After eating a strange flower, Chocotan the mini dachshund gains the ability to talk! Since then, the eager pup has been able to provide her young owner, Nao Hatori, with earnest support. The two often walk to the park in hopes of running into Hatori's crush, Yamato Arima, and his dachshund Happy. During one encounter, Arima is interrupted by his female classmates, distancing Hatori from their conversation. To make matters worse, Chocotan loses her ability to speak and is unable to console her now devastated owner. Despite these setbacks, Chocotan's steadfast love for her human companion motivates Hatori to muster the courage to realize her genuine feelings. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
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Super cute and basically the best thing ever. Short but really sweet. You wouldn't understand until you've seen the episode, but it is very heartwarming at the end I was near tears. The ending was extremely satisfactory because no conflict was left unsolved, and it also allowed room for a sequel episode. The soundtrack was glorious, and the animation was kawaii desu. The characters went through significant development and grew into a loveable and memorable cast of humans and dogs. The voice acting was phenomenal. Overall, this was the most enjoyable experience of the week for me. Really made my entire day.Do recommend 10/10; high re-watch value.
Chokotan is an adaptation of an ongoing manga written by Takeuchi Kozue. The special is only ten minutes long and was handled by J.C. Staff. Yes, the same studio behind Potemayo, The Slayers and Honey & Clover, to name a few. So, how do they handle adapting an ongoing manga into a really short special? Let's take a look and find out. Story: The titular Chokotan is a miniature Dachshund. Her owner, Nao, likes a boy in her school named Arima and gets to see him everyday when taking Chokotan for her morning walk in spite of being in different classes. Also, Chokotan can talk likea human because she ate a strange plant that somehow made her vocal cords work that way. One day things go wrong for Nao when two girls who are in Arima's class stop by and talk to him. That's pretty much the story presented in the ten minute segment. Now, I will be somewhat lenient with it since it is only a ten minute segment. But even being lenient, it does have multiple problems. The first is that Chokotan's magical vocal cords seem to work by plot convenience, failing for no apparent reason and then working again for no reason. The second is that Chokotan doesn't work like a dog. In addition to her magic vocal cords, she has magical tear ducts and doesn't have issues with being colour blind, being able to identify what “red” looks like. The reason for the tears is used as a lazy way to make Chokotan emote because... whimpering wasn't good enough? The lack of colour blindness is just used for a terribly written bit of dialogue. Then we have the conflict itself. Nao freaks out because Arima knows girls besides her and talks with them in an innocuous and friendly way? That's really weak and entirely petty on her part. The romance itself just seems cliché. Yeah, that's a lot of problems crammed into ten minutes. And I'm not even going to complain about Chokotan's ability to talk not doing anything in the narrative since there isn't exactly sufficient time to make it really important. Characters: While the characters aren't very well fleshed out, they are, in all fairness, about the best you can expect from a ten minute special. The only real complaint I have is that Nao is a twit. Having her react so vehemently to the guy she likes knowing other girls just makes her seem creepily possessive and annoyingly melodramatic. Art: The art is one aspect that they did a really good job with. The characters are nicely detailed and there are some nice background details. The best part is the art on the dogs, which looks absolutely adorable. Sound: Kugimiya Rie stars as our canine protagonist and does a cutesy voice for her. To her credit, the voice she uses isn't so over the top and high-pitched that it gets annoying. So it is much better than her Nene performance in Potemayo. Nao is voiced by Sakura Ayane, who does a good job. Arima and his dog, Happy, are voiced by Eguchi Takuya and Tamura Mutsumi respectively, both of whom do well. The music is suitable for the series. Ho-yay: There is no ho-yay in this series. There are only a small number of characters and the important ones are two humans of the opposite sex and two dogs of the opposite sex. Final Thoughts: This is a short special that seems to be designed around gathering interest in the manga. The problem is it's pretty stupid. The story, though very short, is riddled with problems. From not understanding how dogs work, to an incredibly weak conflict, to the plot contrivance talking ability and the really egregiously bad bit of “romantic” dialogue just serves to end it really badly. I will give the special that the art and acting are both good and the story, while bad, isn't terrible or offensive. If the idea of a talking Dachshund helping her owner with her romantic problems appeals to you, give it a try. Maybe you'll be interested enough to check out the manga. For myself, I have to give it a 4/10. There are simply too many story problems that crop up in those ten minutes. Next week, Pokemon: The Origin.
The primary problem that I have with this show is that it's dreadfully boring. This OVA doesn't even bother to give the audience anything resembling a character introduction before we are thrown into this predictable, yet at the same time, nonsensical "journey". There's very little plot to be seen in this anime. The girl's crush and jealousy surrounding the one male in this show comes out of utter nowhere and the story gives us no reason to care about her plight. The thin conflict has an equally shallow resolution with no weight to it. The animation and art was also a bit unsettling. Characters rarelyblink, and have unusually large and detailed eyes, even for anime. Movement of characters is often rigid and unnatural, and on more than one occasion, a character would speak without moving their mouth. The only thing that makes this resemble a watchable experience is the few talented voice actors whose abilities were wasted on this overall horrible OVA.
I gave this OVA a 8. Despite it being disturbingly sweet, it looks like it would be an outstanding anime for 8-12 year old girls. It is kinda stereotypical of what the Japanese seem to think girls want to watch, ie. sweet and cloying romance, but no one needs to be watching just this kinda anime all the time. That is what made me drop it from a 9 to an 8 truth be told. I continuously compared it to children's talking animal cartoons of the west and came see this as a "workable" premise, in that it seems to be around a "power" of the dog. Ithink it generally works better for that than most of the wests attempts. Overall, I would recommend it for kids (girls).
It was cute and cute. The anime tells the story of chocotan and her owner.She is a dog that can talk with humans for a bad explained reason. The episodes are short and this didn't get us time to explain a lot of things.But the end is well made and you can tell the story done.I can't say the anime is perfect or have anything that te best i've seen,but i can say i liked how the story goes and how the characters are cute and heartwarming.The dog interactions are the best,and it really could tell a bit more after what happened in the last ep,but itweren't need since the end it's pretty conclusive.