The Promised Neverland’s first season is an enticing thriller anime about a farm that raises children for consumption. However, the children incite an uprising to escape their fates. Surprisingly, this gruesome storyline is not dissimilar to DreamWorks’s stop-motion classic, Chicken Run. While the anime and the film still have many differences, they are the same at their core.
The Promised Neverland and Chicken Run both feature a band of individuals trying to escape their prison. They also have similar villains and plucky female protagonists who are determined to achieve freedom. Fans may not have noticed the likenesses when they first watched these tales, but once they see how similar they are, it’s impossible not to make comparisons.
However, the reality of their situation is that the orphanage is really a farm where they breed the best children possible for consumption. Students who score well are kept until they are twelve. Students with the lowest scores are adopted each month unless a child is turning twelve. Emma and Norman make the gruesome discovery of their reality when they follow one of their “siblings” to her adoption to return her stuffed bunny. After this discovery, the eldest children, Emma, Ray, and Norman, devise a plan to help get all the children out of the orphanage compound and into the real world.
The Promised Neverland’s first season is an enticing thriller anime about a farm that raises children for consumption. However, the children incite an uprising to escape their fates. Surprisingly, this gruesome storyline is not dissimilar to DreamWorks’s stop-motion classic, Chicken Run. While the anime and the film still have many differences, they are the same at their core.
The Promised Neverland and Chicken Run both feature a band of individuals trying to escape their prison. They also have similar villains and plucky female protagonists who are determined to achieve freedom. Fans may not have noticed the likenesses when they first watched these tales, but once they see how similar they are, it’s impossible not to make comparisons.
However, the reality of their situation is that the orphanage is really a farm where they breed the best children possible for consumption. Students who score well are kept until they are twelve. Students with the lowest scores are adopted each month unless a child is turning twelve. Emma and Norman make the gruesome discovery of their reality when they follow one of their “siblings” to her adoption to return her stuffed bunny. After this discovery, the eldest children, Emma, Ray, and Norman, devise a plan to help get all the children out of the orphanage compound and into the real world.
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