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Monday 10 January 2022

Attack on Titan: Final Season Part 2 Premiere Review

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The following contains spoilers for the premiere of Attack on Titan: Final Season Part 2, which is now streaming on Funimation and Crunchyroll.

Attack on Titan is finally back and at its most metal yet. The Final Season Part 2 premiere certainly hits the ground running with brutal, absolutely savage action, some devastating reveals, emotional moments, and further blurring of lines. Though this episode is mostly table setting, it still does a great job of reminding us of the story so far, reiterating the stakes, and likely building up to a crushing finale.

The episode wastes no time getting right to the biggest unanswered question from last season: what the hell happened to Levi? Well, pour one out for the baddest fighter on Paradis, because it is rather hard to see how he could come back from this one. The poor man's face is messed up, his body is mangled, and he is missing a few of his sword-holding, ODM gear-using fingers. Even if Hange is lying and he is still alive — it was rather odd that she would not let anyone examine the body, and then quickly ran away and threw Levi and herself down a river — it will not be the same Levi we knew and loved. And yet, what makes the opening scene absolutely infuriating is seeing Zeke, the most sadistic person on the show, emerge from the womb of a Titan fresh as a daisy and ready to go. His return also comes with some hints of lore, as we see Zeke next to a girl who he claims built him up using sand, in a strange astral plane looking like the "Paths" Eren Krueger explained back in Season 3.

The rest of the episode deals with the assault on Paradis by Marleyan forces, and the latest round in the never-ending brawl between Eren and Reiner. It is a testament to writer Hiroshi Seko and director Yuichiro Hayashi that the fight scenes work as both roaring spectacle and as the culmination of 76 episodes' worth of character building that the little kid angry and scared of Titans is now a one-man-army capable of holding his own against not one, but three Titan shifters. Eren has truly become the devil of Paradis, and seeing him in action evokes the same terrifying awe that the Colossal and Armored Titans did back in Season 1. Studio MAPPA outdid themselves with the animation this episode, with the 3D animation having more weight to it than last season, as well as a mix of 3D and 2D during the Titan fights that gives the action a more grounded and hard-hitting feel that harkens back to the work of Studio WIT in the earlier seasons. Likewise, the episode features some of the most ferocious action in the entire show, which is saying a lot, both in the savagery of the Titan-on-Titan action, and in the brutality of seeing human soldiers fight against each other on the ground, which is now more reminiscent of a war drama than a zombie show like the first few seasons.

This continues the blurring of lines that we saw last season, as it becomes increasingly more difficult to be sure of who to root for, with the fight changing from being about one side or the other, to being about individuals. We see those like Commander Magath, who shows genuine care for Gabi and Falco, or Reiner, fighting Eren not out of loyalty for Marley, but because he knows they are both suffering, that they've suffered for too long, and just wants to end that once and for all. This episode makes it clear that the ultimate threat is one that affects everyone, with the rumbling being capable of flattening the entire world. And make no mistake, the show is not so subtly building up the rumbling as its endgame, at least during the opening title sequence, which is set to SiM's "The Rumbling." The sequence is an incredible mix of sounds and visuals, with the show finally embracing its edgy, metal self in what is possibly its most headbanging opening so far, animated beautifully by Takashi Kojima.

Trapped in the middle of all this are the remaining members of the Levi Squad, who are still trying to make sense of Eren's actions and figure out if he's still on their side. Since it doesn't feel like the show is going to outright tell us what Eren is thinking, as he's been mostly mute the past few episodes, changing the focus to Mikasa, Armin, Jean, and Connie is the right move, highlighting just how much things have changed and evolved, and also the losses we've suffered along the way. The most emotionally devastating moment of the episode comes as Connie bursts out, being fed up with all the betrayals they've had to endure so far, from Annie and Reiner, to now Eren. That it is Connie that points this out, the one who suffered the most at the hands of Zeke, with whom Eren is so openly working, makes Eren's actions all the harder to justify and root for.

This episode reaffirms Attack on Titan as the biggest anime event of this generation.

And so, episode 76 ends just as dire as it begins, with Eren bleeding out and pinned against a wall, the members of Levi Squad helpless, Levi either dead or dying, and Marley seemingly unstoppable. Time will tell what Eren's plan is, but this first episode of the season reaffirms Attack on Titan as the biggest anime event of this generation, and a titan of modern anime (pun very much intended).



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