SUKI NA KO GA MEGANE WO WASURETA
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
13
RELEASE
September 26, 2023
LENGTH
24 min
DESCRIPTION
With the new school year comes a new homeroom, new classmates, and a new desk for the timid Komura. But any trepidation he might've felt quickly dissipates when he catches sight of Mie, his new seat neighbor. Apt to quietly blurt out the most random things, the quirky Mie wears thick glasses that accentuate her lovely eyes, making Komura’s heart skip a beat!
Unfortunately, Mie is pathologically forgetful and can never seem to remember to bring her glasses to class. It's not all bad, though! Her resulting squinty, mean-girl face sends Komura’s heart into overdrive too! While Komura is keen to help out and share his textbooks with Mie, will his heart give out from the almost daily strain of being up close and personal with his crush?!
(Source: Square Enix)
CAST
Ai Mie
Shion Wakayama
Kaede Komura
Masahiro Itou
Yuika Hibuchi
Saki Miyashita
Narumi Someya
Shino Shimoji
Ren Azuma
Ryouhei Kimura
Asuka Kawato
Aya Uchida
Maho Toyama
Minori Suzuki
Tomo Yasaka
Yuusuke Kobayashi
Tokita-kun
Kentarou Tone
Joshi Seito
Harumi Sakurai
Rika no Sensei
Shinya Takahashi
Rekishi no Sensei
Junichi Saitou
Taiiku no Sensei
Kouji Kawakami
Telop
Eriko Matsui
EPISODES
Dubbed
RELATED TO SUKI NA KO GA MEGANE WO WASURETA
REVIEWS
ZNote
70/100Truly malleable - it’s just as broken or beautiful as you want it to be.Continue on AniList(Video includes audio. Be sure to unmute) There’s an old sentiment that gets repeated when it comes to consuming art – everyone is entitled to their own interpretations and opinions. In the pure abstract, this is true, but it’s also true that media sometimes requires us to lean more towards certain takeaways than others. I highly doubt anyone would watch Girls und Panzer and come away with the sense that it was critiquing Soviet Union sociopolitical dogmatism—though I would love to see someone actually try arguing that in earnest—or that serial experiments lain was just everyone tripping balls on LSD and that all that stuff about “the Wired” was just a drug-induced hallucination. Yet every once in a great while, there comes a property that, either in its material as written or its presentation as shown, is a genuine Rorschach inkblot test. How you end up seeing it says more about you than it does about the art itself, or to put this into more contextually-relevant terms, more about you as a viewer than it does about the studio that made it.
Enter The Girl I Like Forgot Her Glasses, a show whose trailer quickly became the recurring conversation in the leadup to the Summer 2023 anime season. Even before a single episode had aired, everyone seemed to map a feeling onto it. “It looks like garbage,” one would say. “It looks awesome,” another would chime. “It looks like awesome garbage,” shouted a third person. The truth is that all three are correct, because studio GoHands managed to create a show that would be impossible to disappoint, providing an endless stream of frustration for its detractors who saw it as nothing but drudge, comfort food for those who wanted something free and easy with its romantic comedy, and hilarity for those who wanted to see the “most extra” presentation for shockingly mundane material.
(The opening animation already sets up the crazed, chaotic nature of the visual storytelling, with bewildering perspective and aggressive compositing being a fixture of the experience) And the material certainly is that. Caught within the whirlwind of young infatuation, Komura Kaede is smitten with his next-door seat neighbor Mie Ai. Though not the smartest student or the most athletically gifted, Komura cannot help but find her adorable (and with that many individual strands of anime hair, who could blame him?). One day however, Mie ends up forgetting her glasses, leaving her to rely on Komura for the present situation. From there, the show’s vignettes follow a familiar cycle of Mie forgetting her glasses back at home and Komura being right there to either help her navigate when she can barely see, or try and make heads-or-tails of the myriad situations that cause his emotions to catch on fire. All the while, others are keen to weigh in on the plainly obvious budding relationship unfolding. Azuma, the class’s “cool dude,” makes it plain that he finds Komura’s attraction to Mie amusing, and secretly cheers him on, while Komeya takes every chance possible to ask Komura if he’s kissed Mie yet, and so forth.
(The secondary characters quickly catch on to Komura and Mie’s dynamic, coyly saying or doing things that gently nudge them towards the ultimate endgoal of the material) Like the innumerable romcoms before it, The Girl I Like Forgot Her Glasses banks on delaying any sense of confession or upfront emotional confrontation between its two characters to pad out the material and indulge in silliness and hijinks. Under normal circumstances, there is nothing here to tilt one’s head, except that because the characters in question are in middle school, it makes a little more sense why they aren’t quite so forthcoming about their own feelings. But the presence of GoHands’s over-the-top form of presentation does change the manner by which the material presents itself tonally. Because everything visually is so absurdly elevated to overcompensated degrees, everything within the written material is given a heightened sense of ridiculousness, even when a situation itself is completely run-of-the-mill.
On the surface, it reads as a kind of cinemanarrative dissonance – the mundane story of the text does not match the insane story of the visuals. In a film textbook, this might be framed as a death sentence; for The Girl I Like Forgot Her Glasses, it is the essential ingredient to fueling most reactions towards it, positive or negative. There is absolutely no reason why Mie’s hair should flap around like it has a life of its own when the window isn’t open, or the sound to go insane when she says something that makes Komura’s heart almost explode, especially when a situation just doesn’t call for it. Perhaps it could be said that the visual styling for The Girl I Like Forgot Her Glasses is to somehow recreate the way in which Komura sees the world. His thoughts concerning Mie almost cause his brain to short-circuit in real-time, and we become privy to his wigging out by gazing into the abyss of weird body proportions, camera angles, and aggressive effects. It is as though his mind constructs reality like the mirrors in a funhouse. That might be amusing for an attempt to find compositional harmony within this series, especially when confounded by questions that seem tailor-made to address something amiss in cinematography.
But buried underneath an endeavor like that is something far more cosmically eye-rolling, the question of “why is this like this” – of all the pieces of media GoHands could have given this treatment to, they gave it to something this plain!? Even Hand Shakers, perhaps GoHands’s most-infamous and well-known property, could offer the excuse of being a battle fantasy. It seems almost like a joke, but one that insists on treating it like a serious artistic decision, all the while you can’t escape the sense that it’s constantly winking at you to let you know that it’s aware it’s trying way too hard, and still occasionally failing outright.
(The original key animations / genga for the infamous sequence from the trailer, animated by Okubo Hiroshi, and how it looks within the finished product. The animation is a triumph not because of how good it is, but because with the storyboarding compositing, it’s a miracle this was ever completed. Note also how, in the completed cut during the final seconds, Komura enters the frame on the right not from the edge of the screen, but just appears instead) The experience is too surreal to cleanly summarize, frankly. I do not know who decided that The Girl I Like Forgot Her Glasses must look this way, but I find myself not caring to want to know, either. All I do know is that, in the moments where Komura manages to actually score some genuine points (like being willing to lie to Mie’s mom because he doesn’t want Mie to face her disappointment, or skimping out on a day at the arcade with his friends because he’s worried Mie won’t find the post office), I was having a blast watching it all unfold in its preposterously-presented glory. Even though not “every frame’s a (stupefying) painting,” there were plenty, and because of that, I couldn’t help but laugh at jokes I’d never find funny otherwise, or find myself cheering for characters whose actions I’d shake my head at.
Point being, The Girl I Like Forgot Her Glasses is a showcase of GoHands putting in not 100%, but a very particular kind of 100% that offers an endless supply of what-the-fuckery for those who see it that way. When American film critic Pauline Kael wrote in Harper’s Magazine in 1969, “…movies are so rarely great art that, if we cannot appreciate great trash, we have very little reason to be interested in them,” she could only dream of a show like this.
What a beautiful medium anime is, isn’t it?
potsu
70/100Another cookie cutter romance anime (full spoilers)Continue on AniListI had my hopes up for this anime when I saw the animation was unique. I didn't look at the reviews and scores so that it wouldn't influence my opinion and the whole time I was watching the anime I didn't read anyone else's comments to also not let them influence my enjoyment but in the end it was nothing special, in fact it was a letdown.
The early episodes were great, it felt refreshing seeing the high quality animation and the different angles it uses to portray each shot. Like there was a 20 second scene at the start where the mc is just going up the stairs. It looked a bit junky but it's still good seeing the light reflect off everything. And also, the main heroine has a lot of hair and I admire whoever had to animate that.
The plot is that... well... the mc (Kaede Komura) likes this girl called Ai Mie. Mie is practically blind without her glasses, she needs to be 5cm close to someone's face to recognise them but for some reason she keeps forgetting her glasses, and Komura is there to help her with her needs since she's practically blind. And that's the whole plot.
I don't hate a generic anime with a different troupe, I'm a fan of isekai and most isekai are the same but there's a different troupe to it. Like reincarnated as a first class assassin in another world, reincarnated as a hot girl in another world, reincarnated as a slime in another world etc. I haven't watched much romance animes but I've watched enough to understand that most of the "romance" anime never actually goes anywhere. At most the characters will hold hands, and the season ends. Well, it's the same for this anime. However it did get my hopes up when Komura (the male mc) is first presented a chance to confess to Mie (the female mc). They were alone in the classroom during white day with no disturbances, no fireworks, no phone calls, no alarms, no friends suddenly barging into the classroom, nothing. The vibe was there, since it was white day, a romantic day to say. And guess what? Komura chickened out. Look, I get it, it's only episode 4. They haven't built the characters enough yet, they haven't raked in those big bags of money yet, I get it. And this is when Komura promises to himself that he will confess before next year's valentine's day and I had my hopes up... until the anime ended without any development at all.
There was also another guy called Azuma, he's the handsome popular type of kid in school and girl's will basically faint whenever they found out they're breathing the same air as Azuma. In one episode he makes a move on Mie, which is rare because despite being popular and handsome he apparently does not find interest in the school girls, except Mie. But after he found out Komura likes Mie he became a bro and let Komura have her. Respect to Azuma he's a real homie but the amount of times Komura has pissed me off in this anime, oh boy I wished Azuma was the main character instead.
To list some of Komura's flaws: He has abnormally low self confidence, he cannot stop stuttering, he does not speak his mind and he does not want to take the initiative.
Watching more and more episodes I realise Komura keeps belittling himself for some reason. Like I get it, if your crush suddenly does something nice to you, you'll feel like that's weird and belittle yourself to make your mind calm down and not think that she has feelings for you. But no, in many cases Mie has displayed that she clearly has feelings for Komura, she is very bold. Yet Komura is as dense as a rock, that's normal for wimpy main characters. But what isn't normal is that he keeps belittling himself. He'd insult himself like he's no better than a bug every time Mie makes a move on him. I thought there had to been a tragic reason for it but nope, it was never explained. I guess that just shows how little self confidence he has in himself.
To point out the stuttering, after completing the anime I read the comments and also saw most people complain about the stuttering lol. The stuttering was so crazy that even when not paying attention to the anime I'd get annoyed whenever he stutters, he'd basically stutter for every sentence he speaks.
"Good morning, Komura!"
"G-G-G-G-GG-G-G-G-G-GGGG-G-G-G-GOOO-OO-OOD Mo-o-o-o-o-o-o-orning, M-m-m-m-m-mie!"
"tf bro u good?"
"Y-y-y-y-y-yy-ye" anime ends before Komura finishes his sentenceTo be fair, Komura does take the initiative sometimes, maybe 3 times in total. But most of the time, it's Mie that makes a move on him, and he'll always belittle himself and denies that Mie has feelings for him. This troupe repeated throughout the whole 13 episodes. Meaning there was NO development at all. I was so frustrated, such good characters, such good animation and such good voice actors wasted on this shitty writing. It didn't even seem like it was a cash grab anime, that's why I'm so mad.
Also, the funny thing is that the side characters became a couple before the main characters did.
Truth be told I would've dropped the anime on episode 5 if it weren't for Mie. Her character was so good that it carried the whole show. I also did some google search on the author because someone in the comments said the reason why the mc is so wimpy is because the author is a girl and they like wimpy little kids. Apparently the author for this series is also the author of oniichan wa oshimai, which the mc turned into a loli. Makes sense.
7/10, Mie carried the whole show and Komura trolled for 10 episodes.
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SCORE
- (3.4/5)
TRAILER
MORE INFO
Ended inSeptember 26, 2023
Main Studio GoHands
Trending Level 4
Favorited by 1,430 Users
Hashtag #好きめが