• lilypad [she/her, null/void]@hexbear.net
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    4 hours ago

    Arakawa Under the Bridge is basically “relationships or: how I learned to stop worrying and love mutual aid”.

    Its about a capitalist who gets thrown into a more anarcho-* social group and lives there. Its silly and rediculous (and warning theres some homophobia I think, its been a while since I watched it tho so take what I say with salt).

  • CriticalOtaku [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    5 hours ago

    Since no one has mentioned it yet:

    Chainsaw Man is a story about how our relationship to capitalism is the same as being in an abusive relationship, Manufacturing Consent is just grooming and that at the end of the day we have to eat the rich. (It’s not explicitly Marxist but it’s class conscious the same way shows like Parasite or Squid Game are.)

  • KobaCumTribute [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    7 hours ago

    ZOM 100: Bucket List of the Dead is a pro-social, class conscious zombie story about a depressed and horribly overworked office worker waking up to a zombie apocalypse and celebrating because it means he doesn’t have to go to work anymore, then setting out to do all the things he’d never gotten to do before the world ended because he was too busy working, before it’s too late. It also criticizes that and he quickly comes around to “oh, this is actually really empty and reckless,” eventually settling on a theme that’s something like “even in a hopeless, doomed world, even in the face of calamity, it’s important to keep living and helping people and finding joy in life where you can.”

    It’s not explicitly Marxist, but a later arc in the manga does have a character explicitly say something like “Marx said that capitalism’s contradictions would eventually lead to its destruction, but here the world has ended and capitalists are still [making horrible stratified nightmare systems based on rentseeking and feeding people to zombies] and people just keep going along with it for some reason.” There’s also a pretty early panel showing a broken cityscape with no electricity, filled with shambling corpses, overlaid with dialogue about careers that has the gem “100 years ago no one would have predicted modern careers like drone pilot or cryptocurrency specialist.”

    The whole thing is stylish as hell, with decent themes and a tone that walks a line between dry and bitter sarcasm and wide-eyed wonder. It’s a little too soft on the more fucked up places it goes too, but ultimately the main characters are almost pathologically-good-natured civilians trying to survive and lend a helping hand where they can, they’re not hardened revolutionaries out to fight for a better world. The manga also has a lot of little filler scenes that are basically just the cast going to [insert famous tourist destination in Japan] and all but soyfacing and pointing at [thing it’s famous for] before zombies show up and they have to run away. Some pages have multiple of that gag crammed into their panels for a quick montage.

  • Tervell [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    7 hours ago

    gotta shill for Patlabor 2 (the whole franchise is great, although I haven’t gotten around to watching the whole TV series yet, but the 2nd movie is the most explicitly political)

    Patlabor 2: The “Just War/Unjust Peace” Scene (1993) (or with subs here)

    We’re a rich country, and what is our wealth built on? The bloody corpses in all these wars… they’re the foundation of our peace.

    Other countries, comfortably far away, pay the price for our prosperous peace. We’ve learned very well how to ignore their suffering.

  • pastalicious [he/him, undecided]@hexbear.net
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    7 hours ago

    PlanetES - in the near future the moon and space near earth are colonized. Our protagonists jobs are to deal with dangerous space debris but it’s not a profit generator so they are neglected and underfunded despite everything in space relying on them. Also themes of colonialism and the moral hazards inherent in capital accumulation.

  • Awoo [she/her]@hexbear.netM
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    11 hours ago

    Trigger’s shows:

    Gurren Lagann is about a double revolution.

    Kill la Kill is about a revolution, social norms, and different methods of praxis.

    Little Witch Academia has extremely strong class themes.

    Promare is about a failed global revolution, followed by the defeat of a fascist.


    Miyazaki/Studio Ghibli, he’s a communist or at least was. He still holds all the same views he had before the fall of the USSR. Everything he makes is marxist in some way whether he still calls himself one or not.

    Akira is set upon the backdrop of an obviously marxist revolution.

    Shinsekai Yori has deeply political themes but they don’t really start until parts 2 and 3. Any leftist will sympathise with Squealer.

    One Piece - This is explicitly a marxist story that is building up towards world revolution. The author Oda has Che Guevara on the wall of his office.

    Gundam are not explicitly marxist but political themes lean into marxism at times. Some shows better than others, I’m not a gundam expert.

    Revolutionary Girl Utena - about breaking gender standards in society. Queer show.

    Madoka Magica - I argue this show is explicitly marxist and the entire relationship between magical girls and the system is explicitly a critique and call for revolution over capitalism.

    Deca-Dence - Explicitly marxist show. The ending is cowardly though.

    Sarazanmai is Kunihiko Ikuhara’s most direct attack on capitalism

    Kino no Tabi: The Beautiful World - Start with the 2003 version not the remake. Each episode is kinda independent and explores philosophical themes.

    Houseki no Kuni (Land of the Lustrous) - What is depicted is an explicitly a communist society with a communist economy. Show features incredible art, incredible directing, and incredible use of body horror to depict the inner feelings of characters. In terms of modern anime it has done more than anything in the genre to change the way the rest of the industry works by demonstrating what 3d used correctly can do for the genre. This show is a masterpiece and one of my favourites, rewatching it always brings new things to analyse or think about.

    • CriticalOtaku [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      11 hours ago

      Gundam are not explicitly marxist but political themes lean into marxism at times. Some shows better than others, I’m not a gundam expert.

      Just to add, Tomino (the guy who made the original 0079 Gundam) had a similar background to Ghibli’s Miyazaki (they’re the same age and they worked together on World Masterpiece Theater) and was also active in the student union’s in the 60’s. All the stuff he made is extremely class conscious. “Everything he makes is marxist in some way whether he still calls himself one or not.” applies to him as well, even if in public nowadays he’s kinda ultra liberal.

      The show I’d recommend from him is Turn A Gundam, which besides being a beautiful high-concept Sci-fi show (that I won’t spoil) is also explicitly about settler colonialism.

      Edit for basic fact checking lol

      • Frivolous_Beatnik [comrade/them, any]@hexbear.net
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        11 hours ago

        So I’ve been told that Turn A is best with the context of having seen some UC Gundam already, is that true? I wouldn’t be able to judge, having been into Gundam to one degree or another since I was a kid.

        • CriticalOtaku [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          11 hours ago

          Imo Turn A is perfectly fine standalone. It’ll help to be familiar with Gundam shows as a concept, but I think the core conceit is strong enough that you can go in mostly blind and be fine

  • Aquilae [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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    12 hours ago

    You might also enjoy the currently airing Orb: On the Movements of the Earth. It’s a tense seinen about a prodigious kid in the 17th century trying to research/prove the heliocentric model while trying to avoid being killed by the Church.

  • AdmiralDoohickey [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    12 hours ago

    I don’t think you can find something explicitly communist in popular japanese media tbh, at best you will get something anti-imperialist like Code Geass or the Stormblood expansion for FFXIV, or something class conscious like Kaiji

    • huf [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      12 hours ago

      well not japanese anime, sure, but chinese anime? vietnamese anime? someone must be making communist anime somewhere.

      • Tabitha ☢️[she/her]@hexbear.net
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        9 hours ago

        FOR REAL why is there not like the explicitly socialist Chinese/Vietnamese equivalent of JJBA/Death Note/FLCL/DBZ/Attack on Titan/One Piece/Sailor Moon/Fullmetal Alchemist/Breaking Bad that we’re all obsessed with and begging for subs/dubs, waiting weekly for new episodes?

        The closest I can think of is three body problem (and I’m not even sure either version should count).

        I can understand waiting until 202X for this to happen, I just think we’re behind schedule.

        • barrbaric [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          20 minutes ago

          Japan has a pretty big lead in the animation sector, and their cultural dominance in the space can’t be overstated. Billbilli, a pretty major Chinese streaming site, is named after the nickname of a character from a Japanese manga/anime series (Mikoto Misaka from A Certain Scientific Railgun), and a lot of animation studios (and even just solo artists) in other Asian countries end up working as contractors on Japanese productions because there is just so much work there (it certainly doesn’t hurt that the pay for these jobs is usually pretty bad for people living in Japan). The Japanese government also actively subsidizes anime because they recognized the benefits to having cultural exports boost their international reputation. I’d imagine China is doing similar things, but they would have started later. Lastly, the companies that get distribution rights and put together the subs and dubs (Crunchyroll et al) all already have agreements with Japanese companies, and not Chinese ones, so even if there were a bunch of high quality donghua, they’d still likely be overlooked in favor of Japanese anime.

          As for things being explicitly socialist, China tends not to be particularly evangelistic about socialism or their political system, so it’s not surprising that the shows that do get made don’t tend to feature them heavily. Also, while I don’t know what genres are popular in China, I’d wager they’re in a similar place to modern anime where modern or futuristic shows with political leanings where discussions on political economy and the superiority of socialism would be possible have largely died out.

          Unfortunately, so far there’s only been one season of Chinese animation that I thought was worth watching, and it was Link Click S1, which is hardly socialist.