Overall Rating
Good
Story: 3
Dialogue: 5
Animation: 4
Entertainment: 4
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For those who heard of this thing being 17 eps and now are wondering where eps 14-17 are, those wonât come out until the DVD/bluray is released. This anime got cut short. More info here: http://www.houkagoblogtime.com/kokoro-connect-news-updates-thoughts-on-this-seasons-ends/ . Not my blog so donât give me the credit. :P
That being out of the way, the anime being complete for now, and me being pissed that itâs not going to get the closure it deserves, on to the review.
The main problemâs just been noted. Considering that the whole anime got cut on short notice, the for-now ending is decent enough, but for those who havenât yet started on this anime, itâs something to count in. The last arcâs potential basically got crushed, and the last episode feels rushed as a few things donât have any closure and others get resolved far too easily. Resolving things easily is the way of the story, anyways, so it might not disappoint the fans too much, but the fact remains that thereâs far more potential than this anime eventually displays.
Iâm rolling this thing up from the end, however. âKokoro Connectâ can be neatly divided into three arcs, each of which has the five main characters go through different supernatural occurrences and their effects. Itâs something that results in inconsistent pacing, seeing as the arcs are kind of disconnected and could stand on their own, but itâs also something that makes the whole thing a lot deeper and more dramatic than your typical body-switching slapstick show, especially in terms of getting to know the characters and watching them grow throughout these arcs. That being said, however, there is a dragging point at the very beginning, with the start being quite typical except for the underlying heavier feel; a few episodes in however, once the drama kicks in and the characters become more intriguing, it becomes evident that in all its standard-ness, âKokoro Connectâ managed to step aside from generic.
All that being said, what about the characters? The protagonists are standard, known archetypes -- but at least theyâre clearly defined, with core personalities, predilections, and conflicts being shown in detail. Characterisation is solid, with an unusual emphasis on family life, and although the whole anime is just a little too short and a little too standard to allow the viewers to entirely empathise, characters and development turn out strong. And then weâve got the antagonist, Heartseed, who is probably one of the craziest unarmed antagonists of all time. Still, the problem remains that a handful of things get resolved far too easily, and not only at the end.
There we are with character interaction, which is⊠quite odd, to say the least. The first two episodes are standard, and known enough for me to roll my eyes; but those aside, the dialogue is refreshingly frank, if a little forced, at times. Humour is effectively placed to lighten up serious set-ups without ridiculing too much, and the voice-acting is without a doubt excellent, especially so where it comes to individual speaking patterns.
Animation, music, and art arenât quite as great. All of those are without a doubt above average, as the visuals are high-quality, and background renderings and animation are up to date. Problems here lie in typical animation shortcuts and inconsistent quality in character design. The music is standard, count out tiny dissonances here or there (which obviously donât help it), and the character design⊠only let me say this much, our protagonists without exception look like they belong into K-ON! (*groans*).
For entertainment? Itâs a little standard, but itâs good at the same time. It certainly isnât without its faults -- typical start, a cut-off end, stilted character interaction, problems too easily resolved⊠but at the same time, the characters, standard as they may be, are well-presented, the set-ups allow for both genuinely fresh and funny as well as for genuinely serious moments, and with varying degrees of drama, light humour, its supernatural touch, and its air of mystery throughout, it works. Itâs not the best out there, but itâs a decent one. Personally, I appreciate that it made more out of what originally looked like a standard concept, standard characters, standard animation and music, and even if the characters werenât entirely relatable to me, I found it intriguing to watch them unfold. At the same time, however, I felt like it didnât display all of its potential; part of that is due to the fact that it got cut short, but even putting that aside, a lot of problems would run deeper in real life than they seem to do here. A bit standard, yet, but it is anime after all, and if you donât expect too much, itâs a decent one. Some good supernatural drama/mystery, light cues of humour, decent characterisation and character development, and it certainly succeeds in stepping out of the shadow of its rather typical beginning concept. Though I still wish they hadnât cut it off like that.
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