Can an Anime be “Carried by its Animation”? – This Week in Anime
This week, Nick and Lucas sit down and tried to decide if saying a show is “carried by its animation” actually has any meaning due to the subjective nature of art.
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed by the participants in this chatlog are not the views of Anime News Network.
Spoiler Warning for discussion of the series ahead.The Elusive Samurai, Demon Slayer, Attack on Titan, Jujutsu Kaisen, Chainsaw Man, Mob Psycho 100, Trigun: Stampede, Naruto, Dahlia in Bloom, Senpai is an Otokonoko, Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End, Too Many Loosing Heroines!, EX-ARM, Land of the Lustrous, Wistoria: Wand and Sword are available on Crunchyroll.
Fate/Apocrypha, Naruto, and Dorohedoro are streaming on Netflix.
The First Slam Dunk is available on Apple TV+.
Akiba Maid War and “Ippon” Again! are on HIDIVE. “Ippon” Again! is also available on Amazon Prime Video.
I’ll tell ya Lucas, it can be difficult covering so much anime each season. It’s a long journey and sometimes even having a good show to follow can by trying. At times as I walk through the sands of the anime desert, I’ll look back and see the tracks I and the shows I talk about have left, and be confused. For during the toughest times, when the stories were floundering and character arcs tripped on their own feet, there would be one less set of footprints. That was when I realized that those times were when the Animation was Carrying Me.
Nick, I really wish I could follow up your opening with a screenshot of Jesus from the Record of Ragnarok anime, but apparently, they’re cowards and didn’t animate that part of the manga. So instead, I offer you Jesus from JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure and hope that He watches over us as we venture into a convo that focuses on internet words and discourse. Two things that have NEVER proven more divisive than what the writers initially intended.
So yeah, there’s been a bit of discourse lately about shows being “carried by their animation” this year. Though, the sentiment itself isn’t anything new—it comes and goes in waves along with arguments like “should there be more sex and violence in magical girl shows” or “subs vs dubs” or whatever. For as long as there have been anime with attention-grabbing animation highlights, there have been people ready to dismiss it for the creative indignity of uh, looking good.
There’s honestly a lot of nuance to that discussion! Like, to even have it, we first have to share a baseline definition of what “good animation” is. In modern fandom, that generally boils down to “cool, kinetic, heavily stylized action sequences” and “extremely fluid character animation” with very little in between. Then again, modern fandom is populated by people who can only communicate through the words “PEAK”, “MID”, and “TRASH” so there’s not much room for nuance there.
Putting aside my hot takes, I’ll be the first to admit that all of these anime are technical marvels and the result of an incredible amount of work from the production teams behind them. However, I think Mob Psycho 100 and Trigun Stampede are the only nominees with more inspired visuals. Especially in a year where Bocchi the Rock! and Pop Team Epic were available for animation noms, it’s a shame that these noms are fairly uniform in their animation.
To be clear, I totally disagree with them and find that way of approaching animation boring as hell, but it’s a clear example of how “good animation” has basically as many definitions as there are people in the world.
The point is, that animation quality is a far more complicated and personal idea than it might seem at first. That makes the premise of something being “carried by the animation” all the more of a mess to talk about. Weirdly enough, using the phrase says more about the speaker’s own biases and predilections for art than it does about whatever work they’re talking about.
This convo might reveal that I have a terminal “Reviewer Brain,” but thinking of art in such a segregated way is super alien to me. Sure, an anime’s animation can be a strong point for the show, but I struggle to think of a single series where the only thing I liked about it was the animation.
C’mon Nick! Clearly, there are a bunch of mirrors and lamps just off-screen in this shot. This inconsistent lighting totally makes sense within the context of the show!
The point is, yes, there are times when other elements can be enough to overcome poor production values. Yet at the same time, it sure would be nice if the animation could carry its share of the load here. Maybe the show could have some actually expressive character animation to better convey the characters’ emotions. Or they could make it look like the characters were in actual environments rather than boxes filled with CG furniture.
There are a couple of highlights for very specific matches, and those are great, but it ultimately achieves its goals without needing the stuff that gets clipped and spread on social media as “The GOATED PEAK OF GOD-TIER SAKUGAMATION”.
Does that mean then that the “carried by the animation” discourse is a consequence of younger anime fans realizing that most shonen and isekai series actually have fairly limited or straightforward writing? Before anyone @’s me, I’m aware that there are plenty of examples that disprove that statement, but it seems like the titles that come up most often in this discourse are intended for the broadest possible audience and therefore have some pretty direct themes and dialogue.
Nah, I think it’s just the latest way to give a backhanded compliment. Back in the mid-2010s, the go-to phrase was “style over substance” and it’s basically just a way of saying “This show is bad but dumb people (read: not me) are being fooled by pretty colors and drawings.” Which is honestly more obnoxious than anything.
Haha, listen, I’ve definitely had that impulse when I fail to resonate with a mega-popular series, but I’m not about to yuck anyone’s yum or be so reductive and dismissive in my evaluation of a piece of art.
I don’t even mean that as a dunk! That is just the most succinct way I can explain that the animation in Demon Slayer is 100% not for me, and I have no ill will toward the many people who do enjoy it.
Also, I’m definitely not the first person to get on this soapbox, but it’s frustrating how wide swaths of the anime fandom hyperfocus on action sequences when they talk about “good” animation. Too Many Loosing Heroines! quietly has some of the best animations of the season, and it’s exclusively used to drive home small, emotional moments or character quirks.
Oh, don’t even get me started on the discourse around CG anime. I’ll be the first to talk about poorly integrated 3D models or backgrounds (this season’s “carried by the animation” lottery winner, The Elusive Samurai, just had a shaking outing with that) but the weird amount of dismissal towards any CG show is frustrating. I swear, EX-ARM set that whole discussion back 15 years.
There, now we have something we can actually fight about.
It really is that easy, gang! Just be genuine, take enough time to make sure what you’re expressing aligns with what you actually mean, and internalize that disagreement is not a dismissal of your opinion or identity. BOOM! We just fixed like 80% of internet discourse!
Now, if I insult your taste in waifus, that is a dismissal of your value as a person, and you should act accordingly. So don’t come around here with any mid-maidens.
The animation will carry your corpses after this one.
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