18IF
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
13
RELEASE
September 29, 2017
LENGTH
23 min
DESCRIPTION
Haruto Tsukishiro wakes up in a dream world and sees a mysterious girl named Lily. Following this, he meets a man named Kanzaki and learns of the existence of witches, which from here on entangles him in all sorts of incidents.
18if is a part of a multi-media project that also includes a mobile game and a virtual reality game.
CAST
Haruto Tsukishiro
Nobunaga Shimazaki
Lily
Kaori Nazuka
Katsumi Kanzaki
Takehito Koyasu
Airi Kojima
Ai Kakuma
Eve
Ayako Kawasumi
Kayo Sugisaki
Nao Tamura
Mari
Yuriko Fuchizaki
Yurina Kanzaki
Nao Touyama
Misaki
Emi Nitta
Yuuko Sakurabe
Aya Endou
Hanako Sumitomo
Shiho Nanba
Sono
Fumiko Orikasa
Nene
Inori Minase
Natsuki Kamikawa
Misato Fukuen
Mirei Saegusa
Azumi Asakura
Akito Kaminaga
Hiroshi Kamiya
Mana Hayashida
Yuu Shimamura
Ehyeh
Fuminori Komatsu
EPISODES
Dubbed
REVIEWS
WillQ
60/100A show about dreaming of anime ladiesContinue on AniListOnirism in media will always have a soft spot in my heart. The stories of dreamlike, where the audience has to constantly question what's real and what isn't. The worlds that operate on their own internal logic, which the viewer is first taught, and afterwards challenged to keep up with. The ability to completely deconstruct any preconceptions and mold them in whatever shape envisioned. Dream scenarios are the domain of endless possibilities, the ultimate blank canvas where you can do anything you want, break any rules you wish to, with no repercussions.
And that is why a dream can simultaneously become a trapping. After all, the allure of such freedom is hard to deny. For creators, who might become addicted to the consequence-free working environment and become worse storytellers because of it. And for the audience, who might partake in the little-known phenomenon called "escapism". The latter has become a staple trope in various genres, from meta-fiction to coming-of-age stories.
18if is no different in this field. A boy named Haruto enters dreams of suffering girls to figure out the cause of their misery, and do something about it if possible. The escapism motif gets explored in decent depth, looking at different cases and various responses to diverse situations. Successful, famous people yearning for simple, ordinary life. Victims wanting to exact revenge on their oppressors. Unfortunate souls that experienced a trauma and can’t move forward. The show asks the question: when is escapism OK? Why exactly is it dangerous, and in what manner? But also, can it help you, and if so, then how? But perhaps most shockingly, it ponders - what if it's neither good nor bad? Why not just treat it as a lifestyle choice?
While the individual scenarios are fairly simple and chliched, the picture painted by the entirety of the show is slightly more intricate. In fact, the worsted compiled by all the individual plot threads is so tangled, that the series doesn't even try crocheting the final chapter out of it. Instead it abandons the topic of escapism and devotes the last few episodes to its internal mythology. It's a hard decision to judge, and part of me wishes the show had just stuck with its major theme till the end. But in a sense such shift really does fit this kind of story. In the end, the task of combining all the answers and extracting thoughts on escapism is left to the viewer.
This isn't the only unusual story structure decision made by the show, as some of the messages left by individual episodes feel contradictory, as if they are meant to dare the viewer to disagree. In particular, the episode where protagonist tells a character to give up on her wishes and stop escaping her destiny comes to mind. In that sense the series feels thought-provoking, as it touches on big ideas, but absolves itself from responsibility of moralising. Instead it just rummages the topic and leaves the task of cleaning it up to volounteering viewers.
What it does put effort into is maintaining the dream-like atmosphere in all its facets. For example, there's big focus on leaving things unsaid. Open endings and unanswered questions are one thing, but what's more important are details such as the method in which professor Kanzaki enters the dream world, or how he brought his device that allows communication with real world into it, or the mechanics of what happens when Haruto falls asleep inside the dream world. None of that is explained or brought up, it just gets accepted for what it is.
In similar vein the show sometimes breaks one of the golden rules of storytelling, when it connects consecutive story beats with dreaded "and then", rather than usually preferable "therefore" and "but". This is the main tool used to make the dreamlike stories feel, well, dreamlike. After all, dreams rarely make sense. They operate on their own internal logic that works while you're inside of them, but is jarring from the outside perspective. Moreover, characters will sometimes try to make sense of the world's rules and question certain events, but usually they just accept things as they happen, which is another characteristic of specifically oniristic narration, rather than fully abstract.
The final piece of the puzzle is the use of different animation styles (along with different directors) for each episode. Between melancholic episode 3, fable-like episode 7 and narratively-experimental episode 8, every dream world has its own distinct feel, immediately setting the tone of the story and telling us a lot about the type of person whose domain it would be. Solid pacing and good audio mixing further help in immersing us into these worlds, and sometimes the series hits some serious highs.
However, I find it really hard to rank it. For instance, I wonder whether I’m giving creators too much credit by assuming that the ham-fisted final was intentional. I also have to say that most of the series has very few interesting observations. It will make a funny comment about idol world here or bring up an unusual topic there, but then it just gets acknowledged and show moves on, making no impact on the way. There’s no doubt in my mind that there are plenty dream stories more worthwhile (Paprika for one). But at the very least, it’s rare to see one with “monster of the week” formula. Perhaps that is enough of a reason to check 18if out for yourself.
0215MADman
93/10018if is a criminally underrated anime series, it's the most fun I've had with an anime in a while.Continue on AniListI don’t tend to review a lot of shows on Anilist because I’m required to make the review at least a certain length, when usually I only have about a paragraph’s worth of things to say at most. For those I’ll just put them in notes. That and whenever a review isn’t preaching to the choir, say a negative review of something that is viewed positively, no matter how good of a point they make, it’s usually downvoted irregardless of review quality. Now sometimes it’s a case of a review actually being bad, my 20th Century Boys review spent way too much time talking about the negatives for something I gave a 9/10. But I wanted to bring all of this up because I do not expect people to like this review. This is a VERY positive review of a show that people don’t really like.
But I don’t care because I need to explain why this might be the most underrated anime I’ve seen so far in my life.
I didn’t think that when I first started, I doubt anyone did. I saw the first episode a few months ago, thought it was nonsensical trash but ENJOYABLE nonsensical trash. So I put it on my Plan to Watch because I thought I would like it in the same way that I like Future Diary, Killing Bites, or Ben-To: as dumb fun. Episode 2 follows suit, another HILARIOUSLY edgy episode that put a big smile on my face. Then the show kept going. And eventually I realized that 18if wasn’t trying to be edgy, at least not anymore. I started to understand what it was trying to do.
There are 13 episodes in 18if. Only the last three are connected. But most follow the same structural idea: Haruto Tsukishiro is a “dream lord” (there’s no actual name for what he does, but it’ll do for this review), who works with Katsumi Kanzaki to help bring girls out of “sleeping beauty syndrome”. That I did not make up for this review, they call it sleeping beauty syndrome when in reality it’s just a coma but all the patients are girls. Every episode is about these two “dream lords” going into the dreams of girls in comas and trying to get them out. Past that, there’s no real connected plot. Like real dreams, there are no rules. Anything, AND I MEAN ANYTHING, can and will happen.
The best way to categorize 18if is as an anthology series. But in the way that Space Dandy and Paranoia Agent are anthology series. The main characters stay the same but the situations and the people they meet are all up to whatever that week’s director feels like doing. Which makes sense when you consider who the chief director is: Koji Morimoto. This is the only TV series that he’s ever done, what he’s known for is his work in anthology movies. Robot Carnival, The Animatrix, Short Peace, Genius Party Beyond. He did the Magnetic Rose segment of Memories, which is most people’s favorite of the film. That should give you an idea that this is not about continuity. It’s about giving directors money and a 22 minute runtime to do whatever the hell they feel like.
So it should come to no surprise that a chief director who doesn’t care about continuity making a show about dreams leads to one of the most insane anime that I’ve ever watched.
THIS. SHOW. IS. FUN. If you take anything away from this review, it’s that this show is fun. Episode 3 is the only one that I would say has any semblance of normality. The rest are just crazy. Either the episode at its core is bizarre or it’ll be a heartwarming story with the MOST WTF ENDING! There is more than one episode like that! 18if gives me the feeling of a hypnotic fever dream that so many anime try to succeed at but end up failing somewhere down the road.
I haven’t really talked about the episodes themselves, mostly because that would spoil the fun. If you don’t need any more convincing then just go now, gather as many friends as you can, add alcohol if that’s what you’re into, and have a blast. But for those who need/want more convincing, I’ll vaguely say what my favorite episodes are.
- Episode 2 was the funniest episode. It’s super edgy, the editing was hilariously bad, if the whole show was like this I still would’ve liked it.
- Episode 5 told the best overall story. It’s the classic “fame is a nightmare” story but it’s portrayed well here. Probably my favorite 18if episode period.
- Episode 6 had the funniest ending. It was so monumentally dumb, I loved it.
- Episode 7 had the best visuals. IT WAS BEAUTIFUL! If you only watch one episode, make it this one.
18if is not perfect, but it took me on a journey that I’ll never forget. People say it’s hit or miss but the hits vastly outweigh the misses for me. If you want something different in your anime, well there’s nothing here that you’d be able to predict. When it wasn't dumb, it was gorgeous. Above all else, I had fun with 18if.
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SCORE
- (2.8/5)
TRAILER
MORE INFO
Ended inSeptember 29, 2017
Main Studio GONZO
Favorited by 78 Users
Hashtag #18IF