Thunderbolt Fantasy is an anime made out of glove puppets. A regular Kotaku reader told me that, and I was like, excuse me?
Released early July, Thunderbolt Fantasy is testing the publicâs definition of âanime.â Puppeteers inhabiting anime-styled, classic Taiwanese hoteigeki dolls play out sword fights, love scenes and light banter on camera (with a little help from CGI). Itâs a classic, Eastern-style fantasy, complete with sword and sorcery. But itâs also completely unique. I am now convinced that puppet shows can be anime, too.
In the show, two siblings guard a legendary sword that evil forces are attempting to steal. The plotâand for that matter, writingâisnât particularly special, but reminds me of Bunraku, a Japanese puppet style. Movement and emotion are primary; itâs all about visceral reactions. For an anime, it comes off trite. For puppet theater, it is absolutely spectacular.
In its natural setting, Thunderbolt Fantasyâs artistic style benefits from not being a cartoon. Rain drops on leaves, smoky fires and realistically-glittering swords contrast well with the fantasy feel: an excellent juxtoposition of reality and imagination. On the other hand, the animeâs more fantastical elementsâlike a dragon flying off into the nightâare harder to pull off with puppets.
Crunchyrollis airing a new Thunderbolt Fantasy episode every Friday at noon. Gen Urobuchi, who also worked on Fate/Zero and Psycho-pass, is its original creator. Check it out and tell me if you think itâs an anime.