
Hidamari Sketch: Sae & Hiro Graduation
ひだまりスケッチ 沙英ヒロ 卒業編
Studio: Shaft
Synopsis
The day has come for Sae and Hiro to graduate, who are now in their last days as High School students. The first episode centers on the final exams and the university entrance tests, while the second episode centers on the graduation of Sae and Hiro.
Recommendations
Characters & Voice Actors

Hiro
Main
VA: Gotou, Yuuko

Miyako
Main
VA: Mizuhashi, Kaori

Nazuna
Main
VA: Omigawa, Chiaki

Nori
Main
VA: Harada, Hitomi

Sae
Main
VA: Shintani, Ryouko

Yuno
Main
VA: Asumi, Kana

Chika
Supporting
VA: Kugimiya, Rie

Hiro's Friend
Supporting
VA: Tatsumi, Yuiko

Natsume
Supporting
VA: Fukuen, Misato

Ooyasan
Supporting
VA: Sawashiro, Miyuki

The Principal
Supporting
VA: Cho

Ume
Supporting

Hiro
Main
VA: Gotou, Yuuko

Miyako
Main
VA: Mizuhashi, Kaori

Nazuna
Main
VA: Omigawa, Chiaki

Nori
Main
VA: Harada, Hitomi

Sae
Main
VA: Shintani, Ryouko

Yuno
Main
VA: Asumi, Kana

Chika
Supporting
VA: Kugimiya, Rie

Hiro's Friend
Supporting
VA: Tatsumi, Yuiko

Natsume
Supporting
VA: Fukuen, Misato

Ooyasan
Supporting
VA: Sawashiro, Miyuki

The Principal
Supporting
VA: Cho

Ume
Supporting
Related Anime
Prequel
Adaptation
Reviews
Cried. A masterpiece, this series will cure your depression and teach you that life is worth living. The first few seasons are slow paced and calm, allowing you to warm up to the characters and the way the episodes work. Then the pace picks up and the days get more excited and there is literally sunshine everywhere. If you haven't watched this series yet, there's no good reason why not.
How. Really, how can a comedy be anything beyond that? Just ask Hidamari Sketch. Not that often do you see a freaking comedy last over fifty-two episodes. Hidamari Sketch is notable in that, not only do you just feel for the characters throughout the whole thing, but it is one of the very few comedy anime out there that retains the same production crew throughout its entire run. Its visuals become astoundingly better as it progresses, specifically on the way they draw the characters, but the progression feels much better knowing it is not a new team at any given point working on it. I know thatanother certain anime did this for EVERY season and that was a major turnoff, but I digress. I am not writing an entire review for this anime right here, as that is for the season three review. As I said in my first one that was written for the first season, each review counts both seasons. So, the first counted 1-2 and, once I get to it, the third one will count 3-4 as a whole; mainly cause they are pretty similar. However, I could not wait and, after finishing it right now, had to write a review on these OVA specials first. So, this sis more of a summary of my opinion on the entire series, well the next one will be centered on the prior two seasons. Prepare to cry if you, too, watched all of it and are reading this. Heartwarming is not the only word I have to use for this, not at all. From Miya comforting Yuno during the graduation when she was collapsed over the thought of not seeing Sae and Hiro for a long time, to the opening featuring every single character that ever had a major appearance in the anime. It was all just so painful to watch, but in a good way. It reminded me that the buildup was fast approaching and that, after this, the anime would be no more. It is a comedy, but it gives me feels unlike no other comedy before it that I have seen. And, not gonna lie, due to her already minor appearances, I was thinking this would be solely centered on the main girls and that it would not have any major roles for minor characters. But, Natsume got me more than anyone else in these OVA specials. I wish it lasted longer, but what they did for her still made me tear up more than any other sad moment in these specials. So much so that the entirety of Natsume's character unfolded in front of my memories as I was watching it and I could not hold it in anymore. And, though I was not exactly streaming down the face, my eyes were filled to the brim. For the first time, I saw a tsundere character break entirely out of their mold; their comfort zone, to be precise, which is normally what they have whenever they are not around other people. Natsume broke down, and I mean hard, in front of Sae. Her tear ducts were welting and she was breaking down to Sae how she would find a way to meet her again; basically saying that she did see her as a friend the entire series. This was finally realized by Sae during the finale of the fourth season, as Natsume confessed to reading Sae's books; albeit on accident, her synopsis on the story was exactly what Sae wanted to hear from one of her readers and she promptly booted out after mentioning it. Sae approached her as she blabbed on about what they were going to do, grabbed her shoulders and said she did see her as a friend, too. And, entirely out of character, Natsume instead embraced Sae, rather than running away, as she knew this would be the last time she would see her. The scene could have been longer, but it makes sense that it was short due to how minor she was in the anime. But, her progression in that one scene where she actually confessed her feelings and did not do the generic tsundere thing where she brings up a good point or two really hit me hard. Given how used I am to it and how much knowledge I have of the stereotype to make a healthy assumption that the sad scene would have fallen short, it was surprisingly adequate and Natsume embraced Sae until she calmed down, rather than doing it for a little bit and running or, well, dashing away at all after any of the lines she said. She normally avoids contact with Sae for long periods of time, but she wanted this time to be the longest she ever spent with her; and that moment alone can give anyone whom appreciated her character a hard smack in the heart and have you at least watering a little bit in the eyes. Perhaps, cause Natsume did not hesitate once when she was saying her goodbyes. It really is enough to make you appreciate her character development; especially when you go all the way back to season one, where she literally appeared one time and was originally a comedy character that was meant to provoke Sae during the festival. Then, she became a recurring character in the next season, where she had significant development among any other character in their school and, despite being minor again in the final two seasons, her development was at its peak during these seasons and the last of these two specials just released her everything. If there is somehow a brief OVA spin-off series where we see Sae and Hiro beyond college, if not in it, then I hope Natsume has some significant development during them. She deserves it after the ending of these specials. My apologies for delving into Natsume a lot, but I just appreciated her involvement here; little as it was. And, I did not capitalize on much else cause most of the other characters had pretty minor goodbyes and it followed a few generic cliché bits with the singing during the ceremony, the goodbyes to the minor characters we never saw at all in the entire series and so forth. If I had to pick one more goodbye that struck me, that was even shorter than Natsume's own, it was with the landlady. When she brought up the "Sunshine at Hidamari Apartments" or whatever that flyer said on it as she put her arm around Sae and Hiro, it was the zoom before the next scene that hit me hard; showing them all crying, as the landlady had been with them throughout their entire high school years. This was truly a beautiful conclusion and this anime had a worthy amount of episodes. I hope one day I do get that spin-off OVA series.

