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Sweetness and Lightning review

Posted : 1 year, 8 months ago on 16 August 2022 03:48

Talking about this title leaves me with mixed feelings, on one hand I am happy to finally write a review again after so much time but on the other hand itā€™s a bit sad that it has to be about a title that was well received at the time yet forgotten quickly, and that I never had a positive opinion about it.

To start with the positives, itā€™s easy to understand why people would enjoy the show as long as they like slice of life, first of all, for the genre itā€™s pretty well visually presented, even after half a decade I still remember it as a series with no major quality drops, well made backgrounds, vivid, expressive and fluid motions and facial expressions for its type of show, and with cooking anime levels of detailed and very well drawn food. The scene I remember the most and that I watched a couple times outside of the anime was about the little girl Tsumugi walking down the streets while avoiding imaginary sharks on an imaginary ocean in her mind, that particular scene had great special effects, but during the rest of the series there were pretty standard, and as the vast majority of slice of life shows, the character designs are simple, generic and forgettable, besides that the visuals are still a very solid department as a whole.

As for the sound department, the sound effects were good and both the music and the voices did their job accordingly but nothing to write too much about besides Tsumugi, a five years old girl voiced by an, at the time, eleven years old girl, who despite being so young did a wonderful job. I have already talked about this on my Aishiteruze Baby review where Yuzuyu, also a five years old girl, was voiced by a little girl but with a much much worse performance, that is not the case here.

Tsumugi herself is adorable, as most protagonists in this type of shows are, and unlike Rin Kaga, for example, sheā€™s not so mature for her age, in fact she is not mature in the least. Sheā€™s loud, energetic, innocent, and makes a big deal out of everything, in either a comedic or dramatic way. If youā€™re like me, it will get tiresome a bit to see and hear a character cry for unimportant stuff, but itā€™s easy to give that a pass when the character is so young, and when is all around very well characterized.

Sweetness and Lightning belongs in the iyashikei, or feel good, type of slice of life show, and as far as that goes, it manages to have a proper relaxing atmosphere, as long as you donā€™t get overwhelmed by how hiperactive Tsumugi can be at times.

But thatā€™s as far as positives of this show go for me. One complain I have about Tsumugi is that she barely has any conflict with no having a mother, if at all. Yuzuyu from Aishiteruze Baby was a way better character in that regard. I mean I guess you could say thatā€™s the reason why Tsumugi gets so close to Kotori so easily, but thatā€™s it. Speaking of Kotori, her introduction in the show was very weak, crying because she was alone and couldnā€™t eat with her mom? Youā€™re not a little girl anymore. Then there is the father and heā€¦I donā€™t have anything to say about him, really. There are more side characters but they donā€™t offer anything, they are just comic reliefs and what they do is not funny, to me at least.

But whatā€™s the real flaw of the show in my eyes is how it wastes its interesting premise of a widowed man taking care of his child all alone by basically having no plot nor theme exploration, and thatā€™s precisely because it is a feel good type of show. With this premise you would expect drama, but there isnā€™t, or there is but it has to do with irrelevant stuff unrelated to the premise, which in turn is presented in an overblown way. Most of the series is just Tsumugi feeling hungry and the three main characters cooking and eating together. Slice of life shows are usually plotless and relaxing, but it is a problem here because the whole premise goes to waste. It also reduces parenting, something which I asume everyone would agree can be quite complex, to just feeding a kid, thatā€™s as far as the show goes with it, like, come on. Again, Aishiteruze Baby features multiple characters dealing with parenting in their own ways, here is reduced to just that, so I say go watch that show instead, if you can deal with the bad visuals and weak sound.

And the nail in the coffin is how by the very end they hint that Kotori developed feelings for the father (her sensei), if that wasnā€™t the sole reason why she got closer to him in the first place, which not only means that later in the manga thereā€™s probably some romance vibes between a teenage girl and a grown adult, it also would mean that her relationship with Tsumugi was a lie the whole show, at least to some point.

Needless to say, I donā€™t have a positive opinion of this show and I canā€™t recommend it, itā€™s as plotless and lighthearted with simple and forgettable characters as many slice of life series, but this one also wastes a very good premise and theme. Even its best points are done better somewhere else.

For something similar, the Usagi Drop anime and as I already said Aishiteruze Baby, both of which I already covered, give you whatever you could want from this show and are way better. If you donā€™t want to go that back to watch a good childcare show, for some reason, thereā€™s also Koutarou wa Hitogurashi which aired this year and is also good, albeit more sad than the rest.


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