Castle Town Dandelion

(series)
  • Japan Džókamači no Dandelion (more)
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Japan, 2015, 4 h 48 min (Length: 24 min)

Episodes(12)

Plots(1)

The Sakuradas are a perfectly normal family living in a perfectly normal apartment. Except that their father happens to be a king, making them all royalty. And they're watched by over 200 surveillance cameras and are kind of their own reality show! There's also the fact that each sibling has their own special power. Ok... maybe they're not so normal after all! The nine Sakurada siblings have a common goal-to become king! But only one can hold the throne, so they must compete to win the hearts and votes of their people. For one year, they'll campaign their hardest and prove who is most fit to be king. That means making speeches, showing off their special skills, and even becoming... pop idols?! But campaigning is easier for some than others. Especially with powers like transportation, creating clones, or even materializing anything you want! But for middle sister Akane, even the power to control gravity won't be enough to help her. Between the constant surveillance and embarrassing situations galore, Akane has a long way to go to prove she's a worthy candidate. (Anime Ltd)

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Videos (2)

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Reviews (1)

Jeoffrey 

all reviews of this user

English Castle Town Dandelion is basically a classic slice-of-life anime series in a slightly unconventional setting. The classic Orwellian motif with cameras on every corner was what interested me at the beginning. However, unfortunately, they do not use it so well in this show; the cameras are everywhere, but only so that the main male protagonist can swear and be hysterical at them, which I found quite annoying after the second episode. I was also quite intrigued by the "reality show" thing, just like they did a TV competition for regular citizens in the first episode. I almost thought that they could have done some really good take on the subject, a "Royal Family reality show" or maybe "Kingdom Seeks Ruler," and perhaps it would even be funnier than "the ordinary life of royal siblings." I was intrigued by the first episode, rather put off by the second, and similar minor fluctuations occurred quite regularly, even though my impression was still somewhere around average (worse/better). At least the "very fragile family ties" were interesting sometimes. As for the characters, I grew to like them and did not explicitly mind any of them. I liked some characters like Shuu, Misaki, Teru, and Shiori quite a lot. The conclusion was good; I quite liked the last episode. All in all, this is a calm, if slightly strange spectacle that I do not find offensive and sometimes cheered me up a bit. So I think it is above-average, 5.5/10. ()