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There’s still room in the anime scene for poignant teen romances and Words Bubble Up Like Soda Pop has that in spades.
This movie is streaming on Netflix
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed by the participants in this chatlog are not the views of Anime News Network.
Spoiler Warning for discussion of the series ahead.
Jean-Karlo, I don’t mean to brag, but I’ve done a darn good job almost completely cutting down my soda intake recently. A lot of people ask me what my secret is, so I’m here to share the one weird trick the Coca-Cola corporation DOESN’T want you to know: turns out I can get all the sweetness and effervescence I need out of just one movie.
Me, I’ve been nursing a two-liter of Shasta this weekend, so I’m damn near diabetic after this movie. Now, the title might cause some consternation because I know there are some regional differences for how you refer to soft drinks, but I really don’t have the energy for meme fights (and this also goes for you pedants who think it’s funny to ask VTubers if hot dogs are sandwiches). Kick back, crack open a Mountain Dew, and enjoy with us as we have fun with a very lovely film. This is Words Bubble Up Like Soda Pop.
And for the rest of this column, I’m just gonna hold onto that buoyant optimism and try not to remember that his next project is that sequel to Bright that absolutely nobody wants.
Fun fact: the actual Aeon Mall even held a stamp rally to commemorate the release of this film!
In other words, you love to see a film that understands the beauty of a place that’s well-lived-in.
Even the fact that all of these characters have cute nicknames speaks of their depths (we know their nicknames because at one point protagonist Cherry points out his real name is “Sakura”). Why is Beaver “Beaver”? Why is Japan “Japan”? Why is Cherry’s mom “Maria”? You had to be there to know, at the end of the day.
The other is Smile, a teenager from a whole family of livestreamers. She’s very popular but recently became very self-conscious of her buckteeth, such that she’s getting them corrected with braces. She otherwise hides her face behind a medical mask at all times.
Also, not even joking, I am 100% on Smile’s “do not perceive me” side. Masks are so good for that. I can’t believe I went that long without taking advantage of them.
But I digress: her braceface is very cute.
I’m getting ahead of myself again, but the movie also points out a pun in Japanese involving teeth and cherry blossoms, and a major plot point involves a departed woman who, surprise surprise, also had buck teeth like Smile’s.
So let this be a lesson to folks: just because your teeth aren’t perfectly aligned, doesn’t mean that you don’t have a pretty smile.
Which does lead to this painfully adorable interaction, when Smile actually compliments his voice.
Boy, I’ve been there.
I do genuinely like the ways in which social media plays into the scaffolding of their relationship. I’m a little too old to have had to worry about Twitter follows during my high school courtships, but that doesn’t mean I can’t enjoy all this secondhand awkwardness.
As it turns out, Cherry’s family is planning on moving away from town in a few weeks. Cherry doesn’t have the heart to tell Smile what’s going on, meanwhile Smile wants to ask Cherry to the daruma festival (an actual event the town holds).
Gotta add some drama somehow I guess! It’s the one mildly frustrating part of the film for me, because the whole moving subplot really doesn’t fit in thematically with anything else, besides the expected plot beats of a film like this. Not egregious, but a little lazy imo.
I have so much fondness for small hole-in-the-wall places like this, where you can just flip through old vinyl for hours. And clearly the film has a lot of fondness for them too, going so far as to draw the wear and tear on the cardboard boxes. I want to go to there.
There’s probably an actual shop like Fujiyama’s in Takasaki somewhere, with any luck it’s still lovingly run to this day.
The search for the album also has a nice backstory to it: as it turns out, the album was from Fujiyama’s departed wife, and he was the photographer who snapped her photo for the album. His wife died giving birth to his daughter, so it was the only thing he had left of her voice.
Also, the album was titled Yamazakura—which is a pun that not only refers to early-blooming cherry blossoms, but also…buck teeth. Like the ones Fujiyama’s wife had, and the ones Smile has.
There was even a cute bit where we see Fujiyama’s wife was once-upon-a-time self-conscious about her own teeth, which Fujiyama was able to assuage. D’aww.
This scene… oh man, was I cringing the moment I saw Smile notice that the record was warped…
Tho, jokes aside, that scene of Smile trying to glue the record back together is the single most devastating part of the film. I felt so bad for her.
The character acting throughout the film is phenomenal too, which really helps sell a scene like this.
Ahem. Anyway, these on-the-nose plot beats needed a good resolution. As it turns out, Fujiyama was right to trawl around the mall in search of his missing record—it was right under everyone’s noses the whole time!
Lesser writers would nitpick this, but I love how simple it is and how well it works. I got so excited when I saw the fireworks on the opposite side of the album and we smash-cut to the daycare center with that same image on the clock.
I also went back through my screencaps, and sure enough, the clock is prominently featured in the very first shot of the daycare.
Anyway, Cherry’s family is already leaving town when the gang finds the record, so everyone comes together to make sure Cherry gets to the festival. My boy Beaver comes in with the save in letting his graffiti catch Cherry’s eye, writing Cherry’s haiku on street signs. DJ Professor K would be proud.
He gets some of the characters wrong, but again, “Yamazakura” is a pun for both teeth and cherries, so it works out. (It’s part of a long-running gag where Beaver gets his Japanese homonyms mixed up.)
Freaking superb, you fabulous little nerd, you.
Also, there’s a really really cute bit after the credits, but I’m not spoiling it because it really is that cute. Anyway, yeah, Words Bubble Up Like Soda Pop is a really freaking cute movie and you definitely should watch it right now.
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