I decided to limit myself to just one choice, and for me Utena is a very special series (probably my very favourite ever) as well as being a classic in its own right. Maison Ikkoku is a fantastic call too, I cried like a baby the first time I watched that (despite most of it being a comedy...) but in my case, I didn't get to watch it properly until later on. So it was missing that life-changing feel that Utena gave me.
If I had let myself run wild, Urusei Yatsura is probably the show I credit most with turning me into an anime fan so that would definitely get a glowing write-up with due respect to Ranma 1/2 and Maison Ikkoku, and Sailor Moon was another key title in my formative years even though I had to watch it all in German and raw Japanese. I watched Macross Plus a whole bunch of times. Serial Experiments Lain broadened my horizons. I almost died of joy when Record of Lodoss War finally made it to the UK; it's inherently generic but it does what it tries to do so perfectly that it scratches that itch for me as the western fantasy show the west never made. Slayers was a huge addiction for years and years. Millennium Actress is the perfect film, with Grave of the Fireflies definitely up for mention in the same category too. Now And Then, Here And There needs more love than it gets these days. FLCL was my first JP import on DVD and I certainly got my money's worth out of that. I could probably have written an essay on Evangelion all by myself.
Yet GitS:SAC, K-On! and many other shows widely loved by generations of other fans never clicked with me; they couldn't manage broad enough appeal to tickle my personal tastes. I love Gundam but the first TV series wasn't the strongest entry and the versions I like best aren't necessarily the most deserving of the 'classics' label. I also don't like most Ghibli films at all. Tenchi Muyo! was something I was really into back in the day that hasn't stood up to the test of time. While there are some titles I recognise as important for their contributions to anime as a whole, I'm not qualified to write about things that don't set my heart racing. At the same time, other titles were important to me in peculiar ways (Cyber City Oedo 808 wasn't exactly deep, but Benten was my first exposure to a type of character which simply didn't exist in any other media I was consuming back now; I was fascinated).
Some newer candidates for classics I can think of would be The Tatami Galaxy, March Comes In Like A Lion, Shouwa Genroku Rakugo Shinjuu, Baccano!, The Eccentric Family, FMA: Brotherhood (JPT and I might have to fight for this one!), Attack On Titan (sorry, but I think it is) and the Monogatari series (though Katanagatari is actually better). Yuri!!! On Ice is likely to be something I watch again and again. But I'd like to give this newer content more time to 'mature' in my mind before throwing my weight behind it. There are so many titles that were 'the' anime to watch in their day which are probably obscure mysteries to modern fans. Magic Knight Rayearth, Saikano, Fushigi Yuugi, Kodocha, X; all of these were hot topics of debate for years and years yet nobody talks about them any more.
For me, a classic is something that rewrites the rules on some level; Utena is such a love letter to Rose of Versailles that I can't really call it genre-defining but it definitely moved all of the goalposts around for me. Most of the shows I actually rave about during simulcast viewings are totally trashy - I stand by my opinion that DAME x PRINCE was the best show last season - but classic titles definitely have their own vibe. I guess it's easy to tell which titles I rate most in that respect since they're the ones I buy over and over again. Though I own about 10 copies of Sengoku Basara TV and that probably
isn'
t an actual classic
R