After the murderous disappointment of The Boys finale I decided to go and rewatch the first episode for a bit. And holy fuck, the difference is just staggering. There's more budget in the first episode than probably the entirety of S5. It's not just that there's more effects-heavy scenes: every single part of the production is just done better. The costumes, locations, lighting, set design, background detail, amount of extras, even the dialogue, it's like you're watching a different show... because functionally you are. Just consider the scene where Butcher takes Hughie for a walk and there's that panning shot of a city square littered with posters and screens showing off supes. It lasts only like 3 minutes tops, yet there are tons of extras, it takes place during nighttime so the lighting's all dynamic, and it's in constant motion. Were that scene done with the production values of S5, it'd be Butcher showing up at Hughie's house and showing off the same thing on TV. Functionally it achieves the same thing, the difference is in how much scale it gives to the world.
I honestly might do a rewatch of the first few seasons just to remind me how top of the line this show was once. Don't cry because it's over, smile because it happened.
I also had another sampling of anime of the season.
First one was Go for it, Nakamura-kun!, a what I believe is today called BL anime about a high school boy crushing on another boy. While I do wholeheartedly appreciate how far we've come that this kind of thing can just be one among others, I felt like I was neither the age or the target demographic. I'm not gay and my school days are far behind, so I was mostly checked out. It was decently cute I guess, but aside from it being about a romance between boys it didn't really stand out.
The second one was Botan Kamiina blossoms when drunk, an anime about a group of college girls entering student life and getting wasted. While it did grab me more due to being clearly more adult-aimed, there was something slightly sinister about it I couldn't shake off. It's presented as a very typical, cutesy slice of life, but the fact that these are adult women getting drunk while still acting like cutesy anime girls struck a surprising, kind of disturbing note to me that kind of felt like I was being advertised at. A feeling not helped by the knowledge that this was sponsored by actual real-life alcohol brands that are mentioned by name in the show. Drinking being presented in the same way this kind of anime would present cutesy activities like knitting, birdwatching or really anything, while knowing several alcoholic people myself, gives me pause about the ethics of the whole thing. As a pure anime it was okay, but having that ethical quandry niggling in the back of my mind prevented me from really enjoying it. If it was more overtly comedic and/or over the top and showed the girls getting into all sorts of stupidity and shenanigans while drunk might have alleviated that feeling.
Next up was Nippon Sangoku, an absolutely baffling mish-mash that I genuinely could not grasp off the first episode alone. It's post-apocalyptic, but also kind of a period piece, and it's about a young man in an oppressed village dealing with the everyday struggles of the post-apocalyptic world order with his newlywed wife. The artstyle was absolutely stunning and the animation gorgeous, but whatever else happened in the episode is completely overshadowed by the fact that his wife gets fucking Gwyneth Paltrow in Se7en-ed in the episode, which was so out of kilter with both the tone and style that I was just left kind of staring at it mouth agape. Tonally it was all over the map with occasional fourth wall breaks, comedy and interesting animation, but the subject matter was so dark that it all felt rather schizophrenic.
Next one was Witch hat Atelier, a new entry in the line of anime about a young girl entering a magic school to learn magic. This one we watched 2 episodes of so I got more into grips with the story, but was also kind of let down by. The first episode has legit some of the best animation I've ever seen in an anime, movie or show. It was so stunning that I could not take my eyes off the screen. While the premise and characters didn't seem that outstanding, the magic system in the show being more akin to calligraphy was genuinely interesting. It's just a shame that based on the second episode this might be one of those "blow the budget in the first episode" shows, because the difference in the animation quality between episodes was vast. Still, it was charming and interesting enough that I might continue watching it.
The final one I stayed to watch was Needy Girl Overdose, which is apparently a sequel to a game about managing a streamer, not that I'd know anything about that. Our host hyped it as the anime of the season, and if that's true then wow, anime fans have way more sophisticated taste than I'd given them credit for. It was like a mix between Serial Experiments Lain and the final two episodes of Evangelion, and was structured more like a loose screed about parasociality, dynamics of the streaming world, relationship between streamer and audience and so on. It was very dialogue heavy, full of abstract and weird animation sequences and not really much of a narrative. The commentary in it felt very raw, poignant and absolutely on the cutting edge of how the internet works right now. I can't say I wasn't engaged, but it was honestly so dark and depressing (there is a quasi-rape scene too, by the by) that I can't really see myself watching more. But apparently the first episode's not really representative of the larger series, so who knows.