https://starcrossedanime.com/wpcontent/uploads/2020/06/PrincessTutuBanner.png I am not a Mahou Shoujo fan. The first one I ever watched like many was the Sailor Moonhttps://anilist.co/anime/530/SailorMoon/ dub while growing up. It was fine enough but as I grew I eventually came to just ignore and tune the genre out. It wasnt for me it was silly girl stuff. In recent years having met new friends in the community and traded recommendations I was reintroduced to it. Whether it be watching Hugtto Precurehttps://anilist.co/anime/100661/HugttoPrecure/ or Symphogearhttps://anilist.co/anime/11751/Symphogear/ for the r/anime awards or Penguindrumhttps://anilist.co/anime/10721/Penguindrum/ via contract its the most Mahou Shoujo I have seen in years. And I hated almost all of them. They were either so sweet they gave me diabetes or had their head stuck incredibly far up where the sun dont shine. The last one I remember actually enjoying was Madoka Magicahttps://anilist.co/anime/9756/PuellaMagiMadokaMagica/ which is hardly an accurate representation of the genre. And then came Princess Tutu. On paper going by its title and promotional art I should hate Princess Tutu. Directed by Junichi Satouhttps://anilist.co/staff/99002/JunichiSatou the man behind 2018s Hugtto Precure and made by Studio Hal Film Makerhttps://anilist.co/studio/34/HalFilmMaker it looks like everything I should hate about the genre. And yet as I watched Princess Tutu it became very clear to me that this was nothing of the sort. Everything from its direction like a ballet to its tragedysoaked story and characters felt so much richer than any Mahou Shoujo I had seen before. So much so that I dont mind spoiling where this review will go by saying right here at the top that Princess Tutu is the best Mahou Shoujo I have ever seen. So as someone who selfdescribes as Shounen Trash and is routinely dismissed as such please listen when I say: stop reading and give Princess Tutu a shot. You may be surprised. Without further ado lets talk details and strap in because this is going to get wordy. Also fair warning this review will contain spoilers for Princess Tutu. So if you havent watched it fix that. Disclaimer: You can also find individual episode write ups and comment on this review on my Star Crossed bloghttps://starcrossedanime.com/princesstutuanimereview91100throwbackthursday/. Carry on. https://i0.wp.com/starcrossedanime.com/wpcontent/uploads/2020/04/PrincessTutu3.6.png Art/Animation As always we have to start with Princess Tutus animation and art. And to be frank animation wise Princess Tutu doesnt really stand out. Yes there are some great ballet sequences and expressive character animation. Yes the finale was often beautiful from the soaring sakura petals to Ahirus dance. But these are few and far between and not something the series really makes a habit of. Beyond the occasional set piece it just isnt something Princess Tutu concerns itself with much. There are a lot more impressively animated series that have aired before and since Princess Tutu. However this doesnt mean I think its bad Princess Tutus animation is never bad. Rather I would say the series is very frugal with its animation more of a postcard memories style. Saving it for its most important moments to give them that extra impact compared to the rest of the show. Its a very different approach to what we see from series airing today or even back then. Series like Cowboy Bebophttps://anilist.co/anime/1/CowboyBebop and Stand Alone Complexhttps://anilist.co/anime/467/GhostintheShellStandAloneComplex/ or more recently the Shounen hits of My Hero Academiahttps://anilist.co/anime/21459/MyHeroAcademia/ and Kimetsu no Yaibahttps://anilist.co/anime/101922/DemonSlayerKimetsunoYaiba/. These high octane action adventures. They require dynamic movement and action heavy scenes because of how integral they are to their story. Princess Tutu however has structured its entire presentation around the idea of a ballet. We will get into this more when we talk direction but the long and short of its this: to me ballet is all about graceful and clearly defined movements. Things you can see from the back row of the opera house about the bodies silhouette. So Princess Tutu doesnt need the explosive movement or camera work of those previous series. It just needs well done core movement and character animation and thats what we get. Meanwhile the art style of Princess Tutu works to support this in a variety of ways. The biggest one which is also one of my favorite parts of the show are the character designs. Princess Tutu nails each of these giving each character their own aesthetic and color palette making each unique on screen. The easiest way to see this is through their silhouettes where even in just shape they are each distinct. Princess Tutu manages to take this a step further as well by making even characters transformations have distinct silhouettes. Take for instance Princess Kraehe who despite still being Rue has distinct hair and fringe patterns on her dress making it obvious at a glance who exactly is on screen. Every major character receives a similar treatment where through their hair clothing or both they make it obvious with just shape who they are. Princess Tutu doesnt stop at just shapes though extending the distinction between each character to their color palettes. Mytho is consistently shown in white along with his hair supporting his pure and good imagery. Tutu herself is much the same transforming from her uniform into the pure white of her swanlike outfit. The only major color in the design being her hair denoting that this is still Ahiru at her core. Meanwhile characters like Fakir and Rue share similar hair but their clothes and designs change throughout the story as well. Often these changes reflect characters current emotional or story states and priorities. All of this is at its core pretty basic stuff in character design. But Princess Tutu executes it incredibly well. Its this mastery of basic visual techniques that turns Princess Tutus lack of heavy animation into a positive rather than a negative. https://i0.wp.com/starcrossedanime.com/wpcontent/uploads/2020/04/PrincessTutu11.8.png Direction Moving on we come to Princess Tutus direction and Junichi Satou did a fantastic job here. I mentioned it above briefly but what really sticks out to me is how Princess Tutu is framed. The entire show is most of the time at least framed like a ballet. Every major action scene and most of the major character scenes are depicted as if on a stage. The lighting fades and the colors become muted except for around the central characters giving it the feel of a darkened stage with spotlights. The camera stays on one side of the scene rather than rotating as if we were watching from our seats. Combined with how ballet permeates the entire show from subject matter to music choices this direction helps sell the whole package to the audience. And this is before I get into the more traditional techniques used throughout the series. Im of course talking about things like the use of close ups wide shots etc. But my personal favorite that Princess Tutu uses to great effect is the extremelong or establishing shots of the city. Throughout the seriess runtime when transitioning to a new scene we are given a wide shot of the area showing us the surrounding streets and where they fit into the town. This not only gives us an idea of where we are but also helps provide the town a sense of internal consistency. Placing everything in relation to each other how the city was constructed and generally providing the town a sense of character. With how important Gold Crown Town is to Princess Tutus story this effect cannot be understated as by the end the city is almost as important as our leads. And it would never have worked without the myriad of establishing shots. That said I do have some minor quibbles and these have to do entirely with how Princess Tutu aired. For those not in the know Princess Tutus 2nd cour aired not as 13 30 minute episodes but rather 26 half length ones so that it could fit its time slot. For the BDs and DVDs this was corrected merging them back together. But even then when watching the episodes there is a clear difference in structure between the two halves of the series. Where the 1st was immaculately constructed and paced the 2nd often feels choppy and repetitive. It makes sense they had to keep the same story thread going between episodes to fit into 1 whole episode. No doubt when watching as it aired this made for a better viewing experience. Nowadays though it only hurts the series and we will get more into specifics when we talk story. Beyond the issues with how it aired though Princess Tutu also makes odd use of CGI. It tries its hardest it really does but things like Drosselmeyers gears or some of the environments are just out of place. Occasionally this does work in its favor of course. Drosselmeyer is effectively an otherworldly existence throughout most of the show. And the CGI gears do a good job of placing him outside the rest of Princess Tutus world. Additionally Princess Tutu attempts to insert humor throughout the show to break up some of its more dreary segments. For the most part these are fine but I have to point out one I particularly hate. For all the good CatSensei does in his role all his relevant story beats I cannot stand his marriage jokes. So yes Princess Tutu has fantastic direction and pacing and yes it isnt perfect. I love it anyways. https://i1.wp.com/starcrossedanime.com/wpcontent/uploads/2020/03/PrincessTutu1.7.png Setting/Story All that production stuff out of the way its time to talk narrative. At its core Princess Tutu is pretty simple a classic Save the Princess narrative except with a Prince. Our lead character Ahiru a duck is transformed into a person FairyGodmother style and tasked with collecting the shards of the Princes heart. Along the way she faces a myriad of troubles either from those trying to stop her or from the shards themselves. The complexity of it all though comes when you start to consider the why and how for each of these. Why did Drosselmeyer task Ahiru with this why are Kraehe and Fakir trying to stop her how did this all come about. In a lot of Mahou Shoujo you dont get satisfying answers to these questions. Motivations are often because they are evil etc. But Princess Tutu explains each of these and more. Take for instance Mythos heart shards. Each one is tied to a specific emotion with a whole episodelong story built around it. Not only does this fit the monster of the week nature of the show but each one tangibly moves the plot forward as each returned heart shard returns said emotion to Mytho allowing him to grow and change as a character. There is a clear endgame presented to us from the very beginning so none of these feel pointless or irrelevant. On top of that each episodic story is also used to challenge our characters emotionally in some way relating to the shard in question. An episode about affection or love could end up commenting on how stifling that can be if unwanted. Consider more obvious emotions as well such as pride or fear and you begin to see just how many themes Princess Tutu can weave in. The magic of it all though is this: the large amount of episodic themes dont drown out but rather augment the overarching ones of defying fate and selffulfillment. Princess Tutu is framed from the start as a storybook narrative one with a set ending and even author. From the start Drosselmeyer positions himself not as a character within the story but the one writing and controlling it. Always addressing Ahiru Mytho and Fakir as his characters demanding they do what he says. Getting angry when they try to go against his decided narrative since what he wants isnt what they want. As such when the conflict shifts from saving Mytho to breaking free of the story and deciding their own fate it feels like a very natural progression. This isnt to say its perfect but what Princess Tutu does right far outweighs what it does wrong. I mentioned an example of the wrong earlier with the changed air times. Shifting to halflength episodes while required to air definitely hurts the pacing and structure of otherwise single episode length stories. Not enough to ruin them but it is noticeable. And while I love the overall plot and generally enjoyed it some episodes are better written than others. Its in these cases that the episodic nature can hurt it a bit since a bad monster of the week episode is just that a bad episode. One such example of this was Episode 16 Maidens Prayer which felt like it was just retreading old ground in the show. It didnt feel like it progressed all that much. That said these are few and far between and I generally loved my experience. For what is on the surface just another vapid Mahou Shoujo Princess Tutu is incredibly beautifully complex. https://i0.wp.com/starcrossedanime.com/wpcontent/uploads/2020/04/PrincessTutu11.9.png Characters Now we can get to what I really want to talk about the characters. Oh how I love the characters. The whole cast is one of the most emotionally complex and engaging I have seen in a long time. Take for instance our lead Ahiru who spends most of the series in conflict with herself. From the beginning she sees Ahiru and Tutu as two separate people. One the clumsy duck the other her idealized self who she grows into over the course of the series. By the end she comes to accept that the two are one and the same. That she does have worth and she does matter as more than a character in everyone elses story. All the while working to recover the shards of Mythos heart. With this young crush on Mytho transforming and realizing into an actual emotionally mature relationship by the end. Ahirus is not the only arc Princess Tutu has progressing at any one time with Rues being a personal favorite. Where Ahiru is childish and clumsy Rue is mature and elegant. She is everything Ahiru wishes to be even being in a relationship with Mytho herself. But over the course of the story we are shown that not all is right even in Rues seemingly perfect world. We have a tale of abuse and love of how children regard their parents and the damage a poor parent can have on a childs mentality. Princess Tutu shows us how a character can have everything they want yet still not be happy because it wasnt what they needed. All the while fitting both these and other stories into a greater narrative about fate and writing your own story rather than simply accepting someone elses. I could go on and on about these characters. Dancing around heavy spoilers going in on characters like Fakir and Drosselmeyer or how beautiful Mythos emotionless character slowly regaining said emotions is. At the end of the day though without outright spoiling some of the greatest and most impactful plot points of the series all I can do is speak in vague generalities. And I am not a good enough writer to make that interesting or informative. So the best you are going to get here is this: I think Princess Tutus cast is one of the best in anime. Their stories how they intertwine and relate to each other and the greater narrative at large are fantastic. If you want specifics I have write ups on every episode at the same site I linked above. Otherwise just watch the show again and youll get it. https://i0.wp.com/starcrossedanime.com/wpcontent/uploads/2020/03/PrincessTutu2.7.png OST/Sound Design Finally we come to the last real section of this review before a personal anecdote the OST. This is actually a rather weird one to judge. Because on one hand who would have guessed classical music is fantastic. On the other hand though very little of Princess Tutus OST is unique or made for the show itself. How fair is it to judge a show for taking great music from outside and just shoving it in? Well when you shove it in as well as Princess Tutu does I dont see anything wrong with giving them credit where its due. Because Princess Tutu takes these songs some almost 200 years old understands them and then uses them where they have the greatest effect. Taking songs that already have meaning outside of the series and bringing that meaning into the anime to augment each of its own scenes. To be clear Im no classical expert Im just some dude on the internet. But I do enjoy going to the symphony now and again allowing me to understand and appreciate a few of Princess Tutus choices. Take for instance the Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairyhttps://www..com/watch?v=Wzf9B4pPtg from Tchaikovskys The Nutcracker. In the ballet this is played after the Prince and Princess return together a culmination of their journey. In Princess Tutu this acts as Mythos theme and we see him dancing to it quite a bit. Considering the haunting nature of the music and Ahirus own goal of restoring the Mythos heart returning him to the Prince you can see why it fits so well. In fact Princess Tutu uses quite a few songs from The Nutcracker such as Waltz of the Flowershttps://www..com/watch?v=QxHkLdQy5f0 and Marchehttps://www..com/watch?v=h1j5IxOPXdY. With how similar the works are I think its a good fit. Another example is Gymnopdies 1https://www..com/watch?v=SXm7s9eGxU by Erik Satie. A fitting and sad tune for a character like Rue its history also mirrors hers. To this day we dont know the meaning of this song and its history is in question. Was it based on a poem? Or did the poem come after? Was it inspired by a painting or does it have some personal meaning to the composer? Like Rue its history is in question and it has floated around as background music in other peoples stories for ages. These two pieces are far from being alone however. Fakir and the Coriolan Overturehttps://www..com/watch?v=Vvn2oGyji8s or Edel and Musique des automateshttps://www..com/watch?v=XdUb1n3NiEfeature=embtitle. Some of these fit better than others while others connect in name only. However there was never a piece that took me out of the moment. And the more I learned about each one the more I loved its inclusion. All in all Princess Tutu may not have a 100 original OST. But what it does have is one of the most fitting and symbolic OSTs I have had the pleasure of listening to. Whatever meaning an anime may want to embed into a scene its hard to top the decades of meaning behind every piece used here when they are used well. And Princess Tutu does just that. https://i2.wp.com/starcrossedanime.com/wpcontent/uploads/2020/03/PrincessTutu1.9.png ON MAGICAL GIRL SHOWS Now we come to a more personal section of this review. This bit here isnt particularly relevant to the series as a whole nor does it affect the final score. This is more about my experience with Mahou Shoujo and is for those on the fence about it like I was. I want to explain why I dont like Mahou Shoujo and just what sets Princess Tutu apart from the rest. If you already like Mahou Shoujo or dont care feel free to skip to the bottom. But if you are unsure or want to listen to why an action junkie loves what is ostensibly a kids show then strap in. Now as I said above I tend to dislike Mahou Shoujo for two main reasons. Either they are diabetesinducingly sweet or they try so hard to be something more they become incomprehensible. In the first group is where you will find your Precures like Hugtto or Star Twinkle. I cant speak for the entire franchise since the only one I have actually finished is Hugtto and that under duress. But those two didnt leave me with the best taste. I just wasnt able to care about the conflict or characters in these shows. I found them to be shallow and dull. And while the production was often fantastic say what you will about Hugtto but it looks great it just wasnt for me. The characters felt overdesigned and garishly bright pushing the sweetness to teethrotting levels. Simply put they were well made but just not for me. On the incomprehensible end are works like Penguindrum and basically anything Ikuhara directs. The man is a fantastic director his shows are visually great. But as a storyteller I cant help but think he throws everything he can into his series without any concern for how they fit together. The result is often an incomprehensible mess that viewers dig into and create their own meaning out of. If thats for you great dont let anyone tell you that you cant enjoy his works. But for me it always came across as a disjointed mess ruining whatever narrative vision or social commentary could have been behind it. When the man himself cant or wont explain any of his intent behind the works leaving it to the audience I am inclined to think he doesnt know himself. So if I detest Mahou Shoujo so much why do I love Princess Tutu? If I had to nail it down to one thing one reason why Princess Tutu clicked with me it would be tone. The tone of Princess Tutu is like no other Mahou Shoujo I have seen before. It is simultaneously sweet as you would expect from the genre but with hints of tragedy spread throughout. There isnt a single facet of this show without some darker shade to it. Yet unlike series such as Madoka Magica this darkness isnt suffocating. Its this juxtaposition of tragedy and hope that really draws me into Princess Tutu like no other Mahou Shoujo. Whether it be the fairy tales brought in with a Brothers Grimmesc twist or the comedy with a dash of sadism. A teacher who jokes about marriage only to then use those jokes as commentary on what it means to be in love. Princess Tutu isnt perfect but it is unique. https://i0.wp.com/starcrossedanime.com/wpcontent/uploads/2020/03/PrincessTutu1.4.png Conclusion And here we are at the end only took me 3700 words. I really need to learn to tone it down but I also really liked Princess Tutu. All in all for all its faults from pacing to some poor jokes to the occasional filler episode I love it. Princess Tutu is without a doubt worth your time regardless of how you feel about the genre. If you like traditional Mahou Shoujo the core of the genre is still there. If you detest it I believe Princess Tutu is just unique enough to challenge that. At the end of the day as cliche as it is to say I think everyone can find something to love in this show. And I think everyone should watch it at some point if only to listen to some fantastic music. Thanks for reading and if you liked this review or want to read more please head over to the website linked above. This was part of my Throwback Thursday segment where readers vote on what older show I watch next so if you have something you want reviewed go and suggest it there. Thanks again and please watch this damn anime.
91 /100
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