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@_hrthh
anime | manga | aot | tinkle hoy | 707 | 🌾
shibuya เข้าร่วม Şubat 2021
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【New Trailer】
Witch Hat Atelier Anime
Scheduled for April 2026 on Crunchyroll!
✨More: tongari-anime.com/en/
English
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In a recent interview, Makoto Yukimura talks about Hild forgiving Thorfinn:
"When I was drawing that scene of Hild forgiving Thorfinn, I was also crying, “Oh, that was so good! You guys made up!” That was the feeling I had. For the scene of Hild forgiving Thorfinn to have an emotional impact on the readers, there needs to be a moment from an earlier scene that really shows Thorfinn has undergone self-reflection. I was thinking, “If I could write this scene leading up to it, then I would be able to write that scene with Thorfinn and Hild very emotionally.
To build the story up to that point, I had to focus my attention on writing the scene where Thorfinn was a slave at the farm, where he passed out and had a nightmare about all the people he killed coming back as zombies to put the blame on him. At that moment, Thorfinn finally understood what other people feel—the pain and suffering. Until then, he was only focusing on his own hatred, anger, and vengeance. I loved working on this scene because I feel like Thorfinn went through a great change. That led up to the scene of Hild forgiving him."


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Makoto Yukimura on diversity and representation in Vinland Saga.
—Interviewer: Your portrayal of Indigenous and transgender characters—like the Lnu tribe and Cordelia—stands out in a media landscape where such representation is still rare outside of series like Golden Kamuy, Skip and Loafer, and Paradise Kiss, where they’re often mishandled. What impact do you hope these characters have on expanding the narrative terrain? How do you see your storytelling challenging the ethnocentric lens that dominates much of mainstream media when it comes to that representation?
—Yukimura: I did have written characters in [Vinland Saga] from a marginalized ethnic group [and] who are LGBTQ featured here. I actually wanted to portray a character with a disability in the story, too. However, because of the setting, I really couldn’t find the right place to incorporate such a character into the story. One thing I really don’t understand, though, is why do people attack such folks? Is it because they’re different? Why do they just focus on bad things about these groups and generalize them? I truly don’t understand why people do such things. I plainly feel sad when it comes to the way people treat each other.
To me, it’s quite normal for people to have uniqueness. It’s almost needless to say that we all individually have a uniqueness that might be considered different than what is the majority. For example, I grew up in an era where higher education was considered to be the most important thing in society in Japan. You almost had no paths in life outside of that structure. I actually do live outside of that structure, and I’m living perfectly fine. I really want to say that uniqueness is okay. I don’t understand why people are making those judgments to say, “This is okay, but this is not okay.”
I haven’t really thought about what this type of storytelling or character would have an impact on society at all. I’m just writing, drawing, and portraying society as I see it and what I think is normal from my eyes in the manga. If people don’t agree with that version of what I think is a normal society, then oh well. (Laughs) That’s too bad. Those people don’t have to read my manga.

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