Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaWhen a nameless student at Kyoto University encounters a demigod one night, he asks to relive the past three years in order to win the heart of Ms. Akashi, the object of his affection.When a nameless student at Kyoto University encounters a demigod one night, he asks to relive the past three years in order to win the heart of Ms. Akashi, the object of his affection.When a nameless student at Kyoto University encounters a demigod one night, he asks to relive the past three years in order to win the heart of Ms. Akashi, the object of his affection.
- Prêmios
- 1 vitória no total
Explorar episódios
Avaliações em destaque
Well this is my first review...... here goes...
A brief synopsis: Freshman Watashi(literally 'I' in Japanese) finds himself repeating his first 2 years in college with disastrous consequences over and over again, never seemingly realizing that he's repeating life making the same mistakes over and over.
Based on a novel of the same name, "Yojōhan Shinwa Taikei", or literally "4½ Tatami Mythological Chronicles" is perhaps the most innovative anime series I have ever seen..... the Groundhog Day of anime if you will. Masaaki Yuasa's (of Cat Soup and Mind Game fame, and if you haven't seen them go see it NOW!) Tatami Galaxy is one of a kind.
The character designs are pretty distinct from standard anime conventions, and what caught my eye in the first place. I'm surprised more people don't know about this series, because it's a true GEM in covering what many people go through trying to fit into campus life. The humor is light hearted and genuine.... and the characters avoid falling into stereotypes, instead they turn out to be incredibly engrossing and believable.
What's remarkable is how all the stories come together at the end, for a satisfying conclusion. Something which most anime end up trying to do unsuccessfully..... 11 episodes seem like too short a time spent in dealing with Watashi's life...but as the end makes it clear There's no point in continuing a story which has been resolved... a lesson which a few anime out there should realize by now...
P.S. There are 3 7-min specials which were also released with the DVD, watch out for them too!
My rating: An excellent series from start to finish, keep an eye out for small details in between the series. EVERYTHING ties up at the end :)
A brief synopsis: Freshman Watashi(literally 'I' in Japanese) finds himself repeating his first 2 years in college with disastrous consequences over and over again, never seemingly realizing that he's repeating life making the same mistakes over and over.
Based on a novel of the same name, "Yojōhan Shinwa Taikei", or literally "4½ Tatami Mythological Chronicles" is perhaps the most innovative anime series I have ever seen..... the Groundhog Day of anime if you will. Masaaki Yuasa's (of Cat Soup and Mind Game fame, and if you haven't seen them go see it NOW!) Tatami Galaxy is one of a kind.
The character designs are pretty distinct from standard anime conventions, and what caught my eye in the first place. I'm surprised more people don't know about this series, because it's a true GEM in covering what many people go through trying to fit into campus life. The humor is light hearted and genuine.... and the characters avoid falling into stereotypes, instead they turn out to be incredibly engrossing and believable.
What's remarkable is how all the stories come together at the end, for a satisfying conclusion. Something which most anime end up trying to do unsuccessfully..... 11 episodes seem like too short a time spent in dealing with Watashi's life...but as the end makes it clear There's no point in continuing a story which has been resolved... a lesson which a few anime out there should realize by now...
P.S. There are 3 7-min specials which were also released with the DVD, watch out for them too!
My rating: An excellent series from start to finish, keep an eye out for small details in between the series. EVERYTHING ties up at the end :)
My first review here, just like the other person who's reviewed this so far. I'll make it short. This is one of the greatest series I've ever seen. Minute for minute this was one of the most worthwhile watching experiences I've ever had, anime or not. The animation as absolutely beautiful, often including multiple mediums and styles, the main style being very stark drawings with very subdued subtle coloring and great animation, but also including highly stylized film-work on occasion, the occasional splash of 3d, another very vividly colored style, and a really odd sort of chalk-board looking style of cg for particular scenes. The story is an adaptation of a novel, and the visuals tell it in a way that never could've come through in novel form, which are the best kind of adaptations in my opinion, I'm very curious about the original novel though. I'll just go ahead and not cover any parts of the story, as you can find that many places, including here, and I'd rather not spoil any more for you. Watch this now! These 4 hours of TV will not be ones you feel like you wasted, permitting you enjoy good art.
'The Tatami Galaxy,' based on a novel by Tomihiko Morimi and directed by Masaaki Yuasa, is a high-concept YA mini-series with an intriguingly bizarre premise: a young nameless student arrives at college with high hopes of experiencing an idealized "rose-colored campus life," joins an activity circle that he eventually becomes disillusioned with when it fails to lead to his ideal college life, gets mixed up in a series of ludicrous situations, and finally wishes to start over and join a different activity circle, causing time to rewind and prompting him to start over again. However, choosing a different activity makes no difference, as the protagonist gets bogged down by the same disappointments, gets embroiled in escapades with the same level of lunacy, and even gets faced with the same eccentric cast of characters.
The protagonist's constant striving and failing to achieve his desired lifestyle gives the show a quirky and darkly humorous streak that also comes across as nihilistic. It also gives the show a vehicle through which to deliver its central themes.
'The Tatami Galaxy' is a show that warns its viewers to not expect too much and to embrace what they get instead. This is showcased through the journey of the nameless student. Every time the intellectual youngster goes back in time and redoes his first two years at college, he fails to recognize many of the good things that made up those two years due to his arrogance in pursuing the perfect life.
The show also relies heavily on an atmosphere of loss and the sense that something is missing or missed out on. This sense of incompletion is ever-present in the protagonist and his escapades as he completely misses all that made his life at college precious. Likewise, viewers of the show experience the feeling that they have missed something as 'The Tatami Galaxy' is an extremely fast-paced show where every episode flies by in blink-and-you'll-miss-it moments (and blink-and-you'll-miss-it subtitles), so fast that two years of the protagonist's life go by in 22 minutes! This rapid-fire pace is concurrent with another core theme of 'The Tatami Galaxy.' The speed of the show emphasizes the fact that life doesn't stop for anyone (even if one can go back in time and relive his last two years), so one must appreciate and enjoy those amazing moments while they last. As Ferris Bueller once said, "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it."
Life does move fast in 'The Tatami Galaxy,' and every moment that flies by in each episode is unlike anything ever seen. From a bike-stealing agency whose sole purpose is to spoil one's day to a lifelong war of pranks between a zen-like super senior and a lecherous club president to a love doll that gets treated as a real person by any individual who comes across it, every episode of 'The Tatami Galaxy' is chockful of creative absurdities that make for an entertaining experience. It embraces weirdness while remaining grounded in the ugliness of human error, all the while reminding viewers that they are capable of avoiding the same mistakes and enjoying life for what it is. It is an enjoyable show, and I recommend it for anyone looking for something different to watch.
The protagonist's constant striving and failing to achieve his desired lifestyle gives the show a quirky and darkly humorous streak that also comes across as nihilistic. It also gives the show a vehicle through which to deliver its central themes.
'The Tatami Galaxy' is a show that warns its viewers to not expect too much and to embrace what they get instead. This is showcased through the journey of the nameless student. Every time the intellectual youngster goes back in time and redoes his first two years at college, he fails to recognize many of the good things that made up those two years due to his arrogance in pursuing the perfect life.
The show also relies heavily on an atmosphere of loss and the sense that something is missing or missed out on. This sense of incompletion is ever-present in the protagonist and his escapades as he completely misses all that made his life at college precious. Likewise, viewers of the show experience the feeling that they have missed something as 'The Tatami Galaxy' is an extremely fast-paced show where every episode flies by in blink-and-you'll-miss-it moments (and blink-and-you'll-miss-it subtitles), so fast that two years of the protagonist's life go by in 22 minutes! This rapid-fire pace is concurrent with another core theme of 'The Tatami Galaxy.' The speed of the show emphasizes the fact that life doesn't stop for anyone (even if one can go back in time and relive his last two years), so one must appreciate and enjoy those amazing moments while they last. As Ferris Bueller once said, "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it."
Life does move fast in 'The Tatami Galaxy,' and every moment that flies by in each episode is unlike anything ever seen. From a bike-stealing agency whose sole purpose is to spoil one's day to a lifelong war of pranks between a zen-like super senior and a lecherous club president to a love doll that gets treated as a real person by any individual who comes across it, every episode of 'The Tatami Galaxy' is chockful of creative absurdities that make for an entertaining experience. It embraces weirdness while remaining grounded in the ugliness of human error, all the while reminding viewers that they are capable of avoiding the same mistakes and enjoying life for what it is. It is an enjoyable show, and I recommend it for anyone looking for something different to watch.
I'll tell you right now that I don't like anime. I never got into it and of the anime I've been exposed to, I felt the horrible overacting and ridiculous plots robbed the medium of anything worth watching. Now that I've seen The Tatami Galaxy, I'm forced to eat my words and consider it one of the greatest television shows of all time. It's an artistic powerhouse with great characters, clever writing, and an unmistakable artistic style.
The art itself is admittedly what attracted me to the series. I've always been interested in avant-garde animation and this is one of the most beautifully animated shows of them all. I won't bore you with describing the style itself but needless to say it's incredibly unique and satisfying. Even if the writing was atrocious this would be a show worth watching on the animation alone. Luckily enough, it isn't the only great thing about the series. The story keeps reeling you back in time and time again until before you know it, it's all over.
The plot is simple -- an unnamed protagonist recollects his previous two years at university and, like most people, asks whether or not doing something different would lead him to a better position for his 3rd year. For the protagonist, this is often culminated in joining a different club or choosing to pursue a different girl than he previously had, and the series explores what alternative possibilities arise when these choices are made. Imagine "Groundhog Day" or "Lola Rennt" with the wonders and curiosity of a misfit underclassmen.
The show presents itself as an outstanding stand-alone project with a clear story structure. Even though each episode is essentially revisiting the same kind of conflict and resolution, the differences are fresh enough to surprise you every time. Every episode starts with the protagonist complaining about how he came as a freshmen looking for that "rose coloured" (romantic, idealized) campus life complete with a raven-haired maiden, and every episode ends with him asking himself if he had only done something different, wouldn't he have gotten what he'd came to university in search of? This formula allows for seemingly minute details and background characters to re-appear in genuinely novel and surprising ways throughout the duration of the series. The writing is astounding to say the least and you'll find yourself watching the series again and again noticing every time a couple of new things which either foreshadow or reference that which you hadn't seen before. It's not usual that such a limited run series can offer so much on repeated viewings.
The ending is one of the best finales of all time. It ties every loose end up in a way that I would have never expected and feels incredibly satisfying. The last episode answers every question you have about the series, has a very clever twist, and leaves the protagonist with some proper insight and feeling when it's all said and done. It even choked me up a bit, which was probably the last thing I'd expect from a show that doesn't seem to take itself so seriously. The sentimentality and philosophy at the end really strikes a chord and leaves the viewer with insight on their own life decisions and how to come to grips with them.
The most telling part about the show is that you don't end the series wishing there were more, rather, it's a perfectly self-contained package that covers all the ground it needs to without an inch too little or too much. Shows that are this well thought out from start to finish are so rare and few and far between I'm at a loss to even think of a comparable example.
So all this excellence and nothing bad? The only thing negative to say is that the narrative is EXTREMELY fast in every episode so reading subtitles is pretty much as hard as it gets. The worst part about that being how hard it is to enjoy the art style without missing out on key dialogue and narration at the bottom of the screen. If you're patient, you can pause it when you need to or slow down the playback speed, but bear in mind the rapid pace plays very well into the animation style, and serves to "cram" a lot of content into each 22 minute episode. But if the pace were slower and each episode an hour long, the show would definitely lose its magic.
In the end, I guess all I can say is to watch The Tatami Galaxy and see if you like it yourself. Give it at least a few episodes before you make a decision and believe me you'll be hooked. I cannot recommend it highly enough for those who like artsy animation, poignant but never overbearing themes, and the foibles of truly unique characters experiencing college life. Simply put, anime fan or not, this is one of the best shows you'll ever see.
The art itself is admittedly what attracted me to the series. I've always been interested in avant-garde animation and this is one of the most beautifully animated shows of them all. I won't bore you with describing the style itself but needless to say it's incredibly unique and satisfying. Even if the writing was atrocious this would be a show worth watching on the animation alone. Luckily enough, it isn't the only great thing about the series. The story keeps reeling you back in time and time again until before you know it, it's all over.
The plot is simple -- an unnamed protagonist recollects his previous two years at university and, like most people, asks whether or not doing something different would lead him to a better position for his 3rd year. For the protagonist, this is often culminated in joining a different club or choosing to pursue a different girl than he previously had, and the series explores what alternative possibilities arise when these choices are made. Imagine "Groundhog Day" or "Lola Rennt" with the wonders and curiosity of a misfit underclassmen.
The show presents itself as an outstanding stand-alone project with a clear story structure. Even though each episode is essentially revisiting the same kind of conflict and resolution, the differences are fresh enough to surprise you every time. Every episode starts with the protagonist complaining about how he came as a freshmen looking for that "rose coloured" (romantic, idealized) campus life complete with a raven-haired maiden, and every episode ends with him asking himself if he had only done something different, wouldn't he have gotten what he'd came to university in search of? This formula allows for seemingly minute details and background characters to re-appear in genuinely novel and surprising ways throughout the duration of the series. The writing is astounding to say the least and you'll find yourself watching the series again and again noticing every time a couple of new things which either foreshadow or reference that which you hadn't seen before. It's not usual that such a limited run series can offer so much on repeated viewings.
The ending is one of the best finales of all time. It ties every loose end up in a way that I would have never expected and feels incredibly satisfying. The last episode answers every question you have about the series, has a very clever twist, and leaves the protagonist with some proper insight and feeling when it's all said and done. It even choked me up a bit, which was probably the last thing I'd expect from a show that doesn't seem to take itself so seriously. The sentimentality and philosophy at the end really strikes a chord and leaves the viewer with insight on their own life decisions and how to come to grips with them.
The most telling part about the show is that you don't end the series wishing there were more, rather, it's a perfectly self-contained package that covers all the ground it needs to without an inch too little or too much. Shows that are this well thought out from start to finish are so rare and few and far between I'm at a loss to even think of a comparable example.
So all this excellence and nothing bad? The only thing negative to say is that the narrative is EXTREMELY fast in every episode so reading subtitles is pretty much as hard as it gets. The worst part about that being how hard it is to enjoy the art style without missing out on key dialogue and narration at the bottom of the screen. If you're patient, you can pause it when you need to or slow down the playback speed, but bear in mind the rapid pace plays very well into the animation style, and serves to "cram" a lot of content into each 22 minute episode. But if the pace were slower and each episode an hour long, the show would definitely lose its magic.
In the end, I guess all I can say is to watch The Tatami Galaxy and see if you like it yourself. Give it at least a few episodes before you make a decision and believe me you'll be hooked. I cannot recommend it highly enough for those who like artsy animation, poignant but never overbearing themes, and the foibles of truly unique characters experiencing college life. Simply put, anime fan or not, this is one of the best shows you'll ever see.
The characters are great, have some Curious music, and really interesting way to tell the story
I loved a lot of things in this series but I felt confused some times.
I would recommend it to everyone who is interested in something unique.
I loved a lot of things in this series but I felt confused some times.
I would recommend it to everyone who is interested in something unique.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesIn one episode of the series, a character can be seen reading "The Night is Short, Walk On Girl", a book written by Tomihiko Morimi, who was also the author of "The Tatami Galaxy". The director, Masaaki Yuasa, would also later go on to direct an animated adaptation of the novel.
- Citações
Seitarô Higuchi: No one knows what the future holds in life. We must take that endless bit of darkness and turn it to our advantage.
- ConexõesFollowed by Tatami: Uma Viagem no Tempo (2022)
Principais escolhas
Faça login para avaliar e ver a lista de recomendações personalizadas
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Легенда про чотири з половиною татамі
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração23 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.78 : 1
- 16:9 HD
Contribua para esta página
Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente