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The second season of BEASTARS brings us back to Cherryton Academy and hormones are as high as ever. What started as a murder-mystery in a school of animals expands beyond its original scope into a sex-fueled ride of self-discovery with a side of psychedelics and the mafia. There’s nothing else like it.
This series is streaming on Netflix
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Spoiler Warning for discussion of the series ahead.
Nicky, I’m glad I finally have the opportunity to talk about an anime on the right side of history.
Look, I’m never going to be able to talk about Pupa on here, so let me have this.
Putting aside that Serious Offense of stealing one of the best jokes from me just now (criminal, really), we’re skipping the appetizers and digging straight into the main course. Steve, I sure hope you’re hungry because I’m starving to sink my teeth on this second season of BEASTARS!
The first season was already one of the wildest anime I watched last year, and I’m pleased to confirm that this subsequent part is somehow even more bonkers. There were multiple instances where I had to pause the video and reflect on what I had just watched, and even then I often found it hard to believe that this is a real anime. But I guess this is what logically happens when your main characters are theater kids.
Though, any experience is also gonna be totally gnarly. It’s awesome, but don’t say you weren’t warned.
And speaking of flavor, we’ve got a full smorgasbord of delightfully demented plots and subplots this season. Tem’s murder still needs solving. Louis is a mob boss now, somehow. Legoshi and Haru’s relationship is off to a rocky start. Legoshi becomes a meat monk. There’s a giant snake cop. Someone gets their entire arm ripped off. Horny boys beg Legoshi to tell them what sex is like. Adventures in animal Instagram. And I’ve barely scratched the surface.
Of course this is BEASTARS so it pairs this development with a scene where Louis, a deer, is forced to eat a buffalo steak. I have no words.
YOUR NEW DAD JUST WANTS YOU TO EAT YOUR VEGGIES, LOUIS. Ibuki “Lion Dad” is one of the sweetest bits of surprise sentimentality. Also fueling what might be my favorite ED of the year.
It foreshadows a lot! I was kinda taken aback when it first showed up as the ED, but by the end of the season, its bittersweet nostalgia feels very true to both of these characters.
Also, we saw a glimpse of Louis’ real adoptive dad for the first time and boy was that A LOT.
Normal family!
And that’s not even the bulk of the season! But since Louis is basically the deuteragonist, it’s important to nail where he falls into the picture before we can talk about Legoshi, who also goes through a bit of a change.
And I should reiterate, there is a giant snake security guard who lives in the walls of the school, and it barely registers on the scale of buckwild shit that happens.
But this is what spurs Legoshi to pick up Tem’s murder investigation again in earnest, and it turns out our furry Columbo has some tricks up his suspenders.
And by that I mean he French kisses the murderer so he can identify the flavor of their spit and file it away as evidence. Duh.
I have the unique displeasure to introduce to you all: bald Legoshi.
That buzz-cut is definitely a look.
He spends half the season shorn and I don’t like it.
But it’s also representative of Legoshi’s dedication and the sacrifices he’s willing to take in order to bring about justice. The dark parts of his fur are shaved off as he forces himself to become an active player in protecting his friends rather than someone who slinks around in the shadows and simply watches.
So we have Louis forcing himself to chomp steaks to keep up appearances as a cutthroat yazuka lord, while Legoshi tortures himself in front of a rack of meat all night in order to become a crime fighter. This is exactly why we can’t separate these two morons.
In the end he kindles a new appreciation for life and his existing relationships.
The way the female characters’ screen time is cut in favor of the plot definitely hurts though. I still super-love Juno, and Haru and Legoshi’s relationship is still as sweet and as awkward as ever.
He is GARBAGE and also objectively the best addition this season.
To which Legoshi responds that he has never had (gay) horny thoughts ever, very convincingly.
And really, he has only himself to blame for meddling with Legoshi’s murder investigation, which by the way, resolves itself in an amazingly deadpan way. Zero fanfare, just a flat accusation and confirmation. As expected of BEASTARS.
Halfway through the season no less.
And for good reason! Because it turns out the question isn’t just who ate Tem, but who ate Tem. And there’s a lot going on in Riz’s big bear brain.
And god, just, what an incredible scene. It’s like all those decades of jokes about a grimdark version of Winnie the Pooh as an addict, but played completely straight.
This scene reminds me a lot of the first season’s OP. Riz isn’t too different from Legoshi and Legoshi knows that. Just like how bears are similar to wolves but are also natural competitors due to their often shared territory.
Legoshi even admits that everything would be a lot easier if Riz were a rotten guy, but he’s not. He’s just an overly-sincere person who made a grave mistake and keeps choosing to deal with it in a way that keeps hurting everyone involved, living and dead.
Congrats on completing your spiritual journey, Legoshi. Please learn to be normal.
Love to have a casual heart-to-heart in the middle of trying to kill each other.
But thankfully there’s one man even less normal than Legoshi who can save the day.
Also the music was so intense during this part! The improvised-style instrumentals can sometimes sell the more moody brooding moments but whenever Louis and Legoshi are together the sound blows into a full tango.
And that’s BEASTARS season two! It’s a goddamn fever dream and I can’t wait for my next injection of the furry agenda.
In fact, BEASTARS posits we should continue to live life with other people (and animals) because we’re all different from each other. Our differences don’t have to be a point of conflict, they can also be a source of strength, support, and love.
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