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A mysterious creature destroys 70% of the moon. The creature then warns that if he is not destroyed by March of next year, Earth will be next. The creature also demands that he becomes the homeroom teacher for 3rd grade E class at Kunugigaoka Junior High School. The government is powerless to say no. The creature then becomes the homeroom teacher of 3rd grade E class which consists of failed students including Nagisa Shiota. The creature is called Teacher Koro. Meanwhile, the government requests that the students try to kill Teacher Koro even though he possesses super powers. The government offers a 10 billion yen reward for whomever successfully kills him. The students are confused by the situation, but decide to kill Teacher Koro. When their class begins with Teacher Koro, the students finds themselves having a good time with their new teacher.
A mysterious creature destroys 70% of the moon. The creature then warns that if he is not destroyed by March of next year, Earth will be next. The creature also demands that he becomes the homeroom teacher for 3rd grade E class at Kunugigaoka Junior High School. The government is powerless to say no. The creature then becomes the homeroom teacher of 3rd grade E class which consists of failed students including Nagisa Shiota. The creature is called Teacher Koro. Meanwhile, the government requests that the students try to kill Teacher Koro even though he possesses super powers. The government offers a 10 billion yen reward for whomever successfully kills him. The students are confused by the situation, but decide to kill Teacher Koro. When their class begins with Teacher Koro, the students finds themselves having a good time with their new teacher.
The film critiques a rigid educational system that marginalizes students but champions an individualistic solution focused on personal growth, skill development, and self-worth through unconventional mentorship, leading to a neutral political stance.
This Japanese film features a diverse ensemble cast of students, consistent with its source material and cultural context, without engaging in explicit race or gender swaps of traditionally Western roles. The narrative focuses on critiquing a discriminatory educational system and individual antagonists based on their actions, rather than explicitly portraying traditional identities negatively or making DEI themes central to its core message.
The film adapts a Japanese manga. While most characters are portrayed by actors consistent with their established race in the source material, the character Irina Jelavić, canonically depicted as a white European, is portrayed by a South Korean actress, constituting a race swap.
The live-action film "Assassination Classroom" does not include any explicit or implicitly identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative centers on the students' mission to assassinate their alien teacher, Koro-sensei, and their development as individuals, without engaging with queer identities or experiences.
The film features Irina Jelavić, a professional assassin, who is highly skilled in combat and training. However, there are no clear scenes depicting her or any other female character achieving victory in direct physical combat against one or more male opponents.
The film adapts the manga where character genders are established. All major characters in the live-action adaptation retain their canonical genders from the source material, with no instances of a character established as one gender being portrayed as another.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources