Out of the blue perhaps but I've been seeing a lot of Kanna artwork and gifs from Maid Dragon lately, mostly things that show her as a cute innocent child analogous to Renge-chan from Non Non Biyori. The show's attempts in portraying that side of her are very neat at times but I really feel it's not really as compelling as it's supposed to be. During the first couple of episodes we see her go head to head against Tohru even if playfully, it was bloody intense and later on, she manages to outwit Saikawa by crying when she attempts to bully her - these moments(particularly the latter) give the impression that she can handle herself quite well and when she's suddenly shown as a helpless little child, I just can't buy it. Has anyone else felt the same?
On Kemono Friends: it's really amusing to see the show introduce new anthropomorphized animals, usually a creature you've heard or seen or have some semblance of an understanding of its behavior, only through a different lens: the contrast of having human-like aspects. Different friends have different specialties but more than that, they have unique personalities, often land an impression. Episode 6 ended with a major revelation(in perspective of the show's characters), Kaban-chan is actually a human, somehow something we already perceived but when we further listen about how humans are from Shoebill(Episode 7) it really felt like show flipped a mirror towards the viewer. That was honestly, a surreal(perhaps even proud) moment for me keeping in mind how it handles every animal-person it introduces.
"Humans come up with strange ideas and are supposed to be very clever"
"Hey! that's me!"
Silly, as it might seem, I just wanted to share this bit
Logan
Some of the mutant powers don't work out well in live action medium but thankfully that's not until majority of the film passes by. Certain aspects of the story although secondary could've been better written, otherwise a really good experience. I can recommend.