Wonder Egg Priority was an original anime that debuted last Winter 2021. I didn’t initially pick it up, but I
eventually did, for it seemed like it was going to be the best new anime of the
season, based on the buzz it was generating.
Catching up with it, I came to agree that it deserved the hype. It was that good. If I had given it a review after the season ended
(March), I would have raved about it.
However, I didn’t review it then, since it wasn’t technically finished
yet, as the finale was put off until June – a move that’s atypical for a
seasonal anime. And, sadly, the finale disappointingly
failed to nail the landing.
The show
starts off following a socially withdrawn 14-year-old girl named Ai Ohto. While she had experienced bullying because of
having heterochromia, what really messed her up was the suicide of her best
friend, Koito Nagase, which caused her to stop attending school. One day, she encounters a talking bug that
leads her to an abandoned arcade that has a secret entrance to an underground
garden. There, she finds a gachapon
machine that allows her to buy a mysterious egg. That night, in her sleep, she enters a dream
world where the egg hatches, revealing a girl inside. Apparently, this girl is someone who has
committed suicide in the real world. Ai
also learns that, while in this dream world, she must protect the girl from a
horde of impish creatures called Seeno Evils as well as this girl’s Wonder
Killer, a monster embodiment of the trauma that pushed her to suicide. After accomplishing this task, it’s revealed to
her that if she accomplishes a number of other such missions, Koito may be
brought back to life. Thus, Ai becomes
motivated to buy more Wonder Eggs and save more girls from their Wonder Killers
in the dream world.
At first,
you aren’t really sure what’s going on with Wonder
Egg Priority. The psychological
premise, zany and metaphorical visuals, and surreal happenings in the narrative,
paired with the trippy feeling produced by the way it’s directed and edited,
make everything seem ambiguous – whether what we see is actual or just
something occurring in Ai’s head. Still,
any confusion that you experience at this point will only pique your interest
for more rather than turn you off.
Besides, it
doesn’t even take a long time before it becomes clearer that it’s meant to be
taken literally – all the weird stuff we’ve been seeing are actually happening.
Soon after
the first episode, Ai subsequently meets three other 14-year-old girls who are
also doing Wonder Egg missions to save someone dear to them – Neiru Aonuma, a reserved
and quiet genius who is already the president of her own company; Rika Kawai, a
loud and impulsive junior idol; and Momoe Sawaki, whose looks are usually
mistaken for that of a handsome boy, that other girls even fall for her. Quickly turning to a close-knit quartet, they
draw from their friendship the strength to overcome the challenges they
respectively face and heal from the emotional wounds that they respectively
carry.
So, yeah, as
it turns out, Wonder Egg Priority is a magical girl anime all along.
However,
even if such a genre isn’t your usual jam, this anime will still likely win you
over. It just has an appeal that
transcends genres. Besides, it’s really
nothing like your typical magical girl shows.
Imaginative and unconventional, the narrative mixes splendidly
stimulating high-concept ideas and moving human drama, while tackling dark and
touchy themes through both cleverly symbolic imageries and thought-provoking
plot points.
Yet the ambitious,
intriguing storytelling isn’t even its most evident and greatest hook. That would be its aesthetics. Its animation is one of the best, if not the
best, I’ve seen so far in an anime this year.
It’s one of those “every frame is a painting” kind of animation. Every visual aspect – character designs,
backgrounds, action sequences, compositing, etc. – is utterly stunning. On top of that, it also has a fantastic
soundtrack, which yields many compelling “breathtaking sakuga + engaging music”
set pieces. In relation to this, there
is also legit charm from the juxtaposition of the plot’s dark topics with the vibrant,
colorful animation.
But, alas,
it stumbles with the finish, to the detriment of its overall impression. The show’s failure only becomes definite in
the finale, but in retrospect, it actually starts showing red flags when it’s
about to enter its final quarter. First,
episode 8 turned out being a recap episode.
Now, recaps episodes are made by a production to buy time. When a seasonal anime does it, it usually
(but not always) signify trouble.
However, everyone was thoroughly won over by the show that nobody really
suspected that it was on its way to becoming a trainwreck. The show was overflowing with goodwill that
everyone just believed that episode 8 serving as a recap episode was the plan
all along. Then, by episode 9, it took a
turn to Darling in the Franxx
territory (if you’ve seen that anime, you would know what I mean). As a result, it overcomplicated the plot in
areas that didn’t need more complexity, and it oversimplified the plot in areas
that needed more elaboration. Again, all
these were only truly realized in retrospect, as at that moment in time, the
show had earned so much goodwill that fans trusted that the finale special in
June would be capable of tying up all these sizable amount of plot threads in a
completely satisfying manner. When it
was announced that this finale special was going to be have a double-sized
runtime, everyone interpreted that that’s enough time to explain and resolve
everything.
Well, as it
turned out, the advertised length of the special was pretty deceptive. While it did have double the usual runtime of
an anime episode, half of it was spent on recapping the season. And with the remaining time it had, the total
number of lingering loose ends that it gave a satisfying resolution to was
zero. Its way of trying to get away with
it is having a sort of a cliff hanger ending, in which the door is kept open
for either a hypothetical or potential sequel.
Sure, it’s possible that a season 2 can still redeem this anime, but if
this is to be the case, the actuality of a season 2 should have been established
much earlier. While it was ongoing, the
impression it gave – especially with the way it scheduled and hyped that finale
special – was that it was meant to be a limited series. Thus, opting for that kind of finish only leaves
a bitter taste in the fan’s mouth.
Overall, Wonder Egg Priority felt like an anime
that was made on the fly – a production that started strong, had an excellent
middle, but lost its way in the end. And
by ending on a sour note, the excellence – and, oh, how excellent indeed was this
show during its best! – that it displayed during the course of the series is
almost erased.
Still, personally, rather
than how it ultimately ended up being a massive letdown, I would like to
remember this show when it was at its most glorious. In fact, come to think of it, despite of how it wrapped up, I will still recommend this show, as it definitely offered something different from any other anime we’ve seen before.
Wonder Egg Priority may be a dumpster fire. But while on its way to becoming one, the
blaze was gorgeous and mesmerizing.
No comments:
Post a Comment