Secret Santa 2013 – Aria the Animation

ARIA

Why Venice? Why not.

Merry Christmas! Again. This year I’m joining in on the Secret santa run by Reverse Thieves, since the other writers seemed to have fun with it last year. They seem to be having a good run this year too, if the majority of the 2013 (+ Kyo’s 2012) reviews are anything to go by. Or maybe we’re all just optimistic people here.

Apparently my secret santa was under the impression that I hadn’t experienced enough slice of life anime, and my choices were Aria the Animation, Kiniro Mosaic and Kamichu! (though apparently the last one is about a girl who turns into a deity, so I don’t know how slice-of-life-ish it really is). And after finding out that the person who gave me recommendations was kevo from Desu ex Machina, suddenly the list made so much sense. I went with Aria the Animation, since it’s been on my watch list for some time anyways. I’ve always been curious about it since it’s sequels and such are highly rated, and everyone I’ve ever seen talk about it can’t seem to shut up about how great it is. I’ll get around to Kiniro and Kamichu! eventually, but I can’t say that I regret my choice of Aria the Animation.

Aria is basically about glorified tour guides who live on the planet Aqua (aka Mars after humanity somehow got a ton of water onto it and basically turned a section of it into Venice). The tour guides are called “Undine” and being an Undine is the occupation of the main characters of the show. …They basically row boats for customers and that’s about it. Yet somehow, it’s Neo Venezia’s number 1 coveted job, there are entire magazines dedicated to it and a few of the characters are pretty famous for being really good at their jobs. Life must be pretty uneventful absolutely everywhere in this universe if people have nothing better to do than gossip about tour guides, but once you get over that fact, the anime is easy enough to understand. The plot is basically episodic too, so it’s something you can watch at your own pace and not worry about forgetting details, which was nice for my busy schedule.

Aria01Aria02

Along with accepting that, you also have to accept the fact that while characters make up the story, they’re not really dimensional at all. They’re all basically character stereotypes (Akari being the optimistic cheerful one, Alicia being the kind senpai, etc.). This manages to work well with the storyline though, because there isn’t much of a storyline in the first place. Keeping the characters simple kept the show pretty simple, and the simplicity worked well with making the show calming. Akari was a good choice for the main character too, since her constant optimism really set the tone to a lot of episodes. Admittedly though, a lot of the characters were pretty forgettable due to their one dimensional personalities. Sure, you could tell that all of them were just one big extended family to one another, and it was heart warming seeing them get along, but most of them weren’t really necessary. They were just additions placed in the plot in order to get messages across. The cats were a pretty good example for this. Aria the Animation’s namesake refers to Aria the cat (whom the Aria company that Akari works for is also named after). Apparently all of the Undine companies keep blue-eyed cats around as mascots since they’re considered to be good luck, so his presence as a character had an explanation besides being an explanation to the random time travel. For the most part though, he was just… there. Mostly for comic relief. The characters work when you watch the show, but when you stop and thing about it, they might not really be that necessary. I was indifferent to about half of them. Maybe this is changed in the later seasons, but that’s jut the impression I got from the first one.

One of the good points IS the fact that nothing majorly eventful seems to go on though. Or at least, nothing on the scale of “oh no, the entire city is going to be destroyed” kind of eventful. People lose things, friends hang out and Akari is constantly practicing to become a full-fledged Undine with her friends, Aika and Alice. Mundane events happen. Or at least, mundane things are what normally happen. As a bit of an odd break from all of that though, the anime does wander into the surreal at times since Akari seems to travel to Aqua’s past more than once. This is later explained by the fact that apparently cats make it happen (which both explains things and at the same time, doesn’t explain anything at all). Though  in the end, Aria kind of allows this break from things being realistic all the time, since the setting itself is fantastical in the first place.

NeoVenezia2NeoVenezia

A character mentions in one of the last episodes that Aqua is a man-made paradise, and from how the show depicts daily life, it really seems to be one. Which is rather comforting, since most anime like to point out how mankind seems to ruin everything they touch. Akari even says something about Aqua being a place of miracles, since the collective dreams of people was what made the terraforming possible in the first place. This sunny outlook on humanity combined with the fact that Akari enjoys absolutely every single part of daily life and isn’t afraid to constantly monologue about it, this is one of those feel-good anime that’s really calming to watch. The other characters provide some dynamics to the show, but really, they’re just means to deliver the message that seems to be “mundane things are great; life is awesome”.  Even when the show talks about slightly more depressing topics like friends becoming farther away over time, theres always manages to be a positive spin to the topic. There isn’t even a need for dialogue at points because somehow, just watching girls row boats and look at the scenery is enough. This piece of fan art I found on pixiv describes the series better than I ever could.

MizunashiAkari1

That’s it. That’s the anime.

Even if it’s not quite like the picture above though, Aria is around 8 years old and it’s still somehow so damn pretty. The animation may have it’s QUALITY moments here and there with the characters, but the backgrounds are absolutely beautiful. Really, the enjoyment from this show isn’t really Akari loving absolutely everything about life in every episode (though that is part of it). The world is really serene and lovely by itself too. Neo Venezia has it’s own culture that despite being different from any kind of living that I’m used to, still felt really comfortable. With nothing really happening in the plot too, little things about daily life in Neo Venezia really shone through. The water covers the sidewalks and some of the floor level of housing occasionally due to the tide, and a year on Aqua is 24 months. They have people working underground called “Gnomes”, who regulate the planet’s gravity (who knows how, but they exist). These things probably don’t sound that interesting written here, but they were extremely fascinating little details. There was an episode with a hot springs that was in an abandoned house, and who cares what was going on plot-wise, that house looked like a spot someone would genuinely want to travel to see and vacation at. Really, that applies to the whole town, since the city itself is so scenic.

Ariahouse

I mean, just look at where the Akari lives.

Another thing that was really nice about Aria the Animation was the OP and ED. Undine was lovely, and the way they incorporated it into each episode really set the mood for the show. Rainbow felt really nostalgic too. Though maybe that’s because I haven’t heard Round Table since they did the ending theme to Chobits. Apparently the sound track is a big deal too, but I didn’t really notice that to be honest (minus the times when the a cappella singing was going on, which was impossible to miss).


This was really calming to watch. Which is the point, I guess, but at least the anime does what it’s supposed to. It took about an episode for me to get into this, but once I was in, most of the details didn’t even really matter. This is probably the wrong way to explain things, but what I mean is that they don’t ever really explain the mechanics of Aqua (like how they got all of that water to the planet or how they came up with flying machines), but that doesn’t affect the anime negatively. The details on how things work isn’t as important as the fact that humanity is just enjoying the benefits now. The details that do matter is Aqua’s culture, and that part of the story is really well built. When the shows goes into fantasy elements, it still manages to feel like you’re watching the slice of life genre, since some of the fantasy things are just daily life for the characters. But that’s okay too, since the slice of life portions are all really heartwarming (or at least they end that way). I feel like I was kind of harsh on the characters in this post, since their interactions basically make up the tone of the show. There would be no anime without them, but I really can’t help but feel like they could have been replaced a bit too easily. Overall though, this was really enjoyable. I can see myself going and rewatching Aria when I have more time, since I was more concerned with finishing it than enjoying the actual episode.

ARIA4

At least there will always be the house.

About

University student and the one at Metanorn who's known for wearing glasses. Likes blood, insanity and plot twists, but also plays otome games and adores cute romance anime. It balances out... somehow.
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12 Responses to “Secret Santa 2013 – Aria the Animation”

  1. Di Gi Kazune says:

    Kekekeke now where did we leave those warp gates…

  2. Highway says:

    As I said in a comment to lvlln’s post:

    I’ve watched about half of Aria the Animation, and am not really motivated to continue it. Even though I love shows like Non Non Biyori and Tamayura (this latter also by Junichi Satou who did Series Composition and Direction for Aria), Aria just seems to go *too* far in the ‘relaxed’ department. Some of it is interesting, but not enough to make me go back to it and watch that next episode.

    Adding: I guess if someone made it a SS recommendation, that might be something to make me finish it. But I dunno. It’s such a known quantity.

    • Karakuri says:

      I think the main reason I enjoyed Aria so much (where everyone else finds it boring) is because I don’t really watch shows like this. …You know the kind of things I like, and they’re generally the exact opposite of this. So I’m rarely ever in the mood to watch things like Tamayura and when I do watch them, the relaxing effect is really nice.

  3. HannoX says:

    I watched 3 or 4 episodes of Aria, but was so bored by it I couldn’t watch any more. I watched 2 or 3 episodes of Kiniro Mosaic, then dropped it. It’s not because I don’t like slice-of-life or relaxing shows–I’ve watched a number of them, the latest being Non Non Biyori. But something’s got to be interesting about the show, either the characters or the antics they get up to.

    I do, however, own Kamichu! and have watched it all the way through twice. I think that’s the one you should have watched.

    • Highway says:

      I watched all of Kiniro Mosaic, and thought it was fun, but I do wish it had kept that terrific style of the first episode, rather than being much more plain for the rest of the series. It did also get a bit repetitive, as you get it pounded into you that Shinobu’s pretty much a clothes horse ditz, Alice is smitten with Shino, Karen’s wacky, and Aya has a super crush on Youko that she won’t confess. It’s standard for a long-running 4-koma, much like a comic strip, but there wasn’t enough variety for 12 episodes of full-length anime.

    • Di Gi Kazune says:

      I will take a stab here and agree about the slice-of-life comment here. There must be something interesting that appeals alongside the slice-of-lifeness.

      I do own as in physically own one slice-of-life show: Winter Garden.

      • Joojoobees says:

        I really like the show precisely because there were no “antics”. In one episode of the manga (I don’t remember it making it into the anime), Akari and Alicia scrape barnacles off of the hulls of their gondole. The show isn’t about antics, or characters, it is about setting. You are presented with activities that often evoke the season. The people who live in Neo-Venezia are in tune with the rest of the world, and that is why people fly from Earth to Mars just to admire the scenery.

    • Karakuri says:

      The first episode of Aria was kind of boring, but then I found something that interested me, I guess. I’ll be watching Kamichu! before Kiniro, but I think it will be a while before I feel like watching anything like this again. Like I said above, the main reason why I got so much out of Aria was because I hardly watch these things.

  4. PrimeHector says:

    You posted this on Christmas? The names Undine and Gnome are name of elements. Undine is the spirit of water and Gnome is the spirit of Earth.

    • Karakuri says:

      They had Sylphs too that flew and delivered mail, I just didn’t find it that vital to mention the links to spirits. …And the only reason I knew about origin of the names in the first place was due to playing Tales of Symphonia.

  5. BlackBriar says:

    This looks like fun. Though from what you’re saying for part of it is that it’s a semi turn your brain off to enjoy kind of show since most of the details won’t be explained. In a case like that, if it’s entertaining, then there’s little reason to complain.

    • Karakuri says:

      Yeah, this is a show that you can’t really need to think about, but just enjoy. This was the total opposite of my tastes, but it was still a nice watch.

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