The Summer 2018 Anime Preview Guide
Cells at Work!
How would you rate episode 1 of
Cells at Work! ?
Community score: 4.3
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How was the first episode?
Rebecca Silverman
Rating:
I would have loved to have been able to watch this show in biology class back in school. (Or read the manga, but we're talking about anime here.) Cells at Work is very definitely an educational family-friendly show aimed at roughly the same age group as GeGeGe no Kitaro but with a very different goal: to teach basic human biology from the inside out. It stars anthropomorphized cells living in a world that looks like a city but is actually the human body, creating an easy way for viewers to grasp the basic concepts of how the body works by making it so that the body is actually working – as in each cell's job is framed as delivery, security, construction, etc. It's a neat way to present it.
The episode itself is therefore plenty of fun. Our heroine is Red Blood Cell, who has just entered the workforce and is still trying to find her way around. She's taken under the proverbial wing of White Blood Cell (technically a neutrophil in charge of protecting the body from bacteria and germs), and together they manage to deal with Pneumococcus, an alien-like monster that, if left unchecked, can cause a variety of horrible diseases including pneumonia. Mostly this does mean that Red Blood Cell is in a damsel-in-distress position, because Pneumococcus consumes the nutrient-bearing red blood cells and so White Blood Cell is able to basically save her and use her as bait. But since it culminates in one of my favorite scenes from the manga, visualizing sneezing as shooting a torpedo out your nose, I can forgive the random gendering of cells.
What's unfortunate is the Red Blood Cell spends what feels like most of the episode screaming or shrieking, which is significantly more annoying in a medium with sound. She's well within her rights, and oftentimes the situation is more funny than not, such as when she and White Blood Cell are trapped in a bacteria capsule and he's dragging her and her dolly loaded with CO2 around, but it does begin to grate after a while. The character designs translated quite well, especially Pneumococcus with all of his waving tentacles, but there's definitely something weird about White Blood Cell's ass that I can't quite figure out. The platelets are suitably adorable, however, and the beefy Killer T Cells are pitch perfect from their brawny builds to their synchronized laughing.
Since it's a family show, Cells at Work won't be for everyone. But if you're up for a little sixth grade biology framed in a fun way, this episode is entertaining and may even help you some old lessons.
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