There are directors who are architects of their own aesthetics, almost impossible to replicate by the mass production system. Yasuomi Umetsu is one of them. After years of a production that touched the mythological, it finally arrives Virgin Punk, a project that is divided into two souls; A raw film and documentary that justifies why this man took almost a decade to bring his new obsession to life.
The film: the triumph of design over the industry

Virgin Punk It is, above all, a display of visual identity. In a market flooded by generic and “safe” character design Umetsu It reminds us why it’s a legend. The characters in this film have that “Umetsu look”: expressive eyes, detailed lips and an attitude that mixes vulnerability with a latent lethality.
History introduces us to ume, a “watch girl” who inhabits a city where the future feels dirty, tangible and mechanical. Unlike current productions of SHAFT who often abuse the abstract avant-garde, in Virgin Punk We see a return to kinetic and visceral animation. The action is not free; It’s rhythmic. Each movement of UME has a weight, an inertia that only directors obsessed with the anatomy of the movement can achieve.

The atmosphere is a fascinating hybrid between the Cyberpunk classic and a kind of “analog punk”. There are no bright holograms, but steam, oil and metal. Umetsu’s direction feels more mature than in his previous jobs as Wizard Barristers, recovering that spark of authorship that made him famous in the 90s with kite, but with the technical sophistication of 2026.
The documentary: the cost of craft perfection

What makes this release an object of study is the documentary that accompanies it. This is where the review becomes an industry analysis. The documentary is not a complacent “making of”; It is the testimony of a Creative Way of the Cross.
Through their scenes, we understand why years of silence passed. We see a Yasuomi Umetsu who refuses to delegate the essence of his designs, reviewing every layout and correcting animations almost obsessively. The documentary reveals how the project survived changes in study, budget crises and the evolution of animation technology itself.

For the technical reader, see the struggle between the vision of an “old school” principal and the limitations of current delivery times of SHAFT It is revealing. The documentary gives the film a Authority immense, we are no longer judging a work of rapid consumption, but the result of the resistance of an author against the system.
Verdict: The sacrifice of time for beauty

Virgin Punk It’s a wonderful anomaly in 2026. The film is a visual feast for those who missed the late 90’s aesthetic raised to maximum technical power. However, it is the documentary that closes the circle, allowing us to appreciate each frame as a small personal victory of Umetsu.
Was it worth the wait? For the fan of the animation with “Alma”, the answer is a resounding yes. It is not a movie for everyone; Its rhythm and its crude aesthetics can alienate those who are used to fast-seasonal consumer anime. But for the viewer looking for the curator of an author, , Virgin Punk It is a necessary balm.
We are facing a work that does not seek to please the algorithms of the streaming platforms, but to last in the visual memory of those who see it. It is the triumphal return of a Yasuomi Umetsu who, despite the years and difficulties, remains the owner of one of the most iconic and powerful looks of Japanese animation. SHAFT It has served as the perfect canvas for this artistic rebellion.