Violence Jack 1-3 English Subs Uncut Instant

Violence Jack isn’t a sequel. It’s a punishment.

Set after a colossal earthquake turns the Kanto region into a lawless wasteland called “Hell’s Land,” the manga (by Go Nagai) and OVAs follow a hulking, scar-faced giant named Jack. He’s not a hero. He’s a force—a brutal, machete-wielding arbiter who shows up when the weak are being flayed, cooked, or sold.

The three OVAs (1986–1990) adapt the manga’s most infamous arcs:

The uncut versions restore the original cel-by-cel violence: severed heads still blinking, a woman’s face melted by acid in slow motion, and a baby thrown into a fire (unblurred, unbleeped).


A. Animation History’s Id Unleashed Violence Jack is what happens when post-Fist of the North Star testosterone meets bubble-era Japan’s unregulated OVA market. The backgrounds are hand-painted hellscapes; the gore is practical cel animation (no digital blood). It’s a time capsule of “we can do anything on video.” Violence Jack 1-3 English Subs UNCUT

B. Go Nagai’s Middle Finger Nagai wrote Violence Jack after depression over Devilman’s ending. Jack is heavily implied to be Akira Fudo (Devilman) after losing his humanity. The OVAs double down: Jack never speaks, never explains. He just splits torsos. That nihilism is rare in anime today.

C. The Subtitle Miracles Old subs were garbage—phrases like “I will killing you very slow.” The 2024 Kanto Hell Subs version actually translates the brutal Kansai dialect of the villains and preserves Nagai’s dark humor (e.g., “Don’t worry, the rope will break before his spine does”).


The anime adaptation consists of three OVAs (Original Video Animations) released in the late 1980s. They are loosely connected to Go Nagai’s Devilman canon (with many fans believing Jack is the physical manifestation of Amon, the demon merged with Akira Fudo). Here is what each episode covers.

Episode 1: Harlem Bomber The debut episode sets the tone immediately. It introduces the tyrannical Slum King and his subordinates, specifically the ruthless gang leader known as the Harlem Bomber. The narrative follows a young woman, Mari, and her boyfriend as they navigate the ruins, eventually crossing paths with Jack. This episode is infamous for its depiction of sexual violence and brutality, establishing that no character is safe. Visually, it captures the gritty, sketchy aesthetic of 80s horror anime, prioritizing atmosphere over fluid animation. Violence Jack isn’t a sequel

Episode 2: Evil Town Often cited as the most notorious of the trilogy, Evil Town delves into a society living underground. The plot revolves around a power struggle between different factions, including a group of violent bikers. The episode gained legendary status (and notoriety) for its unflinching portrayal of cruelty. It pushes the boundaries of what is acceptable in animation, serving as a test of endurance for the audience. The arrival of Jack in the climax provides a cathartic, albeit bloody, resolution.

Episode 3: Hell's Wind The final episode of the OVA run shifts the setting slightly to a town besieged by a biker gang known as Hell's Wind. While still violent, this entry leans slightly more into traditional action-horror tropes. It focuses on a group of survivors trying to escape the gang's clutches. The animation quality sees a slight uptick here, and the story feels slightly more structured, though it loses none of the dark edge that defines the series.

Most Western DVDs (like the long-OOP Manga Video UK release) are not uncut. They removed:

The true uncut versions come from:

That last one is key. For the first time, episodes 1–3 exist in a single 4.5GB MKV with: ✅ Uncut video (from a Japanese LD + VHS hybrid master) ✅ New, readable English subtitles (not the “Engrish” from 90s bootlegs) ✅ No logo bugs or watermarks


In the pantheon of anime history, few names command as much cautious reverence as Go Nagai. While Mazinger Z defined the super robot genre, Violence Jack defined the "Mad Max" style of post-apocalyptic horror in manga. In 1986, the pages of Nagai’s magnum opus of violence were brought to life in a three-part OVA (Original Video Animation) series.

For modern viewers seeking the English Subtitled, Uncut versions of episodes 1 through 3, the experience offers a raw, unfiltered look at a pivotal era of adult animation—one where the constraints of television were shattered, and the screen was painted red.