TL;DR – This is a film that blends the idea of an advertisement with the presentation of a documentary and works about as well as you would expect
Score – 2.5 out of 5 stars
Post-Credit Scene – There is no post-credit scene

Review –
Growing up, one of the touchstones in my early cinematic life was anime, you
would get it in the morning on TV, which I had to tape on VCR for watching
later. Indeed, I think every one of my generations loathed those opening sounds
of the first episode of Pokémon
because it meant that Cheez TV had
run out of new episodes and was starting it from the beginning again. As I grew
up, it was a part of my cinematic world that I just couldn’t keep up with, and every
time I go to conventions I see an array of cosplayers showing my just how many
shows I have missed. Well when I saw that there was a new documentary about anime
on Netflix, I was really interested because it would be nice to walk down
memory lane and to explore the future again. Unfortunately, that is not quite
what we got.
The premise for this documentary is that Netflix set the director Alex Burunova
of working out the answer to a question ‘What is Anime’? Alex, having no experience
with the genre other than a tangential understanding of its influence decided
to throw herself into the world of anime and manga and the sub-cultures that
consume and make it. This, of course, meant going straight to the source and
talking with the directors and animators where it is all made in Japan. It is
good that right from the start, they make it clear where the genesis of this
project came from, it was a Netflix project and Alex was hired to make it. So
when the documentary goes to Adi Shankar the creator of the Castlevania Netflix series as its first
interview it feels like the right jumping-off point for the show. Well instead
of jumping off from there, this is where the show stayed.