2015-01-01



Over the past ten years I’ve annually compiled a list of the annual new anime TV and web anime productions that I considered the finest of the year. Regrettably, I’m unable to do the exact same thing this year because I don’t feel knowledgable enough about some of the year’s most popular titles to critique them. So rather than compile a “best of” list, I’ll provide a list of the year’s most interesting new anime, along with my picks for worst new anime of 2014.

Unlike 2013, which was a particularly good year for new anime, 2014 was the weakest year for new anime since 2010. The ten most highly regarded debuts of 2014 included three sequels (Psycho-Pass, Sword Art Online II, Log Horizon), a remake of a relaunch (Fate/stay night: Unlimited Blade Works), and an adaptation of a 26-year-old manga (Kiseiju: Sei no Kakuritsu), suggesting that creativity was not a strength of 2014. Anime News Network compiled a list of 155 new anime that premiered in 2014. My own list is more comprehensive, including 211 premieres last year. Out of those 211 new TV shows, TV specials, and web anime, I watched at least one full episode of 206 of them. I deliberately excluded Nano Invaders because the show isn’t Japanese animation.

Witch Craft Works & No Game, No Life both earn credit for being the most sheer fun harem farce TV shows since 1992’s Tenchi Muyo. Both series featured unexpectedly attractive art design and unusually smooth animation quality. Witch Craft Works was a pleasant change of pace because it didn’t include any obvious bumbling idiot characters. Certainly the KMM-dan fills the role, but the girls themselves aren’t actually inept; they’re just prone to bad luck. Co-protagonist Ayaka Kagari’s no-nonsense chivalry is a refreshing and gratifying role-reversal, and Takamiya’s efforts to be worthy of Kagari’s devotion are admirable. Shows like 2014’s Ryuugajou Nanana no Maizoukin demonstrate the difficulty of effectively mixing slapstick humor with serious, threatening danger; Witch Craft Works consistently got the balance perfect. No Game, No Life ostensibly seems like a story that shouldn’t work as well as it does. Borrowing its concept from Sword Art Online & Mondaiji-tachi ga Isekai Kara Kuru Sou Desu yo? and adding in a heavy emphasis on otaku behavior seems like a recipe for bland, pandering cliché. However, the narrative twist of forcing the protagonists to rely on intelligence and wit to overcome seemingly insurmountable odds gave the show a spark of creativity and unpredictability. The show wisely placed viewers into conference with the protagonists, keeping the viewers guessing about forthcoming plot twists just as much as the characters. The protagonist siblings’ self-deprecating yet unflappable confidence is also relatively uncharacteristic of modern anime, making them instantly empathetic characters that viewers like and want to cheer for.

I’m embedding the Witch Craft Works ending instead of the opening because I love the KMM-dan song and because the ending is tonally a better representation of the show than the opening animation is.

Shirobako is still ongoing, having reached only its mid-point by year’s end. However, the show’s first half alone is sufficient to qualify it as one of the year’s most interesting anime. 2001’s Animation Runner Kuromi OVA series pioneered the concept of anime about the daily life of a studio production assistant, but Shirobako earns credit for being so much more detailed and extensive. Viewers uninterested in slice-of-life employment anime like Servant x Service, Salaryman Kintaro, and Hataraki Man probably won’t find much to enjoy in Shirobako, but viewers that appreciate a geeky insider’s view of exactly how anime gets produced already love the show. In addition to providing rare insight into the scheduling and division of labor behind the scenes of anime production, the show is also filled with subtle in-jokes referencing anime titles, studios, and professionals including Mushi Productions, Toei Animation, Rocky Chuck Monogatari, Kantai Collection, Doraemon, Minky Momo, Otoko Do Aho! Koshien, Space Runaway Ideon, Evangelion and Hideaki Anno.

Director Shinichiro Watanabe’s first return to helming a space adventure anime in 16 years turned out to defy everyone’s expectations. Space Dandy was not an eccentric noir like Cowboy Bebop, nor was it a straightforward space opera like Outlaw Star. The show’s nearest sibling is actually Katsuhito Ishii’s obscure 2003 OVA series Trava: Fist Planet. Space Dandy turned out to be an animator’s sandbox: a crazy, irreverent absurdist slapstick filled with everything its animators liked, including boobies, food, spaceships, weird aliens, zombies, giant monsters, ray guns, superheroes, drag racing, rock & roll, kung-fu, baseball, and pro-wrestling. As a linear narrative, the show is rather weak. As a pure spotlight for unbridled giddy anime exuberance, both in content and animation quality, the show is difficult to top.

The 10-episode Minarai Diva TV show slipped by with barely any notice by international fans, largely for justifiable reason. Like other ad-libbed-dialogue shows such as GDGD Fairies, X-Maiden, Chokkyuu Hyoudai Robot Anime, and Tesague! Bukatsu-mono, Minarai Diva isn’t exciting and isn’t much to look at. But behind the scenes the show is a landmark in anime history because it’s the first and only anime broadcast live. The CG animation was literally rendered and broadcast on the fly, and Japanese viewers participated in the show in real-time via Twitter. Possibly the most fascinating aspect of the show was watching the voice actresses spontaneously respond to technical glitches including the CG animation freezing. The show isn’t as interesting as scripted or edited productions, but it is the first anime of its kind and an example of fascinating cutting-edge technology.

Reactions to Hoozuki no Reitetsu are polarized between viewers that don’t like or don’t understand its dry humor and viewers that appreciate the show’s uniqueness. I’ll concede that the series isn’t flawless. But its moments of spot-on cynical, satirical humor outnumber its flops. The show’s pitch black humor wickedly skewers Buddhist and Christian religion, Japanese social conventions, Japanese history and traditions, and contemporary anime tropes and conventions. Enma-Daioh has appeared in numerous prior anime, including Akuma-kun, Dororon Enma-kun, Yu Yu Hakusho, and Dragon Ball, but he’s never been as pitiable and defamed as he appears in Hoozuki no Reitetsu. Perhaps the show’s strongest asset is its perspective. Since the show stars demons and occurs in Hell, it undermines and rejects all of the values and traditions of the human world while satirically revealing that certain rules and moral vices are universal, even among demons. The show’s eagerness to depict ruthlessly indelicate behavior disguised with faux tact gives the series a devilish charm and humor.

Viewers born during the 1990s or more recently probably won’t get the appeal of Hi☆sCoool! SeHa Girl. However, older viewers that fondly recollect the 8-bit era are likely to embrace the show’s nostalgic humor. Today’s younger viewers probably aren’t familiar with Golden Axe, Altered Beast, Space Harrier, Puyo Puyo, and Space Channel 5, or gags about a 56k modems, 3:4 aspect ratios, or Segata Sanshiro. But references to such obscure and forgotten games as Fighting Vipers, Dynamite Deka, and Roommania #203 and gags involving Dreamcast headbutting a giant beetle from Mushiking, Yamato the dog only befriending American ninja, lazy palatte swaps, Virtua Fighter polygon counts, gaijin baseball players with short careers, useless healing spells, and mother-in-law swords all exemplify the show’s goofy gags. Plus hearing Saturn and Dreamcast refer to MegaDrive as “MegaDora-san” is awfully cute.

I don’t like calling out poor anime for the sake of being cynical or spiteful, but fans that want to know about anime ought to know as much about the bad as the good.

The broadcast version of Wizard Barristers episode 11 may be the single worst anime episode of the year. The episode was broadcast with roughly a third of its animation incomplete or missing. But the complete show narrowly avoided being a complete disaster.

Studio P.A. Works has crafted some very sweet slice-of-life dramatic anime, including Hanasaku Iroha and Tari Tari. However, Glasslip was a misstep. Creating a slice-of-life story about self-absorbed, unlikeable characters that don’t do anything isn’t a formula for success. I stopped watching the show after its first episode. I’ve yet to encounter anyone who watched more of it and didn’t regret doing so.



I’m tempted to reference Nobunaga Concerto, but evidently it’s a rather divisive title. The show’s stiff, awkward-looking CG character designs are ugly, and the show’s animation is a bit stiff and stilted. Likewise, character reactions didn’t quite seem natural or believable. However, fans of historical fiction seem to appreciate the show.



Now, eleven months after it premiered, I still can’t determine whether the Wonder Momo web anime series was supposed to be satirically bad or if it was just a natural disaster. The miniseries appears to be debut voice actress Yuka Fujiwara’s only anime role. Thankfully. For as heavily promoted as this production was, one would assume that its short episodes would be graced with a sufficient budget. Evidently they weren’t because the art design and animation quality, especially on the first episode, were terrible. Instead of being witty or satirical, the parody felt uninspired and even insipid. Granted, the episodes do get better after the first one, but going from “awful” to “bad” isn’t much of an improvement.

The following is my list of 2014’s debut TV & web anime. The six highlighted titles are the ones that I wasn’t able to watch any of.

Abarenbou Kishi!! Matsutarou

Ai · Tenchi Muyo!

Ai Mai Mii Mousou Catastrophie

Akame ga Kill

Akatsuki no Yona

Akuma no Riddle

Aldnoah Zero

Amagi Brilliant Park

Ao Haru Ride

Baby Steps

Bakumatsu Rock

Barakamon

Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon Crystal

Black Bullet

Blade & Soul

Bokura wa Minna Kawaisou

Bonjour Koiaji Patisserie

Break Blade

Buddy Complex
Buddy Complex: Kanketsu-hen – Ano Sora ni Kaeru Mirai de

Calimero 3rd series

Captain Earth

Cardfight!! Vanguard G

Cardfight!! Vanguard Legion Mate Hen

Carino Coni

Chika Sugi Idol Akae-chan [web anime]

Choubakuretsu Ijigen Menko Battle: Gigant Shooter Tsukasa

Chuunibyou Demo Koi Ga Shitai! Ren

Cross Ange: Tenshi to Ryuu no Rondo

Daitoshokan no Hitsujikai

Danna ga Nani o Itteiru ka Wakaranai Ken

Date a Live II

Denki-Gai no Honya-san

D-Fragments

Disc Wars: Avengers

Donten ni Warau

Dragon Ball Kai: Majin Buu Hen

Dragon Collection

DRAMAcial Murder

Duel Masters Versus

Escha & Logy no Atelier: Tasogare no Sora no Renkinjutsushi

Fairy Tail

Fate/kaleid liner Prisma Illya 2wei!

Fate/stay night Unlimited Blade Works

Francesca ~ Girls Be Ambitious

Free! -Eternal Summer-

Futsuu no Joshikousei ga [Locodol] Yattemita

Future Card Buddyfight
Fuusen Inu Tinny

Fuuun Ishin Dai Shogun

Gaist Crusher: God Hen
Ganbare! Lulu Lolo 2nd Season

Garo: Honoo no Kokuin

Gekkan Shoujo Nozaki-kun

Gin no Saji second season

Girlfriend (Kari)

Glasslip

Go Go Tamagotchi!

Go! Go! 575

Gochuumon wa Usagi Desu ka?

Gokukoku no Brynhildr

Grisaia no Kajitsu

Gugure! Kokkuri-san

Gundam Build Fighters Try

Gundam: G no Reconguista

Gundam-san

Haikyuu

Hamatora

Hanayamata

Happiness Charge Precure

Hero Bank

Hi?sCoool! SeHa Girl

Himegoto

Hitsugi no Chaika

Hitsugi no Chaika: Avenging Battle

Hoozuki no Reitetsu

Inari, Konkon, Koiiroha

Initial D: Final Stage

Inou Battle wa Nichijou-kei no Naka de

Inu Neko Hour

Inugami-san to Nekoyama-san

Isshuukan Friends.

Jinsei

JoJo no Kimyou na Bouken: Stardust Crusaders

Kaitou Joker

Kamigami no Asobi

Kanojo ga Flag wo Oraretara

Kantoku Fuyukitodoki

Karen Senki

Kenzen Robo Daimidaler

Keroro

Kindaichi Shounen no Jikenbo R

Kiniro no Corda: Blue Sky

Kiseijuu: Sei no Kakuritsu

Kokaku Kidotai Nyumon Arise

Kuma Seijin to Boku

Kuroshitsuji: Book of Circus

KutsuDaru

Lady Jewelpet

Log Horizon 2nd Season

Love Live 2nd season

LOVE STAGE!!

M3: Sono Kuroki Hagane

Madan no Ou to Vanadis

Magic Kaito 1412

Maho Senso

Mahou Shoujo Taisen

Mahouka Koukou no Rettousei

Maido! Urayasu Tekkin Kazoku

Majimoji Rurumo

Majin Bone

Maken-ki Two

Mangaka-san to Assistant-san to

Medamayaki no Kimi Itsu Tsubusu?

Meitantei Rascal

Mekaku City Actors

Meshimase Lodoss-tou Senki: Sorette Oishii no?

Mikakunin de Shinkoukei

Minarai Diva

Minna Atsumare! Falcom Gakuen

Momo Kyun Sword

Mushishi Tokubetsu-hen: Hihamukage

Mushishi Zoku Shou

Nanatsu no Taizai

Nandaka Veronica

Narihero www

Neko no Dayan

Nisekoi

No Game No Life

Nobunaga Concerto

Nobunaga the Fool

Nobunagun

Noragami

No-rin
Nyanpuku Nyaruma
Ohenro ~Hachi Hachi Aruki~ [web anime]

Oneechan ga Kita

Ookami Shoujo to Kuro Ouji

Ore, Twintails ni Narimasu.

Oreca Battle

Orenchi no Furo Jijou

Oshiri Kajiri Mushi 3

Persona 4 the Golden

Ping Pong

Pretty Rhythm: All Star Selection

Pripara

Psycho-Pass 2

PSYCHO-PASS Shinpen Shuu Han

Puchim@s!! Petit Idolm@ster

pupa

RAIL WARS!

Re: Hamatora

Robot Girls Z

Rokujouma no Shinryakusha

Ryuugajou Nanana no Maizoukin

Sabagebu!

Saikin, Imouto no Yousu ga Chotto Okashiinda ga

Saki Zenkoku-hen

Sakura Trick

Sanzoku no Musume Ronja

Seikoku no Dragonar

Seirei Tsukai no Blade Dance

Seitokai Yakuindomo*

Sekai Seifuku: Bouryaku no Zvezda

selector infected WIXOSS

selector spread WIXOSS

Sengoku Basara Judge End

Sengoku Muso Special: Sanada no Shou

Shigatsu wa Kimi no Uso

Shijo Saikyo no Deshi Kenichi: Yami no Shugeki

Shingeki no Bahamut: Genesis

SHIROBAKO

Shirogane no Ishi Argevollen

Shounen Hollywood

Sidonia no Kishi

Sin Strange+

SoniAni -Super Sonico the Animation-

Sora no Method

Soredemo Sekai wa Utsukushii

Soul Eater Not!

Space Dandy

Strange Plus

Sword Art Online II

Tenkai Knight

Terra Formars

Tesague! Bukatsu-mono Encore

Toaru Hikuushi e no Koiuta

Tokyo ESP

Tokyo Ghoul

Tonari no Seki-kun

Tribe Cool Crew

Trinity Seven: 7-nin no Masho Tsukai

Ushinawareta Mirai wo Motomete

Wake Up! Girls Zoo [web anime]

Wake Up, Girls!

Wasimo

Witch Craft Works

Wizard Barristers: Benmashi Cecil

Wonder Momo [web anime]

Wooser no Sono Higurashi: Kakusei-hen

World Trigger

X Maiden [web anime]

Yama no Susume Second Season

Yami Shibai second season

Yokai Watch

Yowamushi Pedal: Grande Road

Yu-Gi-Oh Arc-V

Yuuki Yuuna wa Yuusha de Aru

Z/X IGNITION

Zankyou no Terror

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