House of Five Leaves - Recommendations

Alt title: Sarai-ya Goyou

If you're looking for anime similar to House of Five Leaves, you might like these titles.

Mushishi

Mushishi

It isn't unusual for a person to feel that the world around them is strange and has unexpected secrets lying just beyond their sight. However, for most people this is just an occasional sensation that greets them upon awakening or chases them into sleep. For the mushi researcher Ginko, it isn't a feeling at all; it is a knowledge which guides his travels and motivates his life. Found in the cracks between what is conceivable and what is not, are the varied life forms collectively known as mushi. They surround us and affect us, but their intensely different nature makes them unrecognizable to most. Ginko brings these life forms into perspective for the lives of those most affected and most in need of an explanation.

6 votes

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Reasons you might like Mushishi...

AirCommodore AirCommodore says...

House of Five Leaves and Mushishi are slow-paced, mature, and insightful series that never feel heavy-handed. They share similar settings and color palettes, and have a subtley mysterious atmosphere. They would certainly appeal to the same audience.

k1r1h1t0k1r1 k1r1h1t0k1r1 says...

Echoing AirCommodore's recommendation and comments on style ; both Mushi-shi and Sarai-ya Go-yo have a similar feel as far as color, pace, characterization, and sound.  While Mushi-shi is about para-natural organisms and how they interact with humans, Sarai-ya Go-yo is more of an Edo-period underworld drama.  If you like the atmosphere of one, you'll probably find the other quite enjoyable even though their topic-genres are totally different.

SilentWarlock SilentWarlock says...

These two anime bare pretty much no resemblance to each-other as far as their story or characters, but they share a similar feel, atmosphere, and pacing.  Both are slower paced and unique stories with interesting, well-developed characters.  They're also both set in fairly similar time periods.

VivisQueen VivisQueen says...

When watching Sarai-ya Goyou, there is a strong sense of it borrowing from Mushishi in tone and pacing and style. I am convinced Mushishi puts this to use much better than Sarai-ya Goyou, it being episodic and more focused on overarching environmental themes instead of individual human characters. To put it in English, watch Mushishi next if you want more of the deliberate, contemplative, eerie style done better.

Yurusumaji Yurusumaji says...

Both of these anime titles are beautiful works of art and both work at a bit of a slower pace. It is a blessed relief for people who need a break from shrieking main characters. The scenery is stunning, the characters are interesting and the stories are worth watching.

neutrino neutrino says...

Both series have a mysterious, quiet man whose past slowly becomes the central focus of the plot.  Watching Yaichi from House of Five Leaves, I was constantly reminded of Ginko from Mushishi.  Both have similar atmospheres, slow-paced and thoughtful.

Shouwa Genroku Rakugo Shinjuu

Shouwa Genroku Rakugo Shinjuu

When a small-time crook is released from prison, he is determined to turn his life around by apprenticing himself to the great rakugo master Yakumo VIII, inspired by his performance of "Shinigami" during his incarceration. Surprisingly, the old man agrees to train him and brings his new apprentice to his own house to live, giving him the name "Yotaro", a classical word used in rakugo meaning "fool". Yakumo has much to teach about the art of rakugo, but both he and his ward Konatsu- a hot-headed young woman whose father was also a famous storyteller- are difficult people with a shared dark past. Yakumo refuses to train her, claiming that the world of rakugo is no place for women, and Konatsu has vowed to kill him, claiming that Yakumo murdered her father!

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Reasons you might like Shouwa Genroku Rakugo Shinjuu...

Howlorihara Howlorihara says...

Both shows have a similar tone and place emphasis on many of the same aspects.  Both stories do an excellent job at grounding the audience in its time period.  Furthermore, both also focus on a deep and complex relationship between it's male main characters.

ichigouraharasan ichigouraharasan says...

These both deal with more mature and adult storylines and themes.  Unfairness and acceptance in life are central.  They both feel subdued with a sadness but also a sense of peace, with wisdom.

subparalien subparalien says...

Ahhh, yes... The slow build up. soft and beautiful animation, and conflicting moral elements that make you question how you like the characters. If that's your jive, then both these animes are for you.

Ristorante Paradiso

Ristorante Paradiso

Located on a small street near the center of Rome, the Casetta dell'orso is a small yet popular restaurant staffed by a group of older, bespectacled gentlemen. Nicoletta is a twenty-one-year-old woman who has just arrived in Rome to meet with her estranged mother's husband, who owns the restaurant. She intends to inform him that not only was his wife married once before, but also that she is her daughter - a secret her mother desperately wants kept. When she arrives at the restaurant Nicoletta becomes enamoured with Claudio, one of the waiters, and begins to spend more time there. Despite the age gap, Nicoletta finds her feelings towards Claudio growing; and after making a promise to keep her mother's secret, Nicoletta begins working at the restaurant as an apprentice chef. Now she is trying her hardest to become a good cook, but can Nicoletta overcome the difference in age and win the quiet Claudio's heart?

2 votes

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Reasons you might like Ristorante Paradiso...

AirCommodore AirCommodore says...

Ristorante Paradiso and Sarai-ya Goyou are slow moving character dramas about adults. They're also based off of manga by the same mangaka- Natsume Ono. This means they have very similar art styles, and, most importantly, a very similar style of characterization. It's subtle but very powerful. Nobody will outright proclaim how they are, but every thing they do or say, reagrdless of how seemingly insignificant, add up to a cast of fully fleshed-out characters, free from the cliches that usually plague anime.

chii chii says...

Both anime have a delightful adult feel to them while exploring the characters within the show. Both have a very similar art style to them and make you feel happy just to watch even though neither show is light-hearted. Check out one if you liked the other.

Samurai Champloo

Samurai Champloo

Samurai Champloo is all about style, from the dj-style scratching scene changes to the hip-hop-inspired soundtrack to the eclectic character design. Mugen's fighting style is a funky meld of capoeira and limb-cutting, and Jin is the dramatic foil; he is all steel and old-school samurai style. What binds them together is the desire to test each other's abilities, and a promise to a girl named Fuu: to find the samurai that smells of sunflowers, who plays a pivotal role in her past. Together they travel through edo-era Japan, finding battle and comedy wherever they stop.

2 votes

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Reasons you might like Samurai Champloo...

snivets snivets says...

Although Sarai-ya Goyou is perhaps more serious in tone than Samurai Champloo, both revolve around highly unusual period characters and are driven by shady plots involving the less-than-savory side of society.

subparalien subparalien says...

House of Five Leaves is super pretty. Yes, it moves slowly but it is perfect and the characters are lovely. Samurai Champloo is stylistically cool and the fight scenes are really good, plus the character interactions and well done.

Mononoke

Mononoke

In feudal Japan, evil spirits known as mononoke plague both households and the countryside, leaving a trail of fear in their wake. One mysterious person has the power to slay the mononoke where they stand; he is known only as the Medicine Seller, and he vanquishes the mononoke using the power of his Exorcism Sword. However, in order to draw his sword he must first understand the Form, Truth and Reason of the mononoke. Armed with a sharp wit and keen intellect, the Medicine Seller wanders from place to place, striking down the mononoke in his wake.

1 vote

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Reasons you might like Mononoke...

wickedshizuku wickedshizuku says...

Both of these anime have an abstract and richly drawn atmosphere. The plots are intriguing; characters and music are also pleasing.

Ninja Scroll

Ninja Scroll

Jubei Kibagami is just a wandering swordsman minding his own business... until fate lands him in the middle of a battle with the terrifying Devils of Kimon! Now the fate of all of Japan lies in the hands of a vagabond samurai, a deadly female ninja and a perverted old monk as they take on an enemy who is, literally, immortal.

1 vote

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Reasons you might like Ninja Scroll...

Theta Theta says...

While house of Five Leaves is much more serious and slower paced, these are both excellent entries in the samurai genre.

Shigurui: Death Frenzy

Shigurui: Death Frenzy

In the 6th year of the Kan'ei era, people enjoy a time of peace; skilled swordsmen are revered and respected, and their lives are their own. Amidst the tranquility, Lord Tokugawa Tadanaka decides, for his own amusement, to hold a fighting tournament in which real swords are used - though laws forbid their use. In a match to the death two highly-skilled swordsmen face off: the one-armed Fujiki Gennosuke, and the blind Iraki Seigen. As they take their respective stances, flashbacks paint a picture of the duo’s past and battle wounds; and thus, the real story begins...

1 vote

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Reasons you might like Shigurui: Death Frenzy...

Theta Theta says...

While house of Five Leaves is much more serious and slower paced, these are both excellent entries in the samurai genre.

Basilisk

Basilisk

Oboro, a naive, love-struck girl, is pledged to Gennosuke, an idealist. Both are successors to opposing ninja clans with a long history of hatred kept barely in check by a covenant of peace. Just as the two vow to reconcile the clans with their marriage, the shogun orders the feud to resume in order to resolve an internal struggle that threatens to tear the Tokugawa shogunate apart. Even worse, Oboro and Gennosuke themselves are forced to lead their clans in battle. Can the star-crossed lovers resist the brutal circumstances and remain true to their love as the death toll rises?

1 vote

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Reasons you might like Basilisk...

Theta Theta says...

While house of Five Leaves is much more serious and slower paced, these are both excellent entries in the samurai genre.

Katanagatari

Katanagatari

In the wake of a rebellion that shook Japan twenty years prior, Togame Hida, general director and strategist for the army, seeks to obtain the 12 "deviant blades" created by master swordsmith Shikizaki Kiki to help add stability and security to the Bakufu government. To aid in this endeavor, she looks to enlist the help of Yasuri Mutsune, head of the Kyotou-ryu school and hero of the rebellion. But when she arrives on the island where he lives in exile, she finds him dead, succeeded by his skilled yet slightly daft son Shichika. Undeterred, the two set off from the island in search of the swords armed only with Togami's sharp strategic mind and Shichika's powerful, swordless Kyotou-ryu.

1 vote

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Reasons you might like Katanagatari...

Theta Theta says...

These are two of the more serious samurai shows with good animation and serious dialogue in common.

Death Note

Death Note

Have you ever felt like the world would be a better place if certain people weren’t around? Such grim daydreams might occur when watching the dismal daily news, but on one fateful day, Light Yagami finds that these daydreams can become reality. By pure happenstance, he comes across a black notebook entitled "Death Note", whose text within states that whoever's name is written on its pages will die. With the aid of the death god Ryuk, Light takes it upon himself to rid the world of its corruption, ushering in a new era of purity one death at a time. But as Ryuk foretells, Light's actions will not go unchallenged...

1 vote

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Reasons you might like Death Note...

TheCrazedJester TheCrazedJester says...

This is already seeming like it'll be one of my favorite shortter animes. The character scheme is ingenious, simple yet also plain and imbuing each character with special traits of their own. Story developement is slow paced, but for this anime it works perfectly. Action of the mind, you will find yourself utterly enticed trying to figure out the aim as well as motives of characters, as each is not without a story of their own. I you enjoy an anime which stimulates the mind in a realistic manner, with a melancholic air abput it, watch this. Keep in mind, I am making these remarks after only four episodes which take the time to set up the character map and take the viewer into the world of the story. Magnificent work