She is so completely earnest and innocent that she is impossible not to love. Sawako herself goes down as one of my all-time favorite characters. And while perhaps we are also being setup for a continuation at some point, since the manga is still ongoing, the ending was also not particularly ideal. While I still enjoyed them immensely, I suspect some viewers will likely begin to lose patience at the lack of progress or action in the story. While just about every aspect of the series was wonderful to behold, the series already slow pace comes to an even greater crawl over the last 8-10 episodes. This is not to say that it doesn’t have its faults. Much like its soft artwork and color palette, Kimi ni Todake is the kind of show you will sit back and relax too, forgetting about all the problems of your day. The concepts are simple, the pacing slow, and full of the required blushes and aw shucks moments. Nobody has torturous family lives or tragic pasts or other situations that always feel forced in a way to create drama that could be better achieved with fantastic characters and storytelling. The feelings and situations presented to us are real and powerful but not in an overly dramatic way. He’s a guy who will be loved by viewers not because he’s hot, but because he’s just a really nice guy any girl would want to fall in love with and guys would want as a friend. Kazehaya isn’t a dick, for lack of a better term. She isn’t out for revenge nor is she being pursued by a harem of bishounens with a desperate struggle to choose between them. Sawako isn’t the plain and perky heroine determined to get a man to fall for her who ignores her or treats her horribly. There are none of the usual tired clichés. I firmly believe that in order to really fully appreciate just how special Kimi ni Todake is, you have to already be a veteran of at least a dozen or more of its shoujo peers. While her situation is a bit contrived and not overly realistic, the way it is presented is so wonderfully sweet and beautiful that it is impossible not to love. The remaining story is one of self discovery as Sawako experiences the first feelings of love and friendship she has ever felt. This all changes when she meets a boy named Kazehaya who is the first to truly see her and slowly she begins to draw herself out of her shell. Desperately wanting others to understand her she is instead shunned and feared by her classmates. Our heroine is Sawako, a sweet and gentle girl with an awkward personality and an uncanny resemblance to Sadako from The Ring. It takes all the classic shoujo romance stereotypes and plot devices and flips them on its head leaving us with a thoroughly rewarding and groundbreaking romance.Īt first, Kimi ni Todake drew me in before I saw its first frame of film with its story concept. Read on for our recommendations, and the live-action titles that pair nicely with them, if you’re unfamiliar with the cartoons themselves, and find yourself something worth watching.Only rarely does a series break the mold its genre has cast for it and even more uncommonly does it set itself apart from all others. We’ve done our best to peregrinate through anime’s genre and age brackets in an attempt to create as broad a picture of collection as possible, while highlighting the merits of each title. In our updated list below, we’ve evaluated and recommended the 30 best anime series on Netflix. The library’s simply grown too large to navigate for anyone who values their time - or hasn’t spent all their time watching anime. It’s become a major anime player, and whether you’re into action, romance, trippy fantasy, or cyberpunky sci-fi, its anime as a category isn’t diminishing in importance, even as individual titles shuffle on or off of the service. Netflix is heavily invested in the anime space, to the point where it’s gotten difficult to keep track of just how many anime titles it’s producing or licensing - especially when juggling between the long-running franchise hits like Pokémon and the single-season gems like Cowboy Bebop. Newly added titles are marked with an asterisk.* This article is regularly updated as more titles join or leave Netflix. Photo-Illustration: Vulture Photos Courtesy of Netflix
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