Onihei

Studio M2
Crime / Martial Arts / Drama13 EP/10 Jan 2017

Oshimeter

10.0
1 Fans
3 Want to Watch
1 Watched

Synopsis

In the shadowy streets of 1780s Edo, criminals whisper about a chief of the Arson Theft Control so feared they call him 'the Demon' — and Heizou Hasegawa has earned every bit of that name. As chief of the Arson Theft Control, a special police force in 1780s Edo, his job is hunting down thieves and arsonists, and he's terrifyingly good at it. But the show isn't just about a guy catching bad guys. Early on, Heizou captures a thief named Kumehachi who tells him something interesting: his old gang had a code — don't kill, don't violate women, don't steal from the poor — and someone's now running that gang while breaking every rule. Heizou, instead of just throwing Kumehachi in a cell, recruits him as a spy. That tension between rigid law and flexible justice runs through the whole 13-episode TV series. Each episode plays out almost like a short story, grounded in the messy moral territory between criminals who have honor and officials who bend the rules. The vibe is mature and deliberate — think less flashy swordfights, more quiet conversations that end with someone drawing a blade. If you liked the historical weight of Rurouni Kenshin but wished it leaned harder into realism, or if Samurai Champloo's style was your thing but you want something more grounded and serious, this hits that spot. It's adapted from a classic Japanese novel series, and it feels like it — dense, character-driven, and genuinely interested in how justice actually worked when the law carried a sword.

Episode Guide

Oshimeter0-5960-7980-100
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Characters

Heizou Hasegawa
Heizou Hasegawa
Kesser Jason

MANGA BRIDGE

This season covers Chapters 1-13 of the manga. Continue reading from Chapter 14.

Manga cover

Quick Takes

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Onihei is not for everyone. At first, it seems like your historical period piece drama in medieval Japan, but that is just the background dressing for serious discussions about the nature of justice. It is not flashy nor constantly exciting. Yet it shows why anime can be art
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