More SoL-tinged nothing burger "mysteries" with a latent sort of quirky but not really committed sulky romance that may not exist at all from the creator of Hyouka. This feels about as formal as a 1940s drama but more naturalistic and with a girl always dragging the guys around to eat sweets, like a corrupted CGDCT anime with muted colors and pacing issues that would make even those who like to watch grass grow get antsy.
Visually, it's decent enough but resembles a hipster neo-noir with a 21:9 cinematic aspect ratio, and you'll have to get used to the blandly muted colors. The ED's composited
...
anime characters onto photographs and video cements the cinematic nature and manages to be fairly unique, and there are many dramatic shifts using sunset and the like. I wouldn't say the cinematography is overly memorable, but it does help craft a drab "I'm trying to be as ordinary as possible" and "but, mom, I don't want to go to school!" atmosphere, along with the sound design and an effective ambient score. Even the detached, anti-depressant-tinged dialogue comes across as ASMR. The characters simply melt into the aesthetic.
The mysteries are just as fillerish as Hyouka, there's more or less the same jaded, rose-tinted slacker philosophy of the main from that series, and the same detective component to add the didactic clownishness of Blue's Clues. Kengo, thankfully replacing the dull sidekicks from Hyouka, functions as a brash and fiery foil to the odd couple. The latter mostly spend whole episodes talking about nothing or boring school junk, solving a "mystery," or eating strawberry shortcakes and drinking matcha tea together. They occasionally have cryptic chats about being ordinary, like they're in a bizarro secret society.
It's decently written but comes across as shallow and awkward because it feels aimless, empty, and featuring robotic chemistry between the two leads, until we get to a "mystery," yet these are unrewarding and lack depth. The method seems to be to use the "mystery" to explore the characters, but there's not much to them other than flipping around between being unremarkable high schoolers and a detective duo who have never found a "mystery" too vapid to solve. If you want to make a mystery series, craft interesting mysteries. If you want a character study, you're not going to come to any compelling outcome by wasting our time with a slew of mysteries equivalent to Duchamp's readymade toilet prank from the art world.
The summary gets to the heart of the series and its issues: "However, for some reason, mysterious incidents and misfortunes keep coming one after another into their school lives. Will Kobato and Osanai be able to achieve peaceful days as ordinary citizens?" Are you kidding? The main conflict is for these two goofy goobers to remain "ordinary citizens," but Kobato can't stop from inserting himself into every literal "who cares?" event that prevents him from being "ordinary." Apparently, being "ordinary" means not sticking your nose into the business of other people and solving electrifying whodunnits like who took the last cookie from the cookie jar. I actually don't want to know the answer to this "mystery," if I'm being honest.
Let's walk through an actual episode. Don't worry. I won't spoil the answer to this exciting "mystery." In episode 2, Kengo airs his grievances about how the MC has changed: "Hah. You really think you're man enough to figure out how I made this premium cup of hot cocoa? Quit being a nice guy and start being an asshole! You'll never figure out how I made hot cocoa unless you're willing to be the biggest asshole on the block." After the pep talk is over, three minds come together to solve the "mystery" of how Kengo made hot cocoa. The MC is like, "Yep, that's right, I stopped playing the detective, but I had to step out of retirement to solve the mystery of how my friend made such good hot cocoa." Get the fuck out of here, you pretentious twat. It's like a decoming of age where the main regresses to a child to play detective games with his friends.
The nature of these mysteries indicates that the summary line I quoted is exaggerated and melodramatic to the extreme, yet the characters take these "mysteries" so seriously. During their smarty-pants investigation, the sister even "rules out" certain scenarios because there's a dirty spoon in the sink and the surface isn't wet. What if he simply washed everything down in the sink, wiped it dry, then put the spoon in last? It's so pointlessly speculative. It seems like they would have noticed the solution when they were making hot cocoa, but the eureka moment doesn't come until later. Maybe I missed something because I turned my brain off or was multitasking, but I don't even want to think about something so stupid.
I suppose you could argue Kobato was a man born in the wrong time, and he could have been the next Dupin, Holmes, Poirot, or Conan, but Japan is too serene to offer any mysteries worth solving, except for these cute little vanity projects to puff up the ego of the MC and allow everyone to blow smoke up his ass. Maybe next episode he can solve the "mystery" of who clogged the toilet at school.
Alternative Titles
Japanese: 小市民シリーズ
More titlesInformation
Type:
TV
Episodes:
10
Status:
Currently Airing
Aired:
Jul 7, 2024 to ?
Premiered:
Summer 2024
Broadcast:
Sundays at 01:30 (JST)
Producers:
TV Asahi, Movic, KlockWorx, NBCUniversal Entertainment Japan, Nagoya Broadcasting Network, AbemaTV, Bit grooove promotion, NetEase, BS Asahi, TV Asahi Music
Licensors:
None found, add some
Studios:
Lapin Track
Source:
Novel
Genre:
Mystery
Theme:
School
Duration:
23 min. per ep.
Rating:
PG-13 - Teens 13 or older
Statistics
Ranked:
#28502
2
based on the top anime page. Please note that 'Not yet aired' and 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity:
#2615
Members:
71,959
Favorites:
253
Available AtResourcesStreaming Platforms | Reviews
Filtered Results: 5 / 9
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Your Feelings Categories Jul 21, 2024
More SoL-tinged nothing burger "mysteries" with a latent sort of quirky but not really committed sulky romance that may not exist at all from the creator of Hyouka. This feels about as formal as a 1940s drama but more naturalistic and with a girl always dragging the guys around to eat sweets, like a corrupted CGDCT anime with muted colors and pacing issues that would make even those who like to watch grass grow get antsy.
Visually, it's decent enough but resembles a hipster neo-noir with a 21:9 cinematic aspect ratio, and you'll have to get used to the blandly muted colors. The ED's composited ... Aug 10, 2024
Shoushimin Series, another work of Honobu Yonezawa, who is famous for Hyouka. And it's another high-school detective or mystery anime just like Hyouka. But in the comparison between them, Shoushimin series are not that good or aren't that bad, either. It's just average and sometimes below average, not good or bad or not that great. Now the question is from which aspects—from my point of view, I think the story, plot arrangement, character, character design, and characteristic. And I am not saying that story, plot, character, and everything I mentioned before are just maintaining the quality of being average.
I don't recommend it to others ... Aug 4, 2024
Shoshimin is a nothingburger anime. It's hollow and leaves you with nothing other than the feeling of wasting your time.
Now don't get me wrong. The art is GORGEOUS. The cinematic style is beautiful. The character designs draw your attention whenever you get a close up. This anime oozes style in the simple and meticulous animation. But what more is there than to be a pretty wallflower, dangling such good quality without substance? This anime boasts about being "normal" and solving mysteries. Mysteries, by the way, that are the biggest time wasters and all a part of the protag's imaginations as far as how something may have ... Jul 20, 2024
The Shoushimin Series is an anime that centers around a pair of "odd" teens who aspire to lead ordinary lives. However, their journey is anything but mundane as they continuously find themselves solving various puzzles that life throws at them. These puzzles aren't the thrilling, high-stakes mysteries typical of detective series but everyday dilemmas like making the perfect cup of hot chocolate or tracking down a stolen purse at school.
The anime excels in its detailed dialogue and character development, bringing depth and personality to its cast. However, this attention to detail sometimes borders on overly dramatic, which can feel excessive and detract from the overall ... Jul 21, 2024
What's wrong with being an ordinary citizen, free of any problems that life offers and the unnecessary highlights it provides? Without standing out too much and living peaceful days is a utopia, considering that at all times we are people who care even about the smallest life problems. As a child, we worry about friends, animals, games, food, family... A child can get stressed even about a toy they didn't receive as a birthday present, for example; When we grow up, become teenagers and later, adults, worries become more complicated and most people just want to resolve their lives in the right way and move
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