cerusee: a white redheaded girl in a classroom sitting by the window chewing on a pencil and looking bored (Default)
Picked up:

Shion no Ou:

This is kinda like Hikaru no Go, only with shogi instead of go, and instead of being a subtle, mature, intelligent story (with just a touch of the supernatural) about becoming an adult, it's a crime drama with cross-dressing and sordid--'scuse me, torrid romance. And Paku Romi! It's kind of sad, but I'm infatuated. Husky altos and gender-bending--I'm a cheap date.


Minami-ke:

With the ending of Lucky Star, I needed something to fill my comedy fix. This is slice-of-life, a school setting with three sisters who are utter cliches (maternal older sister, weird, energetic, dumb middle sister, worldly, cynical, genius-type littlest sister, and nary a parent in sight), unless they're just archetypes. Calling them archetypes will leave me with more dignity when I admit that I snicker all the way through each episode. And I totally ship Kana and that guy she keeps kicking. What this lacks in brilliant parodic Lucky Channel segments, it makes up for by not constantly referencing The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya. I mean, guys, I liked it too, but give it a rest already, will you?


Bamboo Blade:

I haven't a clue why I put this on my watch-list. Kendo comedy? Since when do I do kendo comedy? But it's really rather funny; it seems to be constructed by people who know what they're doing, and how to tell a joke, and it's somehow hitting all the right notes. So far, we have a clueless, albeit reasonably competent and likable kendo captain, her totally selfish, yet not despicable loser teacher, who only wants put together a winning kendo team so he can win a bet and get a year's worth of free sushi, a generic nice guy, his childhood friend, who looks like Mikoto from Mai-HiME and whose kendo skills are clearly OVER NINE THOUSAND, and some guy with an egg-shaped head, voiced by Akira Ishida.

It just clicks, somehow.


Genshiken 2:

Should this be ongoing, instead of new? I'm a big fan of Genshiken, both from the airing of the original series, and the subsequent American publication of the really excellent manga source material (Del Rey's translation is nothing to turn your nose up at). The plot isn't new to me, since it's based on manga I've already read, but the adaptation is no less enjoyable for that. If you prefer manga to anime, there's probably no need to watch this, but if you prefer anime to manga, there's no reason not to.


Finished:

Seirei no Moribito:

Kinda like Fantastic Children, this ended with such satisfactory elegance that I'm left with nothing more to say than what I've said already. Do you like a thoughtful, well-told story? Watch this. You won't be disappointed.


The latest season of Maria-sama ga Miteru:

Dude, they aren't even pretending to resolve things anymore, are they? Well, as long as they keep on returning for new seasons, I don't care. More grey-palette, pseudo-Catholic, tasteful shoujo-ai, dammit! I am insatiable! I even still secretly ship Sei/Yuri, even though Yuri and Sachiko are so close to being on an emotional equilibrium that they make a darn cute couple these days.
cerusee: a white redheaded girl in a classroom sitting by the window chewing on a pencil and looking bored (mai loves takumi)
Finished:

Sola:

It ain't AIR. Not much is. But at least it was coherent, and unlike Kanon, it was short. Bonus: Mai Nakahara and Ai Shimizu, alive and together at last. Girly bonding is what they do best.

Nodame Cantabile:

T'was good. T'was fun. The undoing of this anime was that it lacked Tamaki Hiroshi and Juri Ueno and had the misfortune to be made after the live action drama, which owns my heart forevermore. The saving grace was that it played the entire first movement of Rachmaninoff's 2nd Piano Concerto, liek, omg whoa. Chiaki's so hot. But live action Tamaki Hiroshi's Chiaki was hotter, and that's all there is to it.


Dropped:

Bokurano: The op theme is awesome, the manga art that the look is based on is great, and ever since Fantastic Children, I've been deeply in love with Junko Minagawa's voice. Nevertheless, the nicest thing you can say about the aesthetic of Bokurano is that it's pedophiliac, the worst thing you can say about the aesthetic is that manga-ka Kitoh might be a pedophile with a rape complex, and I don't think I want anything to do with him. Dropped this like a hot potato when a would-be rapist was leveled against a teacher who distributes internet videos of his sexual liason with a middle-school student. Rape v.s. statutory rape? I can't contain my excitement. And now, I go to bathe the stink from my skin.


Still watching:

Kamichama Karin: Sure, it's got way more cute than plot. But I'll take tiny blonde chibis and Mai Nakahara yelling, "I AM GOD" over pedophilia and rape-as-love any day.

Lucky Star: The amazing thing about Lucky Star is that I'm not watching it solely for the Lucky Channel segments at the end. Sometimes, I get through almost the entire episode without remembering Lucky Channel. Nevertheless, whenever I get to the end, I remember that no matter how cute and Azumanga Daioh-esque Lucky Star is, it's all for naught without Lucky Channel's snarky satiric endcap.

Maria-sama ga Miteru season 3: I love this as I imagine I might love my own children someday. Need I explain? Well, just in case I do: Maria-sama ga Miteru came out during one of the worst years of my life, it's one of my few genuinely good memories from that period. It also has a very attractive sort of grey/pastel color palette, and muted lesbian overtones. It's all very tasteful, all very pseudo-Catholic, and in OVA 3, Sachiko is able to identify, at a distance, Yumi as dressed in a giant panda suit. It's quite romantic. If you don't believe me, watch it yourself.


Picked up:

Terra E:

omwtfbbq manga. Manga is beautiful. Manga is lovely. I love the manga. I am watching this because I can't bear to just put the manga on the shelf without some kind of farewell, and because Takemiya's stunningly beautiful portraits overlaid onto a sea of stars deserve to be animated in a thousand color palette. I pray this will not be fucked up. Bonus: Sanae Kobayashi (aka Akira from Hikaru no Go, and Akira from Mai-HiME) as Physis. Dude.

September 2012

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23 242526272829
30      

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 7th, 2025 08:55 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios