Spring 2016: all the other anime

I’ve already discussed this season’s moe shows; now it’s time for the rest. Currently I’m following almost thirty series, of which eighteen are some form of action/adventure show. That is rather a lot and not all of them are objectively good, but nevertheless there are a lot of excellent series here, if none of the level of last season’s Shouwa Genroku Rakugo Shinjuu. Listed below are my impressions so far of the eighteen series, ranked in other of how much I like them as well as their overall quality.

Macross Delta: Hayate and mirage - l-l-lovers?

  1. Macross Delta
    It shouldn’t be a surprise that I find this the best series this season considering how much attention I’ve paid to it already. Macross was and is my first love in anime and the latest installment of it hasn’t disappointed me yet. The only minor quibble I’ve had with it is that Mirage could use some more screentime, something that was remedied a bit in episode nine. I like the characters, I like the plot, I of course like the setting and especially the music. Ikenai borderline is a song I’ve been playing almost every day for weeks now.

Concrete Revolutio: because fighting for children is what superhumans do

  1. Concrete Revolutio
    I loved the first season of Concrete Revolutio and that hasn’t changed for the second season. This is an impressively ambitious superhero story, which reminds me of Astro City in its approach to tell stories using a setting created by mixing and matching half a century of anime tropes and archetypes. The other comparison could be to Watchmen in how its using superheroes to tell a political story.

My Hero Academy: How can a hero course reject people who save others and do the right thing?

  1. My Hero Academy
    The other superhero show this season is much more straightforward, but offers that same basic pleasure of seeing a Japanese take on the genre, mixing the superhero origin story with the shounen battle manga. Midoriya Izuku is one of the few people without superpowers in a world where everybody has them, but still wants to be a superhero, being inspired by the world’s greatest hero, All Might. He gets his wish when All Might shares with him the secret of his power and enrolls in the world’s greatest superhero school, U.A. High School while his new superpowers are barely controlled. Well written and animated, cheerfully optimistic, this series subscribes to the essential creed of superheroics: with great powers comes great responsibility in a way few American superhero titles still do.

Re:Zero: torturing the otaku hero

  1. Re Zero kara Hajimeru Isekai Seikatsu
    Take your average otaku gets transported to a fantasy world plot, give the hero the power to reset time, but make it so it only kicks in when he dies. That’s the perfect recipe for doing a it of deconstructing/torturing of the otaku hero. The protagonist Subaru starts off as a cookie cutter genre aware otaku insert, but thanks to that process of repeatedly dying brutally then coming back to life knowing he has to find a way to avoid the same brutal death again he gains a lot of depth. I like that Re:Zero takes its time to tell its story, that there are multiple repeats per plot point.

Koutetsujou no Kabaneri: an engineer girl with actual muscles?

  1. Koutetsujou no Kabaneri
    Created by the studio behind Attack on Titan this looks a lot like it, with humanity living in ghettos to protect themselves from a supernatural, almost invincible menace. The difference is that a) these are zombies rather than giants, of a particyularly tough sort and b) it’s a steampunk setting, the details of which reminded me a lot of the classic Ghibli movie Monoke Hime. The protagonist is both a genius inventor, inventing a gun that can actually destroy a zombie with one shot, something nobody else can, and an incredible dumbass, which is part of what makes this fun because the show knows he’s an idiot. So far the only thing that bothers me is that this is only scheduled for thirteen episodes, which is nowhere near enough to come to a proper resolution. Onwards to season two?

kiznaiver: sharing pain leads to world peace, right?

  1. Kiznaiver
    Kidnap a group of (anime) high school archetypes and give them wounds that forces them to feel each other’s pain, all in the name of world peace: because if everybody could only feel everybody else’s pain there would no longer be war. A remarkably stupid idea even for anime, but Trigger makes it work. Kiznaiver works best when it focuses on the characters rather than on its supposed plot and it’s their interactions that makes it worth watching. You do wonder why they’re so compliant though; I’d expected more rebellion from at least a few people. Let’s not forget that the people behind the project are at least guilty of unethical medical research, kidnapping and torture.
  2. Kuromukuro
    A high school student is visiting her mother, who is the director of a huge research lab looking into buried alien artifacts discovered sixty years ago, just when the lab comes under attack from a series of mecha. She finds herself being shot at by one of the mecha which had managed to enter the building she was in, only to be saved by a buck naked samurai she just freed from one of the artifacts. an intelligent, well written mecha show which reminded me in feel a bit of Xam’d Memories or Eureka Seven with its cast of competent adults as well as the obligatory high school aged heroes.
  3. Haifuri
    A bit of a bait and switch with this one, as it was billed as a cute girls doing cute things — at sea! Instead it turned out to still be a cute girls doing cute things at sea, but they’re also fighting what seems like a worldwide conspiracy to kill them as they’re falsely accused of mutiny. So muhc of the world building makes no sense: Japan has largely been flooded decades ago to the point that most of the population lives in floating cities, the airplane was never invented and for some reason we have WWII warships crewed by schoolgirls in a history that never had a WWII, while there are also modern warships that look pretty much like their counterparts here, which makes little sense in a world without aircraft. But oh well, it looks cool and that’s what this series runs on. The mixture of slice of life stuff and battle action is well done; it reminded me a bit of KanColle but better.
  4. Netoge no Yome wa Onnanoko ja Nai to Omotta?
    This looked like it was going to be a thrash harem show, but turned out surprisingly thoughtful. Our protagonist was once severily traumatised when the cute girl he proposed in game to said she actually was a middle aged bloke, but has recovered enough to not care about the real gender of the current cute girl he’s married to in game. Then he meets up with her and not only does she turn out to actually be the exact same cute girl she was in game, their two fellow male guild members are also cute girls. And going to his own high school. As do several others. But nothing leads to romance except with the main girl, who is slightly confused about the distinction between game and real life, while he is slightly too rigid in making that distinction. The rest of the series is them attempting to reach a compromise between their two points of view. if I’m honest, I’m more on her side than on his. Great fun and it’s actually funny without resorting to harem anime cliches.
  5. Maiyoga
    Written by Okada Mari, this at first glance looked like a horror series, but pretty soon revealed itself to be more of a horror comedy, just played absolutely straight. Okada Mari supposedly has a reputation for the dramatic and overblown and she uses that reputation here to great effect. Maiyoga is the story of thirty dumbasses who for one reason or another turn their back on society to go on a tour looking for a legendary lost village. When they find it all their deep seated traumas come to the fore. Made even better by a protagonist
  6. Maho Girls Precure
    I’m far more into magical girl shows than any grownup man should be. This is the first Precure series I’m following on a week by week basis and it’s utterly adorable. As per usual you have the two girls, one brainy, one more sporty, with the former being a witch and the latter a normal girl, who together turn out to be the legendary Precure magicians. They have a quest to collect a series of gemstones which the big bad is also looking for. There’s a monster of the week to defeat, which is created by the various mini bosses from ordinary things and usually some sort of mild obstacle for them to overcome in their daily lives as well. Nothing innovative, but the execution is done very well and it’s a relaxing twenty minutes spent each week.
  7. Space Patrol Luluco
    The other Trigger show this season, which is basically a mash note to itself. Short, deliberately crude in the style of Inferno Cop and with lots and lots of guest stars from earlier Trigger series
  8. Tonkatsu DJ Agetaro
    Katsumata Agetarou works at his familys tonkatsu restaurant in Shibuya, but he doesn’t find his work exciting. One day he delivers an order to a dj at one of the night clubs in the area, falls in love with dj-ing and wants to become one himself, especially after he realises that the skills his father teaches him in the restaurant are remarkably similar to what’s needed to dj… A nicely bizarre, deliberately crudely drawn series. Each episode is less than ten minutes long which is just enough to tell a story without getting boring.
  9. Bungo Stray Dogs
    A detective agency filled with superpowered people named after famous Japanese authors, fighting crime and solving mysteries. There are hints of an overall plot but on the whole this is a case of the week series. Storywise it’s meh, but the animation is great.
  10. Sousei no Onmyouji
    Two young exorcists fighting against demons are told to get together and produce the saviour that will finally end the war with the demons. They refuse. Hilarity ensues. A fairly typical shounen battle show, with the male lead having to overcome past trauma that made him reject being an exorcist, while the female lead is the up and coming superstar of their generation. This started out relatively strong, but since then has had far too much filler, with the story moving at a snail’s pace. What keeps it enjoyable is that the two protagonists are given roughly equal screen time and treatment and they mesh well together.
  11. Joker Game
    This looked so much more promising in the previews than it turned out to be. A spy thriller series set in 1937, in the runup to WWII? From a Japanese point of view? That could be interesting if the show takes its setting seriously, in a way that e.g. Alan Furst’s spy thrillers do, with protagonists of ambiguous morality. Japan after all was already engaged in imperialistic warfare in China in 1937 and was ruled by a fascistoid, militaristic regime aiming at achieving hegemony in Asia. Heck, the spy agency’s cover of “Greater East Asia Cultural Society” is of course a reference to the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, so there is some acknowledgement of the morally grey (at best) atmosphere the show should operate in. Unfortunately however it seems to focus more on simple spy stories devoid of much politics, rather than actually engaging with these issues.
  12. Gakusen Toshi Asterisk
    The second season of this is roughly on the same level as the first, but more focused and with fewer harem antics. I blame Digibro for being less able to enjoy it this time around though, as that series of videos he did made me aware of all the series’ flaws I can’t ignore anymore. With three more episodes to go it looks like this is aiming at a third season, unless they resolve things very quickly.
  13. Hundred
    Do you like Infinite Stratos? Would you like to see it again? Than Hundred is the series for you. A decently executed action harem series, which looks and feels remarkably old fashioned in its insistence on comedic falling and grabbing of tits.

Assimilating Our Culture, That’s What They’re Doing!

This particular post was inspired by the following passage from a post on Ideas without End:

Indeed, Bogue and Keith’s quarrel with Freyja is that she is a cultural traitor, someone who abandoned the protected national identity of Windermere to side with the “enemy,” a multicultural force that uses soft power (rather than the most absolute strong power of removing free will) to form an alliance. One can imply the perverse logic behind this; assimilation is the opposite of tolerance, and almost works as a kind of revenge. Windermere would not lose its culture to a human empire that simply absorbed alien races and exported stuff to them, so it turned its culture (right down to its national foodstuffs) into a way of war. It is a Zentradi culture that bothered to have civilians, in a way; a single-minded dedication to the preservation of a culture and the subjugation of enemies, albeit without the “race bred only to fight” aspect.

Because it got me thinking more about Windermere and where they come from in their quest to conquer their part of the galaxy and “free” it from NUNS domination. First, we need some deep background.

Macross Delta: protoculture seeded the Galaxy

We knew from all the way back in the original Macross series that half a million years ago there was a powerful alien civilisation called the Protoculture, who more or less ruled the whole Galaxy, who ended up creating a warrior race, the Zentradi, to wage their wars for them which ultimately got them killed off by the Zentradi. We also got hints that humanity was also either descended from or uplifted by the Protoculture. Now in Macross Delta we’ve learned that they actually seeded a hell of a lot more humanoid races throughout, as explained in the intro to episode seven. Humans, Zentradi, Windermerians, those Voldor cat people from the last two episodes as well as the original inhabitants of Ragna are all Protoculture creations, which explains why everybody more or less looks the same and they can all fuck and interbreed with no difficulties even if their partner was originally a twenty metre high giant before they got miniaturised. It’s an old, old science fiction trope, still used occasionally despite that everybody should know better by now.

Macross Delta: Windermere was the last race uplifted therefore the true heirs of Protoculture

It’s this background that provides part of the Windermerean justification for waging war agains the New United Government. The races in the Brisingr Cluster were the last upraised, so that makes them the natural heirs to the Protoculture and Windermere believes itself to be the natural leader to lead the other races in the Cluster to their natural place at the top of the Galaxy. From everything we’ve seen about Windermere so far we know they’re a proud, aristocratic warrior culture and you can sort of guess about why they rebelled agains the NUG in the first place. They went from isolation to being forcibly introduced to the rest of the Galaxy and Galactic culture in an eyeblink and they couldn’t take it.

Macross Delta: proud warriors but not above proposing warcrimes

Proud warrior races like this tend to be rather doctrinaire in their warfare, prefering honest fighting to the sort of stuff Windermere pulls off: biological warfare and mind control doesn’t really fit with that, even if the mind control is done through their ancient art of wind singing. They’re not just using these methods because they offer the only possible way to defeat the NUG, there also seems to be a disdain for anybody not like them from at least some of the Aerial Knights, which leads to things like the screencap above. Which all sounds more and more familiar the longer I think about it.

A proud warrior people, pulled out of isolation by a technologically far superior civilisation, trust into a modernity it mistrusts, using underhanded ways to gain the first advantage in a war against said civilisation and cloaking its own empire building in terms of liberation their fellow cultures from foreign oppression and leading them into a new dawn? Hmm, what does that remind me off?

Macross Delta 8: biological warfare is freedom

Macross Delta: the villains offer their justifications

So in this episode Walkure and the Windermere Aerial Knights meet for the first time and it’s not a happy meeting, especially for the main trio. Hayate and Mirage get beaten up, Freyja almost is executed on the spot and worse they have to listen to Bogue –the red haired short tempered one– monologuing. Whether or not Windermere is justified in its actions, it’s clear that he at least has swallowed the justificatiosn hook, line and sinker. One does wonder about liberation needing biological warfare and permanent mind control though.

Macross Delta: Freyja does not understand

Certainly Freyja isn’t convinced. Anybody who can abuse her precious apples to wage war is by definition wrong. She got a lot of abuse these past three episodes from the Windermerians for her supposed treason but in the end none of it stuck. And why should it? She hasn’t done anything wrong, she just wanted to sing and help rid the galaxy from a dreadful disease. A disease that turned out to be engineered by her own people in order to subjugate other planets. To be honest, so far Windermere hasn’t really managed to give any convincing explanation as to why they shouldn’t be seen as pure villains, the individual nobility of some of the Knights notwithstanding — I hope they get at least a little bit more real justification later on.

Macross Delta: Mirage to the rescue

This was once again a Freyja/Hayate centered episode, with Mirage reduced to a bystander for most of it, though she did get her one moment to shine early on. She’d managed to hang on to a flash bang grenade as they’d been disarmed by the red haired idiot and as Hayate deliberately taunts him to get him to overreact, she quickly throws it but as they attempt to escape they’re as quickly beaten down by the other Aerial Knights. It’s a remarkable effective scene for showing how far Hayate and Mirage have come to understand and trust each other. Rather unfortunate that like so much else Mirage tries, it doesn’t work.

Macross Delta: of course Hayate and Freyja synchronise

Best couple is not surprised to see Hayate synchronise with Freyja during the end of the episode fight against the Aerial Knights as she sings to free a brain washed pilot from his enslavement and he duels with Bogue — poor old Mirage again reduced to bystander. Hayate and Freyja fit together well because their philsophy is so similar: she sings to save people and he is careful to shoot enemy Valkyries in the legs rather than kill them. Macross in general has always been wary of seeking military solutions in conflict and this fits in well with that philosophy of looking for alternate ways to resolve conflicts.

Macross Delta: have a care for your poor fansubbers

Finally, spare a thought for the hardworking people who bring you fansubs and how difficult it is to translate songs being sung on a battlefield — even if much of the first new song was in English. Without them, we wouldn’t be able to enjoy Macross Delta at all as the licensing rights are still fscked up thanks to the whole Robotech fiasco. However, the Japanese Bluerays come with English subs so if you want the option to directly support the series, it’ll be there.

Macross Delta 7: Best Couple spotlight

Macross Delta: gay hacking with Reina and Makina

So we open the infiltration mission with a pre-opening song gay hacking scene featuring the series’ best couple, Reina and Makina. I know I’ve been hammering a lot on this, but I can’t help but like how the show portrays their relationship through little scenes like this. Reina’s first hacking attempt on the defence network fails, so Makina leans in and offers a hand before the two make the Walkure sign together, flipping off the viewer in the process. It shows how much they trust and like each other without you needing to be told this directly.

Macross Delta: Rei Rei is a cute kitty

The planet Voldor is populated with cat people, so that means dressing up with cat ears and lots and lost of nyanderful puns. Of course it would be Mirage who wants to spoil everybody’s fun, but it’s impawssible. You do have to wonder why the Walkure team would be sent in to infiltrate this supposedly not very strategic planet, but if it was logical it wouldn’t be Macross. And anyway, who cares when Best Couple is cosplaying cat girls?

Macross Delta: water and oil

We got a bit of their back story this time as well as to how their relationship got started. Guess what? It didn’t start out well, with them fighting to the point that Walkure had to cancel shows because of it. The picture says it all. There’s Kaname, Walkure’s leader, explaining how the two used to be oil and water, while the sexual tension comes through in the song lyrics even as they stand facing away from each other, arms crossed but one eye still on the other. You can feel their story from that one brief cut — and I do hope we’ll at least get an OVA out of the beginnings of Walkure at some point.

Macross Delta: Freyja loves them apples

Plotwise not much else is of importance. The main characters are fairly useless throughout, Best Couple gets to showcase their gay hacking skills twice, while singing two different new songs and Freyja still has the best reaction faces in all of Macross. So much so that it’s difficult to choose just one to show. A setup episode if there ever was one. One thing that has been constantly missing so far has been Mirage taking the spotlight, so I hope that will change next episode, when the main three are left on their own.