{"rewrite":{"id":"r_6d4dc3f229b7e0a75b25c574","clusterId":"c_61e1d3d3c546a06fda572ed6","slug":"pardon-the-intrusion-i-m-home-episode-1-review-a-comedy-that-feels-like-a-horror-story","model":"deepseek-v4-flash","headline":"Pardon the Intrusion, I'm Home! Episode 1 Review: A Comedy That Feels Like a Horror Story","summary":"Anime Feminist's review of the first episode of \"Pardon the Intrusion, I'm Home!\" describes a series that aims for upbeat romantic comedy but lands closer to a horror story about a woman losing control of her personal space. The episode introduces 24-year-old Rinko, who loves her apartment and her anime merchandise collection. Her peace is shattered when a neighbor, Usada, kicks a hole through her wall. Rinko initially reacts with fear and anger, but immediately forgives him upon recognizing him as the mangaka behind her favorite series. She then cooks for him and rejects the idea of him facing consequences because he needs to draw. A second neighbor, Satsuki, initially seems reasonable but reveals a devious side, offering to pretend to be Rinko's boyfriend. The reviewer notes the show frames these intrusions as comedic, but the dissonance between Rinko's established love for her space and her rapid capitulation to the men's demands is jarring. The episode ends with a domestic dinner scene, which the reviewer finds uncomfortable rather than charming.","whyItMatters":"The review highlights a growing critical conversation about how anime rom-coms normalize the invasion of a woman's personal boundaries for comedic effect, questioning whether the genre's framing of such scenarios is evolving or remaining static.","webCardHtml":"\u003cp\u003eThe first episode of \"Pardon the Intrusion, I'm Home!\" has drawn a sharply critical response from Anime Feminist, which argues the show's intended comedy is undercut by its uncomfortable premise. The reviewer praises the early scenes for establishing Rinko as a relatable character-a young office worker who finds solace in her carefully curated apartment filled with anime merchandise. This investment makes the subsequent intrusion by neighbor Usada feel like a violation, not a setup for laughs.\u003c/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eWhen Rinko discovers Usada is the creator of her favorite manga, her anger evaporates, and she begins cooking for him. The reviewer notes the show seems unaware of the implications, treating the situation as lighthearted. A second neighbor, Satsuki, adds another layer of unease by pretending to be Rinko's boyfriend, leaving her caught between two men who feel entitled to her time and space. The opening credits and final dinner scene frame the arrangement as domestic bliss, but the reviewer sees only a loss of autonomy.\u003c/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eThe review does not comment on animation quality or voice acting, focusing instead on narrative framing. It acknowledges the episode is well-written in terms of character establishment, but argues that strength works against the intended tone. The piece suggests the show may inadvertently comment on how creators can get away with bad behavior if their art is popular, but doubts the series is operating on that level.\u003c/p\u003e","blueskyPost":"The first episode of Pardon the Intrusion, I'm Home! wants to be a funny rom-com, but Anime Feminist calls it 'a horror story about men taking over a woman's precious personal space.'","twitterPost":"Anime Feminist's review of Pardon the Intrusion, I'm Home! episode 1: Rinko's peaceful apartment is invaded by two men, and the show expects us to laugh. The reviewer is not laughing.","threadsPost":null,"newsletterBlurb":"Anime Feminist's review of the premiere of \"Pardon the Intrusion, I'm Home!\" finds the romantic comedy's premise-a woman's apartment invaded by two neighbors-more unsettling than funny. The reviewer argues the show's framing of boundary violations as comedy feels like a horror story.","attributionJson":"[{\"source\":\"Anime Feminist\",\"url\":\"https://www.animefeminist.com/pardon-the-intrusion-im-home-episode-1/\",\"title\":\"Pardon the Intrusion, I'm Home! - Episode 1\"}]","lintFlagsJson":null,"lintHits":0,"costUsd":0,"inputTokens":5289,"outputTokens":850,"status":"published","repairAttempts":0,"nextRepairAt":null,"factsAttemptedAt":1780196075,"createdAt":"2026-05-31T02:43:47.000Z","publishedAt":"2026-05-31T02:47:29.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-05-31T02:47:29.000Z"},"cluster":{"id":"c_61e1d3d3c546a06fda572ed6","canonicalTitle":"Pardon the Intrusion, I’m Home! – Episode 1","representativeArticleId":"a_51bb6bc474a477fb1274356c","sourceCount":1,"writtenSourceCount":1,"writeAttempts":0,"isSolo":true,"entitiesJson":"{\"anime_titles\":[\"Pardon the Intrusion, I'm Home!\"],\"manga_titles\":[],\"work_titles\":[],\"studios\":[],\"people\":[],\"type\":\"review\",\"domain\":\"anime\",\"is_roundup\":false}","contentType":"news","status":"published","firstSeenAt":"2026-04-09T02:00:00.000Z","lastSeenAt":"2026-04-09T02:00:00.000Z","updatedAt":"2026-05-31T02:47:29.000Z"},"attribution":[{"source":"Anime Feminist","url":"https://www.animefeminist.com/pardon-the-intrusion-im-home-episode-1/","title":"Pardon the Intrusion, I’m Home! – Episode 1"}],"entities":{"anime_titles":["Pardon the Intrusion, I'm Home!"],"manga_titles":[],"work_titles":[],"studios":[],"people":[],"type":"review","domain":"anime","is_roundup":false},"keyFacts":["The first episode of 'Pardon the Intrusion, I'm Home!' features 24-year-old Rinko, who loves her apartment and her anime merchandise collection.","Neighbor Usada kicks a hole through Rinko's wall, and she immediately forgives him upon recognizing him as the mangaka behind her favorite series.","A second neighbor, Satsuki, offers to pretend to be Rinko's boyfriend, adding to the intrusions on her personal space.","Anime Feminist's review argues the show frames these intrusions as comedic, but the dissonance between Rinko's love for her space and her rapid capitulation is jarring.","The episode ends with a domestic dinner scene that the reviewer finds uncomfortable rather than charming."]}
