Eren Yeager leaves to restore a break in the wall destroyed by a Titan. He comes under attack by the Titans and is cornered. Shikishima comes to his aid. The titans never stops attacking. Eren is now injured and tries to protect Armin, but is swallowed by a titan. A Titan with black hair appears and begins to expel the other titans.
Eren Yeager leaves to restore a break in the wall destroyed by a Titan. He comes under attack by the Titans and is cornered. Shikishima comes to his aid. The titans never stops attacking. Eren is now injured and tries to protect Armin, but is swallowed by a titan. A Titan with black hair appears and begins to expel the other titans.
The film receives a Left-Leaning rating primarily because its central narrative champions rebellion against an oppressive, secretive government and the pursuit of truth and freedom, aligning with anti-authoritarian and systemic critique themes.
The film, a Japanese adaptation of a Japanese manga, features a cast predominantly of Japanese actors, aligning with its cultural origin. Its narrative delves into universal themes of conflict, survival, and societal structures within its fictional setting, without explicitly critiquing traditional Western identities or centering on DEI themes in that specific context.
The film "Attack on Titan II: End of the World" does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses on humanity's struggle for survival against Titans and internal conflicts, without incorporating queer identities or relationships into its plot or character arcs.
The film's primary conflict involves human characters fighting against Titans. While female characters are present and participate in combat, there are no instances where a female character defeats one or more male human opponents in direct physical combat using skill, strength, or martial arts.
The film adapts characters from the Attack on Titan manga. While some characters were replaced by new ones, no established character from the source material was portrayed on screen as a different gender.
The characters in the original 'Attack on Titan' manga and anime are of a fictional, ambiguous race, not explicitly defined as any real-world ethnicity. The live-action Japanese film adaptation casts Japanese actors, which does not constitute a race swap as no specific real-world race was established for the source characters.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources