Ame To Kimi To is a decently endearing slice of life show that unfortunately lacks a consistent narrative focus that would give its themes and character exploration impact. This is partly due to how AmeKimi is structured with most of the stories that comprise each episode being a mix of general slice of life fluff where Fuji interacts with her friends and family or sitcom style skits where Kimis antics are often the focus. These loosely connected vignettes do paint a relatively vibrant picture of Fujis life relationships and past but they often lack a clear focus that would give them a sense of intentionality or purpose within a wider story. This leaves a major part of the premise Kimis introduction into Fujis life feeling like it serves little narrative function since the experience of having a pet does not act as a catalyst for any substantial change nor does the show commit to utilizing Kimis perspective as a lens to explore Fujis character or the human condition more generally. AmeKimi certainly has moments that do give some insight into how Fuji views the world or have something meaningful to say about being an introvert or creative. Yet all these character beats feel distinctly disjointed or at the very least lacking the appropriate build up to really make such moments resonate with the viewer and feel earned. It is only towards the latter half of the show where things start to come into focus with Fujis experience as a creative taking centre stage as what AmeKimi seems have chosen as its main focus. However this comes far too late with much of the earlier episodes and even Kimis entire role in the narrative feeling like tangents to nowhere or meandering fluff while the show is only now beginning to search for themes to fit its premise. There is still plenty to find charming in the show and its comedy is at the very least endearing even if it does not create waves of laughter. But there is simply little else to give AmeKimi any sense of purpose as a story beyond being feel good surface level fluff much of the time. While the show initially pays a lot of attention to Kimis entry into Fujis life covering the initial phase of owning a pet and getting a decent amount of comedy and fluff from it there is surprisingly little exploration into the experience of being a pet owner. This in itself is not a dealbreaker with how the show eventually settles into being predominantly from Fujis point of view and centring around her as a character. Yet it raises the question of what Kimis function is within the story beyond being a mascot or perhaps even a gimmick. The thematic and emotional core for most of the episodes frequently stem from Fujis relationship with other people while Kimi plays at best a tangential role in causing that interaction or inspiring some kind of change. The premise never necessitated AmeKimi being a story about owning a pet and how it affects someone but that was also the implicit and most intuitive major theme the audience was primed to expect. The shows pivot to focusing on its human characters does eventually become clear. But it does this in a painfully slow manner by increasing the number of substories that focus on other themes one by one each episode instead of being more explicit in its direction. It all leaves the first half of the season feeling disjointed or even aimless by not following up on the ideas it brings up instead preferring to spend time dipping its toes into far too many tangents without committing to their potential. There are still times where Kimi is used as a means for Fuji to effectively monologue to herself and reflect on ideas that cross her mind or a recent event but it is rarely something unique about Kimis presence in particular that draws this out of her. This does show some of the experience of being an introvert with owning a pet being a source of companionship without having to be sociable but this is a best an implicit point that is not well emphasized or accentuated by the rest of the story. The bulk of the thematic and character work in AmeKimi comes from Fujis relationships with a surprisingly wide number of other characters. While this does have the benefit of having Fuji feel like a more concrete character with how well realised her wider life is it does not support the initial themes and atmosphere the show seemed intent on exploring. The angle of the first episodes juxtaposing the subdued Fuji with her boisterous father create a strong opportunity to show how her relationships can change thanks to Kimis presence. This also prevents the show from feeling too mellow or flat by having more lively characters introduce some variation and range in its tone. There is an eventual link being drawn albeit implicitly to the idea that Fujis acceptance of Kimi and his quirks also helps her look past some of the embarrassment she feels with her fathers behaviour. But there is little follow up to reinforce this as the direction the show wishes to go in with exploring the rest of Fujis relationships. Much of the other characters introduced like Fujis neighbour the rest of her family and friends from school all end up having little interaction with Kimi beyond heavy fluff or comedic moments rendering his presence in the story almost nonessential. Instead of a rather insular and introverted protagonist that Kimi can help bring out of her shell Fuji is quickly revealed to have an abundance of consistent and deep relationships. It precludes examining Fujis character from a different angle such how she might form new relationships in this stage of her life which her neighbour Kii could have examined if she started the story as more of a stranger that she comes to connect with instead of them already being relatively friendly. Even when the show seems poised to follow up on this idea when it introduces a mangaka character that Fuji is meeting for the first time the plot thread is left entirely hanging only adding to the sense of meandering disorganization in the story. Of course it is not necessary to follow the stereotype of an introverted character being partially isolated and going against that grain can make for an interesting story. However this decision leaves AmeKimi feeling like it lacks an obvious and intuitive direction to move it since there is little for Kimi to change in Fujis life that would be thematically or narratively impactful. In effect Fuji was doing more than fine before the start of the narrative and a story about how she reflects on her relationships could have been told entirely without Kimi. This feeling of aimlessness is compounded with how Fujis relationships with most characters are rarely shown to grow or change even subtly. Most of the narrative frames its character moments as Fuji realising something about the other people in her life that was already occurring. This is not an unserviceable approach per se but it feels limited and almost flat with how much AmeKimi seems to rely on telling the audience about the connection between many of its characters instead of demonstrating it. This is in large part due to there being close to a dozen secondary and tertiary characters that all end up vying for a role in the narrative and time to be developed with all of them having an already established relationship with Fuji on top of that. It leaves the already episodic story feeling choppy with how there is never a consistent cast of characters to focus on and for the audience to develop a rapport with beyond Fuji and Kimi. This is a key element that a lot of other slice of life shows leverage to have the fluffy moments of their story also serve a greater purpose. The intimate familiarity the audience gains through seeing the characters interact with each other over an extended period allows for exploration into them to feel more compelling and for gradual shifts in their dynamic to be organic and noticeable. While AmeKimi still has sufficiently strong character writing and voice acting to endear them to the audience they drop in and out of the narrative so frequently with little set up that it is hard to feel particularly attached or familiar with any of them. This results in AmeKimi needing to set up and pay off many of its emotional beats in quick succession all on top of those beats relying partially on preexisting history between Fuji and another character that needs to be told to the audience. There is little time for these emotional moments or realizations to feel built up to or earned by the audience and gives it even less time for them to linger all usually occurring not only within the same episode but often within a tenminute subsection of it. This primarily affects Fujis relationship with her friends from both high school and elementary school. Their main emotional beats rely on flashbacks that end up immediately explaining the origins or their connection and how they view their relationship instead of it being something that is gradually shown to the viewer through scenes in the present. The monologues from Fuji that these substories lead to do have something interesting to say at least in concept. But their impact is simply lacking because there is little build up or wider thematic support to make them resonate. In particular a lot of the beats surrounding her experience as a creative with people assuming it is an easy job or that she is making money handover fist do feel real enough. Yet they are far from realizing the full emotional weight that could be achieved because of how late in the season they come into focus. All while the threads that were laid earlier that might have supported the show going in this direction have been left hanging for substantial periods of time making them hard to distinguish from the many tangents fluff or thematic dead ends. It all serves to create a feeling that AmeKimi has a distinct lack of structure with some substories within episodes arguably being close to pointless since they say or do little beyond being cute. The characters are still portrayed endearingly in their animation and voice acting and the technical work within episodes like the cinematography scene pacing and setting of tone and atmosphere are all relatively good. But that is simply not enough to compensate for the lack of a strong vision in the storys themes or even simply the direction it wishes to go in. Overall AmeKimi is still a decently endearing and charming slice of life show on the surface but it is failing to realise its purpose as story and derive any greater emotional impact from that. There are signs in the last episodes that narrative is finally coming together with a clear sense of purpose surrounding Fujis experience as a creative. Yet it still distinctly appears like AmeKimi was conceived as more of a oneshot or short run story that has been stretched out and has spent the better part of a season looking for something to say. It is hard to blame an author for this since not all stories are made from the outset with a narrative or thematic goal in mind. But it is hardly engaging to watch six to eight episodes of a show that seems to meander through multiple narrative dead ends before circling back to its earlier thematic threads. It ought to have been worked out in an earlier iteration of the story or in editing but perhaps that is more the serialised and shortform nature of webcomics to blame rather than the adaptation not doing a drastic retooling of its source material to adapt its story structure for a season of TV. With that it is hard to say the show is more than a 6 out of 10. Perhaps a viewer who is particularly taken by the characters or atmosphere could give it a 6.5 or even a 7 but its themes are simply too weak for it to be exceptional. At worse it even turns the rather superficial jab at the slice of life genre being all fluff with no substance into almost a halftruth. There is still potential at the moment with where the story has finally found itself and any follow up season would certainly benefit from it but it is hard to preemptively give AmeKimi credit for what might come or entirely overlook what it took to even get to this point.
60 /100
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