Angel Beats! is brilliant. I'm telling you this in case you looked up a review to see whether you should watch Angel Beats! or no. Unmistakeably, do it. Even if you're not too impressed at first, stick with it for a few episodes. You should also stop reading this review at once, because it'll be full of spoilers that will likely ruin your appreciation for the show. I want to discuss the show in-depth, and I feel like I can't properly do so without spoiling a large part of it. For this reason, I also feel like I can assume that the reader will have knowledge of events in the show, though I'll still be explaining set-up for those who decide to rob themselves of the pleasure of watching the show blind.
That aside, Angel Beats! doesn't really have any twists in it, at least not in a traditional sense. It's a fairly straightforward story, but a large part of what makes it special is how it plays around with your expectations, especially when it comes to its own quality. Angel Beats! is perfectly content to pretend to be worse than it could for a while in order to pleasantly surprise you later on.
Angel Beats! follows Otonashi, a teen who awakens without memories. Soon, he discovers that he's dead and in a fairly bizarre afterlife that takes the form of a school. Most students are referred to as "NPCs": They're soulless representations of students that act out a daily routine in the school. Dead people who join them and engage in this sort of behaviour soon disappear from the afterlife. The characters don't really know where to, or if somewhere at all.
Otonashi joins forces with the SSS, an unfortunately named (really? you didn't realize what removing one S would do?) militaristic group of delinquent students dedicated to avoiding normal school life as long as possible to avoid disappearing. They're opposed by Tenshi, a seemingly normal girl who acts as Student Council President, and attempts to make the SSS participate in normal behaviour. The SSS's prime objective for the first part of the series is to fight Tenshi, who's armed with what seem to be superhuman powers.
It's a fairly unique twist on a familiar setup, but what makes it work is that the rules of the afterworld aren't really explained. For a short while, this annoyed me, and almost put me off the series. However, I soon realized that this was fully intentional, and it paradoxically had the opposite effect: it helped keep me interested. I understood the rules of the world just enough that I wasn't getting lost, but there were enough blanks left that I felt with every episode like I was moving forward in understanding the world. By the two or three episodes that make up the final arc of the story, I felt like I had a complete grasp on the rules that governed everything, which was immensely satisfying, especially after having felt so confused ten episodes ago. This is what I was talking about earlier when I said it plays with your expectations of its quality.
I went through a similar arc with what I felt about the characters. As one would expect, the SSS is made up of a ragtag group of goofballs. I thought that they'd be mostly supporting cast, and only Otonashi, the leader Yuri, and Tenshi would really get any proper development. I was both right and wrong: It's true that most of the cast is only there to serve as comic relief and background characters, but the show does an amazing job of giving them personality despite their small amount of screen time. Every member of the SSS gets a few distinguishing traits, whether comedic or not, and by the end there's a real feeling of unity to the group, and most of them are very endearing.
There's also quite a few more characters that get real development than the three I previously mentioned. Perhaps the biggest surprise and runaway hit for me was Hinata, someone who I was sure was going to be a generic member of the SSS. He starts with just a few goofy lines exchanged with Otonashi, but slowly gets more and more screentime as the show goes on. By the end of the show, I suddenly realized that I'd been witnessing a powerful and moving friendship develop between the two, and it had been done so subtly that I hadn't even noticed. Hinata himself had also evolved into a fully-fledged, well-developed character, complete with a really touching love story on the side. He's by far one of the most important characters in the show. It's a fantastic feeling, being blind-sided by a show this completely.
Hinata being a standout doesn't make the rest of the cast any less fantastic, however. Otonashi also surprised me greatly. I was very impressed with Mirai Nikki because I found the protagonist Yukkiteru to be mildly interesting, something that seems to never happen in anime, but Otonashi manages to surpass even him. Whilst he's not interesting in the most traditional sense of the world, Otonashi manages to feel genuinely human. His backstory isn't the most original thing, but it's got a sense of tragic irony to it, and he's got a rather interesting point of view on the world he lives (or is dead) in, something that no other protagonist seems to have. I don't know if this is a consequence of the way I am or a good point of the writing in Angel Beats!, but I also found Otonashi to be a protagonist whose shoes are particularly easy to fall into. After a bit of him being unrealistically dickish in the first episode, he seemed to think and act much like I would in the situations he was put in. The way his friendship with Hinata developed blindsided me, much like I feel real friendship developing often does to the ones involved.
Yuri, the leader of the SSS, is a character whose potential I can't help but feel was squandered. Rather than go through a slow arc like the rest of the characters, she seems to stay put in her original viewpoint of the world, which is fine: her backstory is tragic enough that this seems believable. It's also good to have a character around to remind us of what we originally though about this world, and there could have been some ideological, ideally non-violent (because that would be far too cliche) conflict between the other main characters and her, where they eventually agree to disagree. Instead, she seems to agree to disagree immediately, and eventually has her viewpoint jarringly shifted to be that of the main group in less than five minutes of character development. Don't get me wrong, it's a powerful scene, but it doesn't do as much for me as either a slower arc of realization or a complete refusal to change could, and it feels like the way her arc pays would be better suited to a character with less screen time. I'm still glad she's around, however, as she manages to be a really admirable character.
Perhaps the only "main" character I full-on disliked was Naoi. He's introduced about halfway through the show as an ally of Tenshi's. When Tenshi falls from power, he takes over and is presented as a greater evil, with the SSS trying to get Tenshi back to power instead of him. There's a fair amount of depth put into making him seem truly despicable. This conflict is resolved when Otonashi gives him an "accept yourself" speech after hearing his tragic backstory. The episode ends, and suddenly Naoi is a member of the SSS, and is acting as the third man in Otonashi and Hinata's little group. It's a jarring change, but even worse is that he doesn't seem to have any particular purpose. His comedic quirks are amongst the least funny in the series, and he doesn't really contribute anything that Otonashi or Hinata couldn't have done. He's not a bad character, just a bland one who seems to have way too much screen time and way too little to do with it, as well as a jarring heel-face turn.
Last but not least is Tenshi, perhaps the series' flagship character: She certainly has a major part in both the promo art and the intro. The series is arguably even named after her: Tenshi means "angel" in Japanese. As such, it's not at all surprising that she doesn't remain an antagonist for the entire series, which is good, because her run as antagonist is quite underwhelming. Despite the fact that she's shown easily defeating the SSS several times, she's just not menacing. The series tries to pull the whole "Normal looking but destructive schoolgirl" cliche, and it doesn't work very well. You see, when you want to make a character who's not physically imposing menacing, you have to do it through their personality. You can do a huge number of things: you can make them downright crazy, you can make them be malicious, you can make them have stone-cold determination to kill. The series tries to pull off the last with Tenshi, but since she has to be a good character later on she never seems to actually try to hurt anyone, which hugely reduces her threat level in the eyes of the viewer.
She fares a lot better once she's humanized a bit and begins to talk with Otonashi. She's appropriately mysterious, and has a very unique manner of speaking. She never appears to be truly human, which is sort of the point, as that's what fuelled her conflict with the SSS for a long time. However, under her awkwardness and trouble communicating, one can see a caring but lonely girl, and I began to feel truly sorry for her, rooting for Otonashi to err on the side of being kind to her. Once the reason she's been acting to make everyone disappear becomes obvious, it's hard not to feel admiration for her.
Seeing the intro and promo materials, it should also not be surprising to anyone that there's a romance between Otonashi and Tenshi, which I felt was done fairly well. It's miles behind how well Otonashi's friendship with Hinata developed, or even just how touching Hinata's romance with side-character Yui was done, but I can't deny that it hit a nerve. The fact that it being explicitly stated is saved for the very last scene of the anime (not counting the post-credits scene) is also very welcome, since it doesn't feel shoed in to the entire series for no real reason like a lot of other romances do (Looking at you, Sword Art Online and No. 6). I also really liked how obvious it is that Otonashi feels this way for large part of the end of the show, but we don't ever get actual confirmation that so does Tenshi.
Before I move on from characters, I want to put mention a few outstanding members of the side cast. I found Yui to be very endearing, which made the fact that a whole episode is almost randomly centered around her a lot more bearable, and also helped make Hinata's romance with her all that much more touching. The development of the relationship between the two wasn't exactly subtle, but it's nice to see a series representing a blossoming romance with the two parties mock-fighting all the time, which I feel was both fairly realistic and very funny, for once. I found the episode centred around Masami, the original singer in GirlDeMo, to be very touching (if quite confusing), and wish we'd gotten to see more of her. I also really enjoyed the character of TK, who was there pretty much entirely for comic relief, but took such a bizarre approach to it that I couldn't help but smile whenever he randomly spouted nonsensical English lines (I watched the sub) for no reason.
Unfortunately, despite the great character roster, the show isn't brilliant when it comes to the storyline. It's by no means bad, but feels very rushed, not really allowing plot beats to sink in. For instance, at one point Tenshi joins forces with the SSS. She helps them for all of one episode before falling into a comma, and, due to a plan that Otonashi and her concoct as soon as she wakes up, she decides to pretend to have once again become aggressive with the SSS whilst Otonashi acts as her link into the organization. This lasts for about an episode and a half, at which point the SSS is once again friendly with her. It's by far the most extreme example, but is fairly indicative of how the entire story feels. This makes plot beats feel like they don't carry any weight, as the situation keeps changing drastically and you don't get enough time to get used to where the plot is before it continues. If you aren't comfortable where you are, then moving on looses its impact.
I think the reason for this is simple: The series is only 13 episodes long. This is fairly standard for anime, but Angel Beats! has enough going on that I feel it should've gone for the other standard length of 26 episodes. There's just too much to its story for it to be able to be properly told in the timespan that it's given. It's a real shame, too, because even with the excessively fast pace Angel Beats! has a fairly intriguing storyline, with clever twists and turns along the way. Most of the show involves the triumvirate that Otonashi, Yuri and Tenshi make up being in an ideological struggle between themselves, having to decide whether letting go of your pain is a betrayal to yourself or not. It's thematically strong, and does a good job of presenting all sides of the argument as equally valid, though Tenshi's perspective is what the series ultimately settles on. It's just a shame that it didn't have enough time to explore the issue more in-depth.
The events that go on in the plot also suffer a bit from seeming slightly arbitrary. Because Tenshi doesn't remain the antagonist for long (in fact, she leaves the position a bit too fast, I felt, which just backs up my argument), the series has to struggle to find ways of presenting dangers for the characters to deal with. As such, the later part suffers from seemingly random things happening just to make the plot have an antagonist. I see why it was done, but what frustrated me is that some of the more effective episodes where the ones dealing with one character's issues in depth (in particular with both of the successive leads of GirlDeMo), and these seemed to get thrown aside in favour of exaggerated, uninteresting, physical danger that was there as a fairly unnecessary excuse to move the plot along.
That said, all of the plot lines are actually satisfyingly put to rest by the end of the series, and don't often get in way of the juicy character development. The only problems with character development that I felt originated from time constraints were Yuri's problems that I listed above. The series ends extremely well, feeling like everything that happened logically leads to that point. The ending is powerful, and gave me extreme bittersweet feels. I actually shed a few tears during the end credits in the final episode, though that's due more to the fact that it ends on a powerful character moment than a story beat.
The series' weakest point other than its breakneck pacing is its visuals. It's not particularly interesting to look at, and I think the characters look quite unappealing. There's just something wrong with their faces: They feel too wide, and the eyes felt too big even for anime. The action is also particularly uninteresting to look at: Most of the time it's boring wide shots of bullets flying at a target, with only a few melee fights that look only marginally cooler. Fortunately, the soundtrack doesn't suffer in the same way: The opening and ending themes are genuinely great and the in-show tracks are unobtrusive but effective. However, perhaps the best stuff is the songs that in-universe band GirlDeMo performs, which are surprisingly good. The voice acting also finally managed to impress me, with characters seeming to transmit a lot more of their emotion through their voices than in any other anime I've watched so far.
Character and World Building: 10/10
Absolutely phenomenal in both regards. The world building is originally bare-bones, but this just means it's more satisfying to find out more as the show goes on, how the world operates being just another mystery to figure out. Side characters are surprisingly well fleshed out for how many there are, and the main cast is full of interesting personalities. It's also got a real knack for character-based comedy when appropriate.
Story: 6.5/10
What seems like it could be a great story is severely marred be pacing issues. There's a number of interesting plot beats and twists in here, but they happen in too fast succession for one to acclimate, meaning that they loose great part of their impact. It also seems to struggle to find an antagonist in the later half, meaning that the plot becomes a little convoluted at times. Fortunately, it still manages to have a pretty great ending.
Presentation: 3.5/5
The visuals aren't awful by any means, but they're definitely not as appealing as the other shows I've watched, characters and battle scenes being the biggest offenders. If this show had a mediocre audio side, then this score would be considerably lower, but it's fortunately got a great soundtrack, as well as a pretty damn good voice cast.
Enjoyment: 12/15
I won't lie, it's a true shame that this show didn't score higher in this category. The rushed pace led to a number of disappointments that made me not have as much fun as I felt I should. The show felt like it was constantly beginning to go in an interesting direction that I wanted to see more of, before getting bored and moving on to the next thing, much to my chagrin. I want to see more of the SSS being suspicious of Tenshi as a new ally but trying to get along with her. I want to see more of how Otonashi's alternative to what the SSS should stand for makes people re-consider their lives. The list goes on, but more than anything, I want to see more of Tenshi and Otonashi secretly working together to fulfil people's wishes.
Overall: (10+6.5+3.5+12)/40
32/40
8/10
Angel Beats! deserves to be so much more than it is. It's got a fantastic story that had to rush past its most interesting moments to comply with time constraints, which makes me so very, very upset. Despite its time constraints, it manages to do an absolutely stunning job with its characters and world, which I find immensely impressive. This is a show that would have scored perfectly in every category but presentation if not for one issue: It's too short. In other words, my biggest problem with this show is that I wish there was more of it, and I can't think of a better problem for a show to have.
That aside, Angel Beats! doesn't really have any twists in it, at least not in a traditional sense. It's a fairly straightforward story, but a large part of what makes it special is how it plays around with your expectations, especially when it comes to its own quality. Angel Beats! is perfectly content to pretend to be worse than it could for a while in order to pleasantly surprise you later on.
Angel Beats! follows Otonashi, a teen who awakens without memories. Soon, he discovers that he's dead and in a fairly bizarre afterlife that takes the form of a school. Most students are referred to as "NPCs": They're soulless representations of students that act out a daily routine in the school. Dead people who join them and engage in this sort of behaviour soon disappear from the afterlife. The characters don't really know where to, or if somewhere at all.
Otonashi joins forces with the SSS, an unfortunately named (really? you didn't realize what removing one S would do?) militaristic group of delinquent students dedicated to avoiding normal school life as long as possible to avoid disappearing. They're opposed by Tenshi, a seemingly normal girl who acts as Student Council President, and attempts to make the SSS participate in normal behaviour. The SSS's prime objective for the first part of the series is to fight Tenshi, who's armed with what seem to be superhuman powers.
It's a fairly unique twist on a familiar setup, but what makes it work is that the rules of the afterworld aren't really explained. For a short while, this annoyed me, and almost put me off the series. However, I soon realized that this was fully intentional, and it paradoxically had the opposite effect: it helped keep me interested. I understood the rules of the world just enough that I wasn't getting lost, but there were enough blanks left that I felt with every episode like I was moving forward in understanding the world. By the two or three episodes that make up the final arc of the story, I felt like I had a complete grasp on the rules that governed everything, which was immensely satisfying, especially after having felt so confused ten episodes ago. This is what I was talking about earlier when I said it plays with your expectations of its quality.
I went through a similar arc with what I felt about the characters. As one would expect, the SSS is made up of a ragtag group of goofballs. I thought that they'd be mostly supporting cast, and only Otonashi, the leader Yuri, and Tenshi would really get any proper development. I was both right and wrong: It's true that most of the cast is only there to serve as comic relief and background characters, but the show does an amazing job of giving them personality despite their small amount of screen time. Every member of the SSS gets a few distinguishing traits, whether comedic or not, and by the end there's a real feeling of unity to the group, and most of them are very endearing.
There's also quite a few more characters that get real development than the three I previously mentioned. Perhaps the biggest surprise and runaway hit for me was Hinata, someone who I was sure was going to be a generic member of the SSS. He starts with just a few goofy lines exchanged with Otonashi, but slowly gets more and more screentime as the show goes on. By the end of the show, I suddenly realized that I'd been witnessing a powerful and moving friendship develop between the two, and it had been done so subtly that I hadn't even noticed. Hinata himself had also evolved into a fully-fledged, well-developed character, complete with a really touching love story on the side. He's by far one of the most important characters in the show. It's a fantastic feeling, being blind-sided by a show this completely.
Hinata being a standout doesn't make the rest of the cast any less fantastic, however. Otonashi also surprised me greatly. I was very impressed with Mirai Nikki because I found the protagonist Yukkiteru to be mildly interesting, something that seems to never happen in anime, but Otonashi manages to surpass even him. Whilst he's not interesting in the most traditional sense of the world, Otonashi manages to feel genuinely human. His backstory isn't the most original thing, but it's got a sense of tragic irony to it, and he's got a rather interesting point of view on the world he lives (or is dead) in, something that no other protagonist seems to have. I don't know if this is a consequence of the way I am or a good point of the writing in Angel Beats!, but I also found Otonashi to be a protagonist whose shoes are particularly easy to fall into. After a bit of him being unrealistically dickish in the first episode, he seemed to think and act much like I would in the situations he was put in. The way his friendship with Hinata developed blindsided me, much like I feel real friendship developing often does to the ones involved.
Yuri, the leader of the SSS, is a character whose potential I can't help but feel was squandered. Rather than go through a slow arc like the rest of the characters, she seems to stay put in her original viewpoint of the world, which is fine: her backstory is tragic enough that this seems believable. It's also good to have a character around to remind us of what we originally though about this world, and there could have been some ideological, ideally non-violent (because that would be far too cliche) conflict between the other main characters and her, where they eventually agree to disagree. Instead, she seems to agree to disagree immediately, and eventually has her viewpoint jarringly shifted to be that of the main group in less than five minutes of character development. Don't get me wrong, it's a powerful scene, but it doesn't do as much for me as either a slower arc of realization or a complete refusal to change could, and it feels like the way her arc pays would be better suited to a character with less screen time. I'm still glad she's around, however, as she manages to be a really admirable character.
Perhaps the only "main" character I full-on disliked was Naoi. He's introduced about halfway through the show as an ally of Tenshi's. When Tenshi falls from power, he takes over and is presented as a greater evil, with the SSS trying to get Tenshi back to power instead of him. There's a fair amount of depth put into making him seem truly despicable. This conflict is resolved when Otonashi gives him an "accept yourself" speech after hearing his tragic backstory. The episode ends, and suddenly Naoi is a member of the SSS, and is acting as the third man in Otonashi and Hinata's little group. It's a jarring change, but even worse is that he doesn't seem to have any particular purpose. His comedic quirks are amongst the least funny in the series, and he doesn't really contribute anything that Otonashi or Hinata couldn't have done. He's not a bad character, just a bland one who seems to have way too much screen time and way too little to do with it, as well as a jarring heel-face turn.
Last but not least is Tenshi, perhaps the series' flagship character: She certainly has a major part in both the promo art and the intro. The series is arguably even named after her: Tenshi means "angel" in Japanese. As such, it's not at all surprising that she doesn't remain an antagonist for the entire series, which is good, because her run as antagonist is quite underwhelming. Despite the fact that she's shown easily defeating the SSS several times, she's just not menacing. The series tries to pull the whole "Normal looking but destructive schoolgirl" cliche, and it doesn't work very well. You see, when you want to make a character who's not physically imposing menacing, you have to do it through their personality. You can do a huge number of things: you can make them downright crazy, you can make them be malicious, you can make them have stone-cold determination to kill. The series tries to pull off the last with Tenshi, but since she has to be a good character later on she never seems to actually try to hurt anyone, which hugely reduces her threat level in the eyes of the viewer.
She fares a lot better once she's humanized a bit and begins to talk with Otonashi. She's appropriately mysterious, and has a very unique manner of speaking. She never appears to be truly human, which is sort of the point, as that's what fuelled her conflict with the SSS for a long time. However, under her awkwardness and trouble communicating, one can see a caring but lonely girl, and I began to feel truly sorry for her, rooting for Otonashi to err on the side of being kind to her. Once the reason she's been acting to make everyone disappear becomes obvious, it's hard not to feel admiration for her.
Seeing the intro and promo materials, it should also not be surprising to anyone that there's a romance between Otonashi and Tenshi, which I felt was done fairly well. It's miles behind how well Otonashi's friendship with Hinata developed, or even just how touching Hinata's romance with side-character Yui was done, but I can't deny that it hit a nerve. The fact that it being explicitly stated is saved for the very last scene of the anime (not counting the post-credits scene) is also very welcome, since it doesn't feel shoed in to the entire series for no real reason like a lot of other romances do (Looking at you, Sword Art Online and No. 6). I also really liked how obvious it is that Otonashi feels this way for large part of the end of the show, but we don't ever get actual confirmation that so does Tenshi.
Before I move on from characters, I want to put mention a few outstanding members of the side cast. I found Yui to be very endearing, which made the fact that a whole episode is almost randomly centered around her a lot more bearable, and also helped make Hinata's romance with her all that much more touching. The development of the relationship between the two wasn't exactly subtle, but it's nice to see a series representing a blossoming romance with the two parties mock-fighting all the time, which I feel was both fairly realistic and very funny, for once. I found the episode centred around Masami, the original singer in GirlDeMo, to be very touching (if quite confusing), and wish we'd gotten to see more of her. I also really enjoyed the character of TK, who was there pretty much entirely for comic relief, but took such a bizarre approach to it that I couldn't help but smile whenever he randomly spouted nonsensical English lines (I watched the sub) for no reason.
Unfortunately, despite the great character roster, the show isn't brilliant when it comes to the storyline. It's by no means bad, but feels very rushed, not really allowing plot beats to sink in. For instance, at one point Tenshi joins forces with the SSS. She helps them for all of one episode before falling into a comma, and, due to a plan that Otonashi and her concoct as soon as she wakes up, she decides to pretend to have once again become aggressive with the SSS whilst Otonashi acts as her link into the organization. This lasts for about an episode and a half, at which point the SSS is once again friendly with her. It's by far the most extreme example, but is fairly indicative of how the entire story feels. This makes plot beats feel like they don't carry any weight, as the situation keeps changing drastically and you don't get enough time to get used to where the plot is before it continues. If you aren't comfortable where you are, then moving on looses its impact.
I think the reason for this is simple: The series is only 13 episodes long. This is fairly standard for anime, but Angel Beats! has enough going on that I feel it should've gone for the other standard length of 26 episodes. There's just too much to its story for it to be able to be properly told in the timespan that it's given. It's a real shame, too, because even with the excessively fast pace Angel Beats! has a fairly intriguing storyline, with clever twists and turns along the way. Most of the show involves the triumvirate that Otonashi, Yuri and Tenshi make up being in an ideological struggle between themselves, having to decide whether letting go of your pain is a betrayal to yourself or not. It's thematically strong, and does a good job of presenting all sides of the argument as equally valid, though Tenshi's perspective is what the series ultimately settles on. It's just a shame that it didn't have enough time to explore the issue more in-depth.
The events that go on in the plot also suffer a bit from seeming slightly arbitrary. Because Tenshi doesn't remain the antagonist for long (in fact, she leaves the position a bit too fast, I felt, which just backs up my argument), the series has to struggle to find ways of presenting dangers for the characters to deal with. As such, the later part suffers from seemingly random things happening just to make the plot have an antagonist. I see why it was done, but what frustrated me is that some of the more effective episodes where the ones dealing with one character's issues in depth (in particular with both of the successive leads of GirlDeMo), and these seemed to get thrown aside in favour of exaggerated, uninteresting, physical danger that was there as a fairly unnecessary excuse to move the plot along.
That said, all of the plot lines are actually satisfyingly put to rest by the end of the series, and don't often get in way of the juicy character development. The only problems with character development that I felt originated from time constraints were Yuri's problems that I listed above. The series ends extremely well, feeling like everything that happened logically leads to that point. The ending is powerful, and gave me extreme bittersweet feels. I actually shed a few tears during the end credits in the final episode, though that's due more to the fact that it ends on a powerful character moment than a story beat.
The series' weakest point other than its breakneck pacing is its visuals. It's not particularly interesting to look at, and I think the characters look quite unappealing. There's just something wrong with their faces: They feel too wide, and the eyes felt too big even for anime. The action is also particularly uninteresting to look at: Most of the time it's boring wide shots of bullets flying at a target, with only a few melee fights that look only marginally cooler. Fortunately, the soundtrack doesn't suffer in the same way: The opening and ending themes are genuinely great and the in-show tracks are unobtrusive but effective. However, perhaps the best stuff is the songs that in-universe band GirlDeMo performs, which are surprisingly good. The voice acting also finally managed to impress me, with characters seeming to transmit a lot more of their emotion through their voices than in any other anime I've watched so far.
Character and World Building: 10/10
Absolutely phenomenal in both regards. The world building is originally bare-bones, but this just means it's more satisfying to find out more as the show goes on, how the world operates being just another mystery to figure out. Side characters are surprisingly well fleshed out for how many there are, and the main cast is full of interesting personalities. It's also got a real knack for character-based comedy when appropriate.
Story: 6.5/10
What seems like it could be a great story is severely marred be pacing issues. There's a number of interesting plot beats and twists in here, but they happen in too fast succession for one to acclimate, meaning that they loose great part of their impact. It also seems to struggle to find an antagonist in the later half, meaning that the plot becomes a little convoluted at times. Fortunately, it still manages to have a pretty great ending.
Presentation: 3.5/5
The visuals aren't awful by any means, but they're definitely not as appealing as the other shows I've watched, characters and battle scenes being the biggest offenders. If this show had a mediocre audio side, then this score would be considerably lower, but it's fortunately got a great soundtrack, as well as a pretty damn good voice cast.
Enjoyment: 12/15
I won't lie, it's a true shame that this show didn't score higher in this category. The rushed pace led to a number of disappointments that made me not have as much fun as I felt I should. The show felt like it was constantly beginning to go in an interesting direction that I wanted to see more of, before getting bored and moving on to the next thing, much to my chagrin. I want to see more of the SSS being suspicious of Tenshi as a new ally but trying to get along with her. I want to see more of how Otonashi's alternative to what the SSS should stand for makes people re-consider their lives. The list goes on, but more than anything, I want to see more of Tenshi and Otonashi secretly working together to fulfil people's wishes.
Overall: (10+6.5+3.5+12)/40
32/40
8/10
Angel Beats! deserves to be so much more than it is. It's got a fantastic story that had to rush past its most interesting moments to comply with time constraints, which makes me so very, very upset. Despite its time constraints, it manages to do an absolutely stunning job with its characters and world, which I find immensely impressive. This is a show that would have scored perfectly in every category but presentation if not for one issue: It's too short. In other words, my biggest problem with this show is that I wish there was more of it, and I can't think of a better problem for a show to have.