![]() ![]() So it is likely that makers will soon wave the green flag for Keep Your Hands Off Eizouken Season 2 once they have sufficient source material for it. Besides, it is one of those anime that are too good to be canceled. The good news is that the manga is still running, and the studio will eventually have enough content. The manga has published only five volumes so far, and Science SARU already used most of its content in the debut installment. Well, this is because the production studio currently lacks source material for it. However, it seems like they would have to go through a hiatus. Now all of its followers are getting desperate to see its sequel. ![]() It managed to develop a huge and loyal fan base in a very short amount of time. Eizouken even holds a great score of 8.16 and is ranked at #349 on the same platform. Later, its adaptation followed the same path and bagged some great reviews from both viewers and critics. Hands off eizouken season 2 series#The manga series received a great critical reception even before the arrival of the anime. Keep Your Hands Off Eizouken Season 2: Renewal Status! Overall, the show is phenomenal and something that the audience would certainly never regret watching it. It keeps the viewers hooked into the plot, and by the twelfth episode, they start to cry out to see more of it. Science SARU amazingly animated the process of making stories. Along with all that, its beautiful art style and animation made this show a treat for its viewers. Recommended Reading: Sakuga Blog will likely cover the series in full, and I highly recommend their detailed accounts of the creators behind this show.Keep Your Hands Off Eizouken’s story was quite gripping, and its characters were all well written too. By pure chance, she meets Mizusaki Tsubame, an up-and-coming socialite secretly dreaming of becoming an animator. Hands off eizouken season 2 full#By combining Tsubame’s characters with Midori’s art we get a full product and a love letter to animation itself. Asakusa Midori wants to create an anime, but shes too disheartened to make that first step by herself. And it gets that artists themselves are focus on different things. It gets the progression over time as an artist right - Midori evolves from the scribbles initially presented to rich visual worlds. There are so many small details in Eizouken that resonated with me as an artist despite the fact that I don’t consider myself a sakuga person (or at all qualified to comment on individual animators regularly). I focus much more on life drawing, people, and characters in my art than I do extensive backgrounds or concept art. In fact, as much as I identified with Midori as a character - especially her rampant imagination - I’m much more like Tsubame Mizusaki in practice. I continued drawing, but creating concepts was never my forté. These slowly evaporated as we went into junior high school and later high school. Yet another friend’s house was cursed with the big toe of a giant, and we would run screaming through her house, up and down the stairs all the way from the attic to the basement trying to avoid being crushed. Another friend and I dug up pieces of pottery and marbles from my backyard and hoarded them, later running a museum with these all-important artifacts for our parents. ![]() My friend D and I had an entire stable of horses that would follow us to school every morning and be waiting for us every afternoon to walk us home. When I was in elementary school, my friends and I created our own worlds, scribbling them down on scraps of paper like Midori. It’s a more simplistic drawing, and lacks the detail of her later concept art, but is a pure expression of a child’s imagination - something that stuck with me as a viewer throughout the episode and well after I was finished watching. Young Midori’s reimagining of her own apartment complex struck me more than the above scene. It’s love of animation as a medium and vehicle for our imaginations is apparent in every frame. For lack of a better description, Eizouken is a sakuga anime about sakuga. In my own corner of anime Twitter, I saw a variety of sakuga fans sharing the above image - Eizouken protagonist Midori Asakusa watching Future Boy Conan with rapt attention as her voice over muses that this was the moment she realized that people made the anime she watched - with their personal realizations of anime creators and own similar epiphanies. There is bound to be a lot of praise in the anime community (on social media, larger review sites, YouTube, and even tiny little blogs like this one) for Masaaki Yuasa and Science Saru’s adaptation of Keep Your Hands of Eizouken! Their love of animation as a vehicle for their and our imaginations is abundantly clear in every frame. ![]()
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