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Mizu tells herself she is forging her body into a blade—hard, sharp, and unfeeling. She believes that once she reaches the end of her road and kills the last of the four white men, the heat of her rage will dissipate, and she can finally feel the cool peace of the void.

Why such brutality? Because the show is a deconstruction of the "revenge plot." BLUE EYE SAMURAI

The primary antagonist, Abijah Fowler (brilliantly voiced by Kenneth Branagh), is not a mustache-twirling villain. He is a survivor of the Irish Potato Famine. He tells Mizu, "You think I am the devil? The devil is the man who taught me to hate myself." Fowler argues that colonialism is a cycle of abused becoming abuser. Mizu tells herself she is forging her body

The show refuses to let Mizu claim moral high ground. When she slaughters a room full of guards who are just doing their jobs, or when she uses innocent people as bait, she becomes the very terror she claims to oppose. The blue eyes she despises are the same eyes that look back at her in the water. Because the show is a deconstruction of the "revenge plot

Blue Eye Samurai is streaming now on Netflix. Watch it loud. Watch it with the lights off. And ask yourself: What are you forging in your own fire? What did you think of Mizu’s final choice? Is she a hero, a monster, or simply a necessary ghost? Let me know in the comments below.