Jujutsu Kaisen episode 52, “Passion,” has the unenviable task of following one of the series’ most acclaimed installments and somehow still finds room to flex. Packed with sharp character parallels that hint at Yuji and Megumi’s diverging paths, the episode delivers laughs via a slickly animated Yuji vs. Panda bout before dropping its real highlight moment. The final scene unfolds in a single, unbroken take. No cuts, no angle shifts, just two characters in a room — pushing the anime’s already cinematic direction into territory that feels less like TV and more like a full-blown film.
Yuji goes undercover at a fight club to recruit its boss for the Culling Games: Kinji Hakari, a suspended third-year Jujutsu High student rumored to be even stronger than Yuta. After throwing a staged match against Panda, Yuji earns a face-to-face with Hakari in a claustrophobic control room — walls lined with monitors, a bar with a fridge humming in the back, a table dividing them, and Hakari lounging on a couch, already in control of the space.
What follows is a deceptively casual conversation between the two, with both characters rotoscoped to closely mimic real human movement. Rather than relying on spectacle, the scene feels more cinematic than any action sequence so far because it plays like a real-life exchange, two actors sitting in a room trading lines for four minutes. The scene is heavy on dialogue, and the tone gradually shifts from laid-back to threatening, evoking the slow-burn tension of a Quentin Tarantino scene. And because Yuji is a lovable goober, he inevitably blows his cover, triggering a calm but hostile escalation ending with Hakari hurling a glass, briefly flexing his Cursed Technique, and the two smashing their heads together.
The rotoscoped sequence is a standout moment for anime, with Jujutsu Kaisen director Shota Goshozono, also known as Gosso, handling the motion capture for Yuji and episode director Masaomi Andou doing the same for Hakari. Many fans have noted that the episode relied heavily on camera perspectives and angles. One X user expressed that the entire episode, including the uncut sequence, intentionally kept Hakari’s face hidden until the very end when he headbutts Yuji. Other fans noted that scenes play out more atmospherically than the manga’s detailed cuts and angles. In the manga, the continuous-shot sequence is conveyed across panels to capture various perspectives. Even the sound design contributes to the atmosphere, relying mostly on ambient noise rather than a soundtrack.
As this season has shown, Gosso’s love for the source material shines through, and his cinematic touch elevates even quieter moments. Even when the focus isn’t on action, the directors keep the series feeling theatrically alive. With more jaw-dropping fights ahead, it’s exciting to see that Jujutsu Kaisen’s movie-level craftsmanship extends beyond combat, proving that even a simple conversation between two characters can feel like a scene straight out of a Tarantino flick.





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