• Latest
  • Trending
Baki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai Part 2 Review

Baki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai Part 2 Review: Death Has Paperwork

Shoot the People Review

Shoot the People Review: The Image Keeps the Wound Visible

Colors of White Rock Review

Colors of White Rock Review: Mongolia’s New Nomads

33 Immortals Review

33 Immortals Review: Big Raid Energy, Small Upgrade Sparks

Labrador: Autopsy Of Silence Review

Labrador: Autopsy Of Silence Review: Christopher Angatookalook Holds the Frame

Ponderosa Review

Ponderosa Review: Deadpan Dread in the Parking Lot

Dreams of Violets Review

Dreams of Violets Review: AI Finds the Street, Loses the People

Dave the Diver: In the Jungle Review

Dave the Diver: In the Jungle Review: Bancho Takes the Grill Outside

Alone Season 13 Review

Alone Season 13 Review: The Arctic Has Notes

Test Review

Test Review: Muscle, Shame, and Bad Light

The Peril At Pincer Point Review

The Peril At Pincer Point Review: The Sound of Being Used

DreamQuil

DreamQuil Review: A Sci-Fi Retreat With a Mirror Problem

Mousebusters Review

Mousebusters Review: Rodent Scale, Human Sadness

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Saturday, June 20, 2026
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    James Burrows

    James Burrows, the Man Who Directed Over 1,000 Sitcom Episodes, Dies at 85

    Sam Altman

    Amazon Drops Nearly Finished Sam Altman Film Months After Signing $50 Billion OpenAI Deal

    Rosie O’Donnell

    Rosie O’Donnell Wants Back on The View — and Says the Show Just Hasn’t Called

    Supergirl

    Supergirl First Reactions: Milly Alcock Breaks Out, But the Villain Lets Her Down

    George Lucas

    George Lucas Makes His Acting Return in a Minions Movie — and He’s Already Angling for a Sequel Role

    Elisha Cuthbert

    Elisha Cuthbert Breaks Down the Personal Reason She Walked Away From Acting for Four Years

    Famke Janssen

    Famke Janssen Says Marvel “Made a Mistake” Leaving Her Out of Avengers: Doomsday

    Tom Holland Zendaya

    Tom Holland Admitted He Told Zendaya About RDJ’s Secret Marvel Return the Moment He Got the Call

    Paramount-Warner Bros. Merger

    Democrats Want FCC to Block Paramount-WBD Deal From Closing in July

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Shoot the People Review

    Shoot the People Review: The Image Keeps the Wound Visible

    Colors of White Rock Review

    Colors of White Rock Review: Mongolia’s New Nomads

    Baki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai Part 2 Review

    Baki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai Part 2 Review: Death Has Paperwork

    Labrador: Autopsy Of Silence Review

    Labrador: Autopsy Of Silence Review: Christopher Angatookalook Holds the Frame

    Ponderosa Review

    Ponderosa Review: Deadpan Dread in the Parking Lot

    Dreams of Violets Review

    Dreams of Violets Review: AI Finds the Street, Loses the People

    Alone Season 13 Review

    Alone Season 13 Review: The Arctic Has Notes

    Test Review

    Test Review: Muscle, Shame, and Bad Light

    The Peril At Pincer Point Review

    The Peril At Pincer Point Review: The Sound of Being Used

  • Game Reviews
    33 Immortals Review

    33 Immortals Review: Big Raid Energy, Small Upgrade Sparks

    Dave the Diver: In the Jungle Review

    Dave the Diver: In the Jungle Review: Bancho Takes the Grill Outside

    Mousebusters Review

    Mousebusters Review: Rodent Scale, Human Sadness

    EA Sports UFC 6 Review

    EA Sports UFC 6 Review: The Stand-Up Game Finally Hits Clean

    Tour de France 2026 Review

    Tour de France 2026 Review: Rain Changes Everything, Little Else Does

    Keep The Heroes Out Review

    Keep The Heroes Out Review: Dungeon Defense With Bite

    Moonsigil Atlas

    Moonsigil Atlas Review: The Moon Makes Every Turn Count

    Nickelodeon Extreme Tennis: Next! Review

    Nickelodeon Extreme Tennis: Next! Review: Couch Chaos Wins the Match

    Junkster Review

    Junkster Review: UM-13 Builds a Bright Path Through Familiar Platforming

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    James Burrows

    James Burrows, the Man Who Directed Over 1,000 Sitcom Episodes, Dies at 85

    Sam Altman

    Amazon Drops Nearly Finished Sam Altman Film Months After Signing $50 Billion OpenAI Deal

    Rosie O’Donnell

    Rosie O’Donnell Wants Back on The View — and Says the Show Just Hasn’t Called

    Supergirl

    Supergirl First Reactions: Milly Alcock Breaks Out, But the Villain Lets Her Down

    George Lucas

    George Lucas Makes His Acting Return in a Minions Movie — and He’s Already Angling for a Sequel Role

    Elisha Cuthbert

    Elisha Cuthbert Breaks Down the Personal Reason She Walked Away From Acting for Four Years

    Famke Janssen

    Famke Janssen Says Marvel “Made a Mistake” Leaving Her Out of Avengers: Doomsday

    Tom Holland Zendaya

    Tom Holland Admitted He Told Zendaya About RDJ’s Secret Marvel Return the Moment He Got the Call

    Paramount-Warner Bros. Merger

    Democrats Want FCC to Block Paramount-WBD Deal From Closing in July

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Shoot the People Review

    Shoot the People Review: The Image Keeps the Wound Visible

    Colors of White Rock Review

    Colors of White Rock Review: Mongolia’s New Nomads

    Baki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai Part 2 Review

    Baki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai Part 2 Review: Death Has Paperwork

    Labrador: Autopsy Of Silence Review

    Labrador: Autopsy Of Silence Review: Christopher Angatookalook Holds the Frame

    Ponderosa Review

    Ponderosa Review: Deadpan Dread in the Parking Lot

    Dreams of Violets Review

    Dreams of Violets Review: AI Finds the Street, Loses the People

    Alone Season 13 Review

    Alone Season 13 Review: The Arctic Has Notes

    Test Review

    Test Review: Muscle, Shame, and Bad Light

    The Peril At Pincer Point Review

    The Peril At Pincer Point Review: The Sound of Being Used

  • Game Reviews
    33 Immortals Review

    33 Immortals Review: Big Raid Energy, Small Upgrade Sparks

    Dave the Diver: In the Jungle Review

    Dave the Diver: In the Jungle Review: Bancho Takes the Grill Outside

    Mousebusters Review

    Mousebusters Review: Rodent Scale, Human Sadness

    EA Sports UFC 6 Review

    EA Sports UFC 6 Review: The Stand-Up Game Finally Hits Clean

    Tour de France 2026 Review

    Tour de France 2026 Review: Rain Changes Everything, Little Else Does

    Keep The Heroes Out Review

    Keep The Heroes Out Review: Dungeon Defense With Bite

    Moonsigil Atlas

    Moonsigil Atlas Review: The Moon Makes Every Turn Count

    Nickelodeon Extreme Tennis: Next! Review

    Nickelodeon Extreme Tennis: Next! Review: Couch Chaos Wins the Match

    Junkster Review

    Junkster Review: UM-13 Builds a Bright Path Through Familiar Platforming

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
Baki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai Part 2 Review

Labrador: Autopsy Of Silence Review: Christopher Angatookalook Holds the Frame

33 Immortals Review: Big Raid Energy, Small Upgrade Sparks

Home Entertainment TV Shows

Baki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai Part 2 Review: Death Has Paperwork

Ayishah Ayat Toma by Ayishah Ayat Toma
32 minutes ago
in Entertainment, Reviews, TV Shows
Reading Time: 5 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on TelegramSummarize with ChatGPTSummarize with Perplexity

A Nobel Prize-winning scientist rushing to Japan because a prehistoric man has been spotted in the sewers is the kind of sentence streaming anime was built to say with a straight face. Baki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai Part 2 understands the absurdity of its own premise, then treats that absurdity like state business, complete with laboratories, press briefings, underground fight promoters, and men so muscular they look like national infrastructure.

The 12-episode back half of Netflix’s Musashi arc picks up after Part 1 introduced Baki Hanma’s boredom, Tokugawa’s Underground Arena, and the cloned resurrection of legendary swordsman Musashi Miyamoto. Part 2 shifts the revived samurai from spectacle to threat.

Musashi begins as a historical miracle, a dead man given flesh by modern science. By the time police bullets and electrical force fail to stop him, he has become a crisis that exposes how little this world understands the violence it resurrected for entertainment.

That is the season’s sharpest joke, and maybe its sharpest accusation. Everyone wants to study Musashi, test him, stage him, market him, or defeat him. Very few people ask what it means to drag a killer from one moral universe into another, then act surprised when he keeps killing.

The Arena Becomes a Civic Problem

Part 2’s early rhythm depends on pairing impossible bodies. Pickle, the preserved primitive man from the age of dinosaurs, is found in the sewers and pulled back toward the machinery of science. Musashi, cloned from legend, stands beside him as another specimen with a pulse. Dr. Albert Payne sees miracles. Tokugawa sees a card worth booking.

The brief lab encounter between Pickle and Musashi captures the season’s tone beautifully. Scientists panic about risk, ethics, and biological significance. The fight men hear the opening bell. The result is a no-rules Underground Arena match with weapons, a decision so irresponsible it feels almost bureaucratic in its confidence. Streaming television has trained itself to turn every extreme premise into franchise fuel; Baki-Dou turns that habit into a blood sport with better deltoids.

Also Read

  • Baki-Dou The Invincible Samurai Review
    Baki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai Review: Musashi…
  • Baki Hanma: Blood Arena Review
    Baki Hanma: Blood Arena Review: A Hollow Victory
  • Best Christmas Movies
    30 Best Christmas Movies to Watch This Holiday Season
  • best 2025 tv shows
    Gazettely's 30 Best TV Shows of 2025
  • Best 2025 Movies
    Gazettely's 30 Best Movies of 2025
  • best 2025 games
    Gazettely's 30 Best Video Games of 2025

The escalation from arena spectacle to civic disaster gives the season its strongest shape. Musashi cuts through elite fighters, then turns toward the police, where the old romance of warrior honor curdles into public slaughter. The moonlit urge to kill is staged less as madness than as cultural displacement. He comes from a world where violence made reputation. The modern state sees murder. Musashi sees continuity.

Baki watches much of this from a distance, and that distance matters. He does not rush into the role of savior. He studies the problem. His eventual reading of Musashi as lonely gives the season a sudden emotional clarity. The samurai is terrifying, yes, yet he is also a man with no family, no era, no social language beyond cutting. The tragedy is not subtle. Subtlety has never been this franchise’s favorite muscle group.

Hanayama Lands Harder Than the Finale

The season’s best fight is Musashi versus Hanayama, partly because it gives both men something clear to represent. Hanayama’s body is endurance made flesh. Musashi’s blade is historical violence sharpened into instinct. Their clash works because the staging lets impact breathe. Hanayama’s stance, wounds, and refusal to retreat give the fight a heaviness that the more conceptual battles sometimes lack.

Baki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai Part 2 Review

The police using Hanayama as their last resort also gives the sequence a grim social charge. He is treated as a solution because his body can absorb punishment that institutions cannot. That choice turns a beloved fighter into a civic tool, then leaves him bleeding in public while everyone waits to see if the spectacle will save them. The series may be ridiculous, but that image has teeth.

The final Baki versus Musashi confrontation is stranger and less satisfying. Baki returning Musashi’s sword, then tossing him a second blade, is a clever tactical beat. By filling both of Musashi’s hands, he creates a small opening through psychology rather than brute force. That is good Baki storytelling: ridiculous, physical, and weirdly cerebral.

The problem is the repeated use of Musashi’s “imaginary cutting.” At first, the idea fits the series’ fascination with martial aura and mental damage. After several rounds of narrated harm, the device begins to feel like a shortcut. The viewer is told bodies are being sliced by intent, yet the climax needs a cleaner physical grammar.

The soul extraction by Sabuko Tokugawa resolves the arc in a ritualistic way, and it fits the supernatural science that created Musashi. It also drains some force from Baki’s confrontation at the very moment the season has trained the audience to expect collision.

Bodies, Voices, and the Streaming Adaptation Machine

The animation is strongest when it commits to physical presence. Musashi’s posture, narrow gaze, and sudden shifts into bloodlust make him feel removed from ordinary time. Hanayama’s fight gets the clearest visual care, with heavier impact framing and enough stillness between attacks to sell the damage. The season looks better than the earlier batch in several stretches, especially when drawings hold their shape through extreme poses.

The last episodes expose the limits of the adaptation strategy. Panel-like compositions, static frames, and motion blur start to feel too visible, especially during the final fight. Manga fidelity can be a virtue, but direct panel imitation on screen risks turning animation into a guided slideshow. That matters because this arc is about bodies testing reality. When movement thins out, the bodies lose some authority.

The voice work helps restore that authority. Musashi’s performance carries the season’s descent from warrior curiosity into cold appetite, with each calm line sounding less like restraint and closer to permission. Dr. Payne’s exposition has a different function: he brings frantic scientific language into a room full of men who plainly intend to ignore every warning. His wrist getting snapped by Musashi is the season’s industry thesis in miniature. Expertise enters. Spectacle wins.

The cut manga tease involving Nomi-no-Sukune leaves the next step less certain, while Musashi’s preserved body keeps the door open in the most Baki way possible. Death, here, has paperwork.

The martial arts action anime series Baki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai Part 2 premiered all 12 of its episodes simultaneously on June 18, 2026. The story tracks the continuous chaos following the resurrection of the legendary sword saint Musashi Miyamoto via cloning technology as he squares off against underground arena fighters like Baki Hanma, Pickle, and Izo Motobe. The entirety of the explosive second part is available to watch worldwide exclusively on Netflix.

Full Credits

  • Title: Baki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai Part 2

  • Distributor: Netflix

  • Release date: June 18, 2026

  • Rating: TV-MA

  • Running time: 24 minutes per episode

  • Director: Toshiki Hirano

  • Writers: Tatsuhiko Urahata, Keisuke Itagaki

  • Producers and Executive Producers: Takayoshi Aso, Atsushi Chikaishi, Jinyu Zhang, Shinya Tsuruoka

  • Cast: Nobunaga Shimazaki, Akio Otsuka, Naoya Uchida, Shinpachi Tsuji, Masako Nozawa, Rikiya Koyama, Takuya Eguchi, Takayuki Sugo, Yoshihisa Kawahara

  • Editors: Yoshihiro Kasahara

  • Composer: Kenji Fujisawa

The Review

Baki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai Part 2

7 Score

Baki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai Part 2 turns Musashi into the season’s best character and its sharpest indictment: a resurrected killer treated like premium content until the bodies pile up. Hanayama’s fight has the impact the finale only partly finds, while the soul-extraction ending feels fitting, strange, and a little too convenient. Still, the season’s commitment to absurd bodies, institutional foolishness, and old violence in a modern world gives it a savage charge.

PROS

  • Musashi’s menace and loneliness
  • Hanayama fight lands hard
  • Stronger middle-episode pacing
  • Sharp science-versus-spectacle tension

CONS

  • Final fight feels rushed
  • Imaginary cuts lose force
  • Static-panel adaptation choices
  • Soul ending softens impact

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: ActionAkio ÔtsukaAnimationBaki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai Part 2FeaturedMasako NozawaNaoya UchidaNetflixNobunaga ShimazakiRikiya KoyamaShinpachi TsujiSportsToshiki Hirano
Previous Post

Labrador: Autopsy Of Silence Review: Christopher Angatookalook Holds the Frame

Next Post

33 Immortals Review: Big Raid Energy, Small Upgrade Sparks

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Connect with
Login
I allow to create an account
When you login first time using a Social Login button, we collect your account public profile information shared by Social Login provider, based on your privacy settings. We also get your email address to automatically create an account for you in our website. Once your account is created, you'll be logged-in to this account.
DisagreeAgree
Notify of
guest
Connect with
I allow to create an account
When you login first time using a Social Login button, we collect your account public profile information shared by Social Login provider, based on your privacy settings. We also get your email address to automatically create an account for you in our website. Once your account is created, you'll be logged-in to this account.
DisagreeAgree
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Is This Seat Taken? Review

    Is This Seat Taken? Review: A Satisfying Mental Workout

    1047 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • House of the Dragon Season 3 Review: The Throne Learns to Bleed

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Trust Review: Squandered Potential and an Incoherent Plot

    6 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Polygamist Review: Betrayal Burns Bright in Netflix’s 22-Episode Drama

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Proud Review: Ignacy Liss Shines in HBO Max’s Striking New Series

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Evil Lawyer Review: Netflix’s Thai Thriller Puts Ethics on Trial

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Time of Death Review: Michael Kelly Anchors a Grim Prison Mystery

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Sugar Season 2 Review
TV Shows

Sugar Season 2 Review: A Noir With a Telescope It Barely Uses

15 hours ago
Voicemails for Isabelle Review
Movies

Voicemails for Isabelle Review: No Tom Hanks, and It Knows

15 hours ago
EA Sports UFC 6 Review
Reviews Games

EA Sports UFC 6 Review: The Stand-Up Game Finally Hits Clean

2 days ago
I Will Find You Review
TV Shows

I Will Find You Review: Parental Love Turns Dangerous in Netflix’s Latest Mystery

2 days ago
Girls Like Girls Review
Movies

Girls Like Girls Review: Hayley Kiyoko Finds Her Voice Behind the Camera

3 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Which of Alfred Hitchcock's 1960s thrillers is your all-time favorite?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2026 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

wpDiscuz
0
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x
| Reply