StoryI had thought that Kanokon ~Manatsu no Daishunikusai~ would be the most lackluster
anime that I'd see during 2009. Given that Kouta and Chizuru graced our
screens in November, that assertion seemed likely to hold. Oh, how
wrong I was. After the delicious melancholy of Blue Drop, I fired up Itsudatte My Santa! looking for something short and funny with a slight zest of holiday
cheer. Unfortunately, however, it proved too long on stupid and too
short on functioning humor for my needs. Good thing it was a mere two
episodes, as otherwise I might have set fire to my monitor in disgust.
Much like Mai, Itsudatte My Santa!'s overenthusiastic
protagonist, the OVA tries too hard to please. Straight from a
melodramatic voice-over wherein Santa (yes, you heard that right) muses
on how children come to stop believing in Santa Claus, the story jumps
right into a trainee-Santa Claus attempting to cram happiness down the
poor boy's throat. At this moment, any sense of pacing flies out the
window, and the "story" careens from gag to gag without pausing to
reflect on whether or not anything works. The rest of the uninspired
episode consists of an off-brand imitation of A Christmas Carol cheaply bolted onto a half-formed love story. The second portion jumps
forward into summertime to provide one of the worst beach sequences in
the history of anime: little or no fan-service, a weak riff on Mai's "I
can only create things with 'san' in their names" power, and jerky
animations of the gang eating watermelon, and finishing off with a
montage of Shirley trying to orchestrate some alone time for the two
hopeless lovers. That this segment derives most of its humor from
Maimai biting Shirley's backside demonstrates the series' puerile wit
at its finest.
Of course the OVA wraps up nice-and-neat in the finale, but the fact
that the narrative never goes to any length to introduce significant
tension or conflict makes the whole thing seem frivolous. However,
since Itsudatte My Santa! isn't strange enough to elicit a massive "WTH?" (think Puni Puni Poemy). I--like most viewers I imagine--have to ask, "Ken Akamatsu took time off writing manga for THIS?"AnimationItsudatte My Santa! has to be one of the most cursorily animated
OVAs out there. For most of the two episodes, viewers can feast their
eyes on boring pans, nearly-still shots of people talking in front of
static backgrounds, and action scenes that play out like flip-books
written in the corner of high school texts. In 54 minutes of video,
only one scene has any kind of visual flair and the director uses it TO
END BOTH EPISODES. Famed moe champion Ken Akamatsu CLEARLY
intended these two scenes to be identical. The repeated actions and
events serve to reinforce the unchanging and therefore nonthreatening
nature of Santa and Mai's relationshi... No. Reusing footage is just
plain lazy, and placing it at the end of the boring second episode
feels more like a slap in the face than an inspiring end to the story.SoundNo, this OVA doesn't ear-rape you, but it sure-as-hell tries. While
Santa, Shirley, and Maimai all have bland, reasonable voicing, Mai
bounces immediately into the high-obnoxious register and stays there so
long as she's not in Santa Claus mode. Whiny, shrill, and always
shouting, her voice actor, the talented Aya Hirano, should be ashamed of
this performance, deeply ashamed. Luckily, Mai's magical girl transformation into a holiday avatar lowers the pitch of her voice, and
this, coupled with the spare minutes when the character keeps her mouth
shut offer some respite.
Underneath all the action, an innocuous score wends its way through the
anime. A standard synth affair blends in bells and faux-choral themes
to enhance the anime's "Christmas" feel, but the music's low volume
means it serves more as layer of frost atop the more offensive aural
elements than an active participant in any scene; this is unfortunate,
as louder music might have drowned out Mai's grating exhortations.CharactersA foursome of cardboard cut-outs forms the main cast of the anime.
Santa himself starts out interesting, but the OVA wastes no time in
reducing him to a shallow romantic stand-in by the second episode. But
of course, this is a Ken Akamatsu anime, so it's the girls that
are interesting, right? Nope. Mai shows less depth of character than
your grandmother's silver and nowhere near as much history. She flits
between mopey, bubbly, and confrontational with no apparent motivation,
which further damages the already frayed plot. Add to the mix her loli
sister imaginatively named Maimai and a non-descript rival in the form
of Shirley and you get... Well, I've seen mad-libs with more
personality.OverallI know what you're going to say. "Patcheeesss! U scored less than the
sum of its parts!" to which I have to reply that this anime is the
single most insulting thing I have EVER watched. The short OVA tries
far too hard to make the most of its meager content and comes across as
scattershot, insincere, and rushed. This drivel wears its three jokes
thin within the first ten minutes and then follows up with a tired
attempt at romance in its second installment--should you care to stick around that long. The fact that Ken
Akamatsu believes you'll watch this or that this is what you're WAITING
to see it is tantamount to violence against his fan-base in my mind. Do
yourself a favor and skip this one. Also, consider burning your Negima collection in revenge.