Moonlight, A Quiet Film

Moonlight is a quiet film.

I actually had to turn up my speakers just to hear the dialogue, and had to turn them up even more when, after ten minutes, our protagonist resentfully speaks his first words. He doesn’t follow those words up with too many more. Whoever else he is, Little, or Chiron, or Black, is not one for big speeches. His feelings maintain an internal smolder, clear in his downturned eyes and inward-sloping shoulders and perpetual inability to stand in the middle of the frame. Our hero is a man of big feelings afforded minimal release. There is so much there, so much contained in all his unhappy, furtive glances, so much preserved across the astonishingly congruent performances of three brilliant actors.

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Spring 2018 – Week 11 in Review

This week in anime was Holy shit did you see that My Hero Academia episode. I’m sure other stuff happened, but oh my god, All Might versus All For One, what an incredible event. Easily the best episode of the season, and possibly eclipsing the Deku-Todoroki fight as the best episode of the show altogether. Fortunately, while All Might’s battle cast a long shadow this week, everything else I was watching also turned in reasonably solid performances. The theme of this week seemed to be “strong execution of fundamentally iffy material,” as Hinamatsuri managed to turn a one-joke bit into a highlight, Megalo Box did its best to work around the Burroughs fight’s dramatic limitations, and Legend of the Galactic Heroes spun drama out of “our supply lines are getting overdrawn and everyone back at command is an idiot.” It’s frankly nice to not be watching anything whose wild, flailing fortunes could stress me out – there are no temperamental half-masterpieces here, it’s all sturdy productions by very consistent teams. But anyway, let’s get right back into the All Might gushing and RUN THIS WEEK DOWN!

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Why It Works: Kyoto Animation’s Masterpiece Has Arrived on Crunchyroll!

Look, did you think I wasn’t going to write an article celebrating Hyouka’s move to Crunchyroll? Anyway, here is my contractually obligated squealing about Crunchyroll nabbing what could well be the best television anime of all time, along with some hopefully convincing illustrations of why I’m so damn excited. Hyouka is the best, and I am thrilled that so many new people will now get to experience it. Get to it!

Kyoto Animation’s Masterpiece Has Arrived on Crunchyroll!

My Hero Academia Season Two, Part One – Review

Totally forgot to link it last week, but here’s my ANN review of the first half of My Hero Academia S2! I’ve covered it episodically and in larger pieces before, but never as a discreet collection of episodes unto itself, so this gave me the chance to reflect on this particular arc’s place in both MHA and shounen storytelling convention, which was nice. Here’s the review!

My Hero Academia Season Two, Part One

Flip Flappers – Episode 13

The finale at last! With Papika having finally reached her beloved friend both physically and emotionally, the two stand together now, wearing new costumes that seem to fall halfway between wedding dresses and butterfly costumes. Even these costumes feel like a direct validation of their journey, with the bridal notes signaling their unified relationship, while the butterfly motif carries Cocona’s cocoon-inspired name to its logical conclusion. Having fought through terrible insecurities and even the stifling abuse of her long-absent parents, Cocona has emerged stronger than ever, standing proudly beside the girl she loves.

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Chihayafuru S2 – Episode 13

Alright, let’s get back to work on our journey through Chihayafuru! Now that the last episode is out of earshot and we can be brutally honest, I’ll be frank: what the fuck was that. We started that episode concurrently with the beginning of the team tournament’s semifinals, and by the end of the episode, I’m pretty sure we’d only made it through four, possible five actual cards of that match. Yes, sure, the episode had other priorities (like building up Chihaya’s opponent Megumu as a Yumin-tier side character), but that’s such a glacial pace of conflict on its face that I can’t help but grumble a bit. Good fiction is able to make tiny moments feel like endless gaps of time, but Chihayafuru’s last episode wasn’t entirely able to keep its twenty minutes from feeling a whole lot like two minutes of actual action stretched into twenty minutes of episode.

That said, all the buildup that consumed Chihayafuru’s last episode should theoretically be paid off right here in this one. Megumu has now been sturdily established as an opponent who embodies many of Chihaya’s own skills, but who feels more comfortable executing on her overall range of abilities than Chihaya. With a full episode of arc-tending and character-establishing behind us, we could be diving into one of the most fully tactics-focused episodes of the show so far, and I’m thrilled to be here. Let’s get right back to Chihayafuru!

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Vinland Saga – Volume 1

I’ll admit, looking at the color cover of Vinland Saga’s first volume did not inspire much confidence. The character art’s thick black lines, largely realistic proportions, and very stiff posing all brought to mind some kind of western comic anthology, or perhaps one of those “bringing history to life” educational comics designed to Make Learning Fun. The digital shading was just plain hideous, and there’s what, an actual lens flair pasted onto the subject’s dagger? All in all, the cover included enough misguided visual decisions that I was deeply uncertain whether I’d get much out of this volume at all.

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Spring 2018 – Week 10 in Review

Another week of anime has come and gone, drawing us ever closer to the end of this altogether lukewarm season. I can’t really say I’ll be missing this one, as half of my airing schedule are actually long-running shows that just so happened to cross this season (LoGH and MHA), while the other half hasn’t really been memorable enough to stick with me. This week was an unfortunate low ebb for most of what I’m watching, as My Hero Academia kinda stumbled in conveying a key manga moment, while Megalo Box couldn’t quite find enough emotional substance in its requisite “the band is breaking up” conflict. Meanwhile, Hinamatsuri seems to be running out of gas for a few of its running jokes, while Legend of the Galactic Heroes… well actually, Legend of the Galactic Heroes is pretty much always great. Let’s start with that then, and open with some positive thoughts about cynical themes as we run this week down!

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Why It Works: Everyone Loves All Might And Here’s Why!

Today for Crunchyroll, I did a very enjoyable character profile on one of My Hero Academia’s most compelling figures. All Might is critical to My Hero Academia in a thematic and character arc sense, but he’s also just a really endearing guy who’s always fun to see on screen. I hope I properly highlighted both these fractions of All Might’s appeal, and also hope you enjoy the piece!

Everyone Loves All Might And Here’s Why!

Summer 2018 Season Preview

Well folks, the spring season’s beginning to wrap up, meaning it’s time to look forward to our upcoming summer slate, and see what new anime delicacies we’ll be devouring this time. Once again, I’ll be frank – the summer is looking to be a really weak season, following up on a spring that was also an extremely weak season. This isn’t the “new normal,” and this isn’t simply a reflection of my own more exacting standards (okay, maybe it’s slightly a reflection of that) – good anime seasons come and go, and the unfortunate fact is we’ve just run into a couple seasons in a row with a relative dearth of noteworthy projects. After an incredibly strong winter that simultaneously offered Violet Evergarden, After the Rain, A Place Further than the Universe, and Laid-Back Camp, both spring and summer seem destined to struggle.

Fortunately, My Hero Academia is still running, and it’s not like summer is a total wasteland – we’ve got Banana Fish to hold down the “prestige adaptation” slot, and perhaps most importantly, Lucifer and the Biscuit Hammer’s author Satoshi Mizukami is writing one show himself. Plus, there’s always backlog – why suffer through the dubious fruits of whatever happens to be arbitrarily streaming at the moment when we can always watch actually good shows from the past? I might be professionally obligated to indulge fandom’s recency bias, but you all can be free! Go! Set sail! Embrace that freedom, and watch something good!

Anyway. Moving on. As usual, I won’t run down every single upcoming show here – you can check out a site like anichart for a list of general synopses, so there won’t be any of that here. Instead, I’ll just be highlighting the shows I personally have a reason to feel excited about, along with an explanation of whatever it is that caught my interest – great staff, beloved source material, or maybe just a really great trailer. Starting with my most-anticipated properties, let’s buckle up and see what the summer has in store!

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