Movies News Talk

Blue Lock Season 2 Episode 2: Animation Controversy – Hype Dying?

Blue Lock Season 2: Episode 2 Sparks Controversy – Is the Hype Dying?

Blue Lock Season 2: Early Concerns Confirmed— A Concerning Drop in Animation Quality

Blue Lock vs. U-20 Japan is one of the most anticipated anime of Fall 2024. Yet since the season 2 trailer dropped, fans were worried. That trailer showed a clear downgrade in animation –lots of still frames, jerky movements.  The first episode was great, it was slow, paced nicely—which gave hope, that hope was quickly dashed by episode 2, creating some very legitimate concerns about its overall future quality! The first tryout match was a huge letdown – worse than the second half of season 1!  Yikes!

Season 1's animation wasn't always stellar either; it showed this throughout many various episodes; some issues were not entirely addressed through additional production choices;  many even questioned the various issues within that title! There was also the Blue Lock: Episode Nagi movie— that also involved this same problematic and largely unsatisfactory animation style and had similar issues. Yet with the popularity of Blue Lock exploding—there was hope the U-20 arc's production value would greatly improve!   Sadly, the opposite happened which prompted those audience members to become quite vociferous in airing their concerns; airing this concern widely across social media which created much contention and sparked much controversy among fans.

Also Read: Blue Lock Season 2: Villains, Rivalry, and the Future of Japanese Football

Episode 2: Stunning Art, Choppy Animation – A Disappointing Combination

Michael Kaiser, Rin Itoshi, and Marc Snuffy Blue Lock Image

Episode 2 has received the worst reviews of the entire franchise so far. This happened despite actual visual improvements: better lighting, more detailed shading—which shows surprising efforts! The art style itself follows the manga panels— using artistic liberties. And yet, the jerky animation— described as slideshow-like in various locations— and those criticisms continue across numerous social media locations: It demonstrates deep disappointment expressed by many, some suggesting disappointment using incredibly strong phrases and terms which emphasizes the degree of disappointment shared, highlighting their concern through very visible engagement which had almost 120,000 impressions, and over 2K likes from users such as @ITADORIlS.

Too many still frames, too much slow-mo.   The positions changed so quickly, people struggled to see what happened and thus the feel of the dynamic game just evaporated! These methods can sometimes work in certain other soccer anime (Ao Ashi),  it's extremely different for Blue Lock— this anime doesn’t feel like sports so much as intense shonen battles. The heavy use of close-ups and speed lines fails; making the whole experience even more choppy.  Many online even emphasized their positive moments concerning other details such as CGI-assisted special effects surrounding shots and specific animation sequences with such characters like Chigiri and Karasu— from users such as @SinChiSan_ and @kagurabachis and despite other positives expressed online these still remained outweighed by negative concerns expressed in that particular location. This indicates some serious production issues.

Also Read: Blue Lock Season 2: Villains, Stakes, and What's at Risk for the Soccer Project

Behind the Scenes: A Director Change and Potential Production Bottlenecks

Blue Lock TV Series Poster Image

The change in director might have caused some problems!   The website’s updated credits replaced Shintaro Inokawa (Season 1 director) with Yūji Haibara (former chief director); known for amazing visuals,   as mentioned by Blue Lock’s producer Ryoya Arisawa during his interview with Screen Rant. And these visuals; they definitely show some effort, they're really there.  Arisawa’s comment does add credence towards how that emphasis shows in those special effects throughout Episode 2; making it understandable that much of the team's time focused around those specific technical moments.

It’s also notable that there is no clear reason behind the director change.  It also involved 8bit Studio's silence around those persistent animation issues; indicating problems possibly involving earlier negative reception or various work and time pressures such as producing Episode Nagi earlier and other projects like That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime Season 3 which really impacts its overall success!

And this uncertainty really lingers: the trailer uses those first two episodes; making that much-awaited and already widely anticipated U-20 arc quality uncertain!

Also Read: Blue Lock Season 2: Anime vs. Manga - New Scenes, Character Arcs, & More!

Conclusion: Can Blue Lock Season 2 Recover? The Hype Remains Intact, Though Uncertain

Episode 2’s lower animation quality—was a huge letdown; especially consideRing the intense popularity of that particular franchise and many anticipated scenes and overall plot points— however those negative remarks still failed to entirely dim much of that huge ongoing hype! The animation team focused much of its attention into various special effects throughout various scenes which shows potential; suggesting that there’s possibility for recovery—maybe there was deliberate planning involving increased investment towards more critical portions later on.  However, it raises important concerns and makes the potential for later plot failures remain a high risk.

Fans are desperate to see the quality improve in future episodes.  That U-20 arc is incredibly hyped and that very intense, critical game with Japan U-20 might get special attention;  It’s plausible this decision involving concentration efforts was planned entirely— and those other earlier shortcomings could become something less critical once things ramp up into the higher stakes portion of that storyline; potentially giving an overall amazing narrative and final climaX—a huge payoff that many are looking for!

Related Articles