#the dangers in my heart
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a-titty-ninja Ā· 9 months ago
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ć€Œå±±ē”°ć€ byĀ äøøꖰĀ |Ā Twitter
ą¹‘ Permission to reprint was given by the artist āœ”.
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rennebright Ā· 9 months ago
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å±±ē”° by äøøꖰ [Twitter/X] ā€»Illustration shared with permission from the artist. If you like this artwork please support the artist by visiting the source.
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fusudesu Ā· 8 months ago
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romancemedia Ā· 2 months ago
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šŸ’—The Most Romantic Anime Scenes of 2024šŸ’—
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shanks Ā· 1 year ago
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Mr.Tang
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animangabwedit Ā· 9 months ago
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brucebocchi Ā· 12 days ago
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Ranking 2024 anime, Pt. 5: #10-1
hey, this post is also available on my ko-fi, so please check it out and consider tipping/donating as i do this for free and am currently between jobs. you can find part 1 of the list here, part 2 here, part 3 here, and part 4 here. all of my seasonal reviews are on my ko-fi and under my anime reviews tag, mixed in with my occasional musings. thanks!
And we are in the home stretch! I didn't want to split up my top 10 like last year, so it took a couple days to get it all together. Thanks for your patience.
ā€‹As you may have noticed, some of these reviews are longer than others. I've reviewed most of these shows before, so I didn't want to be too redundant while talking about shows I've already reviewed. You can, of course, go back and read my initial reviews in my previous seasonal roundups.
Also, I just wanted to quickly shout out a few shows that I haven't watched much or any of, but would likely have placed well in these rankings, namely Dead Dead Demon's Dededede Destruction, YATAGARASU, the Spice and Wolf remake, Orb: On the Movements of Earth, Sound! Euphonium's third season, and the late Akira Toriyama's SAND LAND and Dragon Ball DAIMA. I only have so much time in a day, week, month, and year, but those series have been on my radar and I do intend to pick them up sooner or later.
But for now, let's focus on what I did watch. Off we go:
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10.Ā Blue Box
This is a slightly biased placement on my end because I picked up the manga this year and quickly fell in love with it, and Iā€™m just happy that it got a faithful, well-made anime adaptation. If you have an issue with that, Iā€™m gonna let you in on a little secret: This whole list is biased. Itā€™s MY list, after all.
After an uneven summer output between My Dear Friend Nokotan and Suicide Squad Isekai, WIT Studio is in full form adapting Kouji Miuraā€™s gorgeous high school sports romance. Rising first-year badminton player Taiki has a huge crush on his basketball star senpai Chinatsu, who practices in the same high school gym he does. Heā€™s happy enough to keep a friendly distance as they improve at their respective sports, but that distance is closed significantly when her parents go abroad for work and she ends up moving in under the same roof as him. The spirit of competition is in the air, and is that a whiff of romance I smell as well?
The reason I felt the need to call out my own bias at the start is because Blue Boxā€™s debut cour is, on balance, probably just ā€œpretty good,ā€ but I was just so overjoyed that this anime even exists that I was willing to overlook the early storyā€™s growing pains. Taiki, of course, is the POV character for most of the first cour, and most of the romantic tension we see so far is entirely from his end as he swoons and huffs and goes into cardiac arrest over any and every gesture Chinatsu throws his way. You know, teenage boy stuff. There have been criticisms that Chinatsu doesnā€™t get much interiority for a bit and that sheā€™s a bit of an enigma in terms of her role in the central ā€œromance,ā€ such that it is so far, which is a valid criticism of a lot of shonen romance stories. Iā€™m generally of the mind that these things are more potent when the object of the protagonistā€™s affection is treated as more than a puzzle for him to solve, but I think Blue Box does a fine job of establishing what Chinatsu means to Taiki before we do indeed begin to get a feel for how she operates and what she might think of him. If you found that part a little maddening early on, trust me when I say itā€™s worth sticking it out.
Regardless, the character writing is what made Blue Box such a hit in Weekly Shonen Jump. Taiki is a flat-out good kid, if a little naive, and his boundless determination to achieve and exceed his goals in both badminton and romance makes him easy to root for. Chinatsu is fairly taciturn, as mentioned, but thatā€™s by design; sheā€™s a notoriously difficult person to read, as even her friends and teammates note that they can rarely decipher what sheā€™s thinking. Sheā€™s still an effortlessly charming character, and itā€™s not hard to figure out why Taikiā€™s got it so bad for her. The real highlight of the series, though, is Taikiā€™s classmate and longtime friend, Hina, a rhythmic gymnast and an absolute troll. She is an absolute delight in every scene sheā€™s in, whether sheā€™s knocking Taikiā€™s knees out from under him, focusing on rehearsing her next routine, or prying into Taikiā€™s love life and realizing that, oops, she really cares about him too. Hina is wonderful and I just want the best for her.
Characters this likable will need the voices to match, and I am over the moon about this showā€™s casting. Shouya Chiba is tremendous as Taiki, in a far cry from his Epic Based Stoic Chad role as Ayanokoji in Classroom of the Elite. Every line read for Taiki sounds exactly as gung-ho about sports and devastatingly down bad for his crush as youā€™d expect of a hormonal 15 year old. Reina Ueda is terrific as the soft-spoken Chinatsu, but Iā€™m looking forward to hearing the always-delightful Xanthe Huynh (Haru in Persona 5, Marianne in Fire Emblem Three Houses) take on the role in the dub just as much. Akari Kitou channels much of the same gremlin energy she did for KamiKatsuĀ to portray Hinaā€™s mischief, and I look forward to hearing her nail Hinaā€™s excellent upcoming character moments. And although itā€™s a secondary role, the casting I was most excited to hear was Chiaki Kobayashi (Mash in Mashle, Stark in Frieren) as Taikiā€™s teammate Kyo. Kobayashiā€™s languid tsukkomi affect was exactlyĀ what I had in mind whenever Kyo would put Taikiā€™s lovelorn antics into stark relief in the manga. Itā€™s like he was born for the part.
This show looks tremendous, perfectly adapting both the soft, doe-eyed character designs from the manga as well as the lower-detail gags. The pastel color palette and gorgeous lighting effects are exactly what I was hoping for while reading the manga. Ā If I have any complaint, though, itā€™s mostly that I want to see more of the sports action. The granular details of the badminton matches and basketball games are hardly the focus of the story, but the action panels are usually the best part of Miuraā€™s art in the manga. Shot-for-shot, it certainly does hew close to the manga presentation, but itā€™s mostly a racquet swing or close-up jump shot followed by an onlookerā€™s reaction. Iā€™d have liked a bit more follow through. The CGI used for background competitors can get a little distracting after a while, too, but itā€™s easy to forget about.
Blue Box is continuing into 2025, and Iā€™m waiting for every new episode with bated breath. If you liked the first cour enough but still have doubts, trust me when I say it just keeps getting better. I look forward to coming back to the second half of this season in another year for my victory lap.
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9.Ā Girls Band Cry
This is one of the most inventive girls-band anime out there, certainly the most so since that one from 2022 that I swore I wouldnā€™t bring up by name. Gorgeous 3D-CG animation, stirring original music, and a compelling cast of characters combine to make Girls Band Cry even more than the sum of its parts.
More than anything, I think what makes Girls Band Cry a terrific showbiz series is that it depicts the uncomfortable reality that a lot of artists are just flat-out unpleasant people and often donā€™t mesh well with one another. Protagonist Nina is messy, stubborn, and angry at the world and her parents and will not hesitate to make it your problem. She butts heads with her friends and bandmates at any provocation, but stubbornness is a major driving factor in the plot: Each of the five members of Togenashi Togeari has something theyā€™re trying to move on from with their music, and while they each have an opinion on how to get there, they do come to realize, after a lot of silly yelling matches, that they want to do so together.
As a vehicle to push Girls Band Cry and Togenashi Togeari as a real-world multimedia experience, this show is a success. Itā€™s a terrific-looking show in ways we rarely see outside of Studio Orange productions (and allegedly Love Live! Sunshine!!, which director Kazuo Sakai also had a hand in); the 3D computer-generated character models and animations are terrifically expressive and lively, and creative visual effects add a compelling sense of synaesthesia to Nina's emotional highs and lows. The voice cast, all pseudonymous contest winners, are also the real-life band members, and they fully nail both elements of their roles. TogeTogeā€™s music in the show is terrific, and as an already-existing Gorillaz-esque virtual band, Iā€™m excited to dig into their back catalog.
Girls Band Cry finally got an official English translation, so thereā€™s no longer any excuse to sleep on this one. Itā€™s funny, itā€™s heartfelt, and above all else, it fucking rocks. Donā€™t let this one fade away just because you mightā€™ve missed it when it aired.
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8.Ā Frieren: Beyond Journeyā€™s End, second cour
When I ranked the first cour of FrierenĀ as the best anime of 2023, I wrote:
The debut season of FrierenĀ will continue into 2024, and if the quality remains a constant, it could very well be one of the best anime of next year too. It has remained as MyAnimeListā€™s top-rated anime everĀ for its entire run, warding off the legion of Fullmetal Alchemist Brotherhood fans. FrierenĀ deserves it.
A year later, it is still MALā€™s top-rated anime, and by a healthy margin. Another 12 episodes aired to kick off 2024, and it was indeed one of the best anime of this year as well. I stand firm in my convictions that not only is it one of the best anime of the decade so far, itā€™s one of the best anime Iā€™ve ever seen.
I really shot my wad by praising FrierenĀ so profusely midway through its run, to the point where I still donā€™t really feel the need to add much more here. The second cour mostly focuses on the First Class Mage exam arc, allowing us to learn more about the present state of magic in the modern day and adding some much-needed depth to the cast. It continues to strike a lovely balance between the quieter moments and bonkers action sequences, as well as the more serious moments with laugh-out-loud goofiness. It may be a lesser arc in this story, but it would be a standout in so many others.
If I havenā€™t been clear enough, I remain over the moon about Frieren. The second cour looks and sounds just as incredible as the first, and this showā€™s success should serve as a reminder to the industry that investment in quality pays off. Madhouse knows they have a banger on their hands, and if the next season can maintain this level of production value for the major arc that is still to come, FrierenĀ may very well earn GOAT status. Even if another season somehow never materializes, Iā€™ll still be talking about this season in five years when it comes time to talk about the best of the decade. Watch this goddamn show.
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7.Ā A Sign of Affection
For all the romance anime and manga I consume, Iā€™ve shamefully been lacking on the shoujo/josei front. I really gotta fix that. If reading more shoujo was what spurred Yukinobu Tatsu to make DanDaDan, then who knows what it might do for me? A Sign of Affection isnā€™t my first shoujo, strictly speaking, but it does feel like one of the first Iā€™ve seen of the good old-fashioned flowery romance type.
What a gorgeous show. A Sign of Affection looks terrific, sounds terrific, and above all feels terrific. This is just a lovely, fluffy romance with low stakes and easy payoff; just two pretty people getting to know each other and learning to overcome their differences. Itā€™s low on gimmicks and plot contrivances, and for as much as I like romcoms and romance stories with a unique bent, I love a good straightforward romance just as much sometimes. Everyone looks beautiful and likes each other and Jesus Christ look at the lips on these boys. Thereā€™s even a double-date to Costco, and what better depiction of marital bliss could there be?
Iā€™m still pleasantly surprised at how this show handles the main characterā€™s disability. Protagonist Yukiā€™s congenital deafness isnā€™t a single-note character quirk or a plot device to make her seem helpless; it simply is. Itā€™s a part of her life that serves as the lens through which all of the people in her life see and treat her, and it leads to the only thing that resembles a major conflict in the show. Itsuomi, the main romantic interest, doesnā€™t baby her or walk all over her; he instead gently tests her boundaries while learning to accommodate her in a way to ensure her comfort. Her childhood friend Oushi, on the other hand, is very jealous of this development because he seems to feel entitled to her just because he did the bare minimum to accommodate her. The circumstances arenā€™t common, of course, but itā€™s a good lesson for a shoujo to have: Donā€™t settle.
My praise for A Sign of Affection mostly boils down to ā€œitā€™s just really nice,ā€ but it does ā€œjust really niceā€ soĀ goddamn well. Itā€™s fluffy, itā€™s comfy, itā€™s cozy, all of those adjectives that would set off my fight-or-flight response if I heard them from someone else, but I was enthralled by this show week in and week out. I canā€™t believe I neglected to start reading the manga, and Iā€™m gonna have to get on that ASAP because I canā€™t wait for another season.
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6.Ā The Apothecary Diaries, second cour
I found myself more intrigued at The Apothecary Diaries at the end of 2023 than most other shows Iā€™d watched that year. I grew more and more invested in the idiosyncratic Maomao as she investigated mysterious ailments and navigated imperial palace politics, all the while being a lovable little shit.Ā 
Before Iā€™d realized it, though, the 2024 half of its run knew it had its hooks in me and took me for a ride. What looked at first like a series of one-off puzzles quickly began entangling into a much larger mystery, rapidly gaining momentum until exploding into a massive emotional payoff. So many of the small details in what you assume are episodic mystery-of-the-week mini-stories become relevant in unexpected ways and draw you in ever further. I adore this kind of lowkey long-term storytelling, and for it to be part of such an appealing package is basically catnip for me.
For as gorgeous as The Apothecary Diaries can be visually, sonically, and sometimes even emotionally, itā€™s worth mentioning that this show is also hilarious a lot of the time. Maomao is on permanent goblin mode whenever she isnā€™t carrying out official business, and any time the palace officials have to rein her in is a delight. The push-and-pull between her and Jinshi is endlessly entertaining to the point where I can wait forever for that payoff if I have to.
I neglected to read the Apothecary Diaries manga after the first season went off the air (though I nearly bought all of it sight unseen), and with the second about to drop, I guess Iā€™m holding off for another six months. Canā€™t say I mind, though. Iā€™m along for the ride and I want this show to keep surprising me for as long as it can. This is easily one of the best anime of the 2020s so far and Iā€™m gonna be there front row center for every new episode.
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5.Ā Bang Brave Bang Bravern
People say ā€œpeak fictionā€ too goddamn often these days. Not that it was a meaningful term to begin with, but itā€™s been memed to hell and back and is mostly just thrown out ironically to mock garbage writing. To be honest, Iā€™m not above it myself, but I prefer to ascribe it, even jokingly, to stuff that can only truly come from a brilliant and/or deranged mind. Preferably both. Peak fiction, to me, is the intersection where talent meets insanity, no matter the degree of either.
Bang Brave Bang Bravern is peak fiction.
I gushed about this show after the winter season, and I almost donā€™t want to say anything further about it, mostly for two reasons: Firstly, because I donā€™t really want to give the game away any more than I already did back in April, and secondly, because I think it may have permanently burrowed into a specific part of my brain and then melted it. All Iā€™m left with is ā€œthis show fucking rocks, dudes rock, you need to see it, itā€™s peak, don't ask questions, just watch it.ā€
Indeed, BravernĀ is the Dudes Rock anime of the year, and an essential piece of Dudes Rock media. Itā€™s Top Gun with aliens and a giant talking robot. And the robot wants to fuck his pilot. This show is loud, horny, stupid, and self-aware, combined just so into a cocktail of legitimate brilliance that is, for better or worse, unlike anything Iā€™ve seen before or since. Nearly every single episode had me clawing at my hair and shrieking ā€œWHAT THE FUCK AM I WATCHING,ā€ and that is the highest praise I can give just about anything.
I might be overselling it just a touch, but BravernĀ is just as earnest as it is utterly wild. Itā€™s an intentionally hilarious show, but it means everything it does and says. Itā€™s a love letter to mecha anime and tokusatsu, and with its top staff sporting GundamĀ and MacrossĀ bona fides, that love oozes into every aspect. The mechs, both manmade and alien, all look tremendous, the music is a throwback to the goofy bombast youā€™d find in series like this as far back as the Showa era, and the ensemble cast outside of our silly leads are just as gung-ho and serious about Saving The World as youā€™d find in just about any other mech show. Anything that can be this goofy with a completely straight face is going to hook me in.
All in all, Bang Brave Bang Bravern is hypercompetent lunacy with heart. Call it weaponized genre awareness if you must, but it knows exactly what itā€™s about, grabs you by the collar, and takes you for a ride, all while doing badass tokusatsu poses and calling out special moves with silly names. This is legitimately what fiction is all about.Ā 
Also, if you donā€™t like Lulu just because she screeches a lot, youā€™re a weakling. Gaga-pi, motherfucker.
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4.Ā The Dangers in My Heart, season 2
This was a series whose first season was conspicuously absent from my 2023 rankings, but I caught up shortly after finishing that list in order to catch up to the second season. Iā€™d watched a glut of slice-of-life romances in 2023 and figured I could afford to miss this one. Iā€™m overjoyed at how wrong I was.
To paraphrase the second seasonā€™s exceptional OP, The Dangers in My Heart is indescribably beautiful. As I said with A Sign of Affection, I love me a straightforward anime romance, and this middle school slice-of-life is just that: Underdeveloped edgelord boy ends up making unlikely friends with, and falling for, the cheery popular girl in his class. This is easy wish-fulfillment on paper, but thatā€™s hiding the trick: Kyotaro isnā€™t gonna get anything he wants by keeping his quills out for anyone who comes near, and he has some growing up to do if heā€™s ever gonna get what he wants.
Season 2 picks up right where the first left off, with Kyotaroā€™s arm still broken from his family trip and Anna feeling guilty because she thinks her distraction was what led to the injury. Right out of the gate, we see the care these two have developed for one another: Anna wants to help while he canā€™t do his own schoolwork, while Kyo is quick to try to cheer her up when she no longer feels like sheā€™s able to. Already weā€™re seeing Kyotaroā€™s character development coming to light: The Dangers in My Heart isnā€™t a story about a Nice Guy getting the girl just by being there; itā€™s a story of self-improvement, of trying to become the type of person whom your crush would want to fall in love with. For a story about and ostensibly marketed to early teenagers, thatā€™s a good lesson to have, and I absolutely devour stories like that.
As can be the case with plenty of adolescents, most of the conflict here is internal. Kyotaro spent the early part of his middle school education keeping a safe distance from everyone in order to avoid getting hurt, and as you can imagine, that did a number on his self esteem. Though heā€™s mostly kicked the chuunibyo mindset, Kyo still prefers to keep his distance, less because he doesnā€™t want to get hurt, but now because he doesnā€™t want to hurt anyone else. Specifically Anna. So much of this story is about him learning to be okay with letting people in and not just falling in love, but making friends and becoming somebody whom people just want to be around. Itā€™s a chuuni rehabilitation story. You love to see it.
With all due respect to mangaka Norio Sakurai, the biggest surprise that came from reading the manga was how much better the anime looks than its source material. The anime looks tremendous in its own right, but compared to Sakuraiā€™s doodly, occasionally messy style, the love put into the show stands in stark relief. Characters, backgrounds, and lighting are all soft, squishy, and warm, almost like the entire thing was run through the filter through which only a 13-year-old in love can see the world, even as a little edgelord. Little flourishes in the environment and music highlight the minute but consequential motes of progression in Kyo and Annaā€™s relationship. The OP ended up shaking out as my favorite of the year, even with 2024 being bookended by Creepy Nuts bangers. Itā€™s that special to me.
And just like that, The Dangers in My Heart went from ā€œeh probably not for meā€ to ā€œyeah this is one of the best anime of the decade so far.ā€ Itā€™s a simple slice-of-life romance on paper, almost literally so in the manga, but this is a transformative adaptation. Thereā€™s much more of the story to tell, and I wouldnā€™t complain about more, but as it stands after two seasons, The Dangers in My Heart is damn near perfect as it is.
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3.Ā Oshi no Ko, season 2
Another year, another season, another top-four finish for one of the best manga adaptations Iā€™ve ever seen.Ā 
The anime adaptation of Aka Akasaka and Mengo Yokoyariā€™s showbiz-revenge manga made shockwaves last year following its thunderous feature-length premiere, and its source material made even more waves due to some questionable plot developments that fortunately went nowhere. Doga Kobo was undeterred by any negative attention brought to the brand, though, and pressed forward into the next arc with a level of swagger you rarely see brought into an animeā€™s sequel season.
The 2.5D stage play arc in Oshi no Koā€™s manga wasnā€™t my favorite, but it was one that you could tell just from reading it would translate well to the screen. Even then, I wasnā€™t prepared for just how hard Doga Kobo would go in adapting it. Character animation is sumptuously fluid, color used to amazing effect, and personal expression bursts forth into impressionistic abstraction to such a degree that it made manga artist Yokoyari cry. Everyone looks and sounds incredible beyond any way I couldā€™ve imagined from reading the manga, which, at the risk of sounding defensive, is still very good as a whole.
This being a story largely about the music industry, the music remains as on-point as ever. Itā€™s too soon to tell if the second seasonā€™s OP/ED pairing tops the instantly-iconic ā€œIdolā€ and ā€œMephistoā€ from the first, but these are no slouches. This seasonā€™s OP, ā€œFatale,ā€ is a whiplash-inducing banger by Tatsuya Kitani and idol Kento Nakajima, performing under the collaborative name of GEMN (itself a relevant name to the show; twins without the i/Ai, DO YOU GET IT???) with visuals that might actually top those of "Idol." The new ED, ā€œBurning,ā€ is Hitsujibungaku at their fuzzy, 90s-style alt-rock best, and it takes on a brand new meaning by the end of the season. Of course, thereā€™s also the story-relevant music; while the bulk of the season focuses on the stage play, the last few episodes give us a glimpse into the pop music process, with the season capping off with an in-universe music video that, while not sonically my exact cup of tea, features 90 seconds of some of the best-looking dance animation Iā€™ve ever seen in my life. Thatā€™s a flex if Iā€™ve ever seen one.
And just like the first season, the second capped off with an announcement that Oshi no Ko will indeed be returning for another season. At this rate, and with the animeā€™s success, they will adapt the entire work, which will raise some eyebrows. Iā€™m not going to litigate the mangaā€™s later controversial developments nor its widely-panned ending, but if Doga Koba was able to handle everything that came before those things with such aplomb, I have faith that it will at least be done well.
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2.Ā DanDaDan
I want to preface this by saying that I agonized over whether this or the final entry is my anime of the year. Iā€™m comfortable with what I chose, but if Iā€™m being realistic, DanDaDanĀ is basically 1b. This is a masterpiece already.
Although the source material was a bit of a cult hit until this year, DanDaDanĀ came with a considerable amount of hype. If you were even peripherally familiar, it wasnā€™t hard to see why: Yukinobu Tatsuā€™s art is absurdly detailed in almost every panel, character designs are easily recognizable (one of the leads dressing similarly to a Persona 3 character was fortuitous for the anime to drop in the same year as Reload), and so many bizarre things happen in the plot that relaying them to anybody who wasnā€™t already familiar would make their brain briefly touch the void. Above all, though, Science SARU was tabbed to animate it, and any project by them is immediately worth your attention.
Sure enough, DanDaDanĀ made an instantaneous splash, its first episode adapting the mangaā€™s bombastic, twisty 63-page opening chapter nearly beat for beat. Iā€™m not gonna ā€œdonā€™t look it up, just go in blindā€ this one, but almost too much happens for me to properly detail it all without just writing a complete synopsis. It boils down to ā€œlonely nerd boy believes in aliens, angry kogal believes in yokai, it turns out both are real and now they have to deal with it.ā€ Itā€™s silly, itā€™s wild, itā€™s action packed, and if you can stomach the sexually-compromising alien abduction of the girl, youā€™re along for the ride.
Iā€™m not gonna harp too much on that last point. It does stink that the female lead, Momo, is stripped to her underwear for the sake of alien sexual ā€œresearch,ā€ but said aliens get their comeuppance before anything happens to her. Itā€™s still not great, and itā€™s not the last time female characters are portrayed in their underwear, but I do promise itā€™s for story reasons, it takes a backseat to the onscreen action and is pretty clearly not done for the sake of fanservice. I know such things can be beyond the pale for some people, but if you think you can compartmentalize that, I recommend you watch the first episode with that caveat in mind and decide from there. You may be pleasantly surprised.
DanDaDanĀ is effectively two stories at once; on one side, we have Momo and the boy, Okarun (a nickname Momo devised for him to preserve her own sanity), gaining wacky supernatural powers in order to fight back these occult threats and regain what was stolen from Okarun from his first encounter with the unexpected (IYKYK). Because these threats can come out of nowhere, their daily high school lives can completely pop off without warning. On the other side, we have quieter slice-of-life tension as Momo and Okarun get to know (and frequently misunderstand) each other and realize they are completely and hopelessly head-over-heels for one another.
Surprise, motherfucker: DanDaDanĀ is a romcom.
Yukinobu Tatsu, formerly an assistant on the first saga of Chainsaw Man, long struggled to get his own work serialized. At his editorā€™s urging, he read something like a hundred manga for inspiration, including several shoujo romance series. That research shows through in DanDaDan; although the bonkers action sequences and off-the-wall monster designs are what draw in readers and viewers alike, whatā€™s kept this many people along for the ride is the beating heart just barely under the surface in the form of the romantic tension between Momo and Okarun. Itā€™s easy to write this off as some ā€œlonely nerd gets the cute gyaru just by being a Nice Guyā€ wish fulfillment, but thatā€™s not really the case here; Okarun was a weird little twerp right from the jump. Similarly to Kyotaro in the aforementioned Dangers in My Heart, Okarun believes early on that heā€™s nowhere near Momoā€™s league, completely unaware that she quickly grows to actually like having him around, so he puts in the effort to become a more well-rounded person so that he can be confident enough to be seen next to her. He also just wants Momo to think heā€™s cool, and she thinks thatā€™s adorable. And sheā€™s right! These two are cute as fuck together.
So you come for the wild action and stay for the tremendous character dynamics. It should go without saying that Science SARU nailed all of the above, but Iā€™m gonna say it anyway. Reading the Manga+ comments on each chapter as I read through the manga, readers were begging a top-flight battle shonen studio like MAPPA or WIT to pick up the series, and I think these fans got more than they bargained for. Masaaki Yuasa hasnā€™t been in charge of a series at the studio since Eizouken, or anything theyā€™ve put out since Inu-Oh, but his influence is all over their recent works, including last yearā€™s fellow top-three series, Scott Pilgrim Takes Off. Itā€™s beyond impressive how, much like Scott Pilgrim, this series manages to maintain the source materialā€™s art style while still looking very much like a Science SARU anime. Everyone is bouncy and malleable as their moods dictate, line weights are wildly varied, and action animation is kinetic and unpredictable. Each fight with an alien or cryptid is awash in eye-searing color or eerie greyscale. The music is a boatload of fun as well; even putting aside the Creepy Nuts OP (banger after banger after banger from those dudes) and Zutomayo ED, regular proceedings are punctuated by a wildly varied score, from funk to folk to an insane chase scene set to an electronic mashup of the ā€œWilliam Tell Overtureā€ and the can-can. Everything about DanDaDanĀ keeps you guessing.
I was looking forward to DanDaDanĀ enough that I went to the theatrical premiere of the first three episodes and was sufficiently blown away. If youā€™ve seen the show, it shouldnā€™t come as much of a surprise that it looks and sounds incredible in a cinema setting. I left the theater positively buzzing, telling anyone whoā€™d listen that they had no idea what was coming, but even knowing the entire story, I wasnā€™t prepared for more of what was to come. The literal next episode after what Iā€™d already seen in the theater had one of the most bonkers action setpieces Iā€™ve seen since Gurren Lagann, and just three episodes later an unbelievable emotional gut punch, prior knowledge of the manga be damned. Every single aspect of DanDaDanĀ as an anime was given the same level of love and care that Tatsu put into his own work. Itā€™s one thing for an anime adaptation to be faithful to its source material, and another entirely for it to elevate and transform it. DanDaDan somehow does both.
If thereā€™s anything that held this back from being the anime of the year, itā€™s that this season kind of justā€¦ ends. With the 12-episode runtime that was given to the debut season, DanDaDanĀ ends its first run right after the beginning of the mangaā€™s next arc, which feels bizarre. Thereā€™s no resolution, but thereā€™s no real cliffhanger here either. Which I kind of get, the story is driven by a constant forward momentum, but a little warning that the season was ending wouldā€™ve been nice. Itā€™s only a six month break until the show comes back, but judged on its own, the way this season ended left me feeling a bit cold and the season itself feeling incomplete. Even shows that have year-long breaks between cours rather than seasons tend to put some kind of cap on each individual run, but DanDaDanĀ just kinda left the toilet unflushed, and next to it a Post-It note promising to come back later. For something this lovingly crafted, that seems like a bizarre oversight.
That was hardly enough to temper my enjoyment though. Anything this well-made is deserving of the attention and success itā€™s attained, but to have this story, with these characters and this level of bonkers action made this well, is just an embarrassment of riches. And God help me, Iā€™m shamelesslyĀ greedy. July canā€™t come fast enough. I need all of it.
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1.ļæ½ļæ½Delicious in Dungeon
At the end of its run midway through the year, I declared Dungeon Meshi the best anime of the year up to that point and that Iā€™d be impressed if anything would manage to overtake it. Though the other two entries in my top three made extremely strong cases, nothing else quite hit the spot and nourished the soul quite like Dungeon Meshi.
Barely a year removed from one of 2022ā€™s best anime, Cyberpunk Edgerunners, Studio Trigger kicked off 2024 with another Netflix original, this time with its first proper manga adaptation since the studio split from Gainax a decade prior. It seemed an odd fit at first to have a studio known for wacky, hyperkinetic action productions like Kill la Kill and PromareĀ to adapt this quirky fantasy dungeon manga, but hey, they also did Little Witch Academia. It turned out to be an odd fit, but in the best way: Dungeon Meshi is pretty offbeat as it is, so for it to get picked up by one of the more oddball prestige studios ended up making a tasty stew.
I struggled to elaborate on what makes this show so good after each of its cours, and six months later I remain a little lost for words. Itā€™s an exceptional story adapted exceptionally well. Between the characters, the story, the setting, the emotional stakes, the comedy, the highs and lows, they nailed it all. Trigger just gets it. Even when characters go off-model for the sake of an intentional animation quirk, it still has that inimitable Trigger charm to it. It sounds just as good as it looks, too: The orchestral score highlights the quieter, sillier moments just as well as the tenser action setpieces, the foley work behind the dungeonā€™s bizarre and varied flora and fauna is immaculate, and the cast is perfect in both Japanese and English (I rarely ever say so but seriously, shout out to the dub).
Iā€™m just as sick of saying ā€œthis show speaks for itselfā€ when I have trouble finding the words as you probably are of reading it, but I have little else to add here. Iā€™ve written plenty already. Just go watch it. This is already one of my favorite manga ever, and by the time the series wraps up at the end of its second season, it will easily end up as one of my favorite anime ever.
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mimimimin Ā· 8 months ago
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anime-707 Ā· 1 month ago
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š—§š—µš—² š——š—®š—»š—“š—²š—暝˜€ š—¶š—» š— š˜† š—›š—²š—®š—暝˜ šŸ’•
The way they are close to each other šŸ™„
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apparently-artless Ā· 9 months ago
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ā—ā—‰āœæ BOKU NO KOKORO NO YABAI YATSU S02E07 ā€ KYOU & ANNA āœæā—‰ā—
ā†³ requested by Willow (@motto-chanto-itte)
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ho-le-dai Ā· 2 months ago
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newmusictodayfan Ā· 1 year ago
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Boku no Kokoro no Yabai Yatsu 2 OP
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rennebright Ā· 11 months ago
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å±±ē”° by ć‚¹ć‚«ć‚¤ [Twitter/X] ā€»Illustration shared with permission from the artist. If you like this artwork please support the artist by visiting the source.
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fusudesu Ā· 8 months ago
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romancemedia Ā· 10 months ago
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Anime Romances + Affectionate Feeding
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theirisianprincess Ā· 6 months ago
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DO YOU GUYS SEE MY VISION???
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DO YOU GUYS SEE MY VISION?????????
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