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This Week in Anime
When Anime Takes on Sex Education

by Lucas DeRuyter & Steve Jones,

Lucas and Steve compare and contrast SHIMONETA and Nukitashi to see which show does it better.

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed by the participants in this chatlog are not the views of Anime News Network.
Spoiler Warning for discussion of the series ahead.

SHIMONETA and World End Harem are streaming on Crunchyroll and Nukitashi is streaming exclusively on OceanVeil.

@RiderStrike @BWProwl @LucasDeRuyter @vestenet


Steve
Lucas, I don't know about you, but I feel ready to have a serious conversation about some sophisticated Swiftian satire that speaks volumes about our present political situation.
steve01
steve02
On an unrelated note, have you been watching Nukitashi the Animation?
Lucas
Steve, I've built half of my career on writing about how media intersects with current sociopolitical issues, so you better believe that I'm watching Nukitashi and am ready to talk about it!

While I'm sure we'll get into both the (maybe accidental) highs and (almost entirely avoidable) lows of the show, I'd like to start by saying that I feel more represented in this anime than in any other show I've watched, so it will forever hold a special place in my heart.

lucas_01
I'm happy for you! Representation matters! And lord knows, if a fellow kid said this to me at an impressionable age, I'd probably also end up leading the kind of life where 3D printing knockoff Tenga eggs was my main hobby.
steve03
Nukitashi is truly a show of multitudes. While I've known of the visual novel by reputation for a while, seeing it in action is something else.
steve04
I know. We're going to both do our best to keep screen grabs tasteful; there's almost certainly going to be an 18+ content warning on this one.
lucas_02
For those unfamiliar, Nukitashi focuses on a brother and sister who return to their ancestral home island following the passing of both of their parents. While at first blush the island appears to be in line with mainstream Japanese society, it has a deeply hedonistic culture that makes participation in public sex acts mandatory and criminalizes abstention. This poses an issue for the brother-sister duo, as the former has some deep-seated hang-ups about physical intimacy and the latter is a lesbian.
The shorter version is that Nukitashi is about an island where this manifested into reality.
steve05
It is, obviously, an appropriately porny setup for an eroge, and the premiere episode takes extra lengths introducing its long list of heroines, which includes a dommy mommy as well as a girl with a nickname inspired by Bluebeard.
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But any setting that features this much sex and this much fascism is going to be ripe for cultural psychoanalysis. And that's how I like it.
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Nukitashi is such an interesting chestnut to crack! These first two episodes feature several rape and sexual assault scenes that have a campy, dramatic flair that's evocative of a Danganronpa game, and pretty tonally inappropriate considering the subject matter. The opening segment paints the island as a sex vacation theme park, which is literally the backdrop of several Kei Mizurai hentai!
lucas_03
However, this anime also beats the viewer over the head with its political messaging, which is ultimately that marginalized people shouldn't be forced to conform to restrictive social norms; which feels super topical in a world where queer and trans folks are being legislated and adjudicated out of public life in countries like the United Kingdom and the United States.
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This isn't us extrapolating from subtext either. The protagonist says it out loud. Clunky, yes, but admirably frank.
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That's a big part of what makes Nukitashi such an interesting melange. I mean, it has some of the angry male stink of a series like World’s End Harem, pitting predatory women against its noble virgin everyman. But Nukitashi also holds its tongue firmly in its cheek (and in other places), and is, so far, not as joyless as WEH.
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And I apologize for remembering World’s End Harem. It soaked up three months of my life, and I will never get those back.
steve16
The TWIA column has long been a safe space, and you can process your trauma however you need to!

Even if we were to be reductive and put Nukitashi in the same "high budget hentai" genre as World’s End Harem, Nukitashi is MILES better than its competition. Background characters notwithstanding, there's a pretty wide array of body types in this anime, and I respect it for not falling into the "big boobs, same face" trap that a lot of shows do when making characters attractive for the audience to ogle.

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I'll be honest, I was floored when Nukitashi introduced a petite character that I assumed was going to be the token loli in this harem anime, only to give her a shockingly grounded internal conflict of wanting to be sexually active but not wanting her body type to be fetishized.

I was not expecting such a real and rarely talked about kind of body dysmorphia to appear in an anime that features a guillotine that forces people to have sex, and I'm interested to see what other based takes Nukitashi has in store!

Now, I would have preferred the second episode not to end with a gross attempted rape scene involving her, but like you said, highs and lows.
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And on the subject of "high budget," what got me interested in watching Nukitashi was its OP, which is directed by none other than Shingo Yamashita (under the pen name Lune Soupe). I had an out-of-body experience in the five seconds between recognizing his signature style and then seeing the lovingly animated handjob inserted into the middle of it.

You can see most of his hallmarks in the YouTube upload, but it has been heavily bastardized to conform to the site's puritan standards. I highly recommend seeking out the uncensored version. It's art.

Highs and lows are a great way to think about Nukitashi in general! While the OP is instantly in contention for one of the best of the season on spectacle alone (where else can you see a man planking using nothing but the strength of his erection?), some sequences and even still frames in the anime looked rough.

While I think the visuals are largely saved by the character designs and surprisingly dynamic lighting, the inconsistent quality and handling of serious sexual material means that I'm only recommending this show to people who are on the same wavelength as I am.

lucas_06
That being said, outside of the show explicitly having a better health care system than America's, it largely focuses on the social politics around sex and sexuality, and that's so rare that I can't help but be intrigued! A bit of messiness can be forgiven, considering just how rare it is to have an anime that's explicitly about societal norms around sex and sexuality.
Timing is everything, too, and it's fortuitous (in a wry sense) that Nukitashi should drop in the middle of several intersecting political movements with sights set on legislating sexuality in the anglosphere. The trans panic rages on both sides of the pond. The UK just imposed draconian ID laws for its citizens, with the US government constantly on the precipice of considering similar measures. And payment processors are squeezing "deviant" video games off platforms like Steam and itch.io. Nukitashi's satire may be broad and blunt, but it strikes a contemporary chord.
steve19
Agreed. While I think the ideas around identity and body images that Nukitashi touches on are fairly universal, it couldn't be airing at a better time. Still, I worry that it lacks the necessary political focus and writing chops to dig into how society and the individuals within it are affected by these regressive policies and laws. If only there were a cult classic anime that also tackled this subject matter...
lucas_07
Oh shit! Visa and Mastercard found out my Crunchyroll subscription lets me watch SHIMONETA!
Hasta la vista.
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That's how you can tell SHIMONETA is the real deal. It knows about The Pool, and it blows it up in the opening. Absolute cinema.
Lmao, I was half expecting that one-way mirror van to show up in this montage, but a cameo by The Pool is also a great way to establish early on that the folks at J.C. Staff who worked on this anime are real ones!
I think you need to look again, lol.
steve22
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OMG, I can't believe I missed it!!! Sorry readers, I think I just outed myself as a fake JAV fan, and I hope you all can forgive me.
I'll vouch for you, don't worry. We should all focus on the fact that the SHIMONETA anime also just turned 10 years old! And thanks to the aforementioned current political climate, its absurdist satire about a fascist puritan movement that bans any mentions of sexuality is literally at our society's doorstep! Wow! I love it here!
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Please also enjoy my crunchy Funimation screencaps from a decade ago. That's just how things looked back then.
While I missed watching SHIMONETA back in the day, I was completely FLOORED by how familiar the mechanics of its puritanical oppression felt to real life today! Those collars and cuffs that can be used to spy on citizens are functionally identical to today's smartphones, as is the reality of digitized commerce that's more susceptible to suppression from third parties!
It also stood out to me as I revisited it. Technology has rapidly given rise to a never-before-seen surveillance state. We might need to go back to finding random porn mags hidden in the woods at this rate.
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I think it's interesting that SHIMONETA's satire takes the exact opposite tack of Nukitashi's. There's no reason both can't work, but SHIMONETA's imagined dystopia feels a lot closer to reality.
100%! In comparing the two, I find that SHIMONETA is more focused on hard politics around sex and sexuality, while Nukitashi centers on the soft politics of a sex obsessed society and how individuals are affected by that climate. While both have their place, I was a Political Science major, and I found myself more quickly gravitating towards the anime featuring a world where distributing prophylactics is a federal offense.
lucas_08.png
You would think the juxtaposition between Jamie Marchi giving her second most sexually graphic performance as a voice actress while also espousing about how sexual ignorance is damaging to both individuals and broader society would be jarring, but it comes together brilliantly! I've burned through the first three episodes for this column, and can't wait to binge the rest of the show once I have a bit more free time.
I'd say its main argument is that "protecting" people, especially the youth, from sex is, in actuality, incredibly harmful. Through forced repression and a lack of education, people like Anna come to wildly incorrect conclusions that don't involve concepts like safety or consent.
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Real talk, this is why I have no patience for "think of the children" arguments, because adolescents especially need unsavory stories, movies, games, and the like to learn for themselves what their sexuality is and what warning signs to look out for when it comes to other people and partners. Trying to foster a generation of know-nothings means opening all of them up to all manner of abuses, because they don't know any better.

And it's incredible that SHIMONETA, for the most part, gets this right while also being exquisitely stupid and juvenile.

steve30
While I was initially concerned with Anna and her mom seemingly being the driving force of this chaste society, even by the end of episode three, it becomes clear that they only feel this strongly about these issues because they've been the most impacted by anti-sex propaganda. As is becoming clearer by the day, this phenomenon is true to real life, and this radicalization pipeline is a growing issue that more sensible folks need to respond to.
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For as in-your-face (or crotch) as SHIMONETA can be, its politics are deeply considered and nuanced. Kids need to know about sex and sexuality to be functioning members in society, and while the idea of adolescents exploring and developing this part of their identity is understandably uncomfortable to many adults, it's something everyone goes through. Even the barest amount of empathy and willingness to remember our youthful awkwardness around this stuff makes all of the political grandstanding around "protecting the children" ring hollow immediately.
And it's always the weirdest, nosiest people spearheading this stuff, when sex is, of course, perfectly normal.
steve31
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Another thing I appreciate about SHIMONETA, as compared to Nukitashi, is that SHIMONETA's noble terrorist cell is led by a girl, Ayame. She's such a fun character, and her unrepentant crassness still feels refreshing to see today, ten years on.
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I completely agree, and will go one step further and say that even the inciting event, the male lead Tanukichi Okuma, getting accepted into the prestigious Tokioka Academy, is incredibly subversive and political! More anime than I can count begin with the lead attending an institution that's only thinly coded as "the good private school." As someone who owes most of my success in life to a robust, public school education, this has always bothered me, as private schools in real life are largely signifiers of privilege that don't prepare kids for real-world challenges.

Having this informed belief of mine validated by a borderline pornographic anime from a decade ago was the absolute last thing that I expected to experience in the year 2025. I'm so happy to see this regressive trope called out and private schools revealed as the privileged identity incubators they are in SHIMONETA!

It's one of the smartest stupid anime I've watched. And later episodes become even more explicitly political, if you can believe that. I know obscenity laws have been around for a long time, and they're what SHIMONETA is responding to, but the ultra-conservative frenzy of the past decade has made statements like these sound even more radical and relevant.
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I was so worried going into SHIMONETA that it would fall into a South Park style "either all content gets to be okay, or none of it can be okay," but it's clear already from what I've watched that the show is incredibly informed about these mentalities and throughly understands how soft power radicalization works.
And maybe Nukitashi is heading towards a similar point. Having not played the VN, I can't say either way myself. But right now, (dirty) jokes aside, I think SHIMONETA is the more thoughtful satire about how sex and politics collide. And thankfully, it's still streaming on Crunchyroll, so it's not too late for anyone to be educated.

That being said, Nukitashi's placement on OceanVeil means it comes with an anonymous comment section, and let me tell you, it is bringing the heat.

steve39
While I normally discourage folks from looking at comment sections (with the exceptions of the comments for TWIA columns; get in there gang!) if we've learned anything today it's that adult content brings out extreme opinions and I'm not at all surprised to see folks reacting strongly to Nukitashi.
I may not be on board with everything Nukitashi does, but I will defend its right to exist. Every human is born with the inalienable right to watch questionable garbage. You might even say that's what living is all about. Don't listen to anybody who says otherwise.
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If folks are going to watch garbage, I'd rather it be sociopolitically charged garbage! And, while I can't watch either of these shows unless I'm sure no one will walk into the room I'm watching them in, I love that they exist and can't wait to experience everything they have to say.
No need to feel shame! Just explain that you're doing research. These are highly educational anime, after all.
steve42
I feel like I've learned a lot from SHIMONETA and Nukitashi already, and if this column gets the response we're hoping for, readers can look forward to a "Things We Learned From Ecchi Anime" column in the semi-near future!

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