Yakusoku no Nebarando; animated mystery / horror / psychological thriller series, Japan, 2019; D: Mamoru Kanbe, S: Sumire Morohoshi, Maaya Uchida, Mariya Ise, Yuko Kaida, Lynn, Shinei Ueki
In 2045, an orphanage hosts 37 children looked over by their ''mother'' Isabella. The children never left the estate, which is surrounded by a giant wall. One day, kids Emma (11) and Norman (11) go to the entrance of the wall, where their friend Conny was supposed to be adopted, but find out she was killed and sacrificed to a demon. Emma, Norman and Ray thus realize they are a food harvest for the demons, sent to be eaten when they turn 12. After Norman is being taken away when he reached the age of 12, Emma and Ray hatch up a plan to climb over the wall and slide on ropes over the canyon underneath, and thus escape with half of the children to the outside world.
The Epstein Files meet Shyamalan's ''The Village'' meet ''The Cabin in the Woods''—the 1st season of the anime ''The Promised Neverland'' is a remarkably sophisticated unraveling of a mystery about kids in an orphanage who discover their narrow world presented to them is not what it seems, and they become a symbol for dismantling and overcoming the propaganda bubble. The mood, the clever writing and the patient story build-up are the main virtues of this anime, yet it is all rewarded in the end. The often tactic of implying something supernatural, but keeping it hidden while the protagonists (and the viewers with them) slowly discover more about this world, is used here to an effect that reaches its optimum, since the story is intriguing, intelligent and swift at the same time. Except for a few neat camera drives (POV shot of someone walking upstairs towards a door; the tracking shot moving behind the corner as it tracks Ray walking in front of it), there are also some delicious details here: for instance, Emma shows a map of Isabella's room and explains to the other kids that she measured with her footsteps the distance between the walls outside and inside, and realized 10 footsteps are missing inside her room, meaning that there is a secret room behind the book shelf. In another tantalizing moment, the kids discover that books written by a certain William Minerva have a secret Morse Code imprinted on its seal, revealing clues like ''orphanage'' and ''monsters''. The final two episodes, 11 and 12, are the highlight, since a plan is devised and executed that is so genius that one simply cannot mention it without spoiling it, though the director uses masterful match cuts and flashbacks to say so much about the past of these characters and their relations. Several themes were deciphered from this story (vegetarianism and animal rights in a slaughterhouse; collaborationism in order to survive; freedom of information; the relation between passive obedience and active hope), but what is more relevant is that these themes were presented in a well set-up and executed storyline which engages until the end that hints at a second season.
Grade:+++