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Gallery Fake
Rated: PG-13 - Teens 13 or older
Status: Finished Airing
Source: Manga
Score: 7.41
Rank: 2330
Popularity: 5558
Fujita Reiji is the owner of an art gallery, Gallery Fake. He deals with fake items, and is also familiar with the black market. However, he has a special talent for art, and used to work for the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York as a curator. (Source: ANN)
Fujita, Reiji
Main
Morikawa, Toshiyuki
Halifa, Sara
Main
Kawasumi, Ayako
Akiyoshi, Masako
Supporting
Soumi, Youko
Aonuma, Mother
Supporting
Sadaoka, Sayuri
Aonuma, Tomomi
Supporting
Kobayashi, Yuu
Review
n-j-s
This is one of my favorite anime series that I have watched. This isn't really a review but more like a very short summary. The show is just so fun to watch. You just have to watch it. Every episode is really interesting and it makes me wonder what the next episode will showcase. The story is clean, makes you wonder about the historical nature of the paintings and other works of art. Its just wonderful. I actually read about some of the paintings and their painters after I watched the series. I learned alot from myown readings on the items shown in the anime. This show also gives me the chuckles because of the personality of the characters. Fujita and his assistant Sara are so fun to watch. Their verbal sparring is clean and light hearted. Sara's personality is pretty cute. Fujita seems like a typical money hungry art-dealer but he really loves what he does and he will do anything to help the people that needs it. Fujita's nemesis Mitamura becomes a very likable and caring character as the story progresses. I love the music used throughout the anime especially during the revealing moments. The story and music fit like a glove.
liebert_
In my eyes, Gallery Fake is not perfect, but it appealed strongly to my personal tastes. It balances a fine line between interesting (borderline educational) information about the art world, characters with mature goals and emotions, and good clean fun. Sometimes that line is completely out of balance, but the show is never boring and always charming. I would call it a much more down-to-earth, less adventure-driven Lupin III, but only to compare and contrast the genre similarities and differences. I thought the insight into the world of fine art would be my biggest draw, but it was actually the main characters that kept mecoming back for more until I was binging the final episodes. Fujita to me was like a Sherlock Holmes character with a dash of James Bond, with Sara's spirited but youthful energy making the duo wholesome /in general/. I will give a warning that there are more than a handful of episodes in which Fujita's behaviour towards Sara is piggish, cruel, and/or callous. I can't turn a blind eye to it as it was upsetting to me on a personal level, and sometimes even infuriating due to the whiplash in Fujita's behaviour between episodes. However, I can try to give the series my good faith as this was a common trope at the time the show was made and the episodes are probably not in chronological order, as most of them are a self-contained story with little to no reference to previous episodes. For all the viewers know, communication being excellent between Sara and Fujita could have happened later chronologically from when things were difficult to watch. At the times when things were good, I loved watching the cozy found family dynamic the two of them have with each other - it's clear that both deeply care about each other, just in their own way. I have to also give props to all the opening and ending themes of the anime - they are varied in nature, and I loved watching until the very end of each episode in order to get my music fix. Pushim's "Anything For You", the third ending theme, is still stuck in my head right now as I type this paragraph... and I finished the series over a month ago! There are only two things which prevented this series from being a masterpiece in my eyes. The first of these is due to the aforementioned self-contained story in most episodes. This leads to some characters appearing only once and then disappearing, never to be heard of again - including one very important character in the later part of the series, whose continued existence could have caused a lot of interesting drama for the main characters. I really think that that plot thread could have at least been concluded with a quick exposition or at least a throwaway line or two in the following episodes if there was no intent on having the character stick around. The second is that there is a varying quality in the writing of episodes, but I will say that most to me are at a comfortable mid-tier. Overall: if you are a fan of the seinen genre, I definitely recommend Gallery Fake.