I read the manga when I was in high school, and some of the values in it are still quite ancient, but the meaning I want to express is clear, and the emotions are delicate and suppressed. The new self-awareness and struggle made me think of what Yohji Yamamoto said, "I, this thing, can't be seen. When I bump into something else and bounce back, I can understand myself." He burst into flesh and blood, and only from these flesh and blood could he refine whether he was a human being. Very cruel, for a high school student, both psychologically and physically. I really wanted to hug him when I saw the mid-term. There is also a lot of variety about the setting of parasitic beasts. They played the roles of predators, revolutionaries, mothers, mentors, etc., causing panic and a huge threat to human society, but are they monsters in the end? The human race is too comfortable and has no natural enemies, and this is an abnormal existence in nature. In this way, it seems that parasitic beasts appeared to punish humans, or to let humans have natural enemies and integrate into nature? Seeing the predation and harm of parasitic beasts to human beings reminds me of a sentence said by the doctor in Jurassic World, "For canaries, cats are monsters." It can be used to understand that the existence of parasitic beasts is reasonable. . Man needs natural enemies.
View more about Parasyte: The Maxim reviews