Because it’s Aggretsuko, of course, said argument plays out over a rap battle, but still, the point is the same: People aren’t just good or bad because they’re you’re friends or because they annoy you, they’re both, and being mature enough to understand that is as important to growing up as an adult as thinking about settling down and having children is (at least, as far as Retsuko’s mom is concerned).

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That reminder is, in turn, thrust upon Retsuko, who also is shown that even as our relatably angry protagonist, she too has her own share of faults. Her standoffish attitude with Anai, born out of the prejudged opinion that as some upstart young graduate he’s just not ready to be out in the “real world” of office life yet, is what helps escalate the situation between them in the first place, alongside her refusal to accept help from him until it’s almost too late. And when she first encounters Tadano and begins getting to know him as a friend and eventual romantic interest, she finds herself repeatedly dismissing him because she thinks he’s a lazy slacker without a job. It turns out that he’s actually a mega-rich startup owner researching A.I., but crucially, Retsuko only finds that out after she actually lets her barriers down and gets to know him better in the wake of her initial prejudice. She’s eventually rewarded with the potential for a romance that makes her happy and is with someone that she understands—someone she might have never had the opportunity with if she stuck to her angry, black-and-white view of the world around her.

Retsuko brushes Tadano off at first, but begins to form a close bond with him as the season progresses.
Retsuko brushes Tadano off at first, but begins to form a close bond with him as the season progresses.
Image: Netflix
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By examining its cast of characters in this deeper, more nuanced way, Aggretsuko shows that it can be a series with a lot more going on than just hilarious heavy metal interludes or aimless, comically incandescent (if not relatable) rage. If anything, it makes the moments Retsuko slips into her death-metal-persona all the funnier—because beyond that over the top anger there beats a true emotional heart to the show that’s about so much more than simply anger.


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