Amon — - The Apocalypse Of Devilman
Amon: The Apocalypse of Devilman , directed by Umanosuke Iida (who worked on The Birth ) and written by Go Nagai himself alongside Akinori Endo, picks up immediately where the first OVA left off. The animation studio was Oh! Production, with character design and animation direction by the legendary Yoshihiko Umakoshi (later known for Casshern Sins and My Hero Academia ). Umakoshi’s work here is raw, muscular, and grotesquely beautiful—a perfect marriage of Nagai’s crude, expressive style and high-fidelity anime detail.
Akira represents fragile, civilized humanity—empathy, love (for Miki), and morality. Amon represents pure, undiluted demonic instinct: rage, the will to dominate, and the joy of slaughter. The OVA charts the slow, then sudden, victory of the primal. When Akira finally loses his grip, there is no tragic hero; there is only a predator. amon - the apocalypse of devilman
The title is The Apocalypse of Devilman , not of the World . While demons are attacking Earth, the true apocalypse here is the death of Akira Fudo’s soul. The external chaos mirrors the internal disintegration. It’s a deeply personal, psychological apocalypse, making it far more devastating than any giant monster attack. Animation and Direction: A Masterclass in Body Horror Amon is not a film for the squeamish. The violence is constant, graphic, and deeply tactile. Limbs are torn off with sinew audibly snapping. Blood sprays in impossible geysers. Demons are designed with a horrifying biological realism—they look like cancerous, chitinous fusions of human and insectoid features. Amon: The Apocalypse of Devilman , directed by
