Note: This review originally appeared on my blog and has a link to my video review of the first 3 Boogiepop novels Boogiepop and Others is in a way the first Boogiepop anime adaptation. Its not the first adaptation in general. 2000 saw liveaction adaptations of the first novel and original anime series Boogiepop Phantom. That latter series was an anime original story that assumed some prior knowledge of the novels. As the book series was tremendously successful in Japan that wasnt a problem there. In the US on the other hand this served as something of a barrier to the series success. Until 2019 there were no anime adaptations of the novels. Boogiepop and Others is an adaptation of the first five or so of the Boogiepop novels. As the second and third books are two halves of the same story this makes for four stories. This covers the adaptation of the first novel and Vs. Imaginator which I covered in my review last week. The other stories include Boogiepop at Dawn which has the origins of Boogiepop. The finale is King of Distortion which is probably the biggest challenge Boogiepop has faced over the series. Boogiepop Doesnt Smile 220https://i2.wp.com/i.pin.com/736x/54/1a/ef/541aef7f331e62e361803cfacfddc336.jpg It is kind of impressive how much Touka fades into the background. As with the novels while Boogiepop is the title character of Boogiepop and Others they are never the viewpoint character. We only see Boogiepop through the perspective of third parties. We dont even see Boogiepop from the perspective of their other self Touka Miyashita. That is both a blessing and a curse for the series. Touka is just bright cheerful and generic enough that she slips under the radar most of the time. Her presence is more notable when Boogiepop shows up and the impact of that varies from the books to the TV series. In the novels its rather understated. The weight of the shift varies from different viewpoint characters and how well they notice the shift. In the anime because theres an audible vocal shift it becomes much more pronounced. Id compare it to the transition between Bruce Wayne doing his regular voice and Batmans voice. On the page it doesnt come across unless the artist and inker do something to call attention to the difference. With Kevin Conroy on the other hand well listen for yourself: https://youtu.be/g4PwNyJOjfU Its most pronounced in the last 10 seconds of the video And Others As in the books the antagonists in the anime alternate between superpowered murderers like Manticore and thematic enemies like Imaginator. They arent a rogues gallery by any means instead of existing to be a threat to Boogiepop they are more of a threat for the viewpoint characters. In this respect Boogiepop and the viewpoint characters are comparable to Walter Gibsons The Shadow novels. In those novels Harry Vincent one of The Shadows agents is the primary viewpoint character. Occasionally the novels shift to other viewpoint characters as they put together the pieces of the plot of that novels villain and only occasionally shifting to The Shadow. Even then on those instances The Shadow was not generally a viewpoint character. Further The Shadow was rarely personally in any danger more often Vincent or another agent was the one in peril. The same is the case here. Boogiepop is never personally in peril. The viewpoint characters are. Theyre generally not hapless hostagesinwaiting but they also arent a force of nature like Boogiepop. It makes the supporting cast a lot more engaging and keeps the plot moving without always having Boogiepop being present. Room for Improvement Evolution That said I really wish Touka was written more as a character instead of as set dressing that Boogiepop occasionally pops out of. It leads to this feeling that some of our point of view characters have figured out that Touka is Boogiepop but doesnt know it and theyre hanging out with her as a weird crap sounding board. By which I mean if they talk about something weird and Boogiepop chips in they know theyre on to something. Im very glad I watched the show and Im definitely continuing on to Boogiepop Phantom. However I dont know how confidently I can recommend the series. I came to this because the discussion of Boogiepop Phantom as a mindfuck anime had been a large part of anime fandom in the early 2000s. If you came into this series without having ever heard of Boogiepop I dont know how much youd get out of it.
70 /100
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