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Monday, September 28, 2015

Anime Hajime Review: Oretachi ni Tsubasa wa Nai

***Warning, the following may contain spoilers for Oretachi ni Tsubasa wa Nai. Reader discretion is advised.***

Series Synopsis


Love is a funny thing. You can spend your whole life looking for that special someone. To only then have that person appear when you least expect it.

Romantic as that may be, it’s but another day in the city of Yanagihara. Here we meet three people different in every way. Except they have more in common than you can imagine.

The first person is Takashi Haneda (voiced by Hiro Shimono). He's calm, shy, and doesn’t like being the center of attention. His kindness has grabbed the admiration of his classmate, Asuka Watari (voiced by Mayumi Yoshida). The two first paired up out of a mutual benefit. Yet over the years, their relationship has only grown.

The second person is Shusuke Chitose (voiced by Hiroaki Miura). Loud and outgoing, is a freelance writer.  His latest assignment is reviewing the newest book from Hiyoko Tamaizumi (voiced by Ryoko Ono).

The third person is Hayato Narita (voiced by Junichi Suwabe). A night owl, he spends most of his time fulfilling odd jobs around the city. His latest gig comes from Naru Ohtori (voiced by Yuko Goto) who is looking for her lost bicycle. Naru isn't intimidated by Hayato’s rough demeanor and enjoys spending time with him.

Three separate people. Three separate lives. Three separate attractions.

One giant mess.

Series Positives


Takashi
Challenge me. Fight me. To my dying breath, I will always say every story, no matter how awful, has something good about it. Then when a show like this comes along, it tests my faith.

Visually Appealing

Oretachi ni Tsubasa wa Nai's artwork reminds me of Clannad. To compare this garbage to Clannad makes me die a little inside. Moving on.

Shusuke
This series was pleasant to look at. The character models were fantastic actually. I have nothing bad to say about how everyone looked.

This show was an ecchi. A strong one at that. Boarding on straight up hentai in a few scenes. To Oretachi’s credit, the nudity was more of a bonus than a necessity.

Hayato
Still, there are shows that have more than just breasts. They have things like an engaging plot and interesting characters. Watch those ones because Oretachi has none of that. 

Series Negatives


I can knock out a twelve-episode anime in a single sitting and enjoy doing so. If by some reason it takes me three days to finish a show of that length, it must have been a busy three days. When it came to Oretachi, it took me a good week to finish.

Not because I was busy. I kept finding excuses to not continue watching starting from two episodes.

Unremarkable Characters

Let me compare this heap of trash to another great show, Durarara.

Like Durarara, Oretachi had a large cast of characters. Within the first half of the first episode, we meet an endless stream of people. The difference, Durarara has several interesting and memorable characters. Oretachi had none.

This was the most boring collection of people I've come across in an anime. I'm incapable of telling you a single person’s name. Don’t let the Series Synopsis fool you, I had my notes always within reach.

True, everyone looked good. But everyone looked the same. Characters blended together. It was hard to keep track of it all. Luckily, you’re not going to care long enough for this to become an issue.

Multiple Personalities

Oretachi had a character with multiple personalities. An interesting device. Or at least it would be if done right. Which it wasn’t here.
 
Someone with several personalities is a fun idea to play with. It allows a story to have an all in one character. One of the best to do this is Mahoraba. If you haven’t seen that one, don’t waste your time with Oretachi.

What Mahoraba got right was limiting the interactions with each personality. They were confined to a specific location and felt part of the group. What Oretachi did instead was give each personality lives of their own life.

This could work. But Oretachi’s execution was absurd. Some of the personalities could come and go as they pleased. They had full awareness of what they were. Except they looked like different characters. When someone from one personality’s life ran into them while they were someone else, said someone didn’t recognize them.

Was that confusing to read? Well, it was as confusing to watch.

The Story

The story was a joke and not in a funny way. It was bad, confusing, complex, messy, random, and most of all, boring. Watching anime shouldn't be a chore, but it took every bit of will power for me to play the next episode. In fact, I had to re-watch one or two because they put me to sleep.

After the boring bits came scenes that made no sense. Things appeared on screen, characters showed up, people talked. Nothing happened, though. There was no progression, only bull. Oretachi wanted to do so much and it turned into a cluster of nonsensical events.

The high point of this show, the very pinnacle of this “story”, came in the first five minutes. Of the first episode. I wish I was joking.


Final Thoughts


Is this a comedy? No. Is this a harem? No. Is this any good? Not in the slightest.

If this review is the only exposure you have of this series, I'm sorry for doing that to you.

This review is short. That's because this was that bad. Don’t watch this show. Oretachi ni Tsubasa wa Nai is a complete disappointment and a waste of time.

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