Migi to Dali

Migi to Dali

After finally adopting a child, the Sonoyamas were unprepared for the mystery that would soon unravel. Hitori seems to be the perfect son for his loving parents. He's handsome, intelligent, and grateful for his new lavish life—but he has a dark secret. Hitori is actually the twins Migi and Dali pretending to be one boy. And they have a terrifying motive behind their hidden identity.

(Source: Crunchyroll)

Official Streaming Sources

  • Type:TV
  • Studios:GEEKTOYS, CompTown, KADOKAWA, Nikkatsu, flying DOG, Bit Grooove Promotion
  • Date aired: 2-10-2023 to 25-12-2023
  • Status:FINISHED
  • Genre:Drama, Mystery, Slice of Life
  • Scores:76
  • Popularity:22446
  • Duration:24 min/ep
  • Quality: HD
  • Episodes:13

Anime Characters

Reviews

Unwelcome

Unwelcome

・ English is my second language, there may be errors in my grammar.. ・I try to make a spoiler-free review, however, in the section **opinion** might have some **spoilers**. ・General experience Final score. My personal score is *based in 5 star system*, so **I tried to put an accurate number here**, but isn't always the case. ・Locate **(Brief) Conclusion + Recommendation** section where the main points are summarized. ~~~━━━━━━━ ⟡ ━━━━━━━~~~ # ~~~**Experience with** __Migi to Dali __ ~~~ ~~~━━━━━━━ ⟡ ━━━━━━━~~~ ~~~**Iɴᴛʀᴏᴅᴜᴄᴛɪᴏɴ**~~~ In front of the seemingly perfect boy, who displays skillfulness in various areas, **the Sonoyamas have no hesitation in adopting him**. This is where Hitori's promising days begin, however, **the bright facade conceals two faces**. Hitori(Lonely) is, in fact, *a set of twins with a mission to uncover the identity of their mother's killer in the village*. They must explore the hidden secrets that lie beneath the surface. ~~~━━━━━━━ ⟡ ━━━━━━━~~~ ~~~**Oᴘɪɴɪᴏɴ**~~~ Migi (Right) and Dali (Left) at first intance we see them serious, **focused on their goal that is not revealed until later**, yet at this point we believed that it was more comedy than anything, because *result quite hilarious their weird methods to exchange as “Hitori” behind the scenes*. However, as we delve deeper into their story and learn about their tragic past, each moment takes on significant meaning, forging connections and **forcing them to wear masks to shield themselves from further harm**. Yet, as their paths begin to diverge, another pivotal point arises in this captivating narrative. The adaptation successfully maintains a great balance by **constantly shifting the atmosphere**, along the color palette perfectly suits the scenes, and the rhythm of the show feels dynamic. Considering the challeging aspects of this story, where the balance between a *bizarre humor* and a tragic revenge are the main topic, **the composition series manage to be inmersive** enough to never lost the focus of what’s going on. The **[opening theme](https://open.spotify.com/track/2rEATv4FT09bqwB6fQ2qJY?si=ZTSsta4GRFOdIn9g5EiQOQ) is undeniably catchy and captivating**, and each episode's cliffhanger leaves a void, and the [ending theme](https://open.spotify.com/track/5Y7I67xCLNaPTHvUP78AI2?si=t_56OpoNTlacsFGCGK-_bg) fills it with a **nostalgic feeling**, creating a **bittersweet soundscape**. It's quite interesting. I found likeable the chosen voice actors, [Horie Shun](https://anilist.co/staff/119869) and [Ayumu Murase](https://anilist.co/staff/110919) are a perfect match. In the beginning, they sounded so similar that can be confusing, but *as the story progresses, you can easily identify each character*, that direction fits perfectly according their development. Migi and Dali are incredibly expressive and maybe profound to analyze to *certain extended*, all while reminding us that they are just children, being a great balance in this series, **they feel genuine**, the same goes for the rest of the charactes, even the adults result amusing by they own context **that result a little disturbing**, yet manage to be coherent and impressive. Throughout the show, I experienced a range of emotions, and I must say, it is a **well-executed adaptation of the manga**,. The storyline is masterfully maintained, **never becoming dull**, and *always leaving you with something to ponder and marvel at the uniqueness of the characters*. While there are certain instances of paranormal elements introduced through random shots, **they do not detract from the overall coherence of the series**. **Regardless of the conclusion of the series**, I feel like it was a pleasant experience. Even though everything started in an anxious and almost anguished story, the hints of Migi and Dali understanding that they can't be the same person result in a heartwarming resolution. After a series of **frenetic episodes**, they finally find the peace and happiness they deserve. It is **at this point that we begin to observe their differences** and witness how they chart their own paths. Despite being physically separated, their hearts remain connected, showcasing the **_wholesome bond between siblings_**. The rest of the characters also have their spotlight, and it feels like a coherent closure for them. ~~~━━━━━━━ ⟡ ━━━━━━━~~~ ~~~**(ʙʀɪᴇғ) Cᴏɴᴄʟᴜsɪᴏɴ + Rᴇᴄᴏᴍᴍᴇɴᴅᴀᴛɪᴏɴ**~~~ The Sonoyama family finally have the opportunity to adopt, **a fateful encounter happens with Hitori**, **he proves to be the embodiment of their long-awaited ideal son**, the journey towards a perfect parenting life begins. However, beneath that smiling face, *two hidden identities are hidden*. “Hitori” are twins **concealing their true selves** as they harbor an important mission, to infiltrate the village and uncover the identity of their mother's killer. Pretending to be a single child, they must interact and investigate, *gradually unveiling the truth behind the case* and ultimately seeking vengeance for their mother. This anime it's a hidden gem, where a multitude of conflicting elements **converge to create a thrilling story of revenge** and a *heartwarming journey of self-discovery* for the main characters. It's hard to put into words the brilliance of this story. The blend of weirdness and occasional parodic atmosphere within a serious context may seem contradictory, but somehow, **it all comes together to form a cohesive and entertaining narrative**. If this brief context is helpful for you to understand the story of this anime, then I must add that **I highly recommend it**. This show masterfully balances its various elements, **resulting in an entertaining story that will leave you thoroughly satisfied with its conclusion**. A truly unique experience awaits you that will give you chill in your spine. ~~~img300(https://imgur.com/G5MAgwa.png) img300(https://imgur.com/k8iSJ2e.png) img500(https://imgur.com/rBoVjX2.png) ~~~ ~~~━━━━━━━ ⟡ ━━━━━━━~~~ To conclude, I read the manga last year by the author [Sano Nami](https://anilist.co/staff/116083), her story provided a truly remarkable experience. It captivated me from beginning to end, and **the anime adaptation successfully brought it to life**. Rest in peace. ~~~img500(https://imgur.com/vIS7LdX.png)~~~ ~~~━━━━━━━ ⟡ ━━━━━━━~~~ ~~~**_ᴘᴇʀsᴏɴᴀʟ sᴄᴏʀᴇ sʏsᴛᴇᴍ_**~~~ ~~~ ★★★★★ ~~~ ~~~━━━━━━━ ⟡ ━━━━━━━~~~

Lenlo

Lenlo

~~~img(https://starcrossedanime.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/Migi-Dali-Banner.png)~~~ Animated horror can be a pretty hard genre to nail. You know what you're watching, so you're expecting to be scared, and it being animated removes it from the real world, narrowing your options. Comedy can be similarly difficult. Due to how subjective it be, its common to fall back on slapstick, what with animations malleable bodies and stylized violence. But what if I were to tell you there was an anime that does both? A situational comedy that gets laughs not from banana peels or pies to the face, but absurd surreal situations? That successfully transitions to a full blown horror, complete with a murder mystery? Well that show is what I'm here to talk about today. Animated studio GEEKTOYS, directed by Mankyuu and originally created by the late Nami Sano who passed earlier this year, I give to you my favorite anime of Fall 2023: *Migi & Dali*. **Be warned, this review contains minor unmarked spoilers for *Migi & Dali*. It also contains major spoilers in some sections however these will be heavily marked to avoid accidents**. ~~~img(https://starcrossedanime.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/Migi-Dali-12.6.jpg)~~~ #~~~__Narrative__~~~ Let's start with *Migi & Dali's* most defining feature, its narrative. The core of *Migi & Dali's* story is one of revenge, as a pair of twins named, you guessed it, Migi and Dali return to Origon Village to discover who murdered their mother. Along the way they will find friends and allies, discover all manner of secrets in this quaint little town, and perhaps even find a family of their own. To do this, they work to become adopted by a local family. However there's a wrinkle: That family is only looking for one child, not two. But what about two who are one? One individual across two bodies, acting in concert, swapping in and out to accomplish tasks as needed. While one works the other investigates, always watching, always learning about this little town. Now I can hear you asking, didn't I call *Migi & Dali* a horror comedy? This sounds like pure mystery horror! Well as I said, *Migi & Dali's* brand of comedy is very surreal. Early on the series uses its premise to justify weird situations or to create off-putting scenes. Take an example from early on in episode two as an example. The twins overhear a their foster parents discussing a secret and become convinced they want to kill them. So the only thing to do? Kill them first, with a plan so silly and naïve only children who don't really understand killing could be. Played straight, this is attempted murder. But *Migi & Dali* never plays it straight, so instead it comes off as this surreal humor. This sort of subversion of expectations is the shows bread and butter, from episode one all the way to the end. What makes *Migi & Dali* truly special though is how it manages to catch you by surprise eight, nine, ten episodes later. The further in you get the more serious the situations and the less naïve our leads become. Slowly but surely it transforms into the mystery horror it originally billed itself as, but the shift is so slow and subtle you don't notice it until you actually get spooked. It's as if the series starts at 80% humor and 20% horror before, by the end, flipping those percent's entirely. Or perhaps it's more accurate to say that it successfully merged the two together, never losing either. However you want to describe it, the point is that *Migi & Dali* successfully balances both surrealist humor, horror, and light-hearted family moments into a downright heartwarming story about two twins finding closure for their mother and a new home in Origon Village. The only major criticism I have about *Migi & Dali's* story is that sometimes it gets weird. Like... Teenagers in diapers acting like babies weird. While these moments are relevant to the story, I can't help but feel they are unnecessary and that what *Migi & Dali* was going for could have been communicated in a different, more effective way. I don't think these scenes will ruin the show for anyone, they are over rather quickly and there aren't many of them. But they do exist, and they will probably weird some people out. I know they did me, which is saying something because *Migi & Dali's* regular weirdness was exactly what I was looking for. It's just these few scenes where it goes to far, without adding much to the actual story in return. Overall though I'd say *Migi & Dali* has one of the best stories of the year. Its balance of humor and horror, of weird and heart-warming, is almost perfect. In fact by the end I was full on crying. Even now, as I'm writing this review, thinking back to that ending still brings tears to my eyes. Oh did I not mention that? Yeah, *Migi & Dali* actually ends. There's no cliffhanger, no "Season Two" that never comes, no "Go read the manga". *Migi & Dali* begins and ends in this cour, never overstaying its welcome, and it's better for it. So if a 13 episode self contained series that goes from surrealist comedy to fully fledged horror to heart-warming found family sounds like something you're looking for, than stop reading this review and go watch it. Or well... Finish reading and then go watch it, need that engagement. ~~~img(https://starcrossedanime.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Migi-Dali-7.2-e1700113792171.jpg)~~~ #~~~__Characters__~~~ Moving on we come to the characters. After how much I wrote about the narrative, it should come as no surprise that the characters are great as well. For the most part at least. All of the main cast are pretty solid. This covers Migi and Dali, obviously, Eiji Ichijo and his mother Reiko, Migi's friend Akiyama, and the Sonoyama's. While not all of them have "arcs" per se, really only Migi and Dali get that much focus and we will get to them, they all get enough attention to shine and show us who they really are. Whether it be Akiyama going from this weird bird kid to a true friend or the Sonoyama's from airheads to legitimately some of the best parents in anime. I guarantee you'll cry for at least one of them. I did for multiple of them! The only characters I would say fall short are some of the side-cast. The maid, Mit-chan, for instance. She exists as this loosely supportive adult, the first one the twins feel they can truly trust. Yet she never becomes anymore more than the well-intentioned gossiping neighborhood cleaning lady, which is disappointing considering her role in the story. Maruta, another local child, gets a similar treatment. He starts as a twat and ends... As a slightly lesser twat. Hell it might even be more accurate to say he ends simply as *our* twat, in that he doesn't really improve he just becomes loveable for it. *Migi & Dali* tries to do something with him, same with the remaining members of the Ichijo family like Karen, but I can't say it succeeds. Luckily these are all relatively minor characters and don't negatively impact the show all that much. Finally we come to Migi and Dali, who are fantastic. They spend the series slowly evolving from "One person in two bodies" into individual people with their own personalities, interests and desires. We get to watch them discover who they are as they drift further and further apart as they see more of the outside world. This of course leads to some great confrontations between the two as, for the longest time, they were the only other person they had. To them, this separation was something to be *feared*, not praised. Yet throughout the shows run *Migi & Dali* handles it perfectly, giving them just enough space to grow and fight but always bringing it back around to the central mystery. So to make a long story short: *Migi & Dali* has a great core cast, and even better leads. It's only a few supporting characters who fall short. ~~~img(https://starcrossedanime.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Migi-to-Dali-3.1.jpg)~~~ #~~~__Visuals__~~~ With that we come to *Migi & Dali's* production. This is, without question, the shows weakest aspect. You see, *Migi & Dali* doesn't really move much. Or at all, if I'm being honest. It's barely animated at all, using primarily still frames, slow movement and wide shots to get everyone within a single frame. There are no big sakuga moments, no subtle character acting or facial expressions, it doesn't even have detailed or memorable backgrounds. This isn't terribly surprising looking at GEEKTOYS other works, neither *Liar Liar* nor *Dead Mount Death Play* were visual powerhouses either. Where *Migi & Dali* differs from those however is that the team seems aware of this from the beginning, not even try anything particularly ambitious to begin with. So while it doesn't look great, it never falls apart or gets in over its head either. It's consistent the whole way through. This is good, because while *Migi & Dali's* animation isn't all that strong, the direction does it's best to make up for it. Again, there's nothing to complex or fancy here, no wild SHAFT editing or fish-eye lens effects, none of that stuff. Instead *Migi & Dali* takes a bunch of otherwise basic shots and hones them to *perfection*. It knows when to hold and let something sink in, when to cut or quickly pan to keep up with a scenes energy, how to time events with the music for maximum effect. Think of it like this. *Migi & Dali* is a mom and pop show burger. It's nothing new or unique, no fancy ingredients or sauces. It's just a burger. But the patty is cooked to perfection, the lettuce is fresh, and the buns baked that morning. It's an average dish, executed as well as it can be. Because of this, *Migi & Dali* is able to nail the tone of most scenes. When it wants you to feel creeped out it turns up the music, darkens the shadows, brings in the camera and starts sliding between shots as if you were looking around frantically. When you're meant to feel happy or touched the colors get warmer and the camera pulls out, brightening up the scene and getting rid of shadows to make you feel safe. Want to be sad? Lets up the blue balance in a scene, same with red for anger. This is what I mean by executing what little it has to perfection. And it's why I think, despite its otherwise lackluster animation, that *Migi & Dali* comes out looking rather decent even as it's the worst thing about the show. ~~~youtube(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PIvQo91LeXo&list=PLsjHJgYvZrFQfxkVlr4pHsTWVB36lr36v&index=17)~~~ #~~~__OST__~~~ Finally we come to the OST! This is the composer, Hiroko Sebu's, first TV length project, and only her third project overall. Her other works are a short animation called "What Happens Before War?" and a small movie by the name of "I Want to Eat Your Pancreas". Outside of anime however she's worked on a number of movies and TV shows, so she is by no means new to this game. So it should come as no surprise that her work on *Migi & Dali's* OST was pretty damn good. For what you can expect, the OST is primarily classical in style. Hell one track titled "Moonlight" is literally Claude Debussy's "Clair De Lune". There are some exceptions to this, like the bumping EDM of "Detective Boys Beavers", or "Heaven and Hell" which brings in an organ. For the most part though, it's classical instruments. This isn't to say *Migi & Dali* doesn't have variety though. Even when restricted to just the classics, tracks like foreboding and purposeful "Proud Woman Reiko Ichijo" manage to sound completely different from the whimsical and exploratory "My First Base, French Style" (Yes it's what you think) or the burst of joy at the taste of something new that is "Instant hit! Cherry Pie". An that's not even diving into *Migi & Dali's* use of leitmotifs. That song you've been listening to as you read this, assuming you clicked the video above? That's the absolutely iconic "A Boy 'Migi and Dali'", used throughout the series whenever the twins are acting in concert. Now try "Mother's Memory" and hear how similar they are, as that same motif is born from another melody. Or try "First Friend" as it takes it's first tentative steps towards change. It's all throughout the OST! Suffice to say, I enjoyed *Migi & Dali's* OST quite a bit. And while it may be difficult at times while watching the show itself to pick out the different tracks, I think it ends up being used rather well to boot. Some may not enjoy that it's almost entirely classical music, and that's fine. There's no guitar, no rock, no real vocals either, and that's going to turn some people off. But for those who either don't mind or enjoy the genre? I think there's a lot to love here. At the very least I think it fits the show perfectly, with the evolution of the leitmotif as the show runs being absolutely fantastic. I feel like you can chart Migi and Dali's journey with that alone, and I think that's pretty cool. ~~~img(https://starcrossedanime.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Migi-to-Dali-2.6.jpg)~~~ #~~~__Closure & Coming Out of the Closet__~~~ With that we come to the personal portion of the review. This is where I drop any semblance of structure and sort of just ramble about my experience with *Migi & Dali*. This is no-holds-barred  spoiler territory, I *will* be talking about the ending and what it meant to me. So if you haven't watched the show and don't want to be spoiled, and I highly recommend you *don't* spoil yourself for this, than skip this section. I've already told you why I think this is a great show, just go watch it and come back. But if you have watched the show and you want to chat about it? Than read on! ~!So I've already mentioned that one of my favorite things about *Migi & Dali* is that it ends. That we get closure. And that's true! But part of that is also *how* it ends. You see, *Migi & Dali* initially presents itself as a whodunit mystery. It makes you think that's the goal, that figuring out what happened to their mother is the endgame. But we figure that out maybe... halfway through? 2/3rds? To me, the beauty of *Migi & Dali* is that this supposed "mystery" is really more of a vehicle for a story about family. About finding people who love you, figuring out who you are, and being comfortable that way in public. Even the inevitable "revenge" for their mother comes in the form of saving their surprise third brother, Eiji, rather than murdering the culprit as they originally intended when the series first began. In particular, for me *Migi & Dali* was almost a coming out story. Throughout the series we see Migi comfortable with the Sonoyama's, enjoy his time with them, enjoy just *being a family* out in the open. He finds it easy to be "himself". Meanwhile Dali is reticent, often found literally hiding in a closet, afraid to show himself. Afraid that he won't be accepted for who he truly is, for Dali rather than "Hitori". It all feels like a really blatant metaphor for Dali being LGBT, which is only furthered by the whole crossdressing and kissing Eiji bit, as well as and the Sonoyama's mention of him being "sensitive". This is what makes their acceptance of him, all the little things they cared to notice like his favorite foods, hit so hard. The Sonoyama's figured it out on their own, and chose to love him before he ever knew. Maybe I'm reaching here, making connections where there aren't any. But even if the details or what the author intended are different, the point is that *Migi & Dali* is an exceptionally emotional story for me. The murder mystery plays second fiddle to simply wanting these kids to be happy. And the emotional catharsis I got when it finally happened, when they sat down for that Christmas dinner, when we got that timeskip and saw them all grown up with their individual lives and hobbies, and when Dali left for college separating from Migi for the first time in years... I'll admit it, I cried like a damn baby! And if an anime is capable of achieving that, of getting me *that* emotionally invested? Well than it's worth a watch ain't it? !~ ~~~img(https://starcrossedanime.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Migi-to-Dali-9.7.jpg)~~~ #~~~__Conclusion__~~~ So yeah, all in all *Migi & Dali* was fantastic. It's not all that great visually, and it can get *uncomfortably weird* in the middle at times. But neither of those is enough to ruin an otherwise beautiful and emotional story about a pair of twins finding a home where they thought they never would. Nami Sano's last work before her tragic passing in August of 2023 was a beautiful one. It hurts that we will never get another work from her like this, or to a lesser extent like *Sakamoto Desu Ga?*. Still, what we got was great, and I highly recommend you give it a watch. At only 13 episodes long, short enough that you can knock it out in a night if you really want, it is without question my favorite anime of Fall 2023. Thanks for reading! If you want to leave a comment, positive or negative, you can leave it [here](https://anilist.co/activity/666772579).

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