The Frontline Report [1/30/22]

The Frontline Report is a weekly column where I summarize my journey through anime, manga, and the related spheres of popular culture over the past week. Expect spoilers for covered material.


Hello, friends! I’ve tried to keep busy this week, but some of that is with projects you all won’t see the results of for some time yet, including another commission series I’m watching. I try to make the Frontline Reports a little beefier in weeks like that to compensate, so I hope you’ll enjoy the three writeups I’ve prepared for y’all this week. (Plus, of course, the other articles linked to elsewhere down below.) We’ve got a really good episode, a somewhat troubling episode, and a sendoff to one of my favorite anime of the last twelve months. Enjoy!


Princess Connect Re:Dive – Season 2

It feels odd to say this, but there’s more going on in Princess Connect: ReDive than almost any other series airing this season. I don’t just mean sheer density of events-per-episode, although there’s that too (it might be the show’s only flaw, if you’re inclined to view it as one.)

To wit: this past week, the Gourmet Guild was roped into helping the elf Aoi (voice acting legend Kana Hanazawa), who you may remember from last season, fit in at the school she’s transferred to.

She wants to get along with her illustrious senpai, the soft-spoken and serious Yuni (Konomi Kohara. Notably for this blog, she was the title role in Pompo: The Cinephile). Plus, by implication, Yuni’s own two friends, Chieru (Ayane Sakura, who has been in a ton of things. Last season she was Julia in Mieruko-chan) and Chloe (Atsumi Tanezaki, probably best known to readers of this blog as the titular lead from Vivy – Flourite Eye’s Song. She makes the otherwise minor character stand out by performing her with a notably deep voice. The performance is just awesome all around, really. I’m not familiar enough with Tanezaki’s work to know if she just decided to go really hard on this character for some reason or if her voice just actually sounds like that. In the latter case, you can catch me swooning over in the corner.)

In an anime that was merely a fantasy adventure / comedy series, you might correctly predict that this eventually involves investigating a haunted forest which turns out to have a super haunted graveyard in it. Less expected are the bizarre turns this episode takes for the surreal; touches like skeletons rising from the grave glitching the very video around them. The wight of a powerful king somehow transforms the surrounding landscape into an echo of his own burning kingdom. It’s Pecorine who takes him out, with a soft hug and some kind words rather than her sword.

When this whole haunted graveyard deal is over, we cut to some time later. Yuni’s been doing research, and the nation marked on the gravestones in the forest doesn’t exist and never has. She’s content to have briefly grasped that something’s going on, but for us, the mystery remains. Some aspects of Princess Connect‘s first season implied the cast (or at least Yuuki and maybe Pecorine) might be faced with the classic stuck-in-a-game isekai scenario and not know it. If that’s true, this is the hardest the series has leaned on it in the second season so far. Questioned are raised, and the answers seem still far off.

That intriguing idea alone would ensure Princess Connect Re:Dive a recurring spot in this column. But I should at least mention the show’s absolutely dynamite production, too. This isn’t Sakugablog and I am not kVIN, so I couldn’t begin to tell you the specific ins and outs of how the show manages to consistently look this good, but I know that it does. Maybe it’s Chief Director Takaomi Kanasaki (Director of PrinConne’s first season, and also quite a lot of stuff for its genre-fellow, Konosuba) and his…what’s the word here? Assistant? The ‘regular’ director, Yasuo Iwamoto (an industry lifer with credits, many as a storyboarder or episode director, going all the way back to 1988 space opera classic The Legend of The Galactic Heroes). Maybe it’s just that CygamesPictures only takes on a reasonable amount of projects at once. (That amount appears to be roughly “one.” If every anime looked this damn good, I’d be happy getting far fewer per year.)

Regardless, the show has yet to have a weak-looking episode. The lack of a huge combat setpiece in this episode shouldn’t detract from the great character acting we get. There’s a bunch! Look at how expressive those faces are! That’s quality.

Suffice it to say, we will see Princess Connect around these parts again.

Tokyo 24th Ward

I wasn’t going to do even a short writeup about this episode, but then a plot developed where the titular ward’s mayor is nakedly employing media manipulation to turn the ward’s populace against the local shantytown that’s literally called Shantytown so people will file complaints. Complaints he will use as pretext to redevelop it into a casino. (Yes, the whole town apparently. I don’t know, maybe it’s a really big casino.)

What a shady place. There are women wielding pipes!

Part of this campaign also involves disseminating a highly addictive and dangerous drug simply called “D” into the streets. This drug is vaped, because of course it is. Also in on this whole racket are SARG, who punish use of the drug that their boss is (presumably unknown to them) supplying. This becomes an inflection point in Shuuta’s increasing uneasiness with Kouki’s authoritarian leanings, but the issue isn’t explored in detail here.

There are ups and downs here. On the one hand, the episode correctly points out that places like Shantytown arise from government disinterest or even active malice, and that bringing them under a tighter grip (especially to “redevelop” them) is no answer. By the same token, the series’ repeated use of “third choices” as a motif seems to present a dichotomy between Kouki’s borderline fascist point of view and Ran’s free-spirited art anarchy.

There is a real distinction there, but the narrative continues to center on Shuuta, who by all evidence, seems to think the solution to most problems is to just talk things out.

I hate raking an anime over the coals for not even bad politics but possibly iffy politics, but Tokyo 24th has Gone There, so I feel as though I have no real choice but to take it as seriously as it clearly wants to be taken on this subject. Next episode involves one of Ran’s friends plotting a terrorist attack, so who knows where this is going. I probably say this too often, but, well, time will tell.

Tropical-Rouge! Pretty Cure

In a way, I feel bad that I haven’t written about Tropical-Rouge! Pretty Cure more. I’ve already shared why the series means so much to me personally in my end-of-year writeup from the tail end of December, so I won’t repeat myself here. But even at as much a remove I can muster from my own experiences, TroPre was something special. And to again return to my own feelings, that finale had me crying like a baby. I was not the only one.

I can feel it in the air. The summer’s out of reach.

TroPre will comfortably settle into its place in fandom memory. Pretty Cure fans don’t let favorites die, and it’s not controversial to say TroPre earns its stripes as one of the strongest entries in the franchise. In a sense, the endless summer that the final episode promises will be as real in our own memories as it is on the shores of Aozora City. The closing scenes are things of simple and pure beauty; Manatsu (Ai Farouz in the defining role of her young but already illustrious career) and Laura (brought to brilliant life by Rina Hidaka) meeting again for the first time, the sheer strength of their bond overloading and destroying the “memory machine” that lurked in the background as the show’s only unresolved plot thread.

The flood of memory is literal; bubbles containing the girls’ precious moments with each other pour out of the Aqua Pot. And just like that, Tropical-Rouge! Pretty Cure makes a graceful, joyous exit, off the silver screen and into our hearts forever.

Keep tropica-shining, girls.


Elsewhere on MPA

Let’s Watch MY DRESS-UP DARLING Episode 4 – “Are These Your Girlfriend’s” – Some anime start out strong, others take a while to find their footing. If episode four of My Dress-Up Darling is any indication, it’s in the latter camp. This episode humanizes the lead, Gojo, to a degree we haven’t really seen before. As a direct consequence, the show comes alive in a way it never previously has. I have thought some prior episodes of this anime were solid or even good, this is the first I’d say was outright great.

Let’s Watch SABIKUI BISCO Episode 3 – “Tag Team” – Back again, Sabikui Bisco takes a bit of a downturn this week. I still liked the episode overall but the show’s rough handling of Pawoo–its only major female character so far–feels like a possible bad sign. My hope is that this is a fluke, not a pattern.

But, of course, we’ll learn together tomorrow. See you then for more Sabikui Bisco, anime fans. Stay safe out there, if you’re in the continental US like me! The weather’s been rough.


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