This is an incredibly beautiful anime. I love how pure and innocent it is. I know that a lot of people criticize the relationship between Violet and Gilbert, because he is a grown man, and for a large part of the *series* Violet is rather young, but, honestly, I don't see anything really wrong with it. The movie doesn't really go into what kind Violet Evergarden is indeed a human, just because shes socially awkward and doesn't eat doesn't mean anything. Violet was in the army at such a young age and was only taught how to act like a soldier, She must've went through a hard time because she lost her arms. Violet Evergarden shows humans' dynamic nature. The show projects how a person treated like a machine can take on a different personality over time, given unique humane experiences. After the war Bad: 1 vote (sub:1) Awful: - Worst ever: - Violet Evergarden Is Next Anime to Get Dolby Cinema Screenings After 1st Gundam Trilogy (Oct 30, 2020) Just think of those bereaved families whose lives are drained in search of their beloved. In a sense, the ending of the series is even more emotionally charged because Violet the iron-willed has chosen to move on even though Gilbert might still be alive. The last scene of Episode 13 has many possible interpretations. I've thought about that line a lot, and this is what I took away: Like the tea we drink, the love we receive is eventually expelled and given back to the those who gave it to us. That day comes when we die. Let us make sure we have a lot of love to give back to those who gave it to us in the first place. 38. Violet Evergarden is an example of another great anime project that Netflix created in response to the large market for anime on Netflix. The story revolves around Violet Evergarden, a young girl that was born and raised with the sole purpose to be the most efficient war machine. Within the logic of the anime, the rationale seems to be that at first Violet does not understand human relationships like parent and child or rejects the Evergardens as her adoptive parents. Then later on, after she has adapted to human society, she has become closer to everyone at CH Postal in the meantime, so she continues to live in the It's not just Violet who can't understand Oscar - it's everyone. If any other Doll had been in her place, they would have just done their job and left, without trying to uncover why he's so broken. They would chalk it to an artist's eccentricity. But not Violet - because she acknowledges she can't understand, she. Maybe, but it undercuts these attempts with trying to resolve everything around Violet's poor character arc. It doesn't help that the dialogue is also pretty poor, and many of the episodic scenarios are over-punctuated with little grace. CrzPn.