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You are at:Home » Akane-banashi shouldn’t work as an anime but it’s still Spring’s best overlooked show
Akane-banashi shouldn’t work as an anime but it’s still Spring’s best overlooked show
Lifestyle

Akane-banashi shouldn’t work as an anime but it’s still Spring’s best overlooked show

10 May 20264 Mins Read

For hundreds of years, Japanese performers have practiced a comedic storytelling art known as rakugo (落語). Traditionally staged in intimate yose theaters, rakugo transforms verbal storytelling into a one-man performance where a single actor inhabits multiple characters through subtle gestures, vocal shifts, and timing alone. Performers, or rakugoka, remain seated in the seiza position for the entire act, armed with nothing more than a paper fan and a small cloth as props. Everything else is left to the audience’s imagination.

Rakugo isn’t exactly the most exhilarating art form, especially in an era dominated by hyper-digital entertainment and shrinking attention spans. On paper, it probably shouldn’t work as the basis for a modern anime; it is a dying art, after all. Yet, Akane-banashi, based on the manga of the same name, has somehow emerged as one of Spring’s most engaging shows. (It’s also one of the most criminally overlooked, although a belated launch on Netflix this month could change that for the better.) Akane-banashi treats rakugo performances with the intensity and structure of battle-shonen showdowns, turning every performance into an internal duel based on rhythm, presence, emotional control, and audience manipulation.

Leading the narrative is Akane Osaki, a 17-year-old high-schooler enamored with the art of rakugo. The story begins years earlier with her father, Tohru, a promising performer studying at the prestigious Arakawa school in hopes of becoming a shin’uchi, the highest rank in rakugo. But after disastrously bombing his promotion exam in the first episode — so badly that he’s expelled from the school entirely — Akane dedicates herself to mastering rakugo and reclaiming the future stolen from her father.

Akane is immediately magnetic, and much of the show’s success rests on her shoulders. Sharp-tongued, confrontational, and fiercely independent, she approaches rakugo with the energy of a battle-shonen protagonist charging headfirst into a fight. One of the series’ earliest standout moments comes when she instinctively slips into performance mode while being confronted by a classmate and his mother after a school fight, effortlessly turning tension into entertainment. Even outside the theater, Akane treats conversation like verbal sparring.

Image: Studio Zexcs/Netflix

What makes her arc so compelling is that her growth isn’t tied to traditional shonen power scaling. Shows like Dragon Ball Z, One Piece, and Jujutsu Kaisen build progression through transformations, hidden abilities, or increasingly destructive techniques. Akane-banashi strips all of that away. Akane can’t overpower an audience with spectacle. Everything comes down to presence; learning how to command attention using almost nothing at all.

That challenge makes the series feel uniquely internal. To become the rakugoka she envisions, Akane has to learn how to read a room, shift personas mid-performance, control pacing, project confidence despite uncertainty, and emotionally connect with strangers. The show frames these performances like tactical battles. Rival storytellers carefully study one another’s strengths, adapt on the fly, and weaponize timing or delivery the way a fighter might exploit an opponent’s weakness. Entire scenes hinge on whether Akane can seize control of a crowd before another performer steals the room out from under her.

Shot from Akane-banashi of Akane in the ending credits. Image: Studio Zexcs/Netflix

And despite the minimalist nature of rakugo, the anime constantly finds ways to make the performances visually explosive. Studio Zexcs transforms storytelling into spectacle through dramatic lighting, fluid camera movement, and bursts of surreal imagery that convey how audiences are emotionally swept away by a performance. The stage totally disappears and abstract backgrounds, bright lights, and other assorted effects give way to the magic of the story being told. Combined with a high-energy soundtrack packed with rock, pop, and Japanese instrumental influences, the series gives rakugo the pulse of a sports anime or tournament arc without betraying the intimacy that makes the art form special in the first place.

By turning storytelling itself into combat, Akane-banashi makes rakugo feel thrillingly alive, rather than antiquated. The series understands that the tension of performance can be just as exhilarating as any sword fight or supernatural battle — especially when the only thing standing between success and failure is whether someone can hold a room completely spellbound.

Watch Akane-banashi on YouTube now and on Netflix starting May 17.

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Akane-banashi shouldn’t work as an anime but it’s still Spring’s best overlooked show
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