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Lupin: Part 2 largely surpasses Part 1, and it even overcomes a few genuinely deflating rug-pulls to create a season with swift pacing, alluring characters, and a clockwork action climax right out of a spy thriller. Part 3 has already been confirmed, but this second block of episodes is a fun and satisfying conclusion to Diop’s story — at least, for the time being. Which returning Netflix show are you most excited to watch? The
Witcher Season 2Stranger Things Season 4 Locke & Key Season 2Ozark Season 4, Part 1The Umbrella Academy Season 3AnswerSee ResultsLast season’s finale, “Chapter 5,” ended with the gripping one-two-punch of Diop’s son Raoul (Etan Simon) being kidnapped just as detective and fellow Lupin enthusiast Youssef Guedira (Soufiane Guerrab) caught up to the master thief. “Chapter 6” has an admittedly awkward start, since Guedira finding Diop doesn’t seem to line up with what Part 1 had teased. However, once its
dramatic questions are clarified, the show falls back into its rhythm of entertaining action peppered with social commentary, largely born from placing non-white characters in traditionally white settings, like those of Maurice Leblanc’s original novels. Diop, the son of working-class Senegalese immigrants, is looked upon with far more suspicion than Arsène Lupin, even (and especially) when disguised as an aristocrat, while North African policeman Guedira — the modern equivalent of Leblanc’s Inspector Ganimard — doesn’t command the respect of his white peers the same way. The season’s first episode pits them against Pellegrini’s Black henchman Léonard (Adama Niane), and what ought to play out as a standard chase to save Diop’s son is imbued with surprising intensity, when all three men are forced to tiptoe around scornful onlookers in a small, mostly-Caucasian town not far from Étretat, where Part 1’s finale took place and where Leblanc himself once lived. Here's what we said about Lupin Part 1LoadingPlay"Lupin manages to have fun even with an antiquated premise — the story of a suave con-man who
charms his way through high-profile robberies — while adding just enough new spin on the concept to feel refreshing. Omar Sy may not have much to work with, but his alluring presence makes Assane Diop feel like a worthy successor to Arsène Lupin. "While the season frequently breaks the promises of its cliffhangers, its narrative still feels more incisive than Part 1. The show’s childhood flashbacks, previously deployed to fill scattered elements of Diop’s backstory, now portray episodic events from his early days as a teenage hustler (where he’s played with charm by the young Mamadou Haidara).
Amid this turmoil, an isolated facility shelters children and nurtures them in peace. However, as a few among them find out about the world beyond the narrow periphery of their nursery's walls, their curiosity about it slowly grows.
Meanwhile, in the outside world, young survivors Maru and Kiruko band together to search for a special place called Heaven, each for their own reasons. Carrying past burdens and tragic secrets, the two hope to find answers to the cruelty they have experienced in their lives and in the world, which still remains in tatters.
[Written by MAL Rewrite]EditBackground
Tengoku Daimakyou was released on Blu-ray in two volumes from August 30, 2023, to September 27, 2023. Visit MALxJapan MALxJapan -More than just anime- Your guide to 2024's Must-Read Manga is here 📖 Answer the Anime & Manga Survey to help shape the future of streaming Puppies, monster meat and k-pop loving yakuza?!?—here are Kodansha's top picks 📚 EditRelated AnimeAdaptation:Tengoku Daimakyou
More charactersCharacters & Voice Actors Kiruko Main Senbongi, Sayaka
Japanese Maru Main Satou, Gen
Japanese Mimihime Supporting Fukuen, Misato
Japanese Usami Supporting Takeuchi, Shunsuke
Japanese Shiro Supporting Takeuchi, Shunsuke
Japanese Ooma Supporting Kino, Hina
Japanese Kona Supporting Toyonaga, Toshiyuki
Japanese Totori Supporting Matsuoka, Misato
Japanese Juuichi Supporting Sakuya, Shunsuke
Japanese Tokio Supporting Yamamura, Hibiku
Japanese
More staff Staff Morihiro, Fumi Producer Kamei, Hiroshi Producer Cao, Cong Producer Yonezawa, Akira Producer
Edit Opening Theme Preview Spotify Apple Music Amazon Music Youtube Music "innocent arrogance" by BiSH Edit Ending Theme "innocent arrogance" by BiSH (eps 1) "誰も彼も何処も何も知らない" by ASOBI同盟 (eps 2-7) "誰も彼も何処も何も知らない (#08 Special Arrange" by ASOBI同盟 (eps 8)
Reviews Write review 106 Recommended 42 Mixed Feelings 23 Not Recommended All reviews (171) Jun 24, 2023 Mcsuper Recommended The theme of finding hope in a seemingly hopeless or dark world has been done before, in a slice of life way in Girls’ Last Tour, in a lovecraftian horror form in Made in Abyss, or in many other ways of which I haven’t seen before. Tengoku Daimakyo takes this theme, but has a sci-fi mystery backdrop to it, making it quite a unique experience, and one I haven’t really experienced personally.
What do we want from a sci-fi mystery show? Do we want
twists and turns, dark reveals, or unpredictability? Tengoku Daimakyo has all of that, but it also has the one narrative technique I . appreciate the most in media, which is “show, don’t tell”.
Ippo watching Ricardo and Date's match. After watching the
press conference between Date and Ricardo, Ippo received a call from Takamura to go with him for roadwork. Ippo went with Takamura to a park so that they could meet Date. When they met Date, they joined him in his roadwork to discuss the press conference and his upcoming match against Ricardo. with Ippo deeming Date as incredible and wished for him to become the world champion. When the WBA title match arrived, Ippo went to the Ryōgoku
Kokugikan to watch the match.