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Space Anime Shorts

Space Anime Shorts

It’s spring, so it’s time to break out the shorts! Unless you, you know, don’t like to wear shorts. Or if the shorts in question are cargo shorts. Don’t wear cargo shorts, kids. Anyways,  if this season’s miserable lineup of shorts is any indication, shorts seem to be going out of fashion. Too bad. I’ll almost miss these little buggers. Good thing Trigger is still here and still very much lacking the funds to afford producing a full-length television anime. May their short once again be the short that certifies the future of shorts.

After her dad gets space injured during a rather embarrassing space accident, space schoolgirl Luluco is forced to replace him as a space detective at the space patrol, hunting space criminals. In space.

Wallpaper

Trigger once again show off that they’re at their best when they make cheery space magical girl shows rather than anything attempting to actually be about anything – looking at you,

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! Luckily, there’s no space sin in never changing a winning space team, and Trigger’s comedic timing, visual flair and excellent space skill at making a space show look good without any space money remain as solid as ever.

This space shorts season is really space lame, but we had to do this space post to make sure we talked about this space show… in space. It has all the kinetic energy and bluntly stupid space humor you’d expect from the makers of space 

. Needless to say, it’s a whole lot of space fun, and mostly keeps space Imaishi’s love of hyper sex and violence (at mach speed) in space check… mostly. Even though it’s a space short, it’s a must watch for this space anime season. SPACE!

Portrait Anime Space Cadet Girl Anna Lee Fisher

I like to joke about people immediately screaming ‘gaaaaaaaaaay’ at two anime girls if they do so much as hug, but now the anime girls have started doing it themselves! Unfortunately, acknowledging what everyone is already thinking won’t make your saccharine queer-baiting any more genuine,

, and the only other thing you’ve got going for yourself is your adorably deluded belief that people can really be as obsessed with bread as the creatures you call your characters are. You’re not an anime, you’re a hilariously misguided advertorial penned by people whose only prior writing experience consisted of role-playing

Have the cast wanting to make out with each other? It’s always hard to judge these really short shorts, but I didn’t find anything particularly compelling here. Count me out, but if you want to see cute girls talk about bread and don’t have a lot of time to do it, this show is for you.

Anime Girl With Light Blue Eyes And Mousy Hair Wearing A Black Hoodie And Jean Shorts Standing In An Empty Office Space With Yellow And Olive Baroque Patterned Wallpaper

Led to believe they’ve been recruited as idols, three girls end up working part time at a dingy arcade. Except they’re actually saving the world from a meteor, or something?

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Literally the only interesting thing about this barely animated mess is its casting of Rico Sasaki, who stands out amongst the crowd of interchangeable idol voice actresses solely because her voice is actually somewhat remarkable. I almost pity whatever crane game manufacturer is sponsoring is thing, though. It’s almost cute how they think they stand a single chance in the cutthroat world that is idol anime with this half-assed, opportunist garbage.

Soooo anyone want to explain how the crane game thing saves the world? Or why this barely animated show exists? The concept is so bonkers that it could have been fun, but there’s not enough time or production values to make it worth it. If you want a weird idol who saves the world from the apocalypse (several times), go watch Miss Monochrome.

Anime Shorts In Short Spring Edition

Doesn’t even try to be anything more. It doesn’t even bother to pretend that it’s anything more than just a paint-by-numbers fantasy RPG,  to a point where it will just shamelessly slap health bars and hit counters on screen and word its exposition like a flippin’ tutorial. I’m not too proud to admit that

‘s fourth-wall-breaking approach does occasionally hit the right marks, yet it’s also one of these shows that needs to learn the Rule of

An

: Pointing out the clichés of your genre won’t do you any good if you shamelessly indulge in them yourself. And with its generic characters,  mannered dialogue, embarrassing anti-humour and gratuitous boob jiggle,

Space Dandy Shorts

They also had a couple decent 4th wall breaking jokes, the account suspension at the end got a chuckle out of me. Let’s be honest though, at less than 4 minutes long with a 1 minute intro sequence this is basically a commercial for the game. It’s amusing for an episode, but I can’t see them having anywhere to go with it from here.Who watches anime shorts? We watch anime shorts. Even though 20+ minute flicks continue to dominate the industry, these bite-sized brain candies have emerged in recent years and garnered a special audience. Liberated from the chains of bloated budgets and long-form script writing, these speedier watches are able to deliver succinct storytelling, frantic punchlines, and curious experiments. Given a couple decades to come into full bloom, they may well become the “indie games” of Japanese animation in a sense. With that in mind, it’s always exciting to track the ups and downs of this fledgling medium. Let’s take a gander at the spring season’s batch of shows that clock in at twelve minutes or less and see how they stack up.

Written by Hiroyuki Imaishi of Kill la Kill and Gurren Lagann fame, Space Patrol Luluco is a smaller-scale effort that already has its sense of self firmly established. The man’s patented style and humour shine through the story of a normal middle-school girl, the eponymous Luluco, who must become an officer in place of her bumbling father. The world itself is what sci-fi dreams are made of; futuristic and inhabited by a mix of humans and innumerable quirky alien designs. This being the work of Studio Trigger, the designs have that inimitable flair and polish to them even though the budget is obviously lower than that of a AAA production. Imaishi has never shied away from sociopolitical intent with even the most ridiculous of premises, so it will be interesting to find out what makes Luluco tick.

Pan de Peace is just what the doctor ordered: a slice of life show about a bread-loving high schooler that is basic but blissful. After enduring various full-length shows that began as real charmers and wore out their welcome with soul-crushing haste, it goes to show that you can indeed capture the pleasant vibes the genre seeks to evoke in a fraction of the time. Its first episode introduces its characters and premise competently and thus doesn’t feel as frantic as its three minute run time would have you believe. Music, character designs, and animation that exceed the norm just ice the cake of pleasantry. It’s also made me morbidly curious what strawberry jam on an egg sandwich tastes like.

Prompthunt:

Anime Shorts & Pants

Obviously one to hog the spotlight, Square-Enix’s premiere JRPG franchise brings a AAA presence that looms over the rest of this list. Brotherhood serves as the prologue to the much-hyped Final Fantasy XV and has done a decent job of establishing the personalities of characters like the stoic Ignis and goofball Prompto quickly. Final Fantasy hasn’t had a weekly anime in many years (and some would rather not mention it), so even though this production is a mere five episodes, it’s a breath of fresh air. It’s also exciting to see a console power-flaunting 3D game adopt 2D animation that still looks the part.

Usakame is a spin-off of the Teekyuu series of vaguely (and I do mean vaguely) tennis-related shorts. This one will instead focus on the rivals of the Teekyuu girls, who all reared their heads in various previous seasons. Promotional shots actually feature a tennis court, so perhaps we’ll see a renewed emphasis on tennis. As far as gag anime go, each season is an unpredictable, superfueled freaksicle of absurdity that needs minimal explanation so I imagine the entry barrier will be minimal. If previous seasons are anything to go by, cramming as much eccentric humour as 2-3 minutes will allow shall be this one’s raison d’etre.

There’s no denying that Crane Game Girls is…different. It tasks its heroines, three aspiring idols, with saving the earth from a meteorite by, uh, working part-time at an arcade. If the first episode is any indication, they’ll do so while being completely oblivious to their roles as saviours as they protect humanity using one those dreaded dollar-devouring claw machines that scarred your childhood. Unfortunately, the pilot, which focuses on the organisation manipulating earth’s liberators, didn’t do a great job of building the premise or characters. I’m not going to dismiss it just yet, though, because any show listed as being directed by “Mr. Milkman” (yes, really) has a duty to be a revolutionary, industry-altering masterpiece.

Ai Art: Space Station Girl By @eveline🖤

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