Tantei Team KZ Jiken Note centers on sixth grader Aya Tachibana who worries about friends, family, grades, and more. One day, she joins the Detective Team KZ with four very unique boys that she met in cram school: Kazuomi Wakatake, Takakazu Kuroki, Kazunori Uesagi, and Kazuhiko Kozuka. (Source: Crunchyroll)
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Tantei Team KZ Jiken Note is a series about a group of middle schoolers who solve mysteries in their spare time...That's all I've got for an introduction. Firstly, credit where it's due. In an era of anime where every other show seems to be about high school kids with magic-science-demon powers saving the world, it's refreshing to find a story where the stakes seem appropriate to the setting. Tales of earth shattering events, evil conspiracies & alien invasions so often found in anime can sometimes feel like a lazy way for the writer to up the stakes in a story that they are otherwise unableto come up with ways to keep the readers attention. KZ meanwhile has thus far kept its mysteries grounded in the reality of a typical middle schooler. That's not to say the mysteries are so trivial as to be pointless, or that the story fails to raise the stakes as things progress towards a solution. Nor do I suspect that many of the viewers have found themselves in some or any of the situations that arise. But what I mean by grounded in reality is that you can imagine, for example, a group of fifteen year old's trying to find out why one of their friends got food poisoning & following that trail to a local factory selling tainted meat. Not everything has to be about saving the world, stopping murderers or finding your one true love to be engaging. In some ways it has the charms of reading Enid Blyton or Richmal Crompton stories (do kids still read those?) about school kids trying to solve the mysteries of missing shoes or just trying to find things to do on a boring family holiday. Frankly it's rather refreshing to watch something like KZ, given that 2015 was full of magic power fantasies & overly dramatic love stories to the point that it got quite tiring. Unfortunately, KZ is not without problems, & quite major ones at that. As is too often the case with ensemble casts, the characters are quite limited in their personalities. Each of the four male members of the KZ team suffer from the usual anime problem of having one (& precisely one!) character trait that has to match with their art design. Nothing happens with any of them, either in terms of their personalities or how their relationships develop (or don't) that you wouldn't have been able to predict just by looking at the MAL image. The shows production is a mixed bag. On the one hand, the water colour look of the background art & the softer pastel colours & borderlines of the characters give the show a nice, relaxed look. But like a frustrating number of slice of life type shows in recent years, KZ suffers from what appears to be the current image editing logic that brighter = better. The result is that the screen is often so bright that it overwhelms the image, washing out any subtler or softer tones &, for instance, giving faces a ghostly, colourless appearance. Indeed at times, usually when there is a lot of white space on the screen, it can get quite uncomfortable to watch. But perhaps the biggest problem with KZ is that the writing is what some would describe as fanficcy. This term is often used derogatively & unfairly, but it's the best way I could sum up what watching KZ can seem like. Indeed, if you told me that KZ started out as a fanfic of Secret Seven or another kids mystery book into which the author wrote themselves, I'd believe you. Aya as a character can be summed up as how a tweenage girl would write themselves if they were imagining how they'd get to go on adventures with their favourite boy band. Her mum's a nag, her classmates are just not on her level (her words, not mine) & by sheer coincidence she finds herself in a room with the hottest guys in the school, who waste no time inviting her into their group. This of course only makes the other girls even more jealous of her than they obviously were before, especially when those hot boys start looking for her in class or waiting for her in the courtyard after school (how embarrassing!) Her "skill" that she brings to the group, that being her superior language skills, has mattered precisely zero times so far & indeed really just means she's a bit better at Japanese (I presume referring to memorising more Kanji?) than the others. None the less, those boys sure do want to impress upon her the importance of that skill & they just have to get to know her better or confide with her about things that they can't even tell each other, despite being friends far longer. Really that's her skill, the power to make the hottest boys in school want to talk to her & to see through to the real them. No surprises that, for instance, when everyone's telling her not to hang out with the green haired delinquent (who takes an interest in her, naturally), she'll stubbornly insist that he's just misunderstood & wouldn't you know it she get's through his tough exterior & is proved right. Indeed, while nominally a show about solving mysteries, KZ wears all the trappings of a harem. Each episode will make sure to find time for her & one of the boys (each mystery tends to have a b-plot revolving around one of them) to have one or more of those "moments" where they have an emotional connection that in no way impacts the story or their relationship going forward. I will say that the shorter run time of KZ helps ensure that these don't end up as excruciatingly drawn out as they often are in shows with a standard episode length, but they're still clearly there just to make the tweenage girl in you go "sqwee!" That's the thing about KZ, though: it's clearly meant for an audience of younger girls. While I stand by my criticisms, I'm also aware that since I'm neither of those things, it's not unreasonable to respond with "well it wasn't made for you, so why are you watching it?" Whether its target audience would have the same complaints I do or not, I couldn't say. But it is something to bear in mind when watching KZ. As a mystery series aimed at a younger audience, KZ does a decent job of keeping things grounded yet still interesting, but does have the usual problems with leaps of logic & the occasional convenient convergence of events to wrap everything up. Someone also needs to explain to Kazuomi that blackmailing a criminal is still a crime. But it's not really possible to not view KZ as, at least on some level, a harem; one that seems less about using Aya as a way to connect the audience with a variety of interesting males than it is about making her seem like the kind of girl that the guys just can't help but be drawn to. Sounds like the protagonist of your typical fantasy light novel, now that I think about it.
Tantei Team KZ Jiken Note don't just need a season 2, it needs at least 100 more episodes like Kindaichi Shounen no Jikenbo. I can't get enough of it !!! This children's detective anime was genuinely good !!! It had interesting CRIME cases and the situations they stumble on has some bad people and the danger is there which really made this good and exciting like Kindaichi. Aya was really cute too with her group of friends that are boys, I guess a little bit of a reverse harem starting young? :) It shows Aya likes being with them. They are all cool and smart thatalso likes Aya. Let me MAKE CLEAR this is nothing like Conan's Detective Boys where irritable nosy brats kids gets in the way and ends up so unreal, even Conan has to pretend to be a naive kid. The characters here may be children, but they are completely better. Wakatake is the least mature, often has childish reasons, and a hothead to expose the culprit. Even then, he knows to gather evidence first when he investigates like everyone else. Intellectually as a group, they can calmly and rationally think their next action, and point out the truth. They think of safety like when it's proper to call the police and make sure everyone's safe especially Aya :) They are like good friends in school you would want around. For example, in the anime, Aya tells Uesugi that he can speak to her anything if there's something he don't want the other guys to know. Another example, in the anime, Aya's friends also never force her to do anything that she doesn't want in the line of detective work. I enjoy watching the kids solving the cases together as great friends, contacting each other, using their abilities together in plan/research, catching the culprit, and what really stood out was while also taking care of school and school life FIRST like children should. This anime is a real detective mystery that I would miss seeing. The cases are plenty original and seeing how there was already a timeskip in the anime from elementary to middle school which was really COOL! IF a full series would be made again, maybe we can see a high school for Team KZ too! With even bigger cases! Well-deserved 10/10