Yuko and Eri are two normal girls who are sucked into the alternate world filled with tiny people. The people of this mysterious world sees them as their "Great Protectors" who can protect their land in a time of strife. The two girls set out on a mission with a group of warriors from the village to find out how they were brought here and how might they return home. However, there is a war brewing and these two Great Protectors are the political tool that every faction lusts for to rally the people to their side. (Source: ANN)
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If you quickly pass by Strange Dawn thinking that it’s just a happy little kid’s adventure, then I’m afraid that you’re missing out on some interesting drama and political, bloody battles that are packaged in a simple, yet very unique design. If you’ve ever seen Kaiba or Shadow Star Narutaru, you’d know not to judge an anime by its cover. Strange Dawn is one of those anime—it’s warm and childish on the outside, but thoughtful and serious on the inside. STORY At first glance, the story of Strange Dawn doesn’t sound very unique at all. Two high-school girls get sent to another world and are expected tosave it; we’ve seen this concept before in popular shows like Fushigi Yugi, Inuyasha, Escaflowne, Magical Girl Rayearth, and so on. However, there is something special about Strange Dawn that really sets itself apart from the others, and that is its setting. Fantasy settings typically possess dragons, demons, magic, and elaborate kingdoms, but not this one. The two girls simply enter the land of the ‘little people,’ which are creatures that closely resemble human dolls. Right from the very beginning, the girls are caught in a war between two countries, Griania and Baljidan, as they try to gain control over Belzeagle, the place that they end up protecting. Everyone calls them the “Grand Saviors,” but they are merely seen as giants who can be manipulated for power. The girls can hardly believe that these little people are capable of so much chaos and destruction, and it takes a long time for them to grasp the seriousness of the situation. The little people really stab each other, bleed, and die. It’s no children’s game. The pacing is really slow in the first half, which turns a lot of people off. Most of the time, the characters are just hangin’ around and talking, but I think that this is important for establishing the characters and setting. In the second half, the story takes a giant leap into all the exciting drama and action. There is something horrible happening all of the time, and even the characters that are on the same side are constantly bumping heads. My only gripe on the story is how it begins and ends. One word: Abrupt. CHARACTERS Ah, the charm of the series. The little people are packed with so much energy, personality, and drama that you can’t help but love them. We have the quiet and serious leader named Shall who strongly believes in the Grand Saviors, the chief’s daughter named Reca who has strong feelings for Shall, her best friend Mani, Princess Alia, and many more. It’s so much fun to watch them interact, and they have the most adorable character designs ever. The two human girls, Yuko Miyabe and Eri Natsuno, are complete opposites. Yuko is loud and rude, and she takes no interest in the little people at all. On the flip side, Eri is soft and sympathetic, and she wishes to help them more often. Throughout the series, they angst, complain, and simply wish to return home. They also choose not to participate in most of the little people’s affairs; they just sit by and let bad things happen to them. These things can get annoying sometimes, but it all comes down to the idea that nothing ever feels quite real around them. I really like how this series portrays their inconveniences, such as having no toilet, no change of underwear, no technology, etc. Anime tend to neglect these kinds of things, so I appreciate that they’re being treated as little important issues here. It makes you wonder how you would also fare in such a place where you don’t have the luxuries of a bathroom, a clothes store, or a McDonalds. Yuko and Eri aren’t particularly special characters, meaning that they’re ordinary in every sense of the word. That might be boring to you, but I think they’re a nice break from other heroines who typically possess a special power that saves everybody in the end. Yuko and Eri just rely on their normal human strength to pull through hardships. SOUND The OP song “Sora E” by Eri Kawai is beautiful, and it adds a wonderful atmosphere to the series. It is actually very addicting to listen to, but if that’s not enough, the instrumental version of the same song is played in the middle of every single episode. It’s a great tune, and hopefully you won’t get too tired of hearing it. The rest of the soundtrack is also very good, and it has a warm spot in my little OST collection, but the main theme song clearly stands out above the rest. OVERALL Despite that Strange Dawn looks so cute and fluffy, it actually has a pretty serious tone. The series throws away certain clichés that are typically found in ‘girl gets sent to new world’ premises, and the characters are incredibly charming and memorable. I’ll never forget the ‘little people.’ It’s just unfortunate that the series begins and ends so abruptly. Some interesting things that are mentioned are never fully explored, which is why I had to knock off a few points. But despite that, this is a good show. At the very least, listen to the gorgeous OP song.
Very obscure anime that I saw all of one time as a kid Arabic dubbed on TV and finally found again after years of wondering if I'd imagined it. And it is beautiful. Children's rating though? That's a lie - the only reason anyone would have to believe that this is a children's anime is the fact that the characters look like little Teletubbies. But it's an anime with lots of blood and violence, themes of war, love triangles and melodrama - heck, there's even (somewhat...) an attempted rape scene! If there's one major problem it's the very abrupt ending, as if the show hadbeen cancelled or something - but given that the beginning was just as out-of-nowhere and abrupt, it seemed kind of fitting. The story talks about two high school girls, Natsuno Eri and Miyabe Yuko, who find themselves lost in a world inhabited by 'humans' that are barely 2 or 3 feet tall and have the body shapes of marshmallows. The anime literally just starts with them walking around in this world wondering where they are and how they got there, which I think is great; no time is wasted seeing what they were doing before they got there, or how they got there, or anything of the sort. The importance of the story happens in this fantasy world, and ends as soon as they leave. The same could be said for the two main leads themselves actually, as while you're watching, you don't get the feeling the story is really about them either - they're just sort of there. There's nothing special about them other than the fact that they are three times the size of every other character, and the fact that their personalities are completely polar opposites. Insofar as the anime focuses on their struggles, it's mostly in the daily necessities that the fantasy world is sorely lacking in - bathrooms, sanitary napkins, a change of clothes - you know, the things that are never really addressed all that much in other anime, or any story really, that involves a character being transported to a past-times fantasy setting. The REAL importance lies in the inhabitants of the fantasy world, the little people of Belzerg, who are trying to protect their village that's being caught in the middle of a war between two neighboring countries. These are the characters you'll find yourself caring about or hating, and these are the characters that go through trials and epiphanies and realizations by the end through their interactions with each other and the two main leads. While I was watching the anime, I found myself able to enjoy it that much more after I decided to distance myself a bit from Miyabe and Natsuno and view them the way the little people did - as otherworldy beings with unimaginable powers, unable to empathize with human emotion. That way it made a bit more sense for their personalities to be so extreme, with Natsuno being quiet, uncertain, but trying to be helpful and Miyabe being loud, contrary, and completely uninterested. Even if you do try to put yourself in the girls' shoes though, when you think about it, their actions do still make sense - they don't really get full grasp of how serious these little people are taking their personal dramas and their war, and that their fights aren't just little squabbles but dangerous brawls with real weapons where people do die or get hurt, because the whole situation doesn't feel real to them, especially given the fact that, again, the little people look like baby Teletubbies. Not to dump on the character designs though; they do look cute, and more importantly individualized, and the art and animation is actually more solid and fluid than you'd expect. I love the bright colors in the anime, and the music is simply breathtaking. The one that stands out the most would be the opening song. It was actually the opening theme I was looking for when I found this anime, as it was what I had remembered most from the Arabic dubbed version I'd seen before. It sounds just as gorgeous in its original Japanese as it did in Arabic, and I advise you to give both a listen even if you don't want to watch the rest of the anime. I actually hadn't planned to either, at the start, but after sampling the first few and continuing to end on a cliff hanger with each episode, I ended up watching the whole thing in two days (when I should have been studying for a midterm too...)
Came across this when scouring around '00 for cute anime girls. It's actually pretty good, randomly. Doesn't look like anyone really watched it. Old-school isekai with two cute protagonists getting caught up in these little chibi people's war, and yeah it's real war they kill each other and use comfort women and such. I laughed for a minute straight when the little chibi guys made their initial appearance and just started murdering each other, but they've got a little wartime plotline with lots of interpersonal drama going on that is a little more sophisticated than you might expect. When it comes down to it, I mainlylike this show because Yuko is hot. She's also got a personality you don't see often, particularly in main characters. I recommend it purely for her if you watch stuff for quality girls. The chibi bros get a little too much screen time in my opinion, but their story is well above average compared to the random anime. Something unique to this anime that I thought was really cool was the reaction of the main characters to their isekai situation. They respond with sarcasm, pity, and annoyance at the struggles of all of the little chibi dudes calling them grand saviors and killing each other and stuff. Not a common trope. The MCs in general are pretty well written and believable characters, and show off their legs quite a bit. There's some good payoff towards the end as well as far as fan service goes. Another thing to mention is that it has a really nice symphonic soundtrack that I was impressed by. Quality girls, unique reactions to the isekai situation, interesting story. Could not tell you why nobody watched this. There are a lot of constructive messages about interpersonal relationships and the motives of others embedded throughout the story, good learning material for kiddos. And I'm telling you, Yuko rules.
Strange Dawn is a surprisingly good show for how obscure it is, but has some crucial flaws that prevent it from being great. In this case I think the flaws are more interesting to look at, so that's primarily what I'll be focusing on, but keep in mind that I think it's an overall good show worth watching. The writing is mostly solid, with a well-paced and engaging plot tackling interesting themes. The characters are well-rounded and seldom completely good or evil. The animation is also well-done, especially considering it's a 2000 show. The background music is charming and appropriate to the tone, and the voiceperformances are generally good. The art style, however, is one of the major problems. Except for the two main characters, all the characters are drawn in a super deformed style, or "chibis". While there's nothing inherently wrong about this, it really doesn't fit the tone of the show, which is a pretty serious and at times violent fantasy series. This style of character design is traditionally used for more comedic anime like Hetalia or Damekko Doubutsu, and so it just doesn't feel right to have to take them seriously when they talk about politics and war. I would assume that the choice to make the inhabitants of the strange world super deformed came at least partly from the realization that it's a simple and cheap way to draw and animate characters; anime is after all a medium that evolves through figuring out how to do things effectively on a small budget. However, this decision affects the show in more ways than just the general sense of tone mismatch. The premise of the show is a well-known formula: our protagonists get mysteriously transported to a foreign world, where they get involved in local affairs while trying to figure out how to get back home. The inhabitants of the foreign world all being tiny, the protagonists are initially feared and respected, as their sheer size makes them forces to be reckoned with, especially in a pre-industrial world where the main weapons are tiny swords and bows and arrows. Despite this, throughout the show they are mostly passive bystanders, victims and McGuffins. Although it tries to use this to further a theme of learning to stand up for yourself, the cinemanarrative dissonance of seeing these giant God-like creatures so easily restrained and bossed around by people so small they'd die if you stepped on one is too strong to really make it believable. Not only do the protagonists often feel powerless, they don't even feel important to the story a lot of the time. As characters they're well-written, they have an interesting relationship and they have some good development, and yet it feels like it'd only take 10 minutes in the writer's room to patch up the hole left if you just took them out. Of course, as with all works with this kind of setting, having a representative of Earth Humans present can make it easier to quickly and efficiently introduce the world and point out its differences to ours, which absolutely has its advantages, particularly in shorter works, but if that's all they're going to contribute it would be better to cut them and introduce the world more naturally. I half-seriously suspect that the only reason the main chars were added was so they had an excuse to use super deformed art designs for most of the cast and cut down on costs. Finally, although the plot is quite high quality most of the way through, the ending feels very abrupt. Without any inside info I can only speculate that perhaps it was intended to be longer (it did feel like a 2-cour show to me in terms of pacing for a large part of the show), but it got pulled prematurely. While this is a shame and I would have liked to see a better ending, I doubt it would have done much to alleviate its other issues.
If you've watched or read kingdom, this is the complete opposite. All of the characters are complete muppets. They have no motivation or reason for existing. Briefly, some grasp at the old, shriveled up and dry remains of a goal or motive, however the plot takes them, ties them to a string and makes them dance butt naked in a huge circle. That is what this show felt like to me. As far as being randomly dropped in another world, it's good. The main characters aren't in a videogame and they do not have cheat skills or knowledge of the far future. Literally their onlypower is to scream like lost puppies and go home. I'd like to mention that the writing is atrocious. Never before have I thought that whole episodes of a show sound like the demented monologues of the author(usually all it takes is a little effort to suspend my disbelief, but this time I didn't even feel like trying). Maybe it was only because of the terrible sub with spelling mistakes, but alas, even if that was true I fell like it would somehow make the tiny characters even more insufferable. The best part is that, at the end I thought they would make a "look how much we grew as people" and "the true adventure was the friends we made along the way" bullshit turn. but all I got was a black screen and credits. It positively shocked and startled me, seeing as I already had no expectations. As far as isekai goes it was very refreshing. So bad that I actually enjoyed some parts(that isn't to say that it didn't get painfully boring towards the second half).(To specify, I liked the setting and the main characters weren't bad as well. This premise could, by a better writer, be turned into legitimately good material) There are plenty of far better received shows that commit worse sins than this one. All in all I prefer a show that is not great through and through, Than one that could be seen as a masterpiece, but shits its pants halfway through. I have been watching so many good anime recently that, for a second, I lost my appreciation for the bad stuff. In conclusion, this story moved me so much, that I felt compelled to write a review and rate it as at least a 7, if not more.
Was quite surprised to find the overall rating to be on the lower side of the scale. This was the first anime I watched that actually sparked my interest. Despite there being so many alternative world-themed anime out there, this one managed to keep me interested and left me at the edge of my seat every single time. I didn't understand this anime when I first watched it as a primary schooler, but I picked it up again during my middle school years and I was so happy that I did. I gained a lot more understanding how they use the two main characters as avessel/vehicle to understand better the culture and what happened in the world that they were summoned to. There were a lot of both subtle and straightforward criticisms on taboos and cultural expectations, and it was a great choice to pick the tension during the war to develop the characters and the love story in it. I'm very picky when it comes to giving a 10 to any kind of series, but this Anime touched my psyche in some ways that others don't. I think some doesn't like the choice of using little people (chibis) and dismiss it as an Anime directed towards children, but it can't be further than that. It wraps itself well around serious themes like war, rape, survival, and death, and they do it well in the span of 13 episodes. Not to mention it is accompanied by great OSTs too, the opening and ending song for this match very well to the Anime and the main characters. The opening score is still one of the best song I have ever encountered and it is still in my playlist of songs I love the most. I strongly recommend audiences who watched this during their younger years to pick it up again, I think they may get something more now that they're older and are more experienced with nuances.
Strange dawn, the name is oddly fitting. It's a show which has it's own take on fantasy stories, and invokes memories of shows similar to "Made in abyss", but perhaps without the story to back it up. In modern lingo this would be named an "Isekai", or "in another world", as the show follows the meandering adventures of two high-school girls trapped in a medieval, low-magic world. It's shows like these which I aspire for their to be a "world building" category on MAL. I can also appreciate this for how untainted it is by the modern anime industry, the characters are far from thestereotypical Isekai power fantasy cast. For my tastes, I thoroughly enjoyed the world and have been sufficiently engaged by it's whimsy, as well as realism, to give it a re-watch. To be clear though, the story is unfortunately poor and comes to a truly unsatisfying end. If you're seeking out a little gem to immerse yourself in the world building, this is for you, but don't expect riveting storytelling.