×
  • remind me tomorrow
  • remind me next week
  • never remind me
Subscribe to the ANN Newsletter • Wake up every Sunday to a curated list of ANN's most interesting posts of the week. read more

The Fall Anime 2025 Preview Guide - GINTAMA - Mr. Ginpachi's Zany Class

How would you rate episode 1 of
GINTAMA - Mr. Ginpachi's Zany Class ?
Community score: 3.6



What is this?

gintama01.png

Sakata Ginpachi is a high school teacher with his trademark silver, curly hair, dead-fish eyes, and a sloppily worn lab coat. He's in charge of Gintama High School's Class 3-Z: home to a ragtag group of frequent troublemakers, including idol otaku, stalkers, mayo guzzlers, sadists, delinquents, and many more. Follow Sakata Ginpachi as he navigates his rollercoaster life, nonchalantly resolving any trouble that comes his way; meanwhile, his unique students continue to raise hell!

GINTAMA - Mr. Ginpachi's Zany Class is based on Tomohito Ōsaki 's spinoff novel series of Hideaki Sorachi 's Gintama manga. The anime series is streaming on Crunchyroll, Hulu, and Anime.com.


How was the first episode?

silverball-gt-gintama-ep-1-richard
Richard Eisenbeis
Rating:

If you're a Gintama fan, feel free to skip over this entry in the guide. I've never seen a single episode of the main anime, and the most I know about the series is that it has to do with aliens and the Shinsengumi—and that it's well-known for breaking the fourth wall. Oh, I also know that Elizabeth is Elizabeth. I have no idea what she is, but I know her name for some reason.

I have, however, seen more of these “popular anime reimaged in a school” comedies than I'd like to admit. Besides Isekai Quartet (which is about the actual canon characters being forced to play high school by an unknown force rather than them being reimagined as high schoolers), they're all pretty much crap. And as for GINTAMA - Mr. Ginpachi's Zany Class specifically… it does nothing to change that opinion.

I didn't laugh even once throughout this episode. In fact, the only part I found even mildly enjoyable was the cold opening, which explained the genesis of this spin-off—and tore it a new one in a far better way than I could ever hope to in this review. The rest of the episode was predictable—at least when it came to the jokes I could understand.

Basically, Ginpachi's class has to get an 80% grade on the next test in a class of their choosing. They decide that the best way to do so is to cheat, which somehow ends up with them actually studying properly for the test (and still failing). That's the main joke of the episode. The rest of the humor, for the most part, seems to be based on Gintama in-jokes. You need to know the characters, their relationships, or their personalities. And, knowing none of these, boredom ensued.

Judging by this first episode, I can say with confidence you shouldn't watch this unless you are a Gintama fan—and maybe not even then (though I'll let actual Gintama watchers make that call). Maybe that was obvious going in, but I don't feel bad giving it a shot.


vlcsnap-2025-10-06-16h57m00s087.png
Bolts
Rating:

Gintama is back…sort of? Classroom parodies are nothing new in the world of anime. The anime industry has spent a considerable amount of time milking that setting and showcasing its popularity to the average anime fan. So, in some ways, it makes sense to take a show that in no way, shape, or form has to do with school and see how these characters would act in that setting. I personally love over-the-top and ludicrous comedic anime, with School Rumble genuinely being one of my all-time favorite anime. However, what happens when you put a show that is already over the top in that setting?

I love how extreme Gintama is with its lampshading. I never finished the original manga or the anime, but I have seen a good chunk of the franchise, and I know that it's pretty standard for the series to poke fun at itself, the company that makes it, and the author who pens it. The series, which started with a full confession that it is essentially a cash grab that will disappoint the fans, was probably the funniest, if not the most obvious, joke in the entire episode. But outside of that, I will admit it was a bit hard for me to get into everything that was going on the minute we actually got into the classroom.

I think it's because, and it might shock some people, the episode was genuinely way too predictable. Gin is laid-back but jaded, and nothing about that really changes when you make him a teacher. He's still rude, he's abrasive, and he initially always seems like he's looking out for himself, but we know deep down he actually does care to an extent. Some of the characters act a bit younger than they usually do (remember, most of the cast are adults), but their jokes mostly revolve around certain character traits that we've seen from the show itself. The only difference is that they're all wearing school uniforms, and now they're in a classroom.

The problem with doing this type of parody for Gintama is that this premiere could've just been an episode of one of the earlier seasons of the show. Sometimes, Gintama would have an episode focused on an entirely different setting, lampshading a different genre. While I am happy that the show is self-aware enough to know that this is a tired premise, the show was still made, and it's expected to generate some profit, right? My biggest concern is whether this series will be able to generate as many laughs as the original series, given its more limited premise for an entire season. I feel like if anybody could pull that off, it would be Gintama, but I'm also cynical in my way, so who is to say?


gintama-cm.png
Caitlin Moore
Rating:
(for the Gintama newbies)

I think I've sat down and watched maybe three episodes of Gintama beginning to end? I've seen a lot of clips and screencaps flying around the internet, but I've never managed to get into it for no reason other than that it's really long. The bits I've seen, such as the conversation about the most eligible men of Dragon Ball and the truck full of penises, are consistently laugh-out-loud funny, so I've never doubted its power as a gag series, but there's always something I want to watch just a bit more. Thus, I went into GINTAMA - Mr. Ginpachi's Zany Class- with mostly fresh eyes.

The opening gag is an extended bit about the circumstances under which this show, initially a four-page manga extra, came to be. I've always been impressed with how much lampshading Gintama gets away with, and this was no exception. From Ginpachi shouting about how it came to be, thanks to a producer bragging that he would get more Gintama made, to their ruthless mockery of Dragon Ball GT, every gag was at the expense of the producers, up until it concluded with the assertion that pretty much everything they'd said was true. Gintama follows the comedy philosophy that if you keep throwing gags at your audience, they'll remember the ones that made them laugh and forget the ones that fell flat, and you know what? It worked. I was thoroughly entertained.

Then Ginpachi-sensei wakes up, and the alternate universe story begins in earnest. Here's where it gets hairier for a newcomer; a lot of the humor relies on recontextualizing familiar characters and run-on gags. The effect is similar to trying to join a group of friends who have all known each other for decades, who have so many in-jokes and references that it feels like they're speaking half in code. The good news is that there are still jokes that don't rely on previous familiarity, and they are indeed funny. The cast of A-list voice actors has been playing these characters together for so long that their chemistry is totally effortless.

Unfortunately, this episode was a great illustration of how inadequate Crunchyroll's new subtitling system is. The backgrounds were stuffed with text-based gags that went untranslated. Perhaps you noticed that one of the calligraphy practice sheets was different, but did you know that it says “mayo”? Wonder who wrote that one, huh?


Subscribe to Crunchyroll here!
The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the views of Anime News Network, its employees, owners, or sponsors.

discuss this in the forum (157 posts) |
bookmark/share with: short url

this article has been modified since it was originally posted; see change history

back to The Fall Anime 2025 Preview Guide summoned by Crunchyroll
Season Preview Guide homepage / archives