| "Anime of the Year" by Konstantin (2005-12-20) |
With the year almost over and the new anime season past its halfway point, I think it's safe to declare my pick for Anime of the Year, which is
Honey and Clover, hands-down. While there were quite a number of excellent shows this year, such as
Air TV and
Mushishi, I think that in the end H&C is both the most enjoyable and the most significant of this year's offerings. Produced as a launch title for Fuji TV's
Noitamina (try reading it backwards) programming block, whose purpose was to appeal to an older female demographic with anime whose complexity and characterization was closer to live action dorama serials rather than the typical shounen and shoujo anime fare, H&C has managed to define the new niche nicely, and raised the bar for both anime and dorama in the process.
The show is a romantic dramedy about a group of friends at an art college coping with school, employment search, romantic convolutions, and survival on a college student's income. Its greatest strength lies in the fact that it avoids the typical anime character templates and the usual contrivances of misjudgement and misunderstanding. Instead each of the characters has their own issues, hangups, and ways of dealing with the world, and the conflicts that drive the H&C stem from the way these combine and interact. The characters may not always be acting rationally, but at the same time their behavior is instantly understandable and recognizeable by anyone who's lived through similar situations before.
It did not surprize me in the least when I found out that Ken'ichi Kasai, the show's director, was staff on KareKano, another one of my all-time favorites. The direction, especially in its use of visual symbolism, feels like a subtler and smoother version of Anno's approach on that show, though the director does not rely quite as much on exhaustive introspective monologues and refrains from interpreting the manga literally. Instead, the director tends to convey what the characters are experiencing by showing as well as telling, often through brief musical interludes where the only words heard are the lyrics of the song being played.
Hopefully, the success of Honey & Clover will lead to more shows being produced with similar character complexity. I'll definitely be keeping an eye on Kasai's future projects. At the very least I've got an addition to my all-time classics list, and that doesn't happen every year.
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