This review contains mild spoilers for To Your Eternity I think that I speak for a lot of people when I say that the day that the first episode of To Your Eternity released the emotions that it managed to draw out in most of us was very unexpected. In the realm of repetitive seasonals that show the sheer uncreativity of the anime industry on full display To Your Eternity managed to stand out from the rest by telling a very resonant story in just the span of 25 minutes. It is an extremely rare sight to see something with such a limited timespan make a sizable portion of its viewerbase break down into tears. The only other episode off the top of my head that I can think of that I can compare it to is Violet Evergarden Episode 10. Out of nearly any anime that I have seen To Your Eternity was one that easily made one of the best first impressions. It is very easy to see why it gained so much attention by just the first episode. However since then To Your Eternity hasnt really captured the same amount of attention as it did in its premiere. It isnt like it was no longer popular after the first episode but it never managed to spark the same type of emotionally driven passion in the anime community as it originally had. To Your Eternity after its first episode never really captures the remarkable impression that it originally left. There are still moments of the series that capture the quality of that first episode however those moments of brilliance stand alongside ones of pure mediocrity and ones that are completely baffling. To Your Eternity is inconsistent to an astronomical extent and it is honestly a remarkable feat that it even manages to encompass so many different realms of quality. https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/thumbnails/crop1200x630gHO/cms/news.3/155165/toyureternity.jpg The first episode is definitely a smart way to start the series. It isnt exactly dishonest about what the strengths of the series are but it manages to frame itself in such a way that it makes its biggest weaknesses basically invisible. The first episode manages to be so strong because the biggest strength of the series is its ability to create extremely sympathetic characters. It is a strength that the creator of To Your Eternity Yoshitoki Ooima has demonstrated fully well in her most prolific work A Silent Voice. Ooimas character writing makes the protagonists of her stories feel extremely likable and relatable to the audience in their introductions which she eventually uses to create extremely heart wrenching emotional payoffs. The first episode of To Your Eternity is possibly the most distilled version of her version of a character arc since it manages to fit in the initial characterization for the unnamed boy and the final emotional payoff in a singular episode without feeling at all rushed. With how tight the first episodes narrative is it sets high expectations. Maybe even a bit too high. Now when I say this I am not saying that the arcs that succeed the first episode dont have good character arcs in them. As a matter of fact Id say that the arc that comes after the first episode the March Arc has just as meaningful of a story as the one told in the first episode. The thing that drags the arcs down compared to the first episode is that every single story arc which includes the first episode has about the same amount of material that they want to say. Despite this each arc gets progressively longer as the series progresses. This means that the watertight narrative that helped the first episode thrive gets generally lost as the series goes on. At the end of the day To Your Eternity tells simplistic stories with simplistic characters which is fine but the length of each arc fails to compliment this. It isnt really helped that each story arc typically only really contains one character arc in it along with the greater arc of Fushi compared to the multiple arcs contained in a story like A Silent Voice. The series increasingly has to stretch itself more and more thinly as it progresses eventually making each arc feel more sluggish eventually culminating in the absolutely godawful pacing of the Jananda Island Arc. While the increasingly sluggish pacing of the story arcs isnt inherently the most awful thing at first the ways that the series tries to relieve that pacing with padding spawns a whole new cavalcade of problems that way down that later parts of the series even further down into mediocrity. https://whereverilook.com/wpcontent/uploads/2021/04/MarchToYourEternitySeason1Episode33840x2160.jpg As I said before the March Arcs story is one that is just as strong as the one told in the first episode. Compared to the first episode it is only weighed down by the lack of multiple character arcs being told and the slower pacing. However the arc is brief enough for it not to really be a problem in the grand scheme of things. It is the Gugu Arc where these problems start to really become noticeable. While Gugus story on paper should be a grand slam it is also when the problems of the length of the arcs starts to work massively against the series. Out of all of the arcs the Gugu arc definitely shines the most in the initial characterization phase of developing itself. Gugu is a very well developed character in the time that he has and that is thanks to great dialogue scenes that flesh out his relations with the world around him. However the emotional payoff ends up getting botched due to previously built up problems over the course of the arc and the fact that it felt more coincidence driven than emotionally driven. The series kept stopping itself with speed bumps of varying degrees that make the arc feel more dragged out than it really has to this arc introduces a physical manifestation of the problems that this series has the Nokkers. In a story that should be driven by its characters the Nokkers being a literal emotionless husk used as a plot device to either add a fight that just pads for time or as a way to cheaply progress the plot completely spits in the face of ethos of the character driven story that the first episode built the series on. However the Gugu arc only really provides a small glimpse into what the seeds of To Your Eternitys problems would truly grow into compared to how much it affected the Jananda Island Arc. https://doublesama.com/wpcontent/uploads/2021/05/ToYourEternityEpisode81.jpg The Jananda Island Arc is an anomaly compared to the rest of the show it is attached to. The arcs very existence confuses me in a series like this. By the Gugu Arc I would assume that the strengths of the series have already been very well established. It shouldve been well established even way before To Your Eternity even started to serialize based on what A Silent Voice accomplished. However the Jananda Island Arc is at a lot of times the antithesis to what makes Ooimas writing work so well. The main cast of the arc is expanded to the point that none of the people that we are supposed to care about in the arc get enough time to get fleshed out so that we care about them. It feels like for the most part the main characters of the Jananda Island Arc arent as complex as any other main character of other arcs. This leads the emotional payoff to completely fall flat since I really dont care about what are effectively cardboard cutouts with notes written on them that could potentially be seen as character traits. The only mild exception to this is Tonari who out of any nonFushi character gets the most development however she cant get a proper emotional resolution due to being drowned out by all the white noise masquerading as actual substance. Hayase is brought back from the March Arc but instead of her just representing an oppressive system that is difficult to escape from she is turned into one of the most baffling onedimensional villains that I have ever seen. There are honestly so many problems with the Jananda Island Arc that naming all of them would make the review so long that it would seem like I was rambling. For all the small and big problems with the arc the one throughline for all of the problems is that there is an absolutely callice disregard for how to actually develop characters satisfyingly and for what the strengths of the series actually are. What truly puzzles me about this arc in particular is that I cant think of a reasonable reason as to why the series would end up with such a stand out section of it. It isnt like this series needs to experiment to succeed since the general formula it set up for itself was so versatile. I really dont know how the series that produced the absolute slog of these 7 episodes also made the incredible beginning of it. https://rabujoi.files.wordpress.com/2021/07/tye143.jpg?w=840 To Your Eternity holds a weird place for me. On the one hand I didnt enjoy it for most of the episodes because in terms of episode count the bad parts of the Gugu Arc and the Jananda Island Arc do outnumber most of the good stuff in this series. However it isnt like other series where the bad parts ruin what the good parts build up because of the semisegmented nature of each story arc. While the first episode the March arc and the good parts of the Gugu Arc take up less than the episodes that I consider to be bad I honestly got way too much out of those episodes to say that the bad parts outweigh those episodes in the end. I cant definitively say if I enjoyed To Your Eternity on the whole or not. It isnt like it is perfectly mediocre its quality varies massively and that is really something that cant be fully encompassed with just a simple score. To Your Eternity occupies many places along a spectrum of quality simultaneously. It both makes fantastic and boring characters. It can both make anybody cry and people completely emotionless. It can both be perfectly paced and be as slow as a snail. Maybe I have a bit too much hope for what comes after this considering the general quality trendline of this series being downwards. However I do find it easier for something like this to take a fresh start since new characters for Fushi to interact with are introduced every arc. I wouldnt say that the future of this series is bright but just that I am hopeful for what is to come. But with what we have To Your Eternity remains to be an absurd combination of different features managing to be one both one of the best anime of the year and one of the worst as well. Thank you for reading to the end of the review if you did. I really appreciate the willingness some of you have to get to the end of a review that probably disputes your own opinion. If you have any criticisms with how this review was made you are free to message me to critique what I had to say. Also please dont like or dislike the review without reading it.
60 /100
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