Takanashi Misha is a second grade elementary school girl whose father is Japanese and mother was Russian. After she lost her mother at an early age, she has lived alone with her father. One ... Read allTakanashi Misha is a second grade elementary school girl whose father is Japanese and mother was Russian. After she lost her mother at an early age, she has lived alone with her father. One day, a new maid named Kamoi Tsubame comes to their house to serve as their maid. She was a... Read allTakanashi Misha is a second grade elementary school girl whose father is Japanese and mother was Russian. After she lost her mother at an early age, she has lived alone with her father. One day, a new maid named Kamoi Tsubame comes to their house to serve as their maid. She was a former master sergeant of Japan Air Self-Defense Force, and her biggest problem is that s... Read all
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- SoundtracksUzauza Waosu!
Performed by Haruka Shiraishi and Manami Numakura
So I saw this show floating around sometime after I had finished watching Happy Sugar Life, which was actually one of my favorites of the season. Now, many people have been off put because of the premise of the show. With comparing this show to HSL, With Happy Sugar Life, that was kind of the point of the show. It was a horror anime, so of course, the relationship between Satou and Shio would be seen as disturbing. However, I will say that in the manga at least, Satou had made it clear that she was not going to engage in that behavior with Shio when her aunt asked Shio what she and Satou did together. That's not completely removing the notion that Satou was grooming Shio - she undoubtedly was - but for the most part, their relationship was so ambiguous that at the end of the day, the director of the anime himself said that he felt that Satou's relationship with Shio was maternalistic in some facets, but it was open in such a way that both interpretations could be potentially wrong or right. With that, I lean towards the notion that the relationship was familial.
With UzaMaid, however...that is a whole other animal. Here, the fact that Kamoi has a raging Lolita complex is treated for laughs. While I believe that anything can be up for grabs at being joked about...I do agree that most of the moments in the show where Tsubame is massively perving on Misha are cringy as all hell. For instance? She lures Misha out of her room with a tray of food...while she herself was on the ceiling. She knows how much toilet paper Misha uses - as well as if she exceeded that amount. She takes Misha out into the woods while she was sleeping to go camping. Granted, she did get Misha's dad's permission to do so, but still. She even admits to Misha that she had a thing for girls who hadn't started their menstruation cycle, and worse, she promises that she would love her even if she started her first period. To be honest, Misha's reactions to Tsubame's advances are what make these scenes funny: she is playing off Tsubame. What makes it even more funny is how Misha acts more like an adult than the actual adults in the setting. Her reactions to Tsubame are what any rational adult's response should be to anyone who exhibits interest in children.
For characters, Misha is kind of bland. She's your type of girl you've seen several times before who spends every waking hour from the time she gets up to when the sun goes down playing games. She is mischievous, refers to her father by his first name, and is generally embittered. Aside from those times that she plays off Kamoi, what makes Misha interesting is her history with her mother. As her mother had died some time ago, this would explain how much of an impact that it had had on Misha. She went from being a cheerful young girl to a secluded gamer who hardly left her room. With Tsubame, there are some interesting things about her such as how she was a former Air Self-Defense Force veteran who had lost her father when she was a young, much like how Misha lost her mother, and she is absolutely ripped. I mean, holy smokes.
If you hadn't had a fetish for muscly women, well you might have one now. She also has the side interest of making dresses, but that is where the problems lie with her. As I have already stated, she has a raging Lolita complex. To be honest....nothing about it is really funny on its own. To me, Kamoi's humorous tendencies only work because Misha is there to give the proper reaction to them. Without Misha's contribution, these moments fall directly on the cringy side. I mean, there are moments where she is shown looking at other young girls with such enthusiasm that she practically was drooling. She admits to having a thing for young girls who hadn't had their periods yet. She even has imagine spots where she has Misha sign marriage papers. Just...none of this is really funny if Misha wasn't there to play the straight man.
Misha's father is more of a minor character, but he's fine. His whole character is trying to reconnect with his daughter after his wife's death, and he often gets so happy when his daughter acknowledges him, he one time called for a chef to make sushi to commemorate the moment. There is also one of Misha's classmates who takes an interest in going to Misha's house in episode 4...even though Misha just remembered that she had Tsubame as a maid. Thankfully, nothing too bad happened. Guess that proves that Tsubame has some reservations. Misha also has a pet ferret that acts as Misha's eyes and guards a room that most likely belonged to Misha's mother before she died. Overall, the show is a hit or miss. I'm not really opposed to it because of the premise of it as that kind of humor is subjective and some would be understandably unsettled by it. As for myself, I might drop the show at some point, but I doubt it's trying to push a propaganda.
- robinsonaustin-07490
- Oct 25, 2018
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- Our Maid Is Way Too Annoying!
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime23 minutes
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