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Total Recommendations: 12

If you liked
Bonobono (TV 2016)
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Shounen Ashibe: Go! Go! Goma-chan
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Short episodes of kid's slice-of-life, with sea life that's really spending way too much time on land. Goma-chan lets the humans do the talking, though the seal himself is just as intelligent, if not more so, than Ashibe and his grade school friends. He's certainly more sensible than Tendou-sensei, but that's not saying much. Bonobono lives in a world devoid of humans, so animals talk and fill the roles of both the children and the adults. In both, the children are relatively normal, questioning the world around them and life in general, with answers sometimes found by themselves and sometimes with the help of parents and other adults. Bonobono's adult figures are rather more reliable (re:Tendou-sensei) and that show has a slower pace and gentler humor than Goma-chan's lively and sometimes absurd or slapstick antics. But both are equally enjoyable shows for all ages. Just remember to suspend your sense of disbelief: baby seals don't fall off the back of trucks and thrive in small apartments, and I'm pretty sure it's physically impossible for a sea otter to walk on its hind legs.

If you liked
Tatamp
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Direct Animation
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While Tatamp has more fine details than Direct Animation's seeming fingerpaintings, both of these works are essentially colored blobs and lines moving around the screen. No story to speak of, just pretty art that moves. I'd suggest watching these two, and any other Mirai work, with a finger on the pause button to stop and examine the art more closely, and maybe take a few screenshots for computer wallpaper.

If you liked
Mac the Movie
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Play Jazz
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As these are both short films by Furukawa Taku, it stands to reason that they are similar. But these two share more similarities to each other than to Taku's hand-drawn narratives or his color and light experiments. While I'm no expert, Mac and Play Jazz seem to be early attempts at computer-drawn animation. They date from the mid-eighties, and boy do they look it. Each is essentially a random sequence of pixel-y, poorly rendered figures and abstract shapes. They look like the art I made as a young kid on an Apple IIC. Or in other words, they both have a slight case of eye-cancer. Both also have western background music, one of their more redeeming features. Play Jazz has a jaunty jazz number, as expected, and Mac features a wordless rendition of Singin' in the Rain.

If you liked
Kogepan
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Shokupan Mimi
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Because one anime about anthropomorphic bread isn't enough, Japan has kindly given us two. They're both cute, funny, and ever-so-slightly disturbing when it's considered they're for small children.

If you liked
Kyou kara Maou!
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Thermae Romae
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Traveling through time and space via pools of water? Check. Main character experiencing a strange new land? Check. Hints of BL? Check.

If you liked
Chikyuu wo Nomu
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...then you might like
Ningen Konchuuki
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Both Tezuka works are set in the postwar period and feature destructive women as main characters. Both are mature and have less than perfectly happy endings.

If you liked
Mouryou no Hako
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Blood-C
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CLAMP was involved with both of these titles: character design in Mouryou no Hako, Characters and story in Blood-C. Both stories build quite slowly, and rather confusingly, until all is revealed in the last two episodes. Both also involve death and dismemberment, Blood-C rather more explicitly.

If you liked
Tenshi no Tamago
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...then you might like
Kujira no Chouyaku
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Both are surreal works with an emphasis on water-the unmoving ocean in one and steadily rising rain in the other.

If you liked
Ayako
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...then you might like
Ningen Konchuuki
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Both are mature works from Tezuka-sensei. Both contain intrigue, murder, sex and persons of dubious morals. Ayako is set earlier than Ningen Konchuuki, and covers a longer period of time.

If you liked
MW
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...then you might like
Ningen Konchuuki
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Both are mature works from Tezuka-sensei. Both are to some degree character studies of deeply flawed individuals. There are scenes of homosexuality in each, though much more in MW.

If you liked
Yuunagi no Machi Sakura no Kuni
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...then you might like
Hadashi no Gen
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Town of Evening Calm looks at the lives of hibakusha, atomic bomb survivors, and their descendants. Gen deals with the same population,though it is much longer, more shonen oriented, and more explicit in its depiction of the horrors of the bomb. Gen is cited as a reference by Kouno-sensei.

If you liked
Tetsuwan Atom
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Black Jack
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Both are long episodic works by Tezuka. In both cases the protagonist is somewhat super-human, be it robot or gifted surgeon, and promotes the triumph of good over evil.

It’s time to ditch the text file.
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