For some reason, I had totally
the wrong idea of what HenNeko was all about. I was under the impression
that despite the title, it was quite a peaceful, sweet and somewhat serious
drama, which was quite possibly because some defective piece of my brain was
mixing it up with Usagi Drop for no reason but that both have animal
names in their titles.
So starting to watch it, I was
slightly surprised that it was a very silly, cutesy romantic comedy about the
problems that occur when wishes made only half-seriously are granted. In other
words, be careful what you wish for, as you might just get it.
This is far from a new concept
in anime, and the wishes here are nowhere near as bizarre as those from Midori no Hibi or Da Capo, but HenNeko certainly has plenty of its
own character. A long way from a gentle and thought-provoking drama, it is in
fact a cutesy fanservice piece that tries to be somewhere in the middle of the
largely realistic romantic comedies like Toradora and Chuunibyou and the zany over-the-top jokey efforts like Sumomo-mo Momo-mo or – ever
my go-to silly romantic comedy anime – Rizelmine. Unfortunately, this
middle ground doesn’t quite work, and it ends up being unsuccessful at doing the
things either extreme manages to pull off.
The story here is that up on a
hill is a stone cat statue with a rather grim expression. People make offerings
to it of things they don’t need, in order to have their desires come true. Our
protagonist Yokodera Youto, a perverted high school student who likes peeking
on the girls in swimsuits, makes a wish to have his inner self come out more
clearly, as the front he puts up is ending up with him having inconvenient
responsibilities put onto him.
Meanwhile, the wonderfully-named Tsutsukakushi Tsukiko wants to be seen as less childish by wishing for her face to stop giving away all of her emotions so easily, and when they both make their wish, the mischievous cat’s mouth twists into a smile and their wishes come true – twisted, of course, into an inconvenient form. Tsukiko can no longer show any expressions whatsoever, being the unsmiling cat of the title rather than the statue, and Yokodera-kun is so unable to stop himself blabbing about what he really thinks that he quickly earns a reputation as a ‘pervert prince’.
Meanwhile, the wonderfully-named Tsutsukakushi Tsukiko wants to be seen as less childish by wishing for her face to stop giving away all of her emotions so easily, and when they both make their wish, the mischievous cat’s mouth twists into a smile and their wishes come true – twisted, of course, into an inconvenient form. Tsukiko can no longer show any expressions whatsoever, being the unsmiling cat of the title rather than the statue, and Yokodera-kun is so unable to stop himself blabbing about what he really thinks that he quickly earns a reputation as a ‘pervert prince’.
Though initially it seems that
the series has some interesting things to say about the very Japanese concept
of honne and tatemae, as Yokodera gets his tatemae – façade
– taken away to reveal only his honne – or true feelings. Tsukiko had
trouble with her tatemae, but gains an extreme one. They do not simply
swap, though, as it turns out that it is another girl, popular beauty Azusa, who
gains Yokodera’s façade, going so far as to construct a fake image of herself
to keep others at arm’s length.
Predictably, this mix-up soon
becomes a conventional harem series. Anything interesting that could have been
said about Japanese society is soon hidden beneath slapstick comedy, far too
much tsundere character writing and fanservice aplenty. Not only these two
girls fall for Yokodera and start to have a rivalry over him, but other anime clichés
join in – random loli whose outrageous frankness can’t be sustained so she is
only in it for a couple of episodes; big sister with big boobies and violent
tendencies but the most dere characteristics of all the tsunderes; even
the apparent lesbian with the crush on the big sister whose rivalry with
Yokodera soon becomes playfully erotic. It’s tired, overdone stuff, and very
little depth is added when the characters go back in time to see the truth of
the sisters’ relationship with their deceased mother and why Yokodera can’t
remember his past. It’s all very derivative of Key, but even more blatant and
superficial, and thus bland.
But it’s also very, very easy
to watch. It’s only 12 short episodes, and it is one of the cutest-looking
anime I’ve seen for years. Nice production values and adorable character
designs that look more like 12-14 year olds than high school students and make
this the latest loli-show-masquerading-as-high-school-romance in a way only
marginally less obvious than Moetan. On the other hand, not only the
girls are cutesy, but the boys too – Yokodera, like Yuuto in Chuunibyou,
is a cutey to match the girls, a shota amongst the lolis, which is slightly odd
but a whole lot better than the millionth Kyon clone of the decade.
J.C Staff's animation has improved a lot. I'm quite interested to see how they attack the Japanese honne and tatemae so maybe I'll give it a go, although I was initially put off but the loliness. Is that a big factor in this series? (With the fan service)?
ReplyDeleteIt's pretty fanservicey, but if you can watch the likes of ToraDora or OreImo, it's no worse.
Delete