Thursday, July 11, 2019
"Inside Mari" Review
(Before we get started, YES, I know this is the visual for the cover of Vol. 2, but this was the most reasonably-sized "Inside Mari"-related image that Google Images could get me.)
That being said, we now come to our final manga review of the year, for Shuzo Oshimi's "Inside Mari".
This creator has already given us the psychological horror greats of "Happiness" and "The Flowers of Evil", so this reviewer came into this series with slightly-higher expectations than usual.
The blurbs made it sound like this would be just another body-swap manga, but, then again, this is Shuzo Oshimi we're talking about; surely it can't be that simple.
And it isn't.
Our ostensible hero Isao Komori is a college dropout NEET who yearns for a chance to go back and build himself a better life from back in high school. And, speaking of high school, he has also gotten into the habit of noticing a certain high school girl at the local mini-mart now and then.
And here we have the first point where we begin to deviate from the formula.
Isao, for all his faults, is not a pervert (at least, not yet, anyway). He does not lust after this girl, this Mari Yoshizaki. He does not desire her physically or even approach or talk to her. He knows how this could be misconstrued and how any physical attraction he might feel towards her would be wrong. And, when he does find himself in her body the next day, he makes no attempt to look at her naked or watch her body urinate or in the bathtub or anything like that.
Normally, any male character in a body-swap manga would be doing exactly those things (to a degree), which is quite refreshing, given the "played for horror" perverted nature of Oshimi's male protagonist back in "The Flowers of Evil".
And another deviation is that, when Isao in Mari's body confronts his own former body at the mini-mart, it is NOT Mari inside! We don't exactly know who it is, but whoever it is does not react like the body-stolen Mari-turned-Isao would react.
Mari. Is. Gone.
And thus begins the main conflict of the story: navigating a strange new social landscape in a new body, while keeping a secret, while trying to find out what happened to the soul/mind/spirit of the real Mari Yoshizaki.
That's right-this change between bodies isn't a body-swap. It's an outright takeover!
This series moves about as slowly as "The Flowers of Evil" did, but that's a small price to pay for an interesting twist on the body-swap story, not to mention Oshimi's usual artistic flair and horror writing style.
Volumes One through at least Three are out in English now at your local bookstore, so here's another shining review from yours truly!
Have a great rest of the year!
Ain't She Cute?
This, ladies and gentlemen, is Ms. Kuroe Akaishi, the heroine of today's reviewed manga "Kaiju Girl Carmelise".
But don't let her looks fool you-she can transform into a massive, city-destroying beast.
And I'm not talking figuratively!
You see, for some unknown reason, whenever she becomes stressed, Kuroe here begins a slow transformation into a giant, scaly, Godzilla-esque monster.
Sadly, when Kuroe was little, she confessed her feelings to another little boy and her hands turned into claws, leaving both her and the boy in question with serious trauma.
Since then, she has become a bitter and lonely shell, "Psycho-tan" to her classmates. In this respect, she reminds me very much of Tomoko Kuroki, the socially-awkward heroine of "Watamote". But all of this changes one day when she catches the attention of local high school modelling pretty boy Minami Arata.
Minami used to be overweight back in the day, so he knows how it can feel to be judged solely on the outside. He, naturally, sees into the broken heart of Kuroe Akaishi and begins to arouse certain feelings within her.
You can see where this is going...
This series was written and drawn by the great Spica Aoki, creator of "Beasts of Abigaile", another great series I liked. But this series has its share of differences to her previous work.
For example, as of the end of Vol. 1, Kuroe (or "Harugon", as her monster form is known, because the location it first appeared was Harumi Town or the Harumi river, I forget which) seems to be the only person in the world at this time with such a problem. There is no community of other non-human monsters here for Kuroe to find solidarity and support with.
There is also a tad more humor present in Kaiju Girl Carmelise, from the oblivious Kuroe, caught up in her own lovey-dovey world of imagining Arata-kun, accidentally destroying buildings and getting shot by the army (and not knowing!) to the crazy kaiju fangirl Manatsu, in love with "Harugon", who even sleeps in a bag shaped like Mothra's larva form.
When she/it first appears, Kuroe worries that she/it has come to do battle with her!
And, for those pervs out there like me, we get a lot more fanservice here than we did in "Beasts of Abigaile", Kuroe's clothes never coming along for the ride when she transforms. And her clothing still runs the risk of damage whenever she transforms, not only when she goes full kaiju.
For example, when she grows a tail she has to hide, we get a gorgeous glimpse of her naked butt cheeks when it sucks back into her, having ruined her gym shorts.
While the series thus far does seem to be running a little thin on plot, such is almost beside the point at this point.
Long story short, for all its well-written characters, its unique premise, and, yes, even the fanservice, Kaiju Girl Carmelise is the first manga series in a long while that I not only want to follow, but actively want to own! It's in my Amazon Shopping Cart!
But is it in yours? Let me know!
Saturday, June 29, 2019
"Eden's Zero" Review
Evening, readers. Here comes a quick review of the newest series from legendary "Fairy Tail" creator Hiro Mashima-the space opera "Eden's Zero".
This series was another "I-picked-it-up-at-the-library-but-not-at-the-bookstore" instance. At the time, I assumed science fiction was more on its way out, and, to be fair, Mashima admits it in his afterword at the end of Vol. 1.
I myself am wary of trying to write sci-fi, mostly because I have no real background with it, but also because, these days, with modern science rapidly catching up to, if not surpassing, the likes of Star Trek and the like, it looks like it's becoming harder and harder to come up with better and more fascinating futuristic technology.
(That and everybody wants to see/know the actual science behind the fiction. I mean, who am I-Dr. Michio Kaku?
...
Look him up.)
That being said, this very thinking has left the market wide open for something like Eden's Zero, where all the classic romantic fantasy adventure tropes are instead transported into space. For example:
* Magic is technology
* The Great Demon King is/was a robot
* All of space is basically an ocean full of stars
One day, Youtubers (frame it however you want-they're still Youtubers) Rebecca and Happy the talking robot cat, land themselves on the robot-filled resort planet Granbell. There they also meet the planet's sole human resident: the boy Shiki, inheritor of The Great Demon King's gravity magic/technology.
Following a fake rebellion by his robot friends in a sweet "cruel to be kind" tactic, Shiki leaves the (unbeknownst to him) dying planet to join Rebecca and Happy on their adventures.
Oh, and if certain people happen to look familiar, it's because Mashima basically lifted them (and not even basically in the case of Happy-he's the same darn guy!) from his earlier work, "Fairy Tail".
Now, I couldn't really get into "Fairy Tail" while it was coming out new in stores or airing on Toonami (because I didn't have cable at the time), but I personally find "Eden's Zero" much more charming and entertaining.
The art style is fun, the fighting isn't too complicated, the story goes along at an easy (almost too easy) pace and we're even thrown the occasional fanservice here and there.
(And I'm talking more than we get in One Piece, but not as much as we would get in, say, Daily Life with Monster Girls.)
Speaking of One Piece, Shiki is basically a more childish Luffy, and the great treasure at the end is not The Great Demon King's treasure, but the legendary cosmic goddess Mother, whom no one has ever seen. But our heroes intend to make their way there...in order to get more viewers for Rebecca's Youtube channel.
I've heard worse reasons...
We are currently three volumes in in the English release, and the series is still holding strong, in my opinion. Although the series is plagued by a lack of a single concrete over-arching villain, as well as the presence of a lot of different plot threads that still have to be woven together.
But, dear readers, this manga reviewer is fully set to hitch his wagon to this series' rocket ship and ride it to the stars!
(PS: I have found the last two manga that I intend to review for 2019. They are, and I quote "Monster and the Beast" and "Kaiju Girl Carmelise". Now that I know their release dates and they've already passed, we'll see if I can't get those reviews to you lickety-split!)
Monday, June 24, 2019
The One on the Right
When high school student Tasuku is discovered looking at gay porn in class, in his haste, he blames it all on a prank by his brother and claims that he could never be a "homo". Being that he actually IS a "homo"-and in rural Japan, no less-this drives him into such a state of self-loathing that he contemplates suicide at the top of a tall hill. He doesn't, obviously, but a sighting of a mysterious woman jumping down (safely) from somewhere on that hill leads Tasuku to discover something called a "drop-in center".
This woman is the mysterious "Someone-san" (and no: I'm not kidding), who tells him that the people at the drop-in center, some of whom are also gay, may be willing to listen to him and provide support with his, for lack of a better word, "gayngst" (my word, not theirs).
Look it up; It's a thing.
I hadn't intended to pick this up. It wasn't on my schedule of new releases, but I just happened to stop by B&N today, on a bad day for new manga, and I had come in such a good mood to review stuff that I had thought would be on the shelves.
While I can appreciate this appeal to diversity, I'd have to say that I probably might not pick up Vol. 2. The story moves forward at literally a snail's pace and Tasuku seems far too passive and wimpy and whiny to ever act like a proper protag. Hell, even the first major storyline follows the backstory of the lesbian couple that he meets at the drop-in center!
The art is all drawn in standard black and white, obviously, but the paper it's written on is a particularly stark white that makes everything seems almost minimalist, no matter how much art the artist crams in.
And, brother, does the artist love to cram in the art!
You get the sense that this Yuhki Kamatani character may have a background in the fine arts, given all the scenery porn and visual metaphors they indulge themself in. For example, when Tasuku sees the happy and loving lesbian couple enjoying the kind of life that he may never have, we're treated to a glowing something flying out of his chest and shattering into fragments like shards of glass. And a cool breeze is always represented by a visible wind full of intricate snowflakes.
Long story short, I may not have intended to pick up "Our Dreams at Dusk", but I'm glad I did, even if only because it gave me the chance to write up an oddly satisfying and freeing negative review.
That's not weird, right? Right?
(And, PS, I have no plans to ever review that "My Boy" manga. One volume was enough for me. Too boring.)
Sunday, May 26, 2019
Sweet-Ish, Let's Say...
Welcome back, manga fans.
Now, before we begin, I'd like to apologize for the lackluster punny title of this particular post. The title of Happy Sugar Life does lend itself to "sugar", "sweet" and cooking puns, but my opinions on the work itself are nowhere near extreme enough for me to go very far in either extolling it or slamming it, so I found myself boxed into a corner.
Anyway, on to the review itself. Again, this is the review for Happy Sugar Life Vol. 1, which just recently released here on American shores.
Sato Matsuzaka used to fool around with boy after boy until she came upon the adorable lolicon Shio-chan. The two seem to live alone happily, subsisting on Sato's part-time job income and their mutual love for one another.
But everything is not how it seems.
Mysteries still remain, but Sato seems to have killed someone (or perhaps more than one someone) in order to gain the apartment in which she and Shio-chan currently live. And Shio-chan is also seen to be a missing child that Sato no doubt abducted and is also forbidden from leaving the house.
I am reminded of Higurashi no Naku Koro Ni, or possibly the short work of Thomas Ligotti, where it's all "Everything is fine...Until it isn't". Not only are the sudden visuals disturbing, but possibly even moreso is Sato herself, out ostensible anti-hero.
There's a considerable age gap between her and Shio-chan, and it definitely isn't played for hotness. Shio-chan seems to barely be into her double digits and at times seems to act more like a toddler, blindly obeying and trusting that everything Sato says is true, and seemingly unable to remember her own parents.
Let's just say this: Every night, Sato puts on a bridal veil and forces Shio-chan, an innocent child with the mind of a toddler, to recite to her wedding vows.
Yyyeah...
Sato cares for Shio-chan equally as a dear sibling, lover (?) and prized possession. Her inner dialogue is also at times stilted and repetitive, denoting madness, and constantly refers to Shio-chan as "hers", as well as strangely calling Shio-chan's love "fragments filling up her heart". Sato even treats her taking of Shio-chan like someone else would treat the shoplifting of, say, a keychain or something, and "Who cares?" about the real owners.
Twisted love is a major theme in this series, especially as Sato fights against other similarly-twisted people with their own warped ideas of love (but only if they threaten her and her way of life).
But I feel part of the fun of this series (however cringey it may be), long story short, is seeing just how far Sato will go and how long she can keep up her "happy sugar life" before it all comes crshing down, one way or another.
PS: See what I did there? :)
Monday, April 1, 2019
Gleipnir: Not Your Average Monster Movie
Shuichi (or was it Shinichi?) Kagaya is a seemingly-ordinary
student who doesn’t want to stand out.
This is because he’s suddenly started becoming a monster. We don’t know what this monster is or why he
changes into it, but it looks to me like something out of “Bendy and the Ink
Machine”. He is also granted an amazing
sense of smell, which is how he one day discovers a local house fire with
someone inside. He uses his monster form
to save the girl, but leaves behind his phone before making the decision to do
so. As it turns out, the girl has the
phone and confronts him over it, admitting to him that she’s interested in
monsters.
He meets her to try and get his phone back, but tries to
play off what she saw as a hallucination.
He is forced to admit the truth, however, when he must use his powers to
save himself after the girl pushes him off the roof. The girl demands to know his secrets and she
introduces herself as Claire Aoki. Then
a curveball is thrown when Claire invites Shuichi homes and tells him that the
fire was her own attempt to kill herself.
And another is thrown when she reveals that her sister is another
monster who killed their parents. When
the sister left, she left Claire with a star coin, which a mysterious new enemy
monster girl comes hunting after.
She claims that the coin can be exchanged for power, if one
is willing to lose everything else. Our
heroes bid a quick retreat, during which it’s revealed that Shuichi is an
unwilling combatant like Kaneki from Tokyo Ghoul, despite how much the
bloodthirsty Claire eggs him to fight.
It is only when her madness is combined with Shuichi’s
strength via a mysterious zipper on his back that the beating (I mean “battle”)
begins. A few weeks later, the two enter
into a brains+brawn relationship to defend themselves from the other monsters
that are undoubtedly out there.
While the story itself is unique and the characters all have
their various nuances that help them all stand apart from each other (plus I
loved all the fanservice we got from Claire), there are also a few problems
with it. First of all, the blurb on the
back makes it sound like Shuichi is a member of a hidden clan of monsters, like
the vampires in Twilight. Instead, he is
struggling alone, with no community to support him or to explain what’s
happening to him.
And, speaking of explanations, the magic that makes this
whole story able to take place is also ill-explained. The villain’s flashback before she dies tells
us of a befuddled-looking pretty boy who appears out of a vending machine with
the same star mark on it that we saw on the coin. He tells her that he’s lost his many star
coins and that he’ll grant her a wish if she helps him. Is this how she became a monster? The volume also ends with a flashback to what
is presumably Claire’s older sister, meeting the same man and claiming that she
wants to make a wish for…Shuichi?
Still, all in all, I feel that Gleipnir’s good points have
far outweighed the bad (at least, at this point), and that I will continue to
follow the series as it slowly-but-surely releases in the English.
Manomidori, signing off.
Tuesday, March 12, 2019
"The Promised Neverland" Review
Welcome, once again, my readers, to another anime/manga series review.
For those of you who stay on top of the recent anime schedule, you would know that a little series called "The Promised Neverland" has recently gotten a TV anime.
(And, yes, I know how redundant that whole sentence was, so just bear with me.)
(Oh, and SPOILERS AHEAD!)
Now, I don't know if I ever noticed this series when it first hit the American shelves, but learning its secret in a Youtube video got me intrigued. I knew from the blurb advertisements at the back of Jump's other manga that these kids were being raised in an orphanage with a terrible secret, but it wasn't until I watched this video that I learned they were being raised as livestock to be eaten.
(I will link to the video down below once my review is done, don't worry.)
Our story begins in the idyllic Grace Field House, where protagonist Emma lives with her other 27 adopted siblings, under the care of a woman simply known as "Mom". Every day they take tests, and there is only one rule: stay within the set boundaries.
There is a reason for this.
One day, when little girl Conny gets "adopted" but forgets to bring her favorite toy rabbit, Emma and her friend Norman follow after her to deliver it. They follow a truck into a dark place, only to find Conny dead with a plant growing out of her torso. And then they meet the demons. Emma and Norman escape, but some fragments of overheard conversation reveal the horrible truth: their life at Grace Field House is all a lie, and "adoption" means their purchase for slaughter and devouring.
The series from then on leads into a Death Note-esque game of strategy, cat-and-mouse, and surprise twists as the children plot their escape.
I love how we're just dropped into this world, with no real explanations for anything, so we, the readers, really feel like we're learning about this world and the truth of it right along with Emma and Norman. Each protagonist character feels different and unique from the others, as well.
And, personally, I thought it was creepy enough when I first heard about it, because I thought the kids were just being fed to other humans. And I don't know if it's better or worse that they're being fed to these demons, these alien, decidedly-INhuman things that look like they'd be more at home as Hollows in Bleach or Taboo in Psyren.
(Pick up those two series, too, if you get the chance. Or at least Bleach.)
The intellectual battle side of things feels like a breath of fresh air in today's manga climate of hack-and-slash, punch-punch-punch adventure fantasy manga. Now, all that stuff is well and good, but I haven't seen something like this come out of Jump since Death Note itself (and maybe possibly Bakuman).
(Though, that being said, maybe there are also hints of this kind of story present in Platinum End, Takeshi Obata and Tsugumi Ohba's latest work. But I'm rambling.)
All things considered, I would suggest giving The Promised Neverland a look-through the next time you visit your local bookstore/library.
Try before you buy and all that.
And here's the link: (seems I can't, look up "horror anime" on Youtube and watch the one by "Mother's Basement")
Sunday, January 27, 2019
Reviewing This Yuri Manga Is My Job
But I enjoy every minute of it!
Seriously, though: Before we begin, I would like to apologize for a slight fudging of my last manga review for Wonderland. I wanted to review nine new manga of this new year for 2019, but Wonderland Volume 1, I believe, released here in America back somewhere around December 2018. I was just so excited to share a genuinely new and intriguing manga with all my followers (all three!) that I decided to fudge a little.
I hope we can still be friends. ;)
That being said, I follow Yen Press on Twitter, and they posted a schedule of new manga releases one day. Now, I love yuri, so I decided to pick this little beauty up this afternoon. (Plus "Dive" was all sporty and never once slowed down to tell us what anything meant. Just like every other sports manga! Grr!)
High school student Hime Shiraki may look like an angel, but she's actually a greedy little devil! Hime has been polishing her looks, all for the day she becomes a rich man's wife (out of desire, not out of an arrangement). But all that changes one day when she runs into and injures a young girl from the Liebe Girls' Academy Cafe.
Yep, you read that right: Academy Cafe. It's like a role-playing butler cafe-type place, but with schoolgirls.
Now, I've never been to a proper maid/butler cafe. But the one I have gone to sucked ass! Dinky little food, bad acting and poorly-choreographed dancing, stupid "getting to know you" games for all the customers, and they even charged you for taking pictures! Not to mention only one damn maid in the bunch!
Phew...rant over.
But, keeping up the act, as well as doing it right, proves tough for Hime, particularly when the cool and beautiful Mitsuki Ayanokouji-senpai keeps getting on her case for messing up. And, when Hime's shy, bespectacled friend Kanoko follows her to work one day, she is also dragged into the madness! And the fun continues when Hime and Ayanokouji are paired together as lovey-dovey Big Sister/Little Sister types, a la Strawberry Panic (a just-okay series, in my humble opinion).
When Hime confesses about her facade to a closed changing room, as well as about her feelings for Ayanokouji, thinking it's Kanoko in there, the curtain pulls back to reveal none other than Ayanokouji herself!
Hime spends the next few days panicking until she and Ayanokouji sit and talk it out. As it turns out, Hime was once found out by a disagreeable girl in her grade school, which left Hime ostracized and with a complex about it. And that girl's name? Mitsuki Yano, Mitsuki Ayanokouji's true identity!
Now, this series isn't hot or anything, but it's sweet, but not in a sick way. The characters aren't near-featureless moe blobs, but don't expect a ton of fanservice. This is a realistic series. And, since this volume ended on such a big shocking revelation, I, for one, think I'll continue reading.
There's been a real resurgence of yuri/lesbian manga here in the U.S. for the last couple of years now, with things like Kase-san, Murcielago, Harukana Receive, Citrus and Netsuzou Trap smacking our shelves. Some have been hot, some have been sweet, but none have yet to achieve that crucial balance, as far as this reader is concerned.
(This one hasn't, either, but we'll all keep our fingers crossed for the future!)
Wednesday, January 2, 2019
Merry Christmas and a strange New Year!
Welcome back, everyone, to a new year and a new set of manga for me to review.
And here we are, starting off 2019 with a good one.
In Ishikawa Yuto's "Wonderland", we follow Yukiko "Yukko" Honda through quite an unusual day.
(And no, she isn't almost asleep on a riverbank when she spots a rabbit with a waistcoat, so let me stop you right there.)
No, when Yukko wakes up one morning, she finds that she, and seemingly everyone else in her city, has shrunk down to a scant few inches tall. After her parents are killed by the family cat, ironically while trying to save her, Yukko sets out on the back of her family's (literally) big friendly dog Poko to find help.
But the Alice allusions don't just end there. When threatened to leave a store because of her dog by Zippo-toting thugs, Yukko finds herself rescued by a foreigner (I guess?) named Alice, who she can just barely understand.
Attempts are made to contact the outside world and to get help from the military barricade around the town. And we all know what the military is really doing when they quarantine off a small town...
Sadly, there isn't all that much shrinking process, for all the talk we've been doing of shrinking. We actually get to see one National Defense Force guy getting his protective suit punctured and then shrinking down like everyone else, but whatever this is is shrinking the people clothes and all.
(Big sorry to all my fellow "shrinking out of clothes" enthusiasts.) :(
There's a fair amount of humor in this manga, as well as plenty of violence, gore and fanservice. The humor itself is a little what I like to call "Japanese", where something silly just happens out of nowhere or right immediately after a lot of serious build-up. For example, Poko being too distracted by dog treats to help out in a battle, or Alice pretending to use the miniature toilet in a dollhouse.
Unlike Attack on Titan, so far this series, Wonderland, seems to be pointing towards a legitimate reason and explanation for things being the way they are. And our Alice seems to be a big part of that. She's definitely more than she seems...
Has my review gotten you interested? I sure hope so. Keep an eye on this blog for eight more manga reviews coming in the new year.
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