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.

Winter 2018 anime roundup

Winter 2018: cosy as fuck.

Yuru Camp: Secret Society BLANKET spreads its influence further

The two best series this season for me were Sora yori mo Tooi Basho, which shouldn’t surprise anybody reading this, and his, Yuru Camp, which was the coziest of all the super cozy shows this season. It was great to have so many great shows that you could wrap around yourself like a comfy blanket during the bleakest months of the year, when Christmas is just a memory and spring is still so far away. These two shows especially were a great antidote against the winter blues, but there were others.

Mitsuboshi Colors: kill the police (with rocket launchers)

Mitsuboshi Colors was another highlight of the season, a show about three little girls protecting their home town, getting up to mischief and shouting poop a lot. Well, only one of them does to be honest. Coming out on Sundays as it did, this was always a good way to end the weekend. I find myself not laughing at most anime humour, but this series made me laugh out loud multiple times each episode. It’s not just that it has good jokes, it’s that the jokes flow naturally from who those girls are: the crybaby, somewhat anxious leader, the cheerful, energetic poop shouter and the always gaming brainy of the three, who’s actually bad at gaming. They get into those huge adventures based on complete misunderstandings that’s very much like how real kids that age think.

Kokkoku: the importance of family

Kokkoku is not cozy at all, but a supernatural horror thriller. It’s the best of all the edgy thriller series —Killing Bites, Hakata Tonkotsu Ramens, Garo— that ran this season, but what makes it special is the protagonist. Yukawa Juri is a graduate looking for a job at the start of the series, fed up with her hopeless family. Said family is an unicum in anime, being a multigeneral, working class family when most anime families are comfortably middle class at worst. Her father is unemployed and has given up looking for a job, her mother works as does her older sister, who is also a single mother, having gotten pregnant with no intention to marry the father. Her brother is a NEET while her living in with them grandfather is retired and the most sensible of the adult men. Which leaves her nephew, who is described as the last hope for the family. So when he’s kidnapped and they have only an hour to get the ransom money, granddad bust out the family secret: the ability to stop time. It’s mostly Juri and her granddad taking the initiative and Juri especially grows through the fight to save her nephew, in the process bonding closer with her family. It’s not perfect, because it has a shitty, fanservice ending theme that has nothing to do with the actual show and the first few episodes are filled with random thugs threatening to rape Juri if they catch her, but its good points outweighted the bad for me. And the opening is crazy good.

Koi wa Ameagari no You ni: Tachibana Akira

You may be forgiven for having skipped Koi wa Ameagari no You ni as it seemed to be about the one side love of this girl, Tachibana Akira for her fortyfive year old manager at the family restaurant she works for part time. Throughout the series there was this anxiety that this crush would morph into a genuine romance between the two, that it would become creepy propaganda for the idea that it’s perfectly normal for a fortyfive year old man to have a relationship with a teenager, not to mention he’s her boss too. Luckily though it never did; instead this was a story about two broken people finding some level of support in each other and getting their lives back on track. Akira herself had an achilles heel injury that stopped her from running track, getting to grips with her injury and the possibility of getting back to running, while her manager, Masami Kondou, used to be a writer in college and one of his friends is actually a succesful author, so he has to deal with his frustrations and regrets in not being able to do the same. Though the story is nominally about Akira, it’s actually Kondou whosee development is centered the most. A somebody who has been thirtytwo for a while now, I can appreciate this.

Hakumei to Mikochi: so too a couple

Despite being disappointed in the series vehement denial that its two main characters are a couple, I really liked Hakumei to Mikochi. There was something very comforting in watching the small adventures of these little (nine centimetres) women every Friday afternoon after work had finished for the week. The world they live in is one of grumpy construction foreman weasels and moe beetles wanting to see what life in the big city is like, where there are steam trains but no electric lights, a sort of non-distinct past of just enough technology to be cozy. It’s the perfect series to relax with.

There are many more anime I’ve watched this season and liked, but these are my top five of the season, other than Sora yori mo Tooi Basho.

Camping and friendship with Yuru Camp

Farewell to the coziest anime of the season. I really hope Yuru Camp will get a second season.

Yuru Camp: waiting for breakfast

This was my second favourite anime of the season, after Sora yori mo Tooi Basho. It captured the experience of low tech camping perfectly, as far as my own experience going camping can tell. Especially the last episode reminded me of when I went camping at the Clarecraft Discworld Events, in a field somewhere in the darkest interior of Suffolk around the turn of the millennium, though there wasn’t a hot spring nearby then. No, we had to make do with just two toilets and a cold water tap. But it was the first time I saw the Milky Way and a sky that had more than a few dozen stars struggling against Dutch light pollution. Seeing the girls standing around the breakfast table at some ungodly hour I can almost feel the cold myself.

Yuru Camp: taking a picture

Being faithful to the reality of camping is one thing, but what really sets Yuru Camp apart is friendship, which it does differently from most slice of moe/four girls start a school club together series. Usually, you either have a group of girls who are already friends, or there’s one central figure that all the friendships revolve around. Not so in Yuru Camp. Rin (second left) and Saitou (far left) are already friends when the series start, but quite content to do things on their own. They know the Outdoors Club duo, Chiaki (second right) and Aoi (far right) from school, but they’re acquaintances rather than friends. Rin grows somewhat closer over the course of the series, but she doesn’t join the club — nor does Saitou — and they remain some what casual friends.

Yuru Camp: friendship

Nadeshiko functions as the catalyst that brings this group together. She meets Rin in the first episode, but doesn’t immediately become friends with her. Instead she joins the Outdoor club and easily does become friends with those two. Once she runs into Rin at school again, that’s when she becomes friends with her as well and at least on nodding terms with Saitou. She’s the type who wants all her friends to meet and become friends with each other too, but she isn’t the central figure in the other girls’ friendships with each other.

Yuru Camp: solo camping and social media

When the series started, we met Rin as somebody who’d rather go solo camping than with friends, contrasted to the far more outgoing Nadeshiko, teaming up with the Outdoors club. The usual course of things would see Rin mellow out, join the club and discover the joys of communal camping. But this didn’t happen: the epilogue in fact sees Nadeshiko try a bit of solo camping herself. That’s what I like about the series, that it respects everybody’s way of camping, rather than having one true way of it. And it’s fitting that it ends with Rin and Nadeshiko meeting up one final time, each having gone solo camping to the same spot where they met in episode one. It confirms the bond they have.

Yuru Camp — First Impressions

A girl goes solo camping at the foot of Mount Fuji and could’ve saved herself a lot of trouble had she woken up this idiot the first time she saw her sleeping at the toilet building:

Yuru Camp: do not let sleeping girls lie

The plot is simple: Shima Rin is a short, quiet high school girl who likes to go on solo camping expeditions around the region she lives in, near Mount Fuji. After a short prologue/flashforward, we follow Rin as she bikes to the camp ground while the opening credits roll. Afterwards she sets up camp, gathers fire wood –during which I learned that pine cones make great fire starters — and settles in for the day. The main appeal of this first half of the show is watching the competence with which Rin accomplishes her tasks, not to mention the scenery porn. I was less sure about the educational voice over during the firewood gathering segment, having a male narrator explaining everything, rather than Rin herself.

The second half of the episode shifts into comedy, as Rin rescues Kagamihara Nadeshiko, the girl she saw sleeping at the toilet building when she arrived at the camp site. Nadeshiko overslept, now found it too dark to bike back home and to make things worse forget her mobile phone; nor could she remember her own phone number when Rin offered her own phone to use. Worse, she’s so hungry her stomach rumbles, which Rin solves with instant ramen. What follows is a ramen eating scene that should make the creative staff behind Ramen Daisuki Koizumi-san wonder why they even bothered. The animation in general is fluid and graceful, a step above expectations for a series like this. Combined with Sora yori mo Tooi Basho, this seems a strong season for slice of moe shows.

Yuru Camp: Nadeshiko and Rin

Character wise, Rin as the quietly competent, stoic one and Nadeshiko as the outgoing, cheerful, slightly goofy one are familiar archetypes familiar from dozens of other slice of moe series, but the difference is in the execution. As with the animation, there’s attention to detail paid that make Rin and Nadeshiko into their own characters, rather than stereotypes. They mesh well together, Nadeshiko drawing Rin out a bit more while the latter is amused by Nadeshiko’s exuberance. So far, this is a series that hits all my buttons for a slice of moe show: interesting characters, an interesting setting and concept to build the show around (rather than just some nebulous school club), all done better than it needed to be.


(Video above courtesy of Sakugabooru.)