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Spring 2014 Anime Preview: Now With More Robots

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As meager rays of sunshine struggle to warm lands blasted by endless winter, the spring anime season has come upon us, sporting a full complement of new shows to warm our frozen hearts. From the youthful mecha adventures of Captain Earth to fantasy light novel adaptations, and from the unique creative vision of Ping Pong to other fantasy light novel adaptions, spring is bursting with brand new anime—plus the return of some well-loved favorites. With simulcasts a click away, there’s no reason to wait. Here are five of the best new shows of spring that are available to watch right away.

Captain Earth

As a child, Daichi Manatsu (Miyu Irino) spent a summer on the island of Tanegashima playing with a strange boy named Teppei Arashi (Hiroshi Kamiya), who showed him a mysterious phenomenon: a circular rainbow floating in the palm of his hand. Years later, Daichi sees a news report about a similar rainbow floating in the sky above the space facilities on Tanegashima. Daichi sets off for the island, determined to return to the place where he last met Teppei. When he arrives, however, he is confronted by an odd young girl, who reveals that alien attackers are about to invade Earth—and that Daichi has the ability to intercept them, using a robot called the Earth Engine. Being an exemplary teenage mecha protagonist, Daichi gets in the robot and saves the Earth.

Animation studio Bones (Star Driver, Eureka Seven) is back with another original mecha anime, and it’s off to a promising start. Brought to you by the writer and director of Star Driver, Captain Earth is everything one would expect from that team: southern islands, mysterious robots, secret organizations, and long transformation sequences. Captain Earth is carefully paced, taking its time to ease the audience into its story and dropping hints at the larger picture while focusing on assembling the main cast. Right now Captain Earth is pure potential—but promises of complex politics and larger mysteries, as well the crisp art and dazzling visuals that Bones is so adept at delivering, are enough to make Captain Earth worth any mecha fan’s time.

For fans of: Star Driver, Eureka Seven, RahXephon, Xam’d, 2 minutes of robot assembly IN SPACE

Watch it on Crunchyroll

 

Ping Pong The Animation

High school first years Makoto “Smile” Tsukimoto (Kouki Uchiyama) and Yutaka “Peco” Hoshino (newcomer Fukujurou Katayama) have been playing ping pong together since childhood. The quiet and reserved Smile is happy to take a back seat to his boisterous friend, playing apathetically and letting Peco garner victories and attention from their high-school teammates and rivals. But Smile can’t keep his skills hidden forever—as his team coach and other strong players begin to notice Smile’s talent, chances are good that he will be forced to come out of his shell and find out what it really means to play to win.

Based on a manga by Taiyo Matsumoto (Tekkonkinkreet) and directed by Masaaki Yuasa (The Tatami Galaxy, Kaiba) for the noitaminA time slot, Ping Pong is not your typical sports show. Yuasa is known for his wacky, art-house aesthetic, and those quirks definitely show up in Ping Pong: the show has a unique visual style and some (if we are to be perfectly frank) rather ugly character designs that are sure to put some viewers off immediately. Those who skip it, however, are going to miss out on what is already shaping up to be a fascinating story full of weird characters and surreal visuals. Matsumoto and Yuasa seem to be a perfect match here, and at eleven episodes, you’ve got nothing to lose. The obvious artsy hipster pick of the season.

For fans of: Tekkonkinkreet, The Tatami Galaxy, feeling superior to your friends

Watch it on Hulu or Funimation

 

Knights of Sidonia / Sidonia no Kishi

Knights of Sidonia

One thousand years ago, our solar system was destroyed by an alien race called the Gauna. The remains of humanity escaped in seed ships such as Sidonia, pursued by their alien enemies and protected by pilots of humanoid mecha called Guardians. Our story follows Nagate Tanikaze (Ryota Ohsaka), the young pilot of one such Guardian.

First, the very good: Knights of Sidonia is a gritty space opera based on a highly-regarded manga by Tsutomu Nihei (Blame), in which young men and women fight horrifying shape-shifting aliens. It depicts a fascinating future where humans have achieved photosynthesis, developed a third gender, and apparently made some people look like bears (you’ll see). Nagate is an unwitting pawn in politics that, based on the hints we’ve gotten so far, run deep in Sidonia’s society. Also, the background art is lovely.

Now on to the extremely unfortunate: Knights of Sidonia is being produced by Polygon Pictures in full 3DCG. This is all very well and good for the mechanical animation; the Guardians look swell. But the character animation is a travesty: the human characters are stiff and unnatural; they glide from pose to pose like mannequins, with about as much expressiveness. The content here is enough for any science fiction fan to take a look at Knights of Sidonia, but with the dodgy CG animation and a limited 12 episode run, caveats abound.

For fans of: Attack on Titan, Gargantia on the Verdurous Planet, Uchuu Senkan Yamato 2199,  space monsters

Watch it on Netflix…this summer. I’ve jumped the gun here a bit.

 

Haikyu!!

Shoyo Hinata (Ayumu Murase) has dreamed of playing volleyball at Karasuno High School ever since seeing them play in a tournament as a child. Despite being the only official member of his middle school volleyball club, Shoyo managed to scrape together a small team in time for the middle school tournament—but was bitterly defeated in the first round by a team led by Tobio Kageyama (Kaito Ishikawa), known as the King of the Court. Shoyo vows to take revenge against Kageyama in high school, but when he arrives at the Karasuno volleyball club, he finds that his first new teammate is none other than the King himself.

Haikyu!! hits the ground running from episode one, fielding likely the most visually impressive first episode of the season. Unlike Ping Pong (and yes, there are two sports anime in this list; these are the times we live in), this is a fairly straight Shonen Jump sports plot—here, it is the execution that elevates it above standard sports anime fare. Featuring an extremely likable cast—Shoyo is a spunky and tireless lead, and even the prickly Kageyama has room to grow—Haikyu!! is dynamically animated, smartly directed, and above all incredibly fun to watch. Look no further for teamwork, rivalry, and friendship…knowledge of volleyball not required.

For fans of: Yowamushi Pedal, Ookiku Furikabutte/Big Windup!, sakuga

Watch it on Crunchyroll

 

Mushishi Zoku Shou

Neither plants nor animals, spirits nor gods, the beings known as mushi inhabit our world and affect it in sometimes beautiful, sometimes frightening ways. Visible to only a few, those who know of the mushi fear the strange creatures. Our protagonist Ginko is a mushishi, a man who travels the land in order to study the mushi and help people who have confronted the supernatural phenomena they create.

Okay, this is not a new show—but it has been eight whole years since the first season of Mushishi aired, and after waiting the better part of a decade, it would be positively criminal of me not to sneak it in. Thoughtful, melancholy, and strangely timeless, Mushishi is quite simply one of the most beautiful and singular shows out there. Mushishi Zoku Shou, helmed by the same staff and cast as the original, is just as lovely as it was eight years ago. If you’ve not seen the first season, you can pick up at the beginning of this one: the show is episodic in format, with each episode containing a complete narrative that can range from wistful to tragic. Wherever you start, you’re not likely to regret it. Mushishi is back, and it’s as good as ever.

For fans of: Natsume Yuujinchou, Kino’s Journey, Mononoke, good anime

Watch on Crunchyroll, and watch the first season on Hulu or Funimation

 

What spring shows are you watching? Let us know in the comments!


Kelly Quinn is an assistant editor at Tor Books. She can also be found on Twitter.


Netflix’s First Original Anime Series Knights of Sidonia Is Mechas in Space

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Netflix original anime series Knights of Sidonia manga Nagate mechas space opera

Netflix is upping the ante on its original programming, going from beloved cult shows of yesteryear (Arrested Development) and new cult darlings (Orange Is the New Black) to anime—specifically, a mecha space opera set on a generation ship. Yep, Netflix is exploring all sorts of new territory with Knights of Sidonia, premiering this summer.

Following Knights of Sidonia’s broadcast on Japanese TV this past April, Netflix will premiere the first 12 episodes of the series for U.S. audiences on July 4. Here’s the synopsis:

The first Netflix original anime series, Knights of Sidonia, based on the popular manga series of the same name, follows Nagate, a low-born youth in a society of genetically engineered refugees who escaped the destruction of Earth one thousand years earlier and now occupy the massive ship Sidonia. When Nagate’s talent as a pilot is revealed he becomes one of Sidonia’s elite defenders against the Gauna, shapeshifting aliens bent on eliminating humans from existence.

Other fun factoids from the manga’s Wikipedia page: Sidonia is built from pieces of Earth, and might be the last human outpost. Its inhabitants have been developing human clones, asexual reproduction, and human/animal hybrids. But with the Gauna hot on their tails, the crew must rely on anyone—including the precocious Nagate—to pilot their Guardian mechas against their alien foes.

Here’s the trailer:

“Netflix has a huge base of anime fans and we are thrilled to be bringing exclusively for the first time them a first-run anime series, especially one as well-plotted, humorous, and beautifully animated as Knights of Sidonia,” Erik Barmack, VP, Independent Content at Netflix, said in a press release. (And anyone trying to find their way back to their personal queue through Netflix’s menus can probably attest to the sheer amount of anime one must swim through.)

This is a big move for a major subscription service to be broadcasting anime exclusively and internationally. In addition to the usual English dub and subtitled versions, Netflix will offer other language dubs for each of the regions in which it operates. But it’s also a first attempt at anime streaming, so it will be interesting to see how Netflix handles things like adding new episodes after their Japanese airdates, and drumming up support among the small core fanbase.

Still, it’s a great step forward! As a rocket ship, we support all representations of ships and mechas in pop culture. Except for that one evil one. It knows who it is.

Photo: Polygon Pictures

Sailor Moon Reboot’s New Opening and Transformation Sequence Leaked

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Sailor Moon Crystal reboot new opening new transformation sequence compare old video

July seems to be the month for anime—in addition to Netflix’s original series Knights of Sidonia, the Sailor Moon reboot will premiere on July 5! Ahead of the new series, both the new theme song and Sailor Moon’s iconic transformation sequence have been leaked… and they’re a bit different from the original we all know and love.

The new Sailor Moon Crystal opening is peppy and a bit more frenetic than what we’re used to. That said, it serves to get the fans really jazzed for the reboot (which, rather than just remake the 1992 original, hews more closely to the manga).

And even though there was some apprehension about the choice to not remake the iconic “Moonlight Densetsu” song, judging from the fan reactions to this video, Momoiro Clover Z’s “Moon Pride” theme went over very well:

Plus, we get some little story tidbits, like the fact that Tuxedo Mask now wears glasses? And just listen to the fans go wild for the Negaverse folks.

And yet, as fun as it is to warble “La La Pretty Guardian Sailor Moooooon,” we’ll always be partial to the cheesy American theme, as performed by Moon Lips:

Kotaku found this video contrasting Usagi’s Sailor Moon transformations then and now—skip to 0:44 for the Crystal version, and 1:45 for a side-by-side comparison. The new one is markedly CGI, with more attention paid to the small details of her get-up (usually the case after a big costume change):

Sure, it looks cooler, but here’s hoping the show itself will continue to rely on creator Naoko Takeuchi’s original designs and less on the allure of CGI.

All of which is to say: We’re really, really excited for Sailor Moon Crystal.

Trailer Revealed For Studio Ghibli’s New Film, When Marnie Was There

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When Marnie Was There trailer Studio Ghibli new movie

This summer, Studio Ghibli will release its latest film, When Marnie Was There, a haunting (literally) tale of two girls whose sweet friendship is only slightly complicated by one of them maybe being a ghost.

Now, the trailer itself won’t tell you a lot about the plot, but for that we can refer to the summary of Joan Robinson’s book of the same title, on which the movie is based:

Anna hasn’t a friend in the world—until she meets Marnie among the sand dunes. But Marnie isn’t all she seems… An atmospheric ghost story with truths to tell about friendship, families and loneliness. Anna lives with foster parents, a misfit with no friends, always on the outside of things. Then she is sent to Norfolk to stay with old Mr. and Mrs. Pegg, where she runs wild on the sand dunes and around the water. There is a house, the Marsh House, which she feels she recognizes—and she soon meets a strange little girl called Marnie, who becomes Anna’s first ever friend.

Then one day, Marnie vanishes. A new family, the Lindsays, move into the Marsh House. Having learnt so much from Marnie about friendship, Anna makes firm friends with the Lindsays—and learns some strange truths about Marnie, who was not all she seemed…

Not surprisingly, the film relocates the story, here to a seaside town on the island of Hokkaido. Directing the film is Yonebayashi Hiromasa, whose last Studio Ghibli project was The Secret World of Arrietty.

When Marnie Was There opens in theaters in Japan on July 19; no word yet on a U.S. release date.

Photos: Studio Ghibli

Summer 2014 Anime Preview: In the Name of the Moon!

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Sailor Moon Crystal

As summer reaches its sweltering peak, what better reason to stay indoors with the A/C on than a new season of foreign cartoons? With a packed schedule of both new and returning shows, the summer season is looking rather suspiciously good. Fans will be pleased at the return of Space Dandy to both Japanese and American televisions, as well as new seasons of Sword Art Online (with guns!), Free! (with mermaids!), Kuroshitsuji (with circuses!) …and perhaps not so pleased with the return of Sengoku Basara (with uglier character designs!). For the binge-watchers, sci-fi series Knights of Sidonia is now available in full on Netflix. And as if that weren’t enough, there’s a whole roster of new shows, ranging from the rose-strewn Sailor Moon reboot to the moody and mysterious Terror in Resonance. With simulcasts mere moments away, there’s no reason to wait. Here are six of the best new summer shows that are available to watch right now.

Sailor Moon Crystal

Sailor Moon Crystal

Usagi is just an average 14 year old girl who’s a little clumsy and a bit of crybaby…yeah, you know this one. Sailor Moon Crystal is a 26 episode series that is meant to follow the story of Naoko Takeuchi’s beloved manga more closely than the beloved 90s TV series did. Crystal is clearly striking a conscious balance between old and new: The new character designs draw heavily from the original manga while attempting to create a more modern look. The casting brings back Usagi’s original voice actress, Kotono Mitsuishi, while replacing the rest of the sailor senshi. The transformation sequence embodies this most of all—though the sequence is (somewhat controversially) animated in full CG, the visuals remain very close to the original 90s rendition.

So does Crystal stand a chance of living up to the nostalgia-laden expectations of Sailor Moon fans? Overall, I would say yes. The premiere hits all the major milestones—meet cat, transform, glimpse Tuxedo Mask, beat up bad guys—without a hitch. The animation, if not superlative, is certainly adequate, and though the new look takes some getting used to, the overall result is very pretty: the long-limbed, detailed character designs do add a delicate girliness, and the silhouetted eye-catches and title cards are especially lovely. The poised prettiness, however, comes at the price of slightly more static characters that at times feel a tad plastic. More than once I found myself missing the more cartoony style of the 90s series (not to mention the amazing 90s fashion, but we can’t have everything). That said, Crystal is just getting started, and with a few more episodes (and the entrance of the rest of the senshi), the show may well settle comfortably into its shiny new style.

For fans of: Sailor Moon, duh.

Watch it on Crunchyroll, Hulu (airs biweekly)

 

Terror in Resonance / Zankyou no Terror

Terror in Resonance

Two mysterious teenagers known as Nine (Kaito Ishikawa) and Twelve (Soma Saito) reveal themselves to be abnormally adept with explosives, carrying out a devastating terrorist attack on a major government building in downtown Tokyo. High school student Lisa Mishima (Atsumi Tanezaki) is unwittingly caught up in the violent plans of the two boys, who call themselves “Sphinx.”

Director Shinichiro Watanabe (Cowboy Bebop, Kids on the Slope) returns to the noitaminA time slot with a tense terrorism thriller. Terror in Resonance opens with a tightly paced first episode that introduces the main cast—the stoic Nine, the eerily cheerful Twelve, and the despondent and mysterious Lisa—and wastes no time demolishing the Tokyo skyline. A haunting soundtrack by the legendary Yoko Kanno (Cowboy Bebop, Ghost in the Shell: SAC) adds considerably to the mood, and the art and animation from studio MAPPA (Kids on the Slope) is sharp and polished throughout this impressive premiere. Terror in Resonance is certainly playing its cards close to the vest: not much is revealed about what’s going on in the background, although Nine and Twelve’s dark past is sufficiently hinted at that it’s sure to become a factor later on. If this original show can keep up the tension and momentum it’s established in the first episode, it’s likely to be a winner this season.

For fans of: Eden of the East, Tokyo Magnitude 8.0, riddles

Watch it on Hulu and Funimation

 

Barakamon

Barakamon

After responding to a famous calligrapher’s criticism of his work by clocking the old man in the jaw, young calligrapher Seishuu Handa (Daisuke Ono) is packed off to a small rural island in disgrace. The city-bred artist is immediately out of his element amongst his inexplicable new neighbors (who all have atrocious country accents and don’t lock their doors), and is especially tormented by a child named Naru (Suzuko Hara), the acknowledged village scamp.

Barakamon is an exceedingly charming slice of life comedy that makes its considerable appeal apparent from the very first episode. Striking an easy balance between comedy driven by a city boy’s fish-out-of-water antics and a sincere exploration of Handa’s struggles to develop as an artist, the show manages to be heartfelt without being pretentious or saccharine. The unlikely friendship between Handa and Naru is a great source of fun here, and child actress Suzuko Hara brings a natural artlessness to Naru that is a perfect counterpoint to veteran voice actor Ono’s performance as Handa. Add fluid, organic animation from Kinema Citrus (Black Bullet, Yuyushiki), and Barakamon easily stands among the best shows premiering this season.

For fans of: Usagi Drop, Silver Spoon, Yotsuba&, rural villages

Watch it on Funimation (US) or Crunchyroll (outside the US) 

 

Aldnoah.Zero

Aldnoad.Zero

Aldnoah.Zero takes place in an alternate history where humans have colonized Mars. Years after a lengthy war between Earth and Mars, an uneasy truce keeps the planets at peace—until a terrorist attack on the Martian princess during a diplomatic mission to Earth sparks the war anew. The show focuses on Slaine Troyard (Kensho Ono), an Earthling in the Martian military, Inaho Kaizuka (Natsuki Hanae), a high school student on Earth, and the princess Asseylum (Sora Amamiya).

Reuniting the director and writer of Fate/Zero (though Urobuchi’s only responsible for concept here, not scripts), Aldnoah.Zero is a slickly-produced original mecha series. Debuting with a fairly standard mecha premise (empires, robots, humanity at war), Aldnoah.Zero distinguishes itself with a solid premiere that, though perhaps a little exposition-heavy at times, does good work setting the stage, both in terms of world-building and character introductions. Character designs by Takako Shimura (Wandering Son) are a special treat here, and the large-scale plot and action is bolstered by an equally large-scale score from Hiroyuki Sawano (Attack on Titan, Kill la Kill). There’s a lot of potential present, though neither our protagonists nor our robots have seen much action yet. I suspect that Aldnoah.Zero will sink or swim based on how the relationships between the main three develop as the show progresses.

For fans of: Code Geass, Kakumeiki Valvrave, almost any entry in the Gundam franchise

Watch it on: Crunchyroll and Hulu

 

Monthly Girls’ Nozaki-kun / Gekkan Shoujo Nozaki-kun

When Chiyo Sakura (Ari Ozawa) finally works up the courage to confess her love to her high school crush, Nozaki-kun (Yuichi Nakamura) mistakes her for a fan of his work. Yes, Nozaki has been living a not-so-secret double life: average high school boy by day, famous shoujo manga artist by night. Nozaki quickly recruits Chiyo as an assistant; meanwhile, poor Chiyo struggles to get her feelings across to her exceedingly dense crush.

Based on a 4-koma manga serialized in Gangan Online (the same online magazine as Barakamon), Monthly Girls’ Nozaki-kun is an ensemble comedy that affectionately parodies shoujo manga tropes. The deadpan Nozaki is obviously at the heart of things, but it is the tenacious and lovable Chiyo who drives much of the comedy, which, true to its 4-koma roots, is light and fluffy, jumping spryly from gag to gag. The rest of the cast is equally wacky and entertaining, and the show is taking a leisurely course in introducing more characters to the mix. An added bonus here is production by animation studio Dogakobo, which brings a little extra oomph to the character animation of this uncommonly fun show. For maximum shoujo sparkles, watch alongside Blue Spring Ride this season.

For fans of: Daily Lives of High School Boys, Bokura wa Minna Kawaisou/The Kawai Complex Guide to Manors and Hostel Behavior, Love Lab, tandem bicycles

Watch it on: Crunchyroll

 

Tokyo Ghoul

Ken Kaneki (Natsuki Hanae) is a college student in Tokyo, a city haunted by grotesque monsters known as “ghouls”—creatures that appear to be human, but must consume raw human flesh to survive. After a fateful encounter with a girl named Rize (Kana Hanazawa), Kaneki becomes a half-ghoul and finds himself forced to abandon his humanity in order to stalk the streets of Tokyo for his next meal.

Based on a manga by Sui Ishida, Tokyo Ghoul is a horror fantasy show that executes its fairly well-trod premise extremely well. Director Shuhei Morita (Oscar-nominated for his short film Possessions) excels at creating the noirish, creepy atmosphere that the material demands, and animation studio Pierrot (somewhat surprisingly) delivers some top-shelf animation here. Kaneki is a sympathetic protagonist, if not especially interesting at this point, and Hanae gives a visceral performance as a young man struggling with his new inhumanity. Gripping and suspenseful, punctuated by action scenes full of splashy gore (mostly censored for the TV broadcast), Tokyo Ghoul is certainly worth a look for those itching for a dark, character-driven fantasy.

For fans of: Shiki, Future Diary/Mirai Nikki, Psycho-Pass, coffee

Watch it on Hulu

 

Watching anything good this season? Let us know in the comments!


Kelly Quinn is an assistant editor at Tor Books. She can also be found on Twitter.

Is Studio Ghibli Actually Closing or Just Restructuring?

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is Studio Ghibli closing rumors Toshio Suzuki quote Hayao Miyazaki retirement

After Hayao Miyazaki announced his final-final retirement in February, fans of Studio Ghibli were understandably worried about the animation studio’s future. Unfortunately, half-formed rumors and conflicting translations don’t do anything to give audiences a sense of security either way.

Just this past weekend, a Ghibli producer’s quote was taken out of context to mean that the studio was being dismantled. It was quickly followed up by another translation clarifying that what we may be looking at is more of a restructuring.

Of course, our problems start with all of the Ghibli news occurring on Japanese television, and people jumping on loose translations. A recent interview with Ghibli producer Toshio Suzuki had him saying, “The production department of anime will be dismantled.”

However, Kotaku did a much more thorough, line-by-line translation of Suzuki’s words, and seem to have teased out a more nuanced meaning:

We’re thinking about disbanding the production department and making a big change to the larger view of Studio Ghibli.

Obviously, Miyazaki’s retiring was quite significant. After that, what should Ghibli do? With that, continuing to endlessly create like this is not impossible, but once, right about now, we will take a short rest and think about what’s next.

The wording he uses for “a short rest” is more literally translated to “breather” or “break.” The Japanese word for “restructure” is also mentioned a few times.

Kotaku also made the keen point that if Studio Ghibli were indeed closing, it would be national news in Japan—and so far, no major Japanese outlets have covered it.

So… they could decide that a restructuring means no more anime. Or they could continue onward even without Miyazaki’s involvement. We won’t know for some time. But we’ll leave you with this moment from the Ghibli documentary The Kingdom of Dreams and Madness, where the creator himself seems unperturbed by the thought of Studio Ghibli running its course:

is Studio Ghibli closing rumors Toshio Suzuki quote Hayao Miyazaki retirement

is Studio Ghibli closing rumors Toshio Suzuki quote Hayao Miyazaki retirement

is Studio Ghibli closing rumors Toshio Suzuki quote Hayao Miyazaki retirement

Image: Studio Ghibli

Fall 2014 Anime Preview: Symbiotic Alien Hands Don’t Make Good Pets

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Time rolls on and it’s fall once again. You could go out and enjoy the changing leaves, or carve a jack-o-lantern, or try to block out all the inexplicably pumpkin spice-flavored products that spontaneously appear at this time of year like snails on the sidewalk after a rainy night. Or you could avoid the whole mess and watch a brand new roster of Japanese cartoons.

After bidding a fond farewell to an exceptionally good summer season (I miss you already, Nozaki-kun), we’ve got quite an eclectic fall. Highly anticipated adaptions of Parasyte, Your Lie in April, and Fate/stay night debut, and so far manage to not suck. Rage of Bahamut stomps onto the scene with CG dragons and a rooftop chase on horseback. If you fancy a bit of time travel, Tomino’s Gundam Reconguista in G will take you straight back to 1979; or if you’re looking for a more recent nostalgia, The Seven Deadly Sins and Akatsuki no Yona both recall nineties favorites. And let’s not forget sequels: For those looking for their cyberpunk fix, Psycho-Pass returns with a new cast and a new writer. For lovers of robots and fun, Gundam Build Fighters Try delivers both just as effortlessly as the first season. For the sports crowd, Yowamushi Pedal is back and feels like it never left, while Log Horizon returns for the RPG fans. And for those who like good anime, the always lovely Mushishi returns for its final season.

With simulcasts a click away, there’s no need to wait—here are five of the best new anime premiering this fall that you can watch right now.

Parasyte -the maxim- / Kiseijuu: Sei no Kakuritsu

Shinichi Izumi is an normal high school student until one day a mysterious girl falls from the sky—just kidding. Shinichi Izumi (Nobunaga Shimazaki) is a normal high school student until one day a parasitic alien consumes his right hand and forces him into a bizarre life of coexistence with an extraterrestrial symbiote. Calling itself “Migi,” the parasite (Aya Hirano) explains to Shinichi that it is only one of many creatures of its kind that have invaded earth, and that the parasites are taking over human bodies and consuming other humans to survive. Caught in the crossfire is Shinichi’s crush Satomi Murano (Kana Hanazawa), from whom Shinichi must hide his new alien hitchhiker.

Based on an extremely well-regarded manga penned by Hitoshi Iwaaki in the nineties, Parasyte is both a long awaited and highly anticipated adaptation. Luckily, the first episodes don’t disappoint: Parasyte fields an excellent premiere and follows it up with a strong second episode. Production by Madhouse (Hunter x Hunter, Chihayafuru) is visually solid, and the grotesque transformations and body horror element is definitely enhanced by the animation. Shinichi himself is a compelling protagonist as he tries to work through what’s happened to him, and watching the relationship develop between him and Migi, whose curiosity about humans certainly doesn’t extend to sympathizing with them, is so far fascinating. With strong source material behind it and a full twenty-four episodes ahead, Parasyte is undoubtedly one of the most promising shows this season.

For fans of: Tokyo Ghoul, Level E, Kemonozume, hands that look like certain other male appendages…ahem

Watch it now on Crunchyroll

 

Your Lie in April / Shigatsu wa Kimi no Uso

Fourteen-year-old Kousei Arima (Natsuki Hanae) is a former piano prodigy who stopped playing when his mother, who was also his instructor, passed away three years ago. When his friends Tsubaki (Ayane Sakura) and Watari (Ryota Ohsaka) introduce him to free-spirited violinist Kaori (Risa Taneda), Kousei begins to see the world, and music, in a different light.

It’s hard to talk about this show without acknowledging the obvious parallels to it’s Noitamina predecessor Nodame Cantabile. Is this, as many people (including myself, I’ll admit) have been dubbing it, “Nodame Cantabile in middle school”? So far yes, it pretty much is, but that’s not a bad thing by any means—along with the music, the relationships between characters in Nodame were what made it so wonderful, and if this show is giving even a hint of that then it must be doing something right. Your Lie in April is a treat for the eyes and ears, featuring beautiful art, lovely pastel backgrounds, and of course plenty of classical music. The main cast is so far quite a pleasant bunch for a group of fourteen-year-olds (it probably helps to have the extremely likable Hanae as the lead here), and I’m quite looking forward to seeing Kousei’s relationship with Kaori develop, both romantically and musically. For those looking for coming-of-age drama and/or classical music, Your Lie in April is a must-watch.

For fans of: Nodame Cantabile, AnoHana: The Flower We Saw That Day, Kids on the Slope, teen angst

Watch it now on Crunchyroll

 

Rage of Bahamut Genesis / Shingeki no Bahamut Genesis

Rage of Bahamut Genesis follows our “hero” Favaro Leone (Hiroyuki Yoshino), a roguish ginger bounty hunter with a questionable moral compass and a flair for the dramatic. Favaro spends his days hunting criminals for quick cash and dodging his rival/nemesis Kaisar Lidfort (Go Inoue), an uptight former knight who has been reduced to bounty hunting through some unknown misfortune. At least, that was how he spent his days until he runs into Amira (Risa Shimizu), a mysterious girl who fell from the sky. Overhearing Favaro boasting about his travels in a bar, Amira coerces him through magical means into acting as a guide on her journey to a foreign land.

Rage of Bahamut has a hyper-generic swords and sorcery setting and the dubious distinction of being based off a cellphone card game. That’s right, a cellphone card game. Happily, that doesn’t stop this show from being both well produced and extremely fun. Director Keiichi Satou (Tiger & Bunny) brings tremendous energy to the show, while animation studio Mappa (Kids on the Slope, Terror in Resonance) so far delivers dynamic action scenes and character animation that is expressive and full of personality. Favaro’s swashbuckling, devil-may-care antics and the grandiose action set pieces have led quite a few to liken Rage of Bahamut to Pirates of the Caribbean, and I can’t say I disagree with that assessment. The surprise hit of the season, Rage of Bahamut is starting out as a whole lot of fun, and it’d be a shame not to see where it goes.

For fans of: Tiger & Bunny, Samurai Champloo, goofy hairstyles

Watch it now on Hulu and Funimation

 

Akatsuki no Yona / Yona of the Dawn

Yona (Chiwa Saito), princess and sole heir to the throne of the kingdom of Kouka, has led a pampered life in her father’s palace. She spends her days pining over her handsome cousin Soo-won (Yuusuke Kobayashi) and being teased by her bodyguard and childhood friend Hak (Tomoaki Maeno). But all this changes on Yona’s sixteenth birthday, when a tragedy that will change Yona’s life forever forces her to flee from the palace.

There is a distinctly retro feeling to Akatsuki no Yona. Based on a historical shoujo manga set in pseudo-Korea, the show follows in the grand tradition of such classics as Fushigi Yuugi and Saiunkoku Monogatari. And you know what? I can’t say I’m not a sucker for it, even if it does feel like 2002 in here. Yona is so far a pretty decent lead—though she hasn’t much to do in the first two episodes besides be a sixteen-year-old girl and react to events around her, a flash-forward prologue hints at dramatic development for her down the road. While the direction and animation from Pierrot (Tokyo Ghoul, The World Is Still Beautiful) isn’t what I would call impeccable, it’s strong enough for the material, and the whole is considerably bolstered by a musical score from Ryo Kunihiko (Saiunkoku Monogatari, The Twelve Kingdoms). Surprisingly engaging so far, Akatsuki no Yona is worth a look for those itching for a nostalgic historical romance.

For fans of: Saiunkoku Monogatari, The Twelve Kingdoms, Fushigi Yuugi, Arata Kangatari, reverse harems

Watch it now on Crunchyroll

 

Fate/stay night: Unlimited Blade Works

Shirou Emiya (Noriaki Sugiyama) is a high school student with an aptitude for magic. Raised by a powerful mage, Shirou longs to use his powers to redress the injustices he sees in the world, but has little skill in anything other than repairing small gadgets. Shirou’s mundane life come to an abrupt end when he accidentally summons the heroic spirit Saber (Ayako Kawasumi) and is drawn into the Holy Grail war, in which powerful mages summon heroes of old as servants to help them battle for the ultimate prize, the Holy Grail.

While it’s hard to qualify Fate/stay night as “new,” it’s certainly impossible to go without mentioning it. Based on a wildly popular visual novel, Fate/stay night received a first TV adaptation by animation studio DEEN in 2006 and a film in 2010. If you had the good fortune to miss both of those, then you may know it from Ufotable’s 2011 adaptation of Fate/stay night’s prequel, Fate/Zero.

I know, it’s all very confusing, and you’re probably wondering, “Can I watch this if I haven’t seen any of that and don’t know who Gen Urobuchi is?”. Well I’m here to tell you yes, I rather think you can. There’s certainly enough information in the first two episodes for a newcomer to get a good grip on the mythology and characters in this new interpretation. What’s more, I think it’ll be worth it: Ufotable has, in the immortal words of John Hammond, spared no expense, starting with a double-length prologue and first episode to situate the viewer in the story. The action scenes, as in Fate/Zero, are a flashy highlight, but the regular character animation isn’t lacking either. And as always, the Fate series’ mythology is strangely compelling—it’s hard to turn down a premise where heroes from all ages fight in a magician’s battle royal. If this sounds like your thing, you probably won’t want to miss Fate/stay night.

For fans of: Fate/Zero, Kara no Kyoukai, any other past or future incarnation of Fate/stay night, lining Type-Moon’s pockets with endless yen

Watch it now on Crunchyroll

 

What are you watching this fall? Let us know in the comments!


Kelly Quinn wrote this entire post while listening to the Gundam Build Fighters soundtrack on loop. She can also be found on Twitter.

Anime Year in Review: The Ten Best Shows of 2014

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Anime Year in Review

As 2014 draws to a close, it is once again time to look back, reflect, and reduce all our experiences into ranked “best of” lists. Whereas often the year is dominated by one major blockbuster, 2014 was a somewhat eclectic year for anime, featuring a smattering of very good shows (and very bad ones), stunning displays industry talent (and incompetence), some very pleasant surprises (and rather unpleasant disappointments), and, alongside the annual prophecies of doom, a few reminders of how imaginative, innovative, and beautiful the medium can be.

So, without further ado, here’s a list of my ten favorite shows of 2014.

Knights of Sidonia / Sidonia no Kishi

This gritty space opera marked a first this year when it was exclusively licensed for distribution in the English market as a Netflix Original Series. Set in a bleak future where humanity is forced to fight an alien menace known as the Gauna, Knights of Sidonia drew us in with its cool scifi world-building (generation ships! a third gender! bears!), space politics, and high-stakes action, which had a touch of the same humanity-is-at-stake, no-character-is-safe desperation and suspense of last year’s mega-hit Attack on Titan. Unfortunately I can’t say that I was as enthusiastic about the visuals as I was about the plot: while the full-CG animation worked well for the dynamic mecha action sequences, the character acting felt consistently doll-like and unnatural, leaving us cold during some pivotal non-robot scenes. Despite these pitfalls, we appreciated the ambition of Sidonia, and will be looking forward to a second season in 2015.

Missed it? Watch it on Netflix.

 

Noragami

Though certainly not the most ground-breaking entry on this list, Noragami stood above other supernatural action shows this year with its strong source material and stylish, crisp visuals. Following the exploits of Yato, a broke minor deity on a quest for fame, and Hiyori, a schoolgirl whose soul has trouble staying in her body, Noragami presents a supernatural world that is intriguingly morally ambiguous. While the show was sadly too short to really do the manga justice and got bogged down a bit in the second half with a somewhat annoying character arc, great chemistry between Yato and Hiyori as well as some pretty nifty action sequences (as expected from Bones) still made Noragami one of our favorite watches this year.

Missed it? Watch it on Hulu or Funimation’s website.

 

Hozuki no Reitetsu / Hozuki’s Coolheadedness

This dark supernatural comedy won me over with its sadistic humor and bizarre setting. Chronicling the daily tribulations of Hozuki, an ultra-competent bureaucrat in Buddhist hell, Hozuki no Reitetsu provided plenty of laughs with a healthy mix of high- and low-brow humor, not to mention a few lessons on the finer points of Japanese mythology. Director Hiro Kaburaki and Wit Studio brought hell to life with sumi-e watercolor-style backgrounds and consistently polished visuals, but the real star was Hozuki himself, whose no-nonsense attitude, strange hobbies, and deadpan delivery (thanks to a great performance from Hiroki Yasumoto) never failed to amuse. Though a little obscure at times for western audiences, Hozuki no Reitetsu stood out as one of the most original comedies we saw this year.

Missed it? Watch it on Crunchyroll or Hulu.

 

Kill la Kill

Studio Trigger’s first foray into TV anime, Kill la Kill came heavily burdened with expectations from fans expecting another Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann. What we got was not quite that, but it was an incredibly entertaining twenty-four episode romp featuring creative fight scenes and larger than life characters. This action comedy was, as expected from director/writer team Hiroyuki Imaishi and Kazuki Nakashima, bombastic, frenetic, crude, and heaps of ridiculous fun. Although I can’t say that Kill la Kill was a masterpiece, I will say that I was never, ever bored while watching it, and gosh darn it if it doesn’t feature the best friendship between a girl and her school uniform that anime has ever seen.

Missed it? Watch it on Crunchyroll or Hulu.

 

Space Dandy

2014 saw not one, but two shows from much-beloved Cowboy Bebop director Shinichiro Watanabe. While Terror in Resonance, after a spectacular first few episodes, crashed and burned in a fiery wreck of bad writing, Space Dandy developed from a mediocre scifi comedy into one of the strangest and most wonderful shows of the year. Saying that Space Dandy is episodic is a bit of an understatement; in fact, it’s more helpful to think of the show as an anthology of some of the best talents in the industry working around a theme than as any kind of cohesive narrative. Consistent Space Dandy was not, but it did put out some amazingly imaginative and visually stunning episodes over its twenty-six episode run.

Missed it? Watch it on Hulu, Funimation, or Adult Swim’s website.

 

Gundam Build Fighters

Sure, Gundam Build Fighters is basically an extended toy commercial, but I’ll be damned if it isn’t the best and most enjoyable toy commercial I’ve ever seen. Revolving around an international tournament where participants battle with Gundam plastic models (or gunpla, as the cool kids call them), the magic of this show is that it whole-heartedly embraces its premise while never taking itself too seriously to have fun. The creators took full advantage of over thirty years of Gundam history to stage creative battles featuring some great mecha animation, but the real draw was the diverse and colorful cast of characters. With plenty of winking references for hardcore Gundam fans and enough unbounded enthusiasm to draw in those who have never even thought of touching the franchise, Gundam Build Fighters was a winner for us in 2014.

Missed it? Watch it on YouTube. Finished it? The sequel is airing right now.

 

Haikyu!!

2014 was chock full of sports shows, covering cycling, baseball, basketball, swimming, ping pong, and, yes, volleyball. This Jump adaptation is a fairly standard sports story in many ways, focusing on an underdog team and an energetic protagonist with dreams of rising to the top. Where Haikyu!! stands out is in the execution: snappy direction, a lively score by Yuuki Hayashi, consistently above-average art and animation, a goofy sense of humor, and a ridiculously likable cast led by reluctant teammates Hinata and Kageyama made this show a pleasure to watch each and every week. Haikyu!! represents classic sports anime at its best—you just can’t help but want to cheer for the Karasuno boys.

Missed it? Watch it on Crunchyroll or Hulu.

 

Ping Pong the Animation

If Haikyu!! represents the typical sports anime, Ping Pong is about as atypical as you’ll find. This show came with a considerable pedigree, based as it was on a manga by Taiyo Matsumoto (Tekkonkinkreet) and directed by art-house favorite Masaaki Yuasa (The Tatami Galaxy). Though Ping Pong was not quite as polished as some of Yuasa’s other work and utilized an art style that some found off-putting, the show’s greatest strengths were its compelling, well-realized characters and thoughtful narrative about friendship and the price and rewards of ambition. It is not often that we are treated to such a unique vision as Yuasa’s, and thus Ping Pong easily made its mark as one of the most interesting shows of the year.

Missed it? Watch it on Hulu or Funimation’s website.

 

Barakamon

This slice of life comedy earned its place here by being exceedingly and unrelentingly charming in its depiction of a neurotic young calligrapher’s life in the remote countryside. Balancing the rural exploits of an endearing ensemble cast (led by talented child-actress Suzuko Hara as the precocious Naru) with an exploration of Handa’s struggle to grow as an artist, Barakamon reminded us that beauty and inspiration can be found in the simplest things. Despite straying a few times into somewhat syrupy territory, Barakamon at its best was funny, heartwarming, and sincere, a combination that had us from episode one.

Missed it? Watch it on Hulu or Funimation’s website.

 

Monthly Girls’ Nozaki-kun / Gekkan Shoujo Nozaki-kun

It’s hard to say what exactly is so great about Monthly Girls’ Nozaki-kun. Perhaps it’s the way it lovingly parodies shoujo manga tropes by flipping expectations and gender roles on their head. Perhaps it’s the smart direction and impeccably-timed visual comedy from Mitsue Yamazaki and studio Doga Kobo. Perhaps it’s the diverse cast of wacky, lovable characters, or the winning performances from Yuichi Nakamura, Ari Ozawa, and the rest. Perhaps it’s Mikorin’s gentle smile. Whatever it is, it made it easy to pick this ensemble comedy as our favorite show of 2014. There wasn’t a single episode of Nozaki-kun that didn’t make me laugh—my only complaint is that it had to end.

Missed it? Watch it on Crunchyroll or Hulu.

 

Didn’t see your favorite show from 2014 on here? Tell us what we missed in the comments, or check out all 210 anime from 2014 in this AMV:

*NB: To qualify for this list, the titles were required to:

  • End in 2014 (split-cour shows were counted as one season)
  • Be legally available in English
  • Not be a movie (still waiting to see Princess Kaguya)
  • Not be a sequel (but for the record, the second seasons of Mushishi and Silver Spoon were both excellent)
  • Not have started earlier than 2013 (for those looking for Hunter X Hunter and Space Brothers)

Kelly Quinn is sorry that anime you liked isn’t on this list. She can also be found on Twitter.


Scarlett Johansson to Star in Live-Action Ghost in the Shell Movie

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Scarlett Johansson Ghost in the Shell live-action movie race

A live-action adaptation of Mamoru Oshii’s celebrated anime Ghost in the Shell may finally be happening—mostly because now a big star is attached. Variety reports that after some deliberation, Scarlett Johansson has signed on to star in the movie. With such a big name attached, DreamWorks executives hope, getting greenlit should be a lot easier.

Of course, there is some question over the casting of a white actress for the title role of Motoko Kusanagi, a Japanese cyborg cyber-crime fighter chasing down a deadly hacker known as the Puppet Master in 2029.

The casting of a white actor as a non-white protagonist brings to mind when Keanu Reeves was considering the lead role in the live-action Akira movie (and the cast for Airbender, and the villain in Star Trek Into Darkness, and…), especially when the Ghost in the Shell producers could have nabbed a rising star like Pacific Rim’s Rinko Kikuchi. There are other casting options that would better match the plot, though in this case the Variety article and additional online commentary point out that the presence of a marquee actress was necessary to get the movie project noticed at all.

Kusanagi’s visual appearance, while iconically female, does change throughout the series, and her personality becomes more and more disassociated with her physical appearance, so we’ll have to wait and see what the filmmakers intend in regards to honoring the origins of the character. In the author’s notes to his original Ghost in the Shell manga, Masamune Shirow explains that “Major Kusanagi is deliberately designed to look like a mass-production model so she won’t be too conspicuous.” The screenplay could run with that idea and have Motoko’s cyborg model be white, making the argument that Scarlett Johansson’s form represents a commercially idealized woman. Spike Jonze’s Her already did that with Johansson’s voice by depicting her voice as the desire-fulfilling operating system Samantha.

In any case, since the movie has yet to be funded or approved by Dreamworks, this remains speculation. We’ll have to wait and see how it unfolds.

Winter 2015 Anime Preview: Season of Sequels

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It’s still plenty chilly outside, and what better reason to stay inside with a fluffy blanket than a new season of anime? Actually, calling winter a “new” season is a little misleading: with the amount of sequels airing, it’s difficult to think of a season less new than this one. After five years, fan favorite Durarara!!’s long-awaited second season is finally on the air with a new studio behind it and about twice as many characters as I remember. Shinto romance Kamisama Hajimemashita graces us with an unexpected but very much appreciated second season, and sports powerhouse Kuroko’s Basketball returns for a third. Meanwhile, JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure, Aldnoah.Zero, and Tokyo Ghoul all continue from where they left off at the end of summer.

As far as new shows go, winter is traditionally a lean season, but there are still a few worthwhile titles to help us get through these cold months. Perhaps the macabre theater of Death Parade, or the vibrant energy of The Rolling Girls, or the labyrinth of visual metaphor that is Yurikuma Arashi can help keep the winter chill at bay. With simulcasts a click away, there’s no reason to wait until spring. Here are five of the best new shows available to watch right now.

Death Parade

In a bar called Quindecim, a mysterious bartender (voiced by Tomoaki Maeno), invites two people to play a game with their lives at stake. Well, “invites” is putting it politely, as there are no other patrons, no visible exit, and a pointed implication that the loser will be killed and strung up in the back room like a grisly marionette. As the game progresses, it becomes clear to the players that more than just their lives are on the line—in fact, the results of this game, and the pieces of themselves they reveal while playing, may seal the fate of their eternal souls.

This psychological thriller originally debuted in 2013 as the animated short Death Billiards (many will remember its more widely-known Anime Mirai cohort that year, Little Witch Academia). So far the show is having little trouble living up to the promise of the short: the initial episodes have been tense, emotionally demanding, and fraught with enough ambiguity to keep watchers guessing (and spark quite heated discussion online). Madhouse doesn’t seem to be skimping on the production side either: the character designs are interesting and distinctive, the art is crisp, and the gloomy palette of the bar adds to the unsettling atmosphere. So far it’s difficult to say what the format of the show will be in the long run, though it appears from the opening (undoubtedly the best of the season) that the overarching plot may focus on the staff of Quindecim who arbitrate over the dead rather than the players themselves. Whatever its ultimate form, Death Parade is so far surely in the running for most promising show of the season.

For fans of: Death Billiards, Hell Girl, Death Note, spontaneous dance numbers

Watch it now on Hulu

 

The Rolling Girls

Ten years ago the Great Tokyo War led to the disappearance of most of Japan’s ruling class. Without leadership, the nation fell apart into the prefectures of old, each protected by vigilante gangs lead by super-powerful fighters called “Bests” who duke it out with the support of their mobs of mundane followers (the “Rest”). Nozomi Morimoto (Ari Ozawa) is one such supporter. When her local Best is forced out of action for a while, she and three other girls take it upon themselves to travel the country in order to help other gangs that were seeking the Best’s help.

This action comedy is the first original anime from Wit Studio (Attack on Titan, Hoozuki no Reitetsu). I honestly wasn’t sure what to expect from this show based on the promotional materials aside from cute girls riding motorcycles, so the premiere took me by (very pleasant) surprise. The Rolling Girls is a riot of color and energy, with gorgeous art direction and flashy action sequences. So far I’m adoring the whimsical, wacky tone and colorful cast, and Nozomi herself is working well as a likable everyman in a world too vibrantly absurd to fully absorb yet. After the first two episodes it’s hard to tell where the series is heading, but if it remains as entertaining as the premiere (and if Wit can keep up the production quality, God help them), it will be a must-watch this season.

For fans of: Kyousougiga, Yozakura Quartet, Sekai Seifuku, Kill la Kill, colors

Watch it now on Hulu

 

Yatterman Night / Yoru no Yatterman

After years of fighting, the masked hero Yatterman defeated and exiled the thieving Doronbo gang and founded the peaceful Yatter Kingdom. Young Leopard (Eri Kitamura, unfortunately at her most irritating), a descendent of the exiled Doronbo gang, has grown up hearing tales of Yatterman’s heroism. One day an encounter with denizens of the Yatter Kingdom leads her to believe that all is not as it seems—rather than heroes, the Yatterman are unjust and cruel. Swearing to punish the Yatterman for their evil ways, she takes up the mantle of her ancestor Doronjo, leader of the Doronbo gang. Assisting her are the decedents of Doronjo’s right-hand men, Boyacky (the delightful Hiroaki Hirata) and Tonzra (Kenta Miyake). Together, the three enter Yatter Kingdom, intent on dismantling Yatterman’s unjust rule.

Yatterman Night is a spinoff of the venerable action comedy franchise Yatterman, which originally aired between 1977 and 1979 (and is certainly not required viewing for this show). The original series chronicles the antics of an extremely goofy gang of thieves (think Team Rocket levels of incompetent, petty villainy) that is continually thwarted by the Yatterman, a masked boyfriend-girlfriend duo that outsmarts Doronbo’s silly plots and wacky mechanical contraptions with seventies fashion and giant robot dogs.

Yatterman Night, on the other hand, seems like some kind of strange postmodern take on the whole concept. By having the trio assume the identities of their long-dead ancestors, this show has managed to transport all the trappings of the original 1977 series—cartoony costumes, catchphrases, etc—into a semi-realistic setting where the characters affect them as conscious anachronisms. It’s an odd juxtaposition for sure, but it’s also surprisingly fun and interesting. It helps that the show is pretty stylish visually, with excellent animation from Tatsunoko (Ping Pong, Muromi-san) for the first two episodes. If the idea of well-animated fights with robots dressed in bellbottoms appeals to you, I recommend you get in on what looks to be an intriguing ride this season.

For fans of: Casshern Sins, Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann, Samurai Flamenco, fashion jumpsuits

Watch it now on Hulu

 

Yurikuma Arashi

In the far reaches of space, the planet Kumalia has exploded, causing a meteor shower to rain down on earth. For some reason, this made all of the bears in the world rise up, assume human intelligence, and feast on cute girls (NASA never warned us about this). A human schoolgirl, Kureha Tsubaki (Nozomi Yamane), falls in love with her friend Sumika (Yui Ogura) and swears that she will not back down on her feelings, but is devastated when Sumika is attacked and killed by bears. Meanwhile two bears, Ginko (Miho Arakawa) and Ruru (Yoshiko Iruta), infiltrate the school disguised as girls to look for a delicious human meal.

Where to even begin with Yurikuma Arashi. This fantasy drama is brought to us by the idiosyncratic mind of director Kunihiko Ikuhara (Utena, Mawaru Penguindrum), and has plenty of his hallmarks. Stock footage of endless winding staircases? Check. Character catchphrases? Double check (shaba-da-doo). Abstruse symbolism? Got it in spades. Visually, the show is definitely worth a look: though the character designs are themselves a bit bland, the show features gorgeous, detailed backgrounds and Ikuhara’s quirky directorial style, which I very much enjoy. After three episodes, this show is certainly in the realm of “challenging and interesting”: Ikuhara is working with some heavy themes, and if we began to speculate now about what he’s trying to say about lesbians, societal disapproval, female sexuality, and bears we’d be here the rest of the day. That said, I’m not sure it’s in the realm of “entertaining” or even “comprehensible.” Like most Ikuni projects, you’re just going to have to go along for the ride on this one.

For fans of: Mawaru Penguindrum, Revolutionary Girl Utena, violence against bears

Watch it now on Hulu

 

Maria the Virgin Witch / Junketsu no Maria

During the Hundred Year War, witches from both England and France take part in the conflict. Maria (Hisako Kanemoto), an idealistic young witch, hates the war and the constant battles around her. Along with her familiars, a succubus named Artemis (Youko Hikasa) and an incubus named Priapos (Mikako Komatsu), she uses her magic to stop battles on both sides and protect her friends. Meanwhile, Maria’s supernatural intervention draws the ire of the Catholic church and agents of heaven itself.

Based on a manga from Masayuki Ishikawa (author of Moyashimon), this raunchy historical comedy is so far surprisingly decent. The setting itself is rather novel, and the show has so far been well paced and fairly funny. As you can imagine with a succubus and incubus amongst the cast, most of the humor revolves around sex (and for mysterious reasons all the witches in medieval France have the fashion sense of a modern dominatrix), but there is also an undercurrent of seriousness, as Maria sets herself in opposition to an impotent and corrupt church and a God that she believes has abandoned humanity. At this point I’m unsure whether the show is trying to make any concrete statement on these topics, or how Maria will ultimately balance its bawdy humor with some of the more serious theological implications it’s raising, but I’m entertained enough to keep watching for now.

For fans of: Moyashimon, Rage of Bahamut, medieval peasants

Watch it now on Hulu

 

What are you watching this winter? Let us know in the comments!


Kelly Quinn has watched the Death Parade opening more times than she cares to admit here. She can also be found on Twitter.

Afternoon Roundup: It’s Dangerous to Go Alone! Take This Caffeine Boost

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Sleevebucks pop culture geeky Starbucks sleeves Link Legend of Zelda Instagram

Welcome to the first-ever Afternoon Roundup! Right around the time you’re flagging and getting your afternoon caffeine fix, we’re here with more great links from around the Web. And once you have your hot drink in hand, maybe you’ll be inspired by the Instagram account Sleevebucks to turn the Starbucks mermaid into every pop culture character imaginable! Although they’ve already done a bang-up job of transforming her into Zorro, Thor, and even Sherlock Holmes himself.

Afternoon Roundup ponders Chris Pratt ruling two big action-adventure franchises; connects the dots on Legend of Korra; and tries to get you to watch Black Mirror already—you’ll really like it!

Afternoon Roundup: Left Shark Was Always Our Destiny

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Back to the Future shark suit Super Bowl 2015

Forget hoverboards and self-lacing sneakers—Back to the Future Part II really did know what was going to happen in 2015! Credit to @FilmmakerIQ for recognizing Left Shark the Super Bowl dancing shark as this year’s spirit animal. Between this and “every girl is crazy ’bout a shark-dressed man,” the Internet is killing it with Left Shark. And if you want to be a shark-dressed man, all of your dreams can be realized.

Afternoon Roundup admires Elsa’s new dress; accepts that Joss Whedon probably won’t direct Captain Marvel; and starts planning its next digital D&D campaign.

Morning Roundup: All Hail Spock!

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Star Trek Comics

BoingBoing shared a gallery of Star Trek comics covers, which were posted by Tumblr-user AstroDevil as a memorial to Leonard Nimoy. They’re all pretty fabulous, but after a bit of debate, we voted for the civilization that had the sense to carve Spock into a mountain.

Morning Roundup brings you a new direction for Star Trek, the ongoing war between DC and Marvel (when will the carnage end???), and David Bowie travels to a magical land of fantasy!

Afternoon Roundup: Margaret Atwood Gets an Eyeful

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Margaret Atwood reading Sex Criminals Matt Fraction Chip Zdarsky

Never doubt that Margaret Atwood doesn’t keep up with contemporary stories, as evidenced by this great photo of her reading up on Matt Fraction and Chip Zdarsky’s Sex Criminals. For that, you can thank Canadian comics fan Hope Nicholson, who introduced her to the book. No stranger to sexual politics in fiction (see The Handmaid’s Tale, Oryx and Crake, etc.), Atwood’s takeaway was “That’s fun.” Next up is Bitch Planet!

Afternoon Roundup brings you the oddest Game of Thrones theory yet, upsetting news about the Twin Peaks reboot, and the materials to remix space itself.

Spring 2015 Anime Preview: The Hellish Life of a Pizza Delivery Boy

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Spring is in the air and we all know what that means…that’s right, new cartoons! In addition to the return of a few favorites—Fate/stay night UBW begins its second half and cynical school comedy My Teen Romantic Comedy SNAFU is back, among others—this season brings a slew of anticipated adaptations. From the ultra-stylish Blood Blockade Battlefront to the sweeping historical landscapes of The Heroic Legend of Arslan and the genuine and sweet Ore Monogatari, there’s something for everyone this season. And with simulcasts of basically everything airing in Japan, there’s no reason to wait. The sunshine outside might tempt you to go out, but here are six new shows that are worth staying in for!

Blood Blockade Battlefront / Kekkai Sensen

One day, as New York City was just sitting there minding its own business, a portal to another dimension opened up, trapping New Yorkers with a bunch of alien creatures from another world. Luckily, New York didn’t seem to mind all that much, and the city swiftly became known as Hellsalem’s Lot, a hodgepodge of humans and extra-dimensional monsters living together in sci-fi squalor. Libra, an organization led by Klaus Von Reinhertz (voiced by Rikiya Koyama), has taken it upon itself to police the paranormal chaos. Young photographer (and sometimes pizza deliverer) Leonardo Watch (Daisuke Sakaguchi) came to Hellsalem’s Lot looking for clues to his sister’s illness, but becomes an impromptu Libra recruit after a chance meeting with hotheaded member Zapp Renfro (Kazuya Nakai).

It’s no exaggeration to say that Blood Blockade Battlefront starts off with a bang. Based on a manga by Trigun author Yasuhiro Nightow and directed by rising star Rie Matsumoto (Kyousougiga) at animation studio Bones (Space Dandy, Fullmetal Alchemist), this action comedy is chock-full of talent. It’s also totally nuts. Blood Blockade Battlefront paints a New York that is as weird and chaotic as its denizens. Matsumoto’s directorial flair is certainly on full display here, and the show has style and swagger to spare. Add a jazzy soundtrack and some flashy battles, and you’ve got a fun series that’s sure to be a treat for the eyes and ears week to week. As for the story, it’s definitely more in the stages of “what’s happening?” than “what’s going to happen next?”, but I’m willing to give this one time to come together—I’m sure that even if the plot remains nebulous, I’m not going to regret watching.

For fans of: Baccano!, Space Dandy, Trigun, Kyousougiga, Redline, strangely placed security cameras

Watch it on Hulu and Funimation

 

The Heroic Legend of Arslan / Arslan Senki

Arslan (Yuusuke Kobayashi) has been raised a pampered prince of the prosperous Pars kingdom, where he spends his days training for battle and yearning for the acknowledgement of his father, the warrior king Andragoras. At fourteen, Arslan is thrown into a battle that threatens to destroy the powerful kingdom that his father has built. Arslan must turn to his father’s general and advisor, Daryun (Yoshimasa Hosoya), for help in regaining his place in the kingdom.

This historical fantasy adventure has quite a pedigree—the anime adapts a manga by Hiromu Arakawa (Fullmetal Alchemist, Silver Spoon), which itself is an adaptation of an ongoing fantasy novel series by Legend of the Galactic Heroes author Yoshiki Tanaka. Though there were some worries going in that inexperienced animation studio Liden Films (Terraformars) would drag the quality down, so far the visuals are certainly serviceable, though they won’t be winning any awards for art or style (or use of CG soldiers). Arslan has spent the first two episodes setting the stage for what is obviously going to be a long, slow-building plot, and while I was skeptical after the first episode, the tense and exciting second had me hooked. With this source material I have no doubt that Arslan has a very good story to tell…but since both the novels and the manga are ongoing, beware unfinished endings.

For fans of: Akatsuki no Yona (Soo-won’s voice actor plays Arslan here), Magi, Fullmetal Alchemist, Legend of the Galactic Heroes, Saiunkoku Monogatari, Moribito: Guardian of the Spirit/Seirei no Moribito, military strategy

Watch it on Hulu or Funimation

 

My Love Story / Ore Monogatari

Ore Monogatari has your typical shoujo romance lead: a big beefy dude who sucks at getting a girlfriend. Takeo Gouda (Takuya Eguchi) is a high school freshman who is used to taking a backseat to his super-popular, super-handsome best friend Makoto Sunakawa (Nobunaga Shimazaki), who also happens to be super-uninterested in the cute girls that flock to his side. One day while riding the train home with Sunakawa, Takeo saves a girl, Rinko Yamato (Megumi Han), getting harassed by a molester and falls head over heels in love. Yamato is determined to see her saviors again—but is she interested in Takeo or Sunakawa? Cue shoujo sparkles.

This high school romcom is adorable right off the bat. Takeo is an incredibly likable protagonist: earnest, loyal to a fault, and oblivious to the point of density. The selling point here is obviously not only that Ore Monogatari is told from a male perspective, but that Takeo is not the typical shoujo romance hero (shockingly he is neither handsome, popular, a genius, nor secretly rich). While this brings a lot of humor and originality to the premise, at its heart, Ore Monogatari is still a bona fide shoujo romance, filled with blushing, copious sparkles, and a heartwarming love story. Production-wise, this show is blessed with the studio, director, and character designer of Chihayafuru (if you didn’t see the resemblance between Suna and Taichi, you’re guaranteed to now), and they are hitting the mark with a polished, delightful premiere and seriously, so SO many sparkles.

For fans of: Monthly Girls’ Nozaki-kun/Gekkan Shoujo Nozaki-kun, Chihayafuru, Lovely Complex, macarons, Fraw Bow

Watch it on Crunchyroll

 

Food Wars! Shokugeki no Soma

Soma Yukihira (Yoshitsugu Matsuoka) has helped out in the kitchen at his father’s humble neighborhood restaurant since he was a kid, and dreams of someday surpassing his father’s skill and taking over the place. Just as he’s about to graduate middle school, Soma is thrown for a loop when Dad announces he’s packing Soma off to boarding school while he closes the restaurant to go cook in swanky kitchens overseas for a few years. Soma is left to the mercy of the Totsuki Institute, an elite cooking school where only the best of the best will survive to graduation.

This cooking comedy is essentially a battle anime where the characters fight with olive oil and demi-glace instead of swords or fists. If the idea of extreme cooking doesn’t appeal to you, then turn around now; if you’ve always secretly yearned for an Iron Chef anime, then rejoice, because this is your moment. Although the adaption by J.C. Staff (Witch Craft Works, Raildex franchise) is nothing special visually, director Yoshitomo (Dororon Enma-kun Meeramera) has succeeded in capturing a lot of what makes the source material fun, milking every last bit of tension in the cooking scenes with fittingly overdramatic music and hilariously hyperbolic character reactions.

The reactions themselves do deserve a mention, as they may be a deal-breaker for some viewers. One of the gimmicks of Shokugeki is the over the top “foodgasms” whenever anyone takes a bite of something delicious. While I find the fan service to be pretty equal-opportunity (both men and women succumb to the overwhelming power of a tasty dish), as well as just plain funny in a lot of cases, some may find it too much. For those that don’t mind characters stripping for the sake of a soufflé, Shokugeki has good odds of being a fun ride this season.

For fans of: Yakitate!! Japan, Koufuku Graffiti, Toriko, omnipandering

Watch it on Crunchyroll

 

Yamada-kun and the Seven Witches / Yamada-kun to 7-nin no Majo

Ryuu Yamada (Ryota Ohsaka) is a high school delinquent who generally tries to mind his own business and slog through school. His boring school life changes one day when he falls down a flight of stairs with honor student Urara Shiraishi (Saori Hayami) and wakes up to find out they’ve swapped bodies. After numerous body-switch shenanigans, the pair figure out that their predicament was caused by kissing—in fact, Yamada can switch with anyone he kisses. It’s student council vice president Toranosuke Miyamura (Toshiki Masuda) who provides the clues they need: a legend that the school is home to seven witches with mysterious powers. Eager to learn more, the three revive the Supernatural Studies Club.

This kiss-and-switch romantic comedy is a highly anticipated adaptation of Miki Yoshikawa’s popular manga. Yamada is heaps of fun, with wacky characters and lots of supernatural school adventures, and Yoshikawa (Yankee-kun & Megane-chan) expertly balances more serious moments with goofy slapstick humor. I confess that, as a fan of the manga, I was pretty worried about this one. The first episode, however, allayed some of those fears. Though the production quality isn’t everything it could be and the pacing is frightfully quick due to adapting the material to fit the one-cour length, the spirit and humor of the source material still shines through. If they manage to keep it up for 12 episodes, Yamada should be a worthwhile watch this season for those looking for a fun school comedy.

For fans of: Yankee-kun & Megane-chan, Monthly Girls’ Nozaki-kun/Gekkan Shoujo Nozaki-kun, Kokoro Connect, Witch Craft Works, Nisekoi, Miyamura

Watch it on Crunchyroll

 

Seraph of the End / Owari no Seraph

In a world where a devastating virus has killed everyone over the age of 13 and vampires have enslaved the remains of humanity as a food source, Yuuichirou Hyakuya (Miyu Irino), a young orphan, lives as livestock in one of the underground vampire cities in Tokyo. He and his closest friend from the orphanage, Mikaela Hyakuya (Kensho Ono), dream of killing the vampires and leading the rest of the children to freedom in the outside world.

This supernatural action show is based on a manga written by Takaya Kagami (Legend of the Legendary Heroes). Owari no Seraph hits the ground running with a tense first episode, sporting strong art and animation from Wit Studio (Attack on Titan, The Rolling Girls), gorgeous post-apocalyptic backgrounds, and a dramatic score from composer Hiroyuki Sawano (Kill la Kill, Aldnoah.Zero). Plot-wise Seraph doesn’t bring anything terribly new to the table: this is very much another “last desperate remains of humanity face an overwhelming enemy” story in the vein of Attack on Titan or Knights of Sidonia, and indeed, by the second episode, the show is already beginning to fall back on some tired tropes. This may be a case, however, where production quality carries the material through—if you are craving flashy battles, sadistic vampires, and a healthy dose of angst, Seraph is a good pick this season.

For fans of: Attack on Titan, Blue Exorcist/Ao no Exorcist, D.Gray-man, Pandora Hearts, vampires in capes

Watch it on Hulu and Funimation

 

Nothing on this list strike your fancy? Try KyoAni’s Sound! Euphonium for a high school drama with brass instruments. Too fluffy? Take a look at Plastic Memories, a near-future sci-fi story about AI and humanoid robots from the writer of Steins;Gate. Not wacky enough? Check out Show By Rock!!, a thinly-veiled rhythm game advertisement that’s completely bonkers and surprisingly entertaining. Too much animation? There’s always Trigger’s Ninja Slayer, which is basically Inferno Cop with ninjas and Boom Boom Satellites. What are you watching this season? Let us know in the comments!


Kelly Quinn thinks that Blood Blockade Battlefront has the best ending sequence of the season. She can also be found on Twitter.


Never Trust a Red-Eyed Robot

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robot evolution Cylon Terminator HAL

ClickHole, which always knows us so well, has drawn a comparison we never considered: Cylons, the Terminator, and HAL are all different stages in the same terrifying robot evolution. We should’ve seen it in those evil red eyes, whether they’re humanoid, in visor form, or just one glowing, malicious, I’m-afraid-I-can’t-do-that orb. Read more, including Ray Kurzweil’s NSFW thoughts on artificial intelligence versus mankind.

Afternoon Roundup brings you sad news in Bryan Fuller-land, an argument for gun control in Hollywood, and a remix almost as good as The Picard Video.

Summer 2015 Anime Preview: There’s No Such Thing As Too Many Princes

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summer 2015 anime feature image

Summer anime is upon us at last, but while temperatures in the northern hemisphere are inching upward, my feelings about this season’s offerings are lukewarm at best. While we’ve got a few notable sequels—Gatchaman Crowds Insight, for one, along with the first new Dragon Ball series in almost twenty years—most of the season is struggling to squeak above utter mediocrity. Still, as always, there are a few worthy contenders among the new shows this season, including a picturesque fantasy romance, a lively 90s throwback, a gritty crime story, and a quirky supernatural school comedy.

With simulcasts in full swing, there’s no reason not to dive in. Crank up the A/C and check out these top picks for the summer season.

Snow White with the Red Hair / Akagami no Shirayuki-hime

summer_akagami no shirayukihime

Shirayuki (voiced by Saori Hayami) is a humble herbalist in the country of Tanbarun who was born with striking apple-red hair. When her unusual locks catch the unwanted attention of Tanbarun’s prince, Shirayuki opts to flee her home rather than become his concubine. Shirayuki heads for the neighboring country of Clarines, where she runs into a mysterious young man, Zen (Ryota Ohsaka). When the prince sends his men to retrieve Shirayuki, Zen interferes, revealing that he is a prince of Clarines. With Zen’s help, Shirayuki escapes Tanbarun, and sets out to build a life and career in her new country.

This fantasy romance, based on a popular manga by Sorata Akizuki, has a quiet kind of charm. Shirayuki is a resourceful protagonist who is driven by her desire to choose her own fate, and Zen, a somewhat naive and impetuous prince, is earnest and steadfast in his friendship with Shirayuki. Akagami is not the kind of series driven by thrilling plot developments, but by the slowly evolving relationships between the characters. With seasoned director Masashiro Ando (Sword of the Stranger, Blast of the Tempest) helming production at Bones (Blood Blockade Battlefront, Space Dandy), the series is in good hands, and the clean and colorful visuals make this show a pleasure to watch. If a laid-back romance sounds up your alley, there’s no better option this season than Akagami.

For fans of: Soredemo Sekai wa Utsukushii/The World is Still Beautiful, Akatsuki no Yona/Yona of the Dawn (not really in tone, but hey, they both have red hair), Spice and Wolf

Watch it now on Hulu and Funimation

 

Ushio and Tora / Ushio to Tora

summer_ushio to tora

Middle schooler Ushio Aotsuki (Tasuku Hatanaka) is the son of a temple family, and has grown up hearing stories about his heroic ancestor, a man who defeated a powerful demon with a weapon called the Beast Spear. While cleaning out the temple’s storeroom, Ushio stumbles upon a hidden cellar, where (to the great shock of no one who has ever watched shounen anime) he finds the monster himself, pinned down by the legendary spear. Unfortunately for Ushio, it’s not as simple as shutting up the cellar and walking away—the unsealed monster has attracted heaps of smaller demons. Ushio is forced to release the creature, who he names Tora (Rikiya Koyama), in order to defeat the demons—but pinning him down again will not be so easy. Thus begins the grudging partnership between Ushio and Tora.

This fantasy action show, a belated adaptation of an award-winning 90s manga, is brought to us by studio MAPPA (Rage of Bahamut, Punchline) and director Satoshi Nishimura (director of another 90s favorite, Trigun). Ushio to Tora virtually oozes 90s, from the character designs to the cartoony slapstick comedy, not to mention the completely straight way they run at a premise that we’ve been seeing variations of for the last twenty years. That said, Ushio to Tora is pretty darn fun. The show has great energy, and the more raw, retro look sets it apart from slick and shiny fantasy shows like Rokka no Yuusha and GATE this season. Ushio and Tora have good chemistry, and Rikiya Koyama’s performance as Tora, which flips from terrifying monster to pathetic whining in a matter of seconds, is especially entertaining. The series is so far following a supernatural-abomination-of-the-week formula, but the two-cour length promises some meatier developments down the line. A good watch for those craving 90s nostalgia and hot-blooded shounen.

For fans of: Inuyasha, Natsume Yuujinchou, Kekkaishi, Yu Yu Hakusho

Watch it now on Crunchyroll

 

GANGSTA

summer_gangsta

In the slums of Ergastulum, protagonists Worick (Junichi Suwabe) and Nicolas (Kenjiro Tsuda) work as “Handymen,” accepting dirty jobs that even the mafia and police prefer not to touch, from taking out rogue gangs to delivering money or drugs. When the cops ask them to deal with a pimp and his gang encroaching on the mafia’s territory, Worick and Nic take pity on a prostitute working for the gang, Alex (Mamiko Noto), and save her life by claiming her as a reward for the job. With nowhere to go, Alex joins the Handymen as a secretary—but her new bosses have plenty of secrets of their own, and falling in with them may be more dangerous than life on the streets.

Gangsta definitely falls into the “dark and gritty cartoons for adults” brand of anime, with its focus on violence, crime, and the general viciousness of its pseudo-European setting. Although this isn’t a category I usually find myself drawn to, I’m liking Gangsta more than expected, a development I mostly attribute to the characters. Worick is a smooth talker who knows when to turn on the charm, and Alex is sympathetic as an audience stand-in trying to make sense of her new companions. But the most intriguing character is Nic, a deaf assassin who communicates primarily through sign language and limited speech. I’ve been quite impressed with the way the show has handled this aspect of the manga source material, and Kenjiro Tsuda gives an excellent performance in Nic’s small amount of dialogue. Animation production by Manglobe (Samurai Flamenco, Deadman Wonderland) is so far competent and consistent, and will hopefully remain that way for the twelve episode run. If you’ve been craving a serious anime with mature themes and a high body count, you’ll want to check out Gangsta this season.

For fans of: Black Lagoon, Michiko to Hatchin, Jormungand

Watch it now on Hulu and Funimation

 

Actually, I Am / Jitsu wa Watashi wa

summer_jitsuwata

High school student Asahi Kuromine (Natsuki Hanae) is notorious amongst his friends for his inability to keep a secret. Not only does this mean his friends swindle him in poker games, it’s also obvious to the whole class who he’s crushing on: Youko Shiragami (Yuu Serizawa), a mysterious girl who keeps to herself at school. When Kuromine musters up the courage to confess his love to Shiragami in an empty classroom, he accidentally walks in on her unfurling a rather unmistakable pair of bat wings. A mortified Shiragami explains that she is actually a vampire, but will have to leave school if her secret is discovered. Kuromine solemnly swears to keep her identity secret, but it’s obvious that’s going to be a uphill battle for a kid who wears his heart on his sleeve.

Jitsu wa Watashi wa is a supernatural school romcom based on a manga with a bit of a cult following. Although the premise is not terribly original, the show has a wacky energy to it that’s surprisingly fun. And while this show is nothing special visually—the character designs are a bit crude, the colors a bit lurid, and the animation doesn’t exactly make my heart pitter patter—Jitsuwata makes up for what it lacks in polish with terrific comedic timing, goofy reactions, and a certain pure-hearted sincerity from its characters. Kuromine’s awkward honesty is particularly endearing (voice actor Hanae is certainly in his element in these roles), and Youko and the others have so far mostly resisted typical harem archetypes. If the enthusiasm for the source material is any indication, Jitsuwata should be an interesting watch this season.

For fans of: Yamada and the Seven Witches, Rosario to Vampire, Majimoji Rurumo, Witch Craft Works, Haiyore! Nyaruko-san, Blood Lad

Watch it now on Crunchyroll

 

Nothing here catching your eye? Check out the full summer roster here, and be sure to let us know what you’re watching this season in the comments!

Kelly Quinn is still pretty upset that Aquarion Logos is nothing like Aquarion EVOL. Tell her how bad her taste is on Twitter.

Let This Fan Poster Convince You Why We Need a Hawkeye TV Series

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Kate Bishop Hawkeye TV series fan poster

With Matt Fraction and David Aja’s Hawkeye run over, the Internet has a little hole in its heart for how this team envisioned the amazing rapport between Hawkeyes Clint Barton and Kate Bishop. (Not to mention Annie Wu’s art for the Kate-in-L.A. arcs!) So, of course Tumblr user nottonyharrison was filling the perfect space with her fan-made posters of a Netflix Hawkeye² series starring Jeremy Renner and some great fan-casting of Aubrey Plaza. We’re not sure what’s the best part of this poster—Kate looking stylish and badass, Clint flying through the air as usual, or Pizza Dog! This is not nottonyharrison’s first rodeo: Another fan poster she created inspired this opener that might as well be TV canon. Seriously, Marvel Studios and Netflix should take some notes from her. (Hat-tip to The Mary Sue for finding this; check out more fan posters there.)

Afternoon Roundup brings you a new adventure for our favorite Star Trek-obsessed astronaut, what happens when you add custom sound effects to Super Mario, and a vintage GPS!

8 Ways the Military Deals With Magical Powers

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The Mirror Empire Kameron Hurley

Fantasy readers are accustomed to a classic depiction of wizards as lone combatants, marshaling the power of the world and changing the direction of history itself with a determined gnashing of their teeth. Naturally, any nation or world power would want a bunch of those kinds of high-powered folks, right? But what happens when you get them? How do you forge a veritable army of wizards into an effective Wizard Army?

Here are eight interesting ways that authors have approached the challenge, in our own world and beyond, by taking a militaristic perspective. In doing so, these authors reveal a fascinating look at the evolution of a society.

 

Conscription

Gemini Cell Myke Cole

Myke Cole’s Shadow Ops military fantasy series explores the idea of magic users—known as Latents—as a brand new element introduced into our modern day world. It’s not just civilians who are magic users: The series kicks off with Supernatural Operations Corps lieutenant Oscar Britton manifesting a rare and prohibited magical power. Hunted down by his own team, Britton is forcibly enlisted into a new corps made up of other Latents. These shadow ops, taking place on a separate plane from Earth called the Source, test the soldiers’ burgeoning abilities and their still-very-human consciences.

As the series takes place at the start of the Great Reawakening, or the return of magic to Earth, the movements of the SOC remain largely reactive, as they must create room within their organization for weaponizing Latents. The book copy for Breach Zone, the concluding book in the trilogy, lays out the social contract created by magic: “Those who Manifest must choose: become a sheepdog who protects the flock or a wolf who devours it.” The random development of magical powers is controlled by means of forced conscription—or rather, the government pressuring its citizens into either staying under its thumb or resisting and therefore establishing themselves as threats to be exterminated. Those who fight for Latent equality are automatically perceived as rebels, so it’s no surprise that they muster their own forces to fight back.

Shadows Ops looks at the nuts and bolts of creating a magical army from the ground up, exploring how military service may be the best approach to teaching Latents how to control their abilities, while at the same time illustrating that magic, at its most basic, is just another weapon that requires adaptation both for and against it. The trilogy in particular poses the question of whether magical armies are an unavoidable conclusion in a world of magic users. It leaves the reader wondering: If armies of magic users are unavoidable, do you force wizards into a military system, or do you wait for groups of them to emerge in the wild? And which approach will ultimately result in a more complete preservation of society and personal liberty?

 

Exchange

Fullmetal Alchemist

The anime/manga series Fullmetal Alchemist has a couple of key differences from Myke Cole’s Shadow Ops in that “magic” is an outgrowth of continued scientific progress—in the series, “alchemy” is a half-science, half-magic skill set based around the manipulation of matter and energy. In essence, magic is man-made, and further, society has had centuries to integrate its use into every day life.

Although not all alchemists work for the government/military, those that do are granted access to better resources—including closely guarded research notes and state-of-the-art laboratories. But joining the State Alchemy program isn’t easy; a candidate must first pass a series of extensive exams, including a written test, psychological evaluation, and a practical demonstration before a military review board. Upon successful completion of the exams, the newly minted State Alchemist is given a codename and the military rank of Major. While a few State Alchemists advance higher in the ranks—Colonel Roy Mustang, for instance—most are content to independently conduct their research, turning in a yearly report on their findings. This is all well and good during peace times, but in times of war, combat-oriented State Alchemists have been called into active duty as human weapons and put on the front lines, regardless of rank—a unit of State Alchemists effectively annihilated a town during the Ishval Civil War conflict, which takes places a few years before the start of the series.

While both series have powerful magical armies, what makes Fullmetal interesting in comparison to Shadow Ops is the expectation of military service as a requirement for access to magical knowledge. Both series feature this system of control and it’s not hard to imagine the world of Shadow Ops eventually evolving a stable service-for-training exchange system like Fullmetal’s. What Shadow Ops’ society lacks are tested limits to its magic system and a method of control over its source. Magic is power, as Shadow Ops demonstrates, but knowledge of magic, as Fullmetal demonstrates, is perhaps an even greater power.

 

Legacy

The Left-Hand Way by Tom Doyle

Author Tom Doyle’s American Craft series marries the social expectations of people living in traditionally military families with the idea of magical lineages. Doyle explains it in this Reddit AMA:

“The idea of the craft running in families was partially inspired by long-running military families like the Truscotts–they seem to have a culture unto themselves. […] The requirement of service is present for all the families, but most families can get away with just some of the members serving some of the time (as you’ll see with certain new American characters in The Left-Hand Way.) And, regarding freedom, most craftspeople want to serve—I don’t say this explicitly, but the craft for the Right-Hand families seems to go with an impulse to put it to a use that serves the land.”

The limiting of magic use to defined family lines sidesteps the issues that Shadow Ops and Fullmetal Alchemist tackle, by having magic power resemble an inherited fortune. Certain families can use magic because they’ve always been able to use magic, similar to how certain families in our own society—European royals, Rockefellers, Hiltons—have money because they’ve always had money. This exclusivity creates an interesting dynamic when applied to military service, since training and access to magic is divided between the military and family. The division brings up interesting questions in regards to loyalty, and the exclusivity of magic puts an interesting spin on magic users that arise outside of those families.

The series is still ongoing—the second book The Left-Hand Way just came out earlier this August—so it will be interesting to see whether this method of militarizing magic will result in an aristocracy, or something else entirely.

 

Aristocracy

The Black Company Glen Cook

Glen Cook’s Black Company fantasy series, credited with providing the template for the “grimdark” style of fantasy, also gave us a living, evolving world with magic at its center. The story kicks off when a wizard named Bomanz attempts to make contact with the Lady, a powerful sorceress who has been in an enchanted sleep for 400 years. After she manipulates Bomanz into freeing her, she also wakes The Taken, ten sorcerers whom she and her husband had controlled. Together, the twelve of them set out to re-conquer the land. The Black Company, a mercenary troupe, contracts to assist the Lady and work with The Taken.

The Black Company series features the same exclusivity of magic as Tom Doyle’s American Craft series, but it takes a further, and more traditional, step in equating the most powerful magic users with those most deserving of rule. The Lady and The Taken comprise an aristocracy of wizards and devote the use of their power to toppling existing power structures and instilling their own.

They aren’t an army, but they are militarized, and as the series progresses this aristocracy’s magical knowledge becomes increasingly applied to their non-magical military. The Company uses their own magic in warfare, mostly as a tool in espionage, and since wizards aren’t too common they also rely on rumors and misinformation to exaggerate their skill and keep their enemies fearful. The Taken, meanwhile, conjure storms, weaponry, and detailed illusions during battle. The Lady casts spells on soldiers’ armor to enhance it, and creates a hammer made of light to defend herself at one point. However, absolute focus must be kept to maintain this sort of power—if a sorcerer allows anger or panic to distract them they’ll lose their magical protection, and be reduced to “merely” physical fighting.

The Black Company can make small amulets and charms for themselves, and the Taken literally have magical flying carpets, which they use in aerial battles against their enemies. This kicks off a magical arms race, as both sides try to develop stronger carpets and better bombs. This arms race results in the gradual loss of the aristocracy’s exclusive use on magic power. “Civilians” figure out that they can utilize magical power stored in True Names, and that correctly naming a magical foe can rob them of their strength. (This information is not exactly kept hidden by The Lady and The Taken. A decisive battle in the first trilogy hinges on the Lady finding the True Name of her evil ex-husband, The Dominator.) As the series continues, The Taken promotes the use of magic beyond themselves and the military, beginning research and development into healing herbs—not to be hoarded by the military, as the Company members immediately think, but as a potential farm crop for civilian use.

Glen Cook’s Black Company series presents an interesting flip from a series like Myke Cole’s Shadow Ops. The former begins with magical power centralized while the latter begins with it decentralized, but both series use magic power to bolster their armies. In either series, the more that magic is used, the more decentralized it becomes. Therefore, if we accept that the introduction of magic always leads to wizard armies, then is it also true that continued use of wizard armies eventually leads to entire societies dependent on magic?

 

Dependence

The Path of Daggers ebook cover

Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time series features all of the above approaches and more. Conscription is utilized by both the male and female users of magic (known as the One Power in this series), problems caused by magical legacies feature heavily in the narrative, and magical aristocracy is rampant. All of these methods support the other, and over the course of the series the breaking and re-forming of these systems is what proves vital to the defeat of the series’ villain. Notably, the series’ hero Rand repeatedly breaks the aristocratic hold on the One Power, digging up lost magical knowledge while doing so, only to later institute his own extremely flawed aristocracy in the form of The Black Tower. (The White Tower, the pre-existing aristocracy, meanwhile, reforms and provides by far the most useful front against the series’ Big Bad.)

There has never been a magic-less world in The Wheel of Time and the back and forth between pre-existing and new systems of control illustrates just how dependent society is on that reality. Magic users negotiate peace between nations, exist as the primary health care system, and hoard not just magical knowledge but any knowledge they deem of use. Arguably, this is done to preserve a society that has suffered world-shattering setback after world-shattering setback, but in reality the dependence of the Wheel of Time’s society on magic completely stymies its overall progress.

Interestingly, forming magic users into military units goes a long way towards reversing the halt set upon the progress of society in Jordan’s series. Several groups of magic users form up into combat units over the course of the story, creating communities that share knowledge and tactics that prove key; not only to defeating the enemy, but in creating systems of education and defense that the population can utilize without needing access to magic or magic users.

As we’ve seen, the exclusivity of magic can lead to tyranny, and the non-exclusivity of magic can lead to dependence. Clearly, an army needs to be able to bring forces to bear that can match the power of magic without having to utilize magic itself. Otherwise, something like the following could happen.

 

Invasion

The Mirror Empire Kameron Hurley

The organization of magic in Kameron Hurley’s The Mirror Empire is very fluid: Magic users draw their power from various satellites in the sky, and their magic necessarily waxes and wanes depending on the orientation of the stars. In The Mirror Empire, one of those dark stars, Oma, has returned to the sky for the first time in centuries; its reappearance heralds change and destruction. In fact, the warring Dhai people take advantage of this auspicious occasion to cross between parallel realities in order to invade and conquer themselves in the “prime” world. In contrast to the “prime” Dhai, who are scholars and pacifists, the mirror-universe Dhai have equated magic with mobilization, drafting all of their magic users and utilizing them to attack across dimensions.

The prime Dhai have magic that can balance the war Dhai, but lack the discipline or training necessary to turn back the invaders. We’ve seen magic considered as simply another weapon, another tool, in the expansive arsenal of the military. But as The Mirror Empire demonstrates, you cannot simply match power for power and expect victory, or even stability. Hurley’s series thus far demonstrates the usefulness of a military in regards to providing defense and deterrence.

 

Balance

Malazan Deadhouse Gates Steven Erikson

Demonstrating the usefulness of military tactics and training for defense and deterrence is something at which Steven Erikson and Ian Cameron Esslemont’s Malazan series excels. Mages and gods are shown as being extremely efficiently integrated into the Malazan Empire’s military strategies and deployments, allowing the Malazans to take on larger forces than they should realistically be able to handle. While surrounding nations and peoples match and often exceed the might of the Malazan Empire’s magical forces, the Malazan utilize superior strategy and efficiency to overcome these power gaps, often triumphing over stronger enemies; enemies which the Empire subsequently folds into its own forces. The ubiquity of magic and wizard armies in the world of Malazan has ensured balance between nations in both their magical might and non-magical armed forces. Because, as the Malazan series demonstrates, even an inch of difference in the balance between militaries of separate nations can result in the decimation of an entire culture.

There is a significant downside to maintaining this balance between magical and non-magical armies, however: Continuous warfare. A nation that has to focus overly much on defense cannot spare resources to grow technologically or economically unless that growth is in support of a continuing war effort. The state of tension also takes a toll on the populace, disincentivizing efforts for individuals and organizations to institute long-view economic growth or social reform. A nation constantly at war is devalued overall. Because if it won’t be here tomorrow, then why build it today?

As we can see, the fantasy genre’s varied approaches to militarizing magic reveal a fascinating continuum of societal evolution when looked at comparatively. We’ve seen how militarization can both help and harm a newly magical society, how it can lead to entirely magical worlds, how it can stall the growth of a society, and how it can break that stall.

What we haven’t yet seen, though, is how militarization can ultimately diminish the importance of magic, and how that may be the best possible outcome.

 

Beyond Magic

The Legend of Korra final battle

The Legend of Korra, the sequel series to Avatar: The Last Airbender, begins as Korra, the new Avatar, sets out from her home in the Southern Water tribe to learn airbending in Republic City (the capital of the multicultural United Republic of Nations). As in the original series, the ability by certain people to manipulate fire, water, earth, or air (known as “bending”) is used in any number of ways, from completing mundane tasks or civil projects to competitive sports, law enforcement, and military operations; traditionally, the warriors of each nation are trained according to their corresponding element (so, the Fire Nation army is made up of firebenders, and so on.)

Magic, in this instance, has long been integrated into society and benders learn how to master their innate abilities alongside their regular schooling. These abilities can be integrated into a variety of career fields, as mentioned above, and further specialization of magic occurs based on those career fields. For example, a waterbender with healing abilities can be trained to treat wounds or illness by redirecting chi around the body, while a soldier would focus on mastering various fighting techniques in order to use his or her waterbending abilities to engage and defend.

At the end of the show’s second season, Korra opens the spiritual portals, allowing the spirit world to coexist within and alongside the human world. In the final season, master metalbender Kuvira is able to harness the power of spirit vines, creating a spirit-powered superweapon. The battle against Kuvira’s spirit-fueled mecha-Colossus and her mecha-suited earth- and metalbender army requires Korra and her allies to launch an unprecedented counter-attack, featuring coordination between every type of bender as well as tech-savvy non-benders like Asami and Hiroshi Sato, Varrick, and Zhu Li.

Eventually Korra uses the Avatar state to protect herself and Kuvira from the weaponized spirit-tech, inadvertently opening a new portal to the spirit world, and the two women are able to confront one another face to face. Hostilities cease, balance is restored, and (as in the final episode of ATLA ), mercy and understanding win out over military might and violence.

The Legend of Korra may actually represent a fitting endpoint for the creation of magical armies. In the end, the training provided by militaries and the various abilities of the magic users in the world of Korra zero each other out. The ultimate conflict in the series isn’t won by superior training, magical super weapons, advantageous disruption of balance, or exclusivity of magical abilities—even though all of these tactics are utilized—but face to face negotiation.

Because when an entire society can utilize magic, then you have to go beyond magic to find solutions.

 

Background research for this article contributed by Bridget McGovern, Leah Schnelbach, Sarah Tolf, and Natalie Zutter.

Chris Lough writes a lot for Tor.com, you see.

Anime? More Like Animeta

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self-aware cartoons

One of the recent treasures on Imgur was a gallery, posted by Imgurian AnOstrichBitMeOnce, of key moments in which cartoons and animated series got scarily self-aware.

The Simpsons hair meta

Bart and Lisa wonder at their physiology, Gin Tama says what we’re all thinking, and old-school Cartoon Network reveals the lengths they go to to make animation.

Cartoon Network meta animation budget

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