Alisa Mikhailovna Kujou é considerada o ídolo de seu instituto. Ela conquistou o coração de inúmeros alunos do sexo masculino e é admirada por todos os outros, mas todos desconfiam dessa gar... Ler tudoAlisa Mikhailovna Kujou é considerada o ídolo de seu instituto. Ela conquistou o coração de inúmeros alunos do sexo masculino e é admirada por todos os outros, mas todos desconfiam dessa garota quase perfeita.Alisa Mikhailovna Kujou é considerada o ídolo de seu instituto. Ela conquistou o coração de inúmeros alunos do sexo masculino e é admirada por todos os outros, mas todos desconfiam dessa garota quase perfeita.
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- 5 vitórias e 9 indicações no total
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I already gave this show an 8/10: I've halved my review. Look, I might get a bit less agreement from others on this compared to my first review, but I don't think much to the show anymore.
As always with my reviews, HEAR ME OUT. Don't immediately dislike it if you like the show. As I said I have given it an 8 in the past, I understand where you're coming from if you enjoy it, I just don't have your view anymore and here's why.
Alya Sometimes Hides Her Feelings in Russian, or as I like to call it Vladmir-Sama: Love is War, is a romantic comedy, high-school slice of life anime. At first it creates an impression of being a simple monogamous easygoing show. We get introduced to Alya, who seems initially a really enjoyable character who is a good balance of being verbose and cutting while also being the adolescent mess we all were at her age. Alya is on the school council and is seen as the Ice Queen high achieving unapproachable and cunning... let me just sum it up: all this seems just like some lame rip of Kaguya from Love is War, or other similar trope "school council" characters we see so often in Japanese media. This isn't me saying Alya's personality is like Kaguya: quite the opposite, where she is very obviously not as refined and cold as she seems, and she is friendly to people at times, but she isn't the genius like Kaguya. Let me put it like this - where Kaguya Shinomiya is a good character because you see a perfect girl's flaws, Alya is a good character because she is a flawed person who strives for perfection.
But the show definitely struggles with originality in its setting and plot: like other Japanese media, we see the school council is powerful, well-respected and organised, and with this comes the power to disrupt lesson times for school politics and debate. How plausible. This is such a common trope that you can't knock it too much, but I dislike how this show approaches it in particular because it tries to make itself seem plausible, where similar school council shows like Classroom of the Elite are so unashamedly ridiculous that you have to slightly enjoy them no matter how cringeworthy they seem.
And this is my problem with Alya as a whole: it can start with some relatability but fast loses it. You get this cool dynamic of two people falling in love, and that's great, and that can hold even amidst the weird political drama undertones which the show seems to be taking far too seriously. But at the same time, it slips out of that essence of 2 people made for each other and deeply unable to reveal their honest feelings, and decides to make all the mistakes other romances make. Love triangles, for some reason the sister complex disease; unnecessary deviation from everything you love about such romance stories. I wanted to find a monogamous chemistry which was unique in this show, but instead I found the author seemed scared. Scared to progress things quickly at risk of ending the show so fast. Scared to not have a backup plot in case his characters weren't well written enough. And in some ways, I get this logic. By that, I mean the writing is a problem; the show really struggles to find a way to keep characters likeable. For some reason, everyone is so uncompromising, so focused on their goals and ideals, and while for a show like One Piece standing ground in the face of great adversity is a heroic and respected act, in a low stakes romantic comedy every character just ends up being insufferable. It starts around episode 6; every character begins to become so stuck in ideals, static and undeveloped, and you begin to feel the school council plots are holding things back. The protagonist feels like the Kirito of the debate world, an overpowered speaker who wins every debate, where Alya is useless and annoying. You spend episodes trying to redeem characters who alienate themselves completely from you at the moment they come into the show. You get random extra romance opportunities, some weird succession wealthy family nonsense, just so many things that are so completely unneeded for a show which didn't need all this. And it just makes the show detestably bad. A huge disappointment and disservice to the character schematics laid out so well in those first 3 or 4 episodes. And that really hurts me.
Production quality is obviously a marvel, and I can't discredit that. If we were off adaptation quality alone it would probably be higher because it's done a good job in many ways. Although some people claim the source material is far better on here and I've not read it so I don't know. Nevertheless, I disliked the plot to this show quite a bit because it lost its enjoyable qualities so fast. Hence I have to say:
This is not worth your time; it is a poorly written, shoddy and overly serious show which is needlessly plot heavy, even ignoring the added issues of fan service and completely delinquent aspects of the show. The show's tropes deteriorate rapidly, and feel as though they quickly shift from self aware mockery to the author self inserting fantasies about his characters into the show. The characters are static, the protagonist is stupidly handsome and popular for someone who's supposed to be a recluse, and no one who's as popular as him is playing gacha games.
4/10. This isn't worth your time and I refuse to change my mind.
As always with my reviews, HEAR ME OUT. Don't immediately dislike it if you like the show. As I said I have given it an 8 in the past, I understand where you're coming from if you enjoy it, I just don't have your view anymore and here's why.
Alya Sometimes Hides Her Feelings in Russian, or as I like to call it Vladmir-Sama: Love is War, is a romantic comedy, high-school slice of life anime. At first it creates an impression of being a simple monogamous easygoing show. We get introduced to Alya, who seems initially a really enjoyable character who is a good balance of being verbose and cutting while also being the adolescent mess we all were at her age. Alya is on the school council and is seen as the Ice Queen high achieving unapproachable and cunning... let me just sum it up: all this seems just like some lame rip of Kaguya from Love is War, or other similar trope "school council" characters we see so often in Japanese media. This isn't me saying Alya's personality is like Kaguya: quite the opposite, where she is very obviously not as refined and cold as she seems, and she is friendly to people at times, but she isn't the genius like Kaguya. Let me put it like this - where Kaguya Shinomiya is a good character because you see a perfect girl's flaws, Alya is a good character because she is a flawed person who strives for perfection.
But the show definitely struggles with originality in its setting and plot: like other Japanese media, we see the school council is powerful, well-respected and organised, and with this comes the power to disrupt lesson times for school politics and debate. How plausible. This is such a common trope that you can't knock it too much, but I dislike how this show approaches it in particular because it tries to make itself seem plausible, where similar school council shows like Classroom of the Elite are so unashamedly ridiculous that you have to slightly enjoy them no matter how cringeworthy they seem.
And this is my problem with Alya as a whole: it can start with some relatability but fast loses it. You get this cool dynamic of two people falling in love, and that's great, and that can hold even amidst the weird political drama undertones which the show seems to be taking far too seriously. But at the same time, it slips out of that essence of 2 people made for each other and deeply unable to reveal their honest feelings, and decides to make all the mistakes other romances make. Love triangles, for some reason the sister complex disease; unnecessary deviation from everything you love about such romance stories. I wanted to find a monogamous chemistry which was unique in this show, but instead I found the author seemed scared. Scared to progress things quickly at risk of ending the show so fast. Scared to not have a backup plot in case his characters weren't well written enough. And in some ways, I get this logic. By that, I mean the writing is a problem; the show really struggles to find a way to keep characters likeable. For some reason, everyone is so uncompromising, so focused on their goals and ideals, and while for a show like One Piece standing ground in the face of great adversity is a heroic and respected act, in a low stakes romantic comedy every character just ends up being insufferable. It starts around episode 6; every character begins to become so stuck in ideals, static and undeveloped, and you begin to feel the school council plots are holding things back. The protagonist feels like the Kirito of the debate world, an overpowered speaker who wins every debate, where Alya is useless and annoying. You spend episodes trying to redeem characters who alienate themselves completely from you at the moment they come into the show. You get random extra romance opportunities, some weird succession wealthy family nonsense, just so many things that are so completely unneeded for a show which didn't need all this. And it just makes the show detestably bad. A huge disappointment and disservice to the character schematics laid out so well in those first 3 or 4 episodes. And that really hurts me.
Production quality is obviously a marvel, and I can't discredit that. If we were off adaptation quality alone it would probably be higher because it's done a good job in many ways. Although some people claim the source material is far better on here and I've not read it so I don't know. Nevertheless, I disliked the plot to this show quite a bit because it lost its enjoyable qualities so fast. Hence I have to say:
This is not worth your time; it is a poorly written, shoddy and overly serious show which is needlessly plot heavy, even ignoring the added issues of fan service and completely delinquent aspects of the show. The show's tropes deteriorate rapidly, and feel as though they quickly shift from self aware mockery to the author self inserting fantasies about his characters into the show. The characters are static, the protagonist is stupidly handsome and popular for someone who's supposed to be a recluse, and no one who's as popular as him is playing gacha games.
4/10. This isn't worth your time and I refuse to change my mind.
No, this show is not as good for me to call it a miracle. It's a very nice romantic comedy with drama and anything that you'd expect from a typical coming of age anime.
What really flashed me here was the Russian language. You see, I grew up with either Russian movies or American movies where Russian is totally butchered and made fun of. Also, I know that the Japanese like other languages like English or German, but due to their very specific use of the Japanese language, they rarely pronounce anything correctly.
Imagine my surprise and joy when I heard real Russian in this anime! Sure, it's with a heavy accent and the main characters have a better pronunciation than the side characters, but still. There were longer parts where I did not even need to read the subtitles and I understood everything. Kudos to the voice actors!
It was worth it to hire a Belorussian teacher of the Russian language as an advisor. Everyone has done a great job and I am looking forward to the second season.
What really flashed me here was the Russian language. You see, I grew up with either Russian movies or American movies where Russian is totally butchered and made fun of. Also, I know that the Japanese like other languages like English or German, but due to their very specific use of the Japanese language, they rarely pronounce anything correctly.
Imagine my surprise and joy when I heard real Russian in this anime! Sure, it's with a heavy accent and the main characters have a better pronunciation than the side characters, but still. There were longer parts where I did not even need to read the subtitles and I understood everything. Kudos to the voice actors!
It was worth it to hire a Belorussian teacher of the Russian language as an advisor. Everyone has done a great job and I am looking forward to the second season.
Alya Sometimes Hides Her Feelings exceeded expectations! Well-developed characters, balanced humor and heartache, and stunning animation.
Alya shines as the quirky, vulnerable princess. Masachika's complex past ripped my heart apart. Yuki's brother complex adds humor, while Maria's kindness makes her a favorite.
Character development is evenly paced; no one feels like a side character. Writing superbly balances humor and emotional depth.
Masachika's childhood history is tough to swallow, connected to a major plot point. Cliffhanger ending left me eager for Season 2!
Highlights: lovable characters, witty dialogue, poignant storytelling. Lowlights: some plot points feel rushed.
A must-watch for school rom-com fans! Comparable to "Toradora!" and "My Teen Romantic Comedy SNAFU."
Alya shines as the quirky, vulnerable princess. Masachika's complex past ripped my heart apart. Yuki's brother complex adds humor, while Maria's kindness makes her a favorite.
Character development is evenly paced; no one feels like a side character. Writing superbly balances humor and emotional depth.
Masachika's childhood history is tough to swallow, connected to a major plot point. Cliffhanger ending left me eager for Season 2!
Highlights: lovable characters, witty dialogue, poignant storytelling. Lowlights: some plot points feel rushed.
A must-watch for school rom-com fans! Comparable to "Toradora!" and "My Teen Romantic Comedy SNAFU."
In my opinion, it is an interesting anime with an amazing story. It can be said that I was reading the manga before the anime was released, and the graphics and art of the manga were also interesting, and then I realized that the anime will be released.
I also noticed that it is going to be animated by a studio that animated Oshi no ko anime, and again this made me want to follow the anime more.
I hope the story will continue well and even a second or third season will be considered for this anime.
Cool comedy romance genre.
I would like to add that apart from the characters of the anime, the Voice actors of the characters are also interesting to me.
I also noticed that it is going to be animated by a studio that animated Oshi no ko anime, and again this made me want to follow the anime more.
I hope the story will continue well and even a second or third season will be considered for this anime.
Cool comedy romance genre.
I would like to add that apart from the characters of the anime, the Voice actors of the characters are also interesting to me.
I'm used to the rom-com genre, and this one has a good start, but slowly falls off over the last 4 episodes
Putting aside some unnecessary fan service and the fact that they flirt with incest, the male protagonist starts acting very mature for his age and neutral towards a certain female, but in the end you see the opposite, so it seemed to me that they forced the usual unexpected romance to extend the anime for at least one more season (which is supported by the fact they avoided to touch the background of certain characters and instead focused on a random debate)
I'll watch the second season for the sake of closure, and I hope they don't take the typical direction (but probably they will if most of the fan base wants that in order to please them)
Putting aside some unnecessary fan service and the fact that they flirt with incest, the male protagonist starts acting very mature for his age and neutral towards a certain female, but in the end you see the opposite, so it seemed to me that they forced the usual unexpected romance to extend the anime for at least one more season (which is supported by the fact they avoided to touch the background of certain characters and instead focused on a random debate)
I'll watch the second season for the sake of closure, and I hope they don't take the typical direction (but probably they will if most of the fan base wants that in order to please them)
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesBased on a love comedy light novel series written by Sunsunsun and illustrated by Momoco. Sun Sun Sun began writing the novel on the Shousetsuka ni Narou website in May 2020. Kadokawa released the first volume in February 2021 under its Sneaker Bunko imprint, featuring illustrations by Momoco.
- Trilhas sonoras1-Ban Kagayaku Hoshi
[Opening Theme]
Music by Yusuke Shirato
Arranged by Yusuke Shirato
Lyrics by Yusuke Shirato
Performed by Sumire Uesaka (as Alya)
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- Alya Sometimes Hides Her Feelings in Russian
- Empresas de produção
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- Tempo de duração25 minutos
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