The 5 Greatest Letdowns in Demon Slayer: Swordsmith Village

Supporters can only hope that if a third Demon Slayer film is made, it will not make the same mistakes as Swordsmith Village did.

Credit: Netflix
By Sonu | Mar 18, 2023 | 3 Min Read follow icon Follow Us

The ultra-popular Demon Slayer anime is expected to return in the Spring 2023 anime season, and a tie-in movie was released to hype up the season’s premiere. The Swordsmith Village film quickly struck theatres, only to disappoint and irritate die-hard Demon Slayer fans. On some basic levels, the Swordsmith Village film performed its job, laying the basis for the anime’s third season, but not much more. Viewers have already identified numerous reasons to despise the second Demon Slayer film, with the film failing to deliver due to its strange production and bad plot. Supporters can only hope that if a third Demon Slayer film is made, it will not make the same mistakes as Swordsmith Village did. The 5 Greatest Letdowns in Demon Slayer: Swordsmith Village.

Lots Of Familiar Material

Most anime films are wholly new content, such as Reincaranted as a Slime: Scarlet Bond or Quintessential Quintuplets, which concluded the plot. Swordsmith Village, on the other hand, was two-thirds rebuilt.

The film included the final two episodes of the entertainment district arc, in which Tengen Uzui and Tanjiro fought and defeated Daki and Gyutaro. That was thrilling to watch, but it also took up the majority of the film’s running time with a lot of familiar stuff that Demon Slayer fans didn’t need to see again so quickly.

Climax & Build-Up Were Reversed

Regardless of genre or subject, all films adhere to the same fundamental three-act format, which comprises introductions and worldbuilding at the beginning, followed by the payoff and climax at the conclusion. Swordsmith Village accomplished the opposite, ending one story arc and beginning another. A bridge between two story arcs can have its own beginning, middle, and end, but the Swordsmith Village movie got it all wrong because it was only three episodes in a row. It was unusual for audiences to have the film begin with an action-packed climax, then have some falling action, and then end with build-up.

Read More: The 5 Greatest Story Arcs in Attack on Titan

Minimal Worldbuilding & Lore

Anime movies are a wonderful way to expand on the universe and lore of the original anime, such as adding a new city, new nations, historical lessons, and much more. The Demon Slayer: to the Swordsmith Village film did this to a lesser level, since Tanjiro arrived in the renowned Sworsmith Village near the conclusion. But, Tanjiro didn’t have much to work with, and the cliffhanger ended before he could take more than a quick look around this new surroundings. The Scarlet Bond film, on the other hand, was nearly purely worldbuilding, with the Raja Kingdom, a new piece of history, and more.

Muichiro Tokito Barely Did Anything

The kuudere mist Hashira Muichiro Tokita appeared briefly among the other Hashira in Demon Slayer Episode 1, and the Swordsmith Village film was supposed to be his introduction. He did appear in that film, but he talked and did very little. Only the last 25 minutes or so of the film were new material, so Muichiro had little chances to appear after Tengen Uzui’s struggle was over. Muichiro could have said or done something significant in that short amount of time, but he decided not to.

Tanjiro had no character development

Anime films frequently build on their primary characters by introducing new friendships, rivalries, and difficulties of all kinds. In the process, the protagonist may discover an unexpected kind or dark side to themselves, learn a new skill, or even form a significant new friendship.

Tanjiro never had a chance for any of that, given how little new material there was in the Swordsmith Village anime film. He fought Gyutaro, as Demon Slayer fans know, and then went to the Swordsmith Village as a curious visitor and nothing more.

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