Blue Eye Samurai’s Biggest Influences, Explained

As Season 1 of Netflix’s Blue Eye Samurai unfolds, it’s easy to gravitate to the series. Many fans have dubbed the anime one of the streaming service’s best pieces of content, as these eight episodes have something for everyone. Mizu (voiced by Maya Erskine) goes on a bloody rampage over many decades to hunt and kill the white men responsible for ruining her life.Blue Eye Samurai works in romance, drama, comedy, and romance, with Mizu encountering a slew of characters along the way. The ever-fluid, life-altering journey oscillates, shifting from one of rage, to Mizu seeking closure and healing. Unfortunately, the final couple of episodes toss her back on a bitter path of revenge. In the process, Blue Eye Samurai nods to quite a few popular franchises in Hollywood, very much wearing these influences on its sleeve.Either way, Mizu decides to go after the white men. She holds them responsible for the death of her mother, remixing what Uma Thurman’s Bride endured in 2003’s Kill Bill. Fans would recall both movies had the Bride tracking down various assassins, cutting a bloody road to Bill, after he had the Bride’s husband killed. The Bride was left in a coma in Quentin Tarantino’s narrative, with Bill sending the message that she shouldn’t have left his fraternity of killers. Only he could say when it was time to retire, so he ripped the very idea of family away from her.

As Season 1 of Netflix’s Blue Eye Samurai unfolds, it’s easy to gravitate to the series. Many fans have dubbed the anime one of the streaming service’s best pieces of content, as these eight episodes have something for everyone. Mizu (voiced by Maya Erskine) goes on a bloody rampage over many decades to hunt and kill the white men responsible for ruining her life.

Blue Eye Samurai works in romance, drama, comedy, and romance, with Mizu encountering a slew of characters along the way. The ever-fluid, life-altering journey oscillates, shifting from one of rage, to Mizu seeking closure and healing. Unfortunately, the final couple of episodes toss her back on a bitter path of revenge. In the process, Blue Eye Samurai nods to quite a few popular franchises in Hollywood, very much wearing these influences on its sleeve.

Either way, Mizu decides to go after the white men. She holds them responsible for the death of her mother, remixing what Uma Thurman’s Bride endured in 2003’s Kill Bill. Fans would recall both movies had the Bride tracking down various assassins, cutting a bloody road to Bill, after he had the Bride’s husband killed. The Bride was left in a coma in Quentin Tarantino’s narrative, with Bill sending the message that she shouldn’t have left his fraternity of killers. Only he could say when it was time to retire, so he ripped the very idea of family away from her.

#Blue #Eye #Samurais #Biggest #Influences #Explained

Note:- (Not all news on the site expresses the point of view of the site, but we transmit this news automatically and translate it through programmatic technology on the site and not from a human editor. The content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.))