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[[File:Violet evergarden anime.jpg|thumb|300px]]
{{quote|''It is a pleasure to meet you. If it is your wish, I will travel anywhere to meet your request. I am auto memories doll, Violet Evergarden.''
|Violet|Episode thirteen "Auto Memoir Doll and `I Love You`"}}
 
'''''Violet Evergarden''''' (Japanese ''ヴァイオレット・エヴァーガーデン'', Hepburn ''Vaioretto Evāgāden'') is ana anime[[Thirteen-Episode Anime]] series adapted from a series of light novels. The light novels were initially released in 2015. The adaptation was animated by [[Kyoto Animation]], and was released in early 2018. An OVA that takes place between episodes three and four was released in July. ATwo feature- length filmfilms wasaccompany releasedthe inseries: the spin-off ''[[Violet Evergarden: Eternity and the Auto Memory Doll]]'' (2019) and the follow-up ''[[Violet Evergarden: The Movie]]'' (2020), its release delayed after the arson attack at the studio.
 
The series follows the titular Violet Evergarden as she seeks to become an autoAuto memoryMemory dollDoll after a war, as well as her helping other clients. Auto memoriesMemory dollsDolls write down, on letters, what others cannot put into words,. andThey must be attuned to the emotions of others, and be a fast typer. ButUnfortunately whatfor Violet, being a [[Child Soldier]] has many downsides, one of them is thinghow thingshe theyhas call[[No "love"Social Skills]] and doesn't know how to feel, resulting in overly formal letters. She's got the second part nailed, but the first part? There's a lot to learn there...
 
To remedy this, she attends an academy for Auto Memory Dolls. She writes a seminal letter for a fellow pupil, bringing her and her brother close together, kickstarting her journey as a Auto Memory Doll. Violet journeys around, travelling to meet other clients and offering them service. These clients include an ill mother, and an alcoholic playwright recovering from grief. As the series progresses, the focus on impacts of the war and Violet's time in the military grows. But what is thing thing they call "love"?
As the series progresses, the impacts of the war and Violet's time in the military grows.
 
The series is focused on evoking an emotional response, and is stuffed to the brim with [[Tear Jerker]] moments. Ensure you have tissues near you.
 
{{tropelist}}
* [[ActionAn GirlAesop]]: Violet[[War duringIs herHell]], slowly explored over the timecourse inof the militaryseries.
* [[Body Horror]]: One of the tools used in the arsenal to deliver [[War Is Hell]] messages. {{spoiler|Both of Violet's arms are shot off while trying to save Major Gilbert. The Major is shot in an eye, with blood splatters and screams.}}
* [[Cerebus Syndrome]]: The starting episodes of the series is by no means light-hearted, but they are mild when compared to latter episodes tackling themes of war, grief, and loss, {{spoiler|even containing an attempted suicide}}.
* [[Cast Full of Pretty Boys]]: Every boy that Violet helps out is handsome.
* [[Character Title]]: Guess who the main character of the show is! You'll never guess it, not in a million years and a lifetime!
* [[Cast of Snowflakes]]: Every face is unique in some way or another, regardless of whether a character is the protagonist or a background extra who disappears after eight frames.
* [[Close on Title]]: Most of the episodes ends with the episode name. Some episodes doesn't, and are never given an official name.
** In episode three, the Auto Memory Dolls training school Violet attends has every trainee having a unique face.
* [[Central Theme]]: Letters and writing can bring people together, no matter how far apart they are.
* [[Cerebus Syndrome]]: The beginning of the series is by no means light-hearted, but they are mild when compared to latter episodes tackling themes of war, grief, and loss, {{spoiler|even containing an attempted suicide}}. The beginning mostly focuses on Violet's internal struggles trying to understand emotions and leaving behind her war stricken self, whereas episodes eight and nine deal with bloody decapitation and people getting shot. Episodes eleven through thirteen bring back themes of military and war, but in the present rather than a flashback.
* [[Character Title]]: Guess who the main character of the show is! You'll never guess it, not in a million years andnor a lifetime!
* [[Cliff Hanger]]: Episode twelve and eight. {{spoiler|They both end with someone getting shot. In episode eight, it's Major Gilbert; in episode twelve, it's Violet's prosthetic arms}}. Episode seven also qualifies, where the news of {{spoiler|Major Gilbert's death has just been announced to both Violet and the audience}}.
* [[Close on Title]]: Most of the episodes ends with the episode name. Some episodes doesndon't, and are never given an official name.
* [[Creative Closing Credits]]: The ending sequence, where the credits are played, have better animation than most shows, depicting Violet under a starry sky, and in a forest. It's filled with original animation, created specifically for the sequence itself. The [[Ending Theme]] "Michishirube" also helps.
* [[Credits Running Sequence]]: One shot in the credits sequence is of a silhouette of Violet walking in place against a black background, holding up an umbrella, while seasons change around her.
* [[Cue the Rain]]: In episode nine, when Violet mourns over {{spoiler|Major Gilbert's death}}.
* [[Do-It-Yourself Theme Tune]]: In the original Japanese track, Minori Chihara, who plays Erica, also sings the [[Ending Theme]] "Michishirube".
* [[Emotionless Girl]]: Violet, when she first starts, cannot understand what love or any other emotion is, speaking in a stoic, composed voice. Because of this, she struggles to express others' emotions down on paper, leading to many angry complaints. By the end of episode three she still remains emotionless, but finally learns how to express others' feelings in the letter she writes.
* [[Ending Theme]]: "Mitchishirube", a slower song than the [[Anime Theme Song]] "Sincerely" used to open the series. It doesn't aim to show off anything, and its translated lyrics aren't reflective of the show's themes. As usual, the images in the sequence are slower with less action to make way for the ending credits.
* [[Ghibli Hills]]: In episode four, when Violet and Iris visit Iris's home town of Kazaly, Leidenschaftlich, as it is a small mountain village primarily focused on agriculture. They are drawn with enough detail to make the actual [[Studio Ghibli]] proud. They are also prominence in episode seven.
* [[False Camera Effects]]: Yet another [[Kyoto Animation]] staple. Commonly used effects include [[Lens Flare]] and depth of field, despite it being a fully animated production. Post processing effects such as bloom, blur, and desaturation are also common.
* [[In Medias Res]]: The series opens with Violet saying that an accessory is the same colour as Major Gilbert's eyes, before curing to the present day. Context to that scene is later given in episode 8.
* [[Flashback (trope)|Flashback]]: In the early episodes, leading up to the [[Whole-Episode Flashback]] in episode eight. In these flashbacks, the audience is shown Violet's experience in the war, but these bits of information are vague and difficult to piece together. The series begins with a flashback of Major Gilbert buying Violet her brooch, and also include scenes in a dark and bloodied room. {{spoiler|We later learn that it's Major Gilbert after being shot, with Violet refusing to leave him.}}
* [[Living Weapon]]: Some members of the military call Violet this, due to her nimble and deadly nature, single-handedly turning around a war.
* [[Floral Theme Naming]]: This is a common theme among the main cast as the majority of them are named after flowers, as such Violet, Iris, Erica, and Cattleya. We also have Anne '''Magnolia''' and Gilbert and Dietfred '''Bougainvillea'''.
* [[Long Title]]: Episodes like ''You Won't Be a Tool, But a Person Worthy of That Name'' and ''May You Be an Exemplary Auto Memoir Doll'' have long titles, although other episodes have short titles, and some episodes don't have titles at all.
* [[Foreshadowing]]: Near the beginning of episode seven, Claudia and Cattleya have a conversation, where Cattleya asks if Claudia has talked to Violet "about the major". This foreshadows {{spoiler|his death, revealed at the end of the episode}}.
* [[No Title]]: Episodes seven has a blank name when it [[Close on Title|closes on the title sequence]]. Episode eight doesn't even have a title sequence when it closes.
* [[Ghibli Hills]]: In episode four, when Violet and Iris visit Iris's home town of Kazaly, Leidenschaftlich, as it is a small mountain village primarily focused on agriculture. Due to its isolation, it is surrounded by greenery and Ghibli Hills. They are drawn with enough detail to make the actual [[Studio Ghibli]] proud. They are also prominencefeature in episode seven.
* [[Scenery Gorn]]: During Violet's war flashbacks, animated with stunning detail.
* [[Ghibli Plains]]: The opening features Violet standing in vast, sprawling plains with way too much [[False Camera Effects]]. The first shot after the title sequence is of Ghibli Plains. The second shot is still of Ghibli Plains, only it's zoomed in on Violet.
* [[The Song Remains the Same]]: In the English dub, the ending song "Michishirube" remains in Japanese.
* [[Great Offscreen War]]: The war sweeping across the continent of Telsis that Violet participated in before recovering, ending before the series starts. Aspects of it are shown in flashbacks, and takes center stage in episode eight. Remnants of the war plays a part in the story in the last three episodes, {{spoiler|which focuses on an anti-peace faction which wants to return to the state of war}}.
* [[War Is Hell]]: The war sequences in flashbacks, often focusing on violence and death. Many bloody decapitation scenes are visible, along with screaming and suffering.
* [[Hidden Depths]]: Almost every single character; new traits are gradually revealed as episodes progress. Some characters lost their mother, and thus are secluded from society. Others lost loved ones in the recent war, and seeks help overcoming their grief.
* [[What Is This Thing You Call Love?]]: The entire reason why Violet joins the CH Postal Company and becomes an auto memory doll is to learn about what love is.
* [[Whole-EpisodeIn FlashbackMedias Res]]: EpisodeThe eightseries focusesopens heavily onwith Violet's timesaying inthat a brooch is the military,same withcolour onlyas aMajor coupleGilbert's ofeyes, minutesbefore setcutting into the present day. Context to that scene is later given in episode eight.
* [[Impossible Task]]: In the OVA, other Auto Memory Dolls in the CH postal company describe Irma's task — writing a letter which can win over any man's heart and any woman would sympathise with — as this. That's when she (and us) discover that she was actually commissioned to write song lyrics, which is a tall order for a ghost writer.
* [[It Works Better with Bullets]]: In episode nine, Violet shoots soldiers who have {{spoiler|shot Major Gilbert}}. A soldier was hit, but when Violet goes to shoot another, nothing happens when the trigger is pulled and he runs away.
* [[Lens Flare]]: Occurs in almost every episode. It's a sign that you're watching a [[Kyoto Animation]] production.
* [[Long Title]]: Episodes like ''"You Won't Be a Tool, But a Person Worthy of That Name''" and ''"May You Be an Exemplary Auto Memoir Doll''" have long titles, although other episodes havelike short"Never titles,Coming Back" are andof the length expected for a title. someSome episodes don't have titles at all.
* [[Memento MacGuffin]]: The brooch that Major Gilbert buys Violet.
* [[Men Are the Expendable Gender]]: Every single soldier killed in combat, either by Violet or any other soldier, are men. Females in the series die of natural causes such as illness, while men are conscripted and sent to the battlefield.
** Partially [[Averted]] with {{spoiler|Major Gilbert's death, the single most meaningful death in the series. He is by no means an expendable character}}.
* [[Mooks]]: The male soldiers that Violet kills in war flashbacks, as well as the soldiers who {{spoiler|hijacked the train}} in episodes twelve and thirteen.
** [[Deconstructed]] in episode eleven, which focuses on the life of the Mook Aiden after being sniped. It focuses on his interactions with his lover, and how they are left behind once Aiden is shot {{spoiler|and later dies}}.
* [[Nice Girl]]: Almost every single mother in the show falls under this trope.
* [[No Antagonist]]: Many of the episodic, self-contained stories uses character driven conflicts. For example, episode 4 focuses on the interactions between Iris and her family, episode 7 on the playwright Oscar dealing with grief, and episode 10 focuses on a loving mother about to part from the world. Part of these conflicts' emotional power comes from a lack of antagonistic forces, meaning conflicts flow naturally and are more representative of dramatic moments in the real world.
** This is averted in the overarching [[Myth Arc]]. The last 3 episodes introduces the antagonistic anti-peace faction.
* [[No Title]]: Episodes seven is called 「 」. Seriously. It's just a space. Episode eight doesn't even [[Close on Title]], and thus is never given an official name.
* [[Recurring Character]]: The other members of the CH Postal company, namely Iris Cannary, Erica Brown, and Cattleya Baudelaire. They don't show up in every episode; they are missing in the standalone ones in which Violet helps other clients, but each plays a role in the overarching plot of the series.
* [[Say My Name]]: In the [[Cliff Hanger]] in episode eight, right after {{spoiler|Major Gilbert is shot in the eyes}}. {{quote|'''Violet''': Major! MAJOR!}}
* [[Scenery Gorn]]: During Violet's war flashbacks, animated with stunning detail. Colours are darker and desaturated to reflect the dangers of war.
** [[Scenery Porn]]: In the present time, Leiden looks stunning with the bright colours and aforementioned [[False Camera Effects|false camera effects]] used.
* [[Schizo-Tech]]: The world at first glance appears like early 20th century (possibly post-World War I), with the main form of communication being letters as telephones haven't been invented, and transportation being as vintage as they get. Typewriters are used instead of computer keyboards, but fully functional prosthetic limbs far beyond our current technological level exist.
* [[Serious Business]]: There are entire companies and people trained ''just'' to write letters for others. The series goes out of its way to states that letters bring people together. [[The Hero]] is a character dedicated to writing letters. Her coworkers are ''also'' people who writes letters for a living. There's a school training people to write letters. Contrast with how letters are treated in real life: you write them yourself ''without'' hiring an Auto Memory Doll, and drop them off at the post office.
* [[Seventh-Episode Twist]]: Episode seven, which ends with a [[Cliff Hanger]], sets the overarching war plot into motion. Although parts of the plot are sprinkled throughout the series--the show opens with a scene from the past--they are vague. These scenes don't give much of the plot away, only teasing that something isn't right regarding Violet's backstory. It marks the start of serialisation of what was a fairly episodic show. The storyline kickstarted in episode seven requires the rest of the series--excluding episode ten--and the [[Violet Evergarden: The Movie|2020 film]] to resolve.
* [[Show Within a Show]]: Episode seven opens with the stage play ''The Red Demon'', written by Oscar Webster. The episode revolves around Violet helping him write his next play. Also occurs with the opera led by Irma in the OVA.
* [[The Song Remains the Same]]: In the English dub, the ending song "Michishirube", as well as the opening theme "Sincerely", remains in Japanese.
** Irma's aria at the end of the special episode also remains in Japanese, and is the only vocal song with English subtitles.
* [[Stern Teacher]]: The teacher of the Auto Memory Doll training course that Violet and Luculia attends. She is described as strict, but ultimately fair, and graduation from the course is considered an honour and great achievement.
* [[Thematic Theme Tune]]: The opening "Sincerely", whose translated lyrics deals with themes of learning new words (needed for writing), saying goodbye and emotions (which Violet slowly does throughout the series).
* [[Time Skip]]: In episode ten, where we are shown Anne growing up, and {{spoiler|receiving the letters her mother wrote her}}.
* [[Title Theme Drop]]: In episode 10, "Loved Ones Will Always Watch Over You", the ending theme "Michishirube" plays over a [[Montage]]. {{spoiler|The montage is of Anne growing up, and receiving letters from her mother}}. In the credits, a third of the theme is used. In the montage, the other two thirds play.
* [[Voiceover Letter]]: In episode ten, {{spoiler|the letters Anne receives from her mother are read in her mother's voice}}.
* [[War Is Hell]]: The war sequences in flashbacks, often focusing on violence and death. Many bloody decapitation scenes are visible, along with screaming and suffering. Overall, the series state that war is pointless, brutal, and only tears apart existing relationships. {{spoiler|In episode eleven, this is focused on as an anti-peace faction shoots one of Violet's clients.}}
** In fact, the entire overarching narrative deals with themes of war. The flashbacks in episodes eight and nine, as well as the story in episode eleven gets up close and personal, depicting how a single person can be affected by war. Episodes twelve and thirteen partially deals with consequences on civilians of war.
** While the war does allow Violet to meet Major Gilbert, it is also the thing that {{spoiler|takes him away}}.
** In the OVA, Irma's lover Hugo was conscripted into the war and never came back.
** Some parents of Violet's clients are dead because of the war.
* [[Whole-Episode Flashback]]: Episode eight focuses on Violet's time in the military, with only a couple of minutes set in the present day. The flashback lasts to episode nine.
* [[Write Back to the Future]]: Unusually, the example does not involve time travel. {{spoiler|In episode ten, Anne's dying mother writes letters to her which will be delivered on her birthday for the next fifty years. The episode never reveals who the letters were addressed to before Anne receives them, maximising the emotional power of the episode}}.
 
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