A couple of episodes of
Horizon in the Middle of Nowhere
I'm currently reading the novels this is based on and finding myself utterly fascinated with it. Minoru Kawakami wrote a fantasy/science-fiction epic that rivals your Songs of Ice and Fires' and Dunes' and Legend of the Galactic Heroes' in terms of scope, political complexity and sheer detail and it all looks like the epitome of incomprehensible anime nonsense full of mechs, chibi ghosts, techno-witches and girls with comically large breasts, comically large hair and comically large outfits. All of which might very well make him one of the most based people alive.
The premise? In the distant future, humanity tried to leave earth to colonize space, failed for... reasons, came back down to earth to find out that Japan was the only inhabitable land, lost most of their knowledge about space travel for... reasons, decided that the only way to regain that knowledge is to reenact all of human history according to an automatically updating history book, split the world into a real world and a pocket dimension to accommodate for all the people, the latter of which collapsed for... reasons, leading to a war between the people from this pocket dimension and the real world, which led to the entire landmass being colonized by the European imperial powers (we're still reenacting history, you see, and we're in the 15th century at the beginning of the series) and Japan's only remaining territory being a small fleet of airships where a group of students (among them an Incubus, a slime, an Indian stereotype, a werewolf, a ninja and an anthropomorphic dragon with ties to the Spanish Inquisition) spearheaded by their class clown chancellor get caught up in a global conflict leading up to a looming apocalypse under the backdrop of the various nations reenacting both the 30 Years War and the Japanese Warring States period with futuristic technology, magic, and techno magic.
Now that we've cleared that up, this story unfolds over 11 novels, many of which are around or over 1000 pages in length, two of which have been adapted into two seasons of an anime.
Don't watch this if you haven't read the books. You won't understand a thing. And also don't read the books, you won't understand a thing either. Or, actually, watch the first episode, effectively a single 20 minute action sequence, that sets up the characters and general aesthetics of the whole thing. It's a wonderful little slice of complete nonsense. And it looks and sounds really nice, the production values are weirdly high.
This is the pinnacle of indulgent, megalomaniacal, borderline schizophrenic, practically incomprehensible, overly conceptual auteurist bullshit.
10/10, no notes.