2014-10-14
Looking back at the Summer 2014 anime season
As before, it's time (and long past time) for my usual retrospective look back at the season to see how well the final result matched up with my early impressions and my midway views. This has been delayed partly because the summer season turned out to be an almost total bust for me; I only managed to watch one show all the way through as it aired.
Watched and finished:
- Aldnoah.Zero: This was a reasonably entertaining show but I wouldn't
call it particularly great; however, the show did manage to make
watching it be enjoyable (for all of its absurdities). Following my
usual rule that whoever gets the most character
development is probably it, Slaine is the real protagonist; sadly,
I suspect that the show disagrees with me. This is the only show I
wound up following on a weekly basis through ths season.
If I took this as a serious dramatic work, it would be a failure; it simply has far too many flaws. As popcorn entertainment I rather enjoyed it because I could laugh at all of the crazy and nonsensical bits and admire all of the ways the show found to make Slaine suffer. I agree with all of the people who say that it's impossible to believe that the show is serious about the events in its first-half climax.
(Also, if this was a serious work it would be an extremely grim one given how large the show's onscreen and offscreen body count is.)
I'm looking forward to the second half although it may well turn out like Valvrave, where the magic and charm wore off very fast.
(Yes, this is a lot of words in an attempt to justify both sides of Author's collected impressions at once. As usual I see both the virtues and the flaws of the show but I weigh them in my own way.)
- Fate/Kaleid Liner Prisma Illya 2wei!: In the end I got bored enough (and desperate enough) to pick this up again after dropping it in the hopes that I would at least get some nice mindless action. I more or less got that, but it was competent instead of spectacularly stunning like I was kind of hoping for. I should really just resign myself to the fact that nothing in Prisma Illya will ever top the episode six fight from the first series and leave it permanently dropped. See also my Twitter capsule summary.
Dropped:
- Zankyou no Terror: I realized that I had essentially no interest in finding out what happened next to the characters or what was going on with the whole situation. So I stopped watching it.
Towards the end of the season I tried out two highly praised series that I had not previously given a chance to. My reactions:
- Barakamon: After three episodes my overall reaction is that I
find the show charming and I can see why people like this a lot, but
I don't find it compelling enough to drive me to watch more with any
particular urgency (especially now that it's not a currently airing
show). Part of it is certainly that the show is a bit too obvious and
heavy-handed with its moral lessons for Handa. The segments when it
wasn't concerned with that were much more enjoyable but unfortunately
not all that frequent in the first three episodes.
- Sabagebu: The highest recommendation I can give this is that it makes me laugh on a regular basis (which is not common, most anime comedy fails for me). However in practice it's fallen into the same problem as Seitokai Yakuindomo, which is that plotless humor doesn't have much to strongly drive me to see the next episode. See also eg Evirus.
I expect to watch more of both of these shows, but in practice neither has grabbed me by the labels and demanded to be watched. Someday, when I feel like it or I want something to fill in a block of anime watching time.
I also tried out Strike The Blood for vague reasons, partly in the hopes that it would be another Tokyo Ravens. My capsule summary is that it hasn't proved to be anywhere near as compelling a watch as Tokyo Ravens was and is otherwise a perfectly ordinary shonen fighting show. I suspect that I'm not going to wind up watching much more of it; I just don't find it all that compelling.
2014-09-20
Why I found Joshiraku an interesting series
I watch anime in translation (via subtitles), and almost all of the time I passively assume that the translation is essentially seamless and more or less transparent; what I'm reading on the screen is close enough to the original Japanese dialog that I'm missing at most minor nuances. Every so often there are stumbling blocks and near non-sequiturs and the rare moment where I can make out a Japanese word that I recognize and tell that the translated dialog is not quite what the characters actually said, but in those moments I assume that the translators have dropped the ball and done a bad job. I think this is an easy mindset to get into and to be honest I think that almost all of the time it's accurate; to put it one way, most shows likely don't have dialog that is all that complex.
(Most shows are not all that complex.)
Joshiraku demolishes this illusion. In Joshiraku the seams of the translation show frequently, not just in the puns but also in dialog that was clearly supposed to be funny and full of jokes but that went completely over my head. Watching Joshiraku was in part a continual process of being reminded that I was watching something in a foreign language and I very much was not getting all of the nuances. As a result, even (or especially) the jokes that I didn't get were interesting because they vividly show me those rarely-visible seams in the translations and my understanding of what was really going on. My puzzled silence when I was supposed to laugh made this gap quite visible.
I generally didn't find Joshiraku funny per se (although it had quite a lot of fun and enjoyable bits), but I always found it interesting to watch because of this and I'm very glad I saw it all. It's not often that I get such a useful and pointed reminder that yes, translation is happening and what I'm following is actually a simulacrum of the real thing (even if it's often probably a very close one).
(This is another aspect of the problem of interpretation, of course.)
PS: This is the reason I was talking about in my Summer 2012 midseason comments on Joshiraku. Yes, sometimes the wheels of blogging grind very slowly around here.
2014-08-30
Checking in on the Summer 2014 anime season midway through
It's time for the usual midway check in on my early impressions of this season. This 'midway' check has been delayed in large part because this season has turned out to be pretty much a bust for me, which has not left me with enthusiasm for writing this.
Things I'm still watching:
- Aldnoah.Zero: This has quietly turned into the one show that I
actively look forward to watching this season. It's not great and
the writing is periodically clumsy, but it's generally well done
and interesting. The secondary characters really make the show
for me; Inaho is so far mostly interesting as a cryptic mystery
instead of a character to be engaged with.
- Zankyou no Terror: This has plenty of beautiful cinematography and animation, but the characters are and remain fairly much ciphers, the actual events are getting increasingly absurd, and I'm not entranced by the plotting. Still it's good enough that I keep watching, although often after some delay (I'm an episode behind right now, for example).
Dropped:
- Space Dandy second season: Theoretically this is just suspended, but I don't think I've ever continued a suspended series. I wrote an entire entry about why this failed for me, but I can boil it down to a tweet: pure artistry in a show isn't enough for me.
Misses:
- Fate/Kaleid Liner Prisma Illya 2wei!: As I thought I might, I got
tired of this. I decided that the conclusion of the first story was
far enough, especially as it apparently shifted to comedy hijinks
for at least the episode after that. To put it one way, comedy hijinks
is not what I was watching Prisma Illya for.
- Sword Art Online II: I came to my senses. SAO II has good production values and some ideas that could be really interesting stories if well handled, but it also has the usual generally terrible and overdone writing, a slavish adaptation process that hurts the anime-only part of the audience, and overhanging it all the long absurd shadow of Kirito poisoning everything he's involved with. I won't say that SAO II would be a good show if it starred someone other than Kirito, but at least it would have a chance.
So far I haven't used my free time to dig into my backlog of anime. I've just been taking it as downtime and fiddling around with other things (mostly other diversions on the Internet). It's been kind of nice as a break but I sure hope that the fall season is better than this.
2014-08-06
What Space Dandy has just taught me about my tastes in anime
Despite what I said in my early impressions of this season, I've effectively suspended Space Dandy because I just felt no particular motivation to watch the fourth episode. As before, this has brought me around to a realization about my tastes.
Put simply, interesting animation turns out to not be enough by itself to get me to watch a show. Space Dandy is clearly a showcase (of both animation and storytelling) and this season it has been doing quite a good job of that, but as I mulled over it on Twitter the problem for me is that there is nothing more there than that. I clearly want my shows to be doing something and going somewhere, or at a minimum to be really funny (cf Seitokai Yakuindomo, and even that has ongoing developments that build on themselves).
(This may also be one of the reasons that the 'cute girls doing cute things' genre doesn't resonate with me. There's a part of me that watches and goes 'yes, and?'. There's also season 2 of Dog Days', where I articulated basically the same issue. Apparently things take a while to get through my skull.)
The short way of putting this is that Space Dandy is the anime equivalent of empty calories, even if they're pretty tasty empty calories. I've evidently had my fill of those and as a result Space Dandy is not for me.
(There's an irrational bit of me that regrets this and really wants to be able to fully enjoy the skilled artistry on display in Space Dandy, and an even more irrational bit that thinks it's necessary to that to be an anime fan with good taste. And it's not like I haven't enjoyed the episodes when I watch them. It's just that every time I think about watching episode four of S2 I decide that I have other things I'd rather do.)
2014-07-23
Brief early impressions of the Summer 2014 anime season
It's time for another early impressions post, as before. This entry has been delayed mostly because I needed several episodes to make up my mind about some shows (and on top of that one important show aired a week later than everything else). I'm once again feeling like grading very harshly, so shows that might get passes in previous seasons are getting ejected this time around. Overall this is not a particularly great season; there is nothing that I'm feeling particularly deeply enthused about and a lot that is rather questionable.
Reasonably enthused by:
- Zankyou no Terror: After two episodes this is at least a promising start, although I have no idea where it's going. It also hasn't particularly done anything that makes me roll my eyes, which puts it significantly ahead of everything else this season. Because the show is playing almost everything mysteriously so far, there isn't very much to say about the content yet. It's well directed and can do action sequences, and at least some of the characters seem interesting. But this doesn't particularly seem like a character-based series so far and it's very early in the plot, so.
Entertaining for now:
- Fate/Kaleid Liner Prisma Illya 2wei!: I didn't wind up with a
high opinion of the first season but
the first episode of this was just entertaining enough by the
end to get me to watch some more. I may tire of it rapidly,
though.
- Space Dandy second season: It's almost exactly what the first
season was, namely mostly an indulgent
showcase for animation instead of anything more coherent or
entertaining. But occasionally it pulls a rabbit out of the hat
to manage an excellent episode, as was the case with the second
episode. For now, a hope for more of these is enough to keep me
watching.
(Yes, yes, this may be optimistic, but Space Dandy has now demonstrated that it can be excellent in the right hands. Since the people involved pretty much change every episode, there's at least the potential of excellence striking again.)
- Aldnoah.Zero: This is well produced and mostly competently written
so far, with some quite interesting characters and a fair amount of
potential. The downside is that the writing is periodically clumsy,
predictable, and crudely emotionally manipulative (such as the slaughter
at the end of the first episode and in chunks of the second). I'm not
sure how much further I'll last. The princess and the daughter of the
<spoilers redacted> are the most interesting two characters so far,
purely on promise and the little glimpses we've had of them; at the
moment the protagonist is your basic bland spud.
(The writing here feels quite like the writing in Gargantia in some ways, which also veered between quite clever and utterly clumsy.)
Barely entertaining by being absurd:
- Sword Art Online II: This is this season's JoJo's for me. I don't know
how long I'll last, but it promises to be absurd in the best straight
faced SAO manner. The problem with this (as compared to JoJo's) is that
SAO is perfectly capable of terribly boring episodes because it takes
itself seriously. JoJo's at least has Stand fights pretty much every
episode.
(If I'm being honest about this, a good part of why I'm bothering with SAO II is so that I can fully enjoy Bobduh's writeups over at Wrong Every Time. This motivation may not exactly sustain me over the long term.)
Not for me:
- Tokyo Ghoul: This is horror, which I'm almost never interested in,
and nothing about the first episode hooked me in the face of that.
- Sailor Moon Crystal: What it boils down to is that I would be
watching this out of something akin to a sense of loyalty or
obligation instead of any expectation of seeing things that are new
and interesting, given that reports so far are that the first episode
is basically a complete remake of the original first episode. If it
deviates significantly from the original show, maybe I'll tune in;
otherwise, it's not for me.
(There are also a number of reports that it is just not all that well executed in terms of animation, directing, and so on.)
Misses:
- Tokyo ESP: I found the second episode to be painfully boring and
cliched. In
retrospect the first episode was too, it was just playing with a
different set of cliches. In the end an anitwitter conversation
(1, 2) helped me
figure out one of my big problems with the show: the characters and
situations just don't seem real but instead seem calculated to aim at
funny cliches.
(I just may give this another try if I get bored and desperate, because the premise certainly could make an interesting show.)
- Argevollen: This has pretty much everything I don't like about mecha and basically nothing that's appealing. I was grinding my teeth and rolling my eyes basically continuously through the first episode. I haven't bothered to watch further episodes; if it becomes amazing, I'm sure anitwitter will let me know.
Have not looked at due to bad initial reports or other reasons:
- Rail Wars!
- Akame ga Kill: Initial reports are not positive, to say the
least, and apparently various unpleasant aspects get worse later on.
- Hanayamata: This is apparently mostly a 'cute girls doing cute things' show and I have historically not enjoyed them. I don't think the sprinkling of supernatural elements is enough to offset that.
Not my thing, whether or not they are good: Glasslip, Locodol, Free sequel, Barakamon, and in general anything not mentioned here.
I may give in to temptation and watch at least some of the second season of Yama no Susume, despite my eventual unenthused views of the first season. It's the kind of show that I want to like, even if I don't in practice.
Dropped from last season:
- JoJo's Bizarre Adventures - Stardust Crusaders: In the end this
proved to be too much shonen fighting show for me, which is to say that
it's dragging on and on and on. JoJo's has been vaguely entertaining
in an absurdist way but I've realized that it's not so entertaining that
I want to watch what is apparently going to be another 26 episodes of
Stand fight after Stand fight before we even get to the main villain,
and then another 13 episodes or so of fighting him.
(I vacillated over this decision quite a lot but what really tells me that I'm making the right choice is the sense of relief I feel about not watching the next episode.)
Since I've dropped JoJo's, there's no ongoing shows that have carried over from the past season.
I suppose five shows is reasonably typical for me in a season, but this time around I'm not really enthused about almost any of them. At least I have something to watch.
(Although that's not all good. If this season had been a near-total bust I might have dug into my backlog and watched excellent series like Big O, Figure 17, or Banner of the Stars. That seems unlikely now unless I flame out on most of these shows.)
2014-06-27
Looking back at the Spring 2014 anime season
As before, it's time for my usual retrospective look back at the season to see how well my final views match up with my early impressions and my midway views. Sort of as I did in my winter season retrospective, there's one show I'm ranking based on how much I'm enjoying it instead of how good I think it is (for everything else I think the two match up quite well).
Excellent:
- Ping Pong: This is the total surprise of the season for me, far
more than I expected at the start of the season. My best
description of it (borrowed from somewhere else) is that in the end
it's a character piece carefully disguised as a sports story, and
what a character piece it is. It is full of interesting real people
and it covers its events with a beautifully understated touch. It is
unafraid to show instead of tell and more than that, to show without
jumping up and down to point out certain things. I found it powerful,
affecting, and in the end touching.
I liked the art style. I think it worked very well for how the story was told and how the story was told really helped the impact of the story.
For more raving about how good Ping Pong is, see eg Bobduh (also).
- Knights of Sidonia: This is far from a flawless show but what
elevates it here is that it absolutely nails a certain sense of
atmosphere and ambivalence, and it's also a gorgeously SF show.
I have come around to feeling that it absolutely needs to be in full
CGI to work, not just for the stunningly well done battle scenes
but also to draw a real distance between it and more 'anime' shows.
The show is also genuinely well directed and well written, things that
are unfortunately rare in anime. One sign of this is that it's willing
to confidently depart from strict adherence to the manga storyline in
order to improve the experience of the anime.
(Some people feel that the large scale death rate in the show has caused this aspect of it to lose its impact. I disagree personally because I think that the show is going for a different sort of impact that is less about people dying and more about the massive death rate among the pilots.)
I'm eagerly looking forward to its continuation in the fall.
(See eg Bobduh's reaction to episode 11 for both praise and criticism.)
- Mushishi second season: This is still an excellent show, one that I
think is better than Sidonia, but I've wound up feeling at a
distance from it for most of
the season. My current theory for why
is that the episodes have lacked any sort of ongoing thread that runs
between them. Sure, Ginko shows up in each of them, but for most
episodes he's just been an oracular presence that solves problems
or watches things happen; we haven't really been pulled into him
emotionally. The exception that proves the rule is the marvelous
episode 10,
which is all about Ginko being unsettled and getting yanked around
and us seeing the really weird side of the mushi.
To put it one way, Mushishi has been great to watch but Sidonia has affected me when I watch it.
(Mushishi was unfortunately hit with production delays that pushed back episodes 11 and 12 to its fall season continuation. Some rumours say that these are more plot and Ginko-heavy episodes; if they'd aired this season I might well have a much stronger opinion of Mushishi overall, based on my reaction to episode 10.)
Plain good fun:
- Hitsugi no Chaika: This wrapped up its first big arc with a nice
big bang and a well done pivot to move the overall story forward.
It continues to be a solid show with competence all around in its
execution and I'm quite looking forward to the second season.
(I have little to say here because this is effectively a midseason pause instead of anything more climactic. Of course the show is executing a midseason story pivot now; it was about time if things weren't going to drag.)
Relatively ordinary:
- Ryuugajou Nanana no Maizoukin: This wound up being a perfectly
competent and decently interesting show with some interesting and
intriguing characters. It's just not particularly memorable as these
shows go because it's not particularly exceptional. Tensai is the
best and most interesting character, with Juugo second.
- JoJo's Bizarre Adventure - Stardust Crusaders: I've continued to watch this basically as a comedy and it's continued to deliver that way. Things have stayed absurd and crazy and there have been some nice moments. I have no particularly deep emotional engagement with anyone in the show the way I have in every show from Chaika on up.
This season has turned out to be excellent, with several shows that are basically certain to rank highly in my eventual 'Best N in 2014' entry. While I'm disappointed with the failure of a few shows, this is much better than I expected at the start of the season; both Sidonia and especially Ping Pong turned out to be far more powerful shows than I anticipated.
(Looking back at my early Ping Pong impressions kind of makes me laugh now. And it's not that the show drastically improved over the course of its run. Its excellence was there from the start but I didn't trust the show to sustain it all the way through, so I was cautious.)
2014-05-26
Checking in on the Spring 2014 anime season midway through
It's time for the usual midway check in on my early impressions of this season and as usual, it's a bit delayed. The headline news is that I've wound up feeling that this season is a pretty strong one, although I've also wound up dropping a number of shows.
Things I'm still watching:
- Mushishi second season: Either I have rosy memories of the first
season or this season is tilting much more towards horror than the
first season did. Whichever it is, the show still has Mushishi's
deft and understated touch. And it's made me genuinely laugh.
- Ping Pong: What makes me so enthused about Ping Pong is that
it's mostly doing a sort of story and exploring a collection
of characters that I haven't really seen before in sports shows.
Pretty much everyone both feels human and is interesting. I find the
stylistic animation mostly just interesting, although I do think it
helps the story and helps things stand out.
- Knights of Sidonia: If I had to describe this in one word I'd call
it relentless; in animated form the show has acquired a visceral
punch that the manga lacked for me. The battles are not soaring action
affirmations but claustrophobic, tense exercises in people being all
too human, things that you dread instead of looking forward to.
(This is not as uncomfortable as, say, RideBack, but it is not exactly pleasant and cheerful.)
- Hitsugi no Chaika: This has slowed down some from the early episodes
but it's staying solid and interesting, and it keeps pushing the plot
forward at a decent pace. I'm glad that it's getting a second season.
And as they say, 'Chaika a cute'.
(Plus, casting all your magic with giant sniper rifles is always amusing. Wands, pah.)
- Ryuugajou Nanana no Maizoukin: This was trucking along as an ordinary
show and then episode 4 happened and made
pretty much everyone much more interesting. The show hasn't always
delivered since then but it has come through pretty regularly, so I'm
happy.
- JoJo's Bizarre Adventure - Stardust Crusaders: It took a while for the show to really grow on me, but it has. JoJo's is plain flat out absurd, crazy, and over the top and I just roll with it on those terms and enjoy the spectacle. I suppose what I'm saying here is that it's really a comedy.
Dropped:
- Haikyuu!!: This is a perfectly good sports show with perfectly good
animation, characters, and so on. It's just not exceptional enough to
overcome the fact that I generally don't get really enthused about
straightforward sports shows, so I took the end of a recent storyline
as a good point to stop watching.
- Soredemo Sekai wa Utsukushii: Despite everything nice I said about it in my initial impressions it turned out that I wasn't all that taken with the show after all. When it hit my least favorite manga storyline at episode 4 I found myself with no motivation to keep watching.
Now declared as misses:
- Captain Earth: I patiently gave this seven episodes to do anything
sufficiently interesting and coherent and it didn't. It doesn't help
that the show is periodically wince-inducingly clumsy and stupid
(cf).
- Mekakucity Actors: This is basically the same as with Captain
Earth. There is probably more here in the show than with CE (and
certainly less stupidity), but the slow pace and the obscurity
irritated me. I likely gave the show too many chances given
my previous standard of 'stop promising,
start delivering'.
- Black Bullet: After three episodes I concluded that this was just
a typical light novel adaptation that had managed some flashes of
being good. This was not enough to continue watching it.
(It does have one of the better opening songs of the season, though.)
- Mahouka Koukou no Rettousei: I came to my senses immediately after writing my initial impressions and never watched any more. From all reports I made the right decision.
Six shows, with three of them being solidly good, is enough to make me happy about this season.
Sidebar: My favorite OP songs of the season
For my tastes, Knights of Sidonia first, Black Bullet a relatively distant second, and then Ping Pong. Nothing else really ranks, sadly including Mushishi (the first season's OP is great although somewhat creepy if you listen to the lyrics, but I don't like this season's OP at all and always skip it). After some qualms the full version of the Sidonia OP has been growing on me.
As far as EDs go, you can't really top JoJo's.
2014-04-22
Brief early impressions of the Spring 2014 anime season
It's time for my early impressions of this season so that I can organize my thoughts and then later see how badly I did at predicting what would be good and what would make me throw up my hands in despair. Early in the run of first episodes I thought I was going to have real difficulty sorting out what to watch, but as time went on I realized that there was a clear dividing line poking up out of my early confusion. Unlike back in winter this was not a line of active failure but instead a line of indifference.
Shows are ranked in rough order of how much I'm enjoying them.
Clear winners:
- Mushishi second season: It's just like the first series continued,
which is great. I can't think of anything to say about Mushishi
that I haven't already said in my entry on 2005.
- Hitsugi no Chaika: This had the most interesting and enticing first
episode of the season, one that demonstrated a mastery of throwing us
into the middle of things and illuminating the world through actions
instead of exposition lumps. Never boring, always active, this episode
went places. Now I just have to hope that the rest of the show keeps
delivering (which the second episode did decently).
- Knights of Sidonia: I don't know how I'd feel about this if I hadn't read a lot of the manga but as it is the first episode works very well for me, partly because I know what's going on with a lot of the mysterious bits. But beyond that I think it did a good job of pushing the story forward, quietly setting up the world without infodumps, and so on. The CGI doesn't bother me but then I'm not picky about that stuff. The second episode did decently with the action and continuing the good work of the first episode and had some nice little touches.
Things that I'm reasonably enthused with:
- Ping Pong: The fact that none of the protagonists are particularly
likable people makes me think that this may be doing something
unusual with its plot instead of being yet another standard sports
story. If it has something interesting to say I'm willing to keep
watching.
- JoJo's Bizarre Adventure - Stardust Crusaders: I'm taking another
shot at watching JoJo's with this and so far it's going pretty well.
The second episode had a surprisingly brutal bit and it remains very
much the essence of action shonen. Hopefully I won't find it too over
the top.
- Soredemo Sekai wa Utsukushii: Again, I've read the manga so I know
what's going on and a bunch of what's coming, which inevitably
influences my reactions. Nike and the other major characters are as
charming (and sometimes irritating) as they were in the manga and I'm
on board for watching more of the antics in animated form.
- Mekakucity Actors: The first episode was interesting but also deliberately opaque. The latter was well enough done that I want to watch more, although it could all collapse like a house of cards. I don't think its collection of standard Shaft stylistic tics either helps or hurts it, but other people may have stronger feelings about this than I do and I'll admit that not much actually happened in the first two episodes.
At least a bit marginal already:
- Ryuugajou Nanana no Maizoukin: I like the idea of the premise and
the two episodes were decent although not spectacular, which is good
enough to keep me watching for now.
- Black Bullet: The first episode was a sodden, charm-less light novel
adaptation, complete with exposition lumps and vaguely cringe-inducing
fanservice. People said good things about the second episode so I gave
it another chance and the result was an order of magnitude better, in
that it was reasonably watchable and interesting. I may not stay with
this for long but I'm at least willing to give it a third episode.
- Captain Earth: This show is well done overall but has two strikes
against it. It's a mecha show and I'm not particularly a mecha fan,
and the second episode had one the most eye-rollingly cartoonish bad
characters I've seen since the second half of Sword Art Online.
Oh, and while it's well done there's nothing here that's really
compelling.
In short, sadly this is no Star Driver. It's much more conventional than that, to its detriment.
- Haikyuu!!: On the good side this has production values and decent characters, but on the other side it seems to be doing a relatively standard sports story and I'm historically not too attracted to those. This may fall down into the 'not for me' category. At the moment I feel like continuing to watch until the action slows down.
Watching despite myself:
- Mahouka Koukou no Rettousei: This isn't really a good show and it's
not even good competence porn, but it is
kind of fascinating to see the next way that the protagonist is going
to turn out to be a special, misunderstood, and amazingly overpowered
snowflake. He's already been revealed as a ninja master and special
combat mage, so what will they come up with next? I expect to get
bored of this at some point, probably when the show starts taking the
'plot' seriously and stops having the protagonist show off all the time.
In short I'm watching this purely for the spectacle and I'm not all that
engaged with the spectacle at that.
(It's possible to do this kind of premise well but Mahouka is not even coming close.)
Mahouka is sort of like Sword Art Online in that both clearly have a bunch of money and effort put into their production but suffer from defects in the actual core content. The result is something that's mostly quite watchable on a moment to moment level (because it looks good, scenes are decently well staged, and so on) but then you wake up and ask 'I was watching what happen?' See also Bobduh's takedown of episode 2.
The line of 'meh', where the shows are not actively repulsive but don't particularly inspire any interest in more:
- Seikoku no Dragonar: Bland but not actively irritating. There is
nothing here that we haven't seen before and the execution isn't
well enough done to overcome that. It deserves special note for
particularly clumsily and badly executed fanservice.
- Akuma no Riddle (at 2 eps): This is teasing us with stuff I don't
expect it to really deliver on, especially as it's adopted from an
incomplete manga and we know how that one goes as far as answering
mysteries and delivering satisfying conclusions.
- Soul Eater Not!: If I strip away all of my fond memories of Soul
Eater, there's just not very much novel or compelling in here.
We had one nice fight scene but apparently that's going to be a
rarity and the character chemistry is too over the top to be really
interesting.
- Brynhildr in the Darkness: Meh. The first episode was okay but not at all inspiring.
(Having written all that I'm feeling the temptation to give some of these another episode or two. Not so much because I think that they're better than I've rated them here but instead because I want them to be better than that and I keep hoping that maybe another episode will change things. This is a foolish hope but it tempts me.)
Outright miss:
- Atelier Escha & Logy - Alchemists of the Dusk Sky: I want to like
the quiet and low-key mood, but after two episodes it's just too slow
for me. To be honest part of it is that I'm simply finding Escha to
be kind of irritating; she's a bit too squeaky and immature and
over-genki.
- M3 - Sono Kuroki Hagane: Total failure to engage my interest. It's bland, absurd, and infuriating, combining an entire collection of lazy cliches with completely uninspiring production and writing that veers between clumsy and insulting.
So very clearly not my thing:
- One Week Friends: I've heard praise for this but at the same time the praise makes it pretty clear that this is not in my area of interest.
Have not looked at due to bad initial reports:
- No Game, No Life: I don't expect this to measure up to last year's
Mondaiji (cf).
- selector infected WIXOSS
- Broken Blade: I've watched four out of the six movies already but have stalled out there, which I'm taking as a sign that I'm not going to be particularly enthused about the TV series version either. If I feel the urge I'll finish the movies instead of the TV series.
There are no ongoing shows that have carried over from last season, so I get to start with a clean slate this time around. I suspect that I'm going to wind up dropping at least some shows above the line of meh just because following eleven or twelve shows is a relatively lot for me.