PUNCH LINE
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
12
RELEASE
June 26, 2015
LENGTH
24 min
DESCRIPTION
When your day begins with being held hostage in a hijacking, can things get much worse? How about being kicked out of your own body? Or learning that if you can't re-possess your physical shell, you'll trigger a panty-fueled apocalypse that will wipe out all life on the planet? For Yuta Iridatsu, it's just the start of the worst out-of-body experience ever. Now, if his dissed disembodied spirit doesn't pursue the persuasions of a porn-obsessed paranormal pussycat and purloin a missing mystical manual, a meteor will collide with Earth! And to stack the odds even further, the book is hidden somewhere in the boarding house Yuta shares with a bevy of beautiful babes, but if he gets an eyeful of his ravishing co-renters in their unmentionables before he's back in himself, it's flash-forward to Doomsday! Will the literal end of the world be wearing briefs, a bikini, or a thong? Find out when panties, possessions and extinction level events have the ultimate rear-end collision in PUNCH LINE!
(Source: Sentai Filmworks)
CAST
Mikatan Narugino
Sora Amamiya
Yuuta Iridatsu
Marina Inoue
Ito Hikiotani
Minako Kotobuki
Meika Daihatsu
Rie Kugimiya
Chiranosuke
Yuri Yoshida
Rabura Chichibu
Haruka Tomatsu
Ryuuto Teraoka
Kenji Akabane
EPISODES
Dubbed
RELATED TO PUNCH LINE
REVIEWS
Zageron
60/100Modestly ecchi, thankfully not detracting from its underlying charm. Not outstanding, but not a waste of time.Continue on AniListPunch Line is a modestly ecchi themed anime, that fortunately does not stick to it very strongly for the majority of the show. The introduction is understandably giddy and, luckily, tries not to take itself too seriously. Panties, nosebleeds, apocalypse, the trailer definitely does those justice, but don't let it fool you. The focus of the show switches to a more suitable theme very quickly, saving the viewers--mine for sure--interest. The somewhat serious nature of the show, with comedy relief, gives a decent mix of dark undertones and dumb up-skirt. If you're looking for an ecchi harem comedy, this isn't the place to stop. The themes are much more serious and subtle, with only a sprinkling of the panty shots in the early episodes.
The soundtrack was pretty well crafted, but is honestly not memorable at all. It is very quiet and non-invasive, instead adding to the atmosphere of any given scene. I cannot recall a single tune or melody after finishing the show, and failed to come up with anything substantial skimming throught the episodes or checking videos online. The opening theme, however, is quite memorable. It starts out being a rather irritating poppy tune resembling the supposed underwear centric show, but grows to be more cheeky and a very excellent contrast to the actual mood of the shows middle and ending arcs.
The secondary characters in Punch Line eventually become lovable, though extremely ditzy and irritating early on. An extensive amount of time is spent on the viewers chances to learn about everyone and their personalities--slice of life--and none of the characters are snubbed of their deserved time on screen. The main character, and their past, is especially interesting. I wont comment on Chiranosuke... not a fan.
I would recommend this as a filler anime if you're contemplating on the next 50+ episode anime you'd like to watch. Though it was an enjoyable experience, Punch Line is not a must watch nor is it outstanding by any means. Give it a try if you're having trouble picking something worth your while.
anagaogao
55/100Punchline is a ambitious and gorgeous anime that fails to tell a unique, plot-twisted time story due to poor writing.Continue on AniListThe anime was a good watch, vibrant colours, nice animation, the style is refreshing and the opening song is SUPER catchy . It was not a bad anime but I would not say is a must watch.
A lot of things made absolutely no sense and I expected them to be explained in the end, which never happened and that left me wondering if they even thought about what they were doing - or why they made such and such characters. At times it felt so random that it just seems for me that the anime had a weak plot and the staff had to randomly drop some ideas to make it seem like the plot was deeper, while in the end a lot of the secondary plot points introduced mostly in the beginning of the show ended up not mattering at all because of the greater plot introduced half-way.
The show had a lot of tone shifts, the comedic parts would sometimes come right after the more serious moments, making me have no time to have any feelings for what ever happened and making the seriousness of the plot rather a joke. I feel like they tried to make the show both dramatic, funny and ecchi all at once and what came out from that was a mess that made me have no reason to get invested in the anime whatsoever, it caused me to disconnect with the story and characters in such a way that if a character would die or if the planet would have exploded I would not care slightly.
The characters are forgetful, although not irritating they are also very blend, nothing I have not seen in hundreds of anime, not one character catches my attention and I feel nothing for the main character even with all the dramatic back story.
The music was OK, I had the opening song in my head for days, the ending is also nice, the OST worked well with the show's visuals.All things considered though, I must say that it was a fun watch, the anime is just really well done art-wise, it is a shame that it lacked so much in the story department.
I would recommend this anime for people seeking for an easy-going experience, the anime is rather short and is sure very vibrant. I would also recommend anime like FLCL or Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann as a better version of what Punchline was trying to achieve.planetJane
80/100You can call PUNCH LINE a lot of things, but it's certainly no joke.Continue on AniList*"to a supremely happy and peaceful future!"* *-title card at the very end of the series.* For a series that technically starts with a bus hijacking, you could be forgiven from assuming from its first episode that PUNCH LINE is a fun, loose, FLCL-inspired romp about a teenage boy who gains superpowers upon seeing panties, and is knocked out of his body and into the past as a ghost to right some great evil or another. It's kind of a weird premise but at first blush, a bit of an aping, and nothing on-the-surface special. This is half true, but there's a lot more to PUNCH LINE than merely a pastiche of one of the greatest anime ever made. There's a lot to PUNCH LINE in general, really. How else would you describe a series that starts as a fanservice-laden action-comedy, digs into a rabbit hole of conspiracy paranoia and time travel loops, and then dovetails into an excellent superhero show in its final two episodes?
Really if PUNCH LINE has a major flaw it's actually that it tries to do too much in its short runtime (just the standard single-cour twelve episodes. No more, no less), and its many moving parts lead to a bit of clash. But we're getting ahead of ourselves here, what exactly is PUNCH LINE? The simple answer is that it's a MAPPA-made (Yuri on Ice!!, Kakegurui, Teekyuu) animation that seems to have kind of arisen from nowhere. Directed by Yutaka Uemura, a man whose credits in the industry are sparse (and since PUNCH LINE ended, have included only the adaptations of the utterly noxious Tanya The Evil franchise), and written by Kotaro Uchokishi, an unknown within the anime industry but responsible for a good deal of video game writing outside of it (most famously, he is the writer behind Nine Hours Nine Persons Nine Doors), there is precious little to be found online, at least in English, as far as what prompted PUNCH LINE being made, so its origin is something of a minor mystery. My own best guess is that it may have been put forward to ride the wave of renewed interest in Daicon-lineage anime prompted by the success of Kill la Kill (not unlike the contemporary Rolling Girls), but a guess it remains.
Regardless of the why, the what of PUNCH LINE can be cleanly separated into the story's two major acts. In the first, Yuta--our protagonist--is knocked out of his body, and into the past, after essentially going super saiyan and overpowering a terrorist during a bus hijacking. How did he power up like this? Well, he saw one of his fellow passenger's panties.
*yes that is really why this happens*
Again, you could be forgiven for thinking that this show is exactly as screwball as it seems on the surface, but this actually does go somewhere. The first six episodes of the series revolve around Yuta's ghost attempting to avert the end of the world, to be caused by an Illuminati-like organization called the Qmay Group, who wish to destroy the planet via asteroid strike, and start human society anew. Thus, the first half of the series is a blend of Yuta trying to solve the mystery of how this is going to happen in the first place and thus try to stop it (with the "help" of a snarky cat spirit Chiranosuke), and some character development for the remainder of the cast. Going over every in and out of the residents of Korai House--where Yuta lives, and now, haunts--would take a lot of time, but in brief, these characters are; Mikatan, an idol who moonlights as the magical girl Strange Juice, Meika, her manager both in idol and hero life (who turns out to be a robot in the first of many, many plot twists), Ito, a shut-in with a pet bear cub who was bullied out of her school after she was seen being driven home by a teacher, and Rabura; an unlucky-in-love fake medium with a gyaru look about her. Lastly there is Kenji, a mysterious super sentai-style masked superhero with powers similar to Mikatan's, but he is something of a special case.
*oh and Ito dies at one point. Don't worry, it sticks for about ten minutes.*
Each of these characters gets enough fleshing out, often via flashbacks interlaced with narratives in the here and now, that when the shit hits the fan in the series' second act, you genuinely worry for all of their safety. Yuta, notably, observes these narratives but due to his nature as a spectre, is not really a part of them. This, as it turns out, is by design, as it's also in this second act that the plot starts to tie itself into knots, for both good and bad. The very, very broad stroke is that Kenji turns out to be Yuta from the future, and at the end of the sixth episode, Yuta actually fails to prevent the end of the world, and with the help of "Kenji", he goes back in time once again. Everything resets to the beginning of the series, and Yuta--now in possession of his body once again--makes a second pass at staving off the end of humanity, this time in an active and present way, and despite the pesterings of Chiranosuke, who tries to insist that he repeat his past actions almost exactly.
This doubling back on the narrative lets PUNCH LINE pull off an interesting trick. Things that seemingly made no sense the first time around are given additional context on the second, and it's here that the show starts foregrounding the mystery element (even as the comedy remains a constant throughout most of the episodes). We're introduced to the idea of uberfication (the super mode that several characters have), the virus that causes it, the motives of the Qmay Group, secret lab facilities and body-swapping. Yuta is even revealed to "biologically" be a girl (rather: his male soul has been swapped into a woman's body, it's complicated. As an aside, the show should be praised here for not making this into the subject of much jest or angst. The only person who really gives him any shit about it is Meika, who comes around eventually. It's no progressive masterpiece, but this is the sort of thing it's very easy to get wrong). This style of storytelling--revelation on top of revelation and twist on top of twist--is undeniably not to everyone's taste, but the rapid clip makes every episode count--PUNCH LINE has zero filler--and by the time the show is in its 11th hour (starting in the 11th episode natch), you're seriously rooting for the characters. Here, PUNCH LINE flips again, into a straight-ahead superhero show. The residents of Korai House become Justice Punch, and each plays a part in taking down a joint attack on the house by the US Army, The JSDF, and a battalion of supersoldiers called W's, all controlled by The Qmay Group. There's a real super robot feel especially to Ito's scenes, where she pilots a squat mecha created by Meika, her piloting ability hilariously being attributed to her skill at mecha sim video games.
*more shows should have a side character kick ass in an orange robot in the penultimate episode*
The ending is maybe a touch predictable. There is a heroic sacrifice--Yuta, or at least an incarnation of him, dies. To save the main villain no less--but life goes on for the surviving members, and Rabura, now somewhat inexplicably a genuine medium, is able to commune with his spirit.
PUNCH LINE's story, both in a literal and meta sense, could've ended there. Spectacularly though, this bizarre, underrated lovechild of FLCL and Zero Escape has managed to spawn a tiny franchise of its own. There is a sequel manga--unknown in the west, but apparently a direct continuation of the story from the anime, and, by sheer coincidence and mere days before I sat down to watch the show, a visual novel. Available, officially, in English, on the PlayStation 4, courtesy of translation company P-Qube. PUNCH LINE is far from a perfect anime--the humor in particular is very much a hit or miss sort of thing and will depend largely on how much humor you can still wring from panty gags, but there is a clear and apparent amount of love poured into every frame of it, and even though its ambition to be everything to all viewers outstrips what it actually pulls off, that's not really a knock against it in this case. If more anime aimed this high, PUNCH LINE would maybe be merely average, but most do not. To be sure, it's not exactly thought-provoking. But as far as anime that aim to hit you in the gut in just about every way possible, and succeed at just that, and for the sheer effort, PUNCH LINE deserves a watch. That it manages to be as good as it is is just icing on the cake.
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SCORE
- (3.25/5)
TRAILER
MORE INFO
Ended inJune 26, 2015
Main Studio MAPPA
Favorited by 463 Users