Let’s Watch CHAINSAW MAN Episode 9 – “From Kyoto”

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


The highest praise that I, personally, can bestow on an anime has nothing to do with my writing at all. It’s a feeling, a kind of half-anxious, half-excited wriggling in my gut. Butterflies; basically, not out of serious anxiety that a show might “get bad” or any malformed pessimistic instinct of the sort, but from the sheer, imminent thrill of where something might go next. It is a very basic lizard brain sort of thing, and it’s not something I really have any control over. It’s one thing to feel like this when I’m not familiar with the source material—or if there is no source material—but today, as I sit here at 9 AM waiting patiently for the newest episode of Chainsaw Man to release, is the first time I’ve ever gotten it from an anime where I already totally know how this story ends. I am that excited purely from the sugar rush of this series being put to silver screen, yet again.

Maybe that means nothing to you, but to me, it’s another badge on CSM’s already well-decorated vest. One it’s really only just put on, in the grand scheme of things, given that we’re heading into the finale of the first of what is sure to be many seasons. Last week, when I was regrettably sick, we saw Chainsaw Man take its combat direction to another level as lives were lost, cursed phantoms appeared from the ether, and seemingly the series’ very foundations were torn to shreds in mere minutes.

This week? Vengeance with the V from Violence.

The last act of the Ghost Devil, Himeno’s now-former contracted devil, is to pull Denji’s ripcord before she finally vanishes. He and Katana Man go for round two in a fight scene that would be the highlight of an episode of nearly any other shonen anime. They slug it out something fierce, and Sawatari, Katana Man’s handler, even calls in some backup. But Chainsaw Man tends to swing for the fences, and this scene, while nice, is fairly conventional compared to what follows. I say this despite the fact that it ends with Denji being cut in half at the waist and left for dead. (You’ll forgive me for not pretending that there’s any real chance he’s going to stay dead in the anime named after him.)

A cue Chainsaw Man wisely takes from its most accomplished ancestors in the shonen anime field is that, while it is ultimately an ensemble piece, it knows to let each individual player showcase their strengths. By analogy; these are solos, stretches of the story where a single character becomes the focus on all levels; aesthetically and thematically bending the series itself to their personal rhythms. Chainsaw Man‘s ninth episode features, basically, two of these showcases, and they are wonderful, things of true frightful glory with fairly few peers in this—or any—anime season.

Makima, to the surprise of, I imagine, no one, is not dead. The episode pivots over to her part of the story through shots of the dead; eerie, still, and silent. Indeed, one of the bodies the camera lingers on is hers. That silence is final for most of the passengers aboard the train that the terrorists hit in last week’s episode. But, evidently, it isn’t so for Makima herself.

Makima jumpscare.

When that train finally rolls in to its original destination, Makima is the one who steps off; covered in blood that is mostly not her own but evidently not actually any worse for wear. The two here-unnamed Devil Hunters she links up with are quickly drafted into a support plot. Simply put, no one involved has the time to speed back to Tokyo to help Denji and friends. Instead, Makima will “do what [she] can” from afar.

So what does “what she can” entail?

Well, I will start by saying, I think almost anyone with even a tiny smidgen of media literacy will pick up on the fact, very early in Chainsaw Man, that there is something decidedly off about Makima. But this episode is the first time we see just how “off” she really is. Let’s put it this way; her plan requires her to be taken to the highest nearby temple that her assistants can find, as well as “thirty convicts serving life sentences or worse.”

You can, here, start to make some guesses about where this is going. But if you don’t feel inclined to, the show spells it out about as soon as Makima has those 30 prisoners kneeling in front of her, with both they and her assistants wearing blindfolds. She then starts making peculiar hand motions; massaging her hands together, as though kneading a lump of clay. Here, for even the most unobservant, I must imagine the fact of the situation suddenly clicks into place; you are watching a ritual sacrifice.

As Makima works, the show undergoes a temporary transformation into a straight-up horror anime. One that is still, mind you, lit by the midday Sun, but is no less oppressive because of it. Makima’s contracted devils—whoever they are—must be fearsome indeed, because we don’t actually see them work at all. One by one, Makima has each convict recite the name of one of the terrorists. One by one, three prefectures away, crows spot them, they feel a sudden, inexplicable, and overwhelming sense of impending doom, and then, spontaneously, they explode, into a water balloon pop of high-pressure gore; ridiculous, and deeply unsettling expressionism by way of supernatural violence. The soundtrack, appropriately, darkens to an intense, drumming industrial track while this occurs. When it’s over, even Makima’s own immediate subordinates are more than a little freaked out. This, clearly, is some nightmarishly deep magic. Questions of how are of course unanswered at this time. You want a takeaway? Try “don’t mess with women in suits.”

Makima isn’t the only one to make an excellent showing here. Kobeni, who I suspect many anime-firsts might’ve written off as a bit character, puts in an absolutely stellar turn here, too. Shaking and trembling, she confronts the fleeing Sawatari and Katana Man. Hirokazu having physically shoved her out of the way of an assassin’s bullet and taken the shot himself, she is one of the few human members of her division left alive. Even so, she charges at Katana Man with nothing but a knife and a truly inhuman set of reflexes.

We actually get even fewer details about what Kobeni’s got going on as far as powers than we do for Makima, but sometimes exposition isn’t necessary. Kobeni manages to somehow flip what must be a truly back-breaking weight of PTSD into enough adrenaline and finesse to absolutely kick Katana Man’s ass; she very nearly kills him. Only after he and Sawatari have fled the scene does she finally break down crying, tearily apologizing to Denji for trying to kill him, and then laughing at herself for the absurdity of her words. The last we see of her here is that; half-cackling, half-weeping, and talking to a bisected corpse.

So, what of Makima and her two new “friends”? Well, somehow or another, she seems to know that her little Satanic ritual / artillery strike worked just fine. Madoka, a character we formally meet for the first time here, gives Makima the rundown; Special Divions 1 through 4 have been decimated—almost literally—by the terrorist attack, and the remnants of the four are being merged into a single unit under Makima’s own direct command. He also, without missing a beat, hands Makima his retirement slip. She accepts it, but when he tries to learn a bit more about what’s transpired here, this is the response he gets.

Bonus Power Screencap: Power isn’t in this episode! She doesn’t even show up in the ED! So do you know what you get instead?

Go on, guess.

Yeah, it’s another Makima stare. I’m not sorry.


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.

Let’s Watch CHAINSAW MAN Episode 6 – “Kill Denji”

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


Chainsaw Man is a story about bad things happening to people. I have said this before, I will say it again many, many more times before it eventually ends. To really get where CSM is coming from, one should attempt to understand this. Chainsaw Man isn’t a drag; we know this already, as the series is full of humor and of more delicate character moments. But it’s not happy, either. The jokes in Chainsaw Man are those of a depressed friend. But at the risk of sounding like the most arch and stereotypical critic imaginable; that gives it a real emotional honesty. The kind that makes everything hit with appropriate weight even when it might seem egregious in an anime that wasn’t this specific kind of tuned-in.

All of this is worth restating, not for the last time, because today’s episode is another fairly slow one, despite an impressively bizarre climax. Gently pressing down the brakes on the actual plot-as-such, it spends a lot of time engaging in character building. As always, if Chainsaw Man is crass, or hedonistic, or occasionally out-and-out psychotic, it is so for a reason. Case in point; episode 6, “Kill Denji”, is a wild seesaw of tone and emotion. This remains a best-case-scenario for adapting the manga; truly unhinged, quietly poignant, and crudely funny, by turns, and as it needs to be.

Where to even start? Sure, we open by learning that, as they suspected, our heroes are trapped on the eighth floor of their hotel, but a simple “how do we break the loop?” mystery would not be nearly compelling enough for CSM. (Even so, what of that is done here is done very compellingly, complete with a small visual motif in the form of a squarish alarm clock that keeps ticking back and forth to always land on 8:18.) We can break what occurs up into roughly three categories, although they’re not entirely in discrete sequential chunks as such.

First of all; we get properly introduced to Kobeni in this episode. Kobeni, as previously mentioned, is a walking bundle of neuroses and anxiety in the vague shape of a 20something young woman. She should really not be in this line of work, and in the manga she was essentially Chainsaw Man‘s main comic relief character. Kobeni’s backstory is so dead simple that it’s lodged somewhere between hilarious and ridiculously depressing. Her parents made her sign up so she could put her talented older brother through college. It was devil hunting or sex work. Ouch.

As has been its wont, the anime sands away a bit of the dark humor here. In the manga, the format itself means that we don’t actually linger on Kobeni’s depressed rambling for particularly long. Here, it’s a full scene, which really screws in just how utterly bleak her life situation is. In a more conventional series, she and Denji might find some fast camaraderie in their poverty-stricken upbringings. In Chainsaw Man, it is she who eventually gives this episode its title, but we’ll come back to that. The main thing to take away is that, while Kobeni’s initial breakdown remains a source of black comedy, much of that is shifted over to Power’s comedically insensitive reaction, rather than Kobeni herself. Remember; to her, this is deadly serious.

We also get a fair bit more insight into Aki and Himeno’s partnership up until this point in this episode. Much of the episode’s middle third is taken up by a flashback of Himeno repeatedly trying to get Aki to try cigarettes; “life is better with a little dependence”, she says, a bit of hard-luck pithy wisdom that suits the spirit of this series perfectly.

This entire sequence is dominated by warm guitar in the soundtrack and a purple-pink sunset over the city. But, even in reminiscence, no one in Chainsaw Man is safe from reality; Himeno is jolted from one memory to another with a slap, a surgically-precise cut that bleeds out the nostalgia of the preceding few minutes in a subtly heart-rending way.

Said backhanding comes from the girlfriend of one of Himeno’s late partners. Aki, who understandably doesn’t think she deserves that kind of treatment, gets petty revenge by sticking some gum on the woman’s clothes, probably the first time in the entire series so far that we’ve seen him do something genuinely funny on purpose. The two bond over a cigarette in the scene afterward, and Aki’s chainsmoking habit is established. The entire thing is sweet, in an off-kilter way.

Back in the present, our heroes happen upon the entity keeping them trapped on the 8th floor. The creature isn’t named as the Eternity Devil here, but its identity is fairly obvious, given its powers and some of the imagery. The Devil has a very simple condition. A contract, even. If the other devil hunters kill Denji, he’ll let them go.

Kobeni and Arai (who’s also been having a hard time of it), immediately turn on Denji, with the former charging him with a big shiny knife while squealing like some kind of small, dying mammal. This doesn’t work—mostly because Himeno and Aki(!) aren’t okay with just turning over a comrade to this thing, even as Himeno points out that it can’t possibly be lying. (Short version of the exposition; if a devil calls something a “contract” it has to fulfill its end of the promise or it’ll die instantly.) The Eternity Devil itself is a cascading wave of rubbery flesh, a specific kind of body horror that you really don’t see very often in mainstream TV anime. (The only other example from this year that I can think of is the finale villain in The Executioner & Her Way of Life.)

There are other options; that mysterious sword Aki’s been carrying is apparently Cursed Or Something, and is quite powerful at the cost of literally taking years off of Aki’s life. He could use it to get them out of this situation, but Himeno objects hard enough to use her Ghost Devil to stop him. Which, itself, leads to Kobeni accidentally stabbing Aki in the side.

All this going on, is it any real wonder that Denji ends the episode by feeding himself to the Eternity Devil? He has no real plan, beyond “make it suffer enough that it’d rather die than keep them trapped in the hotel.” But long-term plans were never our boy’s strong suit.

In the rush to praise what the CSM anime will eventually get to, I do worry slightly that we’re all a bit missing the forest for the trees. This episode ably proves that Chainsaw Man is already great, early on or not.

Bonus Power Screencap: Given all the ruminating over the anime’s themes and general tone this week, I didn’t actually have time to discuss the incredible comedy break of Power deciding to win a Nobel Prize and become Prime Minister so she can make everyone miserable by instituting a “100% income tax.” Here’s her coming up with that little idea.


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.

Let’s Watch CHAINSAW MAN Episode 5 – “Gun Devil”

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


Earlier today, I had a lengthy discussion with a good friend of mine in which we went over all sorts of very personal and heavy subjects. One of these was, essentially, dreams – aspirations. These things keep us pushing forward and pursuing them often defines our lives. I, for example, would like to formally study history someday. I have an interest in the subject and think it’s an important field.

But of course, different people have different sorts of dreams, which brings us to today’s Chainsaw Man serial. You see, at the start of episode five, Denji achieves one of his dreams.

To touch a boob.

Listen, I never said the man’s dreams were noble. Or terribly fulfilling. But hey! He has them! Respect his dreams! Or don’t! I’m not a cop.

Instead of being fulfilled, Denji finds himself spiraling. Power, in a bit of the manga’s trademark askew humor, was wearing breast pads the entire time for…reasons. Who knows why, really? They’re probably Fiend reasons. Very secret, you and I wouldn’t be privy to them. Denji thus finds his boob-touching experience to be largely unsatisfactory, which plunges him into a bout of existential ennui. If there is no truth and beauty to be gleaned from the titties of the world, where then, might it be gleaned?

Well, Denji gets an answer not long later. Whether or not it’s a useful answer is another question entirely.

It’s been a moment since we last spoke about Makima’s Problematic Power Dynamics Emporium on this blog. I don’t think I’m cutting the legs off of any kind of “twist” by pointing out that Makima does not exactly have Denji’s best interests in mind, but Denji himself of course does not know that, and as an emotionally shattered teenager whose spent most of his life not knowing even the feintest hint of human kindness, Makima’s practiced, razor-sharp manipulation seems entirely genuine. What might be read flags to an experienced viewer are, instead, to both Denji and I’m sure at least some of the demographic at whom Chainsaw Man is in fact aimed—it’s a shonen manga at the end of the day, recall—genuinely alluring. They’re also instructive; as warnings.

The little lecture that Makima gives Denji here is all about physical intimacy. She tells him that sexuality is best explored with someone you know very well. She has him fondle not just the obvious but also her ear. It is all extremely charged, and it’s supposed to be. But it’s also supposed to be a little unsettling. Take note of the many cuts back to Denji’s own eyes, which Makima stares phantasmal daggers into, intentionally or not. She also asks him if anyone’s ever bitten his finger before. The sort of request that scans as a little bizarre on paper, but could easily absolutely destroy the unprepared in the right circumstance.

Make no mistake; Denji is actively being manipulated here, in a way that is extremely transparent and wildly inappropriate, considering that Makima is pretty clearly at least a bit older than Denji and is also his boss. Guys; don’t rake me over the coals for this, but I think that this Makima character might not have our boy’s interests in mind!

And sure enough, before he really even knows it, Denji is agreeing to hunt the Gun Devil, a spectre of death that appeared in—where else?—the USA some number of years ago. (Why does he agree? Other than the fact that Denji would probably do nearly anything Makima asked at that point, it’s because she offers to grant him any “one wish.” You get two guesses what he plans on making his wish. First two don’t count.)

We get a flashback, eventually revealed as Aki’s, where the creature passes unseen over a remote home and completely obliterates it and everyone inside in microseconds. Except for Aki himself, waiting for his brother to go fetch a pair of gloves so the two of them can keep playing with snowballs. Naturally, Aki’s brother never comes back.

More exposition, brief but important; the Gun Devil sheds bits of flesh—casings, basically—wherever it goes. Stick enough together, and it acts like a giant magnet, pointing you toward the Gun Devil itself. This is all the context we need for part two of this episode, where we meet some new friends.

From left to right (and skipping Power, Denji, and Aki, who we obviously already know), that’s Arai (Taku Yashiro), Kobeni (Karin Takahashi), and Himeno (Mariya Ise). Respectively, they’re straightlaced and serious, a walking bundle of nerves in the vague shape of a human who jumps out of her own skin at anything and everything, and a bisexual whirlwind freewheeling spirit whose broad smile, perhaps unsurprisingly, holds a profound inner pain. They’re all pretty great. Much of this half of the episode is character dynamic, feeding us fun little hints about this other company of Devil Hunters (such as Himeno’s contract devil being the Devil of Ghosts) fun moments for the newly-expanded cast to interact in equal measure.

Anyway, not long after this, they discover that the hotel building they’re infiltrating is looping infinitely in every direction. The episode ends there, because cliffhangers are fun.

a line of infinite ends finite finishing the one remains oblique and pure – arching to the single point of consciousness – find yourself starting back

On that note, I’d like to talk briefly about this show’s pacing, as a closing note. I think some have been surprised at the relatively easy pace the series is adapting the manga’s chapters at. It’s only skipped a very few things and most of these small arcs at the start of the series have been given an episode and a half or so to sort themselves out. It’s a pacing that feels slightly unconventional in the modern TV anime landscape, but if it is a difference, it’s a welcome one, and it suits Chainsaw Man extremely well.

Bonus Power Screencap: Behold, the hall of 100 Powers! Tremble at their infinite variety and their varied facial expressions! At this rate I’ll be able to pick these out from the ED alone every week.


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.