Mamotte! Lollipop

Title:Mamotte! Lollipop
Save me! Lolipop
Save Me! Lollipop: The Complete Series
まもって! ロリポップ (Japanese)
Overall:Rent
Keywords: , , , , , ,
Notables: Animation - SUNRISE
R1 License - FUNimation
One day, Nina saw a candy next to her cake and ate it. It turned out to be a magical item, which turned her into an object in an Exam for Magicians. The person who obtains Nina and keeps her for 6 months will become an wizard. Her life becomes chaotic as she gets taken constantly by competitors.

(Summary from www.thesafehouse.org)

13 TV Episodes.
Animation by Sunrise.
Series first aired in July 2006
OverallArtAnimationCharacter Design MusicSeries StoryEpisode StoryReviewer
Rent 7 5 8 8 6 7 AstroNerdBoy [series:1403#436]
This series is clearly a shoujo title with some elements pulled from the mahou shoujo genre, only this time the lead girl is a normal human rather than a magical one and she's protected by a couple of magical boys and their magical mascot (familiar). For me, there was also a feel of a series like Pokemon, especially when opponents San and Forte are sent off into the sky, disappearing like Team Rocket does. Also, the rather sub-average animation adds to the kiddy feel of the show, making me think that this would be something seen on 4Kids TV. Normally, I don't notice the animation unless it is way below average or way above average. Sadly, this fell into the negative column.

The show thrives on fast-paced, chaotic moments done mostly for humorous purposes. As I mention, some of the comedy comes from sending teams attempting to nab Nina for themselves into orbit (or otherwise defeating them). Sometimes, there are unexpected moments such as Nina and an opponent getting all cozy over some cake and tea (done for humor and adding to the chaotic feel). The action tends to feel chaotic as well, save for the henshin sequences when Zero and Ichi transform to access more powerful magic. Basically, everything feels like it is on a high-speed treadmill most of the time with new teams brought in to try to nab Nina from Zero and Ichi.

While most of the time the series comes off to me as mindless stuff to let your kids watch, there where some moments of character development and thoughtfulness. Things never get too deep, but I did rather enjoy seeing how San and Forte became a team (and thus why Forte allows San to constantly dress him as a girl and otherwise seemingly use the heck out of him). The story behind Zero and Ichi's partnership was interesting if somewhat cliched and even a bit creepy (Ichi had a crush on his non-blood related older sister). Nina's coming to not only accept but appreciate Zero and Ichi being in her life was sweet (though also cliched). However, since the story wasn't written for me, I'm not really going to complain.

Since the anime series is only 13-episodes in length and the manga contained seven volumes, there's a lot of material that clearly didn't get covered. I'm guessing the production team may have decided to squeeze in as many of the 2-person teams as they could from the manga because the end of the series is pretty chaotic with three new teams suddenly thrown into the mix for Zero and Ichi to have to fend off. Also, those wondering whom Nina is more interested in (Zero or Ichi) won't get their answer in the anime.

The 2-disc set from FUNimation has quite a few extras, which is nice. There are interviews with Nina's seiyuu (SHOJI Yui), San's seiyuu (SAITO Momoko), and Rokka's seiyuu (NOGAWA Sakura). There's also the first chapter of the manga from Del Rey, though on a regular TV, one is going to be hard-pressed to read the sucker. I tried reading it on my computer monitor but it is way to pixilated. Maybe if you have an HDTV and play the DVD on a Blu-Ray player, the manga will be readable. I kinda doubt it though, and that's a shame. Its no good including the first chapter of the manga if no one can read the thing.

As I watched this in Japanese w/ subtitles, I was struck by how erratic the subtitles were when it came to honorific usage. For some strange reason, "Rokka-sama" became "Lady Rokka." Rokka addressed Ichi as "Ichi-sama" and that survived almost 100% of the time. Rokka's butler Gou also addresses Ichi as "Ichi-sama," but sometimes that was retained in the subtitles and sometimes it was dropped. The "-kun" honorific was dropped most of the time, but occasionally, it would appear in an episode. The "-san" honorific wasn't used very often, but I think it made it to the subtitles only once. The "-chan" honorific was used most of the time, but was inexplicably left off at times, the reverse of the "-kun" honorific. Even "Rokka" had her name spelled as "Rock" once and after Nanase's gender is revealed, the wrong pronoun is used for the character. I'm not sure what happened here since there is only one translator mentioned, but a slew of subtitlers mentioned. I can't believe a professional translator would be all over the ballpark like that, so the drops and changes must have happened away from the translator.

Bottom line: the show is way to kid-based to be of any interest to me, but it is a title that your kids may get a kick out of. The poor animation also drops the score somewhat. However, I do admit that the chaotic humor at times did make me chuckle and some character development along the way for certain characters was a nice touch. As such, I'd give this a marginal "Rent."

Last updated Sunday, February 22 2009. Created Friday, February 20 2009.

Other Sites
NameURL
Official Japanese Series Web Site http://www.mamololli.com/
Official FUNimation Site http://funimation.com/lollipop/

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