Do A Cencoroll
Posted by moritheil on 27 Sep 2009 at 1:58 am | Categories: Anime Reviews, New York Anime Festival 2009
Cencoroll premiered in America at the 2009 New York Anime Festival. Contributing editor moritheil was on hand to review it.

Picture unbaked dough. Give it eyes and teeth. This is Cenco, title character of Cencoroll. Along with his human handler, he wreaks havoc on the countryside and transforms into a variety of cool things. The details of his transformation, his battle against other blob monsters, and the involvement of a certain schoolgirl are all integral to the plot. At its core, though, Cencoroll is a primal, visual appeal to the audience via transformation and violence.
Its plot is a simple laundry list of typical Japanese story conventions. Monsters let loose in an urban area, and are attacked by largely ineffectual Japanese self-defense forces. Our heroes are opposed by beings of loose moral character. Innocents are threatened. A hero goes out of his way to protect a girl despite knowing that it must be a trap. In the end, a combination of cool under pressure and fiery determination win the day, and it is children who manage to avert disaster and restore balance.
The music of Cencoroll is excellent. The character designs are a bit on the bland side, particularly the nondescript uniforms, but given the nature of the effort – one man storyboarded, drew, and animated the entire film over the course of two years – one must be forgiving. Facial expressions are excellent, and incorporate exaggerated elements that are typically reserved for super-deformed states.
It is the editing of Cencoroll that is most questionable, and there that it might benefit from more experienced direction. Scene selection is incredibly unconventional, most likely due to it being an amateur work. Pivotal character decisions are glossed over and barely given time, while unimportant details used for transition shots – such as Yuki eating a gummy bear – are given excessive focus. Large time jumps are made with very little in the way of immediate visual cues. The fact that the enemies and main character all look the same on the first viewing certainly doesn’t help things.
Overall, Cencoroll could best be described as a winning idea burdened by a lack of design sense and questionable editing. It has the potential to be truly great, but in its present form it can only be called “interesting.”
Tags: Anime Innovation Tokyo, Aniplex, Atsuya Uki, Cenco, cencoroll, Cencoroll movie, cencoroll review, Hiroaki Takeushi, New York Anime Festival showing, science fiction, Uki Atsuya, センコロール, 動画革命東京
4 Responses to “Do A Cencoroll”
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Sounds interesting, but I had my doubts about expressing everything well in a less than 30 minute film. Thanks for the post!
I’ve yet to see this but…
I’m an aspiring student animator/comic artist so it’s really inspiring to see that there are people out there with the guts to do a one-man animation job in Japan… especially considering their animation industry.
Not to mention this actually seems to have commercial backing.
I’ll drop by and add my two cents if I get the chance to see this…
I saw Cencoroll @NYAF. This review is kind of off. You’re looking for way too much for in film that was made entirely by one person. Most people cant make a good 30 second youtube video yet this guy made an awesome 30 minute anime film. It has great characters, cool story, great animation, fun humor, awesome battle scenes, and great audio. Most anime cant get all of that with a full budget and team working on just one episode.
Bland character design? Bad editing? What are you talking about!? the final statement “Overall, Cencoroll could best be described as a winning idea burdened by a lack of design sense….” are you serious? Listen, I’m not trying to get all fanboy here but there are a crap load of 26+ episode anime that are a lot worse than this. To call Cencoroll simply “interesting” is totally selling it short.
Cencoroll is awesome, very inspiring, and fun to watch. I highly recommend it!
@Anon – Yes. As I said, I think he needs a crew and a bigger budget.
@smashingtofu – I believe it picked up backing after it was done. Essentially, it has backing for distribution.
@Section09 – The purpose of a review is to provide a balanced critical look, not to make excuses for a creator. I am comparing it to works done by teams because in the end, anime is anime. You can’t objectively put the uniforms next to the clothing in, say, Sugo Chara or Bleach and come away with the idea that Cencoroll’s plain white shirts and black slacks/skirts are anything but bland in comparison.
Your argument hinges on the idea that it’s not the creator’s “fault,” but this isn’t preschool and we aren’t giving out gold stars for effort. This is a professional work and it must be judged as such.