Anime Adaptations That Aren’t As Good As They Should Be – This Week in Anime
This week, Nick and Steve talk about sub-par anime adaptations of great books and manga—and end up dunking on The Witch and the Beast, Berserk, and Lucifer and the Biscuit Hammer (just to name a few).
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed by the participants in this chatlog are not the views of Anime News Network.
The Witch and the Beast, I’m in Love with the Villainess, Otherside Picnic, The Maid I Hired Recently Is Mysterious, Ganbare Dōki-chan, Berserk 2016/2017, Lucifer and the Biscuit Hammer, The 100 Girlfriends Who Really, Really, Really, Really, Really Love You, Spice & Wolf, and Spice & Wolf: Merchant Meets Wise Wolf are streaming at Crunchyroll. 7SEEDS is streaming at Netflix.
Nick, as we’re the two most senior contributors to “This Week in Anime,” we’ve shared a lot of crazy adventures over the years. Given that pedigree, I’ve found the perfect topic to sink our teeth into.
I, of course, am talking about when the anime adaptation isn’t as good as it should be. A unique pain we are all too familiar with.
Nick
Everyone understands the thrills of a great adaptation and the pains of a terrible one. But I think we need to spare a thought for the Stealers Wheel category of works where you’re stuck in the middle of those extremities—left to contend with a show that isn’t terrible enough to be a disappointment but not good enough to be worth recommending. Let’s be loud for those mids.
It’s a more interesting space than most people give it credit for. And a larger one too. As much as we bemoan the ever-rising volume of anime being produced, it doesn’t all fall off the assembly line like a heap of pink slime. If anything, more anime than ever now wear their charms alongside their bruises.
I guess that’s a more positive way of saying that a lot more stuff being produced means it’s a lot more common to get bare-bones adaptations that mostly exist to promote source material as quickly as possible without being an outright embarrassment. Good on you for staying optimistic.
I’m trying! The alternative is utter despair—and there’s already plenty of that going around elsewhere. Moreover, this topic sprang to mind because I was thinking about this season’s The Witch and the Beast, an adaptation I’ve been enjoying quite a bit despite its shortcomings.
I’m behind on that one, but even just going by the first episode, I get what you mean about it wearing its faults as clearly as its strengths. A lot of that premiere was defined by strong character and environmental designs having to compensate for some wonky action editing.
I also distinctly remember a moment where a character gets absorbed into a magically summoned tree entirely off-screen—which was confusing even if it made that bit a lot easier to animate.
This happens when you dedicate all your animation resources to making the cast look hot.
That’s not to say the character art is always on point. There’s one episode with egregiously off-model Guideaus—but I find them cute, so I forgive this trespass.
Everyone still appears to be pierced and smoking so I think they pass muster.
“Reasonable facsimile” is a great way to describe it. While there’s always the faint hope for a “dream” adaptation that lavishes your favorite manga or light novel with high-quality animation and direction, most of the time the reasonable ask is that you get something functional that largely translates the charm of the source material without embarrassing itself. It is a bit disconcerting to think that the primary reaction to anime announcements these days is “Please don’t screw this up.”
You’ve got that right. I can recall a time when I held genuine excitement for such announcements. Now, that time may as well be as distant as the fall of Rome. And I hadn’t read any of The Witch and the Beast before watching the anime, so who knows if that would have colored my perspective. Sometimes, ignorance is indeed bliss.
To be fair that’s ugly as a lesser sin. Like wearing mixed fabrics or saying the F word.
But there’s also the realities of the market to keep in mind. There are only so many resources to go around in an already overburdened animation industry—and the nature of the beast means that smaller, more “niche” titles are almost always going to get quick and bare-bones productions for the primary purpose of selling more light novels.
At the same time, sometimes a mid-production can genuinely screw things up without actively failing at anything. Anime and manga may primarily be storytelling mediums, but they’re visual mediums nonetheless, and a downgrade in optics—or even just missing the mark a bit—can sap the appeal out of something real quick.
But demonstrably fails to capture the particular style and intent of the source material’s art:
Ah, and I believe I may be picking up on what that original intent was.
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Lord help the underpaid artists tasked with trying to animate a consistent denier value.
Oof, true. I only just read Berserk in the past couple of years but I can’t imagine being a fan of as powerful and intricately illustrated a manga as that one, and tuning into that jerky CG monstrosity. That’s one kind of monstrosity you don’t want to see in a Berserk adaptation.
What’s fun is that the multiple Berserk anime covers a wide range of adaptational strengths and weaknesses. The 90’s anime sells the atmosphere and drama of the story but struggles to fully convey the scope of the Golden Age Arc battles. The film trilogy excels at giving those battles life and scope but has inconsistent art and animation that leaves the story feeling weaker than it should. And the 2016 series falls on its ass so hard at every turn that it makes both previous versions look way better by comparison.
You also have to consider how adaptations affect the perception of the series as a whole. In Berserk‘s case, I had only ever heard about the Golden Age Arc, possibly because it’s the only part that ever got a decent adaptation. But in reading the manga, I found almost all of my favorite material and character beats happened well past that point.
I will carry the burden of the Lucifer & the Biscuit Hammer adaptation to my grave—cursed just like that goddamn horse.
This is another one where “mid” feels like a stretch. While not the absolute nadir of TV animation, Biscuit Hammer was bad at just about everything it did. Whatever appeal made its way to the surface like a sprig of grass through a sidewalk was thanks to the strength of the original material. Everything else was a wreck and anyone who’s ever dreamed of a Mizukami adaptation screamed in agony as this (seemingly) only chance whiffed it.
As previously argued, I’m a guy who thinks a good source can go a long way in salvaging a spotty adaptation. But I’d agree that Biscuit Hammer stretches that leniency to its breaking point. They shouldn’t be making a product that draws all those different animals. There should be labor laws against that.
Can’t believe the anime found a way to make Hakari even more cursed than the manga. pic.twitter.com/BthVDI0vU7
— Yami ReiRei, JK (@LossThief) November 19, 2023
Aww crabapples.
Maybe that will still come through in this reboot. We’re technically doing this before it airs so if we’re lucky this part of the discussion will be obsolete by publishing time. I don’t feel too confident about that given the previews though.
Me neither, but I know I will watch it. I enjoy looking at Holo enough that I will sit through an inferior adaptation so long as it’s barely competent at portraying my wolf wife. It can be as mid as it likes.
They will look worse AND are worth less now due to inflation. Thanks, Biden.
If you were a real Holo-lover you’d want your wife to look her best.
I can’t trust contemporary anime with that level of responsibility. That’s what the scale figures in my Detolf are for.
With any luck, the best parts of Spice & Wolf will prevail regardless. I’m always happy to be proven wrong about this stuff when it happens. I think I’d be more keen if this new series were adapting more of the light novels, rather than reduxxing two full seasons of television.
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