The movie uses "silly editing" and "wirework" to mimic the frantic energy of a manga. If you enjoy over-the-top, non-realistic action, this hits the spot.
Kanna Hashimoto is a massive star in Japan, often called the "once-in-a-thousand-year idol," and her performance is the glue holding the film’s chaotic energy together.
If you are watching the version mentioned, you are likely seeing the visual equivalent of a "live-action anime." It isn't trying to be John Wick or The Raid ; it’s trying to be a colorful, slightly absurd, and violent romp. It’s perfect for a "popcorn movie" night where you want to see a college student take down a room full of mobsters with a smile on her face.
It’s an action-comedy that doesn't take itself too seriously. According to Netflix , where it is officially streaming, it carries a TV-MA rating for its "wealth of action sequences and killing." Production Context
At its core, the film follows (played by Kanna Hashimoto), a soft-spoken, pink-haired college student who looks like any other girl studying for her bookkeeping exams. However, she has a lethal side hustle: she is the top-tier assassin for a "rental" hitman agency.
The story kicks off when she is hired for a job that pulls her into a brutal internal power struggle within a powerful Yakuza clan. The juxtaposition of her mundane "student life" and her hyper-violent professional life provides the film's primary hook.
