Let’s Watch CHAINSAW MAN Episode 2 – Arrival in Tokyo

Let’s Watch is a weekly recap column where I follow an anime for the course of its entire runtime. Expect spoilers!


I didn’t point it out at the time, but last week, Denji’s then-boss described our hero thus; “the good thing about Denji is that he does what he’s told.”

Today, in the first part of its second episode, that point orbits around several times. With Makima, Denji has effectively traded one master he must unconditionally obey for another. One could argue it’s a slight upgrade, since, as we’ll see, Makima treats him materially much better than the old yakuza boss who ordered him around before this point, but his life still isn’t really his own.

He knows this, on some level. A very early scene here sees Makima describe Denji as her dog. This little smidgen of animal symbolism is probably Chainsaw Man‘s single most well-known thematic motif. Dogs, after all, generally do what they’re told as long as you take care of their needs. Denji is briefly angry about being treated like one, but upon Makima promising him a hot meal of whatever he likes, and offering him her coat to wear so he’s not walking around shirtless, his disaffection mostly evaporates. A few scenes later, and he is almost literally eating out of the palm of Makima’s hand.

It’s important to remember that Denji isn’t unique here. Most people will put up with a lot as long as their material needs are being met. Even given the line of work he’s being asked to take up, it is hard to imagine that many people, in his situation, would not do the same. (Some of you will say something like “RIP to him but I’m different” to that statement. We’ll get back to you as the show goes on.)

Not just an everyman, it’s important to remember that Denji is, too, a hormonal teenager. In addition to the obvious food and clothing benefits, Denji goes along with what happens here in part because he thinks Makima is hot. (Hot tip for the younger people who read my blog; you will never get with your boss.) Of course, Makima isn’t even remotely above picking up on and playing to that desire anyway, and it’s pretty obvious that she’s doing so.

Chainsaw Man is very good at subtle facial expressions as silent conveyors of intent. If you’ve already seen this episode and want to look for something neat on a rewatch, I would recommend going back through those early scenes and keeping an eye on Makima’s face specifically. She’s actually quite expressive and there are multiple points where you can almost see the gears turning in her head over various things.

In any case, as much as this episode is about Makima and Denji’s newfound working relationship, Denji doesn’t actually work directly under her. Instead, he’s assigned to one of Public Safety’s many devil hunting units. Specifically, an “experimental” one, lead by a ponytailed chain-smoker named Aki (Shougo Sakata).

King of Spades

Aki’s real introduction is one of the early manga’s most memorably goofy scenes, and for perhaps the first time, Chainsaw Man the anime actually sharpens the bent for crass humor in the original, rather than backing away from it.

The result? Well, Aki takes Denji for a walk, briefly interrogating his motives. What he gets out of this conversation is that Denji is basically only in this line of work to get with Makima. That’s not good enough for Aki, so he takes Denji to an anonymous back alley and slugs him across the face, expecting the ass-kicking to teach the punk a lesson. To hear him tell it, this is his version of kindness; he’s seen people die from getting into the business for weak reasons, and as much as he doesn’t really seem to like Denji, he doesn’t want that to happen to him.

Denji responds to this particularly physical brand of thoughtful consideration by kneeing Aki in the nuts.

Repeatedly.

While a “ding!” sound effect plays every time it happens.

Immature as hell? Yes. Extremely funny? Also yes. Chainsaw Man is rarely afraid to get a little juvenile in order to take the edge off things. Probably a good call, all things considered.

Soon after this, Makima compliments Aki and Denji on “hitting it off” upon hearing what happened (a very dry sense of humor on that one), and then, in the same breath, makes it very clear to Denji that if he is ever no longer useful to Public Safety for any reason, he’ll be killed.

Your last first day.

Denji and Aki’s first mission together, to exterminate a Fiend—a devil possessing a corpse—goes awkwardly. Denji’s able to dispatch the thing very easily, with a single swing of a Public Safety-provided hatchet, but Aki is annoyed at Denji for not using his devil powers, thinking of it as evidence that the younger hunter isn’t taking things seriously. Aki, it’s established, lost his life to a devil attack. So it is pretty understandable that he’d be miffed by Denji seemingly treating the entire thing as a game.

None of that really gets through to Denji though, who begins instead thinking very hard about boobs again.

He’s such a gentleman.

In fact, his entire sequence here plays as a stone-faced parody of the usual shonen-protagonist-hyping-themselves-up internal monologue, albeit an affectionate one. Indeed, in episode two of his series, Denji has truly found his noble calling, the righteous cause he must fight for.

This is, of course, supposed to be silly. But it’s worth again remembering that when you’re this age, one does think of trivial things like “scoring” with a girl (as CR’s subtitles so lovingly render it) as matters of life and death.

In any case, even with this particular goalpost set, Denji’s life gets more complicated one more time in the final few minutes of this episode, when a different girl walks into his life. Introduced by Makima as his “partner” within Aki’s unit.

You probably already know her, but if you don’t, I kind of envy you.

Because getting to meet Power for the first time is fun as hell.

Queen of Clubs

Yes, that wonderful idiot. A fiend, not unlike the man in the apartment that Denji just killed, but one who is—after a fashion—able to be reasoned with, but that doesn’t really make her rational. She’s introduced with a galumphing, ludicrous carnival music backdrop in the soundtrack, and there’s a reason for that.

Ai Farouz, her voice actor, stands out amongst Chainsaw Man’s cast by being a comparative veteran. She hasn’t been in the industry for terribly long—her first role of note was only in 2017—but she’s had a number of prominent roles. (Notable to me personally, she was Cure Summer in Tropical Rouge! Precure last year.) She plays Power perfectly, swinging from a low growl to a smug mid-range conversational tone, to a whooping screech when Power’s really excited. All of CSM’s VAs have been great so far, but Farouz might take first place. Perhaps it’s a case of limited reference pools here, but she really does play the character like a demonic Cure Summer. It works astoundingly well.

Certainly, Power herself steals what remains of the show from the second she appears. We get a small bit of exposition during her and Denji’s first patrol together (and also more of his leering thoughts about titties), but much more important is her catching the scent of devil blood on the wind and sprinting full-force towards the devil in question, fast enough that Denji can’t actually keep up. She literally hammers the target—the Sea Cucumber Devil—to pieces with a massive mallet made out of her own blood. The BGM erupts in an explosion of pulsating techno thump, and as she smashes the thing to smithereens, she positively howls in triumph. On that note, the episode ends.

And normally I’d cut the article here, but I do also want to take a moment to point out that one of my favorite bands, ZUTOMAYO, did the ED for this episode. It’s cool to see them finally getting exposure via an anime.

Until next time, anime fans.

(I haven’t said that in a while, have I? Well, there you go, a nice return to form.)


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All views expressed on Magic Planet Anime are solely my own opinions and conclusions and should not be taken to reflect the opinions of any other persons, groups, or organizations. All text, excepting direct quotations, is owned by Magic Planet Anime. Do not duplicate without permission. All images are owned by their original copyright holders.

Let’s Watch CHAINSAW MAN EPISODE 1 – “Dog & Chainsaw”

Let’s Watch is a weekly recap column where I follow an anime for the course of its entire runtime. Expect spoilers!


Depending on who you are, it may not be obvious just how big of a deal the Chainsaw Man anime is. More than simply a popular shonen manga, Chainsaw Man is that rarest of things; a mainstream work of popular fiction, widely liked, that completely earns every ounce of praise it receives. Chainsaw Man, the manga, has been running for years at this point, and is on its second “book” of sorts, after an utterly massive Part 1 that ran from 2018 to 2020. The still-early-on by comparison Part 2 picking up earlier this year. (You may remember me covering it. Suffice it to say; that article, but not this one, contains massive spoilers for the entire series. Probably don’t read it if you care about that kind of thing.)

It’s easy to paint Chainsaw Man as a total anomaly; an outpost of bleak, world-hardened cynicism against a sea of its blankly chipper Shonen Jump contemporaries. In truth, this isn’t entirely fair, and there are precedents for this sort of thing going all the way back to the dawn of the shonen format. Likewise, while there is certainly the usual din of manga ride-or-dies chomping at the bit to claim that “anime-onlys ain’t ready,” the truth of the matter is that Chainsaw Man is Chainsaw Man; this is an adaption that would have to fumble the ball in a truly astounding way to be anything less than excellent. And having watched it, I have to admit I’m actually a little jealous of people who get to start the series this way.

That’s not to say that CSM’s diehard fanbase isn’t well-earned, though. I took the plunge myself earlier this year, and I loved it almost immediately. Chainsaw Man is arresting like very little else is. To put it another way; this hype train hauls cargo, no smoke and mirrors here. It says a lot that in an anime season that includes the return of both Gundam and Bleach, this still might be the most-anticipated premiere of them all.

So, the obvious question. Does it live up to the hype?

Well, maybe we should hold off on that for a bit, but here’s what we can say.

The show’s opening minutes are metal rusting and wood rotting in the rain; a cold downpour drenches the first act of the first episode, and colors everything that takes place in a frigid shade of gray. Denji (Kikunosuke Toya), our hero, is an ordinary teenage boy in every meaningful sense, but his life is defined by a crushing, oppressive poverty. He’s in debt to the yakuza, you see, and works off what he can of the negative numbers hanging around his neck by plying the only trade he knows; devil-hunting. (Devils, of course, are demonic beings that rise as personifications of human fears. I’m sure you knew that part already, it’s just common sense.)

King of Diamonds

Denji devil-hunts with a devil of his own; the diminutive Chainsaw Devil, Pochita (Shiori Izawa), who is more or less a small dog-pig with a chainsaw blade on its face. For some number of years, beginning when his father kills himself to escape his own debt, and thus passes it on to his son. Only meeting Pochita offers him even the slightest bit of recourse, after he saves the tiny devil’s life from a fatal wound by offering it the only thing he has left; his own blood. In return, he becomes a devil hunter. This continues, until he is the teenager we see at the start of this episode.

This is Denji’s life; get up, kill a devil, give the boss his cut. After however many arbitrary fees, he is left with pitifully little money to work with for even basic necessities like food and water. The case we see in the episode’s opening minutes leaves him with only 1800 Yen—about $12—to his name, to last him a whole month. (In the manga, there was a smidgen of coal-black humor in the way this was presented. That’s not really the case here, the anime plays it a lot straighter.) Denji isn’t happy, certainly, but he’s accepted this grim lot to an extent. His only real luxury is sleep. Even then; the hunger in his stomach and the anxiety about repaying his debt often steal that much from him, too.

One night, when it doesn’t, his boss does that directly instead, rousing him from his slumber to go hunt a devil in the middle of the night and earn what one could charitably call his keep. To make matters worse; he pukes up a nasty slick of blood, wondering out loud if the same heart disease that evidently killed his mother is coming for him, too.

Our real plot starts here; because there is no devil. Or at least, not one that the yakuza boss intends Denji to hunt.

Instead, he’s lured into a trap. His boss has contracted with a devil, too. The Zombie Devil, because he’s envious of Denji’s power. Denji tries to fight the devil’s minions off, but he’s overwhelmed by the zombie horde before too long. And for a moment, if you’re not familiar with this story, it doesn’t seem unreasonable to think that our protagonist is going to end his journey here and now, rotting, chopped to pieces, in a dumpster.

That, of course, does not happen. Instead, Pochita, the little Chainsaw Devil, and Denji’s only real friend at this point, offers up its own life in order to restore Denji’s. A flashback inside of a drop of blood—a drop running down a stack of old money, it should be noted—transmogrifies into a dream sequence, and before long, Denji is reborn; sans Pochita, plus one ripcord embedded in his chest. All Pochita asks for in return for its sacrifice is that Denji “show [it] his dream.” His dream to live a normal life, as a normal teenager.

We’re a long way from that, as what follows illustrates nicely.

He may be grateful to be alive, but realizing what—who—he’s lost in the process makes our boy very angry, and as he challenges the zombie horde to a rematch, they try to pile on him. This does not work, and he arises; transformed.

He is reborn in a flurry of blood, with sawtooth limbs, LED eyes, and iron teeth. He absolutely wipes the floor with the Zombie Devil and its minions, in an action scene that is a frankly pretty stunning mix of 2D and 3D animation blended almost seamlessly. Denji fights like someone self-taught, with full-body commitment to wild swings of his arms, and, indeed, the chainsaw blade that now protrudes out the middle of his head. But really, when you’re a living tornado of whirling metal and death, do you really need finesse?

The Zombie Devil isn’t the only victim; while he’s at it, Denji takes out the zombies themselves, too, including his former boss. He cackles like a madman, gleeful that now he doesn’t owe them anything. It is cathartic as fuck to watch; I am sure no small amount of Chainsaw Man‘s audience—target or not—wishes they could hack their worst boss into tiny pieces. I may or may not be including myself there, I’ll leave that up to your imagination.

After the violence, he stands statue-still. Perhaps content to simply rust as time passes.

But, as one master dies, another is born. Into the scene of the massacre, out of a black car, walks a trio of devil hunters affiliated with the Public Safety Bureau, the branch of Japan’s government specializing in devil killin’. Two are nameless goons. The third—just to disclose my biases upfront, here—is one of my favorite characters in anything.

Ever.

Queen of Hearts

This is Makima (Tomori Kusunoki). She will become very important, in many ways, over the course of this anime’s run, and in its eventual subsequent seasons. We’ll get to that, but for now, she does one main thing, which is pretty important in of itself. She offers Denji a choice; she and her backup could kill him—he is part-devil, at this point, after all—or, he can come work for the Safety Bureau. He takes the obvious choice; actual employment, a real bed, hot meals, a warm embrace.

There’s a lot I haven’t gone into. Note the way the weather changes over the course of the episode, for example; rainy for most of it, a moonlit, partly-cloudy night when Denji is lured into the Zombie Devil’s trap, and finally, sunlight parting the clouds and illuminating the grisly bloodshed, and shining a light of truth on it.

There are the vocal performances, too; excellent across the board despite Denji’s VA being, here, in his first role of any note, and Makima’s being known mostly for minor roles until quite recently. (Speaking of Makima’s voice, it is genuinely incredible, and I cannot fathom how people were unhappy with Kusunoki being cast. Her voice has a subdued, vaporous quality that just makes Makima sound all the more commanding; a sort of ambiguous sweetness that could as easily mask real warmth or deadly poison in equal measure.)

There’s also the soundtrack, which can offer quietly contemplative ambience in more downtempo scenes, sinister drones in those where something is definitely off, and can equally-well explode into splintering breakcore when things need to ratchet up a few notches.

All in all; this is a truly top-shelf production adapting one of the best manga currently running. It is, in all senses, a dream scenario. Yes, this is absolutely, obviously, completely and totally, a worthy adaption of Chainsaw Man, the manga. Incredibly, it might actually elevate the material in some ways; not an easy thing to do when you’re working with such great source material. Whether you’re a new fan or you’ve been onboard since 2018; strap in. Things are only just getting started.


Like what you’re reading? Consider following Magic Planet Anime to get notified when new articles go live. If you’d like to talk to other Magic Planet Anime readers, consider joining my Discord server! Also consider following me on Twitter and supporting me on Ko-Fi or Patreon. If you want to read more of my work, consider heading over to the Directory to browse by category.

All views expressed on Magic Planet Anime are solely my own opinions and conclusions and should not be taken to reflect the opinions of any other persons, groups, or organizations. All text, excepting direct quotations, is owned by Magic Planet Anime. Do not duplicate without permission. All images are owned by their original copyright holders.