Flip Flappers Series Review

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Overview:

Cocona is an ordinary kind of girl not looking for adventure when Papika (a definitely not normal girl) rushes into her life and literally drags her into various adventures. I reviewed this week to week so if you are interested in my thoughts on individual episodes click here. However, it’s now been two years since this originally aired (updating March 2019) and the question I ended up asking myself was whether or not my view on this anime had changed.

Review:

Flip Flappers was always a difficult anime to review. There’s so many bright and wonderful things about the anime, with sparkling characters, interesting themes, and fairly solid visual presentation (also great music). And yet, even two years later I can’t shake that overwhelming sense of disappointment that it couldn’t pull itself together. I really wanted Flip Flappers to be good. I wanted it to pull all of those ideas it had scrambled about the screen into a coherent plot that just blew me away.  I wanted so much from this other than ‘ooh, pretty’, but unfortunately that was a wish not realised. And two years on, I’m still kind of feeling that Flip Flappers had most ideas and potential than what it actually realised during its run.

My impression the second time through was once again that Flip Flappers sets up a fairly impressive story and characters in its first four episodes. There’s very little to complain about during these episodes as we get introduced to the world and ideas and become charmed by the complimentary personalities of Papika and Cocona. Unfortunately, as Flip Flappers moves beyond establishing itself, it ends up on some shaky footing and by the time we get to the introduced villain at the end and a frantic conclusion that doesn’t hold up to much scrutiny, while there are great moments speckled throughout this series, the narrative as a whole is unsatisfying.

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However, let’s look at the positives. The beginning of the story is pretty amazing. It’s beautiful and colourful with lots of rich symbolism and sequences that draw you in to the adventures the girls are having. It raises question about the nature of the adventures and the relationship between Cocona and Papika. Essentially, it does everything it needs to hook the audience in and make you want to watch more. However, even in this early phase of the show we realise that from a narrative point of view there are issues. Conflicts within the episodes are solved through fast paced action sequences or sudden power-ups. Little is explained or given reason. While this ties in nicely with an Alice in Wonderland-esque feel it isn’t overly coherent. Which is fine for the early phase of a fantasy adventure story provided its followed up by something of note.

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Then we get to episode 5. The girls are on yet another adventure. We’re in the middle phase of the series so should be gearing toward the greater narrative or learning more about the characters, or something should be happening and instead we just go around a time loop with the girls before they run around in a mad-cap type sequence before engaging in a fight that has no real context and somehow everything is okay. Episode 5 can kind of be held up as a model for how the narrative of the entire series goes. We don’t know how they got into the situation. We don’t know why anything is occurring and why it might be good, bad or otherwise. The villain shows up out of nowhere toward the end. Run around lots and lets fight. Whoo!

But I am getting a little sidetracked.

Episodes 6 through 8 continue the character’s adventures through the illusionary world of Pure Illusion and give us even more questions about what it is and why are we collecting these shards? These episodes would be a very reasonable follow up to the first 4 except for one thing. When we finally get to the final third of this series the shards and the nature of Pure Illusion are questions that get tossed aside as almost inconsequential. So, none of the shard collecting really means anything and we leave the series still with no idea what Pure Illusion is or why Cocona (and Mimi) have any connection to it. We don’t know why the scientists were studying it or doing experiments on kids or what anybody hoped to accomplish. So all of these episodes can be more or less disregarded in terms of an overall narrative. Instead, they are a cute diversion into questions that could have been examined but won’t be.

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And this is all the explanation we are going to get.

Then we get to the final run of episodes. This is where things go completely off the rails in terms of enjoyment or narrative. We meet Mimi, Cocona’s mother. Which is fine and all except somehow she turns out to be the antagonist we’re going to spend most of this last third facing, even though there was no indication previously that Mimi was going to be an antagonist and it comes at the expense of every other possible conflict that show might have developed. Also, Mimi sucks as an antagonist. She’s dreadful. She just spews the worst dialogue with incredibly horrendous self-justifications for her actions which absolutely make no sense. More importantly, she doesn’t tell us a thing about Pure Illusion that we hadn’t already been told which means we still know absolutely nothing about it of any substance.

Anyway, let’s have a big fight sequence between Cocona, Papika and Mimi and finish the show with a flourish and somehow everything will be all wrapped up. Except, you know, all the parts that aren’t.

I’m going to be honest, watching this again, the flaws of this show are even more glaring and that ending is just kind of… It is almost as if they gave up and realised they needed to end on a fight.

Okay, if you want a visually pretty story with two main characters who celebrate the fact that friendship and/or love can triumph in the face of all reason and just saying it lots makes it true then Flip Flappers will probably be great for you. For me, I really was disappointed by the end of this even though it kind of showed its hand early on.


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Karandi James


Flip Flappers Episode 13

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Flip Flappers Episode 13 Review:

This episode of Flip Flappers gave me a sinking feeling fairly close to the start.

While part of me just kept hoping that Flip Flappers would actually do something noteworthy other than the visual spectacle the final episode overly relied on the power of love and friendship (without offering anything interesting thematically about either) and pure coincidence. No answers about who funded research into Pure Illusion, where the weird cult came from, who is funding Salt and his group now, who is looking after any of the kids even though clearly the weird cult was responsible for raising them and has now been destroyed, and no real answers about what gathering the shards would have actually done given apparently none of it mattered at all.

Let’s just narrowly focus down on Cocona, Papika and Mimi and not give Mimi any real character. She’s either evil, controlling Mimi, or sweetness and light Mimi and neither side of her has any more depth than that. The one moment I genuinely enjoyed in this final episode was when a second  Salt appeared and more or less echoed evil Mimi’s words from a few episodes ago but Salt wasn’t having any of it and just shot his potential evil twin. Just think how much better off Mimi would have been if she’d done similar.

And that was the best moment to get you thinking in the entire episode as everything else was pretty visuals and frantic energy but little substance. While this series is still very enjoyable it is definitely the biggest disappointment for me this season. I’m going to give myself some time before reviewing it because right now I’d be pretty negative about it.

Flip Flappers is available on AnimeLab.


Thank-you for reading 100 Word Anime.
Join the discussion in the comments.
Karandi James


Flip Flappers Episode 12

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Flip Flappers Episode 12 Review:

For most of this series I’ve found Flip Flappers to be a confused mess of imagery and ideas and there was always some kind of hope that coherence would be found. Episode 11 attempted an info dump to try to somehow make sense of the senseless and it did, kind of, but at the expense of the wonder and mystery or anything that may have actually been interesting.

Episode 12 takes us to the nightmare after the dream, almost the moments before waking, where all the ideas are mushed together and we are running from set-piece to set-piece revisiting images we’ve seen before but in a new and horrific light. Which sounds kind of interesting until you realise that in the entire episode Papika and Yayaka chased after Cocona and Salt walked to the cult base and may or may not become relevant next week.

All the emotional screaming and calling out of names amounts to nothing. The undoing of the transformation sequence before an instant new transformation (Princess style no less) amounted to nothing. Yayaka finally getting to transform just allowed the running around to go on for longer because this story feels the need to never allow Yayaka even a single moment of glory without punching her in the guts right after. Yep, Mimi is our final boss (unless you count Cocona’s own uncertainty which is probably equally to blame at this point), but only evil Mimi.

There’s good Mimi as well from time to time. Sorry, but evil Mimi with overly possessive parenting tendencies is just not enough after all the build up this series attempted. It does link most of the ideas together but it just isn’t satisfying. We’ll see what the final episode delivers but at this point I’m really not expecting much.

Flip Flappers is available on AnimeLab.


Thank-you for reading 100 Word Anime.
Join the discussion in the comments.
Karandi James


Flip Flappers Episode 11

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Flip Flappers Episode 11 Review:

Any hope I had of Flip Flappers coming to something resembling a satisfactory resolution was dashed to little pieces (or rather exploded in a flowery mess) after watching this episode. While as visually tantalizing as ever, Flip Flappers essentially info dumped the whole plot up to now into one episode (and in the process eliminated the need for at least 60% of everything we’d seen prior) and then set up for an action-type show down in the next episode.

Or maybe it will be a battle of wills. Either way Cocona fighting her mother for control of Pure Illusion or her body doesn’t seem like a particularly interesting way to end this. And that shady cult turned out to be worse than useless. They don’t even serve as a red-herring to the plot. More like the Team Rocket of the show when all is said and done and that really isn’t a compliment.

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I think the worst part is Mimi herself. Seriously, the way she ditched Salt at the drop of a hat on three separate occasions just kind of makes me really dislike her as an individual. Even if she did deliberately give him the amorphous as part of some attempt for her non-evil personality to help out in the final round, she did it by stabbing him through the hand.

Oh well. It will be over soon and at least it has the ‘ooh, pretty’ factor to sell itself on.

Flip Flappers is available on AnimeLab.


Thank-you for reading 100 Word Anime.
Join the discussion in the comments.
Karandi James