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Paranoia Agent Episode 3 English Dub

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These are dangerous times we're living in, and dangerous times require a dangerous man. Officer Hirukawa is ready to be that man - a family man who's tough on crime, ready to make the tough calls and crack the big cases. Though he's beaten down by villains and harried by his past, he won't falter in his goals. He's going to crack this case, stop these thugs, and build his family the house they deserve.

Paranoia Agent (Japanese: 妄想代理人, Hepburn: Mōsō Dairinin) is a Japanese anime television series created by director Satoshi Kon and produced by Madhouse about a social phenomenon in Musashino, Tokyo caused by a juvenile serial assailant named Lil' Slugger (the English equivalent to Shōnen Bat, which translates to 'Bat Boy').The plot relays between a large cast of people affected in. Paranoia Agent - Exclusively on Funimation - START WATCHING WITH A 14 DAY FREE TRIAL. Read reviews on the anime Mousou Dairinin (Paranoia Agent) on MyAnimeList, the internet's largest anime database. Idmss plus for pc. The infamous Shounen Bat (Lil' Slugger) is terrorizing the residents of Musashino City. Flying around on his rollerblades and beating people down with a golden baseball bat, the assailant seems impossible to catch—much less understand. His first victim, the well-known yet timid. Paranoia Agent is without question the blueprint for the proper way for Anime to do the seductively dark and complex structure of human nature. In defining existential horror in comparison; the layers of human vice and corruption are laid bare, without giving away the true motivation of the avenging nature of the plot; thus allowing the viewer. What with the alternate selves and identity questions, this week's Paranoia Agent largely played out like a very concise version of Perfect Blue. As the episode proceeded, Harumi's approaching.

Of course, this is Paranoia Agent, so Hirukawa's actually terrible. Jumping focus characters again this week, we got an episode focused on the most crooked of cops, a man funding his dream home with money extorted from a prostitution ring. When the flunky pimp he's been browbeating is replaced by a boss wanting his money back, Hirukawa is forced to turn to petty robbery to keep himself afloat. And as the stakes get higher and Hirukawa descends into his own delusions of grandeur, it begins to look like Hirukawa himself might need a hero, one reflective of this strange, undefinable age.

This was a more straightforward episode than the last couple, with less of a focus on evoking a very specific tone than either Yuichi or Harumi's stories. The execution was more workmanly overall, telling a more familiar story spiced up by a couple well-chosen stylistic diversions. The first and most noteworthy of these was Hirukawa's slowly building delusion of heroism. From the title 'A Man's Path' onward, the episode used consistent cuts to an old-fashioned manga to depict Hirukawa's internal self, contrasting this with sequences of him bowing and scraping to mob bosses or stealing purses from little old ladies. It was a neat stylistic trick and a handy framing device (one that accompanied this episode's repeated cuts to both billboards and Hirukawa staring at his house-to-be), but it also served to center this episode as directly focused on the question of justice and heroism in the modern age.

Because the focus character was one of our chief investigator's coworkers, we got to spend more time with our eternally put-upon chief, who put his own big question in very stark terms. At the beginning, he once again stated his fundamental belief - 'there has to be causality between these cases.' The chief is a traditional man, and he believes in traditional answers. But by the end of this episode, he's forced to concede that some crimes just might not make sense, and some criminals 'might not have so many motives anymore.' 'That's the kind of generation we're living in,' he continues, casting the blame for modern insecurity on the young people of today. But he's not going to take this lying down - he's 'going to grab hold of this generation!' Good for him.

Of course, in an episode focused on a tired old cop falling into delusions of grandeur, the chief's words ring a little hollow. What separates him from Hirukawa, the man who sees himself as an old manga hero in a world far simpler than our actual one? What makes him just, and not just a relic of an age that never really existed? Gta online macbook. The episode's climactic conversation between these two emphasizes this disconnect through their visual and conversational interplay - as the chief steels himself with his simplistic credo, Hirukawa cheers him on and lauds the bar for its choice of old-fashioned matches. For all Hirukawa's debauchery and the chief's firm justice, in the end they might just be two old men rambling into their cups.

Agent

Hirukawa, at least, eventually seems to realize he is not a hero, but is in fact just as in need of a savior as anyone. 'Can't somebody stop me?' he cries at the end, begging for someone to save him from himself, from his responsibilities, from his displacement in his own world. His cry echoes the thoughts of all the characters so far, and once again, Shonen Bat arrives. The hero of the day, ready to strike you down and take your worries away.

Unfortunately, Hirukawa's still all hopped up on drugs and adrenaline from his robberies, so he takes the hit like a champion and comes back swinging. So now Shonen Bat is captured, Hirukawa's more or less an actual hero, and we're only four episodes in. Huh.

This was a very solid episode of Paranoia Agent, trading the oppressive tonal focus of last week for a more straightforward story that let the show more directly attack some of its central questions. It was a bit less of an aesthetic highlight (though Hirukawa's very expressive face was excellent, and the contrast of manga and reality in the final sequences were compelling as well), but that's because it had other priorities. And beyond that, this episode also went some distance to address my central complaint from last week - though Hirukawa was fairly despicable, it seemed like this episode had a real sympathy for the chief, even as it undercut his proud words. He might not be a real hero, but he's at least trying to be one.

Rating: A-

Paranoia Agent Episodes

Nick writes about anime, storytelling, and the meaning of life at Wrong Every Time.

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Status:Complete

Released:2004

Creator

Creator

Cast

Lil' Slugger
Paranoia agent episode 3 english dub
Tsukiko Sagi
Maromi
Keiichi Ikari
Mysterious Old Woman
Mysterious Old Man
Akio Kawazu
Yūichi Taira
Shōgo Ushiyama
Masami Hirukawa

Video trailer

Overview

The infamous Shounen Bat (Lil' Slugger) is terrorizing the residents of Musashino City. Flying around on his rollerblades and beating people down with a golden baseball bat, the assailant seems impossible to catch—much less understand. His first victim, the well-known yet timid character designer Tsukiko Sagi, is suspected of orchestrating the attacks. Believed only by her anthropomorphic pink stuffed animal, Maromi, Tsukiko is just one of Shounen Bat's many victims. As Shounen Bat continues his relentless assault on the town, detectives Keiichi Ikari and Mitsuhiro Maniwa begin to investigate the identity of the attacker. However, more and more people fall victim to the notorious golden bat, and news of the assailant begins circulating around the town. Paranoia starts to set in as chilling rumors spread amongst adults and children alike. Will the two detectives be able to unravel the truth behind Shounen Bat, or will the paranoia get to them first?

TMDb Rating7.8 83 votes
Paranoia

Paranoia Agent Episode 3 English Dubbed

Last air dateMay. 18, 2004

Paranoia Agent Episode 3 English Dub Sub

Episodes13

Paranoia Agent Episode 1

Agent

Hirukawa, at least, eventually seems to realize he is not a hero, but is in fact just as in need of a savior as anyone. 'Can't somebody stop me?' he cries at the end, begging for someone to save him from himself, from his responsibilities, from his displacement in his own world. His cry echoes the thoughts of all the characters so far, and once again, Shonen Bat arrives. The hero of the day, ready to strike you down and take your worries away.

Unfortunately, Hirukawa's still all hopped up on drugs and adrenaline from his robberies, so he takes the hit like a champion and comes back swinging. So now Shonen Bat is captured, Hirukawa's more or less an actual hero, and we're only four episodes in. Huh.

This was a very solid episode of Paranoia Agent, trading the oppressive tonal focus of last week for a more straightforward story that let the show more directly attack some of its central questions. It was a bit less of an aesthetic highlight (though Hirukawa's very expressive face was excellent, and the contrast of manga and reality in the final sequences were compelling as well), but that's because it had other priorities. And beyond that, this episode also went some distance to address my central complaint from last week - though Hirukawa was fairly despicable, it seemed like this episode had a real sympathy for the chief, even as it undercut his proud words. He might not be a real hero, but he's at least trying to be one.

Rating: A-

Paranoia Agent Episodes

Nick writes about anime, storytelling, and the meaning of life at Wrong Every Time.

discuss this in the forum (110 posts) |
bookmark/share with:

back to Classic Review: Paranoia Agent
Episode Review homepage / archives

Status:Complete

Released:2004

Creator

Creator

Cast

Lil' Slugger
Tsukiko Sagi
Maromi
Keiichi Ikari
Mysterious Old Woman
Mysterious Old Man
Akio Kawazu
Yūichi Taira
Shōgo Ushiyama
Masami Hirukawa

Video trailer

Overview

The infamous Shounen Bat (Lil' Slugger) is terrorizing the residents of Musashino City. Flying around on his rollerblades and beating people down with a golden baseball bat, the assailant seems impossible to catch—much less understand. His first victim, the well-known yet timid character designer Tsukiko Sagi, is suspected of orchestrating the attacks. Believed only by her anthropomorphic pink stuffed animal, Maromi, Tsukiko is just one of Shounen Bat's many victims. As Shounen Bat continues his relentless assault on the town, detectives Keiichi Ikari and Mitsuhiro Maniwa begin to investigate the identity of the attacker. However, more and more people fall victim to the notorious golden bat, and news of the assailant begins circulating around the town. Paranoia starts to set in as chilling rumors spread amongst adults and children alike. Will the two detectives be able to unravel the truth behind Shounen Bat, or will the paranoia get to them first?

TMDb Rating7.8 83 votes

Paranoia Agent Episode 3 English Dubbed

Last air dateMay. 18, 2004

Paranoia Agent Episode 3 English Dub Sub

Episodes13

Paranoia Agent Episode 1

Paranoia Agent Watch Dub

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