Let’s Watch is a weekly recap column where I follow an anime for the course of its entire runtime. Expect spoilers!
Chainsaw Man does not really do “slow” or “transitional” episodes. Even so, episode 10 is a comparative breather. The series takes its foot off the gas here for the first time in a while, but that shouldn’t be taken to mean that this episode is in any way lacking. Pathos, humor, and a surprising amount of action are all here. Chainsaw Man doesn’t do “minor” episodes, either.
We open with Aki awaking in the hospital, some days after the attack by Katana Man and his co-conspirators. One must imagine he’s a bit disoriented. Himeno, his partner of a number of years, is dead, as is much of the rest of his division. He himself was taken down during the fight and seems to only have survived through sheer coincidence. What does he awake to find? Just Power and Denji eating most of his get-well soon basket. Just another day in the life.
After they leave, he finds himself frustratedly thumb-flicking a lighter that won’t start, breaking down into a crying fit as the repeated click-click-click of the flint dissolves into memories of Himeno.
Denji has an interesting moment here, as well, on just the other side of Aki’s hospital door. As he recalls that Himeno, one of the first people who’s ever shown him any genuine kindness, is now dead, he realizes that he feels basically nothing. Musing on it further, he realizes he wouldn’t be terribly sad if Power died either. Even Makima, for how big of a spot she occupies in Denji’s mind, would only incur about “three days” of mourning, he guesses. He wonders if he’s lost his heart in more than one sense, before deciding to shove the thought away for the time being because it’s depressing. (I bet he and Finn from Adventure Time could have a very long conversation about that particular technique.) All this before the OP even drops.
After the cut, we follow up on that whole “training” suggestion from last week, and the episode forks in two. Denji and Power get a new teacher, in the form of the chronically drunk, middle-aged devil hunter Kishibe (Kenjiro Tsuda, doing his thing). Kishibe is an enigmatic figure, but slots neatly into the archetype of the drunken mentor. His method for training Denji and Power? Killing them! Over and over and over again, and then healing them back up with blood so they can recover.
Slorp.
He reasons that, since he is (apparently) the strongest-ever devil hunter, if they end up being able to kill him, they’ll be able to kill even the strongest devil without any problems. This is Chainsaw Man’s idea of a training episode; our heroes having their necks snapped and their throats slashed out by the guy who’s trying to build them into better badasses.
When, after the first night of this hellish training is over, Denji complains, you understand where he’s coming from. This is unfair and completely sucks, he says. He’s been working hard because he wants to live his version of the “easy life”, a warm bed, hot showers, three meals a day, etc. But now that Kishibe’s hellish training routine is in the picture, he feels demoralized, and worst of all, this new stepping-up of responsibilities isn’t because of anything he actually did. The Gun Devil wants his heart for some unknown reason. As far as he knows, he has no part in that.
All of this will seem eminently reasonable to anyone who is, or has ever been, part of the mundane workforce. (And probably to more than a few other Devil Hunters as well, although I don’t think any of those read my articles. If you do, please tell me how you got Internet access in the Fujimotoverse in the comments below.)
There’s a particularly lovely bit here where Power and Denji recoup their energy while walking home along a highway at night. They plot to take Kishibe out and hopefully escape their current training regimen as soon as possible, but more than anything, the scene demonstrates a real camaraderie between the two, in spite of what Denji may worry about his own self.
Aki has a decidedly less pleasant experience during the course of this episode. Himeno’s younger sister—who we see here for the first and only time—delivers him Himeno’s letters. In a scene that’s almost completely identical to the manga, Aki reads them, and realizes that Himeno was trying to get the both of them to quit, or at least to go private, for years. Yet another sucker punch to the gut for Aki, who, I’m realizing upon re-experiencing this story for now the third time, seems to have worse luck than even Kobeni.
The episode ends with Aki being escorted to an underground facility where Public Safety keeps the devils they’ve managed to capture alive. Here, in this rusting cage somewhere beneath the Earth, Aki meets his new devil partner, who, we’re helpfully informed, has previously asked his contractors for such pleasant things as “half of their lifespan” and “both eyes.” What will it ask of Aki? We don’t know, the end credits drop in here, leaving that a question for the future.
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