The most powerful flashback was in "Kill Bill" (in the best sense!). I thought that "Battle Without Honor Or Humanity" in the first episode and wise sayings about revenge would run out of references, but no, a beautiful technical battle scene with a bunch of blood under a clockwork composition is so pleasantly associated with the battle in the "House of Blue Leaves" :) And at the same time, nothing prevents us from perceiving the heroine's story separately and as completely independent. It is very difficult to resist and not comment positively on each episode 🫠 I haven't been so fascinated by Netflix animation for a long time, probably since the first season of Love, Death and Robots.
And at the same time, I cannot but note the fact that they overdid it with the fortress of gg: after all, to get a through wound in the joint between the shin and foot and at the same time be able to lean and move the leg is already from the category of fiction (or fall from such a height on the ice, for example)
She was climbing a wall with a man on her back, like Spider-Man) at that moment, I decided to accept all the conventions of this series. From the first episode, for example, I was disgusted by the way they drive half-naked under the snow (with the current frosts outside the window at -30 it was especially painful to look at it)
@Cyberwatcher: I was "lucky" to have the same glass wound through and through. Surprisingly, she walked and ran right with one of the fragments. The only inconvenience was that it was so-so to walk on a flat sole, but on a heel it was OK I remember with horror, but there were no questions about this.
All this becomes somewhat predictable: stab wounds again, overcoming again. Has Mizu escaped damage in at least one episode? In my opinion, no. The scene with the gun somehow didn't really like it, I also like super weapons. In fact, by closing access to foreigners, the Japanese successfully copied firearms and actively produced them for some time. So the handgun did not take root there at all and was abandoned, for many reasons, the complex from economics to culture, but the key was that the then handgun was stupidly ineffective against a trained fighter. Therefore, here (and hit and broke the sword and even almost managed to reload) It all looks strange. Well, yes, the further plot is readable, I wonder how many times I guess (well, except that Mizu is wounded at least twice more).
Well, this series is full of shit. Everything would be fine, but to unwind three armies before that, four, if you also count the dojo, defeat twice the cameo of the Mountain from the PLIO, and not be able to stab some fat white man, but instead jump out the window. In modern terms, I experienced the most severe cringe from all this. At first, the series was good, but from the previous series, where it seems that the dude's norms were unexpectedly portrayed as another asshole at the end, the series began to smoothly break through the bottom.
It is very difficult to resist and not comment positively on each episode 🫠
I haven't been so fascinated by Netflix animation for a long time, probably since the first season of Love, Death and Robots.
And at the same time, I cannot but note the fact that they overdid it with the fortress of gg: after all, to get a through wound in the joint between the shin and foot and at the same time be able to lean and move the leg is already from the category of fiction (or fall from such a height on the ice, for example)
I was "lucky" to have the same glass wound through and through. Surprisingly, she walked and ran right with one of the fragments. The only inconvenience was that it was so-so to walk on a flat sole, but on a heel it was OK
I remember with horror, but there were no questions about this.
The scene with the gun somehow didn't really like it, I also like super weapons. In fact, by closing access to foreigners, the Japanese successfully copied firearms and actively produced them for some time. So the handgun did not take root there at all and was abandoned, for many reasons, the complex from economics to culture, but the key was that the then handgun was stupidly ineffective against a trained fighter. Therefore, here (and hit and broke the sword and even almost managed to reload) It all looks strange.
Well, yes, the further plot is readable, I wonder how many times I guess (well, except that Mizu is wounded at least twice more).