What does a bear know about life in the big city? For Machi
Amayadori’s sake, hopefully a lot! The young shrine maiden
has spent her whole life in the rural mountains with Natsu,
her talking guardian bear. Now, at fourteen, she wants to
take a chance and attend high school in the big city. Can
Natsu really prepare her for city life? Or will his wacky
trials be too much for even Machi to bear?
(Source: Crunchyroll)
~~~_14-year-old Machi is a shrine maiden (miko) in a tiny
village in the mountains where she lives with Natsu, a
talking bear (kuma) she was raised with. Machi hopes to
attend high school in the city, so Natsu attempts to prepare
the shy, sheltered girl for the trials and tribulations of
city life to varying amounts of success._~~~ This was very
different than most things I’ve been watching this year,
being a slice-of-life comedy. It doesn’t take itself
seriously, and it doesn’t delve much into character
development, instead preferring to play with the comedic
potential of characters as they are. Machi and Natsu live in
the village of Kumade, where according to a legend explained
in episode one, bears and people live in harmony after an
interspecies _liaison_ hundreds of years before. Whether
that’s true or not we don’t know, but Natsu can indeed
speak, is known to the villagers, and keeps house with Machi
(whose parents are nonexistent, and whose caretaker grandma
remains offscreen). We don’t learn exactly when they met,
but from flashbacks it was before both were about 5, and
they have a sibling-like relationship.
Machi, for her part decides she _really_ wants to attend
high school in the city–two hours away. Natsu proposes
various quizzes and tests to see if Machi can really
“handle” city life, with varying results as the tests can be
a bit out there, and/or Machi lacks knowledge of (and
comfort with) a lot of contemporary Japanese society, from
brands to dealing with store clerks to online shopping. Even
simple electric appliances throw her off.
Most episodes revolve around either Machi doing _something_
to learn about the modern world (and messing up), or her
cousin Yoshio roping her and other villagers into some sort
of PR attempt to promote the village, which is dwindling and
prompting fears it could die out. I liked Yoshio as a
character for the most part, but while he wasn’t actually
any more oblivious that any other character (a lot of jokes
involved people misinterpreting others), Yoshio got beaten
up a lot for it.
The series is only 12 episodes, which is probably for the
best since the characters don’t change through the series.
It’s interesting that such a unique base was chosen (tiny
village, shrine maiden raised alongside a talking bear,
possibly has mystic powers) and the story uses that to
mainly follow comedy based on character idiosyncrasies.
___Verdict___ _English dub?_ No _Visuals:_ Normal for a
modern anime; not bad but nothing standout. _Worth
watching?_ Sure, if you like light series with little
commitment. It’s not deep, but sometimes you really do want
something that takes little to no brainpower and isn’t going
to cause complex emotions, y’know? Of note, in the first
episode 9-year-old village kids are being inducted into the
knowledge of the village lore (and Natsu’s existence), there
are jokes about _what if Natsu and Machi did *it*;_ a
recurring gag where Yoshio, being basically an older brother
who helped raise Machi, tries to get her out of her clothes
so she can try on costumes (and is oblivious why he gets
punched), and a village woman who mutters “sexual
harassment” basically any time someone makes a joke at her
regardless of topic. (I think maybe the humor here is
supposed to be that it’s _not_ sexual harassment? Unsure.)