High-school student Mariko and her elder sister Mayu are forced out of their apartment by a fire and move in with their landlord. Mariko meets the landlord's handsome son, Natsume, who is also a model. They fall in love but break up when Mariko discovers that Natsume is seeing other girls. Eventually, they are reunited, and the end credits roll. A-Girl has no dialog and is performed against a background of Japanese pop songs composed by Okada Tooru and sung in English! by SEIKA. Intertiles provide continuity, like in old silent films. (Source: Orphan Fansubs)
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The main thought I had while watching "A-Girl" is that I bet this is someone's favorite show. It's sort of a Minimum Viable Favorite Anime, which got me thinking about what that means. There is not a whole lot to this. Not to imply that there's not much to silent film, but this is a silent film, so it conveys its narrative through pictures and title cards and the music selection. The relationships it depicts are archetypical enough that you could probably understand even without the cards. The character designs look somewhat similar to each other, enough so that it can take a second todifferentiate secondary characters. But there's so much emotional imagery compressed within this OVA. And I don't mean that in the "you're supposed to cry here" sort of way; you couldn't even call this story sad. I mean it walks us through an impressive number of different emotions and caters each scene to expressing that feeling and making us share in it. That was impressive and a wonderful approach to animating this story. It felt fresh and unique enough in a way that could make me absolutely understand someone finding this and going "This is my favorite thing ever."
I don't know what's up with the very low review score for this OVA on MyAnimeList, but rest assured, A-Girl is one of those hidden gems that makes sifting through all the garbage of late-eighties-early-nineties anime OVAs worth it. It's genuinely something special. I didn't expect this to be a weird experimental silent film, and I also didn't expect this to be legitimately pretty moving and sweet. The animation is so good, too, which baffles me for how obscure it is. I love it when we get really nice coming-of-age stories for women out of nowhere. Plus, thanks to being a silent film, there's a tonof great music!
Story 7/10 : I absolutely didn't get a damn thing about the story but I had an overall impression of cuteness and sadness about this love story. Art 8/10 : Nothing to say considering the age of the anime. Reminded me of Aishite Night mostly because of the chara I guess. Sound 10/10: The music is a real tear-bringer, seriously. Character 8/10 : We didn't have much time to get to know the characters but fair enough for a single 25-minute episode. The characters were way to similar but it's a common problem for almost every romance anime from the 90s But damn, I need an explanation of thisanime or I won't sleep T_T
This film presents us a gentle approach to the subject of romance and relationships. First thing that comes to you at the start of this film is the immediate strong musical presence, that is only complimented by the visual presentation. That already sets this film apart from many other anime and films. However in addition of the strong visual presentation and musical aspect that is present throughout the film, you can see that the film is composed of segments. There are several layers of these segments and together they form the narrative of the film that is partly told through the visual presentation and in partthrough the musical atmosphere. The combination of these segments and how they play into each other I'd say is one of the strengths of the film. There are multiple songs used throughout the film, usually change of song signaling the dawn of a new musical segment in the narrative of the film. Another type of segments consist of black screens indicating the use of silent dialogue. As opposed to the segments relying on audio, these segments are purely visual. These two kind of segments together form create a sense of harmony and conflict within the audiovisual experience. They are separate from each other but they somehow managed to weave both of them together forming a magnificent audiovisual experience. The art brings beautifully life the designs from the manga and the struggle of the characters romance is portrayed thoroughly through both visual presentation and through musical performance. I'd say this approach that taps into multiple layers individually enables emotional connection to the setting and characters that cannot be obtained from a single layered experience. There is just more depth in the setup of the experience when the output is on multiple layers. Overall the content and design on the film I'd say that the multilayered audiovisual setting reinforces the context on the scenes and the allows the film to have one of a kind impact to the viewer, which is something I value.
This anime isn't for everyone and was probably not intended for the masses. It is a piece of high art. Story: The story is fine and relatable if you are familiar with anime tropes of the time and can follow the storyline. This anime is dense and doesn't tell you anything. It wants you to perceive the storyline rather than give it to you. Art: I'm watching a VHS rip on a 40" 4K monitor. Of course it doesn't compare to anything modern. It is on par with many things of the same time period and better thanmost. They took their time to draw a great animation. Sound: There is very little spoken dialogue. Most of the anime is visuals and music. The music is well chosen and always fits perfectly with the animation. It is a S tier soundtrack. Character: They aren't well fleshed out, but they do a lot with the minimal time given. Enjoyment: 10/10 for me. Otherwise, I wouldn't be here writing a review. Overall: 9/10 It's just good. If you like old anime just watch it.
Such an underrated gem of an anime! I watched this from a VHS, so not the highest quality I've ever seen, but still,the art was very gorgeous. The music in this anime is gorgeous and some of the best that I've heard from the time it was made even brought me to tears at one point. The characters aren't the deepest or most fleshed out I've seen, but for the short time you see them, they work pretty well. Overall, while this anime may not be for everyone, it is an adorable romance anime. Would recommend it if you're a fan of old romantic anime!
Going into this anime, I expected your usual high school shoujo romance. I was completely wrong and immediately got hit with an experimental silent film. Like, legit. No dialogue, 0 voice acting, and title cards. I almost gave up on this 6 minutes in due to a negative review, however, I pushed through and realized how charming it is. I wasn't exactly invested in it like I would be in a usual anime... if anything I was invested as if I was watching a music video with a good story. Which it actually could be categorized as. It reminds me of VIDEOCLUB's Amour Plastique. Not everyone'sgoing to like this but if you like cute and quirky romantic media, I would recommend this. It's an experience.