The premise is nightmarish and the characters are obtuse.
This season was pointless. No tension, nothing resolved, and no new drama to look forward to in the next season. Decent sitcom nonetheless.
This season was pointless. Decent sitcom, but nothing was resolved and no tension created.
In its attempt to comment on the corruption of the wealthy, The Menu just falls on its face. Best served cold.
It's really fallen off these past couple of seasons. Big yawn, dropped.
If this episode doesn't motivate you to put your best foot forward, what will?
Filled to the brim with absolute joy. Every episode was a delight.
This was about as underwhelming as a piece of wet bread with marmite
This is quickly shaping up to be one of my favorite SOLs. It's all so well done
I keep expecting this show to get really dark. Must be the art style. In reality its a slightly too-ero cutesy coming of age story
And it was all a dream. How zainy.
It was fun yet disappointing watching this movie fall apart. The first half was ultimately much more interesting than the second.
Greatly improved over S1. Reformatting the show to be more focused on the sitcom elements tracked well and formed a more coherent plot.
Who's to say which reality is more real?
When do friendships stop being friendly and start becoming burdensome? Are best friends truly meant to last a lifetime and beyond?
Pretty and lacks sustenance, which results in a sugar rush and an upset stomach.
With little sensible plot, I would have preferred a much shorter season. As it stands, the first half is great and the second completely unravels itself into nothing more than a pathetic excuse of a slasher. Kind of regret watching this, to be honest.
Shimamura's mental illness took a backseat, as signified by her natural hair color returning. It was the best part of the show. There was enough of interest left for me to finish it, but damn if I'm not disappointed. Ideally, the arc would have finished tragically as Adachi's overenthusiasm drove Shimamura away. I suppose that's character progression, but for it to happen over the course of a year is unrealistic. I am mostly disappointed with its ultimate genericness.
That being said, this was an excellent watch full of potential and accompanied by a fantastic art style. Thoroughly enjoyed most of it.
Despite failing its pilot's promise of extraordinariness, TONIKAWA sparks happiness in every episode.
There's the grime I was looking for in a Batman movie.
An excellent conclusion to a great trilogy.
While the character growth is appreciated, it is definitely rushed. All in all, a decent ending for an excellent drama given the episodes allocated.
That was the smoothest recovery from raging alcoholism and drug abuse I have ever seen
Too much flash and not enough grit
Not bad, and definitely gets better as the season progresses and the characters grow. Getting through the first 3/4 of the season was a slog, though. Looking forward to S2.
All of the mysticism set up in the first episode was dropped, which just left awkward cringe humor. Depressing.
The concept is lacking, but I hope the show can find its footing.
Surely there are other ways to demonstrate Matt's resolve. Devoting half an episode to watch him kiss girls lacks what makes this show worth watching.
One must not only learn from deskwork, but also from interacting with other souls.
It's obviously a cult classic. I'm just not part of the cult.
The logic is disappointing, but the strong family values make up for it
Many threads left open for season 2, but I'm doubtful it will come. Probably won't bother with s2 regardless. An average overreaching comedic drama.
Best epilogue this mess of a story could have had.