The Manga Curmudgeon

Spending too much on comics, then talking too much about them

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Consumerism

September 19, 2006 by David Welsh

Oh, Marvel. When I said I wished you’d take lessons from manga publishers, I didn’t mean for you to adopt nipple phobia. (Images at the link might not be work safe.)

ICv2 has some interesting manga-related content today. Yaoi Press is putting the YA in yaoi, launching a line for the 13-and-over crowd. (Honestly, DMP and Blu already publish a bunch of titles that would suit early teens, or at least what grown-ups think they can handle, but I think this is the first time anyone’s specifically tried to market a line towards them.) And Viz responds to questions about edits in a recent volume of Fullmetal Alchemist.

Comic Book Resources has posted sales figures in the Direct Market for August. Would I be spoiling the surprise if I told you that Naruto topped the manga chart? Update: David Taylor crunches the numbers over at Love Manga.

Lyle loves Yakitate!! Japan. Pass it on.

John Jakala has some issues with Dark Horse’s scheduling problems.

Speaking of Dark Horse, there’s still no sign of Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Serivce in this week’s comics, even though it was due out in August. While I’m sure Banya: The Explosive Delivery Man has its charms (and is Dark Horse’s first manhwa release), I will not be appeased by the fact that they did release a book with “delivery” in its title.

In happier new arrival news, Seven Seas delivers the first volume of Boogiepop Dual. Fanfare/Ponent Mon, while still leaving me wondering where my copy of The Building Opposite is, does offer Mariko Parade by Kan Takahama and Frédéric Boilet.

Update #2: The MangaCasters offer their picks of the week.

Filed Under: ComicList, ICv2, Linkblogging, Marvel, Sales

Monday, Monday

September 18, 2006 by David Welsh

This week’s Flipped will be delayed slightly. Given the recent debut of the Bleach anime on Cartoon Network, I thought it might be time to actually, you know, read the manga. And since John Jakala has been recommending it to me for ages, I asked him for back-up. So basically you’ve got two people rattling on about a given book as opposed to the usual one. I’ll post a link when it goes up.

Update: Here it is.

It was a lot of fun, and I’d like to do more of these. I’d particularly like to find someone who really disagrees with me about a given series and do a similar back-and-forth.

In other Jakala-related developments, John sent me the first three volumes of Beck: Mongolian Chop Squad (Tokyopop), and I ended up liking it a lot more than I thought I would. I think I had been expecting something louder and coarser, but it’s really a very easygoing book.

There’s some aggressive quirkiness at work, but it doesn’t overwhelm the general good nature that the book exudes. It isn’t headed in any particularly obvious direction, and it’s taking its time about going anywhere. The characters are almost all interesting and likable, and the dynamics among them are engaging.

I’m not entirely sold on Harold Sakuishi’s artwork. It can seem a little lazy at times, though there are lots of sequences that are rich in detail and clever composition. Some sequences look rushed, though. The look of the book doesn’t entirely cohere for me.

But it’s a pleasant, sometimes surprising read. If anything, it’s a really nice companion piece for Del Rey’s Nodame Cantabile, though with a contemporary soundtrack instead of a classical one.

Filed Under: Flipped, Tokyopop, Viz

From the stack: SECRET COMICS JAPAN

September 17, 2006 by David Welsh

Cracking open a copy of Secret Comics Japan: Underground Comics Now, my first thought was, “Wait, Viz published this?” Don’t get me wrong. I love a lot of the books in Viz’s various imprints, but if this is the kind of stuff they were publishing six years ago, somebody get me a time machine.

Edited by Chikao Shiratori, the book collects an eye-popping mixture of shorts with an experimental, Garo-esque flavor. In assembling the stories, Shiratori wanted to offer an alternative to the magic girls and young men with a dream who dominated much of the translated manga at the time.

The cumulative effect is dazzling. There’s a rich range of styles on display, from the adorably disgusting Junko Mizuno to the stylish, cinematic josei of Kiriko Nananan to the bizarrely detailed Usamaru Furuya. Narrative structures run from utterly straightforward to thoroughly abstract, and the subject matter is similarly diverse.

Each piece contributes something different to the big picture that Shiratori is trying to assemble. Diversity is a difficult concept to illustrate in a meaningful way, but Secret Comics Japan offers an absorbing cross section of ambitious weirdness.

Shintaro Kago’s “Punctures” is both visually revolting and hilarious. In it, society has become so paranoid about the possibility of injury that they’re resorting to preemptive self-mutilation. In a world where restaurants are forced to warn you that the contents of your coffee cup are hot, it’s depressingly plausible, even if Kago takes the notion to grotesque extremes.

Benkyo Tamaoki takes a surprisingly slice-of-life approach to erotica in “Editor Woman.” As Shiratori says in his introduction to the piece, Tamaoki produces “high quality manga that also happen to be porn.” The title character is painfully normal, and Tamaoki packs the story with mundane details and petty frustrations that somehow manage not to counter the story’s function as erotica.

My favorite selection in the book is easily Furuya’s “Palepoli,” gloriously weird, beautifully illustrated one-page cartoons. They’re disturbing, profane, and hilarious. (“Golgo 31” is one of the funniest things I’ve read in years.) I’ve really got to order his Short Cuts.

There’s glorious stuff in here, and fans of Digital Manga Publishing’s Robot series would do well to try and track down a copy. It’s an amazing collection of the kind of styles and stories you don’t generally see on the shelves at Borders.

(I ordered this from Viz’s on-line shop, but it’s also in stock at Amazon. Other books by some of the creators with work in Secret Comics Japan include: Tamaoki’s Blood: The Last Vampire; Mizuno’s Princess Mermaid and Pure Trance; Nananan’s Sweet Cream and Red Strawberries and Blue; and others I was too lazy to research.)

Filed Under: From the stack, Viz

Manga review linkblogging

September 15, 2006 by David Welsh

Over at PopCultureSchock, Erin F. goes highbrow with the latest Manga Recon column. There are reviews of A Patch of Dreams (Fanfare/Ponent Mon), Sexy Voice and Robo (Viz), Pyonyang: A Journey in North Korea (Drawn and Quarterly), How to “Read” Manga: Gloom Party (Digital Manga Publishing), and The Push Man & Other Stories (D&Q). (The fan-service averse should skip the PCS front page, lest they be confronted by some young woman threatening site visitors with her Ass of Doom.)

At Sporadic Sequential, John Jakala takes a look at the adorable but baffling Q-Ko-Chan: The Earth Invader Girl (Del Rey) and Omukae Desu (CMX). (John isn’t as taken with OD as I was.)

MangaCast (at the spiffily redesigned site) offer reviews of RavenSkull #1 (Seven Seas), Lunar Legend Tsukihime #2 (DrMaster), and the utterly appealing, way-too-short Chikyu Misaki #3 (CMX). Brigid at MangaBlog gave her thoughts on RavenSkull not too long ago.

Filed Under: Linkblogging

Catalog shopping

September 15, 2006 by David Welsh

Okay, order forms are due tomorrow, but the new Previews just showed up in the shop this week. Let’s see what’s there!

If you’ve been even vaguely intrigued with Phil and Kaja Foglio’s Girl Genius, Airship is giving you a great opportunity to see what it’s all about. They’re publishing a black and white, manga-sized Omnibus Edition priced at $14.95 for 312 pages of story.

Who knew First Second’s Mark Siegel had spare time? He’s illustrated two graphic novels for Aladdin Books: A new soft-cover version of Seadogs: An Epic Ocean Operetta, written by Lisa Wheeler, and To Dance: A Ballerina’s Graphic Novel, written by Sienna Cherson Siegel.

I loved Gabrielle Bell’s When I’m Old and Other Stories, so chances are good I’ll feel the same about her new collection, Lucky (Drawn and Quarterly).

I mentioned it yesterday, but it bears repeating. Fanfare/Ponent Mon has a new collection of stories from Kan (Kinderbook) Takahama, called Awabi. Takahama’s stuff is gorgeous, and chances are slim that you’ll run across much of it in a bookstore, so if you’re interested, you might consider pre-ordering.

The solicitation text for Escape from Special (Fantagraphics) isn’t particularly helpful until it gets around to describing creator Miss Lask-Gross as “a love child of Linda Barry and David B. mid-wifed by Judy Blume.” Now that catches my attention. (Fantagraphics also seems to be having a summer sale with 20% off orders of $40 or more.)

This also seems to be one of those months where new volumes of tons of ongoing manga series I love come out. CMX has Emma vol. 2. Dark Horse has The Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service vol. 2 (which I’m sure I’ll love if the first volume ever shows up). Del Rey has ES vol. 3. Seven Seas has Inverloch vol. 2. Tokyopop has Fruits Basket vol. 15, Sgt. Frog vol. 12 (of 12, apparently), and Shout Out Loud vol. 3. Vertical has the fourth soft-cover volume of Buddha. Viz has The Drifting Classroom vol. 3 and Monster vol. 6.

Okay, what did I miss?

Filed Under: Airship, Drawn & Quarterly, Fanfare/Ponent Mon, Fantagraphics, Previews

In the months to come…

September 14, 2006 by David Welsh

It’s time for another trawl through the latest Previews catalog for debuting titles.

ALC:

  • Shoujoai Ni Bouken: Adventures of Yuriko by Kelli Nicely, $15.95. A yuri tale of a pop star who goes back to high school as part of a television reality show.

Americanime:

  • Airshell by Lia Fiengo, $12.95.
  • Honor of the Damned by Nevin Arnold and J. Bascal Monares, $14.95.

Antarctic Press:

  • How Not to Draw Manga, $14.95.

Broccoli International USA Inc.:

  • Yoko Koto Kiku by Koge-Donbo, $9.99.

Carroll & Graf:

  • Mammoth Book of Best New Manga edited by Ilya, $13.95. I missed this one on the first pass through the catalog. The solicitation promises 512 pages of global manga from a mix of newcomers and established artists like Andi Watson, “home-grown stories that speak directly to western audiences.”

Dark Horse:

  • Red String by Gina Briggs, $12.95. Hm. A collection of a shôjo-influenced web comic. From Dark Horse. I’ll just be heading to the shelter now. (Okay, they did used to publish lighthearted web-to-print hit Megatokyo, so it’s not that surprising. Still, “Dark Horse” and “shôjo” are not easily typed in rapid succession, for some reason.)

Del Rey:

  • Train Man by Machiko Ocha, $10.99. Del Rey’s version of the story arrives.

Digital Manga Publishing:

  • Hero-Heel by Makoto Tateno, $12.95. Another manga by the creator of DMP’s very popular Yellow.
  • J-Boy by Biblios, $16.95. 400 pages of short-form yaoi from the anthology Junk!Boy.
  • Kissing by Shoko Takaku, $12.95.
  • Princess-Princess by Mikiyo Tsuda, $12.95.

Fanfare/Ponent Mon:

  • Awabi by Kan Takahama, $19.99. My pick of the month, hands down. F/PM also offers a new printing of Takahama’s exquisite Kinderbook.

Ice Kunion:

  • Legend by SooJung Woo and Kara, $10.95.
  • Moonboy by Lee Young-You, $10.95.

Netcomics:

  • Almost Highly Classified by JTK, $17.99
  • Let’s Be Perverts by Yoojung Lee, $9.99.

Tokyopop:

  • Blank by Pop Mhan, $9.99.
  • Kamiyadori by Kei Sanbe, $9.99.
  • Nosatsu Junkie by Ryoko Fukuyama, $9.99.
  • Little Queen by Yeon-Joo Kim, $9.99.
  • Someday’s Dreamers: Spellbound by Norie Yamada, $9.99.
  • Soul Rescue by Aya Kanno, $9.99.
  • Utopia’s Avenger by Se-Kwon Oh, $9.99.

Viz:

  • O-Parts Hunter by Seishi Kishimoto, $9.99.

Yaoi Press:

  • Surge by Kyle Green and Studio Kosaru, $12.95.

If I missed anything, leave a comment or drop me a line, and I’ll update.

Filed Under: Previews

From the stack: THE DRIFTING CLASSROOM Vol. 1

September 13, 2006 by David Welsh

Don’t walk; run. Don’t speak; shout. Don’t cry; wail until your throat is raw. These are some of the guiding principles of Kazuo Umezu’s The Drifting Classroom, a horror classic that’s been licensed as part of Viz’s Signature line.

People who have rejected manga based on its reflective tendencies and leisurely pace won’t have anything to worry about here. Umezu’s tale of the students and teachers of a suburban elementary school mysteriously transported to a menacing wasteland moves at an insane clip. Describing anything as a roller-coaster ride is beyond cliché, but it applies here, assuming lengths of track are missing and the coaster has been built over an active volcano.

I’m reluctant to describe any of the book’s plot beyond a bare-bones summary, because I think the thrill of it comes from the shocks that arrive on just about every page. Umezu doesn’t dwell on the hows of his story; the school has disappeared, and that’s all that matters. The Drifting Classroom concentrates instead on the ensuing panic and its influence on human behavior.

And that behavior is genuinely shocking. The children are desperate for some kind of guidance or comfort, and the adults are far too out of their depth to provide it, though they try to go through the motions. Hysteria manifests in anger and violence. No one knows what’s happening or what to do, and the ordinary order of the school dissolves in terrifying ways.

I admit that I laughed several times while reading The Drifting Classroom. I think it was laughter born of disbelief. “Did I actually just read that? Did Umezu actually just draw that?” I did, and he did. It’s pure madness, and it almost never rests.

Despite the fact that it was originally released in 1972, there’s nothing particularly quaint about the book. It looks less like a manga that was ahead of its time when published as it does a weirdly brilliant contemporary pastiche of its original period.

In a text piece at the end, author Patrick Macias notes that The Drifting Classroom came after the period where Umezu’s work was strongly influenced by Osamu Tezuka. I still think there’s a great deal of Tezuka here. (I wouldn’t have been surprised to see Astro Boy come soaring into the school’s playground, though I’m fairly sure no good would have come of it if he had.)

But it’s Tezuka providing the architecture for Umezu’s own style. Umezu takes the open faces of children and crumples them with suspicion, grief and rage. He takes the stalwart composure of adults and undermines it with bewildered panic. Thick speed lines are used to illustrate terror instead of adventure.

The Drifting Classroom is unquestionably one of the weirdest manga I’ve ever read, but it’s also one of the most exciting. Umezu has crafted a nightmare out of disturbing but believable human behavior.

Filed Under: From the stack, Viz

Halfway there

September 13, 2006 by David Welsh

What is it with Marvel reminding me of Heathers? Anyway, when reading Ray Randell’s scathing summary of the final issue of Marvel Team-Up (found via Postmodern Barney), I couldn’t help but think of that funeral scene for the jocks. “I love my dead, gay son!”

That great black comedy rightly makes Entertainment Weekly’s list of the 50 best high-school movies ever made. Alas, Saved does not, which is just wrong.

To assuage me, EW provided a profile of the endearingly bitter Rachael Harris, who is set to appear in Christopher Guest’s For Your Consideration. The prospect of watching Harris improvise opposite Parker Posey makes me even more excited about the movie.

At Yet Another Comics Blog, Dave Carter provides the promised additional comparative data on Tokyopop and Viz release trends. In the comments on the first post, Jake Forbes notes another point of comparison: that Viz has a reliable source of longer manga series, while Tokyopop has to work with smaller publishers who tend to put out shorter stories.

Forbes, who provides fluid, literate adaptations for Fullmetal Alchemist and other series, weighs in on the alteration of a sequence in the eighth volume of FMA over at MangaBlog.

And thanks to Lyle for ensuring that the theme music from Paranoia Agent will be in my head for at least three more days. More, if I keep compulsively clicking on the video clip.

Filed Under: Linkblogging, Marvel, Media, Movies

So…

September 12, 2006 by David Welsh

The Drifting Classroom is… like… insane. Good insane, obviously, but wow.

Filed Under: Viz

Graphs and charts

September 12, 2006 by David Welsh

Dave Carter follows up on a question Lyle asked regarding different public perceptions of Tokyopop and Viz, despite a similar volume of releases. Dave’s approach to the question is intriguing, and the results are equally so.

Filed Under: Linkblogging, Tokyopop, Viz

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