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Archive for the Series Category


Steven Universe: The Complete First Season (English)

May 18th, 2018

At last! The entire first season of Steven Universe on DVD. 52 episodes of what I sincerely consider to be some of the very best cartooning I have seen in decades. I’m so ecstatic to be able to be writing about cartoons and comics during what is an absolute Renaissance of cartooning and comic making. ^_^

Steven Universe: The Complete First Season on DVD covers the series sequentially from “Gem Glow” through “Joy Ride”, what Amazon Prime considers Season 1 and Season 2. The set consists of three disks, each one decorated to reflect Amethyst’s, Pearl’s and Garnet’s gems. 

In this first season, we meet Steven Quartz Universe, a “magical boy” whose late mom was an alien from the Gem Home Planet. His guardians, Pearl, Garnet and Amethyst, don’t quite understand what being a human is like, but they do their best to make Steven happy, and train him at the same time in what we imagine to be the powers he will inherit from his mother’s gem. Steven can be – and frequently is – annoying and whiny, but as the story plays out, he not only matures as a person and a fighter, but we get a glimpse of the person he will become in future seasons. 

The story begins with what appears to be a standard formula of fighting monsters of the day. This morphs quickly into a layered and nuanced story about love, and betrayal, and war and peace. All the characters, not just Steven, do a lot of changing in this first season. The characters as we we see them in Joy Ride are not the same one’s we met in the beginning. 

Anime fans will recognize references from some popular shoujo series and, for the Okazu audience specifically, the homages to Revolutionary Girl Utena will please. Garnet’s story is also sure to put a smile on your face. 

The quality of the video is good, certainly better than watching it on television or the low-definition version on Amazon Prime. I wonder if the animation would hold up to w Blu-ray release, I’d be interested to find out. 

There are a number of extras on the final disk, including Rebecca Sugar doing demos of some of the songs, and an interview with her about the process for a few key ones (some of which may be spoilers for future season.) It’s very interesting to hear her demos and compare them with the final versions. Videos are interspersed with San Diego Comic Con 2017 footage. I warn you, the music is sticky. I’ll sing a song for a week at a time. Recently I’m stuck on “Working Dead” from the last season and my wife is looping “Stronger Than You” from Season 1 in her head.

I’ve encouraged any number of folks to watch this cartoon, and in doing so, I always caution them about this first season -Steven can be hard to take, especially in the first handful of episodes. But if you haven’t already taken the plunge, this is definitely the right time to grab this collection, get your snack of choice and let Steven, the Crystal Gems and the denizens of Beach City drive their van into your heart.

Ratings:

Art – Starts at 7, but rapidly firms up to 9. The backgrounds are especially brilliant
Characters – 10
Story – 10
Yuri – 10
Service – 0 There’s nothing salacious here.

Overall – 100

I’m going to come down on the side of this is must-watch animation for Yuri fans and one of the best cartoons I’ve ever seen.





Hayate x Blade 2 (Nyan), Volume 6 Manga (はやて×ブレード2 6) Farewell Hayate x Blade!

April 15th, 2018

Today we are gathered to praise the the end of one of the greatest manga to ever be drawn, Hayate x Blade. It is with bittersweet tears that we say farewell to this series. I don’t want to be morose, though, this was an amazing series and I had fun every second I spent reading it.

I was introduced to Hayate x Blade by Touko_no_doriru-san in 2005, and have been reading ever since. Statistically speaking, one volume should have been less good than the others, but none ever were. 

Hayate x Blade taught me that physical comedy could actually be funny. 

Hayate x Blade gave me characters fighting in bloody, crazy, amazing action scenes, characters committing their hearts and minds to the act of beating the crap out of one another.  I loved every second of it.

Hayate x Blade gave us characters who would do anything to support and strengthen their partners.

Hayate x Blade shed blood, sweat and tears both figuratively and literally.

In the final volume of Hayate x Blade, Hayate and Nagi finally have the fight they needed to have. 

And most of all, Hayate x Blade 2 (Nyan), Volume 6, (はやて×ブレード2 6), ended on a joke that made me snort my drink through my nose.

Thank you Hayashiya-sensei for this amazing series. Thank you for 24 volumes of manga, 9 Drama CDs (!!!) an animated commercial and 13 years of great fun!  林家先生、ありがとうございました。お疲れ様でした~~!

Ratings:

Art – 10
Story – 10
Characters – 100
Service – I could hear the swords colliding and the screaming. That’s a kind of service, too.
Yuri – 3 hints, jokes, Jun is a lesbian, Yuri-ish pairs, it was always fun and never mattered that there were no relationships.

Overall – 10

I hate to be “that fan,” but I cannot wait to find out what Hayashiya-sensei’s next project is. Hopefully the Yuriforce will be with us. ^_^ (In the fantasy in my head, I’m kinda hoping she’ll have some time to do something for Galette.)

If you have thoughts about this series you want to share, hit me up in the comments. I just want to say that Amachi Hitsugi might be my favorite character in all of manga for all time. 





Yuri Manga: Sweet Blue Flowers, Volume 3 (English)

April 11th, 2018

Today’s review is a special sneak peak at a piece of writing for the “Big Book o’Yuri”! Thank you to all my Okazu patrons for making this possible. If you want to support my work – and to get another patron-only sneak peek from the book this spring, be part of the Okazu family! 

Deborah Shamoon, in her introduction to Passionate Friendships writes, “Prewar girls culture created a private space of girlhood, a community of friends insulated from the pressures of a restrictive patriarchy.”

By the late 20th century, the readership of shoujo manga and literature had been well trained to admire – and desire – this “private space of girlhood,” as epitomized by sex-segregated schools festooned with the accouterments of western religious orders. In the year of Maria-sama ga Miteru‘s apotheosis from popular novel to anime series, another equally influential series was being serialized in Ohta Publishing’s Manga Erotics F magazine, Shimura Takako’s Aoi Hana/Sweet Blue Flowers.

Okudaira Akira has herself admired and desired admission to an all-girls’ school, where students walk slowly so as to not ruffle skirt pleats and greet each other with old-fashioned greetings. On her way to school, the modern world intrudes on her idyll and she rescues another girl from a groper on the train. The other girl turns out to be a childhood friend of Akira’s, Manjoume Fumi. They pick up their friendship as if they’d never been apart.

Fumi is going to another girls’ school, more modern than Akira’s old-fashioned one, but no less fraught with the passions that infuse the kind of Yuri story that I have labeled a “descendant of S.”

Even though it was written for the adult readership of Manga Erotics F (an eclectic manga magazine) Aoi Hana embraces the interior lives of its adolescent female characters. The focus is not on sex, but on sexuality and the maturation of the characters’ personalities as they go through the paces of high school life. Joining clubs, making friends, school festivals remain the focus, as is common with much of manga but, after some perfunctory crudeness in the first volume, there’s a surprising lack of voyeurism; an almost an enforced naiveté, in the way the girls view – and are viewed by – the world.

Fumi is very much the embodiment of Shamoon’s “the shoujo,” with her shy personality and verbal reticence, she “does not appear as a threat,” and is meant to be seen as a Yamato Nadesiko, “pure and virginal.”

Fumi comes out several times in the course of the series, in a much more realistic example of “coming out” than usual for manga of any kind. She “comes out” to Akira early on, when she explains that she’s going out with an older student, Sugimoto. She follows this in a later volume by clarifying that she likes girls generally, has had a physical relationship with another woman prior to Sugimoto and reinforcing that she likes Akira in a romantic and physical sense. As Fumi matures, her confidence grows, as we can see in an even later volume, when she comes out again to friends and yet again to a grandmother. This kind of repeated “coming out” to different groups with differing levels of intimacy would be familiar to most sexual and gender minorities. (We can amuse ourselves imagining her later coming out to her parents, as well, although that is not addressed in the manga directly.) For this series of repeated coming out scenarios, Aoi Hana deserves a place of honor. As we’ve mentioned in the trope chapter (reference needed), although coming out is possibly the defining trope of western LGBTQ literature featuring teens (especially in YA literature) it’s largely absent from Yuri manga as a standard trope.

In the end, Sweet Blue Flowers, which gained its own apotheosis into an anime in 2009. It was dressed in the trappings of an ‘S’ tale, but was ultimately a same-sex romance told with a modern sensibility and for an audience which preferred happy endings over the “death or marriage” of early Yuri.

***

 

In Volume 3 of  Sweet Blue Flowers from Viz,  we are treated to the spectacle of Fumi’s repeated coming out and the affect it has on her circle of friends, most especially on Akira, who must find a place within herself to understand what Fumi’s feeling mean to her. 

The second-years are maturing, rather quickly. Mogi is dating Akira’s brother, and Kyoko seems to have all of a sudden sprung fully into adulthood. With the even more condensed omnibus format, time seems to have contracted here and we’re almost left breathless at the changes from the beginning of the volume to the end. 

This adaptation is exceptional. Reproduction and translation are all seamless, and we’re able to have a very authentic manga reading experience. The only downside of this is that it highlights the creator’s inherent weaknesses in story telling. Shimura creates character-driven narrative, but sometimes the narrative needs slightly more than just interior monologue to drive it. ^_^;

What this volume is, without question, is very lesbian. Fumi isn’t the only gay character any more now that we know that Tamashina-sensei is Ono’s older sister’s lover. And, while the impact of that is hardly touched upon in the narrative, the addition of a role model is important for Fumi. To have someone to talk to…the value of that in a young lesbian’s life cannot be overstated.

This volume is, in my opinion the strongest of what Viz will release as four volumes. We can see the progress the young women make as people, before the story turns back into itself to fulfill the requirements of a romance series.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Characters – 8
Story – 7
Lesbian – 6
Service – 1

Overall – 8

The fourth and final volume of Sweet Blue Flowers in English has a June release date. And then, we’ll be able to talk about the ending. ^_^ There’s a lot to discuss.





Yuri Manga: Yagate Kimi ni Naru, Volume 5 (やがて君になる )

March 29th, 2018

It’s summer vacation and the Student Council is very busy. Between organizing the school festival and practice for the Student Council’s original play, Yuu doesn’t have much time to spend with Touko. They do squeeze in one date, but for the most part, Yuu’s spending her time with Kanou, who is struggling to find an appropriate end to the play.  In the middle of a crisis, Kanou meets one of her favorite writers and is surprised to find that the author is a woman.  Kanou writes a letter to Renma-sensei and, with renewed vigor approaches the script. 

This is not a side chapter. Kanou struggling with a script is really very much the core of Volume 5 of Yagate Kimi ni Naru (やがて君になる ). I say that because, when Kanou decides on a course for the play, it’s Yuu who stomps it down. Why, she asks, no, demands, should the lead even have to be any one of the people that the people around her insist she be? It’s a shockingly profound thought, to Kanou. Even though we can see that Yuu is thinking at least as much of Touko herself, it’s a massive breakthrough for Yuu, not just in how she thinks about Touko, but how she approaches their relationship.

Yuu’s breakthrough leaks into other parts of her life. She encounters a classmate who is crying after her feelings are rejected and says and does the right things. But not only is Yuu shown being supportive and humane, a male classmate joins them and also says and does the right things. This scene was worth my money as it’s an excellent example of a really decent guy handling a woman’s emotions with empathy and decency. A how-to on embracing non-toxic masculinity. It was really sweet.

Ultimately, the only one Yuu has not made any changes for is herself. Until, in the tension before the play, Touko grabs her and pulls her to a back of the building for a kiss. Yuu holds Touko off. She explains that she’s not for Touko, but she does support her, and will continue to do so, but will not be used by her. At which I sat back and said “Finally!” Yuu also demands Touko shed the burden of living up to her deceased older sister and do the play for herself. Which she does. 

A final chapter covers Yuu trying to decide where to hang the charm she got at the aquarium on her date with Touko and all the situations in which it would become awkward. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8 
Characters – 8 As they become more complicated, I like them more 
Yuri – 3
Service – 1

Overall – 8

This is the first volume we’ve seen Yuu push back at Touko and my interest in this series grew three times as a result. I guess I’d been waiting for Yuu to be an active participant in the narrative; 5 volumes into it, she finally has become one. I now look forward to seeing what becomes of her.

Bloom Into You, Volume 5 will hit shelves in June 2018 in English so you’ll be reading this pretty soon!





Yuri Manga: MURCIÉLAGO, Volume 5 (English)

March 20th, 2018

In Yoshimurakana’s MURCIÉLAGO, Volume 5, little girls wearing yellow boots and carrying blue umbrellas are turning up strangled and the police are stumped.

Kuroko works on the case…and one of the bereaved mothers. She also finds time to meet with her erstwhile opponent at Virginal Rose, Teresa, now going by her real name, Narumi, who has gathered the Virginal Rose survivors and is trying to make a safe space for abused girls. Kuroko offers to underwrite the shelter/school if they work as informants, an idea that has been used in some of my favorite literature for centuries, so I approve.

In the meantime, we are subjected to the trials of Sora, who was kidnapped by the killer, so that we can be creeped out by the storyline. It is successfully creepy.

 Kuroko wraps this storyline up swiftly, for which I am now twice thankful. Even more thankfully, the end of the book see the return of weird-eyed Reiko the sniper in a new, exceptionally violent chapter. 

Final chapters are both silly and awful in equal part. Hinako is coming across as ever more unhinged. 

Reading this manga has taught me a lot about myself. I’ve known since Ikkitousen days that I do not mind violence as long as it is between two equally matched people. Exploitative or abusive violence enrages and disgusts me (probably much as the kind of violence I don’t mind makes other people feel, I imagine.)  I like weapons expertly handled. There is no form of hand-to-hand combat that I find dull, but man, do I really dislike the idea of people being beaten to death by skillless jerks with bats. Pisses me off no end to see people beaten by cowards who have to gang up or sucker punch victims. Huh. So, this too, goes into the folder of “no” when it comes to tolerable violence. On the other hand, I have a mental folder for tolerable violence. Huh. 

Yuri? Yes. Kuroko’s amassed quite a harem by Volume 5. Chiyo is her steady, of course, and we see her with Nanami and Matoi and of course Yuria, the medical examiner (who I had completely forgotten by Volume 10 in Japanese, which I was reading along side of this. Good thing she was here to remind me who she was. ) 

Ratings:

Art – 6 No less ugly than usual
Story – 5 Violence against little girls is in the no folder.
Characters – 8 Manipulative and vile, but I like ’em.
Service – 10 Nothin’ but
Yuri – 8  Having a lesbian psychopath as a protagonist definitely keeps this rating high. ^_^

Overall – 9

I love the next arc and any and all time spent with Reiko. Spider ahoy!