heavenly_pearl: (Default)
Happy New Year! For those interested, here's my annual fanfic review

And my thoughts on the fall anime season:
 
Natsume's Book of Friends Season 7 - You know, despite the fact that Natsume meets a new yokai in almost every episode this season, it's a bit strange we only saw the Book of Friends used only a couple of times this cour! But, connected to one of those times, it was interesting to finally meet the very first yokai whose name Reiko collected and learn how the book originally got started in the first place. (The story behind it is very bittersweet.) I also loved the focus on the supporting characters this season. I think most of Natsume's school friends got one episode devoted to them, and we even met a guy who could possibly be Natsume's unknown grandfather. This may be the series' seventh season, but I'm not bored of it at all. Let's just hope that it doesn't take another seven years for us to get another cour!
 
365 Days to the Wedding - This is a really sweet fake dating -- or should I say fake engagement -- romance between two very awkward, introverted people. The whole subplot about someone finding out about their secret and making threatening phone calls to them using a voice-changing device was a bit dumb (seriously, who cares that much about a fake relationship between coworkers, even if it's to avoid a transfer to Alaska?) and obviously just included to give the story some tension, but, honestly, it wasn't needed. I just enjoyed watching Rika and Takuya gradually getting to know each other and falling in love for real. I also liked how the show explored different views of marriage and what it means to different people. The cour ends in a great spot (with Rika and Takuya spoilers )), but I definitely wouldn't mind seeing more. 
 
Nina the Starry Bride - There's a lot to like about this series. The animation is beautiful, the plot is great (if maybe a bit rushed in parts, especially in the beginning), and Nina/Alisha is a fun and spirited lead character. I just wish I liked her two love interests more. Azure is obviously the better choice between the two if she has to pick between them, but he's still the one who bought her off the streets to pretend to be his dead sister, the princess. Speaking of which, you would think the fact that everybody believes them to be blood siblings would be a much bigger deal to angst about, but neither of them seem to think much about it at all, which is a bit weird. Well, they are (pretending) to be royalty, so maybe incest is more accepted between the royal family in Fortna? It also doesn't help that due to the aforementioned rushed beginning, Azure and his romance with Nina come across as being rather underdeveloped, so it's hard to be invested in their relationship. In any case, ignoring the kinda-incest (but not really), the more immediate problem is that "Alisha" is already engaged to Sett, the prince of a rival kingdom. He's the "bad boy" type who will occasionally deign to be nice to Nina but is otherwise mostly unpleasant. (He does start to get a little better once he gets attached to Nina, but, still, not a great guy.) Honestly, I don't get what she sees in either of them (mostly she seems to fall in love with them out of pity due to their tragic backstories, rather than their actual personalities), but, whatever. Despite my dislike of both of her love interests, I do love Nina and all the palace intrigue, and I'm really hoping we get another season, especially with the rather inconclusive ending we got...
 
Yakuza Fiancé: Raise wa Tanin ga Ii -- I know, I know, I was just complaining about Nina's problematic love interests, but sometimes, it's kinda nice to just sit back and watch a truly dysfunctional romance, and the one between Yoshino and Kirishima certainly fits the bill! Forced together in an arranged engagement by their respective yakuza leader grandfathers, they don't get off on the right foot, but as it turns out, Kirishima is a huge masochist who loves when Yoshino treats him like crap, and though Yoshino likes to pretend to be a normal teenager, she can be just as wild and unhinged as Kirishima when the situation calls for it. Watching them argue and grow closer as they get involved in various yakuza schemes is a lot of fun. It's also just plain awesome to see some josei anime for a change! (Technicallly, Nina the Starry Bride is also josei, even if it feels much more shoujo in vibe.) I don't really get the point of them being seniors in high school, though. Considering how adult they look and act and how little of the show actually takes place at the school, I think it would have made much more sense for them to just be in college already. Also, as with NTSB, the last episode is weird, just kinda...ending after setting up for the next arc. (Seriously, I was like "That's it?" after the final scene and wondered if there was going to be a thirteenth episode, but there's not.) I wouldn't mind so much if we were guaranteed another cour -- which I hope we do get -- but, come on, it's a josei anime. It's a miracle that it got one cour in the first place; it's not getting a second. (Nina...maybe. Between the two, I'd put my money on NTSB getting a sequel, but I still think it's unlikely for both.) The second-to-last episode would have worked fine as an ending spot. Now I might just have to check out the manga (for both this and NTSB)...which was obviously the main goal anyway!
 
Wonderful Precure - The one thing I will say about this season of Precure is that after some lukewarm romantic subplots in previous seasons, the romance between Iroha and Satoru is pretty freaking adorable. I'm surprised Satoru and his pet bunny, Daifuku, never became Pretty Cures, though! After last season introduced the first boy Cure in a main role, I thought for sure it was only a matter of time until Satoru and Daifuku joined the team, but it never happened. (Apparently, they do get Cure-like forms in the movie, but I haven't watched that.) Anyway, I do rather like that this season focuses a lot more on the characters and not so much on Precure stuff. I know I criticized the lackluster "battles" (if you can even call them that) in the beginning, which never really changed, but when the villains aren't really that bad and actually have a good reason for their anger against humans...eh, I guess it doesn't really matter if there's not much fighting involved this time. At least the characters get some nice development.
 
Delico's Nursery - After a long break, Delico's Nursery came back to finish up the rest of the cour from last season, which focused more on the investigation and less on the child-rearing. Since the child-rearing was the part I actually enjoyed, I wasn't as interested in this second half of the show. It was...fine, I guess?
 
After-School Hanako-kun Season 2 (kinda) - I don't really get the point of making these four episode long series of shorts. Even Crunchyroll is considering these episodes to still be part of the first season, even though a year has passed between them. Why not just do a full 12-13 episode cour? With each episode being only about ten minutes long, it doesn't seem like it would take that much extra effort, especially compared to a cour of full-length episodes. Anyway, much like the first batch of episodes, this set was amusing, but mostly forgettable, mostly just serving as an appetizer to the main event, the long-awaited second season of Toilet-bound Hanako-kun next season, which I am legitimately excited about.
 
Uzumaki - Speaking of four episode series... In my last post, I expressed the hope that this series would at least be better than Toonami's last attempt at airing a short horror series around Halloween, Housing Complex C. Was it? Eh, I guess so, but that's not a high bar to clear. The first episode was legitimately great, with stunning black-and-white animation that looked like a moving manga. I also liked that they showed the episodes in Japanese with subtitles. (Apparently they're showing the dubbed version during a marathon the weekend after New Year's.) I'm not sure if it's the first time they've shown subtitled anime on Toonami -- I think I remember some subtitled movies? -- but I wouldn't mind seeing more in the future. Unfortunately, there was a noticeable drop in quality starting with the second episode that lasted until the end. It didn't help that the characters were as flat as paper, and they tried to cram way too much into each episode. I think the series would have benefitted a lot if it had been a full cour.
 
As for next season... Man, is it packed! Of course I'll be continuing with the end of Wonderful Precure and watching the new You and Idol Precure, assuming Crunchyroll gets it, which I have no doubt they will. (There's another Precure coming out this season called Mahō Tsukai Precure!!: MIRAI DAYS, but it's a sequel to the older series Witchy Precure, which I haven't gotten around to watching yet, so that one will have to wait.) There's also new seasons of the aforementioned Toilet Bound Hanako-kun, The Apothecary Diaries (so excited!), and The 100 Girlfriends Who Really, Really, Really, Really, REALLY Love You. Re:Zero and Blue Exorcist also have new cours, but seeing as I still haven't caught up with this past season's cours, they will need to be wait-listed, along with the second season of Unnamed Memory, which I'm just not in any rush to watch. (The second season of Happy Marriage will also have to wait until whenever I subscribe to Netflix again.) 
 
As for new series, the show I'm most looking forward to is obviously Medalist, another figure skating anime. Can't wait, can't wait, can't wait! I've read some of the manga, and it is so good! I'm also planning to check out Honey Lemon Soda and Anyway, I'm Falling in Love with You. Maybe Ameku M.D.: Doctor Detective, too, but that  will probably have to wait-listed. If they show up on either Crunchyroll or Hulu/Disney (got a year-long subscription to both for cheap on Black Friday), I Have a Crush at Work, Baban Baban Ban Vampire, and Sakamoto Days are some other titles I'm eyeing.

And, finally, my Top Ten Favorite Anime of 2024! (* means I didn't watch it simulcast)
 
A Sign of Affection
The Apothecary Diaries
YATAGARASU: The Raven Does Not Choose Its Master *
Frieren: Beyond Journey's End
Sound Euphonium Season 3
Frieren: Beyond Journey's End
Black Butler: Public School Arc
Kimi Ni Todoke Season 3
Girls Band Cry *
Natsume's Book Of Friends Season 7
Spice and Wolf: MERCHANT MEETS THE WISE WOLF


 
heavenly_pearl: (Mermaid)
Sound Euphonium - It's a shame we didn't get to hear the band play as much as we did in the first two seasons, but otherwise, I absolutely loved this cour and the focus on Kumiko, who struggles to figure out what she wants to do after she graduates high school while also having to compete against a talented new transfer student who also plays the euphonium for the chance to play the soli with Reina at Nationals in the band's new contest piece. Also, no need to mention that the animation is still absolutely gorgeous!

Black Butler - Black Butler has one of the strangest release schedules I've ever experienced with anime. The first season is mostly true to the manga (apparently, I've never read it myself) until the ending, which is anime original. Then Season 2 is competely anime original and made essentially to undo the ending of the first season, which killed Ciel off. They went back to following the manga with Season 3 (Book of Circus), but the next two manga arcs were covered with a 2-episode OVA (Book of Murder) and a movie (Book of the Atlantic). Now seven years after the movie's release, it's back with a Season 4, covering the Public School Arc. If any series could really use a reboot, I'd put Black Butler at the top of my list at this point, but I actually really enjoyed this arc. In fact, it may be my favorite arc so far! It was nice to see Ciel interacting mostly with people around his own age for a change, and thankfully, there was very little creepy sexualizing of Ciel this time around. The last episode hints at the next arc, so hopefully it won't be too long before we actually get another season!

Spice and Wolf: MERCHANT MEETS THE WISE WOLF - It's been a long time since I watched the first adaptation of Spice and Wolf, but I'm struck by just how similar this new adaptation is to the old one, to the point where I'm wondering why they didn't just make a sequel to the original if the intention is (presumably) to adapt the full novel series? Literally the only major change I've noticed is that the new series starts with a flash-forward scene. Other than that, it's basically the same exact show with new animation and music. That being said, it's still a great show! If you've never seen the first series, I definitely recommend checking it out. Lawrence and Holo are absolute masters at the art of flirtatious dialogue, and even a subject as dull as economics becomes positively riveting when those two are involved. If you have seen the first series, though... Eh, you can probably just skip this first cour and just pick it up once it gets to new material. If it ever gets to new material. (It's continuing into next season for a total of 25 episodes, which is the same length as the original series, so I'm not really sure what the overall plan is.)

Grandpa and Grandma Turn Young Again - This series does not put its best foot forward with the first episode, in which their teenage granddaughter (and her mother, but she's a daughter-in-law, so it's not quite as weird) gets the hots for her suddenly-young grandfather (who she knows is her grandfather). It's hard to tell whether we're supposed to believe Mino's just joking around, or if she actually serious. Fortunately, it's never mentioned again beyond the first episode, and Mino soon gets her own age-appropriate, not-related love interest. That's a good thing, because the rest of the series is a genuinely touching and sometimes bittersweet look at a loving, happily married couple getting a second chance to be young again and make the most of the time they have left together.

Laid-Back Camp - A change in animation studio means the show looks a little different than it did before, featuring a lot of hyper-realistic backgrounds that are likely actual filtered photographs, but at heart, it's still the same cute show about cute girls having fun while going camping. What more can you ask for?

My Hero Academia - The FOUR episodes of recap that started this cour were excessive and pretty pointless, but once it got back to the actual story, the show has been on fire (for the most part)! Good thing, too, since this is the start of the final batttle, the climax of the entire series. Normally I tend to get bored whenever there's too much fighting going on in a show, but My Hero Academia is one of the few series that can hold my interest even through back-to-back battles, thanks to how easy it is to follow along with what is happening and how cool and inventive everybody's powers are. I just wish Spoiler ) got to stick around a while longer. Yeah, her power was super OP, but it's a shame that she got killed off so soon after her introduction. At least she went out in a blaze of glory. I also almost completely forgot that there was supposed to be a traitor in Deku's class since it hasn't been mentioned in ages, so the revelation of their identity seemed kinda random and anti-climatic, but in hindsight, who it is makes sense, and the reason why they started working for All-For-One is very sympathetic, allowing them a chance for redemption.

Mission: Yozakura Family - Could have really done without the annoying big brother with the sister complex, but otherwise, this was a really cute and funny show about an ordinary teenage boy who "marries" (by way of an old family tradition that's probably not legally binding) his best friend/crush and becomes a member of a wacky family of spies.

A Condition Called Love - This show starts with an interesting premise. Hotaru loves her family and her friends, but believes herself to be aromantic, incapable of falling in love with anyone. (Of course she doesn't actually use that term, but it feels like an appropriate label for her, at least at first.) Hananoi, on the other hand, is the complete opposite, with absolutely no friends and distant family. For him, the ONLY thing that matters is romantic love, to the point where he seems to have no real personality of his own, since he's always trying to conform himself to his latest girlfriend's tastes. Obviously, he doesn't have the most healthy view on love, and even though it makes sense why he has such issues when you learn his backstory, it's easy to see why a lot of viewers find him creepy and stalker-ish at first. The thing is, while Hananoi does change little-by-little over the course of the series, the show has Hotaru decide she's in love with him way too early in his (re)development. When she confessed her love for him around the midway point, I was left wondering, "Why?" At that point, she still didn't know much about him, and what "changes" he'd gone through were so small that his grandmother basically had to tell Hotaru (and the audience, by extension) what they were. There were some cute moments between them, and I appreciated how much focus was put on the importance of communication (even if they didn't really do much with the idea, and Hananoi is still keeping a huge secret from her by the end of the show), but, really, there needed to be more time spent on developing Hananoi's character earlier in the series before they turned their trial relationship into a real one. That would have made it a much more compelling romance.

Go! Go! Loser Ranger! - This show started off really strong, but started losing me when Fighter D began impersonating a cadet and a lot of new characters were introduced at once right before a fairly boring battle tournament set in a parking garage, of all places. There just wasn't any time to learn or care about any of the other cadets before they started fighting, so those episodes were a bit of a drag to get through. It picked up a little near the end, but, still... Just too many characters introduced way too fast.

Vampire Dormitory - Ah, this show... It's kind of a trainwreck, to be perfectly honest, and I rolled my eyes more than a few times at how dumb the characters are and how idiotic the plot is, but...it's still pretty fun to watch? Like, in a "it's so bad, it's good" kind of way? Yeah, it's definitely no Shakespeare, but if you turn your brain off, it's an entertaining enough soap opera. Just don't think too much while watching it. Seriously, just don't.

Wonderful Precure - Still not really feeling this new Precure series, but I am glad focus has, at least for the moment, shifted mostly away from Iroha and her dog, Komugi to Mayu and her cat, Yuki, who are frankly much more interesting characters. The conflict between Yuki, who only cares about keeping Mayu safe and believes Iroha and Komugi are putting her in danger by being friends with her, and Mayu, who understands how Yuki feels but also wants to help her friends and the possessed animals, is really well done, and at least Yuki/Cure Nyammy is willing to do some actual fighting. I just don't get this insistence the show has with Komugi and Yuki attending school in their human forms. They're animals! They don't know how to read and write! Or at least they shouldn't, but it seems all logistics are just glossed over to put them in school uniforms.

Unnamed Memory - There are hints of a good story here. Too bad this anime has little interest in actually showing us that story, instead settling for basically summarizing the source material. Even for someone not familiar with the original light novels like me, it's obvious the show skips over a lot in favor of hitting the highlights. Things just happen with no warning and little explanation, almost forcing people to check the comments on Crunchyroll for spoilers to understand what actually happened. A lot of anime are created as extended commercials to get viewers to check out the original source, but in this case, it feels more like the show was aimed toward people who are already fans of the novels...except I can't imagine those fans being very happy with this kind of adaptation, either. Somehow, though, it's getting another season? 0.o Why? I mean, it's not outright terrible, but... (Actually, the last episode of the season was probably the best one of the series and basically resets everything, so maybe a second season could do a better job...but, eh, I'm not in any rush to watch it.)

Next season, I'll be continuing with Spice and Wolf, My Hero Academia, Mission: Yozakura Family, and Wonderful Precure. I also plan to watch the new season of SHY, but as for new shows... Honestly, nothing's really piquing my interest except maybe Twilight Out of Focus. Normally, that would be a bad thing, but with Sailor Moon Cosmos finally coming to Netflix in August, along with a third season of Kimi ni Todoke (so excited for both!), I've decided to subscribe to Netflix for a few months and catch up with some of the exclusive series I've been wanting to see there, like Delicious in Dungeon, My Happy Marriage, Romantic Killer, Ooku: The Inner Chambers, and the second season of Tiger & Bunny.

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