top of page

Louis and Legoshi

Contrast to Louis and Legoshi and Beastars characters to other universe: Original and Vampire Diaries and etc(supernatural television).( don’t worry about that can’t able find blog but write own style without plagiarism********) Not sure if agree story background are true. First time make a blog adding some pictures(options)!!!!!!! Enjoy!!!!!!!!!!


Legoshi and Louis are cool in many way including other character, In my view envy Bill more ugh someone find better tigers competition need more likable like many felines! Poor Bill!! Louis was hot, but can be egoistical and selfish and kind and considerate; envy mostly carnivore’s strength due his small size of deer. According resent and hatred toward carnivores. Louis like carnivores but canine particular like Juno he was attracted(last chapter broken heart). Toward much felines he seems to have softer side like way he did Shishigumi lions with strong bonds like family; Ibuki mostly his mentor. He does have sympathy after all and empathy toward felines like canines. Terrible rumor of evil vigilante horse Yafya’s background he knew the bigot horse and sublime Beastars red deer hate the horse done toward many innocent carnivores; torture and beaten them to death.

Much Louis dismay of Yafya, Louis pity for carnivores he cares about have special bond with carnivores strong with Shishigumi as he try find find he find likable male feline besides Bill due but hard to find; he prefer female felines easier. In some fanifc canons, Louis seem have attract to foxes and tigress, leopardess, female cheetahs showing magnet chick like Legoshi(if so seen canon.


Let’s talk about Louis and morality! It’s a messy subject, since Louis is quite cynical and the existentialist crisis he had when he became head of the Shishigumi led him to do some pretty terrible things because he believed there was no more point in fighting a vain fight against corruption. Juno calls him out when she meets with him in the Black Market, accusing him of giving up and just accepting the ugliness around him. Legoshi tells him he doesn’t want to see Louis corrupted by the Black Market. To both of them, Louis insists this is the natural course of things blah blah blah he’s happy where he is they’re both naïve for believing things could be different etc. etc. etc. And yet, when push comes to shove, and Legoshi’s life is in danger, Louis drops the cynical gangster façade and admits that he likes carnivores, that he cares about Legoshi, and he leaves the Shishigumi. There’s a hint this is coming in his conversation with Legoshi at the restaurant, where he argues for Legoshi to continue along “the path of light” and keep fighting (even though he, Louis, has given up). The thing is, Louis does have a sense of morality. A strong one. He drops it when he joins the Shishigumi, because he’s playing into a role that’s trying to fool himself into thinking he fits, but it was there before he was a gangster and it comes rushing right back once he decides to leave. His first meeting with Oguma is an iron-clad example: Louis, at that point nothing more than #4, a bit of livestock in an illegal trading pen, encounters a grown herbivore for the first time. He can tell by looking at Oguma that being bought by this animal means he will not be killed. And yet, when they go to take him from his cage, he fights: screaming, thrashing, biting. He does not want to go with Oguma. The livestock keeper tries to soothe him by telling him he’s going to live, and Oguma, in a shocking moment of intuition, says that’s precisely why Louis is fighting. Oguma:

Imagine Louis in the back-alley market interacting with tiny carnivore children. He bends down and lets them touch his antlers because they are always looking, and even tells them a bit about what red deer are. Louis often has a small crowd of little lions, wolves, tigers, bears, Komodo dragons, and other baby carnivores following him. At first it annoyed him, but he really likes it. He plays with them and reads to them and tries to help educate them when he realizes their schools are sorely lacking. Sometimes he brings them into the Shishigumi hideout to teach them. His time with the little carnivores really ignites his pro-Carnivore flame, as Louis himself realizes how underprivileged they are as carnivores. He wants to see his children’s crusade grow up, not become members of gangs. When Louis leaves, he makes sure he gives money to carnivore schools in the backalley market.


Commentaires


Featured Posts
Recent Posts
Search By Tags
Follow Us
  • Facebook Classic
  • Twitter Classic
  • Google Classic
bottom of page