Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid has been in hangout comedy mode for several weeks now, paying just as much attention to its supporting players as either of the characters in the title. I love when TV shows spread the wealth between cast members, but not all of Maidragon’s are created equal. I’m all Lucoa’d out, for instance, and the show hasn’t offered a lot of worthwhile societal commentary to offset her recent prominence. It feels like chapters are being adapted hunt-and-peck style, rather than being grouped into episodes by theme (an area where the series has excelled in the past). So, with each miniature story feeling so disjointed, and the show not generating much food for thought as of late, it’s time for a lazy Kaguya-style ranking of the six segments from Maidragon’s past two episodes. Gotta bang this post out somehow, man.
Category: Finished Series: Slice of Life/Drama
Kobayashi-san Chi no Maidragon S – 5-6
It can be easy to forget just how big Dragon Maid’s cast is, since a lot of its supporting members are pretty one-note, but these two episodes did a great job of checking in with (nearly) all of them. Some of those check-ins were better than others, though, particularly the imaginative and revelatory trip down Tohru and Elma’s shared memory lane. I think I mentioned this earlier in my coverage of the series, but I’ve never paid much attention to its lore, so it’s possible that we already knew about this chapter of their lives and this episode merely gave us a longer look. Whether it was brand new or a simple expansion, the beautiful Middle Eastern setting gave the dragons’ first meeting a visual specificity that I loved. Tohru and Elma would have sought out the relative freedom of the human world millennia ago, given their loose alignment with their clans’ value systems, so the fact that they crossed paths in proximity to the fertile crescent made all the sense in the world.
Kageki Shoujo!! – 06 [A Glimpse of Stardom]
Hello everyone, and welcome to the halfway point of Kageki Shoujo. This week we get more insight into the lives of a couple of other girls who are part of our class of aspiring actors. And as has been the norm so far, we also get peeks into the pasts which seem to drag them down. Though, the highlight of the episode was still the opportunity to be able to see our lead duo finally get to go out in front of an audience and display their acting chops.
Did that all these individual acts add up to form an irresistible tour de force?
Let’s find out!
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Kageki Shoujo!! – 05 [The Chosen Maidens]
Our lovely group of girls aiming to be the top Kouka star return in this week’s episode to come back to their usual school life and all the pressures of competition that come with it. While some of them are happy to be making incremental progress, others are satisfied with where they find themselves in comparison to their peers. Someone finds a passion they want to pursue; someone else starts tunneling into a pit of extreme self-criticism.
How do all these conflicting scenarios unfold?
Let’s find out!
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Kobayashi-san Chi no Maidragon S – 3-4
One thing I’ve always enjoyed about Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid is its energetic commentary on the human experience. It’s interested in topics such as friendship, work-life balance, and finding greater purpose, but it always presents them with gusto, never using them as an excuse to drone in your ear. Ironically, nonhuman characters such as this series’ dragons are great tools to explore these issues – their lack of familiarity with human customs and behavior lets the show be a bit more direct in its messaging. Other anime with anthropomorphized casts tend to use their animal natures to drive the story, which often results in sensationalist plotting, but that’s not the case here. Miss Kobayashi’s dragons exist in the real world (or an ideal version of it) and seek fulfillment in ordinary life, despite their unearthly proficiency at nearly every task they try.
Kageki Shoujo!! – 04 [Tears Overwritten]
After putting the viewers through the emotional gauntlet last time around, Kageki Shoujo returns this week attempting a more balanced tone in narrative, adding in bits of slapstick humor interspersed between moments of self-reflection and painful reminders, while focusing on Ai’s stalker and delving into the reasons behind his mega-fandom of JPX.
Some parts don’t work as well as they could have but the ones that do really put the series’ strengths front and center.
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Kobayashi-san Chi no Maidragon S – 02 [Hot Guy Kobayashi!]
After a week of the Internet wringing its collective hands over the “gift” given to Kobayashi-san in the previous episode, it only lasted for seven minutes of this one. I had little doubt that this adaptation would resolve the issue quickly (its first season apparently skirted a lot of weirdness from the manga, as well), but I’m pleased nonetheless. Dragon Maid is an anime with a lot going for it, but those positives are already difficult enough for traditional audiences to glimpse without the author’s fetishes further clouding their vision. Of course, we had to go through Kobayashi’s trials as the new owner of a dangling appendage first, with a new waste disposal routine and her roommate’s bountiful breasts to threaten the status quo, but all was resolved before long. I think we were meant to infer that Tohru shedding her precious outfit was what restored a disappointed Kobayashi to her former self – in the end she’s just a maidsexual programmer, regardless of whatever biological forces are imposed on her.
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Kageki Shoujo!! – 02+03 [Those Who Long to Cross the Silver Bridge | The Teddy Bear]
When I was little, six or seven years old, I used to wonder where babies came from.
The story about a hardworking stork carrying them around had started to seem less plausible by that age. Moreover, our home didn’t even have a chimney! No, no, it just didn’t add up. I had realized by that time that mummy and papa were tricking me and not telling me the true story of how I came to be on this planet. So, one day, I confronted my mother about the truth. “I would be tricked no longer. Hmph!” I must have thought to myself. I remember pestering my mother till she finally gave in and told me that it was she herself who gave birth to me. That after she had married my father, she had gotten ‘pregnant’ and a whole nine months later I had come out of her tummy. Which, truth be told, sounded even more preposterous than being delivered by a stork. But since she assured me that it really was the truth, I reluctantly believed her.
I had asked her how does a person get ‘pregnant’ and she’d told me that, “After a boy and a girl get married and start living together and fall in love with each other even more, they try to show their love by making a baby.”
“But how do they show their love?” I had asked.
I remember the question flustering her for some reason and her only response being, “When you’re older, you would understand”. Heh, little did she know that I was a real smart kid. I had seen plenty of movies to know that when a boy and a girl were meant for each other, they’d share a kiss.
That’s how they showed that they loved each other.
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Megalo Box: Nomad Anime Review 83/100
Megalo Box first aired in the Summer season of 2018. Part of the 50 year anniversary for the legendary series Ashita no Joe it was… satisfactory. It brought anime fans back to a different time, an older time, in ways good and bad. Yet despite ostensibly being an “Original” Megalo Box was so heavily tied to Ashita no Joe that it couldn’t escape the comparisons. The story felt like a retelling of something we got 50 years ago, smashed into a 13 episode season. And while some, myself included, still enjoyed the series it felt like something was missing. In Nomad we find that something. While while watching Nomad I felt like I was watching Megalo Box for the first time. The real Megalo Box, more than just a copy of Ashita no Joe, what the series was always meant to be. And I love it.
Created by TMS Entertainment, jointly written by Katsuhiko Manabe and Kensaku Kojima, and directed by You Moriyama I give to you my Summer 2021 Anime of the Season: Megalo Box: Nomad. Let’s dive in
Be warned, this review contains minor unmarked spoilers for Megalo Box: Nomad. It also contains major spoilers in some sections however these will be heavily marked to avoid accidents.
2.43 Seiin Koukou Danshi volley-bu Anime Review 30/100
I normally try to start these reviews with some kind of cutesy lead in. Maybe a play on the sports anime genre and how it needs more drama focused series. Or a riff volleyball anime now that the recent season of Haikyu is over and the manga complete. Something about how the fans are looking for their next fix of Cute Boys Play Sports. Sadly 2.43 Seiin Koukou Danshi Volley-Bu, henceforth referred to as Volley-Bu, simply isn’t worth it. Looking for a decently animated sports series for your action fix? Denied. Perhaps a well crafted coming of age drama that tackles social pressures and suicide with grace? Denied with prejudice. The sad fact of the matter is that Volley-Bu, produced by David Productions and directed by Yasuhiro Kimura of JoJo’s Part 5 fame, is terrible. And I’m here to explain why. So without further ado, lets jump in.
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