220https://i.redd.it/6ri5s9xyrnn51.jpg The 1990s were a turbulent time for Japan. Thanks to hiking interest rates brought upon by the bursting real estate bubbles of the late 80s alongside severe deflation at the hands of credit crunch the Japanese economy collapsed in 1991 resulting in a long term recession now morbidly dubbed The Lost Decade. As a result the term karisuma charisma began to garner popularity in the mid 90s to describe characters actors and idols. The theory contends that the Japanese populous following extended grief brought about by economic turmoil wanted to see their dreams represented again and so turned to optimistic media as a sort of catalyst for their desires. Enter Kodocha a TV series that was far from the first to express this notion of charisma and far from the last but which in my mind signifies its ethos best. The story follows an energetic elementary schooler named Sana who stars in an ongoing TV serial Kodomo no Omocha or Childs Toy that supposedly is meant to model a normal classroom but which acts mostly as a conduit for Sanas thoughts. The presence of Childs Toy in Kodocha posits Sana as an almost entirely outward entity a girl whose every thought emotion and action must be externalized for an audience. The anime furthers idea through other recurring motifs such as the This Weeks Sanachan intertitles which show off Sanas fashion the tape recorder that Sana uses every episode to channel her inner most issues into song and the episode recaps in which Sana explains the ongoing story beats through personal anecdotes many of which change depending on the situation and the characters involved. 220https://i0.wp.com/beneaththetangles.com/wpcontent/uploads/2020/12/SanaAndHerYackBack.jpg?resize=7102C538ssl=1 What Kodocha excels at more than most TV shows aimed at children is to not simply describe the ways in which kids behave and think independent of adults but to structurally imitate these thought processes in nearly every aspect of the show. In the DVD interviews of his 2004 short film Makasete Iruka series director Akitarou Daichi explains that one of his favorite themes to explore in Kodocha was quote the society grownups have built and the childrens world within it. Society made and run by adults is stiff and rigid but grownups according to Daichi grit their teeth and bare it rather than attempt to fix things. Children on the other hand have no desire to adhere by the systems which govern the adult world and therefore have the unclenching power to bend its barriers. It is for the reasons Daichi lays out that Sanas every feeling dictates the pacing and tone of Kodocha. She is the world and its idol so every action she makes onscreen cascades outwards into society be that the anarchic hierarchies of their elementary school classroom or the troubled households of her acquaintances. The series proports a sort of self awareness over this fact using the very platform of an inuniverse TV show to highlight how adults themselves bank much of their success and stability on children and how anime like Kodocha might be meant to rear a whole generation before shipping them off to a much grayer adulthood. As the very first page of the manga states We are the future Earth. The future is in the childrens hands. It comes as no surprise then that the adults of Kodocha often lack any agency over the dramas unfolding within the world of their children. Their id quite literally quells the grownups ego. 220https://nefariousreviews.files.wordpress.com/2017/05/kodocharap2.jpg?w=474h=356 Although Daichi contends that he is already tainted by the mere fact of him being an adult he believes that Kodocha offers a variety of serious topics through the emboldened purviews of children. There isnt much in the way of lecturing here and the spastic directing coupled with impeccable voice acting by Shizue Oda and Tatsuya Nakazaki makes this anime one of the most endearing and charismatic that the 90s has to offer. Please afford it some time out of your day. It will leave your crusty old cataracts looking like glitter on a sunny day. Bet.
100 /100
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