MOTTO TO LOVE-RU
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
12
RELEASE
December 22, 2010
LENGTH
24 min
DESCRIPTION
Did Riko Yuuki’s life go to hell in a handbasket when a naked alien princess from the planet Deviluke suddenly appeared in his bathtub and he found himself betrothed into the universe’s most dysfunctional romantic relationship? No, but only because he never got a damned handbasket. Even if the luscious Princess Lala is finally starting to admit her real feelings for her earthling scum significant other, there are so many other things constantly going wrong that Riko’s doing well just to survive.
Whether it’s due to bounty hunters, a defective transporter, body switches, alien skunks, mighty morphing power bathrooms, a sleepover that goes horribly, horribly wrong, or, that worst galactic scourge of all, Valentine’s Day, each day seems determined to prove why you should never, ever, marry a monster from outer space!
(Source: Sentai Filmworks)
CAST
Lala Satalin Deviluke
Haruka Tomatsu
Haruna Sairenji
Sayuri Yahagi
Rito Yuuki
Akeno Watanabe
Momo Belia Deviluke
Aki Toyosaki
Konjiki no Yami
Misato Fukuen
Yui Kotegawa
Kaori Nazuka
Mikan Yuuki
Kana Hanazawa
Nana Deviluke
Kanae Itou
Run Elsie Jewelria
Fuyuka Ooura
Risa Momioka
Ryouka Yuzuki
Ryouko Mikado
Masako Jou
Shizu Murasame
Mamiko Noto
Rin Kujou
Mai Hashimoto
Kyouko Kirisaki
Chiemi Chiba
Saki Tenjouin
Ayako Kawasumi
Zastin
Takehito Koyasu
Celine
Ryouka Yuzuki
Peke
Aki Toyosaki
Akiho Sairenji
Mikako Takahashi
Gid Lucion Deviluke
Hidetoshi Nakamura
Mio Sawada
Chiemi Chiba
Aya Fujisaki
Kaori Mizuhashi
Principal
Kenichi Ogata
Kenichi Saruyama
Hiroyuki Yoshino
Haruko Nitta
Tomoko Nakamura
EPISODES
Dubbed
Not available on crunchyroll
RELATED TO MOTTO TO LOVE-RU
REVIEWS
OVERPOWERED99
80/100Using a mini-stories basis helped to improve the overall quality for this series. Fan service has now really blossomed!Continue on AniListMotto To LOVE-Ru is a show that brings in the goodness of fan service at your doorstep just like the first season, except it's even better! With new characters and perspective on previous ones, there is a guarantee for enjoyment to blossom at each episode.
Previously on To LOVE-Ru. Episodes came in like a filler train wreck and the cargoes that toppled out were too heavy to be enjoyable to carry. I mean, the contents inside were too similar, so there really was no point in carrying them anyways! That's my quite peculiar analogy on what I felt during the first season, but it gets the point across. And now, the curtains unveiled in this season and oh boy was that a welcomed surprise. How and why is it better? First thing would be in how the episodes are structured. Rather than dragging the length out with a single episodic story, they decided to put in three mini stories for each episode. This new structure helps to give more diversity, an aspect that was lacking during the first season. It paves way to much-needed focus on the cast of girls, particularly with the beloved golden assassin and the disciplinary tsundere. What comes out of that is progression on the romance life of many girls, along with the development on their personality showcasing the sides they’ve never truly shown before. The culmination of each girl's differing personalities add up to many fun and silly situations that make them so likable and laughable. Though with all that said, this season still comes with issues. Some comedies are not funny and even though it's an ecchi, the dragged on fan service may get a bit excessive at times. While there are occasional boredoms here and there due to the lesser-than-previous-season repetitions, their entertaining pureness overweighs most of these issues. Main boy Rito went through so much ever since he became unlucky so I got to hand it to him for dealing with everything. Keep up the good work!
And with that out of the way, we do a hop and a skip to the visuals of the anime! At first glance, the difference is already noticeable once we compare it to To LOVE-Ru. Just like how Lala can transform her clothes with the help of Peke, the anime did a transformation in its art style. The biggest difference is that the colors are whitewashed, making everything look slightly less saturated than before. It took a bit of time to get used but at the end, I really liked how it looked. In a way, it's an upgrade, especially when the linework still feels refined and the animation retains normality and consistency. There are a couple of visible amplifications for the art, particularly during the more significant scenes that appeared throughout the show. As for the character designs, no changes there and they all look youthfully cute (except the principal). Ecchi scenes are still as exaggerated as ever with more gloss to define the curves, so nothing really new there. When the characters go through all sorts of havoc, they come in with a bunch of expressions and of course, the white-eyed ones that's really common in comedic anime are no exception. From happiness to clumsiness, whatever face they decided to put on places a smile on my face. Especially with that Celine. Her non-stop smiles are too contagious. Most scenes are blasted with loudness and energy radiating out of the girls. Definitely can't see Rito taking a break with that going on in his life. Cheerful soundtracks complement with the bright tone and the character's voice acting are done well, capturing the charm of each character.
Motto To LOVE-Ru is simply a step up to the previous season. It's an improvement on pretty much all aspects, and that's a good thing because better enjoyment comes out of better quality. If To LOVE-Ru is an enjoyment that reaches the Moon, then this one has enough fun comedy, romance, and personality to reach Mars. This journey of harem and ecchi is awaiting you!
linajthol
35/100"Anime was a mistake" - me after watching thisContinue on AniList"Anime was a mistake" - me after watching this
We’re using that meme right at the door and keeping it there, because this is some serious shit. “Motto To Love-Ru” (or To Love-Ru Season 2, which is what it actually is) is an abysmal excuse for an ecchi romantic comedy and it fails on almost every level. Basically every episode devolves into senseless 13-year old puberty wish fulfillment and all the jokes are so obnoxiously juvenile or poorly timed that they fall flat. Character development doesn’t happen often, and when it does, it never sticks, because every single named character is a simple caricature of an already-established shonen/ecchi trope, and they will never deviate from that.
Every character is also incredibly annoying, detrimental to the plot, and unclear in motivation. Lala is an alien princess who likes Rito (the main character) and tinkers with machinery that always has a fatal flaw. 99 times out of 100 this flaw is used to exploit To Love-Ru’s extensive female cast, be it to put Rito into some lewd situation, or to put any of the girls into some insane situation where they lose their clothes or get groped. Even then, the plot never consistently relies on this mechanic- only in the first season is it an incredibly reliable pattern. Instead, each episode of “Motto” has 3 different stories that usually focus on different girls in the harem. I would describe the flaws with each girl, but that would take far too long. Instead, let’s look at the things that they don’t get wrong, because those are much rarer.
OP/ED are serviceable and I have no problems with them. The main character actually is written as a decent person and not a deplorable human like Heaven’s Lost Property or, more recently, Hajimete no Gal. Rito is a likeable young guy with a crush on a girl from school and a tendency to get into situations rife with misunderstandings, but overall, he does the right thing. The only problem is that everyone fails to learn that, or understand that, so he’s basically the opposite of Keiichi from Oh My Goddess.
In OMG, Keiichi Morisato gets involved with plenty of misunderstandings between himself and the “goddesses.” However, most of the characters learn and understand that Keiichi has no ill or lewd intent and would not act on any such urges, so most of the misunderstandings are concluded before any conflict can arise. This is satisfying on multiple levels- first, any contrived conflict coming from something out of the character’s control is mitigated, and mostly resolved quickly. Second, even if the conflict still arises, the characters are able to react to it in a new or sensible way, instead of screaming or violence EVERY SINGLE TIME.
In contrast, Yuuki Rito is the single most misunderstood and abused harem lead ever. Every single skirt flip, wardrobe malfunction, accidental teleportation, body-switching, accidental drugging, rape attempt (yes, really!), is HIS FAULT. WITHOUT ANY DOUBTS. He is consistently on the receiving end of slapstick violence and high school girl screaming for all of the things he never does, or in some instances, is literally incapable of doing. If he wasn’t such a great guy, this would be FINE. But he’s clearly pure-hearted and shy! Well, as pure-hearted as a teenager can get.
People do not fully enjoy seeing good people get punished, without retribution or reason behind it. Let’s use an example to explain how this cycle works.
In a similar vein to To Love-Ru, Monster Musume no Iru Nichijou is a harem focused around one guy and all the strange girls who fall in love with him, and their daily life. In one chapter/episode, one of the girls (Miia) is accosted and manipulated by a (presumably male) creeper into almost-rape on a canoe, but the main guy (Kurusu) arrives just in time to stop it in a both comedic and important manner. This actually involves some character development- Kurusu has never gone to such extreme lengths for any of the girls like that before, and it is even revealed later that he was trying to find Miia to give her a gift. Also notable is his treatment of the creeper, offering to undress “him” so that they don’t get sick from being wet. “Conflict -> Tension -> Fear -> Comedic Action -> Catharsis -> Development.” Not only does it help the viewer further understand the established characters involved, but it provides a proper resolution to the conflict, attempts a light comedic moment, and it’s very well-paced and introduced.
To Love-Ru does none of this. At the start of each segment, a girl is “chosen” to star, and she gets in some mess, and Rito is involved/blamed. The situations are lined with depravity and perverted wish fulfillment, from anything to an incestous relationship with a little sister, having a girl almost coerce you into rape after you do a “gentlemanly” act for her, licking a girl erotically while morphed into a dog, accidental sexting with an uptight student body member, and excessive amounts of unnecessary softcore tentacle hentai. A large majority of these events are treated as if the viewer should just sit back and enjoy the boobs (which are pretty much always either HUGE or nonexistent) while nothing substantial happens. And you know what, that would be perfectly fine, if…
This show didn’t pretend to have a plot. Consistently it is referenced that some of the girls actually seriously view Rito as a romantic interest, most notably Haruna (Rito’s crush) and Lala. This is brought up as if it’s a problem? Though Rito, at the beginning of To Love-Ru, was very clearly only interested in Haruna, and it’s only randomly brought up in “Motto” (and parts of the first season) that he’s interested in Lala, though it feels pointless and out of left field, especially considering how Rito’s life became pure hell after he met her. But that’s why this show makes me so angry. It’s not advertised as pure softcore porn/ecchi. It’s advertised to have story, progression, character development. And it has NONE OF THAT. It is as structurally sound as Kiss x Sis, as substantial as a sheet of cardboard with fake boobs drawn on it. The plot is only occasionally used to bring DRAMA and TENSION that feels, somehow, even MORE contrived than the rest of the plot. It’s painful to see such a decent base for a story be so wasted.
Instead, go watch/read Oh My Goddess or MonMusu. Maybe even Shuffle or Oshiete! Galko-chan, if you really need the high school setting. They have actual character development, well-timed humor, and substantial plots. And hell, you can even get some enjoyment out of the first season of To Love-Ru. It’s not an 8/10 but it’s so much better than “Motto” that it’s insane.
SIMILAR ANIMES YOU MAY LIKE
- ANIME ActionHigh School DxD
- ANIME ComedyUrusei Yatsura (2022)
- ANIME ComedyTrouble Chocolate
SCORE
- (3.45/5)
MORE INFO
Ended inDecember 22, 2010
Main Studio Xebec
Favorited by 639 Users