We are coming to the end of another surprising season of anime with a number of Yuri, Yuri-adjacent and Yuri-adjacent-adjacent series. Most of these anime were interesting to watch, One was outstanding – we’ll talk about that one shortly, some were overall excellent with fatal flaws – weirdly, two of them shared much the same flaw, IMHO. Today we’re going to look at one of the latter.
As I watched Jellyfish Can’t Swim In the Night, streaming on HIDIVE,, I was once again reminded of Bee Train being asked about the Yuri in Noir at Anime Expo 2002, a panel that for reasons, I moderated. When asked about the Yuri in Noir, Bee Train members replied “If you want to see it, it’s there.” That was 22 years ago. In 2024, that same cavalier attitude toward Yuri has very much colored fans feelings about the ending of Jellyfish, an otherwise good story about finding people who help you accept yourself and whom you can accept in return. It’s a pretty standard cute-teen doing cute stuff, on a larger scale than just a high school club, so I hesitate to call it “slice-of-life.” It’s a rare life that is writ that large. And good for those folks who do get to that scale. They work hard to get there, as our group utilizes the skills they each uniquely bring to the whole.
On the one hand, this is a glossy story of outcasts making a place for themselves…which becomea a little complicated if you read it “You should find friends that accept you,” instead of “When you accept yourself, it might be easier for you to find a place for yourself in the world.” But these outcasts do learn to love themselves, and each other and they take their moment in the limelight to do their very best. It doesn’t matter whether it was good or not, honestly. They embraced their chance.
For many fans the major problem of the series is the staff’s comments about potential Yuri in the series. Like that Bee Train comment, this is another example of a bunch of people with no emotional skin in the game, using Yuri as a tactic to create engagement within fandom. As a person who has been watching companies do that to fandom for literal decades, I’m more surprised at the series that do stand up for their characters, like the folks involved with Mobile Suit Gundam: The Witch From Mercury, than I am at those which do not and don’t much care about the consequences.
Fans have been pretty vocal about their disappointment in the use of a kiss between two characters as a throw-away, “This is something that might happen, but no matter, it has no meaning” moment. Especially in a series which did have a solid plot line about gender identity. I hate to paint myself as jaded, but given the overt Yuri of Whisper Me A Love Song, I felt that loss less keenly than the one real problem I had with the anime. That last song disappointed me. Music is subjective of course, but I was hoping for something more epic. On the positive side, the story did avoid an obvious pitfall in which our leads are pitted against one another, but I am convinced we have limited budget and time to thank for that, rather than pure-hearted storytelling. Had the series been 24 episodes long, I have no doubt it would have gone there
The phrase “Yuri scam” seems to have been coined by some portion of fandom online for this series, when Yuri bait doesn’t quite strike the same chord. The sentiment expressed by those people are “we were set up, and let drop. Just to see what happened.”
Do I think this was a Yuri anime? No and I don’t think it was trying to be one.
I do think this was an anime about intimacy and friendship – something I apparently can’t get enough of. But as for what we wished to see, we’re going to have to get directors and producers in anime who have some need to give us representation, in the way the staff of She Loves To Cook, She Loves To Eat, does, before we’ll see anything change.
Ratings
Art – 8
Story – 8
Characters – 8
Yuri – 4
Service – 5 There were some seriously unneeded ass and crotch shots that make me worry about the future of humanity, but then so does the massive money being poured into “AI” that tells people to eat a rock a day.
Overall – 8
Will Jellyfish be something we come back to year after year? Probably not. Nonetheless as an ultimately “feel good about yourself” anime, Jellyfish did what it set out to do, did not do things it had no intention of doing, and told the story that it had to tell.
Watch Jellyfish Can’t Swim In The Night on HIDIVE and let me know what you think!