Sometimes it seems like there aren’t many original ideas these days. With all the reboots and Avengers flying around, it feels like we’ve seen it all. Then again maybe it’s just my line of work, where miner mannequin idol groups and people licking copsare everyday occurrences, that has made me jaded.
Yet despite all this, Back Street Girls is one work that has still managed to raise this eyebrow made heavy from years of live eels and pounds of gold in people’s butts. It’s premise is simple but so strange: a yakuza boss orders three of his men to undergo extensive surgeries to transform them into an idol group to perform his songs.
Originally a manga by Jasmine Gyuh that began in 2015, it is about to get the full anime treatment in a series airing on Japanese TV from 3 July. Here’s a preview!
The story follows three members of the Inukin yakuza family, Kentaro Yamamoto, Ryo Tachibana, and Kazuhiko Sugihara, who, under orders from their leader (who also happens to be a genius producer-songwriter) get extensive surgery to become Airi Yamamoto, Mari Tachibana, and Chika Sugihara.
The trio then enters the underground idol scene under the group name Doku Dolls and together must juggle the demands of a fully functioning idol unit and yakuza family at the same time. Needless to say, hijinks ensue.
The voice actors for the main cast are Daisuke Ono (Black Butler, JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure) as Kentaro, Satoshi Hino (Naruto, Gintama) as Ryo, and Kazuyuki Okitsu (Ladies versus Butlers!, Berserk). Meanwhile Airi, Mari, and Chika will be voiced by relative newcomers Yuka Nukui, Kaori Maeda, and Hikaru Akao respectively..
Given the nature of the story, however, it is unclear how the voice work will be divvied out. For instance, there is another trailer which is exactly the same but uses the women voice actors instead.
Those who want to find out can tune in when it airs on BS11, Tokyo MX, and MBS. It shouldn’t be boring…and I mean that in the imperative sense. If you’re making a story about forcibly transgender yakuza idols, it’s your solemn duty to not make it boring.
The response from Japan and abroad seemed mixed but overall cautiously optimistic.
As the last comment reminds us, the hiatus of Love Live! Sunshine has left a vacuum in the idol genre of anime. Perhaps Back Street Girls is just what’s needed to fill it.