Episode 24 – Witch Watch

How will you rate it Episode 24 of
Witch watch ? Community score: 3.8
©Shinohara Kenta/Shueisha, Witch Observation Production Committee, MBS
This season Witch watch By the end, I think the show might last for a while and these final episodes will be more focused on the drama. After all, between Nico and Morito’s romance and the entire doomsday prophecy that has been imminent in the background since the show began, there is no shortage of serious avenues that the show may get closer and closer until we (hopefully) get another season. But, to my surprise, despite some romance here, it seems that the show still has a lot of comedy, basically all of which are Morito’s expenses. Our rigid ogre boy has been more nervous than his stoic attitude, and while the series has never been afraid to laugh at it, it’s basically just twenty minutes in a row to prove his true fool.
In the first half of the year, we were probably the weirdest premise we’ve ever obtained in this show’s shorts. Now, how weird some of the settings in this show are, you might be wondering what might be all of them, the answer is very simple: Ten minutes to talk about denim jeans fashion. Morihito’s love for some good old-fashioned jeans has come twice or twice, but when Miharu makes a stupid mistake asking him what good it is for them, he and the others are attracted by all the ins and outs of how to take care of them properly. It’s very helpful and can explain the fade out color or which wrinkles look stylish, but it’s all so detailed that you can tell the comic chapter, which is based on Kenta Shinoharawhich makes watching Morihito talk about this super fixed thing. But, like any good publicity, what’s really scary is that this attracts your ability, and while I’ll likely wash my own jeans regularly for the foreseeable future, the fact that I even briefly considers trying some of the techniques shown here proves how the show’s performance sold out of this weird premise. Like I said at the top, it’s an episode that’s totally committed to tearing Morihito, so when he manages to sell others on the gospel of denim jeans, it inevitably comes at your own expense when one of Nico’s spells ends up tearing his favorite pair of jeans. It’s hard not to be at least a little bad for him, but that only makes the jokes here more beautiful, as Miharu offers Morihito a pair of high-value vintage jeans from his father, rather than selling them for their value, he insists on wearing them so that he can wear them. Just like any nerd caring for their overly fixed object, it doesn’t understand much about material value and more about what that object means to them” which is certainly considerable, but it’s still almost impossible not to laugh at Morihito’s degree of obsession.
The second half of this episode provides us with a final romantic escape between Nico and Morito, as the latter sets Nico out of dates in order to prove to other familiar boys that he can have a more successful date with girls. As we’ve been waiting to see how long the romantic dates of the two, it seems like a scene that should result in ten minutes of pure fluff, which is certainly what Nico expects, but if there’s something short-lived seems to be totally dedicated to showing why you don’t want to go out with Morihito. Since he couldn’t relax anything, he ended up planning the date to a minute, from train time to dinner reservations, and insisted on his ridiculous schedule, even though it was obvious that Nico couldn’t keep up with the letter. Most importantly, soon all of their dates put their interests first, as his idea of a date movie was a pathetic old-fashioned movie, and the relaxing cafe was the time when he and the owner sat there awkwardly while he and the owner spent the whole time joking. It’s frustrating to watch it, it’s all fun, and you can’t help but feel Nico here when Morihito ends up being an unconsidered date on almost every opportunity. What ultimately saved the train’s difficulties was when Morihito put his schedule on the track when exhausted from his plan, finally realizing that he might not have thought enough to do what Nico would love. Nico admits that she is trying to show her everything he knows, and once he slows down the date, the two end up enjoying a quiet moment under the stars. But, like the ending here, it also shows how frustrating Nico’s frustration is, like anyone else who can sign out on this date, and it’s clear that our girls have the patience of a saint. While this is perhaps not the most romantic setting the show can offer, the fact that Nico is able to fully keep up with Morihito’s neurotic tendencies is just a testament to how these two people have achieved each other, and even if I wish these two had made faster progress in hooking up, I’m glad that their process is still fun.
However, it’s all so much fun, but it’s all easy for the technology of the penultimate episode of the season, which really makes me wonder how the anime staff plan to close it next week. After the credits, the gang is preparing for school festivals, and someone has posted ominous internet posts about wanting to use Nico’s magic for some kind of crime, but it seems less exciting than solving more of the whole warlock threat, which seems to be the end of a season. There are no surprises in the show, though, so there will always be a chance to squeeze out some good tension from it, but the season has been chosen to end, which I’m sure will be memorable.
grade:
Witch watch Currently flowing crunchyroll On Sunday.
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