Let’s be real—this is clearly a low-budget production. The character designs are serviceable but stiff. The backgrounds are mostly still shots of Tokyo at night. However, the director uses a lot of soft lighting and close-ups on eyes and hands, which gives it a strange, melancholic intimacy. It’s not "pretty," but it is atmospheric .
Off the Deep End: First Look at Nariyuki Papakatsu Girls – The Animation – Episode 1 Nariyuki Papakatsu Girls-- The Animation - 01 -...
OtakuOverload Category: Seasonal Anime / First Impressions Let’s be real—this is clearly a low-budget production
Well, folks. Every season, we get a few shows that make you do a double-take at the season preview chart. This time, that award goes to Nariyuki Papakatsu Girls-- The Animation . I went into Episode 1 purely out of morbid curiosity, and I have... feelings. However, the director uses a lot of soft
Enter (19), our first "Papakatsu Girl." She’s a cynical art student with expensive taste and an emotional wall a mile thick. Unlike the bubbly heroines we’re used to, Rin treats this like a business negotiation. She asks for his annual salary within the first three minutes of conversation. Brutal.
The episode opens with our male lead, (45), a mid-level salaryman who just got passed over for a promotion. He’s tired, invisible at home, and drowning in loneliness. On a whim, he downloads a sketchy-looking dating app.
Let’s be real—this is clearly a low-budget production. The character designs are serviceable but stiff. The backgrounds are mostly still shots of Tokyo at night. However, the director uses a lot of soft lighting and close-ups on eyes and hands, which gives it a strange, melancholic intimacy. It’s not "pretty," but it is atmospheric .
Off the Deep End: First Look at Nariyuki Papakatsu Girls – The Animation – Episode 1
OtakuOverload Category: Seasonal Anime / First Impressions
Well, folks. Every season, we get a few shows that make you do a double-take at the season preview chart. This time, that award goes to Nariyuki Papakatsu Girls-- The Animation . I went into Episode 1 purely out of morbid curiosity, and I have... feelings.
Enter (19), our first "Papakatsu Girl." She’s a cynical art student with expensive taste and an emotional wall a mile thick. Unlike the bubbly heroines we’re used to, Rin treats this like a business negotiation. She asks for his annual salary within the first three minutes of conversation. Brutal.
The episode opens with our male lead, (45), a mid-level salaryman who just got passed over for a promotion. He’s tired, invisible at home, and drowning in loneliness. On a whim, he downloads a sketchy-looking dating app.