The Chainsaw Man movie adaptation of the Reze arc is underway, and early staff comments are already turning heads. According to insider teasers shared at AnimeJapan 2024, one specific scene has producers questioning whether it can be pulled off without exceeding R-rating thresholds. The moment, referred to as “nearly unfilmable,” comes straight from the manga.
Director Tatsuya Yoshihara and other team members hinted they plan to include the scene without holding back. They stressed the importance of staying faithful to the original work—even if that means testing censorship boundaries. Fans quickly speculated that the controversial bathhouse and explosion sequences involving Reze may be at the center of this concern.
Balancing Shock Value With Theatrical Limits

Yoshihara noted during a panel, “We’re not trying to shock people just for fun, but the scene in question defines Reze’s arc and Denji’s trauma.” He explained that removing it would weaken the emotional core of the story. Still, there’s concern over how such graphic content can be adapted for theaters without running into restrictions.
Producers are working closely with rating boards to determine what’s permissible. Some animation cuts may require strategic lighting or framing rather than complete removal. The goal, according to MAPPA insiders, is to honor the intensity of Fujimoto’s writing without compromising the theatrical release. Internal discussions remain tense around where to draw the line.
The Reze arc, often hailed as Chainsaw Man’s most emotionally devastating portion, doesn’t shy away from physical and psychological brutality. If executed without dilution, it could push anime films into even darker cinematic territory—something MAPPA appears prepared to embrace despite previous backlash over crunch and content.
Anticipation Rises With Risks Ahead

The movie’s teaser poster and minimal trailers have only intensified speculation. Fans on social media praised MAPPA’s boldness while also expressing worry about possible censorship in international releases. The studio has not confirmed whether the scene will be modified for overseas distribution, but aims to release a unified version across regions.
With MAPPA already under pressure after multiple high-profile releases, the stakes surrounding Chainsaw Man – The Movie: Reze Arc are massive. The studio hopes this adaptation sets a new standard for anime films—visually, narratively, and emotionally—even if it means confronting rating limits and industry taboos head-on.