Series Synopsis
Yuta
Iridatsu (voiced by Marina Inoue) has found himself in the middle of a bus
jacking. Held at gunpoint, the situation seems dire when suddenly the hero known as Strange Juice arrives on the scene. The masked fighter, with glowing hair and
superhuman strength, easily defeats the culprits and everything seems to have
been defused.
However the
mastermind of the high jacking reveals himself and gets the advantage over
Strange Juice. Yuta is at a loss of what to do when he accidentally gets a
glimpse of a female passenger’s panties (stay with me on this). This triggers a
transformation within Yuta, giving the same bright hair and strength of Strange
Juice. Yuta is able to put an end to the conflict by throwing himself and the
mastermind out of the bus.
The two go
crashing into a nearby river where Yuta is saved by Juice. The triumph is short
lived because a strange beam of light shoots down from the sky and Yuta’s spirt
is thrown out of his body.
Waking up
the following day, Yuta finds himself back at his apartment, the Korai House.
Still dazed by what has transpired he is greeted by a spirit cat
that calls itself Chiranosuke (voiced by Yuri Yoshida). The cat says that
someone has taken over Yuta’s real body and the only way to change back is with
a mysterious book that is hidden somewhere in the apartment complex.
Begrudgingly,
Yuta begins his search for the book. While doing so, he also starts to take up the
role as guardian for his four neighbors.
First is
Mikatan Naruginoa (voiced by Sora Amamiya), a member of the idol group
Seas May and who appears to be guarding some kind of secret. Next is the recluse
gamer, Ito Hikiotani (voiced by Minako Kotobuki) who has recently been through a volatile moment in her life. The third is the landlord Meika Daihatsu
(voiced by Rie Kugimiya) who has a special knack with machines. And
finally is Rabura Chichibu (voiced by Haruka Tomatsu), an exorcist who doesn't believe in the supernatural what so ever.
With the dawn of the New Year a little more than a week away, Yuta and the other members of Korai House become involved in a series of strange occurrences that all seem to be leading to an event of apocalyptic proportions.
With the dawn of the New Year a little more than a week away, Yuta and the other members of Korai House become involved in a series of strange occurrences that all seem to be leading to an event of apocalyptic proportions.
Series Positives
If you think
my synopsis comes off as completely random, it’s because Punch Line goes so far down the rabbit hole. I can recite, verbatim, every
action and event for the first half of this series and you would still have no
idea what direction it would be going in.
Yuuta |
Where this show ends up is a universe away from where it started. And it’s so
fun the whole way through.
The Story
Ito |
Meika |
No action is a mistake, but rather a deliberate choice. Seeing it all come together in
the second half is both well done and satisfying; everything fits together
and makes sense. Having the many roads congregate into a single point was what made the show worth it.
All of this
leads to a finale that is equally happy and sad. The absolute ending is a
little bit of a copout and begins to fall apart, but I’ll get to that in a
moment.
Yuta
Rabura |
Chiranosuke |
It defiantly
does that and exploits it to no end, but as the show goes on it becomes more and
more secondary and it doesn’t come up when it absolutely shouldn’t; particularly in the climax.
This is
where Yuta and the show pull out all the stops. It’s surprisingly big and
unpredictable, thus making it absurdly tense and gripping. Getting to this
point, we get to see Yuta become a much better character. He comes to
understand what he needs to do, how he needs to do it, and why. There's a lot on the
line, but ultimately it comes down to him saving the people he has come to care
deeply about.
Yuta doesn’t
become the hero because the story says so. He had to go through quite a bit and
prove that he truly was the only one that could make everything happen. I want
to go into more detail, but this is such an important, series making process
that I dare not say more.
Series Negatives
This show does goes against an ideal in
storytelling that I whole heartily believe in. It’s something that's needlessly
risky and has no true benefit. To Punch Line’s
credit, it has a strong enough story to abate it, but not avoid it; the
Complexity Trap.
All of the
best anime I have seen have spawned from simplicity. This includes comedies,
romances, and mysteries. It's
simplicity that allows for the greatest creativity because it allows for the greatest adaptability.
A story shouldn’t be bogged down with rule after rule after rule. The simpler
the premise, the simpler the idea, the more there is to work with.
Again, Punch Line does have a lot going on and
it does a great job balancing them, however it’s not perfect. There are three
things that this show is constantly struggling with.
Details
With everything
that’s going on and with them all seemingly important to the story in some
form, it all needs to be explained. This doesn’t happen in a few areas. The
main, and maybe most important one, is how and why Yuta has the powers that he
has.
This is an
important answer because it is also the answer to why everything is taking
place. What the show goes with is basically because he does. Okay I guess, but
really that’s all we get? Sure this does allow for some cool action scenes, but
it feels like there should be more to it than that. I say this because along with the details
that are glanced over, there are also details that are irrelevant.
Strange
Juice for instance, why is she a thing? It’s fine that there’s another person
with the same powers as Yuta, but what’s with the hero route? The existence of
Strange Juice doesn’t serve the story in any way.
Another
example is with Yuta himself. If he were to see a girl’s panties twice in quick
succession, his power level would become so great than an asteroid would come
crashing down to Earth, killing everyone. This doesn’t come into play at all
except for a joke in the first episode. It’s just another rule that exists for
the sake of existing.
Instead of
having all these pointless details, the show could have focused more on the
back story and why these events are taking place.
Conveniences
This isn’t a
full blown problem, but it is something that should have been avoided.
Overall, the transition from event to
event is smooth and makes sense. However on a couple of occasions, it feels
like it’s making up rules as it goes along. This usually involves Yuta in his
spirit form.
Yuta wants
to do something that will help his friends, but is unable to do so because of some rule
that wasn’t mentioned beforehand. Like when he needs to possess someone in
order to communicate. To do this there needs to be someone who has a strong
connection to the spirit world. Surprise there is one. However, Yuta’s spirit
power isn’t strong enough to do this. Luckily, he can get a boost if there's cinnamon
in the air. Why cinnamon; f@#$ if I know. But it’s okay because there happens
to be cinnamon. Ah but one more thing, Yuta can only possess someone for seven
minutes and we only learn that after the time is up and he gets kick out. It’s
a never ending cycle.
I say this
is not a huge problem because more unfortunate rather than annoying. It’s this
kind of thing that separates a good story from a great story.
Paradox
To get my
point across effectively, I will have to mention a detail that can be construed
as spoiler-ish. Therefore I will be issuing a SPOILER WARNING, but this is a detail that you learn early in the
first episode.
There’s time
travel. That right there is probably enough for you to guess what it is I’m
about to say.
Time travel
is such a tricky thing to pull off and it only becomes harder with a series as
complex as this one. It leaves so many opportunists for plot holes and paradoxes.
That and it gives you one hell of a headache when you start to think about
them.
Punchline is able to avoid it, until
pretty much the last minute. I can’t say anymore because it would a series
spoiler, but needless to say I still haven’t fully made sense of it yet.
Final Thoughts
Punchline is good. I may have got a tad
wordy with the negatives, but this is a good series; I had a lot of fun with
it.
Thought the
story is on the complex side, it is well told and it mitigates much of the
fallout. It’s able to do this because all the things I did mention in the
negatives were never the focus and they never took away from the focus.
There is an
end goal to all of this craziness and it never loses sight of it. A thousand
things may be happening, but the story never strays from the path. Because of
this, Punchline manages to be a
really solid series.
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