Also, it's not a horror series.
It is, maybe not a normal one, but it is for anime at least where horror is difficult to be achieved.
Why should horror be difficult to achieve in anime? Higurashi no Naku Koro Ni is definitely a horror, and nothing über-fantastical like the vectors in Elfen Lied happens. There's nothing in Elfen Lied that I would say did or will stick with me, and that's because I can point out all the "worst elements of humanity" that are showcased in the show are all rather cliché. Children are cruel. The director and his son are classic nihilists. Mayu's parents (especially her mother) are common for her kind of backstory. The essentially human testing on the diclonius that don't actually make much sense when you take a step back and analyze them.
Despite the dark nature of it, it's not a straight-up horror show. The director of the series himself apparently called it "a love story", which I'm inclined to believe given the (at least) two romantic subplots.
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I like the pace quite nicely. I like action, but I absolutely don't care for it.
I did include that caveat for a reason. If I had cared for more than three characters, I probably wouldn't have minded, but most of the time I was waiting for the story to get back to one of the few arcs I cared about.
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The forced sadness is actually the good negative point I mentioned in my previous post. You may find the characters unbelievable, for the most part I don't. Well, maybe for Kohta's reaction in the end, and that reaction would be even believable in the right circumstances, which are not present.
You must believe me when I say that I know real stories that are far worst than the ones depicted in this anime, some from personal experience. I don't think anything is impossible when humans are the subject. The themes displayed at the anime are quite real, maybe exaggerated a lot, but real nonetheless.
Well, I can see any and all of the characters working to an extent, but as I said there's just an over-saturation of the evil end of the spectrum for me. I can believe in apathy much more than active maliciousness, and seeing so many actively malicious people (not even counting the diclonius who are believably malicious) just takes me out of the experience. As I progressed through the series it also felt like there were maybe a lot of conveniences for the plot?
Also, I'm trying to figure out what "Kohta's reaction" you mean. I assume you mean after his memories come back? Or do you just mean the way it ends with "and life returned to normal for our heroes"?
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Changing a little the subject, but still on the subject of reviews. It is because of reading reviews that I decided to watch Gurren Lagan. It has some awesome reviews, but the anime isn't good enough for me. I have to agree it has a nice message to pass, specially for children. It has a weird, but very fluid animation. But that is it, not much more, kind of mindless one.
I saw Gurren Lagann on Sci-Fi (before it changed names) before ever considering looking up reviews for it and just had a hell of a time. I don't know what the reviews said about it, but to me Gurren Lagann is definitely just a dumb, fun show. Extremely dumb, in fact, since it ends with galaxy shurikens. It parodies Evangelion a little along the way, but overall that doesn't make much of an impact other than stage the second arc of the first season.