Blue Eye Samurai -

But the series (particularly in episodes 5 and 6) suggests a darker truth:

This is where the show diverges from John Wick . John kills for a dog; he wants to retire. Mizu kills because if she stops, she would have to look at herself in a mirror without the lens of vengeance to blur the image. She is addicted to the hunt. No analysis is complete without acknowledging the two mirrors held up to Mizu: Taigen and Akemi. BLUE EYE SAMURAI

, however, is the true subversion. Initially presented as the damsel or the love interest, Akemi evolves into a Machiavellian strategist. She rejects the fantasy of the "ronin saving the princess." Instead, Akemi weaponizes the gilded cage. She realizes that power in a patriarchal society isn't won by swinging a sword, but by controlling the hand that holds the leash. But the series (particularly in episodes 5 and