'Sins Of Kujo' Ending Explained And Season 2 Theories
4 Articles
4 Articles
'Sins Of Kujo' Ending Explained And Season 2 Theories
Netflix’s Japanese legal drama series Sins of Kujo is an adaptation of the Japanese manga series “Kujo’s Deadly Sins” by Shohei Manabe, and as the name suggests, the show revolves around defense attorney Taiza Kujo and his new associate, Shinji Karasuma. Kujo strongly believed in providing his clients the best defense, regardless of whether they were guilty or not. He didn’t allow his personal moral compass to interfere with his job even if it m…
Netflix : "Sins of Kujo" Represents the Best Legal Drama of Recent Years
©Courtesy of Netflix Taiza Kujo annoys other lawyers because they think he makes them look bad—and perhaps he does, but maybe not in the way that they think. He accepts the worst of the worst as his clients and negotiates deals his colleagues consider potentially unethical. However, he takes the time to better understand his clients’ psychology and motivations. Somehow, he often counterintuitively reaches something like justice, or the closest …
Sins of Kujo Review: An Impactful Drama That Packs Interesting Punches
Sins of Kujo Review: No-nonsense lawyer Kujo separates morality from his job and focuses on defending the dark underbelly of society, from petty criminals to the yakuza. Joined by lawyer Karasuma, the two wield the law’s powers in their favour. Sins of Kujo Netflix Cast Yuya Yagira, Hokuto Matsumura, Elaiza Ikeda, Kenta Machida, Takuma Otoo, Muro Tsuyoshi Sins of Kujo Series Directors Nobuhiro Doi, Takeyoshi Yamamoto, Hiroshi Adachi Sins …
Sins of Kujo on Netflix says defending the guilty is the last radical act in Japanese law
Taiza Kujo does not pretend to be a good person. He describes himself, without apparent discomfort, as a good lawyer who happens to be a bad person — and the series built around him takes precisely this distinction seriously for ten episodes, refusing, at every point where the genre would normally offer resolution, to tell the audience which of those two self-assessments matters more. This is the specific bet Sins of Kujo makes, and it is a hard…
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