6. Kemono Jihen
Release date: January 10
Director: Masaya Fujimori
A child of a human and an otherworldly creature, and seemingly abandoned by those parents, Kabane Kusaka is shunned by other children. They can tell something is different about him, which is accurate: There's a demon inside of him. After encountering a supernatural private detective, Kabane is introduced into a world of kemono, or those who lurk in the shadows, involved with humans but undetected by them. The concept of being ostracized because of such perceived evil isn’t a particularly new idea, but Kemono Jihen tweaks this trope and its dark fantasy formula enough to be compelling viewing. Kabane is not exactly a wide-eyed idealist, nor super in touch with his feelings—his numbness to pain and insult is a chilling subversion of outsiders in the genre. In addition to its exploration of found family, the mix of folktale horror among the everyday calls to mind Bill Willingham’s comic Fables, both about the integration of old mythical creatures into contemporary society, with threads reaching into institutions of power. The show also wrings some grim imagery and macabre humor out of the fact that Kabane can’t die—shot, consumed by bugs, and even beheaded in the first few episodes. With the show going to such places while still only getting warmed up, it’ll be interesting to see where it lands.
5. Vlad Love
Release date: February 14
Director: Mamoru Oshii
After decades of heady philosophical science-fiction and fantasy, Vlad Love represents something of a palette cleanser for the veteran director Mamoru Oshii. After contemplations on everything from our bodily relationship to technology to man’s impulse to destroy, the show plays like a low stakes and often extremely stupid return to his roots, recalling his years of work on Urusei Yatsura in the '80s. The show is quirky and off-the-wall in a way that Oshii’s work hasn’t been since that time, with hyperactive scenes full of strange meta-gags and non-sequiturs (look out for a scene interrupted for nearly a half-minute with Wikipedia descriptions of a bomber jet). That wall-to-wall silliness won’t work for everyone, but its bizarre digressions are constantly amusing, and Vlad Love makes for a kinetic return to the kind of playfully raunchy rom-com Oshii cut his teeth making. That nostalgia is extremely deliberate—those with a keen eye will spot visual references to his past works and series. It’s artful in its goofiness as well, with strange and subjective use of split-screen interpolated amongst soft, painterly backgrounds, courtesy of art director Kazuhiro Obata and background artist Yasutada Katou. Though the series’ sudden release has threatened to bury it, its high energy helps it stand out amidst an already packed winter season.
Available on: Crunchyroll
4. Jujutsu Kaisen
Release date: October 3, 2020
Director: Sunghoo Park
If you’ve watched any shonen anime, Jujutsu Kaisen often feels comfortably familiar. Its teenage outcast protagonist Yuuji Itadori housing an all-feared demon inside him (and his immature silver-haired, blindfolded mentor Satoru Gojo) recalls Naruto; the thin veil between humanity and demons and the invisible war between them recalls Yu Yu Hakusho. Its goofy supporting cast, spectacular fights, and can-do spirit feel part and parcel with its designation as battle anime. Where Jujutsu Kaisen’s magic lies is in its knowing embrace of genre tropes, and then smartly subverting them, letting the audience think they’re in on what the show’s planning before veering sharply off-course. It’s also the rare shonen where women are portrayed with as much complexity and forcefulness as men, something that came to a head in a recent standout episode that explores the characters’ psychology through perfectly choreographed brawls. Jujutsu Kaisen isn’t reinventing the wheel, and more often than not living up to the straightforwardness of its title (translating to “Sorcerer Fight”). It’s still squarely focused on big fights and supernatural horror, but it’s a canny modernization of a tried-and-true formula, one that continues to satisfy week after week.
Available on: Crunchyroll, HBO Max
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3. Horimiya
Release date: January 9
Director: Masashi Ishihama
An isolated and intense young man, Izumi Miyamura doesn’t grab much positive attention from his high school classmates, nor does he try to. This all changes in a chance encounter with his popular classmate Kyoko Hori outside of school, where both discover that their first impressions of each other couldn’t have been more wrong. Though the manga on which the anime is based has been running for years, Horimiya wastes no time in building the romantic overtures between the two, focusing on the emotional consequences of their relationship rather than merely the step-by-step buildup. It's a double-edged sword, as its breakneck pacing (the director has only a single season to work with) can feel disorientating. But it’s salvaged by its elliptical approach to storytelling, viewing Miyamura and Hori's burgeoning relationship as a collection of different moments rather than a will they/won't they courtship. As a result, it feels like a more naturalistic, but no less touching approach to romance. Horimiya is more than worth watching simply for its visuals and character art, perfectly emphasizing moments of quiet intimacy, loneliness, and self-doubt.
Available on: Hulu, Funimation
2. Sk8 the Infinity
Release date: January 10
Director: Hiroko Utsumi
An original sports anime directed by former Kyoto Animation staffer Hiroko Utsumi (Banana Fish), on its face, Sk8 the Infinity is equal parts radical and ridiculous, and full of the emotional acuity and gentle, good-natured humor that you’d expect from someone whose visual and directorial sensibilities stemmed from work on K-On! and Nichijou. It’s full of vivid, contrasting color and high energy, and simply just great fun from the jump as it depicts a group of hardcore skaters participating in a secret, no-holds-barred downhill skateboarding competition in an abandoned mine, known as S. But it finds surprising emotional grounding through the relationship between Reki Kyan, a high school sophomore, who introduces new transfer student Langa Hasegawa to skateboarding. Like the best sports anime, Sk8 the Infinity builds interesting rapport between competitors and allies alike, with implicit tension between Reki and Langa as the former begins to feel insecure about how quickly his close friend picks up new skills. For once, the protagonist isn’t preternaturally gifted, and the show finds compelling characterization through the insecurities of hard-won talent cultivated through a lot of practice. Robot skateboards, skaters who dress like matadors and ninjas, some incredibly good voice casting, the insecurities of seeing someone that you love surpass you in ability—it’s the show that has everything.
1. Wonder Egg Priority
Release date: January 13
Director: Shin Wakabayashi
The words "magical girl" are never uttered in Wonder Egg Priority, but the loud and colorful markers of the subgenre—transforming objects of power, animal familiars—are presented in contrast with quiet and delicate observation of each of the character’s painful inner struggles. Following 14-year-old Ai Ooto as she fights to protect the souls of dead teenage girls housed within the eponymous "wonder eggs," the high quality of the show’s animation proves immediately striking, full of nuanced character acting and spectacular, high-flying and allegorical action that has earned comparisons to Kunihiko Ikuhara (Revolutionary Girl Utena) and Naoko Yamada (A Silent Voice) in equal measure. Even with all that visual flash, the explicit depiction of a tough subject matter will understandably prove an insurmountable hurdle for many—even though for the most part, director Shin Wakabayashi (Owarimonogatari) and writer Shinji Nojima (Suki!, Ie naki ko) tackle the most uncomfortable topics through quieter, incidental reveals. Consistently powerful and provocative, Wonder Egg Priority strikes a perfect balance of sensational action with painful subject matter without missing a step (yet, anyway). From its incredible animation to its off-kilter electronic score, it's without a doubt the most exciting new show of the year so far.
Available on: Funimation