Oda Cinnamon Nobunaga


Oda Cinnamon Nobunaga is a Japanese manga series by Una Megurogawa. It has been serialized in Tokuma Shoten's seinen manga magazine Monthly Comic Zenon, as well as the webmagazine Web Comic Zenyon, since June 2014 and has been collected in seven tankōbon volumes. An anime television series adaptation by Studio Signpost premiered from January 10 to March 27, 2020.

Characters

;Oda Nobunaga
;Date Masamune
;Takeda Shingen
;Uesugi Kenshin
;Imagawa Yoshimoto
;Kuroda Kanbei
;Sanada Yukimura
;Ichiko Oda
;Hideto Mitsu
;Matsunaga Hisahide
;Marie Antoinette
;Akechi Mitsuhide
;Ota Gyūichi
;Tokiyoshi "Seira" Honganji
;Ichiko's father
;Ichiko's mother

Media

Manga

Anime

An anime television series adaptation was announced on the sixth volume of the manga on July 19, 2019. The series is animated by Studio Signpost and directed by Hidetoshi Takahashi, with Maruo Kyōzuka handling series composition, and Hisashi Kagawa designing the characters. It premiered from January 10 to March 27, 2020 on TV Tokyo, TVO, and TVA. Akane Kumada performed the series' opening theme song "Sunny Sunny Girl◎", while Kenyu Horiuchi and Toshio Furukawa performed the series' ending theme song "Cinnamon-tachi". Crunchyroll is streaming the series. It will run for 12 episodes.
No.TitleOriginal air date

Reception

had four editors review the first episode of the anime: James Beckett was initially on board with the show's concept but felt the jokes were too obvious and catered only to Japanese history aficionados, and its use of "noticeably cheap artwork and corny vocal performances" made it feel like a short-form series but is instead an "achingly repetitive" full-length one; Theron Martin commended the use of Nobunaga and other Sengoku-era figures as reincarnated canines through good "artistic effort" and decently comedic scenarios; Nick Creamer was critical of the show's overarching joke being stretched throughout its runtime and having "no real aesthetic strengths" to distinguish itself, concluding that "f you've seen the trailer, you've seen the entire show; feel free to skip this one." The fourth reviewer, Rebecca Silverman, saw promise in the overall concept with its juxtaposition of dogs having elderly voices and side-by-side comparisons with their human forms, but felt it lacked enough "humor power" to justify its full-length running time.