The Elusive Samurai Finds Its Moral Center in Kojirō and Ayako
The review argues that the show's emotional recovery from a child murder scene depends on the retainers, not the protagonist, to carry the theme of loyalty.
Reporting from 1 sources: Beneath the Tangles.
A new review of The Elusive Samurai focuses on the second episode's betrayal of Kunitoki and the introduction of retainers Kojirō and Ayako, who restore the protagonist Tokiyuki's faith in others. The piece contrasts the betrayal scene with the Gospel account of Judas, framing the retainers as models of faithful heroism.
The second episode of The Elusive Samurai depicts the murder of Kunitoki, a child betrayed by his uncle Godaīn Muneshige. The review at Beneath the Tangles compares the scene to Judas Iscariot's betrayal of Jesus in Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ, noting the shared elements of a nighttime search party and a false display of affection before the victim is taken. The piece argues that the show would become unpalatable at this point if not for the introduction of Kojirō Nezu and Ayako Mochizuki, two young warriors who become Tokiyuki's retainers. The reviewer describes them as always present without stealing the spotlight, and frames their loyalty as the story's counterweight to the betrayal. The series, produced by CloverWorks, aired its first season in 2024 and has a second season scheduled for July 2026.
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.
Sources
- Beneath the Tangles The Elusive Samurai, II: Kojirō and Ayako, Retainers of a Hidden Lord