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Cells at Work! (2018)
This is a story about you. A tale about the inside of your body... According to a new study, the human body consists of approximately 37 trillion cells. These cells are hard at work every day within a world that is your body. From the oxygen-carrying red blood cells to the bacteria-fighting white blood cells, get to know the unsung heroes and the drama that unfolds inside of you! It's the oddly relatable and interesting story that is the life of cells!
This is a story about you. A tale about the inside of your body... According to a new study, the human body consists of approximately 37 trillion cells. These cells are hard at work every day within a world that is your body. From the oxygen-carrying red blood cells to the bacteria-fighting white blood cells, get to know the unsung heroes and the drama that unfolds inside of you! It's the oddly relatable and interesting story that is the life of cells!
The series focuses on the anthropomorphized functions of cells within the human body, depicting universal biological processes and the necessity of both individual responsibility and collective action for maintaining health. It remains apolitical by centering on scientific and educational themes rather than societal or governmental critiques.
The series features anthropomorphized cells, which inherently bypass traditional human racial and gender casting considerations. Its narrative focuses on biological functions within the human body and does not engage with societal critiques or explicit DEI themes.
The series focuses on the anthropomorphized cells within the human body and their physiological functions, containing no narrative elements depicting human family units or family-life norms.
Cells at Work! does not feature identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The series focuses on the anthropomorphized functions of human cells within the body, without exploring aspects of sexual orientation or gender identity. The narrative remains centered on biological processes and educational content.
Cells at Work! is an educational anime series that depicts the functions of the human body through anthropomorphized cells. The series does not feature any identifiable transgender characters or explore themes related to gender identity. The narrative remains focused on biological processes, resulting in no depiction of transsexual themes.
The series features female immune cells, including Macrophage, Eosinophil, and NK Cell, who actively engage in combat. Their opponents are primarily pathogens, bacteria, viruses, and cancer cells, which are not depicted as male characters. No scenes show a female character defeating one or more male opponents in direct physical combat.
The anime adaptation of "Cells at Work!" maintains the established genders of its anthropomorphized cell characters from the original manga. No characters originally depicted as one gender are portrayed as a different gender in the series.
The series features anthropomorphized human cells, not human characters with an established race in the source material. The concept of a race swap does not apply to these stylized representations.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources























