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You are at:Home » A Hundred Scenes of Awajima is the most beautiful anime you’re not watching
A Hundred Scenes of Awajima is the most beautiful anime you’re not watching
Lifestyle

A Hundred Scenes of Awajima is the most beautiful anime you’re not watching

3 May 20264 Mins Read

We’ve all at some point wanted to be a star. It’s only natural to crave the spotlight, but standing in it requires a kind of conviction few can actually sustain. Countless stories have explored this innate human desire — from The Great Gatsby to the Marvel universe — but the latest entry in this long-running narrative tradition comes from a brilliant new anime that’s streaming now on Crunchyroll.

Set against the backdrop of an elite opera boarding school, A Hundred Scenes of Awajima puts that quiet, often painful pursuit of stardom on full display. Based on the dreamy, watercolor-esque manga by Takako Shimura, this anime adaptation from Madhouse (Death Note, Paprika, Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust, and countless more classics) and director Morio Asaka is elevated by its breathtaking animation style and ethereal soundscape.

Awajima initially seems to follow Wakana Tabata, a dedicated first-year student with dreams of becoming a theater star. She recalls characters like Asa Takumi (from Journal with Which), timid and unsure of how to express herself yet desperate to be seen. But the focus quietly moves past her, not because Wakana stops mattering, but because Takako and Morio are less interested in following one life than in capturing many. In that sense, the Awajima Opera School itself becomes the closest thing the series has to a main character. Rather than a traditional ensemble, the series presents a rotating collection of lives, each one capturing a different shade of the same fleeting emotion.

Morio structures Awajima around pairs, not protagonists. Each episode introduces two characters not as leads, but as reflections of one another. They act as contrasting emotional states that only fully make sense when viewed together. Like brushstrokes on the same canvas, they bleed into one another, their emotions overlapping, blending, and sometimes clashing in ways that feel fleeting but deeply intentional.

Image: Crunchyroll

Whether it’s Wakana Tabata’s quiet uncertainty, the poised distance of Kinue Takehara, or the subtle push and pull between Emi Okamoto and Yuki Onoda, every character in A Hundred Scenes of Awajima feels less like a protagonist and more like a borrowed moment. A perfect example comes just minutes into the first episode: The camera lingers on Wakana as she walks down a hallway with a classmate, but the audio drifts elsewhere, picking up a stray conversation between two girls leaning against a nearby wall. The scene lasts only a few seconds, but it says everything about Morio’s approach to his characters, even when they feel like part of the scenery. Awajima feels like a collection of fragmented lives, many of which are unfolding just out of reach.

It helps that A Hundred Scenes of Awajima features stunning animation that looks and feels like watercolors brought to life in a nod to Takako’s original art. Scenes don’t cut so much as they fade, like memories you’re trying to hold onto before they slip away. Morio even employs a soft ghosting effect around the edges of certain shots, subtly distinguishing past from present and giving everything a dreamlike, untethered quality.

Still from A Hundred Scenes of Awajimi featuring characters walking in a memory. Image: Crunchyroll

The music works in much the same way. Rather than punctuating the more fantastical moments, it drifts in and out of scenes, carrying emotions that the characters themselves can’t fully articulate. Conversations trail off into soft melodies, rehearsals blur into full performances, and silence is just as expressive as sound.

Together, the visuals and score create something more fleeting than a traditional story ever could. Just like its characters, nothing in Awajima ever feels fully fixed. You’re not watching a story unfold — you’re watching a performance that feels destined to become legend the second it ends. Awajima is a rumination on the arts, on potential, and on how much one is willing to sacrifice to accomplish their dreams.

With only three episodes in, A Hundred Scenes of Awajima is already a promising start to what could be the Spring season’s most inspirational anime yet. The stage is set, and episode four is calling.


A Hundred Scenes of Awajima is streaming on Crunchyroll.

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