#anime reviews

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It’s been a while! New flat, new job, new end of the country…but while I have a little spare time, I want to talk about Bodacious Space Pirates.

Bodacious Space Pirates was an unexpected find for me. I was trawling through TV Tropes and their lists of past anime seasons, attempting to track down a) something new, b) something well-written, and c) something that wasn’t sexist. Benevolent sexism runs rife in a lot of popular anime, and more than once I have got into a well-reviewed series to find female characters relegated to the backburner or constantly lagging behind their male compatriots in terms of ability and storyline.

However – once in a blue moon you find something that hits all of your buttons AND that you haven’t already seen at least five times, and I had no idea that Bodacious Space Pirates even existed.

The anime tells the story of Marika Kato, a teenage girl who inherits spaceship and a captaincy from her deceased father – and not just any captaincy. Her ship, the Bentenmaru, is a pirate ship.

Marika has big boots to fill and the determination and intelligence to do it – but she also has a mother that will teach her how to shoot a gun, and a crew that wants her to succeed, and a school club that works together to teach her how electronic warfare works in the modern age of piracy.

Bodacious Space Pirates, above all, is a story about women supporting each other and forging solid friendships. They work through their own emotional arcs and kick ass and work on their skills and always, always, find new challenges to take head on. There aren’t any romantic entanglements to distract Marika from her adventures; instead, she makes new friends and grows into a resourceful and mature young woman.

The sole romantic relationship that takes centre stage is between two of Marika’s female classmates: Lynn, a talented hacker and vice-president of the space yacht club; and Jenny, former president of the space yacht club and aspiring business-woman. Both of these characters eschew most of the typical stereotypes, Jenny in particular – when her kidnappers attempt to force her into a political marriage, she looks up, eyes wide, beautiful in her white wedding dress…and then she reaches down, grabs the gun she has strapped to her leg, fights her way out and steals a spaceship.

This anime has heart and intelligence in spades – its female characters dream big and work for those dreams; they treasure their friendships; they are funny and ridiculous and badass and sweet; they teach and support each other; they have the utmost respect for each other.

And they never, ever, come second-best to a man.

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Shouwa Genroku Rakugo ShinjuuDeen / Josei, Historical, Drama / MangaRating: 10/10It makes no justice

Shouwa Genroku Rakugo Shinjuu

Deen / Josei, Historical, Drama / Manga

Rating:10/10

It makes no justice to write a short review for a great work like Rakugo Shinjuu. There are so many things to talk about and reflect on this show; so many lens you can use to dissect it. It’s rare to have a show that can earn so much praise.

Rakugo has all the makings of a classic - a historical story line, focus on a deep friendship and art that Deen made with respect. Rakugo serves as a base for layers of stories to unravel - a traditional art struggling to find its place in a modern world, and through it a set of characters searching for meaning and self-worth.

Maybe I can summarize the plot as a story of inherited burdens - on how each generation pass on a baton of ensuring the art stays alive and their honor stays intact. Rakugo is not a simple art form or a medium of entertainment - families and friendships are built upon it, dreams fulfilled and lives grown upon each story memorized and perfected. Through it we see Kikuhiro and Sukeroku’s shared journey to represent an art forced to them by circumstance but they end up loving more than themselves.

Kikuhiro built his journey on a quest to find forgiveness - to forgive himself for being not good enough, not being worthy of the Yakumo name, not able to fulfill his promise to Sukeroku to foster a rakugo that can stand the test of time. With the arrival of Yotaro, he’s forced to reflect about his life and realizes that he didn’t lived a worthless life, no matter how many tragedies he’d overcame or how many wrong decisions he’s done. What matters is the present and how he spends his remaining days in the world to ensure the cycle of burdens will be cut off once and for all.


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Dagashi KashiFeel / Comedy, Slice of Life / MangaRating: 8/10After a lot of unimpressive shows, Feel

Dagashi Kashi

Feel / Comedy, Slice of Life / Manga

Rating: 8/10

After a lot of unimpressive shows, Feel finally had something that made me stay! Sweets, sweets and more sweets, who knew? And the history/context behind them - that’s what Dagashi Kashi’s all about. It’s a silly show about how Hotaru convinces Kokonotsu (son of a candy shop owner) to take over their shop while introducing us to Japanese snacks in the process.

The plot’s actually simple but all those snacks and toys being featured each episode is what makes the show entertaining. It doesn’t have a whole premise than the one above but people still watch due to the funny antics among the characters (as well as some ecchi on the side). Of course I shouldn’t fail to mention the educational side of the show, with each snack having its own history (many dating back to hundreds of years) - some with very nostalgic or simply mundane contexts.

Admit it, the show makes you want to go to Japan and buy all those stuff featured - sad many are only available locally. And it’s great that the show ended without the need to actually end, as newer slice of life shows tend to be like that. I’d definitely recommend the show if you need a lot of laughs in between more mainstream (and darker) programs.


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Prince of Stride: AlternativeMadhouse / Sports / Otome GameRating: 7/10Madhouse isn’t a studio that

Prince of Stride: Alternative

Madhouse / Sports / Otome Game

Rating:7/10

Madhouse isn’t a studio that comes to my mind when people talk about sports anime. (They did Hajime no Ippo, a sports classic.) I actually had low expectations with Stride, considering its otome origins and how it focuses on a sport that doesn’t exist in real life (yet). Even so I ended up with a sour aftertaste as Stride rolls over.

Stride seems to have an identity crisis on what it wants to pursue - is it a shonen about a club rebuilding to reclaim former glory? A shoujo/harem with a girl surrounded by muscled guys? Maybe some yaoi cheese trap with a heaping of fanservice? Sometimes it attempts to be a silly comedy, too. These ideas are all over the place which convinced me it’s a show not to be taken seriously. Of course it’s entertaining but it takes some convincing to believe the sports aspect actually works - the idea’s fresh but vague. There was a lot of potential if only it was more fleshed out.

The colorful palette and the music compensates for what’s lacking - if only more time was spent drawing the characters. And as a show goes into climax it made me confused who is the main focus of the story - you’d though it was the entire team, maybe it’s Nana or Riku or whatever. There was little time to sort out all these conflicts and the rushed ending doesn’t help in solving them once and for all.

There are many ideas that could have made Stride a better anime - a longer season, perhaps? More competitions or backstories? I’m not in the position to say what should’ve been done but as a viewer I feel sad (of course) that a story with such potential only ended up half-baked. Whatever, it was somehow fun and I’d love to see the fictional sport turn into a real-life affair.


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Girls Beyond the WastelandProject No. 9 / Drama, Romance / Visual NovelRating: 8/10Hardly anyone wat

Girls Beyond the Wasteland

Project No. 9 / Drama, Romance / Visual Novel

Rating:8/10

Hardly anyone watched Shokomezadue to its art style and being judged as another “school club” anime, but as the series goes it managed to ward off that impression and offer something surprisingly deep. Good thing I simply thought of the art as being reflective of its VN origins when I signed up.

Buntarou Hojou (a.k.a. Bunta) has a seemingly normal life but doesn’t know what to do in the future as any high school student would. Then came Sayuki Kuroda, a loner who’s deeply engrossed in bishoujo games (partly because her brother creates some) and plans to create one, for some vague reason. With the help of Bunta’s friend, they go on a journey to create a game that will sell and will be talk of the town.

The “vagueness” of Kuroda’s motivations and how it unraveled and was solved as the story ends could only be the big letdown for me. It’s as if the story’s struggling to make a convincing ending. But ignore this and you’ll find Shokomeza refreshing - the focus on the VN-making process and the light moments among the team members; add to that Bunta discovering writing is actually his passion and something he doesn’t just do to earn or due to favors from friends. There’s a sprinkling of quotable moments in each episode, mainly reflections on the joys and the struggles being part of the creative industry.

While it’s originally a VN, there’s little focus on the romance aspect, which makes me torn if it worked to its advantage or not. Maybe they’re trying to avoid the drama or could be reserving it for later, but it’s definitely interesting to see how the Bunta-Kuroda-Yuuka love triangle could have developed if they focused on it more. 

Shokomeza deserves some love, definitely. I’m amazed on how a relatively new studio delivered something decent out of the maligned school club/VN segment. I can’t wait for a second season, if there will be.


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