しょう
seen from Thailand

seen from Canada

seen from Germany
seen from Canada
seen from Singapore
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Canada
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from South Korea
seen from Türkiye
seen from Germany
seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
しょう
the third and final part to the kingdon season 2 compilation!
part one: (x)
part two: (x)
part three: (you are here)
Social Medias
I have 1) an essay to write 2) mognitive psience 2000 induced tunnel vision (incurable)
[ID in alt text]
Isekai victim and her team of beasts
Dorohedoro ✹ Season 2 ✹ Episode 9
Of course Ritshou complement each other to an uncanny degree but in particular I’m fascinated by how violence influences their dynamic. "We could never even fight like brothers because I'd have no way to protect myself" versus "yeah okay maybe it didn't work the last four times but certainly the FIFTH headlong charge will stop my dad". Ritsu’s chronic fear of rocking the boat versus Shou’s smug comfort in face of aggression and hostility. Like. Their first meeting is a fistfight and Shou absolutely wipes the floor with him. Shou is then so enamored by this boy who's ass he just kicked that he rewires his entire plan to include him, to hype him up, to yell some self-esteem into him because no! He is strong and he can fight back!! Ritsu just has to lock in and believe it for himself! Shou did it, Shou overcame his fear and despair with the power of hope, surely Ritsu can do it too! And Ritsu, who has spent his whole life shying away from violence— until a couple weeks ago, of course, when he went sicko mode and beat up delinquents every day for the hell of it. Ritsu who is still grappling with his trauma around helplessness and hurt, who sees Shou and throws himself swinging into his first real fight, and yeah he loses, but there is no fear when he stares down this kid in the halls of the 7th Division. There is significantly more fear when that kid rolls up to his house, but less than twelve hours later, they're buddying up and sacrificing their lives for each other, so that clearly didn't stick.
(I think about that a lot, by the way. It took years and years for Ritsu to resolve his fear of his own brother. With Shou it took one afternoon.) Violence colors both of their histories— it’s hard to forget, really. Ritsu nearly died in a horrible accident, bleeding at his brother's hands. Shou is less clear about the details, but we see his father soon enough, and there's not much ambiguity in what happens next. Does that trauma only tie them closer, or does it tangle into itself and complicate the whole mess? Ritsu wants to fight because he wants to feel safe. Shou, arguably, wants the same. Do they brawl or roughhouse? Does it ever go too far, too deep into familiar territory? Or is it better, somehow, because yeah we're replaying old steps but now it's different. Now I'm different. At last, finally, war is over. Shou can be gentle. Ritsu can discard the soft placations. Do they heal in opposite directions, crossing paths as they go? Is there a point when they look in the mirror and see each other?