First Impressions – Skip to Loafer

OP: “Mellow” (メロウ) by Keina Suda

Another day, another premiere of a show that would have been my top pick in a lot of seasons.  I haven’t read Skip to Loafer, but this felt like as safe a bet as those circumstances could ever allow.  So far pretty much every first episode I’ve watched this season has almost perfectly matched my expectations (whether I knew the source material or not).  And given how lofty my expectations for the season are, that’s generally a very good thing.  I was fully expecting to like Skip to Loafer a hell of a lot, and that’s exactly what happened.

This is only the second manga adaptation P.A. Works has ever done, so in a funny sort of way it represents a move both towards conventionality and a change of pace for them.  I was a pretty big PAW fan at one time but for me they’d really lost their way over the past decade.  It seemed like almost everything they did (Uchouten Kazoku being the glaring exception) was desperate to deliver exactly what people’s idea of a P.A. Works series was, and that was no longer something I wanted to watch.  So their branching out is, on balance, a plus in my book.  Skip to Loafer is less of a stylistic departure from them than Akiba Maid Sensou or even Paripi Koumei (their first manga adaptation), but still quite a different look and feel for PAW.

That look is down both to mangaka Takamatsu Misaki and Deai Kotomi, the industry stalwart who’s handling both direction and series composition here.  I certainly don’t love everything she’s done but Deai is capable of outstanding work, and she has a very distinct visual style that suits the material perfectly.  I can’t help but think Skip to Loafer would have been a Brain’s Base series ten years ago – the color palette and thematic structure are right up their street – and indeed that studio is where Deai-sensei did most of her best work.

In addition to being a huge romcom season spring is also a seinen bonanza, and Skip and Loafer is another that checks both boxes.  It’s also the first of the big high school romances to debutante (leaving only marrieds outstanding, though ToniKawa will address that).  In fact it reminds me of one of my current favorite seinen (or any) manga, Hirayasumi – though it would be more correct to say the opposite was true.  The heroine is Iwakura Mitsumi (Kurosawa Tomoyo), a small town gal from Ishikawa on her way to start high school in Tokyo.  Mitsumi has her new life planned out to the last detail, but it soon becomes pretty clear that her reserves of common sense are not on par with her book knowledge.

It would be fair to say Mitsumi is unprepared for the scale of Tokyo – her middle school had all of eight pupils, which is surely a reason many such kids go to Tokyo to attend high school.  She’s staying with her father’s “sibling” Nao-chan (Saiga Mitsuki), who it’s strongly hinted is a trans woman (the choice of seiyuu supports that supposition).  But despite Nao’s warnings Mitsumi (who had no idea cities could have more than one train line, as her’s had zero) gets hopelessly lost on the way to school.  Fortunately for her the kindly Shima Sousuke (Egoshi Akinori), a classmate, is running late himself (overslept) and takes pity on her in her obvious misery.

To some extent we seem to have an obvious opposites attract scenario here, though Mitsumi is so sheltered and Sousuke such a bishie that she never had a chance anyway.  This appears to be an elite school, and Mitsumi is in fact that spokesperson for the first-years at the entrance ceremony (which presumably means she got the highest score on the entrance exam).  She’s genki, scatterbrained, and naive.  Sousuke seems to be carefree, maybe a bit unserious, and is as tall and glamorous (and blond) as she is ordinary-looking.  But they’re both nice people, and clearly each is attracted by the strangeness of the other.  It’s not hard to see where this is headed.

There are a lot of potentially really interesting pieces to this puzzle.  Each lead has their own orbit of pre-existing satellites – his middle school pals and her family and bestie (and pets) back home, and it seems as if neither is going to be ignored.  They’ll surely make friends in school, and then there’s Nao-chan’s intriguing situation to consider.  Ultimately though of course Skip to Loafer is going to focus on the title pairing (whether those will be official nicknames or just implied I don’t know), and they seem more than up to the task.  They’re an extremely likeable couple and this premiere was winning in an effortless, breezy way.  It looked and sounded great (loved the music), and it seems pretty much like a can’t-miss prospect at this point.

ED: “Hanauta to Mawarimichi” (ハナウタとまわり道) by Rikako Aida

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10 comments

  1. Am current on the manga, so I can say that you’re in for a treat (and a few surprises to boot). The look of this adaptation is amazing. Probably my favorite sequence comes when Sousoke is jogging after Mitsumi once she takes off her shoes and stockings and books it to the school. It’s a lovely page in the manga, but animating it gives an energy to the moment when he first sees her for who she is and gets hooked (even if he’s not entirely conscious of that fact). Also, thanks for the Hirayasumi recommendation.

  2. You’ll thank me even more after you read it…

  3. I may be bingeing it right now …

  4. T

    Is Sousuke supposed to be blond? I thought it was just anime hair colour.

    I haven’t been so charmed by a first episode in a long time. The seiyuu for Mitsumi was fantastic.

  5. If that isn’t blonde I don’t know what blonde is…

  6. Definitely a show I’ve been waiting to see animated. I do love how the backgrounds are standard, but the colors makes it more pleasant and warm.

  7. N

    Well, I was charmed. Okay, I was already 50% there after the OP, but everything else after that was just as delightful. Fish-out-of-water scenarios are a staple and it worked out really well here.

    There’s also something to be said about the “best laid plans” as the day couldn’t have gone more off-script for our heroine Iwakura Mitsumi. Indeed, she had her entire all planned out from high school and to the great beyond. I know what you mean about the trains when I visited Japan. Wait, there’s a JR Central, East and West? Incidentally, I got to ride on all three lines. Despite getting hopelessly lost, this bring her to a chance meeting with Shima Sousuke. In his case, he’s just lollygagging on purpose as he doesn’t care for getting to the entrance ceremony on time. However, Mitsumi does have a reason not to be late, which we’ll see later.

    The speech that she was able to dictate from memory and then the aftermath sums up her character quite well. She may be out-of-her-depth so far, but she worked hard to get there. Sorry to hear about the nickname too. Once you known as “The…”, it can be difficult to shake it off. Even if others didn’t see it, the school’s grapevine moves that quickly.

    There’s a lot to like already from the art direction, the music and our two leads. I look forward to seeing the other members of the cast and how the rest of the show goes on.

  8. Yeah, love how specific her characterisation has been in just one episode: she’s focused to the point of neuroticism, anxious, an overachiever that can’t help but worry, wildly oscillating between overconfidence and crushing failure. To put it like a certain Denji meme, “she just like me FR FR”. Can’t help but sympathise and root for her!

  9. N

    Yes, same here. There won’t always be days like this, but she made it out okay *sees final moments of the episode*. She can still get some sleep on the train, yes? I look forward to seeing how she plays off the rest of the cast.

  10. So happy to see this animated. Been following the monthly serialisation for some time (same monthly magazine as Vinland Saga and Ookiku Furikabutte). I enjoy seeing Sousuke finding himself from not really interested in school but because of how Mitsumi intrigues him that he is now looking forward to it.

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