Hana no Ko Lunlun/YMMV


 * Anvilicious: The Japan OVA is chock-full of anti-pollution calls.
 * Ear Worm: The opening song. Being a Mitsuko Horie song, this is pretty much a given.
 * The Latin-American Spanish version even more so.
 * French Love Lunlun: The show was quite successful in France under the name "Lydie's World Tour."
 * Latin-Americans also love "Angel the Girl of the Flowers".
 * Narm: Considering how old this series is, of the episodes get so melodramatic that it comes off as comical or even stupid instead of touching in these modern days.
 * Lunlun's  is basically reduced to   Lunlun, sweetie, we know you're trying to help, but please stick to being The Messiah and not try to play lawyer, okay?
 * Made even worse by how  Come ON, this isn't The Perils of Penelope Pitstop!
 * In the Latin-American dub, the emotional moment in which  becomes horribly hilarious once you notice that the dub VA is either a male trying to voice a little girl, or a very deep-voiced woman trying to do likewise. Either way, the Vocal Dissonance hits HARD and makes what was supposed to be a Tear Jerker completely ridiculous.
 * When Fallen Princess Margot laments her bad luck and how she's bound to marry an old Upperclass Twit to save her family from destitution, she covers her face with her hands and cries into them. Bad thing? She then flails around for a brief moment, and the already old animation gets so weird in these brief seconds that that it's funny instead of sad.
 * Tear Jerker: It's a shoujo from The Seventies, so emotional rollercoasters are expected. Some episodes take the cake, though, and while sometimes it goes into Narm territory, others work beautifully. Like the one in Sicilia in which  For a series that sometimes comes in as cheesy and overemotional, that episode was wonderfully done.
 * The Woobie: Many, MANY woobies. Of all places in Europe.,  ,   and the kids of the Italian Orphanage of Love come as the biggest ones.
 * Iron Woobie: Lunlun. Yeah, her trials bring her lotsa problems and she has her doubts and breakdowns, but she ultimately keeps going no matter what.
 * Jerkass Woobie: Isabel. She but she did it less out of utter malice and more in despair since she had been alone and friendless for years.
 * Stoic Woobie: Sayid, the Moroccan boy Lunlun befriends, who almost never smiles and is harsh to those he doesn't know but is ultimately a young boy looking for his place in the world. (And ultimately shows some more emotions when  His grandpa Sharo is more of an Iron Woobie, as he's more cheerful than his grandson and