Analysis Of From The Animation To The Real World: Ghouls Are Roaring

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From the Animation to the Real World: Ghouls Are Roaring “[A]nimated feature films draw much of their dramatic intensity from the struggle between human and nonhuman creatures” (Halberstam 272). It seems this formula works very well for most animations because there is always existing conflicts on two or more different classes. While we are enjoying the show to see how many tricks involving in both parties, is there anything we should deeply consider for the part as human? The story takes place in one of the crowded city in Japan. Tokyo Ghoul (2014, directed by Shuhei Morita), describes a series of conflict, love and friendship from the human to ghoul. The opening focuses on an ordinary college student, Ken Kaneki, who is interested in literature. One day, he meets a young beautiful lady, is called Rize Kamishiro, who is reading the same novel as Kaneki in a coffee shop. After greeting with each other, Kaneki invites Rize to visit his favourite bookstore during weekend, and surprisingly, Rize accepted. For Kaneki, Rize is a polite and pretty girl, who loves reading the books written by the same author he loved. So, he thinks it is a great opportunity to get closer with her via dating. It reflects that teenagers don‘t realize the problem in speed dating. Rize pretends as a friendly and soft human girl in order …show more content…
But she is accidentally killed by a huge platform fallen from a skyscraper. Later, both of them are transported to an emergency room, and the surgical operation eventually transplants most of the live organs from Rize to Kaneki, so he can survive. When Kaneki realizes that his diet preference becomes very strange after the surgery, he tries to taste all of his previous favourite snacks, drinks and food, but for him, they are entirely disgusting. Surprisingly, he finds that a fresh bleeding human body smells like the dishes cooked by his loved

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