Amon: Apocalypse Of Devilman Page

Grief and rage consume Akira. He loses control, not of his Devilman form, but of the demon inside him. Amon, the original "Demon of War," seizes the moment. He doesn’t just emerge; he Akira’s soul entirely. Akira Fudo ceases to exist. In his place stands the full, unshackled power of Amon: a mindless, raging beast of pure destruction who cares nothing for humanity, demons, or salvation.

For fans of extreme anime, body horror, and tragic monsters, Amon: The Apocalypse of Devilman is essential viewing. It is not comfortable. It is not fun. It is a two-part, 90-minute descent into a mind that has broken completely. It asks a simple, terrifying question: What happens when the hero doesn’t just fail, but disappears? amon: apocalypse of devilman

But over time, Amon has gained a cult following as the most adaptation of Nagai’s original ending. Go Nagai’s 1972 manga ended with humanity annihilated and Satan weeping alone on a dead planet. Devilman Crybaby gave that ending an operatic, tearful grace. Amon gives it a raw, animalistic howl of despair. Grief and rage consume Akira