my home hero
Anime News Network.
Archived from the original on December 11, 2019.
Retrieved May 13, 2020. ^ Akers, Isaac (November 28, 2015). "My Hero Academia Vol. #02 Manga Review". The
Fandom Post. Archived from the original on May 17, 2020. Retrieved May 17, 2020. ^ Izumi, Nobuyuki (December 6, 2020). 『鬼滅の刃』はなぜ「完結」したのか 物語の続け方/終わらせ方を考える.
[12][13] Thorfinn's crew is later joined by Gudrid, an Icelandic girl fleeing an unwanted marriage; Karli, a baby boy the crew find orphaned on the Faroe Islands alongside a dog; and Hild, the daughter of an inventor with a grudge against Thorfinn. [14] After attempting to fight a group of Jomsvikings, the group are captured and end up in service under Thorkell. Thorfinn recommences his journey with his crew, drawing away the assassins around a set of islands while the rest of the crew escapes toward Odense. They meet Captain Vagn, the leader of a rebel
camp of Jomsvikings who seeks to usurp power from Floki before it goes into the hands of Floki's grandson Baldr. [15][16] The surviving men of Vagn's camp swear allegiance to Thorkell, who defeats Floki and captures him and Baldr. Thorfinn is temporarily made leader of the Jomsvikings and carries out orders from Canute to disband the Jomsvikings and spare Floki and Baldr from execution. Free from the Vikings, Thorfinn's group continues their journey. [17] Final Arc[edit] Two years later, Thorfinn's crew returns to Iceland with the wealth they acquired from selling narwhal horns in Greece. Thorfinn and Gudrid marry and raise Karli as their son. [18] With the resources promised by Halfdan, Thorfinn begins to assemble a crew to settle in Vinland. Thorfinn creates a peaceful haven where
weapons are no longer necessary by clearing a portion of the forest and successfully cultivating wheat.
Live-action director Shusuke Kaneko commented in response, "If preventing them from seeing this movie is going to make kids better, then why not prevent them from watching all bad news?". [13] In regards to the 2019 The Twilight Zone episode "The Comedian",
Rosie Knight of The Hollywood Reporter stated that "Samir's story appears to take a large influence from . Death Note. "[136] The Simpsons has parodied Death Note in both comic books and animation with the 2008 comic book story "Murder, He Wrote" in The Simpsons Treehouse of Horror #14,[137][138] where Bart receives the notebook from the Ryuk-ified ghost of Krusty the Clown, and the "Death Tome" segment of the 2022 television episode "Treehouse of Horror XXXIII", with Lisa receiving the titular book.