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The Mike Toole Show -The Other 100 Best Anime Movies of All Time, Part 1

by Mike Toole,

When I see articles likePaste's Top 100 Anime Movies of All Time, I grit my teeth a little, because I know what to expect, and it's hard not to get a little frustrated. List articles, so-called “listicles,” are the junk food of the internet—they're fun and easy to read, and from a writer's standpoint, fun and easy to create, so the supply of them is limitless. Before I even clicked on the link to the article, my brain exploded in visions ofStudio Ghibli's oeuvre dominating the top 25. In that respect, the Paste list lived up to expectations – it dutifully included every single Ghibli film minus three (two of them beingGoro Miyazaki movies), as well as a trio of notable pre-GhibliHayao Miyazaki outings, plus all ofSatoshi Kon's films and most of the filmographies ofMamoru Oshii,Makoto Shinkai, andMamoru Hosoda. That alone makes up for no less than 39 entries. So right from the start, almost 40% of the list was sort of a gimmie, a fat stack of well-known favorites that'd be really easy to write about.

Of course, it's still a pretty good list, a nice point of reference that showcases the power of the medium in broad strokes. As a writer myself, I couldn't help but scrutinize it and think, “You know, I could make a better Top 100 than this one.” On Twitter, I made a joke about doing a completely separate top 100, one that omitted the obvious choices entirely. One of my online pals suggested that doing this would be an ordeal, a real chore, and I'd end up scraping the bottom of the barrel.Ahhhhh, shit! I love this kind of challenge, and before I knew it, I was mentally making that list, and it filled up fast.

On this list, I've raided the entire 60-year-plus span of modern anime history for some lesser-known, lesser-loved classics. The Paste list includes quite a few OVAs, but I've tried to be a little more selective. (Man, I could do a pretty good list of Top100 OVAs…) Short OVAs that ran in theatres are fair game, I think.

Full disclosure: About 20 of the selections on my list are currently available on DVD (and in some cases, blu-ray) in North America fromDiscotek Media, a company for which I do some freelance production duties. I'd feel more conflicted about this if it wasn't for the fact that rescuing and preserving classic, important films like these is a vital part ofDiscotek's mission. Also, fourteen ofDiscotek's releases are on the Paste list, too. There's no escapingDiscotek if you like great anime films, is what I'm saying. Now, let's start the countdown!

100.Odin - Photon Space Sailer Starlight

I had to start the trip here, aboard a sailboat in space. A long time ago, my peers and I regardedOdin - Photon Space Sailer Starlight as something of an endurance test – if you could sit through its monstrous 140-minute running time without going stir crazy, you were one tough anime nerd. But after repeated viewings and discussion with other fans, my cohort started to appreciate what the filmmakers had accomplished. Odin was originally planned as a big-deal TV series, but producerYoshinobu Nishizaki's ambitions proved a little too great. He enlisted the help ofSpace Battleship Yamato directorEiichi Yamamoto andNikkatsu greatToshio Masuda (who'd also helped cut together the theatrical versions of the Yamato stories) to get the project finished, and while the resulting movie meanders a lot, narratively, it's consistently and compellingly beautiful to look at, a curio in which the famed producer tries to replicate his Yamato success, right down to the large cast of characters and the boat in space. Odin is filled out by a charmingly goofy soundtrack by metal band Loudess and a series of unintentionally hilarious story beats, involving an unlikely hero (“He seems like an idiot,” one crewmember remarks, “Let's bring him aboard!”) and a stoic captain who secretly wants his crew to mutiny so the can go chasing off after the origin of the gods. Odin is not, strictly speaking, a good movie, but it's a pretty great one. (“Great,” meaning large or immense; I don't necessarily mean it in the pejorative sense!)

99.Harmagedon

Rintarō's reputation as a chameleon-like director who's just as likely to turn out a dud as he is a smash hit is richly deserved; for every sumptuousGalaxy Express 999, there's a thudding, strangePeacock King. On paper,Harmagedon sounds great – the director adapts a popular science fiction tale fromKazumasa Hirai andShōtarō Ishinomori, collaborating with the famous manga artistKatsuhiro Ōtomo, who turns in character designs. The film itself, concerning a diverse team of ESP users that must band together to fight an evil alien and prevent the end of the world, limps along gamely from a narrative perspective, plagued by a number of dull moments and odd left turns. What elevatesHarmagedon is its utterly spectacular animation: with scenes created by animation wizards likeKōji Morimoto andYoshinori Kanada,Harmagedon turned out to be hugely influential, an animation signpost guiding the way for the great action animators of the 80s and 90s. It was also a commercial success, and no doubt helped giveKatsuhiro Ōtomo the credibility he needed to get his Akira film project rolling. It's notRintarō's best film, butHarmagedon is absolutely worth remembering.

98. Lensman

Lensman was supposed to be another signature accomplishment for its studio,Madhouse. The movie was the directorial debut of a talented young action animator namedYoshiaki Kawajiri, who would work together with the veteran Kazuyuki Hiroikawa. It used state of the art 3D computer graphics to help tell its adaptation of the classic space opera tale by E.E. “Doc” Smith, and its sponsors treated like a real event, with trailers on TV, toys at the stores, and a frothy, buoyant pop theme song by popular rockersTHE ALFEE. It was eagerly anticipated in the west, too, where it debuted at the 1984 WorldCon. But fans who knew Smith's books well were puzzled – here, square-jawed model galactic patrolman Kimball Kinnison is replaced Kim Kinnison, a starry-eyed farmboy who dreams of adventures in space. His allies are given odd facelifts as well, and while the story as a whole has familiar elements, like the struggle of the valiant Arisians against the galactic crime bosses of Boskone, it had little in common with its source material. Turns out that the rights to Lensman were acquired not via Smith's heirs, but through his publishing company. Despite the drastic departures from Smith's books, Lensman remains a wonderfully fun, quirky space opera. You just need to step away from the source material in order to see it. Since its release, the movie (and a fairly mediocre TV series spinoff) has sank out of sight; Smith's estate don't care for the movie and have been trying to get a Lensman Hollwood movie off the ground for decades, so who knows when we'll see this version of the Galactic Patrol again?

97. AComet in Moominland

Here's another adaptation of western source material, a theatrical take on the famous friendly troll characters ofTove Jansson. Jansson's Moomin books and comics received the anime treatment several times, with notably mixed results, but it's this movie that feels the most Moomin-like, since it's a very straightforward adaptation of the author's second Moomin book.Comet in Moominland does more than just port the 1992 TV series to the big screen – art directorJirō Kōno, a sometime partner of the great directorOsamu Dezaki, infuses the proceedings with a gentle, watercolor-like visual luster. The story is a great point of entry to the Moomin saga, as it introduces a number of new friends for the shy, good-hearted Moomintroll, like the itinerant Snufkin. Story-wise, it's about a threatening comet, a trip to the observatory to get a closer look, and a frenzied rush to a nearby cave to wait the disaster out. There's been renewed interest in Jansson's creation recently, including a decent 2014 version of Moomins on the Riviera. That movie looks more sophisticated, but this one's a better film.

96.Armitage III: Poly-Matrix

Here's a “movie” that's essentially a set of OVAs re-edited and stapled together; it won't be the last on this list.Armitage III: Poly-Matrix succeeds for a few reasons. First and foremost, it rips off Blade Runner with the kind of panache not seen sinceBubblegum Crisis, depicting a future society in which ordinary humans are deeply suspicious of “Type-3” androids that are almost indistinguishable from regular people. One of those suspicious humans is Ross Syllibus, a detective who's fled Earth for Mars to outrun a troubled past. Naturally, he's paired with Naomi Armitage, an accomplished and outspoken Type-3, and it's not long before they're confronting mysteries both conventional and unconventional. This theatrical cut is a durable and enjoyable sci-fi yarn, and it's really helped out by the interesting contrast of its lead actors in the dubbed “international” version, which went as far as using Hollywood stars. Elizabeth Berkeley's warm, engaged performance as Armitage contrasts against Keifer Sutherland's bored, confused Ross, but it works surprisingly well.

95. BIRTH

Movies like BIRTH are why some people complain that anime looks great, but makes no sense. BIRTH is the signature work of the late, greatYoshinori Kanada, an animator and animation director who was one of the first to really introduce innovation to super robot cartoons in the 1970s—Toei's earlier stuff was great fun to watch, but guys like Kanada infused their work with style and weight, and really pushed the medium forward. In the realm of goofy robot cartoons, his work really stood out. Of course, characterizing BIRTH as a Kanada project is a bit unfair to its director,Shinya Sadamitsu, not to mention other collaborators likemecha designerMakoto Kobayashi, but it's Kanada's sense of style and action that helps BIRTH rise above its utterly rudimentary, forgettable story. It's about a kid on a planet who finds a magical sword and is pursued for it, but like I said, the story doesn't matter – this movie is all about style and action, a series of high-tech Roadrunner vs. Coyote jokes that keeps upping the ante of absurdity. In spite of that weakness, BIRTH is an animator's playground; mad geniuses behind classics likeCowboy Bebop andMagic Knight Rayearth also worked on this movie. In spite of its flaws, I could still watch this film over and over again.

94.Musashi: The Dream of the Last Samurai

Here's an unabashedly strange film, one that, based on its trailer and campaign poster, appears to be an action film about the great samurai Musashi Miyamoto. But it's actually a documentary, a lecture given by a funny little CG professor. The lecture, which delves into both Miyamoto's philosophy and his views on military tactics, is a framing device for a series of awesome vignettes about key moments in Miyamoto's life, including his legendary showdown with Kojiro Sasaki. Musashi is a movie I find enjoyable in spite of its peculiar format and notable visual weaknesses; it's got great action animation, a boffo theme song, and it really paints a vivid picture of the legendary swordsman and scholar.

93. Catnapped

Takashi Nakamura is another underappreciated name in anime. Animation nerds will invokeKōji Morimoto's name for his bold style, but Morimoto was following in the footsteps of Nakamura, who was his boss on theTatsunoko cartoonGold Lightan. Nakamura worked as a key animator on important 80s films likeHarmagedon andRobot Carnival, and eventually got his own project: Catnapped. Catnapped is pretty great, an unabashedly weird family comedy about how we sometimes forget to treat our pets well, and what we'll do to win them back when they go astray. In this case, a kid named Yasuo (his bratty sister calls him Toriyasu) fails to pay attention to his pet dog Papadoll, who wanders off to the mysterious land of Banipal Witt. The two kids are soon drawn to this magical land by its feline inhabitants, who present them with a serious problem – their pet dog has turned into a monster, and they have to stop it somehow! Nakamura created the story and characters of Catnapped, but you can also see the fingerprints of horror scribeChiaki J. Konaka all over this movie. It's an enjoyably strange film, one that kinda tries to evoke that Ghibli family movie feeling, but is too cheap and weird to pull it off.

92.The Princess and the Pilot

These days, it's all the rage to adapt popular light novels as anime TV shows, but here's a stand-alone story adapted from a single book.Jun Shishido's film, about a pilot making a long perilous journey with his top-secret cargo, a princess, puts the action front and center, with plenty of nifty CG dogfights and airplane chases, but it's the characters in this film that will win you over. The tension between princess Juana delMoral and her pilot, Charles Karino, is a bit Wuthering Heights – he's the product of a checkered background and an unhappy childhood, and she's a kind but spoiled aristocrat – but together the two of them make solid action movie partners and a fun romantic couple.The Princess and the Pilot is a charming, effective, one-and-done little movie.

91. The Life of Gusko Budori

Oh right, here's one of thoseKenji Miyazawa stories where the main characters are cats. Only I'm not talking about the 2012 film byGisaburō Sugii, but the 1994 film byRyūtarō Nakamura. The late Nakamura, who'd later give us the excellentSerial Experiments Lain, created this film at StudioAnimaru-Ya. Unlike Sugii, Nakamura's version of Miyazawa's fantastic story uses soft, cartoonish human character designs. The cat style has merit, but I think that this approach is even better—it hangs a human face on Miyazawa's title character, a deeply decent person who overcomes tragedy at his home in Iwata to go out in the world, connect with others, and work hard for the common good in spite of his personal hardships. The Gusko Budori story is a great vessel for the author's gorgeous, otherworldly idealism, and Nakamura's film is an effective adaptation, one that's been long out of print. I wish it was easier for people to find.

90. Time Stranger

Earlier, I branded BIRTH asYoshinori Kanada's signature work. This movie isMori Masaki's signature work! Masaki's another legend of the medium, a production and storytelling hero from back in the era whenMADHOUSE was a creative dynamo. Time Stranger isn't actually his best film – I'll reveal that one later in the list—but it's his best-looking movie, and for my money one of the best-looking anime movies ever made. The critic Roger Ebert was fond of using a phrase for movies that were weak on story, but looked great: persistently watchable on the visual level. Time Stranger has that quality in spades. Admittedly, its story isn't that bad – it's a meditation on the inflexibility and persistence of time, a look at the mysterious and compelling Oda Nobunaga, and a story about the conflict between two men from the future with very different ideas of how the world should be. It's also a completely silly adventure tale about some kids in an ugly van who get hijacked by a fugitive time-traveler. Teko, the pretty girl of the group (and she really is pretty, designed byMoto Hagio no less!), seems to fall in love with every handsome man they encounter, and the overall behavior of the characters is a little unintentionally hilarious and abrupt—for a bunch of 80s kids, they're very accepting of the notion that they're hurtling backwards in time and might not be able to return to their era! I got to see this movie in the VHSfansub era, but for most fans, it's a classic waiting to be discovered.

89.Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Mermaid

Right smack in the middle of an endless wave of 30-minute featurette movie tie-ins involving super robots and magical girls,Toei came up with this film, a surprisingly faithful adaptation of the originalHans Christian Andersen fairy tale. Unlike their other “Manga Matsuri” fare, this film is far more in keeping with original studio chiefHiroshi Ōkawa's notion ofToei as a feature animation powerhouse. Okawa died in 1971, and his successor was more interested in prospering by way of churning out inexpensive toy tie-in cartoons, so this film is a surprising departure. Perhaps it was a reward for directorTomoharu Katsumata, a company man who'd done plenty of good work on TV in the years prior. The film itself is colorful, winsome, and ultimately tragic, just like the original fairy tale. It doesn't look that much like the later, more famous Disney version of the tale – its heroine is a blonde girl named Marine, for starters – but it unquestionably influenced it – just look at the mascot/sidekick characters! Katsumata's movie is stately and focused, and enough of an emotional gut-punch that fans who saw it on TV or cheapo home video as kids still seek it out.

88.Ai City

Before he found a comfortable girls-with-guns formula atBee Train,Kōichi Mashimo was an innovator. He directed the colorful and action-packedDirty Pair: Project Eden, he helmed the consistently hilarious Irresponsible Captain Tylor, and he directed this oddity, a 1986 feature film about powerful psychics who do battle over the fate of a mysterious young girl named Ai. The movie opens with a frenetic chase scene, as a group of hoodlums (including a lady in a bunny girl suit) pursue our hero and his charge. In the background, a peppy pop song blares, describing, in halting English, all of the things that are happening onscreen. Later, we'll learn that the heroic Kei is a “Headmeter,” a psychic warrior so powerful that the total value of his power is displayed on his forehead, increasing dramatically as he fights.Ai City is strange, disjointed, hilarious and totally exciting. I wish more movies had its fearless sense of adventure.

87.Marine Express

Back in the late 70s,Tezuka Productions routinely participated in a 24-hour telethon called Love Will Save the World by producing a series of 90-minute telefilms. They made several movies in this fashion, andMarine Express is the finest of them all. Taking place in the future year of 2002,Marine Express is a massive crossover involving all of Tezuka's “star system,” includingAstro Boy,Kimba, andPrincess Knight. It's science fiction that involves an undersea train line and a lost civilization, but it's also a rollicking murder mystery, as the detective Shunsaku Ban must team up with the dark doctorBlack Jack to solve the mystery of who killed his client. Creator Tezuka didn't direct this movie, but he did iInsist on drawing every frame thatBlack Jack appears in, since this is the popular character's debut as a leading man.Marine Express is great fun – it's got a bumpin'Tommy Snyder theme song and Tezuka's signature persistent sense of zany fun, in spite of the serious stakes.

86.Urotsukidoji: Legend of the Overfiend

I'm not just puttingUrotsukidoji here because it's an infamous film that introduced the mainstream to the idea ofhentai anime – it's a genuinely lurid, exciting, apocalyptic action movie! It just also has copious amounts of creepy tentacle rape. Anyway, this film—another experiment in patching together OVAs, only in this case all of the raunchiest material is left on the cutting room floor to make the movie a tiny bit more palatable—is about a trash-talking, blue-haired half-demon named Amano Jaku. His mission is to figure out which handsome college boy is the Overfiend, the legendary demon who'll unite heaven, hell, and earth, in disguise? Is it the class clown, or the jock? This project is another work from infamous producerYoshinobu Nishizaki, and it doesn't lack for his usual ambition – it's full of spectacular action scenes, and functions just as well as a monster movie as it does ahentai movie. The cast is peppered with actual well-kownseiyuu (the Englishdub stuck to pseudonyms), and… well, at least they got the music guy fromGiant Robo. Anyway, if you can take its extreme sexual violence, the movie cut ofUrotsukidoji is worth seeing.

85.Heart Catch Pretty Cure! The Movie: Fashion Show in Paris!

No,you immediately followed the entry about a supernatural sex demon with one about a magical girl cartoon for little kids! I'm not just name-checkingPretty Cure, though. The fact is, there aren't enough female anime creators and directors represented on this list. Institutional sexism has kept ladies out of the director's chair for a long time – I'll discuss this a bit more in a later entry – but that's eroding, and this movie is a great example of the talent that's emerging as a result. A lot of good animation directors come out from the bowels ofToei's TV anime production unit, and one of the best in recent years isRie Matsumoto, who cut her teeth handling episodes ofPretty Cure,Kyousougiga, and of course,Saint Seiya Omega. This movie is a pretty rote story about the Heartcatch girls (this time, they use magical perfume to transform!) and their trip to Paris being interrupted by a friendly-but-conflicted werewolf and a bad guy called Baron Salamander, but what makes it shine is Matsumoto's highly developed flair for action. The movie is full of eye-catching transformation and cool fight scenes, climaxing on a big battle in front of the Arc de Triomphe. It takes a good director to turn a sales vehicle for toys into a truly compelling film, and here Matsumoto works a lot of magic to create an exciting and enjoyable action movie.

84.Twelve Months

This film isn't the first east-west coproduction on the list—the Moomin movie had foreign investment, too—but it's the first between Japan and the Soviet Union, created from a partnership betweenToei Animation and Soyutzfilm. It's still anime through and through, created by animation greatsYūgo Serikawa andKimio Yabuki, with original character designs by no less thanOsamu Tezuka. (If you ask me, his work is changed pretty drastically for the movie. Still looks good, though!) The film itself is a simple fairy tale: young Anja has been set up for failure by her wicked stepmother, who hopes the kid will freeze to death in the forest while gathering flowers for the queen. But Anja is saved by theTwelve Months of the year personified, who use their seasonal powers to thaw her out. Serikawa's take on the story is an austere, restrained, but beautiful movie, with fantastic music by Vladimir Kristov. Few international co-productions turn out as well as this one.

83.Ranma ½: Big Trouble in Nekronon, China

I've got a soft spot for this movie, because it was one of the first full-length anime films I saw after I'd learned that anime was a whole medium unto itself. Its mix of breakneck-paced comedy and action was still like nothing I'd ever seen, even though it was pretty common at that point. The movie faithfully follows the big-deal shonen movie formula, opening with one ofRanma ½'s trademark giant chase scenes before shifting the action to China, where the hotheaded martial artist Ranma Saotome must save his (and occasionally, her) fiancée from no less than the Seven Lucky Gods themselves. The movie is rounded out by the pretty Lychee, playing the role of the cute girl who only appears in this film. This is a solid action-comedy and a good, well-rounded example of the appeal ofRanma ½.

82.Ringing Bell

Once upon a time, a greeting card executive namedShintarō Tsuji decided that he wanted to produce really great animated films. Fortunately, his company wasSanrio, theHello Kitty people, so he had plenty of access to money and talent. One of Tsuji's first projects was an adaptation of a children's book byTakashi Yanase, the famous creator of the beloved heroAnpanman. But this story was notably darker – it was about a lamb who watches his mother die at the fangs of a wolf, and can only come to one conclusion: to survive, he has to become stronger, more vicious, and more ruthless than the wolf! So he becomes the wolf's understudy. It seems silly, but the wolf, who understands his role in the food chain all too well, warns Chirin that he can become a fearsome predator—but only at a terribleMoral cost. The film is directed by the legendaryMasami Hata, who also created the excellentSea Prince and the Fire Child and rescued the troubledLittle Nemo film from the woodpile.Ringing Bell is compelling and genuinely disturbing in parts, both a potent source of childhood nightmare fuel and an impressive study of good and evil.

81. Treasure Island

Anime movies aren't just always movies. Sometimes they'reOVA series re-edited as films, and sometimes they're condensed versions of TV shows. This film is the latter, a director's cut ofTMS's classic TV series created for its 10-year anniversary. What makes it stand out so much is the director, the great and accomplishedOsamu Dezaki. I could make a good top 15 or 20 using nothing but Dezaki films. Here, what starts off as a seemingly average, obvious adaptation ofRobert Louis Stevenson's novel is quickly elevated by one thing: Dezaki's vision of Long John Silver. Dezaki's Silver is one of the medium's great heroes; the director's version of him sits somewhere between Robert Newton's memorably rougish performance from the 1950 Disney movie and an idealized, dashing father figure. Works like Treasure Island would build the foundation for Dezaki's later accomplishments, and this edit has all of the TV show's best parts in one place.

80.Spring and Chaos

Here we go withKenji Miyazawa and the cats again! But this isn't an adaptation of one of the author's stories—it's a biography of his life, byMacross co-creatorShōji Kawamori. Kawamori focuses on Miyazawa's life as a teacher, and his attachment to his infirm sister—the writer is depicted as a mysterious, inspiring figure to his students, and a devoted sibling who just isn't strong enough to turn aside fate's march. What's compelling about thisOVA (one that ran in theatres) is Kawamori's depiction of Miyazawa's flights of fancy, the bursts of inspiration that would lead him into poetry and short stories, as pure synaesthesia. This feature would make a good companion piece toNight on the Galactic Railroad.

79.Hellhound Liner 0011, Transform!

The otherToei films on this part of the list are well-crafted, straightforward fairy tales. But this movie, from the same era, is a revelation. It's about a kid whose pet dogs save the life of a scientist, so the scientist returns the favor by turning the dogs into a pack of powerful cyborg pups who transform into vehicles. Then, they all team up and fight aliens. This movie is run through with astonishingly colorful visuals and boasts a cheerfully bizarre, try-anything plot; I live to discover films like this.Yūgo Serikawa helped create this film, but it was directed byTakeshi Tamiya, who also directed the enjoyably weird talking-train cartoon movieKikansha Yaemon D51.

78. Asura

Keiichi Satō gets a lot of credit for creatingThe Big O, but he's gone on to build an impressive career since then, helming fare likeKaras and the recentGANTZ: O film. Here, years before the recentBerserk TV series would shock us with its ungainly mixture of 2D and 3D CG animation, Sato uses a similar approach to tell the story of a feral child who takes revenge on society. Think about feudal Japan. Are you picturing rolling mountains and rice paddies? No, try a burnt-out land ravage by war, drought, and famine. Its this landscape that gives rise to Asura, a murderous cannibal who fights to survive against an insensate society. The movie is kind of like The Revenant, only the whole world is the antagonist and it's way les cheerful in general. Asura is a savage, compelling action movie, and one that was almost completely overlooked upon its release in 2012. I think it's time to dig this one back up.

77.Highlander: The Search for Vengeance

Yeah, it's a weird Hollywood tie-in. It doesn't matter. The Highlander anime, directed by the greatYoshiaki Kawajiri, is still either the best or the second-best Highlander anything, depending on who you ask. (I think the original movie is a little better.) But this animated film easily beats out the Highlander film sequels, the TV spinoffs, and the cartoon version. Plotwise, there's not much there, just some gobbedlygook about a post-apocalyptic future and a virus. But at its root, this film is a Highlander movie, so it's really about an immortal swordsman named MacLeod, and his slow roll through time, dueling endlessly with a similarly immortal adversary. What makes this movie worthwhile is Kawajiri's virtuosic use of the Highlander storytelling device to set up outlandish sights like a sword duel on the wing of a flying B-29 bomber. The film's writer,David Abramowitz, has said that Kawajiri shocked the producers and himself by rewriting the script without permission. I bet he improved it.

76.Summer Days with Coo

Keiichi Hara's 2007 movie about a young family's discovery of a curious orphaned kappa trapped in a fossil is a winner, a sweet and pretty story full of expressive character animation. What I appreciate most is the attitude of Koichi and his family upon finding Coo, the kappa—they're surprised, but not shocked, because after all, they grew up reading stories about yokai like him. Coo, for his part, is happy and engaged with his human friends, but troubled— he can't remember his name, and there are old taboos forbidding humans and kappa to live together. His kappa family was wiped out by humans, so those taboos are there for a reason. I caught this film at a festival back in 2008, and I remain forever angry that we gotColorful, a pretty good movie, released here, and not this, a pretty great movie. This is a fine family film in the vein ofMy Neighbor Totoro and Letter to Momo.

That's all for now - we'll see you next time with the next 25 entries!


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Answerman - The Woes That BefallOne Punch Man Season 3

anime
One Punch Man is a classic example of what happens when good anime goes bad.― Keen Foxxx asks: "I'd love to hear your thoughts onOne Punch Man season 3. What's actually going on with the production? How can such a popular franchise face so many issues? Don't the people in charge realize the mess this creates and the potential financial and morale damage to staff for a series this beloved? I also h...
game review

Pokémon Legends: Z-A Game Review

games
It’s a very differentPokémon experience, for better or for worse.― Kalos is, by far, thePokémon region most deserving of aLegends game. WhenX/Y came out in 2013, it was the first new generation ofPokémon not to get a third (or in the case of generation 5, third and fourth) game. This would later become the new normal forPokémon of course, but that didn't even happen immediately followingX/Y, ...
feature

HowKamen Rider Helped Me Recover from Trauma

When faced with a life-changing accident, Jean-Karlo turned to Hiroshi Fujioka's performance as Kamen Rider and the series' enduring story of hope.Takeshi Hongo is Kamen Rider, a cyborg. He was modified by Shocker, an evil secret society that pursues world domination. Kamen Rider has pledged to fight against Shocker for the sake of freedom for all humanity. WhenKamen Rider began in 1971, viewers ...

Super Space Sheriff Gavan Infinity Series Takes OverSuper Sentai's Timeslot

Gavan Infinity launches newtokusatsu brandProject R.E.D.― Toei announced on Monday that it is launching a new live-action tokusatsu (special effects) brand titledProject R.E.D., which stands for "Records of Extraordinary Dimensions," and that this new brand will take over TV Asahi's Sunday 9:30 a.m. timeslot from Toei's long-runningSuper Sentai series. The first series in the brand isSuper Spac...
review

In the Clear Moonlit Dusk Volumes 2-8 Manga Review

manga
In the Clear Moonlit Dusk feels like the sort of series I ought to be enjoying more than I am, which is an awkward position to be in.― Mika Yamamori has proven over the course of her English-released series that you can't predict where her romances are going to go. Write off purportedly no-chance rivals at your peril and make assumptions about the trajectory of the story at your own risk; Yamamori i...
review

Detective Conan: Rivals Of The Great Detective Anime Series Review

anime
I'm not sure if this was always the intention or if these episodes were a direct response to the first batch of episodes that TMS put out, but it looks like more episodes ofDetective Conan have been adapted that now add some much-needed context.― Those mad lads did it! I'm not sure if this was always the intention or if these episodes were a direct response to the first batch of episodes that TMS p...
feature

A Special Evening with Ultraman

Anime News Network was allowed to check out the tour as it stopped by the Japan Society in New York City, where I was able to enjoy a lot of the strong enthusiasm for this franchise firsthand.― Sixty years is a long time. Even if you've never actually sat down and watched a piece ofUltraman media, no doubt you have come across something that has been either directly or indirectly inspired by this ...
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