“17-year-old motorcycle-obsessed dropout Akihiko exchanges letters with a mysterious girl before his life takes an unexpected turn.”
Bobby's Girl
ボビーに首ったけ
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Based on your preference for character-driven stories with layered emotional arcs, this title's exploration of identity and belonging would deeply resonate. The pacing mirrors series you've rated highly, and its thematic depth aligns with your appreciation for nuanced storytelling...
However, the slow initial episodes might test your patience given your history of dropping shows that don't hook you early. The art style shift in the middle arc could also be a concern...
Synopsis
17-year-old motorcycle-obsessed dropout Akihiko exchanges letters with a mysterious girl before his life takes an unexpected turn.
The "Bobby" referred to in the title is actually 17-year-old Akihiko Nomura, an underachieving high school kid with a deep love for motorcycles. His grades are failing, and his father – traditional and strict (but who must have also at some point gave in and allowed him to have a motorcycle) – is trying everything he can think of to get the kid to apply for college. His mother is so silent, she might as well not even exist. Really, his support system lies entirely in his twinkle-toed little sister, who's nosy but cheers him on in her own way. Bobby really does little else but work on his bike. He cleans his bike. He tunes up his bike. He rides his bike. One would call him a motorcycle otaku. His most recent achievement seems to have been getting photos of himself on a road trip printed in a motorcyclist hobby magazine. This leads to an unexpected result: a girl his age, who picked up that issue on a whim, decides to write him a letter. A long, rambling letter, but dreamily romantic just the same. Bobby admits to his sister that he's never gotten a letter from a girl before. He writes back, "I got your letter. I'm happy 'cause it was from a girl." Bobby is not a well-rounded kid. He barely speaks – even to his own family – and the "letters" he writes back to the mystery girl usually consist of a single sentence or so. His obsession is all-consuming, to the point where he happily quits school to work at a biker bar. Of course, his father, at a loss, kicks him out of the house. Staying with a friend, he's delighted when his female pen pal says she'll call him. On that day, his boss at the bar decides to take him to a motocross track. But that's a day that wouldn't end in a way that anybody would expect. (Source: ANN, edited)
What people say
Community consensus
Derived from 9 sampled reviews
What 9 viewers settled on.
Polarized
σ 2.11 · split reception
6.3 pts
Recommenders 8.3 · others 2.0
↑ 0.44
Running avg · Nov 2008 → Mar 2026
- 10 “If you have any interest in motorcycles it's very hard to dislike this movie. I doubt that most people would stumble across this film without prior interest but if someone has, I still believe it's...”
- 7 “Something juvenile hides within. A feeling of express freedom, the burgeoning of the world ahead of you, the rain falling past, and the sunlight turning to black. It is lonely to be young, before...”
- 8 “Having just seen Bobby's In Deep for the first time, and having read the reviews that have been posted for the film to date, I feel compelled to post a review of my own in praise of the film for...”
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- Format 1 × 44′ eps × min
- Total runtime 0h 44m all episodes
- Aired Mar 1985 – ongoing
- Source Movie media type
- Rated PG 13 - Teens 13 or older
- Ref. BS-2825 catalog
Produced by
- Kadokawa Shoten Producer