Three students--two ardent anime fans, and one natural manager--form a school club dedicated to the creation of anime. Their trials in creating a three-minute demo reel to justify their club's budget are almost certainly callbacks to Gainax's early days, when the men who became the primary producers of that company were teens.
This manga is absolutely brimming with visual imagination and a vivid sense of place. The creator's love for the anime that these students also love bursts off the page. Someone who's inclined could take hours ferreting out little details in the backgrounds and the designs created by Asakusa.
The Eizouken characters are all girls, and this is completely insignificant. I can say at least, that there isn't a mawkish paternal gaze on them (as I tend to feel from healing type stories with an all-girl cast), nor a sexualized one, either, so that's good. At the same time, they could just as easily be boys, or anthropomorphic animals. They aren't so much characters as vehicles for showing us the processes behind garage-band-like anime.
It reminds me a lot of the Nausicaa manga in the level of lavish detail and the sense of a whole, visually created world, and also in being rather dry as a story. Sense of wonder and world building prevails over character, which diminished my enthusiasm as a reader significantly. I will never be interested in the micro level of detail that goes into mechanical designs, for example. But for those who are fascinated with such things, and/or the technical aspects of adventure anime from the '70s and '80s, this has a good chance of being a winner.
Four pages of detailed footnotes add context, and this volume could be a good jumping-off point for new fans, although unfortunately one of Eizouken's major inspirations is not readily available in English. Three and a half stars, rounded up.