Questions arise from the very first episode and we expect them to be answered, they never are | It has been mentioned briefly, and it has to be brought up at some point, but the ending to Root A is probably the worst ending to an anime that I've ever witnessed |
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Many dark grays, browns, and greens are used all over the place, making the anime feel more depressing than beautiful | We are given such limited information because the pacing is so rushed and for lack of ability to expound on the plot, the writers simply gave us bland fighting scenes |
He is a known psychopath working under Shinohara, with his background being explained in an exchange between the two.
12The plot is the biggest pitfall here, due to lack of clear direction and explanation | His character is supposedly killed the ending is obscenely convoluted , and since his actions have been relatively unknown, his growth is nearly nonexistent |
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It might be family, friends, or your dearest of objects; it's not so much what it is but the act of protecting it that matters | There are no special shout-outs to be had |
Pierrot should have kept the same opening song from the first season Unravel by TK from Ling Tosite Sigure , which will undoubtedly be the most memorable piece of the Pierrot iteration of the franchise.
5Once again: this show will change your way of thinking, your way of life | |
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Overall 5 Story 3 Animation 6 Sound 5 Character 5 Enjoyment 4 This series is essentially what you would expect to be the end product of 12 directors and script writers playing telephone together with each episode, which would mean no overarching consistency, lack of cohesion and continuity between episodes, little to no character development, and a poor narrative | After his previous trauma at the hands of Jason, Kaneki is no longer the scared, helpless kid but instead a confident, strong ghoul |
But following his beginning speeches and departure, his vocabulary is reduced to a lot of screaming and the occasional "Hide.
13