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Crunchyroll’s 13-Episode Anime Horror Hidden Gem Is Still the Scariest of All Time

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Paranoia Agent, now streaming on Crunchyroll, is industry legend Satoshi Kon’s 2004 anime about the fallout of a bizarre assault and the panic that follows. Tsukiko Sagi is a character designer suddenly thrust into the spotlight after creating an immensely popular cartoon dog. Facing debilitating burnout and under pressure from her manager to achieve greater success, she walks home alone at night. She’s stressed out, and her dazed, anxious state has already caused several accidents. After breaking down in a parking lot, discarded drafts are strewn about… Klunk! A bent, gold softball bat clobbers the poor woman. At the hospital, she describes the assailant to the detectives: a small boy wearing shorts and a baseball bat, shredding across the city streets on golden inline skates. A figure the panicked city calls Shōnen Batto, or Lil’ Slugger.

Straight-up horror anime are less prevalent than ones with general gothic or supernatural themes, and genre blends that delve into the frighteningly subversive. This was the only long-form series Kon made before his untimely death in 2010, but it combines the best of his work before and after it. While considered a more psychological thriller than a horror show, there is something about Paranoia Agent that insidiously wriggles in your mind, tapping into the dread and anxiety prevalent in the modern world. With the long-delayed release of the Uzumaki adaptation soon upon us, it’s a good time to bring up more horror anime, and even 20 years later, Paranoia Agent is undoubtedly one of them.

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‘Paranoia Agent’ Shows a City in an Existential Crisis

Even in Kon’s more lighthearted work, like Tokyo Godfathers, he always presents life in contemporary Japan with grit and cynicism, a dreary place many seek an escape from, a place that seeks to destroy its inhabitants. Everyone struggles to get by with a roof over their heads, and those with jobs are about to crack under the pressure to perform sufficiently. In Paranoia Agent, that escape comes not only from the characters’ separate fantasies and delusions but also from the increasingly violent attacks of Lil’ Slugger. Maybe, like Tsukiko, they’re looking to catch a needed break from a stressful job, or they’re seeking to forget something terrible they’ve discovered, or even just to clear the suspicions that they are Lil’ Slugger. The mysterious boy serves as this sick, saving grace. With a swing of the bat, his victims are completely unburdened, or so it would seem.


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There aren’t any curses or death games in this show, with the horror being more social and supernatural. With Lil’ Slugger being a saving grace, the victims are the ones who unsettle you in various ways. Some are reprehensible, like a lecherous, corrupt cop who sees himself as an anti-hero. Others put you right in their shoes, back into an isolating situation you’ve been in before, being burnt out, ostracized by your peers, or lost in your world. At some point, everyone feels like the world is going mad, and you’re the only one who’s fine, or you’re breaking down, and everyone else is okay. Everyone seeks that release, even if it means self-destruction, and that’s when you hear the rollerblades.

With each attack, the mythos of Lil’ Slugger grows; with each episode, not only the victims but investigating officers and even copycats get lost in their unreality. As the story continues, the attacks make less and less sense, the connections between victims are tenuous, and Lil’ Slugger seems to attack without rhyme or reason. With so much unknown about him, it leaves more room for people to speculate. It’s with this idea that, only a few short years before the explosion of social media changed the world forever, Paranoia Agent predicted the future.

How ‘Paranoia Agent’ Predicted a Horrific Future

In recent years, it is worryingly clear that we’ve come into the age of misinformation. That, regardless of its credibility, if something is stated often and loudly enough, a lot of people will just kind of believe it. People can create their own echo chambers and become completely lost in fantasy or conspiracy. We could bring up all kinds of inflammatory real-life examples, but to bring it back to Paranoia Agent, the audience soon learns what some may have suspected is true: there was no Lil’ Slugger. Tsukiko hurt her own leg and created the character as a scapegoat to take the pressure off her.

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At its core, Paranoia Agent is a show about mass hysteria in the modern age. As the media and the very early internet perpetuate the story of Lil’ Slugger, people continue to talk about it, and no one comes any closer to finding the truth. That the initial attack was self-inflicted brings those seeking the truth no comfort as people continue to get attacked, and more ferociously. There are copycats of copycats perpetrating the crime, regardless if Lil’ Slugger is real or not. Despite being fabricated at first, the city-wide panic made Lil’ Slugger real, with everyone’s pent-up anxiety and inner demons all creating this violent, deluded burst.

However, Lil’ Slugger isn’t some impervious entity. As dark and confronting as Kon’s stories are, they’re never entirely hopeless. The solution is the clearest and yet the most difficult. There’s a way for each victim to save themselves. Confronting the harsh reality of one’s situation is something people avoid. There’s always someone to blame, some big conspiracy that the whole world is against you, that you’re the hero of the story who’s trying to do what’s right. While a blow to the head feels like a clean slate for the victims, the things they’re running away from will still be there. It’s only by facing the truth and confronting who they are that they’ll truly be free.

Paranoia Agent is available to stream on Crunchyroll.


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Paranoia Agent
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Release Date

2011 – 2005-00-00

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Directors

Satoshi Kon

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Writers

Seishi Minakami

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Paranoia Agent


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