By day, Romeo Maki is a respectable man who loves bringing gifts to the local orphanage, and Juliet is a newly employed nun working at said orphanage. However, by night, they are Masked Man M and Lady S, popular professional wrestlers. Kick-Heart tells the story of what happens when this dynamic pair meet in the ring, the only place where they can express their hidden desires. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
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Pain and pleasure. They are two sensory feelings that are central to the experience of living as a human being. Although they are typically distinct from one another, it is certainly something else when the two feelings merge: something that may seem strange to some, enticing to others, or perhaps strangely enticing to the rest. Masaaki Yuasa, the acclaimed director of titles such as Mind Game and Yojouhan Shinwa Taikei, drew the idea for the main theme of Kick-Heart from this concept of pain and pleasure. He watched a French man getting tortured, and then amused himself at the thought of what it would belike if that man experienced pleasure simultaneously. Also noteworthy is that he also drew inspiration from Tiger Mask, which is where the idea for pro-wrestling came from. Eventually, Yuasa’s ideas developed into this short film, which is notable in itself for the fact that its production was funded through a Kickstarter crowdfunding project. It is thanks to Kickstarter that this delightful tale of sensual wrestling was made possible. With that said, Kick-Heart’s story is a simple one. At only twelve minutes, it would be unreasonable to expect an in-depth exploration of the human condition. Still, Kick-Heart, with its theme of pain and pleasure, focuses on a romance that is created between a “Romeo” and a “Juliet.” The Romeo in this case is a pro-wrestler who goes by the name of “Maskman M.” In the wrestling ring, he faces off against the Juliet, “Lady S”. As the letters in their names might suggest, Romeo enjoys taking the beatings in his job, whereas Juliet enjoys dishing them out. The romance appropriately kicks off (pun somewhat intended) during a match when Romeo takes a kick from Juliet, hence the title “Kick-Heart.” Just enough information is given about these two characters so that they firmly represent the different sides of the film’s theme. While the characters themselves are not the focus, the short movie format makes this work well, as attempting to flesh out a character in a limited amount of time would instead detract from the narrative focus. Despite the fairly simple premise, the film’s monomaniacal focus on its theme of sensual pain and the contrast between the two main characters is one of its strengths. Another one of the strengths of this short film undoubtedly lies with Yuasa’s directing. Those of you who are familiar with his works will recognize his dynamic and fast-paced style and composition, coupled with some over-the-top scenes and quirky humor. And Kick-Heart is indeed funny and entertaining, putting the main character in strange and awkward situations. Dialogue is somewhat sparse and is only used when it absolutely needs to be, or to deliver the humor. Kick-Heart is ultimately a visually-driven work, as is the case with Yuasa’s other titles. Accordingly, the aesthetics of Kick-Heart are perhaps its greatest treat. Yuasa’s works are often known for their art styles that are significantly different from the norm, and this film is no exception. This is mostly evident in its use of vibrant and vivid colors that emphasize its lively atmosphere. The character designs are eccentric, reinforcing the quirky humor that is used throughout. A bright color palette becomes more prominent during the wrestling sequences, in which the film’s climax lies. Of course, the colorfulness of the film is not limited to the art style alone, as the use of animation is just as lively. Of particular note are scenes that are depicted in a unique and peculiar manner, such as Romeo falling in love and his heart visibly pounding to show that. As an animated film, Kick-Heart uses the visual medium to great effect, making it both a pleasure to watch and to simply look at. The soundtrack for the film may not be outstanding in comparison to its visuals, but it emphasizes the robust nature of the film nevertheless. The track used in the opening credits sequence is an excellent indication of things to come, establishing the atmosphere in an upbeat and energetic sort of way. Kick-Heart’s length alone makes it a difficult title to simply pass up, as it is only about half the length of an average anime episode. It is a definite recommendation to anyone who watches anime or animation in general. Fans of Masaaki Yuasa will enjoy his familiar style in this film, and others will find it a great introduction to his growing list of works. Kick-Heart may not have the scale of a feature-length film, but it certainly packs quite a punch. Or, in this case, a kick.
Overview: Masaaki Yuasa has a reputation on MAL SO high that it's actually difficult to find parallels. Old school, film snob magazines like Sights and Sounds will talk about François Truffaut, Federico Fellini, Andrei Tarkovsky, Ingmar Bergman, and Jean-Luc Godard in the same way that MAL and 4chan talk about Yuasa. That should give you a hint of just how highly he's regarded among part of anime community. However, there is ONE Yuasa anime that nobody talks about. The one black mark on his record that MAL apparently hates. Kick Heart is that anime! Plot: Kick Heart is a 12 minute, psychedelic romp about a masochistic luchador whois in love with a nun and lives at an orphanage as a priest. Basically, Yuasa was eating shrooms while watching Nacho Libre and decided to make this brilliant catastrophe. In Yuasa's defense, he COULD have been inspired by the actual story of Fray Tormenta AKA Sergio Gutiérrez Benítez. I pray for the dignity of anime that he didn't actually do this based on Nacho Libre...even though I kind of liked that movie. Stop looking at me! It wasn't THAT bad! Anyways, the main battle is between the luchador named Masked M (because he's a masochist) and a sadistic luchadora named Lady S, because of course she's a sadist. The luchadora is actually the nun that Masked M is in love with from the orphanage...because of COURSE she is. Despite the plot and characters being nothing to write home about, this anime is actually fucking hilarious! This is laugh a minute quality and its worth watching for that reason by itself. Art: The animation is unsurprisingly extremely fluid and is Yuasa's trademark style. Since this is a wrestling anime, I can say this is VINTAGE Yuasa. Overall: The comedy value of this anime goes through the roof when you learn the backstory. This was kickstarted and funded entirely by Yuasa's fanboys. They thought they were getting another Tatami Galaxy or Kaiba and instead they got this...thing. This anime may be the greatest troll move I've ever seen by an anime director. This is right up there with Inferno Cop and Ninja Slayer. The difference is that Trigger fans have come to expect stupid and over the top. Yuasa's devoted fans must have reacted to this anime like that scene in the Producers with the elderly, mostly Jewish audience reacting to the opening of Springtime for Hitler. The difference is that they didn't leave laughing and loving it. They left it 3s and 4s on MAL. Before this, Yuasa was someone I respected far more than I actually liked. After pulling this shit though, Yuasa is Mah BOI!
With a total of one episode at approximately 12 minutes long, this show is more than worth the time you will put into it. Do you like professional masked wrestling? Do you like characters with secret identities? Do you like S&M? Well, you should still give this show a try. This show (or episode I should say) actually manages a plot in its short run-time. I've personally seen shows that can go six episodes without developing anything plot-wise, so seeing a show with an extremely brief story, that still makes itself humorous and interesting, was very refreshing. The animation quality is good, and it fitsperfectly with the tone of the show. The sound quality is even better, with a dub that actually sounds like effort was put into it. Hell, by the time you finish reading this you could've watched the whole thing. Want a quick laugh? Go watch it.
I know that director Masaaki Yuasa is loved here on MAL but I was still shocked to see how many 8's and 9's this short by him was getting. Kick-Heart wasn't very good, guys. The short was only about 12 minutes long but I'm still giving it a 3/10. The story is bare bones: a masked wrestler is also a masochist who falls in love with a female opponent because she beats him up. Yeah, it's awkward. Don't watch this in mixed company. He literally gets turned on by watching her slap the shit out of his tag partner. Did I mention their names areMasked M and Lady S? S&M, get it!? Ugh, it's so bad. The anime is also pretty gross, like there's a part where M gets stuck inside the fat body of S's tag partner and he sees dead bodies and sludge in the folds of her fat? Kick-Heart features Yuasa's trademark chaotic animation style which I find grating. It was also really blurry and hard to make out some parts. I actually liked the design of Lady S, the fact that she was physically intimidating (part of why I didn't give this a 2/10), but again I just wish she (and the rest of it) was drawn better. Some scenes look like a middle schooler drew them. In the end M throws the match to S but it's ok S still gives the prize money to save the orphanage because *drum roll* surprise twist, S was the new nun at the orphanage the whole time!? Wow, I totally didn't call that twist the moment the nun was introduced!? Wait, hold on. M acts surprised, like he didn't know she was S...so why did he still throw the match if he knew his orphanage needed the prize money? It makes no sense. He literally just agreed to the match because he wanted her to beat him up some more. Again, this is an awkward one. Blech.
Japan can come up with some weird and wonderful things. This is a country where people can pre-order their Christmas dinner months in advance from KFC, have hotels with rooms that are slightly larger than coffins, and have mascots for literally everything, such as bottled water, train lines, and even prisons. And it's not like the west doesn't have it's fair share of weirdness either, just take a look at wrestling. Throughout the history of wrestling, there have been wrestlers such as Doink the Clown, Xanta Claus, who is an evil Santa Claus, and Perry Saturn, a man who fell in love with a mopthat had a face on it. So naturally there would be some crossover. A demonstration of this is Kick-Heart. Kick-heart came out in 2013 and is a short film produced by Production I.G. It was fully funded on Kickstarter and was the first anime to be fully funded by crowdfunding and open up the doors to many other anime projects. I was screened at several festivals and first aired on television on Toonami. The short film has some pretty good talent behind it. The director is Masaaki Yuasa, the person who created Mind Game (2005) , Kemonozume (2006), Kaiba (2008), and Tatami Galaxy (2010), and he went on to direct Ping Pong (2014) shortly after this. So there is a reason to be interested in seeing this short. It's a love story between two people that have a secret to hide, one a pro-wrestler and the other a nun. There isn't much of a story to Kick-Heart beyond it's initial premise since it's about 12 minutes long, and i don't want to spoil much of it so you can see it for yourself. It really doesn't need to be more complicated than it is. The short brings you in with it's animation style, and thankfully, it has plenty of style. It shows off it's animation talents proudly. It's animation is fast and energetic, and suits the concept very well. Unsurprisingly, this has a cult following. Surprisingly though, it got an English fandub while the fans were waiting for the official English dub to get released. Whether it's worth listening to is up to you, but i imagine if you like something on the weirder side like Kick-Heart, the fandub might up your alley. Kick-Heart is worth checking out for those who like the unusual side of anime that comes out of Japan. It definitely has a great weird energy to it and a unique style, but it's not for everyone, so you have been warned.. It's only 12 minutes, so you can watch it on your lunch break or if you're waiting for something and you need to pass the time.
Fun little short. I don't think it gets mentioned too often despite being one of the most recent of Yuasa's works and that's probably fair. Kick-heart doesn't have the same emotional impact his other works normally carry, instead the focus seems to be more on style and animation which are done extremely well. The story is simple and a lot of things are left up to the viewer to fill in. You could try spinning it in a way that would make it look like some point is being made or some theme is being explored, but that's just self-wank. The only thing that matters, isthe premise of a masochist wrestler falling in love at first sight with his female opponent. Unbeknownst to him she's also a nun at the orphanage he grew up in. What really matters is how this story is presented. The art is very on point. Rough, colorful, expressive but still smoothly animated and at times set to psychedelic music that adds to the whole surreal feel of the short and helps to make the scenes flow. Don't expect elaborate fight scenes or anything like that though. Since it's Yuasa you will instead get things like a man getting his chest slapped silly in slow motion or main character getting trapped under expansive folds of fat filled with gunk and bones. There a bit of more or less normal wrestling too but what you'll see is mostly goofy and eccentric. As a package it's hard to say this is very remarkable or a must watch but it's good for what it is and worth checking out if you care even a little.
Despite having a run time of just under twenty minutes, Kick-Heart manages to pack in a lot of, well, heart. The story practically flies by on high speed rails, yet it's paced exactly at the speed it should be--fights go fast and scenes transition from place to place quickly, but Kick-Heart knows when to slow down and allow the viewer to breathe--such directing could only be possible from Yuasa. And while the story itself isn't anything too interesting, the art, sound, and animation design is just brilliant. Characters feel as if they're full of boundless energy, emotions flamboyantly on display at all times. It's nothing shortof visual porn just to sit back and experience it all. In any case, there's really no reason not to watch something so short, yet so fantastically well done. Don't let the average rating fool you.
Out of 100 Nobles watching… 90 were impressed! 10 expected a little more substance Kick-Heart is a neat little crowd-funded short by Production I.G. which came to me by way of a YouTube AMV as all nice animations I never knew about tend to. I make a habit of stopping to see the source on these sorts of things so when I saw that Kick-Heart was around 12 minutes I went and watched it right away. Kick-Heart was a delightful little short, and serves as a reminder to an industry that is ever more concerned with efficiency and costs just what a traditional style passion project can look like.CG assets just cannot capture the energy of something like this animations complete disregard for clean line work. There is an energy in Kick-Heart conveyed through traditional techniques that is refreshing. A scene where our protagonist runs to the wrestling ring, jumps in, and we get a zoom pan to his stupid smiling face is filled with such a great use of anticipation and exaggeration I really can't stop coming back and watching it. The short is just a bit of fun really messy, but well executed animation. It is the first ever crowdfunded animation and for that reason should merit some acknowledgement, but it really does stand on its own merit. I will say the Jack Stauber AMV made by lisuga on YouTube captures most of the best bits with an absolutely killer bop. With the original being so sparce on story and short I have wound up watching that AMV a loooot instead of just watching the short again.
When the main gripe one has with a piece of media is "I want more of this" is it really even a downside? Surely this is a good thing, right? I mean, yeaaah, but still I would love to see a lot more of these characters, the ending really implies a further narrative, I would adore to see a full slice of life romcom with Romeo and Juliet juggling their lives as M and S along with a blooming "romance" This being said, I adore this short, everything from the aesthetic of luchadors and nuns to the insane proportions and how they actually affect fights in fantasticalways to the themes of BDSM being framed like love at first sight. Basically, watch it and pray with me that we someday get a full series. Someday!
There is not many dialogue in here. So most of the time you are served with the creative artstyle. We can see visually a love inside their heart and body, it is represented beautifully. I can safely say that this anime artstyle is really unique and the characters design too. Looks like an old anime where every character personality match with their body appearance. Though, I give you a warning if you have an epilepsy because the fight scene is filled with rapidly color change. The rest is average really. Like their voice is average, music, BGM, and the story. Its not good and its notbad either. The story plot didn't really stick to me because I got confused about what is going on. And the MC backstory didn't either, they barely make anything understandable except for his fetish and objectives. Found this anime because the Jack Stauber - Buttercup MV. It is fairly watchable if you have spare time to spend.