

And so I cannot bring myself to care when it tries to play Hanabi as the victim, the tragic heroine. They deserve everything that happens to them. It becomes impossible to feel any empathy for them and the grief they are constantly plunging themselves into. But it escalates, and they, and just about everyone else surrounding them, wants more, more, until nothing remains in their hollow lives but sex and sleaze. If that is where the series stood, all may have been fine. And so the cycle, their tedious lives continue. But they still can't give up on the one they love.


They can't love each other because they love someone else. Hanabi and Mugi are lonely because they cannot be united with their loved ones, and so they seek to find some solace in each other. There is seldom a character within Kuzu no Honkai who behaves sensibly or is capable of thinking with any other organ except their genitalia. If you found anime such as Aku no Hana and School Days difficult to watch, you might have yourself something of a challenge here, too. It is misery for misery's sake, existing almost exclusively to make you feel like crap. Kuzu no Honkai doesn't have that message. There exist a wealth of fiction that, while depressing, and perhaps never even enjoyable, are still valuable for the message they are trying to make. It isn't necessary for a story to make you feel happy. The characters are relentlessly trampled upon, until, indeed, as the title might suggest, they are reduced to human trash. It introduces itself as a melancholic tale of unrequited love, and quickly transforms into something far more ugly. The full cast of the Netflix adaptation of The Sandman is below.There aren't many anime as uncomfortable as Kuzu no Honkai. The Sandman cast: Every actor in Netflix's DC Comics drama

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