Albany Times Union

For adults, about kids

3 animation series have something to say about youth

- By Mike Hale The New York Times

There are many growth areas in television these days, but few are as busy or offer as much variety as adult animation. Already the format for more than a few of the recent past’s most richly entertaini­ng shows — “Bojack Horseman,” “Bob’s Burgers,” “Rick and Morty,” “Archer,” “Tuca & Bertie” — it has only gained momentum. New series arrive every week (and that’s not counting the quarterly infusion of anime), perhaps driven by a combinatio­n of evolving tastes and pandemicin­duced production shifts.

They can take the form of superhero and sciencefic­tion genre stories, like Amazon Prime Video’s “Invincible,” HBO Max’s “Gen:lock” (premiering Thursday) or Adult Swim’s “Blade Runner: Black Lotus” (Nov. 13). Many still crop up in the broad category of wacky-family comedies, like Fox’s “The Great North” or “The Harper House” on Paramount+. Some lean into animation’s license for transgress­ion, like Adult Swim’s “Teenage Euthanasia,” Netflix’s “Chicago Party Aunt” or Tubi’s “The Freak Brothers” (Nov. 14).

Inspired by the return of Netflix’s “Big Mouth,” here are three excellent adultanima­tion series that take very different approaches to the same goal: Whether it’s through theatrical smuttiness, minimalist degradatio­n or surreal fantasy, each has something to say about the real lives of young people.

“Big Mouth”

The most unrelentin­gly and entertaini­ngly dirty show on the small screen returns with a fifth season on Friday. Like neurotic New Yorkers in a Sondheim musical, its adolescent characters are endlessly talkative when it comes to their obsessions: masturbati­on, the dimensions of the organs involved in masturbati­on, the likes and dislikes of the classmates they think about while they’re masturbati­ng.

Nick Kroll, a creator of the show, and John Mulaney give vivid life to the central characters, the neurotic nerd Nick and the brash nerd Andrew. But what sets “Big Mouth” apart is its collection of shaggy hormone monsters, sleek love bugs and other beings sent from an alternate dimension to help guide the human teenagers through their difficult years, spicing questionab­le advice with insults and raunchy one-liners. It’s as if adolescenc­e had a particular­ly gamy lounge act as its soundtrack, a conceit made literal in the Shame Wizard, a master of dispensing shame because he can’t feel it himself. David Thewlis wraps the character in glorious layers of smarm.

“Sonny Boy”

As coming-of-age allegories go, this recently completed anime series, on Funimation, is right on the nose. A school building suddenly drifts out of our world and is suspended in a black void; the 36 middle schoolers trapped inside must overcome their anxieties and jealousies and work together to find a way back, a process commonly known as growing up. The voyagers also acquire strange new powers, as teenagers tend to do. The coolest kid can fly; an antagonist­ic outsider can order whatever she wants from her own magical version of Amazon, and has to keep the community supplied with material goods.

The challenges they face are also easy to parse as Japanese social critique: the student-council types institute rules that keep everyone constantly working; students who freeze in place like statues turn out to have disappeare­d into “Twin Peaks”-style curtained rooms where they can play video games or lift weights in solitude. (A girl is chastised for calling them hikikomori, the Japanese term for extreme recluses.) Western viewers won’t have too much trouble following along, even though the story is told in the elliptical, fragmentar­y style typical of sciencefic­tion anime.

“Ten Year Old Tom”

In 2008, HBO premiered “The Life and Times of Tim,” a roughly animated (the characters looked Etch A Sketched), quietly raunchy workplace cringe comedy that built a small but devoted following. Weighing the show’s insider cred against its paltry viewership, HBO canceled “Tim” after two seasons, changed its mind, and then canceled it for good after Season 3.

But that was before HBO Max, which is now the home of the first season of “Ten Year Old Tom,” writer and director Steve Dildarian’s follow-up to “The Life and Times of Tim.” If you were part of the earlier series’ cult, you’ll be happy to know that “Tom” is largely the same show.

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