, who as advertised is very grating on one’s nerves. Aside from going from zero to energy girl (plus “goshujin-sama” for a few episodes) in 25 minutes screen time, a large part of the hatred and of the show is her amazing sense of idealism.

I admire her belief that everyone should be able to be happy, that Jun’ichi should be Everyone’s Jun’ichi, that magic is a thing used to make things happy. For the most part, her character in the closing parts of the show consists of the first two parts, which work very well, and very entertainingly.

But, the entire first half of the show seems to be made to drive the third point home with a large, pointy stick; there’s not getting it, and then there’s Not Getting It, which Aisia takes a ridiculous amount of time to understand. Maybe it’s that I have a lower tolerance of stale jokes than I do even for Random Fanservice, but the formula of “Aisia wants to make people happy. Hijinks ensue.” gets old. Fast.

Luckily, as mentioned, a lot of the rest of the characters do manage to keep the show afloat, as D.C.S.S’s strength lies in again it’s fact that, essentially, the harem race is locked up. It’s very interesting to see more of a focus on the girls coming to terms with their feelings, instead of the guy just going “Hmm, who do I pick.”

For example, Kotori’s, and arguably everybody’s, struggle with pushing herself away from Jun’ichi was a very compelling and at times emotional part of the show, as D.C.S.S. manages to explore the other side of the spectrum. It ignores the long, dull build-up to confessions (although one from Aisia, who arguably did a lot of work not just for everybody but for herself, would be nice), instead replacing it with the constant battle between enjoying just being friends, and yearning for something more. Almost reminiscent of a lot of School Days, except a lot less ugly.

The clash between the viewpoints on magic between Sakura (who has had to learn the hard way) and Aisia was well welcomed as well. Instead of just becoming another player in the “race”, Sakura took on almost a villainous role, or at least one of strong opposition to Aisia. While she may not have gotten as much screentime as she should, or could, have, Sakura definitely made her presence made with her long debates with Aisia over the justification of reviving the sakura tree.

And inevitably one will be able to find a fan favorite in the 10-odd characters that make recurring appearances. Mako and Suginami are the best and most awesome comedy duo since Mayumi and Itsuki (these four seriously need their own spin-off show). Kotori will probably get at least a few pity points for everyone. Nanako and Tamaki were my underdog favorites, the type where you consider a dedicated episode or a confession to be a moral victory.

The repeated themes really do a lot towards making the show better as well. Nemu and Jyn’ichi fighting and making up (out) over and over again. Kotori and the lesser haremettes facing the issue of just what to do with unrequited love, over and over again. The tree cutting off the relationship between Nemu and Jyn’ichi, for unknown motives, over and over again. It’s really a show that rewards the observant, especially in the last few episodes where you can’t shake that sense of deja vu.

Relatively objectively, there’s not much to say about D.C.S.S’s production values. Aside from the strange shift in Jyn’ichi’s hair color from the first season, the second season was pretty solid if not spectacular in animation values. The music was spectacularly average as well; the OP theme was a great song but the background music is all but forgettable.

In the end, D.C.S.S., like Aisia herself, is a show with good intentions and a great effort, yet with a misguided focus. Still, it’s a very watchable and entertaining show – just not a blockbuster nor the dramatic tour de force (at least near the end) that D.C. was.
-CCY

Series Review: Code-E

“In your body…in your body…I have a great deal of interest!!”

Code-E was the little one that couldn’t.

It certainly was a hopeful to be the underdog show of the summer, a little secret known only to a few that could enjoy the slow yet purposeful motion of the show, and the endearing yet not overly moe characters.

It was a solid entry into the common field of romance slash comedy shows that managed to get a good piece of slice of life into the mix as well.

Code-E centered around a girl named Chinami Ebihara who, aside from being a mysterious transfer student, had the uncontrollable power to release electromagnetic waves when she was flustered. It was a relatively novel premise and with a mysterious cast including a Quiet Girl, two comically inept German spies and some guy with a pocketwatch, Code-E certainly had the chance to impress.

And it did.

For the first few episodes, perhaps. Then it hit a sophomore slump that nearly every romance anime has to get tangled with; the falling of the main characters for each other, a tricky task to pull off in a believable and refreshing manner.

Nevertheless, Code-E worked out of the hole in the closing stages, introducing an overarching plot and building up to a thrilling climax.

And then, in a sense, it stopped. Because it was over…

(Disclaimer: Hot drinks are hot, and spoiler-filled recap posts contain spoilers after the jump.)

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