Premiere Impressions – Hinomaru Sumo

A very effective prologue for the tale of a sport that hasn’t gotten its due in a long time.

The setup here is nothing new, but as always, it’s all in the execution. A good sports show needs three things at the beginning.

1) A likeable protagonist. (This is where I feel that Ace of Diamond fails out of the gate.) Hinomaru falls squarely into the time-honored hot blooded redhead archetype, and honestly, it’s not broken, so why fix it?

2) An established rival. Here we have a squad of delinquents with a silver-haired leader who loses badly to Hinomaru and will inevitably come back to challenge him again, even if he joins the team.

3) A twist. Hinomaru shares one with Haikyu’s Hinata; they’re both very short, but Hinomaru is literally too short to be considered for professional sumo, so he has a hurdle to overcome by proving himself.

I’m happy to say that not only does Hinomaru check all three boxes, it’s also already been confirmed for a full two-cour runtime, meaning we should hopefully get enough time for a satisfying and inevitable tournament arc with some sort of resolution. Because of the subject, Hinomaru Sumo is inevitably going to be under-watched outside Japan, but I’m here to say that missing it would be a lot of wasted fun.

Premiere Impressions – Bloom Into You

This is all very, very gay, and I’m living for it.

After NTR, after Citrus, finally we have an honest-to-God, heartwarming yuri romance that doesn’t have to involve questions of consent, and I am just so very ready for it. Studio TROYCA is also continuing its streak here of fantastic-looking productions (barring perhaps IDOLISH7, which I have yet to sit down and finish).

The setup is actually pretty clever, too, as it steals the traditional slice-of-life scenario of an indecisive girl getting dragged into a club she wasn’t particularly interested in. In this case, though, what she finds is a group of mostly rational, normal people just doing their jobs and drinking tea. It’s weirdly refreshing to see a student council that’s exactly what they would be in real life, minus the fact that you have to walk through a forest to reach the club room.

I quite like our couple, too. They’re not particularly out there, but I’m very much ready for a depiction of an average high school lesbian romance, with all the confusion and awkwardness that goes along with that.

The one thing I’m kind of concerned about is the backpedal near the end of the episode, right after the climax. It makes it seem a little cheap to come right up to the line of a love confession and then just have someone declare that they weren’t really sure what they were doing and just take back the whole interaction. But it also isn’t exactly uncommon in immature romances like this one, so I’ll let it slide.

HIDIVE just needs to champion this over all its other shows this season and maybe it can turn its bad habit of backing the wrong horse around!

Premiere Impressions – Zombieland Saga

This show is crazy and it absolutely wants you to know that.

I mean, for goodness’ sake, it’s a show about death metal zombie idols where the manager is a necromancer actively refusing not to explain anything; I’ve certainly never seen anything like it. (By the way, just to clear something up, the “Saga” doesn’t necessarily refer to an epic story; the story takes place in Saga Prefecture.)

Just watch it; the less you know going in, the better your reaction here will be to the sheer insanity on display. I loved every second of this premiere.

Premiere Impressions – Run with the Wind

If I can’t have more Haikyu! yet, I’ll take this for sure.

I feel like it’s been forever since we’ve had a Production I.G. TV series, but they always come busting in with crazy good animation to make everyone else look bad. This first episode just looks amazing, and if we’re to see a lot of running in the near future, hopefully it looks better than Prince of Stride Alternative (dunno how Madhouse managed to screw that up!).

We have a pretty typical but still funny setup – in his desire to form a track team, a university student has convinced nine other boys of similar age to move into a strangely convenient apartment building where two meals are served and the rent is only $300…because it’s actually the dorm for the Kansai University track team, and their rental agreements are also club commitments, and he wants very badly to run again.

Our cast is already shaping up nicely, with ten distinct pretty boys and a lot (a lot) of shipping potential. The first episode just lets each of them run with one personality trait each, and with such a big introduction, that’s fine for now, and we can safely assume they’ll each be getting a spotlight in future episodes. (Hey, it’ll be easier to deal with than iDOLM@STER Side M, where there were almost twice as many characters as there were episodes.) I’m really looking forward to seeing how this plays out.

My one worry, though, is the director, who has a long history of working as Episode Director and Storyboarder as is common, but whose most recent television director gig was Joker Game.

Basically, please, don’t let this be Joker Game.

Premiere Impressions – RErideD – Derrida, who leaps through time

What a way to start Fall!

Surprise! Out of nowhere, four episodes of a brand new show premiere early on Crunchyroll before the season even starts, and while I was initially worried about what that might mean for the quality of this show, my fears were totally unfounded. RErideD is already shaping up to be something great.

We haven’t seen a decent science fiction story in a while with a tone like this – very dour and grounded, yet with a fantastical element. The ill-fated KADO had a cube with an alien inside, and here, we have time travel and the robot apocalypse, which of course is brought on purely by greed. I don’t consider that a spoiler since it’s obvious from the beginning that that’s where things are going, but let me summarize this episode anyway, because a lot happens in it.

1) A researcher discovers a fatal bug in his automated robots that activates when they are deployed en masse in combat.

2) He goes to his boss with this information, and his boss rejects his request to recall so that a patch can be implemented.

3) Said researcher retreats from work and goes to visit his old friend for said friend’s daughter’s birthday, for which he gives her flowers.

4) The daughter confronts him about giving up on researching time jumping, and he tells her it’s impossible.

5) Later that night, the researcher finds out his friend’s daughter has been hospitalized due to some sort of accident related to her own time travel experiment.

6) Even later, the researcher’s friend calls him and tells him to get his shit together because his boss is trying to hunt him down and kill him for discovering the bug.

7) The two get into a car accident that traps the friend and gets him killed by the boss and his hit squad, and the researcher flees on foot.

8) The researcher stumbles into a strange facility and, without thinking, steps into a cryo chamber without setting a time limit on it. While he is frozen, a woman (I’m guessing the friend’s daughter) visits him and places a pocket watch where he’ll find it when he wakes up.

9) The researcher awakens and steps outside in the future, where the city he knew has been destroyed by the robots he created after the bug caused them to turn on the human population.

It’s a lot for a premiere, but it sets up a ton of potential going forward, and the direction keeps up, especially once night falls and we get a ton of emotionally-lit, dramatic shots (I’m very fond of the aesthetic of snow falling at night…).

Basically, this has me pumped.

First Impressions – Grand Blue Dreaming

What an amazing bait and switch.

This chill-looking “diving” show has turned out to be a screwball meme-comedy sure to launch a thousand GIFs. This is the kind of absolute nonsense that I’m totally down for.

The main characters are all adults, too, so I don’t feel particularly ashamed of ogling the insane number of hot bara guys that spend nearly this entire episode with absolutely nothing on. If you thought Free! was shameless with its fanservice, you haven’t seen anything yet, but the reason it works for me is because the characters involved are totally okay with being in the buff for pretty much no reason. 

And the adult comedy is hilarious. The fact that the nudity in the show is played for laughs makes it work pretty much all on its own as the show sells it over and over, along with an extended sequence of alcohol jokes that aim this show pretty squarely for the adult crowd.

So, uh, yeah. I won’t pretend I like this show for purely intellectual reasons, but it’s doing pretty much everything I can think of correctly, so we’ll see if it holds up.

First Impressions – Angolmois: Record of Mongol Invasion

Two words: Bad. Ass.

We’ve got a lot of action shows this season. In addition to the previously mentioned Planet With and Banana Fish, we have the thus-far unlicensed Sirius the Jaeger (which I’m looking forward to after the P.V. was previewed at Anime Central), and third seasons of both Overlord and Attack on Titan (neither of which I’ll be covering since I haven’t watched either of those shows), along with the garbage like Lord of Vermilion, and if you stretch it, Thousand Musketeers, Demon Lord, and Master of Ragnarok.

But, uh, this one was freaking awesome.

It’s a lot more conventional than Planet With and Banana Fish, but the visuals here are easily enough to sell this show on their own. The character designs are distinctive despite most of the characters wearing the same thing, the guys are attractive in a dangerous, crazy kind of way, and the ancient-parchment filter the creators went with just ties it all together and makes it look much more polished than it actually is. Oh, and the fight choreography is amazing even though it isn’t fluidly animated.

And the story is no slouch here. We get a cast of criminals who aren’t out for redemption, but for blood, and a very interesting protagonist in Jinzaburou, who wouldn’t be at all out of place in Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure. We don’t know what he did to deserve exile (even he thinks he should have received much worse punishment), but his personality goes from zero to a hundred as soon as he’s put into battle, carrying some heavy implications, and other characters say that he’s famous for something even though he denies it. I’m really looking forward to seeing where this goes.

First Impressions – Banana Fish

What a strange show.

It’s an American mob story, something we haven’t seen in a few years, but unlike 91 Days, this one takes place in the modern day (having been updated from its original setting in the eighties) though they do seem to share the trait of having two protagonists. Time will tell if they subtextually fall for each other.

I liked this one, but it left me with a few curiosities, the first being why the show is paced this way. It’s almost too fast to keep up with, reminding me of the Baz Luhrmann Great Gatsby movie, where because nothing ever gets a moment to land, we don’t get a sense of gravity for almost anything that happens. Banana Fish is based upon a 19-volume manga, and based on this first episode, it almost looks like they’re gonna try and adapt the whole thing in just 22 episodes (being a Noitamina show), so if by episode 3 this becomes exhausting to watch, I’m probably just not going to bother.

And it’s a shame, because the other curiosity is the director for the project – one of the first things I noticed were the striking camera angles that immediately made me want to know who was helming this, and surprise, it’s Hiroko Utsumi, who apparently jumped from Kyoto Animation just for this opportunity. This baffles the hell out of me, considering she was the director of Free! and its sequel, though not the films, so she may have been off the franchise for a while. Still, it’s a shame to lose her for the third season.

Banana Fish looks like a modern Mappa show usually does; okay character designs behind great color composition and stylized well enough that you don’t notice the choppier animation. Beyond the already-mentioned camera instinct, I don’t have much to say on the production end.

One last strange thing about this adaptation, though, is some of the language used. I understand the story was written in the eighties, but hearing or seeing any modern work use the word “fag” as a serious insult is just so cringy these days, and not because I myself am a gay man. Terrible writing in shows like Glee have just completely robbed the word of meaning by acting like kids still say it constantly, when in most of America, the only time it gets thrown around is by actual gay kids making jokes about themselves. Amazon’s translators haven’t really been known for nuance, but this seems like something that should have been changed by the production team, and shouldn’t have gotten put in the show to begin with. Just sayin’.

Update @8:30PM: Edited to fix a few minor errors.

Quick First Impressions – Seven Senses of the Re’union

I’m really happy that we’ve transitioned from people getting trapped in games, to people playing them.

That being said, this was enjoyable, but I’m not sure I understand the extent of the early praise. The story is different for the genre, but it’s not necessarily anything really new, and one of the upcoming twists is pretty easy to see coming (the whole good-players-get-jobs thing is pretty much a staple trap for science fiction, most famously used in Ender’s Game, particularly since only players with certain abilities are even able to play the game to begin with).

That being said, I’m still frustrated with narratives about games by people who don’t really understand things about games (Log Horizon has me pretty spoiled here), because a lot of mechanics don’t really make sense (like Asahi’s Xenoblade-style future sight, which should make these kids pretty much unstoppable), and I’m still bothered by the concept of characters getting well-known nicknames just for having abilities that most max-level players would have. Additionally, the idea that MMO players would turn down an event quest with potentially unique rewards just for being a low-level quest almost made me laugh out loud.

But the hook works, and if we get some interesting plot movement in the next two episodes, it’ll probably be enough to get me to stick with it.

Quick First Impressions – Happy Sugar Life

Hoo boy, this one is complicated.

Okay, so this one is definitely not gonna be “quick” (and I’m thinking of renaming this column in the future as I’ve had a lot more to say lately), so if it’s tl;dr, I completely understand. This show is not gonna sit well with everyone who doesn’t go into it with full context, and that involves a really heavy introduction.

I’ll start with something you’re probably all familiar with, the concept of “moe”. An exact definition has never really existed, but in recent years the term has essentially come to mean something cute that should be protected. It isn’t inherently sexual but can become so depending on the person experiencing it, and quite often the target of this concept is a young girl, since they’re depicted fairly often in anime in normal circumstances (see Kanna from Maid Dragon, Tsumugi from Sweetness & Lightning, etc.)

Last year, we saw the airing of a show by the name of Angel’s 3Piece!, which spent its first episode setting up a charming plot about a music producer who gets approached by an elementary-aged band of girls wanting his help producing a song for them, until the final minute of the episode where it takes a heavy swerve from “playful innocence” to overtly sexualizing six year old girls by having them offer their bodies to the protagonist in exchange for his help. The important thing to keep in mind here was the framing of this moment. It might have been a little uncomfortable but ultimately salvageable if it had been played as a joke, but instead, it crosses the line by being played completely seriously. Even if the protagonist refuses (which I don’t know the answer to, because there was no way I was going back to find out), the tone has been irreversibly set as a show that is absolutely going to pander to men who are explicitly attracted to little girls, and there is no possible way to change that.

The other problem was perhaps a little more clear to people who don’t overanalyze things the way that I do, and that’s context. In this scene, the protagonist is not really active in the crucial moment. All on their own, these three actual children have decided (somehow) that offering sex with no prompting whatsoever is the best way to get what they want. Rather than the protagonist sexualizing these girls, it’s themselves, followed by the camera (very deliberately, just so we know this is meant to be taken seriously) and by extension the viewer.

This is sort of an inversion or deconstruction of moe, but since the project pretty clearly had no intention of following through on that idea (which is fine, we got Made in Abyss to do that pretty thoroughly), I washed my hands of it, called it a waste of time, and gave it a 1/10.

Now, finally, let’s talk about Happy Sugar Life.

Over this pretty excellent slow burn of a premiere, we learn a few things, and this one I have to spoil in order to talk about, but lucky for me the dark turn is clearly going to happen from the start, so I feel I can discuss in-depth what’s happening.

We have our protagonist, Satou, who looks like a high-schooler (and is the correct age) but we don’t see her in school, only ever at home or at work (a maid cafe), despite the fact that she almost always is seen wearing what looks like a school uniform. She rejects a boy’s advances (who then immediately insults and objectifies her to his friends, not that she seems to care at all), and tells him her heart belongs to someone else. We very quickly learn whom – a girl named Shio, who looks to be about half her age.

Woah. Slam on the brakes, because if you don’t really get it, this is gonna instantly make you never wanna touch this one again, like how I feel about 3Piece.

We see the two of them interact a lot in this episode, but there are important things to take note of, the first being that at no point in this premiere does it directly paint Satou as a good person who is making good decisions. From the very beginning, we see the creeping shadow of coldness in her heart that only dissipates when she is around Shio, and this girl is pretty much the only thing she thinks about, ever. This is framed correctly as a red flag in-universe.

The second thing is that we don’t see Satou sexualizing Shio, at all. (There is a scene of them in the bath together, but this is a much more common thing for families to do together in Japan to begin with than it is in the States.) Indeed, her entire outlook on love seems to paint it as almost completely nonsexual. She isn’t innocent by a long shot, but more along the lines of a complete separation of the ideas of love and sex where the two never, ever mix.

My point boils down to the fact that this is one of the most intentional deconstructions of moe I have ever seen.

Because make no mistake, this is indeed what she’s feeling for Shio, with the caveat that it’s being projected onto a real girl and not an anime waifu, and that she has taken things way, way too far. We never ever see Shio leave the apartment they share, and at the end of the episode, we see why: Satou has kidnapped her from her parents.

Just that one in-universe justification for this story premise tells me that what we’re seeing is indeed supposed to be a poor situation, despite the apparent bliss of the two involved people. I assume we’ll find out why Shio is so attached to her kidnapper, what her parents are like, and why Satou decided to do this in the first place, but the other important justification is one you might not even think about until the end of the episode – if Satou is so desperate for money so she can take care of Shio, how does she afford their nice apartment?

At some point in the recent past, she murdered the owners and chopped them up to fit in trash bags, Dahmer-style.

Happy Sugar Life, in its creepy slow burn, is a way more effective horror story than Angels of Death. This is the kind of idea you’d see in a Stephen King novel, and I’m really excited to watch it play out. I really hope the show can keep this tightrope act of craziness going, and I really hope I’m correct that Satou doesn’t see Shio sexually, because this is one of the best premieres I’ve seen in a long, long time.