Time of Eve/YMMV

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


  • Awesome Music: I have a dream, the ending song of the movie.
  • Fridge Brilliance: Rikuo and Masaki are continuously subverting the cafe's main rule. Then again, that's what pretty much all of Asimov's robot stories were about as well.
  • Fridge Horror: There are a few offhand remarks made relating to the disposal of robots that have served their purpose. Unless something happens to change the world, this is the ultimate fate of most of the cafe's regulars!
  • Fridge Logic
    • Chie does not recognize Rikuo's glasses as being glasses. Yet her guardian wears a pair.
    • Conversations in normal tones somehow don't carry past the intended recipient, even in a small space without any apparent soundproofing.
    • If androids really are intended to be just appliances, it would make little sense to equip them to eat, drink, blush and cry. The former two might be acceptable, if their services include cooking, but the latter are exclusively emotional expressions.
    • It is implied that no two robots look alike, which would be useful for quick recognition by their owners, but inefficient for mass production.
  • Jerkass: Most humans, if not all of them.
  • Moe: Sammy, very much so. Rikuo might also qualify, due to his Woobie status.
  • Sweet Dreams Fuel
  • Tear Jerker: Katoran's story and the last episode are the most significant ones. The movie implies that Nagi's backstory might be the worst of all.
  • The Woobie: Rikuo witnessed a robot playing the piano and was moved by it. He subsequently fell into a depression, because he was beginning to feel like his efforts were worthless.
  • Woobie Species: Robots. The ones seen so far have been, if anything, more likeable than the humans (to be fair, only a small portion of the cast is indisputably human). And yet they're completely unable to express themselves, for fear of being hated and abandoned by their masters.

Back to Time of Eve