Chainsaw Man Explores Religion

Returning with yet another vice, Chainsaw Man chapter 140 explores religion.Continuing Denji’s woes in Part 2, he dispassionately listens to Sword Man’s tale of the Chainsaw Man Church, glossing over the fact that teenagers used violence to take over a former cult. Fan-favorite Kobeni’s younger brother, Nobana, who last appeared in Chapter 117, is reintroduced as a tour guide and religious devout. The chapter evolves with Denji’s short-lived interest in the religion before Nobana’s conspiracy theory leaves him apathetic again.”Adults’ mental faculties are diminished because of an American ultraviolet ray weapon in Japan’s air,” and America bears responsibility for “the current system of getting married after you become an adult,” according to Nobana. Fujimoto’s fixation on America may have been comedically disconcerting for many fans but shouldn’t come as a surprise. Chainsaw Man contains vast inspiration from American media — Tarantino films, notably, and further evidenced by a recent reference to A Clockwork Orange. The anime’s opening song was also filled with American movie references.RELATED: Chainsaw Man’s Kobeni May Be Annoying, But She Plays an Important Role

Returning with yet another vice, Chainsaw Man chapter 140 explores religion.

RELATED: Chainsaw Man’s Kobeni May Be Annoying, But She Plays an Important Role

Continuing Denji’s woes in Part 2, he dispassionately listens to Sword Man’s tale of the Chainsaw Man Church, glossing over the fact that teenagers used violence to take over a former cult. Fan-favorite Kobeni‘s younger brother, Nobana, who last appeared in Chapter 117, is reintroduced as a tour guide and religious devout. The chapter evolves with Denji’s short-lived interest in the religion before Nobana’s conspiracy theory leaves him apathetic again.

“Adults’ mental faculties are diminished because of an American ultraviolet ray weapon in Japan’s air,” and America bears responsibility for “the current system of getting married after you become an adult,” according to Nobana. Fujimoto’s fixation on America may have been comedically disconcerting for many fans but shouldn’t come as a surprise. Chainsaw Man contains vast inspiration from American media — Tarantino films, notably, and further evidenced by a recent reference to A Clockwork Orange. The anime’s opening song was also filled with American movie references.

#Chainsaw #Man #Explores #Religion

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.))