#Kadode Koyama
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#dead dead demon's dededededestruction#dead dead demons dededededestruction#dead dead demons#dddd#inio asano#mangacap#manga panel#manga aesthetic#manga#monochrome#manga cap#ouran nakagawa#kadode koyama
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Summer 2024 Anime Overview: DEAD DEAD DEMONS DEDEDEDE DESTRUCTION
A giant mothership is hovering over Tokyo. The aliens haven’t done anything or even made themselves known yet, but Japan and America are already trying to blow that UFO up, and show off who has the best weapons, causing many civilian casualties along the way. While all this happens, two girls are just casually living their lives. But are they as normal as they appear?
One thing I want to say is if you watch this anime and care about being intensely spoiled, do not watch "episode 0" until you've finished episode 16. It actually slots chronologically between episode 16 and 17, and that's where the episode took place in the manga, so I have no idea why they did that. Fortunately I had someone to warn me about that, so I will be that someone for you.
Dead Dead Demons DeDeDeDe Destruction or De x 8 as I will be calling it, can be really tough show to watch—not because it’s bad, it’s very good, but because of how depressing and visceral it is at times, and how devastatingly accurate it is to the shitshow of our world. This tends to be balanced a bit by the touching friendships (and possibly? More?) of the very likeable cast of teenagers…but you also feel a huge sense of dread about their safety as things ramp up and their stories deepen.
The anime goes hard on criticizing the military industrial complex, Japan’s government, America’s government, xenophobia, treatment of immigrants, rich people, and conspiracy theorists. All things I also hate, so that’s great. What hurts is how you could easily see the events happening—waging war on the aliens despite no provocation, people using an app to to hunt down and slaughter them...
It shows how even some of the protestors of the genocide use their movement to cover their own selfish motivations, meanwhile countries taking the situation as an opportunity to vie for power and dominance, rich government officials lie to their people and abandon them…obviously there's a lot of commentary here on how we dehumanize immigrants and minorities and enable genocides for capitalism and political power.
It's very bleak, and there were a lot of episode that had me just feeling sad, especially comparing it to current events. But there's also this interesting focus on normal people trying to live their lives during this alien "invasion", and the kids who still go through the dramas and upsets of everyday life. And especially the “I’d burn down the world for you” intense emotional relationship between Kadode and Ouran, the two teen girl leads.
Ouran is the main lead, and she’s a chuuni beyond chuuni, acting wacky and cheerful and spouting nonsense-- except if you pay attention, she's saying some pretty valid things—critiques of capitalism, war, government surveillance—but then following it up with something wild like “and that’s why I should rule the world”. You get the sense she’s cloaking an awareness of how shit the world is in humor, and as the show goes on and as her surprisingly intense and weird backstory unfolds, it becomes clear why that is.
The relationship between Ouran and Kadode is the center of everything--their bond IS the show. It's that kind of ride-or-die, I'd-kill-for-you, I'll-be-by-your-side-even-if-the-whole-world-is-against-you, in-every-life-i'd-find-you-and-love-you, soul-bonded, fiery devotion and love. They are the most important person in each other's lives, full stop. It's those kind of relationships that are so transcendent it goes beyond simple definitions of romantic and platonic. In other words, my kind of shit exactly.
But, as far as romance goes, Ouran, at least, is definitely queer and the depths of her determination to keep Kadode safe in a world that wants to destroy her girl that would make Homura Madoka Magica blush. (Kadode is more ambiguous, but she’s definitely soul bonded with Ouran. And honestly should just date Ouran because god she needs to be rescued).
There’s also a gentle empathy for marginalized people underneath all the horror—the girls befriend an alien trying to survive in the guise of a human, and it doesn’t seem like a coincidence that the first person our alien tells absolutely everything to is the gnc/potentially trans person of the group, Makoto (To be specific, they seem to still be figuring out their identity, but they definitely present feminine and specifically came to Tokyo because their small town wouldn’t be okay with how they like to dress). The way Makoto immediately shields their alien friend from others when they make the reveal that they saying “Don’t let them see, it’s not safe” and how it’s followed up by the alien reassuring Makoto that their friends will be okay with it if they take their wig off to swim...it makes the metaphor extremely clear, and it’s always nice when a series can explore marginalized characters both textually and metaphorically.
Through the kids, we get kernels of hope in this story, a reassurance there are kinder people in this world, and a hope that kindness will endure.
As depressing as the story can be, what it has to say is important and it doesn’t hold back in making you see what it’s going for—from the “Cool Japan” logo flashing right before the Japanese government gives a weapons demonstration that will later kill citizens and destroy innocents...
...to the Trump-alike American President (and let me tell you it’s startling to be watching a show in Japanese and suddenly Donald Trump impression in perfect English) *(had to use the manga here because Crunchyroll didn't close-caption this part :/)
Then there's the American tourists, who were clearly va’d by someone really good at English, potentially a native speaker, and it’s incredibly funny how much of their dialogue has “fuck” in it and seeing the subtitles skip over that. Also much of their dialogue is treating the devastated Japan as a tourist attraction and saying how funny it all is to them. Logan Paul has entered the chat.
De x 8 very clearly hates America and recognizes it as a blood thirsty colonial power, which is correct, but the show is just as hard on it’s own country, saying the Japanese government would happily get back on the colonizing horse if they had an excuse, and many citizwns would mindlessly support them.
A small thing I appreciate is far from the usual anime aesthetic where everyone is blandly cute, the anime gives a ton of people ridiculously cartoony features that make everyone distinct—and being goofy looking is not meant to indicate a character is stupid or ugly—Makoto’s a super sympathetic character with giant cartoon buck teeth and one character that’s even pointed out as pretty has like, a pig snout nose. (It also makes it so the character noted as being drop dead gorgeous...actually is, instead of coming off as just as conventionally attractive as the rest)
Soooo a lot of good stuff going into this story. Let’s talk about some caveats.
There’s a continuing storyline between Kadode and her adult teacher, who takes her to his place to have sex with her. When he does, she ends up ditching him because of her feels for Ouran (gay) and I thought that would be the end of it, but nooope he’s a groomer, they pick up dating again when she’s in college, literally months after the previous encounter. The dude is presented as a scumbag, he cheats on his girlfriend, he seems generally apathetic, his clear discomfort with Kadode calling him “sensei” shows that he knows what he’s doing is wrong …and ultimately the relationship is shown to be unfulfilling, with Kadode directly stating so and acknowledging he’s just advantage. That doesn’t stop it from being uncomfortable though, especially since it’s confirmed he and Kadode have sex eventually (offscreen, thank god) and honestly, I felt it dragged on way too long. The first encounter pretty much demonstrated everything we needed to know about the whole thing in my view.
And of course there’s a ton of potentially triggering content in a story like this—from genocide to suicide to child murder to almost anything you can think of. Also like, one character has a sister complex, but on the milder side for anime. One where it’s conceivably platonic, and it’s not like he goes after her boyfriend Yuri Forger style, so it doesn’t bother me too much. There's also a good dose of fatphobia. And finally moment where a woman reveals she has ADHD (which I've never actually heard anyone say in anime so I actually got a little excited the more fool me) and then is almost immediately shown to be faking it.
The ending…is another big sticking point for me. It feels disconnected from the rest of the series, mainly focusing on a character we barely know and likely don’t care about and spending very little time with the characters we do, presenting an interesting status quo and immediately abandoning it, and while earlier episodes of the series presented "actions have consequences and we gotta live with them" as a major theme, it was suddenly like, actually they don’t!
The ultimate ending, again, hinges on a decision from a character we don’t care about and honestly feels like a deus ex machina. It felt almost like the author really wanted a happier ending but knew that wasn’t in line with the story he’s told so far, so he just tacked it on. Or maybe it was an editorial mandate, who knows. I think the most satisfying way to see watch episode 1-16 as its own pretty satisfying complete story (which works really well), and then treat episodes 0 and 17 as their own separate thing, a potential additional ending but not the definitive one. At least that’s what I did.
Overall, De x 8 is a show with a lot to say and it gives you plenty to chew on. While it is often depressing, it is very rewarding. The unbreakable bond between two messy girls, as well as the moments of ordinary joy and small human/alien journeys are the core of the show, and what makes it shine. I definitely encourage you to give it a watch. It's being really slept on, and it shouldn't be.
#dead dead demon's dededededestruction#dead dead demons#dead dead demon's dededede destruction#dead dead demons dededededestruction#dead dead demons dededede destruction#god help me this title#anime#summer 2024 anime#anime overview#my reviews#ouran nakagawa#kadode koyama#dddd#dead demon's destruction
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FUCK THE SYSTEM. LICK SPACESHIP PARTS. BE GAY. DO CRIMES.
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Dead Dead Demon’s DedededeDestruction | Ep. 1
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something something tv girl
#dead dead demons dededede destruction#ouran nakagawa#nakagawa ouran#kadode koyama#koyama kadode#dead dead demons#dededede#inio asano
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Doodle of the Dead Dead Demon's DeDeDeDe Destruction MCs
Sillies
#drawings#my art <3#my art stuff#dead dead demon's dededededestruction#manga#ontan#kadode koyama#ouran nakagawa
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Koyama Kadode & Nakagawa Ouran // Dead Dead Demon's Dededededestruction
Wonderful Hobby Selection by Good Smile Company
#koyama kadode#nakagawa ouran#ouran nakagawa#kadode koyama#dead dead demons dededededestruction#nonscale figure#wonderful hobby selection#good smile company#anime figure#anime#figure#upload#prepainted
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i’m very normal about this manga
#dead dead demons dededededestruction#dead dead demon's dededede destruction#dead dead demons#ouran nakagawa#kadode koyama
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youtube
“Dead Dead Demons Dededede Destruction” The Teaser Trailer
The official website for the two-part anime film Dead Dead Demons Dededede Destruction unveiled a teaser video and a crucial graphic for the first film. While the second film is slated to launch in Japanese theatres on April 19, the first film will debut on March 22.
#dead dead demons dededede destruction#kadode koyama#ouran nakagawa#ontan#keita ooba#anime#anime film#anime news#Youtube
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Chatty AF 214: Dead Dead Demons Dededede Destruction Retrospective
Vrai, Peter, and Toni look back at the anime adaptation of Inio Asano’s sapphic apocalypse, a series that couldn’t be more timely in its exploration of genocide and an “everyday apocalypse.”
Episode Information
Date Recorded: September 23rd, 2024 Hosts: Vrai, Peter, Toni
Episode Breakdown
0:00:00 Intro 0:01:28 Also there’s a manga 0:03:11 Spoiler warning 0:04:09 Content warning 0:04:29 Content vs tone 0:07:41 Anime vs manga 0:10:12 Oba and the aliens 0:17:34 Fascism, colonialism, the military industrial complex, and corporate complicity 0:22:14 Activism and futility 0:28:13 Kenichi and Hiroshi 0:30:29 Collective vs individual action 0:35:21 Kenichi by way of Naomi Klein 0:39:28 Dostoevsky has entered the chat 0:40:23 Time for metatext 0:46:35 Watchmen-like narrative structure 0:51:25 The anime is gayer? 1:01:37 Makoto appreciation 1:06:39 The English dub 1:09:37 Adaptation quality 1:15:05 Final thoughts? 1:19:29 About the title 1:21:22 Outro
#dead dead demon's dededededestruction#dead dead demons#dddd#inio asano#kadode koyama#oran nakagawa#ouran nakagawa#kadontan#chatty af#podcast#wlw#sapphic#SoundCloud
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#kadode koyama#dead dead demon's dededededestruction#dead dead demons dededededestruction#dead dead demons#dddd#inio asano#mangacap#manga panel#manga aesthetic#manga#monochrome#manga cap
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shes tiny and she waves, kadode koyama
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average japanese winter shenanigans
#Dead Dead Demon's DeDeDeDe Destruction#Keita Oba#Ouran Nakagawa#Kadode Koyama#[dial-up modem noises]
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Dead Dead Demon’s DedededeDestruction | ep. 2
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