Since unemployment has cursed me with free time here is my rundown of what I have watched the last few months. (Spoilersish)
High School of the Dead: I went in to this knowning nothing of what it was. I just saw the Netflix description and hit play. I was very pleasantly surprised to find that even though it starts out like a typical "High School" anime most of the negative tropes with that are tossed out the window immediately. From this point it turns in to a fairly well done zombie apocalypse story.
Corpse Princess: Again went in to it not knowing a thing about it. Fairly enjoyable if a bit formulaic. The "twist" ending was actually a fair twist. I only had access to the dub so all I can say is some of the dialog is -very- repetitive. A good example being for the first half of the series every time a fight happens (virtually every episode) we get a few lines of dialog reminding us what the monsters are and what the protagonist is.
Cannan: This was one I looked up a bit first. Since it is a short series (12 eps) I tend to research those in case there is other media it draws on. This series is actually the squeal to a Japanese only release Wii game. That said you don't need to have played it and the story is strong on it's own. It is your fairly typical girl assassin anime. It does stand out though by have moderately clever explanations for the special powers of the protagonist as well as a good story behind the animosity between the pro and antagonist. All that said though the cover art and the story synopis are a bit misleading, the titular character Canaan is really more of the secondary character. Her journalist friend really winds up being the main character and serves as the vehicle to progress the story. While Canaan is an interesting character she remains someone two dimensional. A good view for only 12 eps.
Strike Witches: Wow. I don't know where to start with this. This is one of those series I am not sure why it is on Netflix. I honestly felt a little dirty after watching it. It's basically lolita witches who attach little airplanes to their legs and fight aliens. There is a story arc but no real growth in the characters. Avoid....unless lolicon is your thing... *inches away from that hot potato*
Elfen Lied: This is another "wow". I am not sure if it is just something lost in the translation or a fundamental flaw with the source material. It just seems this anime doesn't know what kind of story it is trying to be. At it's root it could be a strong sci-fi story with some nice gore/horror thrown in. However that gets off put with the ecchi humor, slice of life teenage story, and the gratuitous underage nudity. Now all that aside....I kinda liked this. It was very visceral, like it didn't pull punches. It was as if to say "this is nasty business, people are perverts, and bad shit happens." A good story, told somewhat haphazardly but in it's weird way it works.
Desert Punk: Allow me this one. I -loved- this anime. It's campy, ecchi, full of heart, lots of good action, endearing characters, and a good story. This one starts off slow, your typical badass gets a cute side-kick anime. From there it becomes the typical enemy of the week story acting as a vehicle to drive the overall plot that is slowly revealed in slices. Near the end quarter of the series it has a genuine and unexpected twist (I will not spoil this one) that changes the overall light-hearted if serious tone of the story. This one is highly recommended. ( <3 Rainspider )
Dance in the Vampire Bund: Ok....this is one that I did research on after the first episode because I couldn't believe what I saw. This is basically lolicon vampire anime. Apparently there was a big stink about this anime because it was going to be heavily censored but got around it by the fact the character depicted are well over the age of consent. I only recommend this one if lolicon is your thing and you like otherwise half-decent vampire stories. Else avoid...I wish I had.
Le Chevalier D'Eon: This is an honest-to-goodness anime for grownups. No teen/tween age characters. Little humor. And it is set during a rather accurately depicted France in the years leading up to the revolution. It pretty much uses historical drama as a vehicle to drive an occult horror story. Though the term is never used, the main character is inhabited by the revenant of his sister and when confronted by the practitioners of black magic responsible for her death is possessed by her spirit until the foe is slain. A very strong story, good animation done in "realistic" style, and a very well written arc.
Ok I don't feel like typing anymore.