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	<title>Anime Pilgrimage RTT &#187; Hand Maid May</title>
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	<description>Alexander Doenau's Adventures in the Anime Mountains</description>
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		<title>Hand Maid May</title>
		<link>http://www.batrock.net/anime/?p=76</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jun 2004 04:16:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Hand Maid May]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Warning: In this review I &#8220;spoil&#8221; a plot point that saves the series from being dire tosh and makes it highly watchable. I think that it&#8217;s okay to read this as it suggest that there&#8217;s light if you don&#8217;t like the first four episodes. Every so often in anime, a new fad becomes popular and [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><i>Warning: In this review I &#8220;spoil&#8221; a plot point that saves the series from being dire tosh and makes it highly watchable. I think that it&#8217;s okay to read this as it suggest that there&#8217;s light if you don&#8217;t like the first four episodes.</i></p>
<p>Every so often in anime, a new fad becomes popular and many titles are produced to reflect this. Unfortunately, these fads are generally based around fetishes. This is why, a few years back, there was an influx of anime about maids. Then it went one step further: <i>robot</I> maids. <i>Hand Maid May</i> &#8220;challenges&#8221; the genre further by making the robot maid &#8230; one foot tall! Despite her diminutive stature, poor May still can&#8217;t escape being objectified.<br />
It&#8217;s tough being the victim of a fad.</p>
<p>Kazuya is a university student who plans to create an intelligent robot. His arch nemesis and best friend, Nanbara, gives him a DVD which causes a virus to manifest on his computer that somehow leads to his ordering a 1/6th scale robot maid (a Cyber Doll, or CBD). Then, just when he wants to develop a relationship with this maid, more (human sized) CBD move in! And <i>another</i> CBD desperately wants to collect the $1.4 million payment owing on May!<br />
The only party to these antics if Kasumi, Kazuya&#8217;s landlady and unspoken love interest of several years.<br />
Oh, how wacky it all is.</p>
<p>I was going to write this off after the first four episodes, but then with the fifth it gets &#8230; better. Suddenly things start making sense, there&#8217;s some genuine visual creativity, some of the weaker characters become somewhat substantial, and the fan service services without disturbing.<br />
See, that&#8217;s the thing; in the first four episodes, a twelve inch robot in maid clothing is just too <i>kinky</i>. It&#8217;s not much of a spoiler to say that the series becomes much better when May is remodelled at a human size. Okay; so it <i>is</I> a spoiler, but as far as I&#8217;m concerned if it hadn&#8217;t happened the whole thing wouldn&#8217;t have been worth it at all. It&#8217;s another series where, if it hadn&#8217;t been planned all along, you get the impression that the writers realised that the direction they were taking wasn&#8217;t working; where can one go with a 12 inch robot? Romance is impractical, so &#8230;<br />
The good thing is that it quickly dispenses with this romance. When you&#8217;ve got an army of robots and one human girl to choose from, I know which I&#8217;d choose. The fact that they try to present it so that Kasumi and May are competing for Kazuya&#8217;s love was slightly disconcerting, so it becomes a tale of friendship and development of human characteristics, and completely abandons the basic conceit of the opening episodes.</p>
<p>So initially it&#8217;s infuriating. Nanbara is annoying, May makes a horrible rattling sound every time she moves, the one character who can provide guilt free fan service wears terrible clothing that&#8217;s both revealing and unappealing. You can miss the fact that the story becomes interesting very easily, however; the turning episode has lousy animation and all the characters are hideously off model.<br />
So, <I>Hand Maid May</i> shed its skin and became something sweet. When the creative spirit within is unleashed, then it&#8217;s something to enjoy and laugh at. Even the too fast, too high OP grows on you. There&#8217;s even a hilarious drama that all of the CBDs are addicted to.<br />
Of course, it&#8217;s still not without problems; the DVDs have the most bizarre subtitling tactic ever. Mami is a character who occasionally spouts English dialogue. When this happens, the subtitles translate this English into romanji. It&#8217;s generally not too hard to follow, but in anime you should always subtitle the English dialogue because it doesn&#8217;t always sound like the English it represents. It was definitely an odd experience.</p>
<p><i>Hand Maid May</i> is, indeed, something that has been done before. But it&#8217;s done well here, so that doesn&#8217;t matter. Only when something&#8217;s been done before and this time around it&#8217;s done poorly do you have a problem. Despite its abhorrent start, after &#8220;the change&#8221; <i>Hand Maid May</i> becomes watchable without leaving a horrible dirty feeling in the pit of your soul.</p>
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