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Whether for their series or films, Madhouse is renowned for their animation prowess. So much so, collectively, their films have won a total of two Japan Academy Prizes, two Gertie Awards, six Mainichi Film Awards, three Ōfuji Noburō Awards, and three Animation Grand Awards, two Tokyo Anime Awards for Animation of the Year, and five Animation Kobe Feature Film Awards. As such, it can be pretty difficult to pinpoint exactly which ones could be considered the studio’s finest. Even so, here’s our picks for some of their best that no fan should ever miss!
1) Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End

While ten years is a huge amount of time for others, its but a drop in the bucket in Frieren’s extremely long lifespan of over a thousand. Upon disbanding after a decade-long quest to defeat the Demon King and returning to her everlasting hobby of traveling to collect spells, outliving two of her former companions, Frieren realizes how the time spent with them truly impacted her and regrets having taken the bonds and precious memories for granted. So, she journeys beyond what was once a task completed to forge stronger bonds with people and strive to create and understand personal connections.
From the beautiful animation, to the atmospheric music, to complex characters the audience can really get familiarized with along their journey, Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End is not just one of the absolute best, most renowned works of Madhouse, but one of the absolute best, most renowned anime ever.
Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End can be streamed on Netflix, Prime, Hulu, or Crunchyroll where available.
2) Monster

When renowned neurosurgeon Dr. Kenzou Tenma is faced with the moral dilemma of either saving a child’s life or following orders to perform surgery on the town’s mayor, he manages to save the life of the young boy, Johan Liebert. Unfortunately, Tenma’s good intentions come with their own consequences. Years later, beyond losing his job and fiancée, deaths mysteriously begin cropping up, with suspicions pointing a finger at Tenma himself, forcing him to face the consequences of his choices and the monster he allowed to live.
If you want a great mystery to binge, Tenma’s pursuit that leads him to travel on a lengthy, years-long journey spanning 74 episodes full of psychological suspense and thought-provoking questions of morality is an absolute classic series by Madhouse.
Monster can be streamed on Netflix.
3) Death Note

As Ryuk can’t stand the mundanity of the Shinigami Realm, he finally decides to shake things up in his boring, immortal life. When he drops his Death Note into the human world, it’s none other than bright 17-year-old student Light Yagami who stumbles upon it. Questioning whether the macabre rules of writing names to end lives is an elaborate prank, Light decides to put it to the test by writing a felon’s name, which proves the Death Note’s authenticity as Light inadvertently enacts his first murder. Adopting the alias “Kira”, Light justifies his continued use of the Death Note by taking the lives of those he deems evil. But with an enigmatic serial killer gaining notoriety, the mysterious genius detective known as L is hot on Kira’s trail, the chase becoming a battle of wits.
Death Note is a well-known, beloved classic anime by Madhouse that has been a sort of beginner, more mature anime for many coming of age. So much so that it’s been referenced by many other types of media as a familiar anime in general.
Death Note can be streamed on Netflix, Prime, Hulu, Peacock, Pluto, or Tubi where available.
4) Sonny Boy

Though 36 students and their school becoming lost in a void-like dimension is already strange, their situation becomes even stranger when some students gain supernatural abilities. Although the student council attempts to impose order, a sense of detachment begins to divide the group as the students possessing special abilities rebel against the only sense of authority the student body has. Eventually, the conflict actually brings the students to discover the strange world’s set of rules necessary for survival. And after one student decides to take a chance and the school yet again swaps dimensions, they soon learn that each world has its own unique set of challenges that the students must decipher in hopes of finding their way back home.
If you’re looking for a severely underrated, enigmatic anime, Sonny Boy is for you. While this title isn’t as renowned as others by Madhouse, this series is definitely a gem of a pick for anyone interested in a strange new world that the audience can puzzle out alongside the variety of unique characters.
Sonny Boy can be streamed on Crunchyroll or Hulu where available.
5) Death Parade

Though most people expect to be sorted into either Heaven or Hell directly after death, to the special few who die in pairs, they make a pit stop in Quindecim, a sort of purgatory-like bar. With a mysterious man named Decim acting as bartender and arbiter, it is he who is in charge of the judgment that directs the mortals’ fates via games. Whether it’s darts, bowling, or an arcade fighter, these games determine who earns reincarnation and who’s to be sent to the void. Along with the guests’ souls being wagered, their true natures also come to light during these revealing, lethal trials.
While typically death tends to be a scary, intimidating prospect for what horrors lie beyond, it’s not Decim that is the scariest part of death regarding judgment, but the people themselves. As 2015 was a pretty decent year for anime, Madhouse’s Death Parade was one of the best.
Death Parade can be streamed on Crunchyroll.













