Anime Feminist Recommendations of Winter 2019
A big new year comes with fresh new shows—and a few familiar faces. The team got together to pick their top recommendations for the Winter season.
A big new year comes with fresh new shows—and a few familiar faces. The team got together to pick their top recommendations for the Winter season.
Dee, Vrai, and Peter look back on the Winter 2019 season! The gang talks stellar sequels, flawed adaptations, messy originals, and pleasant otome surprises.
Dee, Peter, and Vrai check-in on the Winter 2019 season!
The weather outside may be frightful, but some of these winter anime are pretty darn delightful.
Who’s ready for a pastel-shaded “cute girls doing cute things” show? The audience for ENDRO sure is!
Another batch of premieres watched and reviewed! Now that we’ve weathered the storm, it’s time to see what goodies have washed up on our shores.
I may not agree with the characters’ beliefs about relationships… but to be honest, I don’t think the writers do either.
I’ve probably put more thought into this show’s fairy-tale themes and contexts than is really there.
This looks to be a dazzling adventure series with major promise in its cast.
With a plot that would be right at home on the CW network, Domestic Girlfriend promises lots of scandalized gasps and cries of, “No, don’t do that!”
This is the first premiere of the season where I left with absolutely no idea of what this show was going to be about.
There’s something that sets me on edge about modern dark magical girl series.
Anyway, yeah, it’s a harem anime.
Just like the song in Gypsy says, “You gotta get a gimmick if you wanna have a chance.” And while otome anime aren’t quite the same thing as old-timey burlesque, the old rule holds true.
Of the two primary characters of My Roommate is a Cat, one is likable. The other is not. Can you guess which is which?
For all the fanfare lent to Dimension High School being a show that transcends reality, it’s kinda boring how the fight for the fate of the 3-D world lies on a series of brain-teaser puzzles.
I don’t think I’ve watched something with this much of a boner for the military since the last time I sat through a Michael Bay movie.
I am not the target audience for this series, but I was still pleasantly surprised by how creative this premiere turned out to be.
The Promised Neverland might be the most excited I’ve been about a Shonen JUMP manga adaptation in years.
“Lesbian pedophiles” has only barely become an established subgenre, and I’m already running out of energy for this shit.