Iman Vellani is the kind of movie star whose enthusiasm, humor, and openness radiates off the screen and feels positively incandescent in person. The 21-year-old actress, best known for her role as Kamala Khan in 2022âs Ms. Marvel and 2023âs The Marvels, is unabashedly open in sharing her love of all things MCU-related, from playfully debating the finer points of canonical continuity with Marvel Studios head Kevin Feige to co-writing a Ms. Marvel limited series with Sabir Pirzada.
But Vellani has other passions beyond Marvel â her most recent being anime. Earlier this year at the Crunchyroll Anime Awards, Vellani shared with Polygon what convinced her to finally take the plunge into exploring Japanese animation.
âI was very intimidated by anime until very recently,â Vellani said. âI started watching anime about a year ago, so this is a new obsession for me, but Iâm totally into it now. Thereâs just so much content, I didnât know where to start. I mean, I can barely keep up with all the Marvel content thatâs out there.â
Image: Wit Studio/Crunchyroll
Vellani attributes her nascent love of anime to Attack on Titan, which she was introduced to via family and friends and proudly names as her current favorite anime. âThey just talk about it all the time,â Vellani said, âand Attack on Titan kept coming back up whenever they would talk about anime. I started watching it and was like, This is a story that seems like itâs about humanity. I think I can get into it.â
Of the entire ensemble of characters that appear in Attack on Titan, Vellani pointed out one in particular whose story resonated the most with her. âI love Mikasa Ackerman,â Vellani said. âThe way that she kept Erenâs scarf at the end of the show, even though Eren told her to give it up and forget about him. Her being the only one who was able to kill Eren at the end to stop the Rumbling. That is a woman who â I donât think Iâve seen many other female characters like her who have that authority, willpower, and determination to actually act on it. I recently cut my hair, and when I looked in the mirror, I was like, I know what my next cosplay is.â
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Image: Wit Studio/Crunchyroll
Aside from Mikasa, Vellani also named one of the seriesâ other leading characters as one she especially enjoyed, going so far as to praise the voice actor responsible for their performance in Attack on Titanâs finale. âI like Armin because I always like to root for the nerdy characters,â Vellani said. âI watched the final half of the show with the English dub and, I donât know who the actor who plays Armin is, but they deserve a raise because their performance in the final episode blew me away. He made me cry, his wailing and that flashback scene between him and Eren, it just hit me in all the right ways.â
After resisting anime for a while, Attack on Titan quickly became a show that stuck with her. âThe ending was such a gut punch. It left me feeling so awful at the end, but itâs like one of those Succession-type endings where itâs not the ending you want, but it made sense. The ending made sense for the story, it made sense for the characters.
âI think they tied the knot so perfectly, and I canât think of anything else Iâve watched recently thatâs impacted me as much as that. I was crying in my bed watching it. My mom walked in on me and she was like, âItâs just an animation show!â and I was like, âNo, this is real!ââ
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Image: MAPPA/Crunchyroll
Shortly after finishing Attack on Titan, she dove into exploring other popular series suggested by her friends. âI finally started Jujutsu Kaisen and One Piece,â Vellani said. âOne Piece was one that I did not want to get into initially because itâs like, what, a thousand episodes now, and that felt like too much. Greyâs Anatomy was more than enough for me, and I stopped at, like, season 10. But after the Netflix show came out I was so drawn to the characters, and after the heartbreak of Attack on Titan, I needed something lighter and funnier and that made me feel good. The characters are likable and I want to root for them all, so thatâs a show I really like.â
And Vellaniâs love for anime doesnât stop at TV. âI watched Suzume just before coming to Japan and I loved it,â Vellani said. âThat blew my mind. Truly a masterpiece. I also recently watched The Boy and the Heron and, as a 21-year-old, it really spoke to me and it reassured me that my inner child still exists.â
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Image: Studio Ghibli via GKIDS/YouTube
When asked why she felt that her generation has embraced anime, and what it was about the medium that specifically spoke to her, Vellani cited the empowering roles and depictions of women and children, as well as the craftsmanship of studios like Studio Ghibli, as some of the reasons why anime is so popular among Gen Z audiences. âI just feel like anime feels so progressive with the way they depict women and children, especially in Studio Ghibli movies. All those movies are so good at showcasing youth and childhood and imagination in a way thatâs encouraging children to keep that mindset.
âI feel like a lot of American cinema right now is just so depressing. It just wants to show the gritty real life of the world. I want to live in a world that makes me excited for the future, and I think anime does such a wonderful job in showcasing all the beauties of life. We went to the Ghibli Museum this morning and saw how they draw every single detail of the houses â the bricks, the walls, the windows â and you just realize how much people paid attention to these details when they drew it. Like, this is how they see the world, and thatâs how I want to see the world, as something thatâs full of life and joy.â