Haruki Bandou was born into a family of Judo marital artists
and expected to continue the family legacy. But he’s about
to trade Judo for... cheerleading?! When his childhood
friend Kazuma Hashimoto invites him to join the BREAKERS, a
male cheerleading club, Haru finds himself amongst a quirky
group of boys. Can this squad of slightly odd and cute
members make a breakthrough in college athletics?
(Source: Funimation)
# ~~~If what you are looking for is an anime with an interesting cast and you don't mind a somewhat predictable development for its genre, this is for you.~~~ # ~~~–~~~ __1. Originality: 8__ _Personally, I consider that any sports anime that moves away from the overexploited baseball, basketball and soccer already acquires a higher level of originality._ However, the idea that the show tries to capture (to recognize cheerleading as a current sport) is something that I consider quite new. That, and the fact that cheerleading is not really a sport for men normally. That's why, although the story is inspired by a team of cheerleaders of real life, I can't help feeling that Cheer Danshi!! is a sports anime with one of the most original plots that I have seen in this genre in a while. However, of course some things in its development look somewhat generic, so I can't allow a 10. __2. Story Development: 8__ _Although it seems impossible to develop a good sports anime in 12 episodes, Cheer Danshi!! is the exception._ Fortunately, this is an anime that could be said to have almost no filler. Each episode, although it may seem a filler episode at the beginning, ends up showing how important it is in the main plot and in the development of its characters. In addition, I have to rescue how all sixteen members of Breakers receive development or, at least, a background story that allows us to empathize with them and keeps them away from being simple extras. __3. Characters: 9__ _Its diverse cast, and the different points of view on why to be in the group, makes you get interested in the characters both inside and outside the training for the routines._ If there is something that managed to get my attention as the episodes progressed, it's how the new personalities that were adhered to the team affected it as a whole both positively and negatively. Although at the beginning our seven original members may seem a bit simple, we can recognize their peculiarities later when we meet the other nine members and their varied personalities. __4. Enjoyment: 10__ _Although it's a little obvious at this point, I think it's worth emphasizing again that I really enjoyed this show in its entirety._ If there is something to highlight about this show as the "most enjoyable thing" that it has, it has to be the characters and their development not only as a team but as people. Obviously, watching them strive to follow their new dream is exciting, but it's even more so to see them strive to improve in their personal lives. ~!Even more with that final episode, in which each of them define themselves while talking about that task that the coach had commissioned them at the beginning of the season. It really works like the end of a trip.!~ # ~~~–~~~ # ~~~I decided to watch Cheer Danshi!! thinking it would be bad, and that I could laugh at it. Obviously, I didn't expected to come across a catching story and interesting characters who you want to know more about after every episode.~~~
~~~_Disheartened with judo, college student Haruki “Haru”
Bando was invited by his childhood friend Kazuma Hashimoto
to create “BREAKERS”, an unprecedented boys’ cheerleading
team. Can their motley group of amateurs pull it off?_~~~
Sometimes I pick up a show because I’m hoping for something
mild to only pay half attention to, and sometimes that
backfires because it turns out the show is really good.
That’s what happened here. Loosely based on the real-life
Waseda University all-male cheer team _Shockers_, (and how
loosely I don’t know, maybe just that _Cheer Boys!!_ is also
about an all-male university team) this was a sweet and
colorful story about, in the timeless tradition of sports
stories, a group of people coming together to Do a Sport
With Friendship.
One thing I really enjoyed was that the characters are all
in college (university), so they’re a bit older than the
usual sorts shows I’ve seen, and that gives the characters a
great reason to be independent of their families. Our main
character is Haru, college freshman and shy boy from a judo
family with a judo sister and who _really_ doesn’t want to
do judo anymore. So when his best friend and fellow judo
teammate Kazu suggests they both quit and start a
cheerleading club, Haru is…well, not on board with the
second half of that idea. But he comes around. Like we knew
he would, because it’s the idea behind the entire show.
First order of business: recruiting additional members so
they can actually perform a routine. First recruit: this
dork:
Wataru was my favorite character: a serious guy who likes to
quote famous lines and makes up for his initial lack of
skill with dedication and an inability to feel embarrassed.
He ended up with some _great_ lines.
The fact that they end up with recruits, put on a decent
show at a school festival, and end up with more recruits and
a goal of a regional competition isn’t a surprise–it would
be surprising if none of that happened. Instead, the tension
in the story comes mainly from personality clashes and
individual worries. Haru doesn’t face pushback from his
parents, but his sister seems to resent him for giving up
judo. Club members have differing levels of commitment, and
irritate each other. Another cheer team gets offended that a
bunch of newbies decided they wanted to cheer, because you
can’t have a sports story without _someone_ judging you for,
heaven forbid, not dedicating every breathe and thought in
your entire life to Sport.
_oh no, people in my sport have more enthusiasm than talent_
I did get irritated in the middle when one of the
inter-group personality clashes was getting out of hand.
Luckily it only lasted for a few episodes but one member of
the team was not only annoyed with, well, everyone else for
not taking it as seriously as he did, but he also started
lecturing others and making the team an unpleasant place to
be. I just wanted to be like, _Dude,_ there is a way to
bring up your issues and criticizing others to their face,
when you are not a leader and haven’t taken this to
leadership, _is not it._ (It resolves, because this is a
sports anime about the Power of Teamworkfriendship, but
_ugh._)
But overall, it was a very fun show. I loved the character
interactions–there are some great, funny lines, and it
really did sounds like a bunch of college friends talking
and joking a lot. Plus, even in animated form, cheer and
gymnastics is fun to watch!
# ___Verdict___ ___English dub?___ Yes! ___Visuals:___ Light
and pretty! I was surprised when I started the first episode
and found that it has a more shoujo style, but it’s very
nice to watch. ___Worth watching?___ Yes! It’s fun just to
watch the characters interact, and the routines, but it’s
also fun to watch a sports show that has fairly low stakes
(this is an extracurricular club, no one’s life depends on
them winning) and wraps up nicely (12 episodes).