Daily Archives: Monday, March 24, 2008

Anime Review - Doujin Work: 74.7%

The Essentials

Doujin WorkName: Doujin Work
Genre: Comedy
Episodes: 12
Released: July 3, 2007 - September 18, 2007
Based On: Doujin Work manga by Hiroyuki
Director: Kenichi Yatani
Produced By: REMIC, Media Factory
US Distribution By: N/A

Major Japanese Cast

Najimi Osana: Masumi Asano
Tsuyuri: Momoko Saito
Justice: Hiroki Yasumoto
Junichirou Hoshi: Kazutoshi Hatano
Sora Kitano: Kimiko Koyama
Kaneru Nidō: Ito Sakata

Major English Cast

N/A

Scores

Animation: 6/10 (x 4 = 24 pts)
Story: 8/10 (x 4 = 32 pts)
Music: 7/10 (x 4 = 28 pts)
Coherence/Story Arc: 9/10 (x 2 = 18 pts)
English Dubs: N/A
Gut Score: 8/10 (x 5 = 40 pts)

Total: 142/190 (74.7%)

Review

Doujin Work is about a college student, Najimi Osana, who finds out that two of her friends – Tsuyuri, who she knows from college, and Justice, who is a childhood friend - draw doujinshi for a living.

Having just been fired from her part-time job, Najimi decides to earn her millions by drawing doujinshi as well, even though both Tsuyuri and Justice try to tell her that it’s not all that profitable. On top of this, Najimi has two major problems: she can’t draw, and she gets incredibly embarrassed when dealing with perverted things.

With the help of Tsuyuri, Justice, Hoshi, a boy who becomes her first fan, and Kaneru, a friend/rival of Najimi’s in finding success in the doujin world, Najimi attempts to become a successful doujin artist.

Doujin Work starts off on a pretty good roll, hitting you up with one good perverted joke after another. However, in the last quarter or so of the series, it seems to start losing some of its momentum.

Probably the best thing about the story itself is that the development of Najimi as a doujin artist seems realistic, as she struggles through most of the series just to sell her books, as one would expect for a beginner, though the very end is kind of a stretch. It’s not necessarily the best story you’ll see, but I wouldn’t really consider it bad either.

On technical aspects, probably the weakest aspect is the animation. While it was done in a particular style intentionally, at times the lack of budget definitely shows through. Close-ups of characters are generally done well, but when you are looking at a wider shot, animation tends to take a major hit.  The music is also only so-so, though not bad.

Overall, if you’re looking for a quick laugh (the 12 episodes are only half-episodes), and don’t necessarily care about having excellent animation, then you may not mind taking a look at Doujin Work.

First Watched: July - October 2007
Do I Own: No
Do I Recommend: Indifferent