The second season of Love Live! Nijigasaki Gakuen School Idol Doukoukai.
~~~NO SPOILERS ~~~ ~~~img(https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FWGoSi9aAAAtzKZ?format=jpg&name=large) ~~~I am not your biggest Nijigasaki fan, literally I am not. You see I’ve always seen Nijigasaki differently from the other Love Live titles for many reasons that go from the single anime to other things but this is not the main subject of the day. Not many know but my very very first review about Nijigasaki was quite negative because I couldn’t feel what I felt with the other titles of the same franchise; I felt completely empty and I had a tough time even accepting it as an entry to the franchise because I felt it was completely wrong. Of course then I did a rewatch of Nijigasaki and something changed and I stopped hating it but it never became anything close to what I feel about the other Love Live anime, I simply cannot love it but I can only limit myself to liking it a decent amount for what it is. I’ve always felt like the first season focused way too much on the insane amount of characters rather than giving a good progression to the story and I won’t lie, I hated some episodes because they were insanely slow and without a real sense; I also hated the lack of imagination for the ambients because I’ve always felt it was poor on that aspect and the story **often** felt disconnected between each girl’s episode. But there was something that made me enjoy that anime, that something that I still can’t properly explain but I know it was within the characters because despite the heavily forced and sometimes rushed development there was something big that could come out of that. Did Sunrise learn from the past season and brought something better? Hell yeah, and not only.
Spoiler Warning Here we are with the anticipated second season of Love Live Nijigasaki. The first season received mixed reviews from fans of the series, but I thought it was the best Love Live installment at the time. This second season, however, does not properly execute based on the foundation laid by its predecessor. This season of Nijigasaki introduces three new characters, Lanzhu, Shioriko, and Mia, but the story is centralized around Lanzhu and her interactions with Shioriko, Mia, and the girls of the School Idol Club. Her philosophy is to captivate others and put on an amazing performance, with that being the extent of it. She also disagrees with the beliefs of the School Idol Club, she believes that people should pursue their dreams without needing the help of others. This creates conflict within the characters, where both sides believe in different things. Additionally, this creates an antagonist within the show, which is a first for Love Live, as well as one of the most interesting things that Love Live has done since its start in 2014. Where I find this anime to struggle is keeping its attention on this theme. At the start, it focuses on this quite solidly, featuring several developments between Lanzhu and the girls to further the plot. One of the main things that occurred during this development was the creation of subunits. Initially, the first subunit was made to “challenge” Lanzhu’s ideology. I feel that this progressed the plot well, carrying the themes of dreams nicely in a short, few-episode mini-arc. After this, two more subunits were formed. Why? I have no clue. The creation of these subunits made absolutely no sense. One of the more important things during the previous season of Nijigasaki was that everyone was a solo idol. Why do they suddenly want to join up when they were against it before? It’s incomprehensible. The pacing of this season was very inconsistent. Every arc in the show is dedicated to one or two episodes. Everything that was dedicated to a single episode was rushed, yet all assigned two episodes were properly developed. One exception to this rule was Mia, where I felt she got proper development due to how differently she was written from the rest of the cast. She got a single episode to share with Lanzhu, plus little bits of other episodes. Overall, this helped make her development feel more natural and did not require her to have an entire episode dedicated to herself. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said about Shioriko or Lanzhu. Shioriko followed the single episode rule, while Lanzhu only felt like she got the episode with Mia and bits of other episodes. While yes, Mia got the same treatment and it worked, why is Lanzhu different? Well, she is the main “antagonist,” while Mia was more of a side character. This inherently means there should be more put behind her than the other characters and this is where her character faltered. Another problem I had with the characters was the relationship between Ayumu and Yu. It could have been handled much more strongly. There was a deficiency of interactions within this season and it makes me question why they decided to establish their relationship in the former season. It wasn’t completely terrible though, as the show dedicated episode 12 to the two of them, which was one of the better episodes within the show. Despite everything I said so far, not everything about the characters and story is bad. The new characters bounce off the old ones when they interact and interactions between the cast as a whole are sharper than in the previous season. I had a solid amount of fun watching these events play out. The story is starting to reach its end as well. From where they are currently, they’ve started to worry about the graduation of the third-years. Although this could be seen as generic sports anime worries, or standard Love Live “we gotta win before the third-years graduate” kind of thing, I quite enjoy it. It is not an unreasonable thing to think about, while also providing a sense of time. The animation for this season was varied in quality, but overall solid. My biggest issue is the background art. Sometimes it looked perfectly fine, nothing too amazing, but was solid; at other times it looked like garbage. The backdrops looked like blurry jpegs without even attempting to be hidden. Characters would also be poorly composited within the scene. Outside of these moments, the show looked fine. The character models looked consistent most of the time and the performances looked solid. The animated segments of the performance all looked great, on par with the images from the game they’re based on. The CGI parts were decent. They weren’t as groundbreaking as something like Houseki no Kuni, nor as well-hidden as those in Love Live Superstar, but they looked fine. Speaking of performances, how did everything sound? It sounded really solid. The BGM was nice to listen to throughout the episodes, and the performances sounded pleasant. Granted, some performances were stronger than others, all were at least something that I would see myself listening to. The lyrics to these songs were all nice and occasionally meaningful, linking to their character arcs within the show, or, in the case of Lanzhu during the first episode, telling you about their character. This season of Nijigasaki has some highs, as well as some lows. From a technical standpoint, this show is pretty solid, providing captivating performances, while from a writing standpoint, this show can be lacking at times. Overall, this season has been somewhat of a downgrade from its promising first season, which has been very unfortunate to witness. Thank you for reading.
I’m not what you’d call a “Love Live fan”: I’ve never played the mobile game and I watched the Muse series many years ago, and I didn’t even like it back then. When Nijigasaki season 1 came out, I decided to give it a try, and surprise surprise, I enjoyed it. Nothing incredible or outstanding, but characters were cute, songs were bangers and always on point, visuals were good as well. The last part about Yuu and Ayumu felt quite terrible I must say, but overall it was an enjoyable series, which felt mostly an introduction to something… “better”? “Deeper”? Not sure, but I was hyped. After Nijigasaki I also watched Sunshine season 1 and Superstar, and guess what, they were even better, a lot better I'd say! So everything was going smoothly, and finally, Nijigasaki season 2 aired: characters were still cute, graphics and artistic-wise was still good… but it wasn’t a good show, at all. Where do I even start? #__New characters and new units__ This was something I was really thrilled about: brand new characters joined Nijigasaki! Right off the bat, in episode 1, one of them, Lanzhu, made her debut with an outstanding performance and a 10/10 song (we’ll talk about that later). It’s also pretty obvious her role in this series: she basically introduced herself as antagonist, since she wants to perform by herself and doesn’t want to join the Niji club. Aaand… that’s it. She has some screentime in episode 2, and then she’s just there, being somehow irrelevant. No monologue, no confrontation, every time she meets one of the main cast nothing really happens. Things about her start (and finish, I guess) to happen only several episodes later ~!when Mia writes a song to her and then they both joins the Niji club,!~ until then she just doesn’t matter anymore. And really, that’s it, that’s Lanzhu: cool, great voice and nothing else, absolutely worthless. The rest of the show is mostly filled with the original Niji girls creating new units in the worst possible way: something random happens, some of the girls are there and a unit is born, I’m not exaggerating here, it’s just random. Luckily, Mia and Shioriko do had their own episode, but either time it felt incredibly underwhelming. Somehow they tried to “tie” this new three character together and it actually feel like that Mia, Shioriko and Lanzhu were close, but not in a good way. “What do you mean?” you may ask, and that leads us to the next issue. #__Screentime management __ Our new girls needed more screentime, or at least a more impactful presentation to Shioriko and Mia, not just one episode each. Really, this show never gives the right amount of screentime to things that really matter while it always has room for improvised drama that last one episode and then suddenly ends. Are we actually in season 2? Well, give us more in depth bonding within the cast please, not only about Yuu and Ayumu and not some random events that accidentally lead to create a unit. You literally had 13 characters, are you really telling me that every single of them isn’t worth to do something better than this? I’m not against episodic structure, but Nijigasaki s2 is every single time about an event that seems more melodramatic than it actually is and stop, a unit is formed and the episode ends. Guess what? The best part of this series is without a doubt episode 10, which is a comedy and more lighthearted moment about Kasumin. So the whole storyline about Setsuna ~!finally revealing herself wasn’t important enough to have a whole dedicated episode? They absolutely needed to put in the same episode ANOTHER dramatic plot twist which endangers the festival but everything gets solved in 10 minutes, didn’t they?!~ So Rina ~!finally performing without her gear covering her face isn’t relevant enough to has his own space, they could just give it like a bunch of seconds during the last episodes!~ And guess what, ~!the unit about the damn new characters has absolutely no room in the whole series, it just suddenly appears for like 20 seconds in the last episode because, of course, it’s not relevant, isn’t it?!~ #__Music and performances__ Finally, Nijigasaki season 2’s best part. I know, I sounded very angry just a moment ago, but when we talk about Nijigasaki’s music and performances that’s absolutely nothing I can say about it: everything is simply flawless. Lights, colours, stages, choreography, songs, voices… Nothing is out of place. “Enjoy it” is currently one of my favourite songs (ever, not just about Love Live or anime shows), but “Star we chase” and “EMOTION” are bangers as well. “Eutopia” is probably my favourite performance, Lanzhu shows perfectly how she’s talented when on the stage (if only they gave her actually some space would’ve been nice too…). Opening and ending are included, they’re both catchy and perfectly fitting the whole series’ mood. I’d say that we didn’t even need this anime, these MVs uploaded on YouTube would’ve done way better than the actual series did. #__Verdict__ It’s pretty common to watch a series and don’t liking it. When it happens to me, I always understand why a specific show that I dislike might be enjoyed from others, you know, "live and let live", "let people enjoy things". Nijigasaki season 2 is the first show I can’t believe is being enjoyed, I can't believe it actually has its own fans: almost everything is trash and worthless, even though songs are 10/10 we’re talking about like 4 minutes per episode (including op and ed), and I’m pretty sure that Niji fans aren’t watching 20 minutes of nothing just to have some short performances. Everything felt rushed, every single character felt inconsistent, it’s a sparkling show about nothing. Did you like Nijigasaki season 1? Well done, stop right there, maybe you’ll better off playing the mobile game and watching MVs on YouTube, but really, ignore this season as whole. Let’s just forget about it, it’s not worth your time.
__Antes de leer__: ¡Hola!, esta es mi primera review, espero que te guste, planeo hacer más en el futuro así que cualquier consejo constructivo es agradecido. :D Nos encontramos ante la iteración más reciente de nuestras chicas del Nijigasaki, que tras el éxito del primer School Idol Festival, preparan ya el segundo. La serie comienza con la llegada de Lanzhu Zhong, una chica llegada de Hong Kong que viene a intentar ser la número uno entre las school idols, ella sola. La temporada empieza con el conflicto entre Lanzhu y las chicas del club, comenzando una rivalidad que nos llevará a nuevos horizontes, donde las chicas, que hasta ahora eran solistas, formarán unidades para demostrarle a Lanzhu que pueden brillar más que ella. ~~~img500(https://c.tenor.com/5vLDF7ELpowAAAAC/lanzhu-lanzhu-zhong.gif) ~~~ Mientras tanto, Yuu, intentará encontrar su hueco dentro del curso de música, donde otra chica extranjera le guiará (sin quererlo) hacia su nuevo camino como compositora. Las actuaciones de esta temporada ganan mucho respecto a las de anteriores, en la línea que ha seguido Love Live desde que acabase Sunshine!!, cada vez se superan más y más y ya el CGI casi no parece CGI. Aunque no llega al nivel de una actuación completamente animada como podemos ver en Idolm@ster, cada vez es más fluida y más vistosa. ~~~img500(https://c.tenor.com/5dbjqP2YP2kAAAAd/love-live-love-live-nijigasaki-school-idol-club.gif) ~~~ La música sigue la línea de la temporada anterior, aunque esta tiene menos canciones que la anterior, ya que si la anterior temporada teníamos de media una canción por episodio, en esta nos encontramos que hay capítulos donde no suena ni una sola canción, y eso en parte es refrescante. Love Live siempre se ha caracterizado por ser una franquicia muy conservadora, Muse y Aqours comparten argumento, y Liella! con las nuevas incorporaciones llega a la cifra mágica de 9 integrantes, y su meta sigue siendo llegar al Love Live, ganarlo y dar a conocer su escuela. Sin embargo las chicas del Nijigasaki son diferentes, y te lo hacen demostrar, primero, con un estilo de animación que difiere del resto de series de la franquicia, en segundo lugar, siendo principalmente solistas y unidades pequeñas, en tercer lugar siendo una cifra diferente a 9 chicas, ya que esta temporada llegamos a la cifra de 12. Además, ir o ganar el Love Live no es una necesidad o una prioridad, ni siquiera se lo plantean. No lo necesitan. La serie no lo necesita, lo que da a lugar a más comedia, desarrollo y escenarios interesantes. ~~~img500(https://c.tenor.com/ZQvv9yVRQE8AAAAd/love-live-love-live-nijigasaki-school-idol-club.gif) ~~~ Hay gente que lo tilda de aburrido, o de que no hay un argumento como tal. Pero yo valoro el hecho de que se tome su tiempo para desarrollar a los personajes y tener ese toque Slice of Life que tanto gusta. Sobre los personajes, cada vez conocemos más a las chicas y sus inquietudes y metas, y eso les da una profundidad que deja atrás al resto de chicas de la franquicia. Podemos ver como por ejemplo Kasumin tiene complejo de ser líder, como Lanzhu busca amistad y confianza, como Setsuna llega al punto de querer liberarse y ser ella misma... Cosas que no siempre se ven, o si se ven llegan solo a uno o dos personajes. En general creo que esta temporada de Nijigasaki, junto con la primera, forman la generación más disfrutable, no solo por la evolución que ha tenido, sino porque no repite la fórmula cíclica de todas las series. Habrá gente a la que le guste más o menos, pero de seguro no dejará a nadie indiferente y por supuesto que recomiendo su visualización. ~~~youtube(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_OMjQzHPqB0) ~~~
(This review was written before Love Live Superstar season two came out) If you had told me three years ago that I'd actually watch a Love Live season, I probably would have called you insane. Yet here I am having watched three Love Live seasons, one of which is a sequel and the subject of today's review. Long story short, I watched the first season of the _Love Live Nijigasaki_ anime on a whim and wound up liking it a lot, moreso upon finding out it finally ditched a certain trope that I outright hate that was present in the original series and Sunshine. When season two was announced, I was hyped as hell, and I liked _Love Live Superstar_ as well, though not quite as much. It helps that the second season of _Love Live Superstar_ is going to air right after this. But that's another review for another day. So how did Nijigasaki's season two fare? Well...sequels have it rough. To quote another reviewer I know, if they change too much they risk losing their audience, but if they change too little, then the audience will grow bored. It doesn't help that the mobile game's second season is pretty infamous for being flat-out terrible from a writing and narrative standpoint. Then again, the first season did a lot to improve on most of the characters in the game, so surely the second season did the same, right? Yes, to an extent, but while I do love Nijigasaki's second season, it's not without its issues. Hot off the success of their first School Idol Festival, the school idol club is fired up and have decided to try their hand at setting up a second idol festival, with the help of the new student council president Shioriko Mifune. Plus, now that Yu is taking music composition classes, she's excited to see where this new direction takes her. Things get a little spicy when an ambitious transfer student, Lanzhu Zhong, decides to become a solo school idol and tells the school idol club that their way of doing things isn't right in her eyes, with her friend Mia Taylor making her music. Will Lanzhu dethrone the Nijigasaki school idol club as the newest hot thing, or will the club be able to win her over with the power of friendship and music? So like I mentioned before, I've never played any of the _Love Live_ mobile games, nor do I have any plans to. But I did do some research and apparently the character of Lanzhu and her writing in the game were pretty poorly received, mainly because she debuted as a super petty, relentlessly self-centered alpha bitch who was needlessly cruel to the girls, but the other characters kept shilling her as this awesome person who deserves the world. Later chapters would try to make her nicer, but with haphazard results that felt more like it was just trying to recon her earlier behavior rather than actually having her own up to her earlier actions. While I can understand having some drama in the _Love Live_ franchise to spice things up, there are definitely better ways the game could have integrated Lanzhu into the series or even tackled her narrative arc. The anime, true to its mission of rectifying issues the game had, doubled down on fixing Lanzhu's overall character, as she comes off as more of a friendly rival to the girls rather than a straight up bitch, with her actions being not as openly malicious or adversarial as they were in the game. Thank God for that. This also extends to the characters of Mia and Shioriko, who were also more adversarial in the game, though not to the same extent Lanzhu was, and being made significantly nicer in the anime. As much as I appreciate the anime's attempts to introduce new characters into the fold though, it does result in the cast being rather bloated. There are now a total of 13 main characters in the Nijigasaki anime, in a 13 episode anime. Having new characters come into the limelight does wind up resulting in a few of the other characters being relegated to the background and not having much development as a result, which is an issue that's been pretty common with Love Live anime in general. Granted, many of the Nijigasaki girls already received time in the limelight in the first series, but several of them could have benefited from having more time to show what they're like outside of the club, examples being Karin, Emma, and Kasumi. Even a lot of the new characters they introduce, such as the idols from other schools, are only there to either help with the idol festival, or in the case of the Kurobane sisters, a random Deus Ex Machina to progress the plot when the creators write themselves in a corner. Juggling too many characters in a short time frame doesn't allow them much time to grow or evolve. Though it's still better about it than the trash heap that was _Lapis Re:Lights_, that's for sure. There isn't much to say on the animation or music front, as they're both the same as the first season, and the quality is consistent across both seasons. There aren't as many songs in this season as there were in season one, and some of the ones briefly used in the final episode were songs taken straight from the game. They're still very well sung and well made though, with Stars We Chase being my favorite among them. Plus, the story here is a lot less episodic compared to the first season, for those who felt like the first season didn't come into its own until the finale. But not every episode sticks the landing. One episode shows Ayumu, Yu, Shizuku, and Setsuna hanging out together, and at one point, they all put on an impromptu play...which winds up not panning out, and the circumstances that prompt three of the girls to form their group A-ZU-NA feel really contrived. But those were really the only episodes that I felt didn't really hold up. So yeah, while Nijigasaki season 2 isn't as good as the first season I feel, it still has a lot to offer, even if its buckles under the weight of its expanded cast and a few haphazard writing decisions.