Rating:4.66
Approval:58.5% (5 votes)
First let me apologize in advance: this review will not be one of my best, since it's been a while since I saw the series and I really don't want to watch it again anytime soon. However, since there are no other review yet, here's mine for what it's worth.
Aside from bad movies made from good series (think Escaflowne!), I think this is about the worst I've seen of anime. That's not to say it doesn't some nice animation or other technical merits, but they're not enough to save a poor composition and a story that's full of cliches and shallow characters. The fansub I watched had interviews or commentary with the production staff at the end of each episode, and from those I Wish You Were Here seemed to be a "my first anime" project. Now this isn't necessarily a bad thing by itself -- Shinkai Makoto's Kanojo to Kanojo no Neko is wonderful, and even some really independent works like Ame to Shoujo to Watashi no Tegami are cute and worth a watch. But no, as much as I hate to disrespect the artists, the creators of I Wish You Were Here strike me as somehow similar to a startup video game studio making their first game, where all the talent is focused on eye candy, and the story ends up being whatever they can scrap together from Hollywood cliches and video game storylines written only for the sake of giving a "point" to the action (read the instruction manual for Quake if you don't know what I'm talking about). Writing a story isn't about following a formula and throwing together the standard conflict/resolution pattern around your basic premise. It's about making something fresh and new. I Wish You Were Here has the feel of a bad Hollywood thriller.
Now sometimes anime can be good even when the story is full of cliche, if the characters are unique and interesting. But unfortunately, from my point of view at least, character was the worst part of the show. In particular, I found the romance between the protagonists disgustingly sappy and pathetic. As much as the anime succeeds in manipulating the viewer to feel for them and want them to be together, the basis of their relationship is dependence and weakness. Don't misunderstand -- I don't have a problem with flawed characters, and in fact normally I want to see lots of flawed characters. But I want to see their flaws treated as what they are -- that is, difficulties to be overcome -- not idealized into some flowery nonsense. Maybe if you have a thing for weak and dependent girls becoming weaker by depending on a man, you'll like this series, but I found it insulting to my intelligence and belittling to the emotion that the series is supposed to be about. My advice to the creators of this one would be to stick to topics you understand. Love certainly isn't one of them.