It's summer. I'm in the blissful period before my grades come in, where I can kick back, forget that I'm a uni student, and just do stuff. As such, I found myself with a lot of free time, and what better to do with this time than watch anime and play videogames?
After watching the fantastic Daria twice (which, despite not being anime, I started to write a thing about and found myself with writers block), beating Dark Souls (review coming eventually), almost 100%ing Bully and playing through most of Dark Souls II, I remembered that I hadn't watched anime in ages, and as such, on impulse, randomly picked an anime off of my to-watch list and went through the whole thing in one day.
I'm not sure how Free! ended up on said list. It seems to be a combinations of genres I don't like. It's very much a shoujo (translation for the unintiated: girl anime, this being for, not necessarily about, girls), and I am not, as it happens, a shoujo. It's also a sports anime, specifically a swimming anime. I'm not a sporty guy, and, as far as sports go, swimming is one of my least favorites (largely due to a pretty awful coach for several years in my childhood).
I won't lie, Free! doesn't make a good first impression. The first episode is an awful slog, with tonnes of cliches happening all around the place for no appropriate reason, and a lot of the characters coming across as bland. I almost quit watching right there and then, but decided to give it a second chance and watched the second episode, which was considerably better.
As one would expect, Free! follows a high-school swimming team, made up of four members, who, as the show for some reason makes a gleeful point of pointing out, all have girly names. The closest we have to a protagonist is the star of the team, the quiet and standoffish Haruka, who has a bizarre fascination with being in water.
Haruka himself is one of the biggest issues with the show. Most of the time, he just seems unpleasant. He's really insistent about the fact that "I only swim free", which gets to be really annoying, and, until the final two episodes, doesn't seem to justify the affection that everyone else seems to feel for him in any way. He's mopey, picky, standoffish, and just a downer to have around. There's a few mildly funny gags where a couple of his obsessions are made fun of, but that's unfortunately the highlight of his character.
The rest of the team, thankfully, does a lot better. There's the captain and backstroke specialist Makoto, who comes across very much as a gentle giant, friendly and understanding, as well as acting as the emotional backbone of the team. There's also Nagisa, the resident jokester and beam of sunlight, whose relentless energy and positive attitude originally annoyed me, but very quickly grew on me (he actually eerily reminds me of Persona 4's Teddie in that way), as well as Rei, the new guy who actually goes through a fairly effective (if oft used) arc, starting off as the cold logic guy and eventually turning out to be one of the people most in touch with the emotions of those around him. The supporting cast, (namely the team's manager Gou/Kou, the coach, and the teacher sponsoring the team) are actually some of the better characters, with their support for the team feeling genuinely heartfelt.
The plot is fairly barebones, as one would expect of a sports anime: Haruka, Makoto and Nagisa used to be on a team with Rin, another star swimmer. Rin left, he's now come back, and he's a jerkass obsessed with beating Haruka. What ensues is the new swim team going through a bunch of hurdles to compete against Rin, including setting up the team from the ground up, training, and a bunch of competitions. Eventually, the four of the old team members reconcile and learn that what really matters in competition is the power of friendship after all.
It's not precisely groundbreaking, but it works well, and it allows a few fairly tense moments to happen. The show's biggest hindrance is the sport it focuses on - the writing does do a really good job of setting up these tense situations, with a lot more than just a medal being on the line for the characters, but the payoff is never not disappointing. The swimming scenes are never more than a few seconds long, and consist of an animation just looping over and over whilst people yell in the background. The most intense these get is in one of the final confrontations, when Rin and Haruka get red and blue (respectively) backgrounds with speedlines.
The other big hurdle the show fails to satisfyingly jump over is Rin. If he was supposed to be a downright unlikeable jerk, then the show's done a great job, but he's actually supposed to be an old friend of the teams, and as I said, they end up reconciling by the end. There's also some tragic backstory about his dad clumsily tacked on, which leads me to believe he's meant to be at least mildly sympathetic. This does not work well. Rin seems like a genuine asshat, acts like a genuine asshat, and looks like a genuine asshat. The only times he's seen being nice to anyone are flashbacks to his childhood, and the very end of the series. The entire rest of the time he's making derisive comments to everyone, being both a sore winner and a sore looser, and just being a prick in general. This unfortunately ruins the emotional climax of the show, which is centered around him. Also, for some reason the artists decided to give him pointy teeth, which just goofy as fuck.
Rin's teeth stand out because this is a very good looking show. The characters are especially well drawn, which comes to no surprise as a large part of the show's appeal for its intended demographic is supposedly the pretty buff boys in swimsuits. Whilst I'm not very attracted to that, I do have to say, those boys are really pretty, really buff, and those abs are very lovingly detailed. Fortunately, everything else is also very competently drawn, looking sharp and clear, with the water being especially impressively pretty.
The show has also got a pretty great soundtrack. Whilst the opening and ending themes are fairly generic, a lot of the music that plays throughout the show is genuinely great, though it tends to have issues with fitting what's going on on screen well, with goofy music occasionally playing over serious moments and viceversa. This is especially true of the one bizarre exception to the otherwise mostly instrumental music: the dubstep track. This is my favorite song on the soundtrack, not because I like dubstep (I enjoy how dumb it is, and that's about it), but because it almost feels like it was intentionally placed over inappropriate scenes, which resulted in me repeatedly laughing out loud as someone climbed out of a pool to intense wub-wubs.
Character and World Building:7 /10
The supporting cast is really great, with a considerable amount of both memorable and endearing characters. Unfortunately, the two main characters of Haruka and Rin are both boring and unlikeable, which brings the series down immensely.
Story: 5/10
It's there. The main drive behind the story is a relationship that's very much uninteresting, and the plot is one we've seen plenty of times, but it's done decently enough that it doesn't get in the way. The main appeal of the show is the moment-by-moment conflict, not the overarching plot, and that's usually driven enough by the characters I did like to be effective.
Presentation: 5/5
I can find no issue but Rin's teeth and that one dubstep track.
Enjoyment: 10/15
Despite a lot of the flaws, I did find myself immersed in the moment-to-moment drama, and the humor was often effective. Unfortunately, the constant downer that is Haruka, and the occasional unpleasantness that is Rin bring the show down a lot, and manage to drop the enjoyment rating by 4 just by themselves, with the anticlimatic swimming scenes nailing the coffin shut. If Haruka had acted the way he does in the final episodes through the whole series, this would likely have been considerably higher.
Overall: (7+5+5+10)/40
27/40
6.75/10
Despite it not being what I like, Free! did manage to hold my attention, and didn't feel like a waste of my time. It's got some very strong writing in the characters, but three very clearly defined fatal flaws that just divebombed my enjoyment of the whole ordeal. It's not something I'd recommend unless you're attracted to males and are into the typical sports formula, but if you are Free! is more than likely worth every second of its running time.
After watching the fantastic Daria twice (which, despite not being anime, I started to write a thing about and found myself with writers block), beating Dark Souls (review coming eventually), almost 100%ing Bully and playing through most of Dark Souls II, I remembered that I hadn't watched anime in ages, and as such, on impulse, randomly picked an anime off of my to-watch list and went through the whole thing in one day.
I'm not sure how Free! ended up on said list. It seems to be a combinations of genres I don't like. It's very much a shoujo (translation for the unintiated: girl anime, this being for, not necessarily about, girls), and I am not, as it happens, a shoujo. It's also a sports anime, specifically a swimming anime. I'm not a sporty guy, and, as far as sports go, swimming is one of my least favorites (largely due to a pretty awful coach for several years in my childhood).
I won't lie, Free! doesn't make a good first impression. The first episode is an awful slog, with tonnes of cliches happening all around the place for no appropriate reason, and a lot of the characters coming across as bland. I almost quit watching right there and then, but decided to give it a second chance and watched the second episode, which was considerably better.
As one would expect, Free! follows a high-school swimming team, made up of four members, who, as the show for some reason makes a gleeful point of pointing out, all have girly names. The closest we have to a protagonist is the star of the team, the quiet and standoffish Haruka, who has a bizarre fascination with being in water.
Haruka himself is one of the biggest issues with the show. Most of the time, he just seems unpleasant. He's really insistent about the fact that "I only swim free", which gets to be really annoying, and, until the final two episodes, doesn't seem to justify the affection that everyone else seems to feel for him in any way. He's mopey, picky, standoffish, and just a downer to have around. There's a few mildly funny gags where a couple of his obsessions are made fun of, but that's unfortunately the highlight of his character.
The rest of the team, thankfully, does a lot better. There's the captain and backstroke specialist Makoto, who comes across very much as a gentle giant, friendly and understanding, as well as acting as the emotional backbone of the team. There's also Nagisa, the resident jokester and beam of sunlight, whose relentless energy and positive attitude originally annoyed me, but very quickly grew on me (he actually eerily reminds me of Persona 4's Teddie in that way), as well as Rei, the new guy who actually goes through a fairly effective (if oft used) arc, starting off as the cold logic guy and eventually turning out to be one of the people most in touch with the emotions of those around him. The supporting cast, (namely the team's manager Gou/Kou, the coach, and the teacher sponsoring the team) are actually some of the better characters, with their support for the team feeling genuinely heartfelt.
The plot is fairly barebones, as one would expect of a sports anime: Haruka, Makoto and Nagisa used to be on a team with Rin, another star swimmer. Rin left, he's now come back, and he's a jerkass obsessed with beating Haruka. What ensues is the new swim team going through a bunch of hurdles to compete against Rin, including setting up the team from the ground up, training, and a bunch of competitions. Eventually, the four of the old team members reconcile and learn that what really matters in competition is the power of friendship after all.
It's not precisely groundbreaking, but it works well, and it allows a few fairly tense moments to happen. The show's biggest hindrance is the sport it focuses on - the writing does do a really good job of setting up these tense situations, with a lot more than just a medal being on the line for the characters, but the payoff is never not disappointing. The swimming scenes are never more than a few seconds long, and consist of an animation just looping over and over whilst people yell in the background. The most intense these get is in one of the final confrontations, when Rin and Haruka get red and blue (respectively) backgrounds with speedlines.
The other big hurdle the show fails to satisfyingly jump over is Rin. If he was supposed to be a downright unlikeable jerk, then the show's done a great job, but he's actually supposed to be an old friend of the teams, and as I said, they end up reconciling by the end. There's also some tragic backstory about his dad clumsily tacked on, which leads me to believe he's meant to be at least mildly sympathetic. This does not work well. Rin seems like a genuine asshat, acts like a genuine asshat, and looks like a genuine asshat. The only times he's seen being nice to anyone are flashbacks to his childhood, and the very end of the series. The entire rest of the time he's making derisive comments to everyone, being both a sore winner and a sore looser, and just being a prick in general. This unfortunately ruins the emotional climax of the show, which is centered around him. Also, for some reason the artists decided to give him pointy teeth, which just goofy as fuck.
Rin's teeth stand out because this is a very good looking show. The characters are especially well drawn, which comes to no surprise as a large part of the show's appeal for its intended demographic is supposedly the pretty buff boys in swimsuits. Whilst I'm not very attracted to that, I do have to say, those boys are really pretty, really buff, and those abs are very lovingly detailed. Fortunately, everything else is also very competently drawn, looking sharp and clear, with the water being especially impressively pretty.
The show has also got a pretty great soundtrack. Whilst the opening and ending themes are fairly generic, a lot of the music that plays throughout the show is genuinely great, though it tends to have issues with fitting what's going on on screen well, with goofy music occasionally playing over serious moments and viceversa. This is especially true of the one bizarre exception to the otherwise mostly instrumental music: the dubstep track. This is my favorite song on the soundtrack, not because I like dubstep (I enjoy how dumb it is, and that's about it), but because it almost feels like it was intentionally placed over inappropriate scenes, which resulted in me repeatedly laughing out loud as someone climbed out of a pool to intense wub-wubs.
Character and World Building:7 /10
The supporting cast is really great, with a considerable amount of both memorable and endearing characters. Unfortunately, the two main characters of Haruka and Rin are both boring and unlikeable, which brings the series down immensely.
Story: 5/10
It's there. The main drive behind the story is a relationship that's very much uninteresting, and the plot is one we've seen plenty of times, but it's done decently enough that it doesn't get in the way. The main appeal of the show is the moment-by-moment conflict, not the overarching plot, and that's usually driven enough by the characters I did like to be effective.
Presentation: 5/5
I can find no issue but Rin's teeth and that one dubstep track.
Enjoyment: 10/15
Despite a lot of the flaws, I did find myself immersed in the moment-to-moment drama, and the humor was often effective. Unfortunately, the constant downer that is Haruka, and the occasional unpleasantness that is Rin bring the show down a lot, and manage to drop the enjoyment rating by 4 just by themselves, with the anticlimatic swimming scenes nailing the coffin shut. If Haruka had acted the way he does in the final episodes through the whole series, this would likely have been considerably higher.
Overall: (7+5+5+10)/40
27/40
6.75/10
Despite it not being what I like, Free! did manage to hold my attention, and didn't feel like a waste of my time. It's got some very strong writing in the characters, but three very clearly defined fatal flaws that just divebombed my enjoyment of the whole ordeal. It's not something I'd recommend unless you're attracted to males and are into the typical sports formula, but if you are Free! is more than likely worth every second of its running time.