Let’s Watch is a weekly recap column where I follow an anime for the course of its entire runtime. Expect spoilers!
For the second time while writing this column, I feel the need to open this article with an apology. I have to level with you here. I genuinely mostly like Spy x Family, but this is, by my count, the fourth episode in a row that’s been basically pleasant and amusing but also of no consequence whatsoever. I’m aware that Spy x Family is not some immortal drama that seeks to resonate throughout the ages, but it’s not a particularly great sign when co-seasonals of such narrative heft as BOCCHI THE ROCK! and Do It Yourself!! have had more comparative forward plot momentum this cour than SpyFam has. It’s not that I’m demanding shootouts, character deaths, and commentaries on the nature of the human condition in every episode, here, but it really and truly feels like very little is happening. This is Spy x Family spinning its wheels; in a full water-treading mode that is perhaps the unintentional result of its heavily decompressed pace. It’s not even that these episodes are bad; they’re just difficult to write about.
The good news is that, for an episode that isn’t really about much of anything—save maybe some more light pair-the-toys energy between Anya and her perpetual frenemy Damian—it at least is still a pretty good one. (Again, nothing since “Yor’s Kitchen” has even sniffed actually being bad. There’s just not really a ton going on.)
Again, the episode is split between an A and a B plot. The A plot is another Anya segment, although the real focus is on new character George Glooman, a classmate of Anya and Damian’s who we haven’t seen until this point. Georgie here is under the impression that his company has been “crushed” by the Desmond Group (the very same owned by Damian’s family). To this end, he hired a spy to try to mess with Damian’s grades—that was the B plot of last week’s episode, which we skipped here on Magic Planet Anime because I wasn’t feeling very well. It also introduced us to a new counterpart for Loid, a bumbling novice spy who goes by the codename “Daybreak.”—and when that doesn’t work, he here resorts to trying to get him expelled. Perhaps unsurprisingly, that doesn’t work either; Anya might not like Damian as much as Damian clearly likes her, but she’s unwilling to let him get kicked out of school over nothing. It would foil her beloved papa’s mission, after all.
There’s also some stuff here about George exploiting the fact that everyone—even himself—thinks he’s leaving. He asks for drinks, for caviar(!), for mementos, etc. Only to then find out from his pa that the Glooman company is just being bought out and everything is pretty much fine. Whoops!
The B plot is a bit more interesting this time around. Mostly because it stars Yor, who gets her first real chance to show off at all here since the cour started. She runs a bundle of gym clothes to Eden Academy because she gets the impression that Anya’s forgotten them. Naturally, Spy x Family being what it is, she’s actually mistaken, and the entire segment’s punchline is that she did all this for no real reason at all.
But, along the way we get some very nice animation and some unusually zany directing for this series. Including a memorably bizarre cut where Yor kicks a falling flowerpot back up onto the windowsill it fell from, in full Looney Tunes fashion.
Maybe, in the end, that’s really how I should be thinking of this show. As a half-hour Chuck Jones or Tex Avery joint, a showcase for fun animation and wacky antics. But by its very nature of having an overarching story—Loid’s mission and Anya’s part in it, and the blooming family dynamic between Loid, Yor, and Anya—it more or less resists that classification. Thus, episode 19 ends like last few have: solid, but unsurprising. The next-episode preview once again teases a new proper story arc. Perhaps we’ll get something more substantial to chew on then.
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Yeah, I kind of wish more was going on in the story, but I still had a really good time watching this episode.
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The last few episodes have left me flat. They don’t seem to be getting anywhere and cuteness and adoreableness isn’t quite enough to carry it.
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