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Today we’re bringing back Megan with a thoughtful and lovely look at one of this years prettiest anime, The Aquatope on White Sand, streaming now on Crunchyroll. (I asked to cover the second cour myself, so we’ll be back early next year season to talk about the rest of it. ^_^) In the mean time, please welcome Megan back! The mic is yours, Megan.
Aquatope begins with a young woman, Fuuka, leaving her idol job in Tokyo after she gave an opportunity up for another member of the group. Her dream is over, but on a whim she takes a flight to Okinawa where she meets Kukuru, the acting director of Gama Gama aquarium. With only weeks to go before the planned closure of the aquarium, Fuuka decides to support Kukuru with her dream of keeping Gama Gama open.
The entire cast is likeable, but the bulk of development goes to our leads, Fuuka and Kukuru. Fuuka is kind, almost to a fault; both with her idol and aquarium jobs, she prioritises othersâ dreams above her own. Her arc sees her grow in confidence and learn to pursue her own dream again. Kukuru was the bigger surprise of the two leads. From the promo material and first episode I didnât expect her to be quite as serious and focused on her work as the aquariumâs director as she turned out to be. The dynamic between the girls also works out differently than you might expect at first: in the early episodes Kukuru is the one giving emotional support to Fuuka as she faces up to her mother in episode 5, but in the second half of this first cour Fuuka emerges as the more mature of the pair.
While the showâs first half doesnât definitively commit to a friendship or romance reading for Fuuka and Kukuruâs relationship (the showâs awkward attempt in episode 9 to advance a âbig sisterâ interpretation for Fuuka is one of the writingsâ rare missteps), either way there is a lot to offer here for Yuri viewers. Aquatope depicts the pairâs emotional intimacy beautifully, with both their emotional and physical closeness growing as they support each other with running the aquarium and overcoming their own issues. Wherever the second half of the show takes them, hereâs hoping they have a future together.
The other main character of Aquatope could be said to be the aquarium itself. When the first episode aired and included a magical realist scene of Fuuka getting swept up in an underwater vision, I was sceptical since the show seemed otherwise well-grounded, but the magical element ended up working in the showâs favour. The pairing of an aquarium with these ineffable magical visions makes thematic sense; even now, so much of the sea is still a mystery to us. In several episodes we also meet characters who have visions at the aquarium that help them move on from turning points in their lives. Along with the stories of the supporting cast, this helps build a connection to Gama Gama as a place that feels worth saving.
The aquarium feels like a believable location thanks to the fantastic animation effort from PA Works. Where Aquatope might lack in impressive âsakugaâ sequences, it makes up for with a consistent high quality both in the character and background art throughout these first 12 episodes. The fish are mostly rendered in CGI, but it looks acceptable, and closeups and the penguins are animated in 2D. Particular praise should be given to the background art team, Gama Gama and surroundings were so well-rendered they came off as real places.
Spoiler warning: Please skip past the section starred off below, if you prefer to remain spoiler-free.
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For a âiyashikeiâ (healing) anime, Aquatope often struck a serious, even melancholic note from the early episodes. The closing episodes of this first cour paid off these hints, and secured my recommendation of the show for mature anime viewers who find it increasingly hard to relate to the teen-centered themes of most anime. The first cour of Aquatope is about the experience that, perhaps as much as any other, defines becoming an adult: giving up your dream.
It testifies to the showâs strong writing, no matter how much we as the viewer might wish for a different outcome, the closure of Gama Gama feels like a logical conclusion to everything that came before. Weâd seen how unsuccessful Kukuruâs initiatives to draw visitors to the aquarium had been, and episode 10 introduces a new, much larger and more centrally located aquarium opening up that renders Gama Gama aquarium irrelevant. In truth, the writing had been on the wall since the start, and Kukuru locking herself up in the aquarium as a typhoon beats down her attempts to fortify the building is an effective visual for both Kukuru and perhaps the viewerâs denial of the reality of the imminent closure.
The finality of episode 12 is surprising for a two-cour show. Many people I know watching week-by-week thought it actually was the final episode and were surprised to find out it was only the halfway point. For viewers who usually like their anime on the shorter side, the first cour presents a satisfying and complete story on its own, without the meandering some other two-cour anime can fall prey to, with almost every episode developing the leads and their relationship, or the aquarium setting itself in important ways. This pacing helps Aquatope to feel, in my experience, more consistently engaging than some other similar anime, including PA Worksâ prior series about working women such as Sakura Quest.
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Aquatope presents a moving and mature story of pursuing and giving up dreams, and of the leadsâ growing emotional intimacy. The show is shaping up to be a new favourite for slice of life and Yuri viewers, and I can highly recommend giving this overlooked anime a try.
Ratings:
Story – 9, a well-written and smartly paced story of giving up your dream, and what comes next Characters – 8, everyone is likeable and the leads get some good development
Art – 9, a consistently beautiful effort by PA Works
Yuri – 6, nothing explicitly romantic but the leadsâ emotional intimacy is lovely
Service – 1, a beach episode with the girls in swimwear, otherwise, no
Overall – 9
PS It took me a while to figure out what the word âAquatopeâ means. I was reading vol 3 of (excellent and very queer-inclusive fantasy LN series) Reign of the Seven Spellblades, which used the word âBiotopeâ, a word similar to âhabitatâ. So âAquatopeâ, I presume, means âaquatic habitatâ.
Thanks as always for reading my review! Iâm looking forward to hearing your thoughts in the comments ^_^
Erica here: Thank you so much, Megan! Your thoughts echo my own completely. It’s a beautiful anime with some strong values and lessons that are both gentle and inexorable. I’m looking forward to covering the second cour. It’s a bit selfish of me, but I wanna write about this lovely anime, too! ^_^
Wonderful review, Megan. And I’m glad I read the spoilers, that sounds like something I need to be prepared for ;D
It was a helluva ending.