Watching too much slice of moe

The real world may have been a scary and distressing place this year, but in anime 2018 was remarkably cozy.

Yuru Camp: Secret Society BLANKET spreads its influence further

This was a good year for slice of moe series, those shows that focus on the everyday life of usually high school girls (rarely high school boys). When I first started watching seasonal anime a few years ago and started watching everything I assumed these series were made for girls, because that’s what you expect from shows populated almost exclusively with women, don’t you, coming from a western perspective? Anime fandom however quickly made it clear that all those “moeblob shows” were aimed at gross otaku manchildren and you shouldn’t admit too loudly to watching them. Luckily that view is slowly changing as more people lose their hangups about what counts as respectable anime. For me this sort of show probably fuctions like a sort of ersatz emotional labour, getting to relax and unwind by watching anime girls going camping or cheerleading or even going on a trip to Antarctica.

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho: penguin love

Sora yori mo Tooi Basho was not just the best slice of moe show this year, but immediately became my favourite anime of the year and despite stiff competition, hasn’t shifted from that spot. What started out as a light hearted adventure about a girl who realises she never had a big dream and she’s already in her second year in high school in the end turned into a study in grief and processing it. Watching it week by week was cathartic, leaving me on the verge of tears almost every episode. For obvious reasons female friendship is a theme in most slice of moe series, but it’s rarely done as convincingly as it was done here, with four girls at first united only by their desire to go to Antarctica becoming close friends over the course of the series, growing up week by week as they tackled the challenges thrown at them. Such a female centered coming of age story is rare and one told as well as this, even rarer. It was also incredibly funny, which is always a bonus.

Winter 2018 was in any case a strong season for slice of moe shows. Besides Yorimoi there was Ramen Daisuki Koizumi-san, about a girl who loves eating ramen and her friend/stalker who loves her very much, Mitsuboshi Colors, about three elementary school girls/shitlords playing around and bullying their local police officer, Slow Start, about a girl who had to skip a year between middle and high school and is terrified people might find out and Hakumei to Mikochi, two literal little women being only a few centimers tall living together in a magical world. But the best of them all was Yuru Camp. Incredibly well animated as you can see above, funny, but above all warm and cozy. You have this one girl who likes being on her own, going on solo camping trips meeting another girl, energetic and outgoing who becomes her friend and also takes up camping, joining their local school’s outdoors club. And where most series would’ve the first girl join as well, this never happens in Yuru Camp: her desire to be left alone from time to time is completely respected. Instead you get a much more realistic view of friendship, where not all the characters are friends, but some are friends of friends, people you’re friendly to but not necessarily are friends with. It was great seeing the friendship and perhaps something more bloom up between the two main characters and all the camping related stuff was fun and reminded me of going camping myself.

The rest of 2018 was less strong, but there were still a few standout shows. Comic Girls was a show about an anxiety ridden high school mangaka who on the suggestion of her editor starts living in a dorm with three other high school mangaka. Equally insecure and thirsty, Kaos was actually a thinly disguised, hopefully exaggerated version of the original manga’s creator. Most of the show was well animated, fluffy fun as expected from a Manga Time Kirara adaptation, but Kaos’s anxiety is handled seriously even when it’s the source of much of the humour in the series. The same goes for the attraction Kaos has for one of her dorm mates: she’s incredibly thirsty about it, but that attraction itself is never ridiculed. It’s this hidden seriousness that makes this a better series than something like Slow Start, which may seem very similar at first blush. Not that the latter is bad, it just misses some of the bite of Comic Girls.

Another standout this year was the third season of Yama no Susume, the half length anime about school girls going mountaineering. In the previous season they had tried to climb Mount Fuji, but our main protagonist,Yukimura Aoi, failed; this season was all about preparing to try again, probably next season. What also drove this season was that her best friend Kuraue Hinata was getting jealous of the new friends she made climbing mountains. It had been Hinata who’d introduced Aoi to the sport in an attempt to draw her out of her shell, but now that she was becoming less shy and actually making friends without her, Hinata became a bit jealous, feeling left out. As you can see from the clip, you don’t need narration to understand something is going on between these friends. That’s always been the greatest strength of Yama no Susume, its incredible character animation and gorgeous scenery.

On the other end of the spectrum we have a series like Anima Yell!, another Manga Time Kirara four panel manga adaptation, with decidedly ‘cheap’ animation, proably because the studio responsible, Doga Kobo, was also busy with a higher profile series the same season. Even a showcase set piece like the clip above isn’t as good a similar clip from any of the series mentioned here. There are a lot of static shots, lots of talking heads and other less obvious ‘cheats’ to simplify the animation. It also lacks some of the depth of the other series, this is based on a four panel gag manga after all and in the first episode especially you could almost see the panels. As such it’s arguable a much more representavive example of a slice of moe series than something like Yuru Camp or Yorimoi. But, it’s a fun series with fun characters, a bit of yuribaiting and it was one of the series I’d always watch first the day it came out. And that’s the real strength of slice of moe shows; they’re almost always a fun time, something bright to look forward to each week even when you don’t have enough energy for something more demanding.

This is the tenth post in this year’s twelve days of anime challenge. Tomorrow: Watching too many kids shows.

Slow Start — the slow burn of forbidden love

We’ve all been there.

Slow Start: waking up hungover is always awful

It’s a school night and you’ve let yourself be tempted to go out for a few drinks with a co-worker or friend after work. Because you can’t actually hold your drink all that well, the one or two beers you drunk are enough to make you blotto and you have to be brought home by someone. So the next morning you wake up on the couch with a terrible hangover, not knowing quite how you got home. As you slowly wake up, you idly look around your apartment and realise you barely remember anything from the previous night. You don’t even remember bringing your student home with you, let alone why you tied her up.

Slow Start: Eiko is tied up

Slow Start episode 7 was …interesting. In a season with quite a few outstanding slice of moe series, Slow Start was looking a bit lost, a perfectly competent adaptation of yet another Manga Time Kirara series but offering nothing not seen before. Apart perhaps from slightly more overt yuri content. Throughout the series so far the girl tied up above has been shown to be very affectionate with another one of the main cast, her childhood friend who had barely grown since she last saw her in elementary school. Eiko herself meanwhile being one of those cool beauties that has a girlfriend in every class. All of which is as expected until this episode, when she was the focus character for once and it turned out she was heavily into their home room teacher, the poor woman who woke up to find Eiko tied up in her living room.

Slow Start: Eiko is a bit masochistic

Earlier in the episode Eiko is celebrating her birthday in class, with all her classmates having given her hair pins. When the teacher shows up, Kiyose teases Eiko a bit about her many many hair pins before putting one in herself: a paperclip. As Eiko and the rest of the main cast discuss all this, she lets it slip that Kiyose is her type exactly: cold and a bit overbearing. She certaintly likes to flirt with her, as the episode shows, with Kiyose not exactly playing along or encouraging her, but still having a natural rapport with Eiko. In the safe world of a slice of moe yuri baiting series all this is very cute.

Slow Start: Eiko is my student

Nevertheless I’m not sure I’d be onboard if the series does anything more with it. There was a strange seriousness to this episode, almost as if it was intended to be romantic rather than comedy, an erotic undercurrent (what with the needless tying up of Eiko) out of place in a series like this. There’s nothing wrong with Eiko having a crush on her teacher, or trying to flirt with her and test her boundaries that way, but the show as a whole seems to root for her and that’s a bit iffy. Student/teacher romances are always a no-no no matter if it’s yuri or not: too much of an age and power difference to be healthy. Which is a pity because the flirting between these two is really nice. Eiko is light hearted and teasing, Kiyose has an innate ability to just say or do exactly the right thing to melt Eiko in a puddle of embarassement. I could cheer them on if only they weren’t student and teacher. Luckily even when drunk Kiyose still remembers Eiko is her student; she does nothing to encourage her. I like Slow Start, so I hope it’ll be back to normal next week and the flirting just becomes a running gag again rather than the way too intense forbidden love it wanted to be this episode.