In this 13-part mini-series, Kino and her talking motorcycle Hermes travel around the world, visiting different countries for three days each in order to learn about each one.
This anime contains 5 potentially triggering events.
Episode twelve: several people are killed in explosions.
Episode thirteen: several people are killed by a pyroclastic flow.
In both cases it is not graphic, and the burned corpses are not shown.
Episode nine: political dissidents are claimed to be insane and unable to distinguish reality from fiction. There isn't much effort to make them believe this themselves though.
The main character repeatedly avoids discussion of a traumatic past event, but it's unclear if this is because it's traumatic to her or for other reasons.
Episode twelve: there are mass graves, but the people there were presumably dead before burial.
Episode thirteen: many people are buried alive by a pyroclastic flow.
Episode five: several shots of people suspended by their feet with rope.
Episode nine: people are arrested and restrained.
Episode eleven: a character is restrained while undergoing medical experimentation.
Episode ten: characters commit suicide by jumping from a cliff into deep water. Their bodies are seen sinking into the water but it's unclear if they're already dead at that point. They do not struggle or act as though they're drowning.
Several mentions of hospitals or medical procedures in the abstract. Episode eleven features a brief shot of a character undergoing medical experimentation.
Episode five: several people are executed by being suspended by their feet from a building and dropped.
Episode ten: several characters commit suicide by jumping from a cliff into deep water.
Episodes six and seven: the main character is detained and forced to compete in a series of colosseum battles.
Episode nine: several political dissidents are arrested by the police and forced into a building which they are not allowed to leave.
Episode two: the inside of a truck where slaves have been imprisoned is shown. The slaves are already dead.
Episodes six and seven: various characters are incarcerated underground and forced to compete in colosseum battles.
Episode nine: political dissidents are arrested and forced into a building which they are not allowed to leave.
Episode nine: there is explicit fourth-wall breaking, characters discuss whether they are fictional, the narrative is quite surreal, and various characters are accused of being delusional.
Outside of this episode, the series contains some surreal elements such as talking dogs or motorbikes, but is otherwise stable and internally consistent.
Episode thirteen: there's a description of a group of people being discriminated against and driven out of several countries before founding their own country elsewhere, which parallels Jewish experiences in some ways, but there's no connection to Judaism specifically.
Episode six: the (female, but somewhat androgynous) protagonist is called a boy. She threatens those misgendering her with a gun and they apologise and correct themselves.
Most of the individual episodes have sad endings, or at least not happy ones. The show is overall a tragedy. The final episode does not have a happy ending.
episode 2. Rabbits are shot. So are people.
Episode 4 has someone being stabbed, near the end.
Episode 6 and 7 are about battle tournaments. there is gun (and other weapons) usage.
episode 11 is called love and bullets...
Episode 12 has a violent middle.
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