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Tuesday, 29 December 2015

Orenchi no Furo Jijo (Anime Series Review)

Orenchi no Furo Jijo
(The Circumstances in My Home's Bathtub)

Review by QuartzWolf
(Originally written sometime in October, 2014)
 
This is a longer version of a review I posted at Crunchyroll sometime around October 2014. Yes, longer. Pretty bad, huh. I have no idea at this point how many hours of my life I've dissolved into this thing by now.

Legs of Tatsumi. Merman in bathtub.
The circumstances of the bathtub.

Overview:
Orenchi no Furo Jijo (The Circumstances in My Home's Bathtub) is a series of anime shorts that can be summed up as concerning the everyday goings on and possible bromance of a teenage boy and a merman living pretty much alone in a huge house that aforementioned young man is house-sitting (for invisible parents/relatives). A merman. A ditzy, demanding, freeloading merman who has taken up permanent residence in the young man's bathtub after being (mistakenly) rescued, who proceeds to drive the young man's water bill up into the stratosphere and invite over all of his equally moist friends without permission. As the saying goes, "Hilarity ensues."


Tatsumi (a human) 'sharing' his bathtub with Wakasa (the merman).
The fateful moment.

The show is based on a 4-panel (4-koma) manga series by Itokichi... originally in a shounen manga magazine published for girls. Yes, you read that correctly. As of 2015, it's currently being published in English by Seven Seas, and as of writing this, I already have the first volume (and have read through it more than three times). I wouldn't have described it as a Boys' Love series by any means (as far as anything of it I'd read... but I think I may stand corrected at this point), but it is hilariously, mercilessly suggestive and packs a nice dose of satire here and there. The anime short adaption, however... yeow. It totally tosses any trace of that subtle barrier aside like Free!'s Haru doffing everything but his swim trunks the instant he spies a body of water. Personally, I really miss the sting of the relative subtlety in what I'd seen of the Japanese version of the manga... but the show still came off as pretty good.

Crowded Tatsumi in bathtub with merman tail on his head.
Sometime around the twelfth of Never.


Humour: 4 of 5 (-1 mostly out of terribly selfish personal bias)
I find that the anime version loses a lot of the punch of the humor by taking it in a more extreme and overt direction. For me, it also lost a lot of the casual warmth present in the original manga, by interpreting it into animation this way. (Although this might just be my own bias of viewing things in a more satirical light to begin with.) On the other hand, each episode had me giggling through it like an idiot.

Chibi Wakasa wrapped in plastic bags and choking on seaweed.
"No more green water!" is why the bathtub is now pink.


Animation: 4 of 5
The animation is moderately good, pretty middle-of-the-road, but definitely in the high-quality camp for its length. ('Camp' could perhaps describe it in some other ways as well...) The visual gags are pretty well-paced. The shifts in drawing style didn't ever strike me as cheap or jarring, and the chibi characters are not so warped or cheaply drawn as to melt your brain. Not right away, at least. In fact, they might even be endearing. (Naturally, your mileage may vary.) Overall, it's consistent and the pacing is great. It doesn't throw magnificent animation at you in the first few episodes only to take it away. Not really sure what else to say about it... Um... it's pretty. Yeah.

Brainless jellyfish.
Should I feel relieved that this isn't Suu?


Acting: 4 of 5
The voice acting is middle-of-the-road (again), by this I mean it is flatly good quality - very, very good for a four-minute gag-oriented filler show - and is funny where and how it's supposed to be, but it never exceeds that. There's some very high-profile voice actors in this. (It makes me wonder how they wrangled that...) For fans of Free!, there's some familiar voices to be heard, which might be a bonus. (If you've watched too much Free!, you might find it hard not to imagine this as some kind of weird fan fiction in disguise.)

But let's face it; this is a 4 minute gag show and if we put this up against the acting in a high-budget, full-length show like Kamigami no Asobi or Kids on the Slope it's not going to hold up. Personally, I find their choice for Wakasa's voice just a little bit grating... It has a very stereotypical 'effeminate bishounen' sound to it, but that's pretty much an industry standard, so... no real complaints, I guess. (Although for me, rather than helping the humor, it really detracts from it. I've heard enough of that particular stock character. Just my ridiculous personal bias... I might just be disappointed out of imagining him with a deeper more masculine voice while reading, because I found it funnier. :/)

Chibi merman and depressed boy in bathtub.


Intro and Music: ??? WTF I DON'T KNOW

Badass Film Noir Merman with Art Nouveau Hair
The intro is done in a completely different style. Dark and overly dramatic, it borders a little on false advertisement... This reminded me a bit of Cuticle Detective Inaba, but unlike that show, the abrupt out-of-character intro falls flat as a joke, as, so far, there's nothing else to support it. It's just there and then it's gone. I suppose it's only supposed to signal the irreverent nature of the show, but it kind of even fails there, since the tone isn't so much 'irreverent' as 'irrelevant'. Basically calling itself out as nonsense. The only thing really going for it is a tease and some eye candy, which will probably be taken as an unfair tease to a lot of viewers. (I've already seen a lot of comments and some reviews to that point...) The song itself gives away the target demographic right away - it's reminiscent of the J-Pop/J-Rock in Uta no Prince-sama, DRAMAtical Murder, and the like. The stuff going on in the background of the actual show isn't anything memorable, it's just the usual kind of 'anime background music' we all know and... tolerate. (Even now I'm having trouble remembering it to say anything about it...)

It was all a dream! The dream of a mermaid merman who reads pulp magazines!


Broader Appeal: 2 of 5 (Limited)
I don't find that the show has any of the broad, cross-gender appeal of Gugure! Kokkuri-san, its contemporary in both time and subject matter. (Gugure! Kokkuri-san also features cute male unwanted guests with sexy(??) animal features moving into a dark-haired, distant-eyed, passive protagonist's home.) Orenchi no Furo Jijo is squarely and solidly aimed at those who want to squee over hot boys way too close to each other. Even if some of those boys are only human from the waist up...

It gets a bit rough having a bunch of guys with out-of-control lower bodies...
around... in such a small space...


Length and Pacing: 3 of 5
The short length of the episodes (4 minutes total) might play against it for some, or cut it short to just the right length for others. If they'd forced themselves to make it longer, it's pretty likely it'd have lost a chunk of its watchability. The gags and jokes flow well (insert water joke here). Asahi Production did a very good job at adapting the incredibly short little arcs of the manga into animation and making them run fluidly. Like I said before, I was giggling through the whole thing like an idiot. The thing is, it's still only a 4 minute show... and a chunk of that is taken up with the intro. I really would've liked to have seen it as a 28 minute show or an OAV... but I don't think that it would've ever come to rest on a studio or team that would've been able to get the resources to expand it, given how limited the audience is perceived as being. A series with the premise of 'Hot Boys in Bathtub - no actual sex' is still going to be considered a very limited sell. Even with the imouto. Well, I guess we're lucky with what we've got... 'cause it's very good for what it is.

The Imouto.


Bottom line:
It's a good show for a quick laugh, especially if you're into boys' love. Or mermen. Or tentacles. The short length might play in its favor. (Insert 'delicious bite sized seafood' joke here.) It's sexy and funny and deliberately overwrought, and it makes a great weekend binge-watch... but if you enjoyed the somewhat subtler and slightly more satirical tone of the manga (before Seven Seas got a hold of it), it really might not be for you. As it is, this show certainly made me squirm, and not necessarily always in a good way... :s


PS - If you're a heterosexual guy, prepare some brain bleach before watching this. For that matter, that also goes for anyone who isn't already immune to yaoi, just in case...

PPS - Watch out for the octopus massage.



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