![]() ![]() Along with his friends and the school nurse, he fights his way out and begins a journey to find out what exactly has happened to the world. Takashi Komuro is a normal high school boy (as are many anime leads), but one day, an infection breaks out that turns people into zombie-like creatures. This OAV consists of nothing but fan service, essentially, and its content is considered to be part of the main series for the purposes of this review. The anime covers the first segment of the manga's story, while a subsequent OAV was released with the Blu-Ray version as a "bonus" episode. Notes: Based on a manga by the Sato brothers, which has been on hiatus since 2011. ![]() Length: Television series, 13 episodes, 24 minutes eachĭistributor: R1 DVD from Sentai FilmworksĬontent Rating: 17+ (borderline-pornographic fanservice, graphic violence, vulgarity, profanity)Īlso Recommended: Elfen Lied, GANTZ, Rin: Daughters of Mnemosyne, Kore wa Zombie Desu Ka, Tokyo Magnitude 8.0 (for a better and very different disaster anime), (Non-Anime) Return of the Living Dead Genre: Apocalyptic drama / ecchi action (with survival horror elements) Haigh was eventually hanged for his crimes in 1949.I'm Standing On A Million Lives (Season One, part 2) Police eventually found remains which had been reduced to sludge but gallstones and part of a plastic denture survived, confirming the woman’s identity. He went on to admit to eight other murders where he disposed of the body in sulfuric acid baths. ![]() When police arrested him he told them that ‘Mrs Durand-Deacon no longer exists, I’ve destroyed her with acid. Perhaps the most famous real-life acid bath criminal case involved John George Haigh. A single lungful would cause so much fluid on his lungs, he would have drowned. The fumes from the many litres of HF that Jesse was exposed to would have been deadly. Once it is in the bloodstream it will quickly act as a poison. HF eats through most types of gloves and can easily penetrate skin and fat tissue. In the programme Jesse wears a face mask and gloves. So you really do need the correct type of plastic container and you definitely wouldn’t want to use a standard household bath. HF used to be stored in wax bottles but nowadays polyethylene or Teflon (PTFE) bottles are used. When the two next meet up at the end of the day, the acid has eaten through the bottom of the bath and they arrive just in time to witness the floorboards give way, releasing all the ghastly contents onto the corridor below! Would the plan have worked? Jesse places the first body in his household bath and, whilst wearing gloves and a face mask, adds the acid. He soon gets annoyed and frustrated and so just goes home. Hiding behind the shop shelves, Jesse tries sitting in plastic crates to find out which would be large enough. He sends Jesse off to the local hardware store to find something suitable. He tells Jesse that they need to be careful about the type of container they use to put the bodies in as HF is so dangerous it can react with metals, certain plastics and even glass. Walter knows that an acid such as hydrofluoric acid (HF) will be able to dissolve the bodies as it can destroy tissue and decalcify bone, so he steals a few large bottles of HF from his high school chemical stores. ![]() He improvised an experiment to gas them but now they have the problem of disposing of the bodies. Walter suggests using acid, but this has problems of its own. In a previous episode they found themselves in a tight spot with gangsters who forced them to make drugs. He has turned drug maker, cooking-up ‘meth’ (methamphetamine) with Jesse, a local dealer. In Breaking Bad Walter White is a high school chemistry teacher who has a critical illness and needs to make cash for his family. ![]()
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