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The second season aired from April 10 to July 3, 2019, with a recap special covering the first season having aired a week before broadcast on April 3, 2019. The season was simulcast on Hulu in the United States, on Tubi in Canada, [ 14 ] on AnimeLab in Australia and New Zealand, [ 15 ] and on Crunchyroll in Europe. [ 16 ]
However, the first season's ending was praised for mixing both elements of the narrative into two episodes where Saitama makes a dull expression before becoming serious in a fight for the first time. [20] IGN agreed stating the series does a fine job at how Saitama properly ends most of his fights in a different fashion. [21]
[17] [18] The film, titled Tonde Saitama ~Biwako Yori Ai o Komete~ (or Fly Me to the Saitama II), premiered in Japanese theatres on November 23, 2023. [19] [20] In the opening weekend it also topped the Japanese box office with $2.77 million, [21] having a better commercial start than the previous film. [22]
It only took 4 years but Saitama is back, with the Monster Raid arc in full focus.
A monster named Vaccine Man wreaks havoc in a city and is about to kill a young girl when a bald hero named Saitama intervenes and kills him with a single punch. Saitama recalls the events three years earlier that pushed him to become a hero; after saving a boy with a cleft-chin from Crablante, Saitama resolved to become a hero but became too powerful for his own satisfaction.
Some of his major roles include Saitama in One-Punch Man, Kousei Arima in Your Lie in April, Hikari Sakishima in A Lull in the Sea, King from The Seven Deadly Sins, Ritsu Kageyama in Mob Psycho 100, Inaho Kaizuka in Aldnoah.Zero, Atsushi Nakajima in Bungo Stray Dogs and Io Flemming in Mobile Suit Gundam Thunderbolt, Kira Yamato in Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Remastered and Mobile Suit Gundam SEED ...
The second season aired between April 10 and July 3, 2019, with a recap special covering the first season having aired a week before broadcast on April 3, 2019. [2] [3] The second season was simulcast on Hulu in the United States, on Tubi in Canada, [4] on AnimeLab in Australia and New Zealand, [5] and on Crunchyroll in Europe. [6]
"This Is Not For Tears" was written by Succession showrunner Jesse Armstrong and directed by Mark Mylod in his eighth episode for the series. Like the first season's finale, the title of the episode derives from the poem "Dream Song 29" in John Berryman's The Dream Songs. [1] Filming for the episode primarily took place in Korčula, Croatia.