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Episode 9 – Dorohedoro Season 2

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In manga form, Dorohedoro is an assault on the senses, and I mean that in the most complimentary way possible. In anime form, the adaptation cannot quite replicate the same feeling, so it instead brings its own sensory dimensions to the story. This week’s opening fight is a great example. Between the visual and sound direction, there’s a tactile physicality to each bone-crushing blow. It delivers impact after impact laden with blood and guts aplenty. The Shin versus Dokuga slugfest in particular stands out, because no matter how many magic powers and knifes you throw into the fray, nothing beats two dudes punching the shit out of each other.

If only the anime didn’t embrace its darkness so literally. While there are ways one could stage and choreograph a brawl without a light source, the adaptation’s palette just turns muddled and nearly indiscernible when the lamp breaks. This spooky mood creates some tension as Natsuki stumbles upon the Cross-Eyes’ boss—the horror genre is no stranger to darkness, after all. However, I think a little more fine-tuning would have gone a long way. An OLED screen helps, of course, but that shouldn’t be required to parse the episode.

The “debut” of Kai, the boss, is this week’s big plot development. There’s neat symmetry and irony here: Kai kills En and transplants En’s devil tumor into his own brain, which lets Kai use En’s mushroom magic. More prudently, though, Kai himself ends up taking En’s place both literally and figuratively in the sorcerers’ world. There’s a power vacuum, much like the one in En’s hollowed-out skull, and Kai steps in to fill it. Meanwhile, riding their boss’ coattails, the other Cross-Eyes take care of the day-to-day drudgery in the mansion, which in typical Dorohedoro style is full of dead bodies.

I can never get enough of this series’ macabre sense of humor. In between cleaning up the viscera around the mansion, the Cross-Eye flunkies take a moment to revel in the luxury of a fully stocked supply closet. Dokuga almost tears up at the sight of toilet paper in the same episode where he reveals that Kai killed Risu in cold blood in order to harness his Curse magic. Dokuga kept this quiet due to a Machiavellian calculation that Kai’s power as their leader is more important than his apparent bloodthirst. Also, Dokuga refuses to throw out En’s annoying cuckoo clock because he knows it would be wasteful, and he’s too familiar with poverty to take any part of this mansion for granted. Nearly every character in Dorohedoro contains these multitudes.

Q Hayashida loves to keep her audience on their toes, too. If you’re trying to solve these mysteries or predict where the story will go next, you can’t afford to be anything except hyper-vigilant. Haru’s penchant for singing demonically abrasive death metal was a goofy punchline last week. This week, it’s the plot point that drives Risu/Curse away from Kai after his “resurrection.” That’s good foreshadowing and good follow-up thanks to its goofiness, not in spite of it. And I like how it might prompt paranoia in a certain kind of reader or viewer. They might notice that Johnson continues to follow Kasukabe around everywhere. Maybe that’s because a giant talking cockroach makes every scene that much better. Maybe Hayashida has big plans for the big guy. Who knows? Either way, it means more Johnson, and that makes me happy.

Meanwhile, Aikawa hangs out, eats tasty grub, and runs into some old friends (and foes). His chill and friendly demeanor strikes a growing contrast against Kai’s enigmatic ruthlessness, and we’re left wondering what their connection is. At the very least, Aikawa appears oblivious to any part he might have played in Risu’s murder, as he deliberately seeks out his old partner and leaps to his aid when he notices Risu’s disheveled state. And it’s difficult to picture Aikawa betraying Risu, given what we know of their bond. By all accounts, they were basically boyfriends. On the other hand, if there was a betrayal here, then that closeness might have fueled the magnitude of Curse’s fury.

Speaking of close relationships, Shin and Noi are my OTP. They are hard-working, cold-blooded killers, and together, they make the cutest couple I’ve ever seen. Look at the way Noi’s eye’s soften into worry when Sho tells her about Shin. Look at how Shin turns as red as his mask when Noi pulls away from her smoke-filled CPR session. There’s so much genuine tenderness there. Watching them pulverize and dismember their enemies together never fails to warm the cockles of my heart. And I’m so happy the anime doesn’t shy away from Noi’s physique. The adaptation uses traditional animation for her nude form, and you can see how much care the animators poured into every contour of her muscles. I love her. I need to be her. Noi is big time gender goals, and that is yet another reason why Q Hayashida one of my goats.

Rating:





Dorohedoro is currently streaming on
Crunchyroll and Netflilx.

Sylvia is on Bluesky for all of your posting needs. She loves Hole. You can also catch her chatting about trash and treasure alike on This Week in Anime.


The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the views of Anime News Network, its employees, owners, or sponsors.

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The Ogre’s Bride Anime’s Trailer Unveils More Cast – News

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The staff for the television anime of Kureha‘s The Ogre’s Bride (Oni no Hanayome) light novel series revealed three more cast members in a new trailer on Saturday.


Cast image for Takamichi Araki, Ouga Kiyama, Sakurako Kiyama
Image via The Ogre’s Bride anime’s X/Twitter account

The newly announced cast includes (left to right in image above):

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Image via Oni no Hanayome’s X/Twitter account

The anime will premiere in July 2026.

The novel series is set in a Japan where humans and demons co-exist peacefully. Yuzu is an ordinary high school girl, who lives in the shadow of her older sister who is the bride of a demon. One day, she has a life-changing encounter with a beautiful ogre who claims her as his bride.

The cast includes:

Kazuhito Ōmiya is directing the anime at Colored Pencil Animation Japan. Yumi Kamakura is in charge of the series scripts. Hikari Tanaka is drawing the main character designs, and Hiroko Shigekuni is also credited for character designs. Masaru Yokoyama is composing the music. 

Kureha began the light novel series on Starts Publishing‘s Novema! platform in 2019. The series won the grand prize at the First Novema! Character Short Story Contest. Starts published the ninth volume in May 2024. Yū Shiroya illustrates the series.

Jun Togashi launched the manga adaptation in Starts Publishing‘s Noicomi magazine in December 2021. The manga adaptation won Noicomi’s annual comic ranking in the girl comics category in 2022 and 2023. Starts shipped the eighth compiled book volume on December 26. MangaPlaza is releasing the manga in English.

The light novel series and its manga adaptation collectively have over 5.8 million copies in circulation.

The novel series also inspired a live-action film opened on March 27.

The live-action film based on Kureha‘s The Ogre’s Bride (Oni no Hanayome) light novel series  sold 146,000 tickets in its opening three days and earned 202,395,960 yen (about US$1.27 million).

Sources: Aniplex‘s YouTube channelComic Natalie


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‘Babies of Bread’ Anime Short Gets TV Series – News

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Stop-motion series debuts on July 4



The staff for Japanese company CHOCOLATE Inc.‘s CG anime film shortBabies of Bread” (“Pan no Aka-chan“) announced on Saturday that the short will get a stop-motion television series on July 4. The staff streamed a promotional video:


The series will air during the Doyō wa Nanisuru!? show on Saturdays at 8:30 a.m. JST on KTV and the Fuji TV network.

Haruka Ichikawa returns to direct, write the script, and plan the series at CHOCOLATE Inc. with dwarf studios. Riki Fuhrmann will design the characters and Takao Ogi returns to compose the music for the series.

Additional staff members include:

The original CG film short is set in a bakery in the middle of the city, and will center on “baby bread” characters, including Cream Bun, Baguette, Donut, and Croissant as they attempt to thwart a burglar.

The short premiered on YouTube in December 2024.

Sources: Babies of Bread series’ YouTube channelComic Natalie


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Unico: LOST Volume 3 Manga Review – Review

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I am once again taking another magical step into the world of Unico and right off the bat, it’s great to see this world expand. One thing I loved about this series is how effectively it rides the line between being beautifully mysterious and downright haunting. A lot of that does come down to the presentation, which takes advantage of gorgeous panel spreads to create a lovely sense of atmosphere. I also feel like the use of color in this volume, in particular, was also far more deliberate than before. Black and dark greens were used to emphasize this foreboding sense of dread, while shadows were used to emphasize serious scenes despite the overall color palette still being quite bright.

There is more dialogue in this volume compared to the previous books, but I feel like this story could almost be told strictly through its artwork. The individual set pieces and character designs stand on their own, but the way that everything flows together immediately communicates a sense of narrative progression directly into your brain. It is a very underrated quality in a comic that is primarily geared towards children. This is the kind of comic that I could read to very young kids, and even if they don’t understand the admittedly more complicated lore, they would still be able to follow along for the most part by focusing on the flow of the pictures.

I will say that the story definitely introduces more complicated ideas here. Some of those elements are in service of the story, expanding the overall scale as everyone begins traveling between realms to find Unico, and the idea of everyone scrambling does make this a more anxious read than before. There are a lot more perspectives showcased in this volume. While it does make the world of Unico feel more lived in, I do worry that the series doubles down on my complaints about the previous volumes. Unico himself gets buried a little bit under everything that’s going on. He is still trying to figure out who he is and what exactly his purpose is. While everything in the story does still effectively revolve around him, he does get far less screen time in this book.

Instead, a lot of time is focused on this Sphinx son who is dealing with his own sense of inferiority, the scary mercenary, who is trying to hunt Unico down, and even the lovely returning cat companions that Unico befriended in the last volume, except now they’re learning how to time travel. I was worried when that plot point was just randomly introduced here. I don’t think that idea alone complicates or ruins the story, but I do feel like this book suffers a little bit by just having things or ideas brought up out of nowhere with very little fanfare. Again, for a story that is primarily geared towards children, things are setting up to be far more complicated than they need to be, to the point where even I am struggling to see where all of this is headed.

Make no mistake, though, this is still a quality product that I feel like I could still recommend to people, especially if you were a fan of the first two. However, there’s so much to keep track of now. This does genuinely elevate the stakes, giving plenty of other characters time to shine. But it also comes at a bit of an expense with regard to the story and Unico himself. I don’t think it goes so far that the entire story is ruined, as I am still more than satisfied with this book based on the artwork alone. But a part of me does wonder if the next volume might be a make-or-break point for the series.

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