Kill Blue Episode 1 Review: Age-Regression Premise Carries Uneasy Baggage
The review highlights how Kill Blue's de-aging premise creates a tension between effective action storytelling and uncomfortable implications around age, romance, and sexual harassment that the premiere does not resolve.
Reporting from 1 sources: Anime Feminist.
The premiere of Kill Blue introduces Juzo Ogami, a 40-year-old assassin who kills only the worst criminals and has never known a normal life. After being stung by a genetically-modified wasp during a mission, he regresses to a 13-year-old boy. Now he must attend middle school to protect his boss's daughter while a cure is sought. Anime Feminist's review praises the casual atmosphere and strong action sequences, which effectively convey Juzo's decades of experience. However, the reviewer expresses significant discomfort with several narrative elements. There is concern the series may pair the adult-minded Juzo with a middle school love interest, a dynamic the reviewer considers difficult to handle well. The premiere also includes a scene where a comrade hesitates to save girls from a panda-masked pervert, which the reviewer found troubling. The reviewer notes Juzo's excitement at discovering he loves learning, calling it bittersweet given his denied childhood. The review concludes the series is not the most original concept but was enjoyable, and notes the completed manga suggests a full adaptation.
Anime Feminist's review of Kill Blue's first episode centers on the paradox of an adult protagonist forced back into middle school. The reviewer notes the show's casual, Great Pretender-like atmosphere works well for the action beats, which showcase Juzo's lethal competence. But the same premise raises red flags. The reviewer explicitly worries about a potential romance between Juzo and a middle schooler, calling age-gap relationships notoriously difficult to write. A scene involving a panda-masked pervert and a comrade's hesitation to intervene is singled out as particularly jarring. The reviewer also laments that the opening theme suggests the series will not explore Juzo rebuilding a bond with his daughter, a subplot they found promising. Despite these reservations, the review acknowledges the premiere was a good time and notes the completed manga likely means a full adaptation is planned.
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.
Sources
- Anime Feminist Kill Blue - Episode 1