Stunning Anime Look Back Appreciates the Work of Art
Look Back, the 2021 manga by Chainsaw Man mangaka Tatsuki Fujimoto, follows the coming-of-age of fourth grader Fujino as she discovers and asserts her desire to draw manga. Her story is shaped by an unexpected rival-turned-accomplice Kyomoto, a truant who takes up the pencil after reading Fujino’s school newspaper comics, yet quickly outpaces the drawing skills of her hero.
It’s evident just in its protagonist and deuteragonist’s names that each is a stand-in for Fujimoto. Each girl represents different philosophies of art, different sides of the mangaka, different ways to live. Fujino publishes consistently, always has a story to tell, motivated by audience reception. Kyomoto is reclusive, her manga showing obsessive detail but lacking any story to connect with audiences on an emotional level.
Together they become a prodigal duo submitting work through middle and high school until, finally, they’re given a serialization—one Kyomoto can’t accept. She goes to art school instead to become a better artist and a better person all on her own. She’s always looked up to Fujino, but Fujino has always looked back. She goes to art school while Fujino moves to the city and makes it big.
Look Back is a celebration of all that is drawn. Its opening scene finds Fujino (Yuumi Kawai) sitting over her desk drawing her four-panel manga for the school newspaper. We watch her expressions, reflected in a mirror moving in and out of frame. Squinting. Contemplating. Her arms shuffle to find an eraser. She shifts her weight, leans in. Many of Fujino’s own manga appear here animated—one in an extended, fully colored and voice-acted sequence that shifts art styles entirely.
Brought to animation by industry veteran Kiyotaka Oshiyama’s Studio Durian—a super group of MAPPA, Khara, Science SARU, Production I.G and Ghibli animators—Look Back enters the pantheon as one of the great works about art. It’s not allegorical like The Boy and the Heron (its closest contemporary in animation and theme), but is rather a film that sits in the work of art.
While there is an understated yet undeniable craftsmanship in Fujimoto’s manga about making manga, movement elevates Look Back. Color (Maya Kusumoto) and sound (Eriko Kimura) carry powerful tonal and temporal shifts across the film’s 58-minute runtime, while haruka nakamura delivers a nostalgic score of muted piano and soprano strings that captures dissatisfaction and loss. Oshiyama himself takes the credits of writer, director, storyboarder, character designer, animation director and key animator.
Oshiyama introduces surreal visuals that feel like they were missing from this story all along, while the film even adopts manga panels to portray memories as flashbacks. The most visually striking moments in Look Back are its hand-drawn tracking shots, while what 3D CGI is used is incorporated judiciously. An almost magical quality is imbued in the film as it lacks distinguishable animation in-betweens—everything retains even the rough sketch lines of hand-drawn key animation that is most wondrous in the motion of bodies and the folds of clothes. Other subtleties, like the translucence of paper held up to light and eraser shavings covering a desk, feel downright indulgent. And Oshiyama doesn’t shy away from drawing more explicit connections between the original author and his characters, much weightier than simple Easter eggs, given the obvious stand-ins. The last art we see Kyomoto (Mizuki Yoshida) work on, heartbreakingly, is a painting of the vault Denji keeps locked in Chainsaw Man.
But beyond the technical craft, what makes Look Back so appropriate as an animated film is its relationship to time. Time must pass for us too when Fujino draws at night, at school, at the park, when she runs in the rain, sobs in an empty bedroom; and Oshiyama lingers. Look Back guides our attention to something less romantic than the ideals of the craft. It’s work. And all the animation is itself more work. To make audiences sit with Fujino as she draws, how many hours did that take?
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