Happy (Belated) International Cute Witch Day

Featured image: “Chibi cute witch” by SweetCherryVenus.

I’m currently finishing up a project, so I am behind on what I want to do with the blog, so behind that I even missed International Cute Witch Day yesterday, which is a serious sin for a magical girl fan.

I have some new posts and reviews I want to write, but for now I’m in the “I have to get this novel out of the house or I’ll go crazy” stage, so that takes precedence. Here are the updates I have at present:

Dead to Rites

Everything is finished on my end for the sequel to Jake and the Dynamo. I honestly though it would be out last month, and I’m not sure why it wasn’t, but I’m not here to point fingers, so I probably wouldn’t tell you even if I did know.

I’m going to start harassing some people to find out what’s going on. In any case, the good news is that I should have two new novels out in the near future, in rapid succession.

Rag & Muffin

I am in the final editing phase. I’ve made the changes my editor requested and I’m now going through the printed draft with a red pen. After I make the final edits, I’ll run the whole thing through a spelling/grammar checker, which is tedious, but which also catches a few typos and other errors that even close editing can miss.

After that, it will see the publisher’s proofreader, and then I’ll make any final edits and be quit of it. I pride myself on submitting very clean drafts, so if Rag & Muffin is like Dead to Rites, the turnaround time will be quick and the final changes will consist of little more than a few missing commas.

The submission draft should be out the door by the end of the weekend.

This is actually my first novel, and it’s a long time coming. It took this long to build up my skills and actually produce this version, which is now worthy of publication. It also took a fair amount of research. I’m glad it will soon be seeing the light of day.

I do, admittedly, regret somewhat that I didn’t get it published earlier. It’s a dark subversion (of sorts) of popular children’s stories, and it would have been more unique in that regard some years back, before the current dark phase of magical girls became so prominent. However, Rag & Muffin might not exactly qualify as a magical girl story anyway: It’s more of a grim take on the “Wake up, go to school, save the world” motif, which to my knowledge has never got this exact treatment before. On overarching theme in the book is that childhood heroics can have unintended consequences.

Also, some of the obscure medical issues in the book are now less obscure. At the time I first started working on it, hormone blockers for children were an esoteric medical subject rather than a national debate. But so it goes.

Anime Review: ‘Ultra Maniac’

Ultra Maniac, written by Miho Maruo and directed by Shinichi Masaki. Music by Toru Yukawa. Starring Akemi Kanda, Yuie Hori, and Hiroshi Kamiya. Based on the manga by Wataru Yoshizumi. Ashi Productions, 2003. 26 episodes of 24 minutes (approx. 10 hours and 24 minutes). Not rated.

Available on Crunchyroll.

The oddly named Ultra Maniac is a minor classic of the magical girl genre from the beginning of the twenty-first century. Although lackluster in its animation and presenting a more-or-less conventional plot, it contains enough unusual elements to make it stand out, and its satisfying ending comes as a genuinely pleasant surprise even if it could have been better set up.

A photograph of Nina and Ayu smiling
Nina and Ayu, our protagonists.

This anime is based on a manga by Wataru Yoshizumi, who’s most famous for Marmalade Boy. The manga and anime versions of Ultra Maniac, however, bear little resemblance to each other, as the former is more of a romantic comedy with magical elements while the latter is a straight-up magical girl show complete with the standard transformation sequences and McGuffin hunt.

Nina in her magical girl costume
Nina transforms … into possibly the frumpiest magical girl outfit ever.

The bizarre title is apparently in reference to the enthusiasm for manga that a couple of the characters have (maniac or mania being an older term for otaku), though this is downplayed in the anime to the point that the title is merely weird.

Continue reading “Anime Review: ‘Ultra Maniac’”

Happy International Cute Witch Day

Once again, it is Halloween, the second most important holiday in the magical girl calendar. Tonight, magical girls can go abroad without calling undue attention to themselves.

This year, I am dedicating International Cute Witch Day to Little Witch Academia. I much enjoyed the short film (it came out in 2013) some years back, but I admit I’ve not seen the widely popular television series that came after it and became available in the U.S. last year. It’s on my list.

art from Little Witch Academia

For some reason, I barely remember what the short film was about, though I remember enjoying it. It was was an obviously Harry Potter-influenced story of quirky girls going to witch school, and it had some high-flying broom scenes with the kind of creative yet jerky animation for which Studio Trigger is known.

art from Little Witch Academia

Speaking of Trigger, I finally got around to watching Kill la Kill about a year back, and it completely blew my mind. It might be the best skewering of the magical girl genre I’ve ever seen, because it not only mocked it mercilessly, but unlike the slew of grimdark shows we’ve had lately, demonstrated in the process that it actually understood what the genre is about. So I trust the studio to know how to handle magical girls.

screenshot from Little Witch Academia

If they could do magical girl warriors so well, they could probably do cute witches well, too, and the popularity of Little Witch Academia tends to confirm that.

Screenshot from Little Witch Academia