KIMETSU NO YAIBA
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
26
RELEASE
September 28, 2019
LENGTH
24 min
DESCRIPTION
It is the Taisho Period in Japan. Tanjiro, a kindhearted boy who sells charcoal for a living, finds his family slaughtered by a demon. To make matters worse, his younger sister Nezuko, the sole survivor, has been transformed into a demon herself. Though devastated by this grim reality, Tanjiro resolves to become a “demon slayer” so that he can turn his sister back into a human, and kill the demon that massacred his family.
(Source: Crunchyroll)
CAST
Tanjirou Kamado
Natsuki Hanae
Nezuko Kamado
Akari Kitou
Inosuke Hashibira
Yoshitsugu Matsuoka
Zenitsu Agatsuma
Hiro Shimono
Giyuu Tomioka
Takahiro Sakurai
Kyoujurou Rengoku
Satoshi Hino
Shinobu Kochou
Saori Hayami
Tengen Uzui
Katsuyuki Konishi
Mitsuri Kanroji
Kana Hanazawa
Muichirou Tokitou
Kengo Kawanishi
Kanao Tsuyuri
Reina Ueda
Obanai Iguro
Kenichi Suzumura
Sanemi Shinazugawa
Tomokazu Seki
Muzan Kibutsuji
Toshihiko Seki
Sabito
Yuuki Kaji
Genya Shinazugawa
Nobuhiko Okamoto
Gyoumei Himejima
Tomokazu Sugita
Hotaru Haganezuka
Daisuke Namikawa
Tamayo
Maaya Sakamoto
Sakonji Urokodaki
Houchuu Ootsuka
Yushirou
Daiki Yamashita
Rui
Kouki Uchiyama
Kagaya Ubuyashiki
Toshiyuki Morikawa
Enmu
Daisuke Hirakawa
Makomo
Ai Kakuma
EPISODES
Dubbed
RELATED TO KIMETSU NO YAIBA
REVIEWS
Scientiiaa
95/100The weak have no rights or choices. Their only fate is to be relentlessly crushed by the strong.Continue on AniListDemon Slayer is a Japanese manga series, which was published by Koyoharu Gotouge, which is his 2nd work. An anime television series adaptation by Ufotable premiered on April 6, 2019. The final episode aired on September 28, 2019.
From the earliest times, the humanity knows about human-flesh eating monsters, lurking in the darkness to devour an unfortunate soul that does not trust rumors. However, the rumors also mention an elite corps of demon hunters, skilled assassins, killing demons. Demon Slayer focuses on Tanjirou Kamado, who is still very young, but is the only man in his family. One day, Tanjirou decides to go down to the local village to make a little money, selling charcoal. When he returns back, he becomes an unwilling part of these horrifying rumors: his family is slaughtered and the only survivor, his sister Nezuko, is turned into demon. For some reason, Nezuko still acts as a human, which is the reason for Tanjirou to join demon slayers and cure his sister. Will he manage to join the elite corps and cure his sister?
It is, without a doubt, quite a challenge to make an interesting and new battle shounen. With so many titles that represent the genre, as well as cliché surrounding it, Kimetsu no Yaiba could have been another title, everyone will stop to hype about after the first week. However, there is something different about it, which makes it stand out. The story-line is slow, which grants enough development, the main protagonist does look like your average battle-shounen protagonist, but he is not as annoying as his counterparts, characters are actually interesting, since even supporting cast receives enough development, finally, the setting looks somewhat new, because you will not see that often a setting, describing the Taishou era.
Animation wise, it is quite challenging to find even one work of ufotable with bad animation. It does look somewhat similar to Katanagatari, but not quite. Everything from character designs to action scenes looks just awesome and beautiful, an eye candy you want to never end. Sound wise, even if there is English dub one day, I would still highly recommend you to watch Demon Slayer subbed, because of many voice acting gurus, voicing this series. Even the OST fits the anime well and makes the series even more catchy.
Characters is another important part, a must to make battle-shounen likeable. Kamado Tanjirou, however, does not look that promising to 'carry' the whole series. However, this problem is solved when he is joined by the other protagonists of the series, who together form a very likeable group of protagonist. They are interesting, because of how different they are: Tanjirou Kamado is a very trustworthy and hardworking individual, but he is a too trustful. Nezuko Kamado, Tanjirou's sister and the only person that was able to remain human after having been turned into a demon. The noodle head Zenitsu Agatsuma is a member of the Demon Killing Corps and a traveling companion of Kamado Tanjirou. He is always scared by any noise, but he becomes a fearful enemy for the demons, when it is needed. Inosuke Hashibira is the last companion of Tanjurou and he is also a t..p.
Enjoyment wise, it is truly one of the brightest gems of this season. Kimetsu no Yaiba is one of these titles that was able to unite comedy and drama and make it interesting to watch. What I mean is that many series were trying to do that, but failed. One was intervening with the other and the end result was horrible. Here, however, just like in Gintama, it is both funny and dramatic sometimes, which makes it that good. Imagine 26 episodes of nothing but drama. This is just unreal for any person.
Overall, Kimetsu no Yaiba is one of a very small amount of battle-shounen series that is actually fun to watch. The story, the art, the voice acting, the OST, I cannot think of anything, I did not like about it, nor have I ever felt bored, when I was watching this series. There are, however, some minor flaws, I feel useless to even mention. Great job, Gotouge Koyoharu. For your first animated series, Demon Slayer is quite an achievement to be proud of.
A very-very weak 10/10.
Lenlo
70/100Competently crafted, yet safe, Kimetsu no Yaiba can stand toe to toe with its contemporaries with its head held high.Continue on AniListIt's hard to find a more ubiquitous genre in anime than Shounen. Maybe romance/moe-blobs, but it's a close race. With series like One Piece and until recently Naruto, being a constant presence each season/year. Often this makes it difficult for newer series to break into the anime market in a meaningful way. With the recent success stories of that being My Hero Academia and Black Clover. However, with this season, I think Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba can stand toe to toe with its contemporaries and stand proud. As the series, written by Koyoharu Gotouge and adapted by Ufotable, has broken into the scene en force. Even managing to break into the mainstream on social media like Twitter with some episodes, really showing how far anime can reach today. So the question then becomes, what does Kimetsu no Yaiba do right? What does it do wrong?
Without further ado, let's dive right in and see if we can't answer those questions.
(Disclaimer: I am working to make 50 the new "average". 70 is not an average score people. 70 is above average. Also this review contains minor spoilers. You can also find individual episode write ups and comment on this review on my blog here. Carry on.)
Animation/Art Of course, the first thing you have to mention when talking about anime is the art and animation in question. Starting off, Kimetsu no Yaiba has style. I have always enjoyed thicker or inconsistent line work in a series. Most anime just come off feeling to impersonal and this helps alleviate that somewhat. Combine that with Ufotable’s generally excellent effects/lighting work and its a recipe for some beautiful still shots. Some might complain about lighting gradients and such, and yes occasionally these are a problem. You need only look at the recent One Punch Man S2 for an example of this going wrong. However I feel that Yuuichi Terao, the Director of Photography, generally has a handle on this sort of thing. I dare say that after holding the position on Fate/Zero, Fate/UBW and the entire Kara no Kyoukai series among others, he knows what he’s doing.
Moving on to animation itself, this really needs to be split into two parts. Those being the traditional 2D and the myriad of CGI in the series. Starting with the first, Kimetsu no Yaiba is pretty tame for the most part. Shifting to a much simpler style for all of its comedic bits and keeping movement to a minimum outside combat. Some rotoscoping excluded. Inside combat however, is where Kimetsu no Yaiba shines. With the legendary talents of Masayuki Kunihiro and Go Kimura for animation and Nozomu Abe for special effects really stretching their muscles on this series. When it wants to, Kimetsu no Yaiba looks nothing short of stunning. The issue though arizes outside of these highpoints. As the series suffers from reused animation, some simple or confusing storyboards and perhaps a touch of to much ambition in some parts. Oh, also the CGI.
The CGI is probably the biggest bugbear I and others have with the series. When it comes to environments, I think Kimetsu no Yaiba does a fine job. Creating some very interesting combat arena’s, backdrops or first person camera motions. Yes, the textures are visible and when compared to the previously mentioned 2D it becomes obvious. For the most part though, it works. When it comes to the characters however… There’s no missing it, as our leads walk across a fantastically rendered background, waddling their CGI butts across the screen. Occasionally it works fine, when other elements help mask it. Try as they might, Ufotable just couldn’t nail everything, and it’s a damn shame. When it’s all said and done though, personally I don’t think it will bother you all that much. These scenes are generally far between and the action set pieces carry most of the series weight.
Direction Next up, let’s talk about how Kimetsu no Yaiba actually uses this animation and art. Here Haruo Sotozaki is a man of extremes. Resulting in either very beautiful frames, or incredibly simple ones. Most of this only really coming out during the battles. How much of this we can credit to his storyboard and how much to the animators own creativity, I do not know. But I will give him the benefit of the doubt. As in many combat scenes, Sotozaki tries to make the best of his CGI environments. Twisting the camera and following our lead as he flips around the screen in one continuous shot. A 2D character in a 3D rotating environment. It’s really ambitious I feel, and while it doesn’t always work, its something I can appreciate the attempt of.
Meanwhile, outside of combat, Kimetsu no Yaiba is pretty basic. Mostly consisting of character shots and flipping from face to face while people are talking. Occasionally we will get some interesting angles outside combat. Such as the memed to death “Dio walk“, or some nice rotating or skybox shots to help establish a scene/environment. For the most part though, it’s just simple and solid. Framing a character against the moon, or other such imagery. Personally, I prefer this more simplistic approach to going hog wild like say… Studio Shaft. As what is important is you get the information across first, and get fancy with it second. It’s one of my major complaints with Shaft, their often style over substance approach. So while Kimetsu no Yaiba's direction won’t win any awards, I think it serves its purpose solidly.
Story/World Finally onto the actual narrative of the story, starting with the story/world. Kimetsu no Yaiba sort of takes the easy way out here, setting itself in the Meiji era of Japan. A setting most anime fans have seen at least once, right at the cusp of the industrial revolution for the country. It’s not a bad setting, one of my favorite classics Rurouni Kenshin takes place in the era. And it’s not like Kimetsu no Yaiba doesn’t do its own establishing through many shots. Such as the night life of Asakusa near Tokyo, the rural mountains or the Demon Slayers own headquarters. However it never really explores this environment, not even bringing up or addressing the sword ban until the final episode. Instead focusing entirely on the demon’s and its characters. Not a poor choice, but definitely one with consequences, as I wish we had gotten more.
For the story itself, if the upcoming movie wasn’t enough of an indiciation, this isn’t the full story. Instead being more of an opening to the entire series as Tanjiro gets established inside the Demon Slayers order and sets up the greater goal. With each individual arc focusing on a new antagonist each time, with undertones of the greater conflict slowly getting established. This is something I actually think Kimetsu no Yaiba does well, as while we don’t see direct conflict with the lead antagonist Muzan, he is introduced early. Letting each of the later arcs build on that established character through said arc’s antagonist. It’s actually rather novel for a Shounen. As many completely forgo the overarching antagonist, instead focusing entirely on each individual arcs antagonist. That or when they attempt it, the arc villain’s don’t connect properly to the greater conflict. So well done there.
Characters As far as characters go, I think Kimetsu no Yaiba has a few standouts among an otherwise average cast. With a few notable negatives. Among our heroes, the positives include Tanjiro and Inosuke. The first actually has a rather mature view towards combat and the story in question. Understanding that demons need to die for killing innocents, instead of the normal MC attitude of “saving” everyone. Yet he doesn’t let that stop him from empathizing with them, as the moment he is unable to do that, his sister stops being human herself. Outside combat he is still a little naive at times, with classic Shounen MC traits, but he is largely a positive. Meanwhile Inosuke is a veritable walking dating sim, who I think portrays his upbringing fantastically. Like most characters, he is tuned up a bit at the start. But he quickly tones it down and establishes himself.
Among the villains, I can’t not mention Kibutsuji Muzan, voiced by the brilliant Toshihiko Seki. This man makes Demon Michael Jackson irresistible, I just love his voice. Capable of going from calm and composed, to terrifying in a moment while keeping the base character. Enough about that though, we have to talk about his actual character. For only really being around for maybe 20 minutes total, Muzan gets more characterization than most. Establishing himself early, and then getting more and more built up through other characters backstories with him. Effectively building him based off of other people’s experiences, rather than the viewers own. Personally, I think Kimetsu no Yaiba does a good job here. Effectively creating a head honcho bad guy without coming up with a crazy reason for the MC to fight them and survive early on. Sidestepping the whole question of power. Sadly, not everything is sunny here.
There are some negatives as far as characters go, one being specific, the other being how the series introduces them. For the former, Kimetsu no Yaiba has a tendency to introduce all of its characters turned up to 11. Blasting the basest aspects of their personality at full volume from the start. There were a number of times this immediately put me off a character. As however effective it is at establishing who they are, it is terribly annoying. For the most part, as we spend time with these characters, this gets toned down and leads to some good ones like Inosuke. For Zenitsu however… I just couldn’t get into him. His whining and womanizing is like a completely separate character from the somber and self-deprecating kid who doesn’t want to fight demons. One is an interesting internal character study. The other is just annoying, regardless of the impressive VA.
Music/OST Last but not least, let's talk about the music. Jointly produced by Go Shiina and Yuki Kajiura, it’s pretty damn good. I would link a few songs in particular here, but each one would spoil or ruin the surprise of some standout moments in the series. So instead just take my word for it when I say that it’s good. There are of course plenty of insert songs that define a scene, not really overpowering but elevating even when they dominate the sounds effects of what’s happening. But some of the real stars to my ears are actually some of the few composed by Yuki Kajiura. As though Go Shiina does most of the work I believe, Kajiura is back in form for Kimetsu no Yaiba. With her haunting vocals such as in “To Destroy The Evil” or her combination of strings and flutes in “Survive And Get The Blade“.
Meanwhile Go Shiina provides the bulk of the OST for the series I believe. Composing a majority of the background music for the show. While most of this isn’t particularly noteworthy, mostly just setting scenes, I think it still does its job amiably. Not every song in an anime OST needs to be an insert song or a set piece. The role of the OST isn’t to dominate a scene but rather to amplify it. Meanwhile a bad OST is one that takes away from the scene in question. For Kimetsu no Yaiba, I never had that experience. Sure I can only really recognize a handful of tracks, but the rest of the time? It fit right in. So between this serviceable establishing music and the standout insert songs by the two composters, Kimetsu no Yaiba's OST at the very least earns a good listen from any fan.
Conclusion So, all in all, how was Kimetsu no Yaiba? If I had to choose a word to sum it up, it would have to be “competent”, or maybe “enjoyable”. I certainly didn’t have a bad time with the series. I don’t think there is a single portion that underperformed. As even at their worst the characters had their moments, and the story quickly moved past the few mistakes it made. No, if anything what holds the series back is how… safe it feels. The Kimetsu no Yaiba competently executes a standard Shounen story, but it doesn’t really take any risks. I fear that without Ufotable’s beautiful adaptation, this story is one I would otherwise pass over. As the animation and music is usually what sells the scenes, not the story itself. Hopefully now that everything is established Kimetsu no Yaiba can get a bit more adventurous.
Because as critical as I am, and while it doesn’t crack into the greats, this is a solid series, competently executed with some fantastic production. And that’s more than we usually get in this day and age.
thelastcube
87/100Straightforward lore + amazing adaptation + consistent during the whole 2 cour = consider me all aboard the hype trainContinue on AniList[Does contain spoilers]
At first, Kimetsu no Yaiba just feels like another typical shounen anime, and tbh it is that only to an extent, but it does it so well that you just can't ignore it.
The main premise of the anime is pretty simple and straightforward - A really evil antagonist kills the family of a young all-happy and helpful teen, only leaving his younger sister who's now a demon. The teen is now motivated to turn his sister back to human again, are directed by a really skilled dude who's obviously a future pillar, the teen works hard and gets better and better and becoming stronger - pretty typical.
The main star of the show that makes it amazing here is ufotable and their adaptation. Ufotable did an incredible job adapting the manga, from the awesome animation style (I love those wave animations) to the amazing character designs, to the incredible sound effects and osts to literally the best CG in the anime industry rn (ofc, it's ufotable after all) and not only that but keeping the level of production consistent during the whole 2 cour. This adaptation was like a Christmas present for a shounen trash like me.
I absolutely love the character designs of all the Hashiras, plus the character design in general (especially the character designs of some demons). (maybe apart from Tanjirou's family, they're all... a bit monotonous/too alike) and the animation, oh boy the animation. Add that incredible animation style with awesome direction and CG and you get masterpieces like episode 19 or literally any moment Zenitsu uses his 1st Form
The lore being straightforward and simple also helps not have stupid tangled and confusing parts in the story, combine that with the sasugafest ufotable provides, and you have this piece of art here.
Further, Kimetsu no Yaiba is among the likes of Samurai Champloo and Baccano for me as it has it's distinct enough of animation style and vibe in general (that a lot of anime do not have, or at least is not that discrete enough to stand out on their own. And honestly the animation style was the reason I started watching this series and I am totally satisfied)
This was surely one of the best anime out there within this season, and easily a S tier for me because I enjoyed it so much
SIMILAR ANIMES YOU MAY LIKE
- ANIME ActionOwari no Seraph
- ANIME ActionAo no Exorcist
- ANIME ActionBoku no Hero Academia
- MOVIE ActionStranger: Mukou Hadan
- ANIME ActionBoku no Hero Academia 4
- ANIME ActionBlack Clover
- ANIME ActionHUNTER×HUNTER (2011)
SCORE
- (4.15/5)
TRAILER
MORE INFO
Ended inSeptember 28, 2019
Main Studio ufotable
Trending Level 3
Favorited by 41,157 Users
Hashtag #鬼滅の刃