Get emotional, throw questions, but don't give direct answers.

Brandon 2022-11-08 22:30:24

The second season was a bit worse than the first. But there are also works by Yoshimitsu Kataha. After reading it as a whole, I still feel a lot of emotions and a lot of questions, but no answers are given. More attempts were made in the style of animation.

The first episode, the future of robots serving waste wood humans. In the end, the program conflicted with humans because of mistakes/or the robot company deliberately. Humans either paid to upgrade the program or were killed by the machine.

Episode 2, Frozen Whales. An episode of mutants and humans living together. Pretty romantic. But not confronting the conflict.

Episode 3, Assault Squad. Humans can live forever, which means that new life is no longer allowed to be born. The male protagonist is in charge of hunting children. In the end, I suddenly found out that I was moved by love. The story is very delicate, and the transformation of the male protagonist at the end is too personal. The question is still raised, immortality is actually closely related to the birth of death (no new life).

In the fourth episode, Snow in the desert, the male protagonist has a strong regeneration and repair ability, so he has been chased and killed, and finally he is with a transformed human. is a love story.

Episode 5, Tall Grass. I like the style of painting, but the story is like an urban legend.

Episode 6, the whole house. This is my favorite episode. Two kids saw a monster on Christmas Eve. They thought it was a thriller, but the monster was Santa himself. Conflict, right to hit our long-standing confusion about Santa

Episode 7, Living Cabin. Astronauts outwit robot dogs after crash landing. In the end, he subdued the dog with a flashlight. . .

Episode 8, The Drowned Giant. Very poetic. The most recommended episode of this episode.

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