Why It Works: Five Anime With Great Sibling Bonds!

Today I’ve got one more grab-bag of anime recommendations, spinning off the signature strength of this season’s Demon Slayer. To be honest, even Demon Slayer itself could really use some stronger characterization for Nezuko, but she’s definitely starting to take a stronger role in the story relative to her earlier situation. And in the meantime, I’ve got a pile of shows that already demonstrate how well anime can articulate the unique joys and stresses of sibling bonds. Have at it!

Five Anime With Great Sibling Bonds!

Summer 2019 Season Preview

How the fuck is it already time for another season preview? It was February like three weeks ago, the spring season can’t possibly be ending now. What did I even do this spring? What am I doing with my life?

Yes folks, it’s time again for a season preview, and all the existential dread and recrimination which accompanies it. This season has gone by in a flash, and though our endless secession of days is certainly a cause for concern, we can at least console ourselves with the prospect of new cartoons to enjoy. While the spring season concentrated its highlights into a small number of shows, and was defined mostly by the titanic presence of directors like Shinichiro Watanabe and Kunihiko Ikuhara, the summer is looking to be much more diffuse in its highlights. There are fewer sure hits, but plenty of shows with at least a dull glimmer of potential, giving me a whole bunch to talk about. As usual, I won’t be highlighting or summarizing every single upcoming show – there are plenty of sites you can check for that, and not much for me to add. Instead, I’ll just be emphasizing the shows I’m genuinely looking forward to, as well as my generally staff or source material-related reasons for that excitement. Starting with the season’s brightest prospects, let’s break down the stars of the coming season!

Continue reading

Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha A’s – Episode 7

Get ready folks. It’s time to continue our journey into Nanoha, and see what those dastardly Velka Knights are up to now! A’s prior episode was a very important one, as it centered on the long-awaited reveal of Hayate’s true family history. As the family’s many idle interactions have made obvious, regardless of what evils the Velka Knights performed in the past, at this point they are entirely dedicated to preserving Hayate’s idyllic family life. To that end, they’re even willing to disobey their master’s own wishes, and work to complete the book of darkness in order to keep her alive.

The reveal of the Velka Knights’ history went basically as expected, and did great work in further illustrating the moral contrast between these foes and the first season. While Hayate feels ever more like a direct parallel for Nanoha, her knights have been defined as essentially the opposite of Fate.

Condemning Testarossa, and drawing Fate from her side, was a pretty morally straightforward proposition – Fate was being abused and mislead by her mother, and Testarossa’s own goals were catastrophic in both nature and intent. In contrast, the Velka Knights are actually working to help their master in spite of her own wishes, are fully aware of the stakes and consequences of their actions, and are working in service of a goal that, while dangerous, is still fundamentally sympathetic. While Testarossa was responsible for basically all the pain Fate both inflicted and endured, Hayate has been nothing but good to her knights, and they’ve done nothing but become more human and sympathetic in turn. They’re frankly getting far more sympathetic framing this season than our actual protagonists, who are very nice people, but also technically Space Cops.

With their history finally revealed, A’s is prepped and ready for another confrontation between our main teams. Whether this episode focuses on that or Yuuno exploring a friggin’ library, I’m ready for whatever may come. Let’s dive into another episode of Nanoha A’s!

Continue reading

Scorching Ping Pong Girls – Episode 6

Alright folks, gather round, gather round. Lower your paddles and set your ping pong balls at rest. The hour is nearly upon us, and already the machine gun clatter of balls against boards can be heard humming in the distance. It is absolutely time for more Scorching Ping Pong Girls!

When we last left off with the ping pong girls, Agari and Koyori had just proven their mettle against the team’s intimidating captain, Kiruka. Of course, their “victory” came in the form of winning exactly one point each against her, after she’d already exhausted herself defeating every single other member of the team. The episode thus offered a natural mixture of “our heroes have leveled up” and “our heroes still have a long way to go,” along with persistently seeding the overhanging promise of Nationals as the true prize.

That repeated emphasis on Nationals may reflect Ping Pong Girls’ structural constraints more than anything – we’re almost halfway through the season, and we’ve still just finished introducing our own main team. Ping Pong Girls isn’t wasting our time at all – the reason its overarching narrative has moved slowly is because it was too busy dazzling us with fun matches, which is the story’s true purpose. But that pacing does mean we’ll only have time for maybe one tournament, and “earning a spot at Nationals” will likely be the point of that tournament.

Meanwhile, Ping Pong Girls continues to be very charming in terms of its fluffy slice of life material as well. The show’s jokes are hit or miss, but Kiruka and Munemune being extremely married was a very endearing turn, and helped flesh out each of them as sympathetic people. Let’s see what our champions get up to next in Scorching Ping Pong Girls!

Continue reading

Spring 2019 – Week 8 in Review

There is nothing truly new to report about this week’s anime as a whole, and I’m already two hours late on posting this article anyway, so we’re jumping right into it, folks. Demon Slayer was solid, JoJo was ridiculous, Sarazanmai was repetitive, Carole & Tuesday was transcendent – I think that’s about it for preamble? Yeah, I think we’re basically covered. Starting off with Tanjiro and Nezuko’s shonen shenanigans, let’s run down one more week in anime!

Continue reading

Why It Works: Music in Anime: The Song is the Story

Today I’ve got a Why It Works post I’m very happy with, as I got to write at length on a topic I’m always fascinated by – storytelling conveyed without narrative, and particularly storytelling conveyed through sound design. The entry point for this discussion was how well Carole & Tuesday’s songwriting expresses its protagonists’ growth, but many of my favorite shows use not just music, but in-show musical performance as key emotional moments and character turns. As a musician and songwriter myself, I’m naturally inclined to embrace music-focused anime, and fortunately, several of my favorite anime directors seem to love musical performances just as much as I do. Here’s the piece!

Music in Anime: The Song is the Story

Simoun – Episode 18

Folks, it is absolutely time to watch some more of the graceful, mysterious, and altogether captivating Simoun. It’s been a little while since we last checked in on this story, but we left on a thunderous series of worldbuilding reveals. Entering forbidden religious ruins with enemies in pursuit, the sybullae discovered that the spring which forms the cornerstone of their religion actually has multiple entry points across the world, seeming to exist in multiple places at the same time. Additionally, more simoun craft were discovered within this ruin, one of which contained a familiar face – Angulas, the young priestess who once sacrificed herself to tear the holy empire down.

Angulas’ presence here could well indicate that the various religions all of this world’s political bodies worship all stem from one communal root, one which doesn’t pick favorites in distributing its holy favor. Angulas died in a moment of selfless religious ecstasy, a description that could just as easily be applied to priestesses inscribing their Ri Majoons in the skies. Given that, what is the purpose of all their struggling, and what goal does Onashia actually seek? And at the same time, does Angulas’ presence here mean Dominura and Limone might be similarly cocooned, waiting for their friends to retrieve them?

Whatever the answers may be, I’m thrilled to explore this thematically rich property once more, and spend some time with its very sympathetic cast. Let’s see what lies in store!

Continue reading

Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha A’s – Episode 6

Alright folks, let’s dive back into Nanoha A’s! This season has been establishing Hayate and her “family” as clear echoes of Nanoha’s crew all season, and never was that more apparent than last episode, where the show essentially assigned all of the beats normally reserved for the protagonist (opening monologue, closing statement, mid-battle reflections) to Hayate’s party. Though the episode ended on the reveal that all of Hayate’s companions are magical creatures summoned by the Book of Darkness, the rest of the episode was largely dedicated to emphasizing how little that mattered – they are as loving of a family as Nanoha’s, mutually supporting and utterly willing to sacrifice for each other.

That episode also featured a whole bunch of sweet fights, further solidifying Nanoha’s chops as an all-purpose action platform. While the show’s first season had some exciting clashes, cool animation flourishes, and a generally unique aesthetic, its fights were generally just emotional clashes of laser bursts – what sense of weight and consequence that existed was mostly contained in the dramatic casting and leadup to each major blow. With the Velka knights in the mix, Nanoha is now striving for more tactically diverse battles, with their own internal dramatic arcs. The show’s results on that front have been a little mixed – these fights still seem to be driven more by dramatic necessity than tactical back-and-forth, and devices like each team splitting into pairs for battle feel a little hackneyed. But weightiness of the physical exchanges aside, they’re still exciting as heck, and a great visual spectacle in their own right. Whether we’ve got further investigation of Hayate’s perspective or simply a bunch of sweet laser fights ahead of us, I’m ready to get back into it. Let’s see what’s what in the next episode of Nanoha A’s!

Continue reading

Princess Tutu – Episode 24

With only three episodes remaining, the time for cryptic allusions and shrouded metaphor is largely behind us. Princess Tutu’s latest opening monologue emphasizes that clearly, as we are greeted by the image of a grave scattered with pages, and a pendulum swinging in the background. The narrator tells us, “once upon a time, there was a man who died. The story the man wrote was about a happy prince who loved everyone and was loved by everyone. The people fought, each wanting him to love them and them alone, and an evil raven pecked at their loving hearts one after another. The more the prince loved them and tried to save them, the more the people’s love just fed the raven. In the end, the raven thought ‘I’d like to try eating the prince’s heart, the most delicious one of all.’”

Continue reading

Spring 2019 – Week 7 in Review

As we enter the second half of the season, all of my airing contenders have more or less settled into their default modes, as hope and anticipation solidify into weekly expectations, and rambunctious young stories find their mature footing. Demon Slayer’s episodic strengths and weaknesses have become relatively predictable, while Carole & Tuesday’s consistent genius is now the one goddamn thing I can rely on in this blighted world. Predictability gets a bad rap, but being predictably terrific is a pretty good thing in my mind, so I am all in favor of Carole & Tuesday’s choices. Let’s check in with our young rock stars and all this season’s other heroes, as we plow through another Week in Review!

Continue reading