Your Magic is in Another City – Arcane: League of Legends on Netflix

December 5th, 2021

Promotional poster for Arcane: League of legends, Season 2. A girl with blue hair looks at us from the bottom of the poster, Her read-haired sister looks to the left from the top of a cast of characters.Today’s post is thanks to Ted the Awesome, who made an impassioned pitch for me to watch Arcane. And so I have. As you know, I do not play games very often, but had of course heard of League of Legends. Without knowing anything about the world, I guessed that this cartoon was meant to function as a kind of prequel, but this review will address it as a standalone story in its own right.

Arcane: League of Legends tells the story of two sisters brought up in the corrupt squalor of the slums of Zaun, and two idealist young scientists from the prosperous city across the bridge, Piltover. Vi and her sister Powder live hand to hand – as, it is implied, everyone in Zaun does. Zaun has various criminal organizations vying for superiority, but the syndicate run by Silco gets an advantage and Silco functionally takes over Zaun. Jayce is a privileged young man in Piltover who creates Magical “Hextech” gems, along with his partner Viktor. As the story progresses, they find that dreams and reality don’t match.

Now, let me say right up front that I did not enjoy Arcane for itself, but I did think it interesting. It gave me a lot to think about in terms of how stories are constructed and the shortcuts taken with popular culture writing like games and comics that people take for granted as providing depth without actually doing so.

To begin with part of the pitch for this series, was “how the systems of government (and lack there of) worked and how our heroes try to cope with wanting a better life and dealing with what life actually gives them. It’s not cookie cutter series where there’s a convenient end goal where once you’ve gotten it, everything will be better.”

And it occurred to me that white cis/het men who play games and consume media, probably have seen a grillion media forms that tell that story. You save the princess, get the item and You Win! (A process that has led generations of men who game to think of women as rewards rather than people, famously discussed by Arthur Chu in Your Princess is in Another Castle.)

As a queer woman, that that has never been the narrative I’ve been offered.

Almost every action narrative with a female lead starts with loss. Her family was killed, now she’s out for revenge! They “took everything” stories that begin with rape, poverty, enslavement, abandonment and loss, is the typical female lead story. Sometimes we get the Cassandra model, where the smart lady is ignored and everyone else on the ship gets an alien bursting out of their chest and dies. Remember, one of the reasons why shoujo manga took off so fast and so hugely in the 1990s in the west, was precisely because it gave us narratives of girls who were just girls doing their best. They cried when they were sad, and had friends they could lean on. They had agency and could make choices….all things that is still kind of rare in action media with female leads.  In Age of Ultron, Black Widow’s entire character development was boiled down to her having being forcibly sterilized. Not that she killed a lot of people, brought down governments, caused untold suffering…she’s not able to bear children. That’s it. Like that’s the only thing women are about. Her inability to bear children is not just a de facto red mark on her ledger, but “a lot of red.” (Again, see Arthur’s above article about misogyny in nerdom.)

In this narrative, we are told a story about two sisters who are given zero opportunity to thrive. Every experience is trauma, loss, constant stress. It is not a different story than women experience in many places right here, right now. Poverty, illness, violence, mental illness…nothing about it is different. Absolutely cookie cutter, as it seems shockingly few men have the capacity to imagine anything else for women both in entertainment and real life.

So setting aside that children suffering loss as a plot driver is not compelling to me, the main concern I have with Arcane is that everyone in the story acts like a 15 year old thinks adults act. There are no actual adults in the cast. Just adult shapes, with simplistic thinking. It’s comic book villainy.

Don’t get me wrong, I see this in the real world, too, and it doesn’t seem to be obviously problematic to some portion of the population. Self-dealing is an extremely common form of political corruption. I was in a town planning meeting once when a council member who just *happened* to be a landscaper demanded the HVAC units of a new building be blocked off with a specific kind of tree which he just *happened* to have on hand. So the council of Piltover being self-concerned isn’t really the problem. The problem is that every scene with them is incoherent. They all reminded me of a Dilbert comic: “The correct approach to any situation is, by amazing coincidence, the only approach you know.”


The warrior argues for war, the logistics guy argues for (his) trade. Jayce comes in screaming but never says anything.

This is what I mean by no adult thinking: The Hextech. Those gems are going to make things better for people. How? Why? Why is it not obvious that it will just be taken by the privileged to given them more privilege. What problems do they solve? What problems do they create? No one asks or answers any of those questions. If Viktor thinks Hextech can help Zaun, why not just…give them to Zaun? Yes, I know why. But they just…never talk about any of it. Jayce shows up with Hextech, is made councilor and a scene later is the head of the council. This is not how politics, trade, economics or people…work.

All of this is a shortcut for pop culture writing. “Look, this is a complex society,” without thinking for a moment what is complex about it.

This carries over into the writing about Powder/Jinx. She’s a sweet innocent, until she snaps. As I watched Jinx fuguing I thought, “Oh, she’s Alice from Batwoman.” I’m not a mental health expert, I am not saying what happened to Jinx could not happen.  I’m saying that a coherent narrative about mental illness, poverty and trauma is ignored for a 1983 music video with lots of neon instead.

The art style was interesting overall, a kind of magical deco for Piltover. (It’s not steampunk, which is more an aesthetic in which the Age of Reason and the Industrial Revolution have a Victorian baby.) This kind of Futurist Magical Deco in Piltover and Decrepit Industrial in Zaun, which immediately brought the setting (and the story) into comparison with Fritz Lang’s Metropolis. The animation was not bad, although typically, the settings and backgrounds were given a lush smooth quality the humans couldn’t quite get. I was very impressed with the animation of facial expressions. Used to anime, as I am, it was pretty amazing to see faces looking like…faces.

Lastly, you may have guessed that if I am reviewing this on Okazu, there is some lesbian aspect to the narrative…and so there is. In the course of the story a relationship is introduced for one of the protagonists.  Vi meets up with this world’s version of a police officer, Caitlyn. Caitlyn is as privileged as Vi is disadvantaged and their relationship is antagonistic for some episodes. When they start to warm up to one another it is very reasonably presented as emotional intimacy that has potential to become more.

Sadly, the story again chooses a shorthand and Caitlyn is left to become no more than a catalyst for Vi and Jinx to resent each other. This frustrated me, as there was no point at all to the entire scene which becomes the climax for this story, setting up Vi and Jinx as opposing forces. Frustratingly, it was obvious that Caitlyn was put there as a puppy in the narrative for all the reasons mediocre writers put puppies in the narrative.

Of all the relationship choices in this story, the one that actually works the best was Silco’s relationship with Jinx. It felt very much like the creators were toying with the idea of crossing the line with them, but Silco consistently remained a father figure to Jinx right to the very end of the story. That surprised and pleased me and was legitimately the best-handled nuanced relationship in the whole story.

Overall, while I did not love Arcane, or find it entertaining, it gave me a lot to think about. I’m more aware of the kind of shortcuts – what I call handwaves – pop culture  takes in world and relationship building….and I expect better. I want stories for adults to be written in a way that requires adult perception. I’m not saying I can’t get behind a teenage superhero or magical princess, but if you’re going to hand me a complex world, then I expect the creator(s) to be able to explain its complexities and then to do so.

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – 5 It so easily could have been an 8, with a few screaming scenes removed and some thought put into it
Characters – 7 I wanted to like everyone, but I kept shouting “WHY?” at the TV
Service – 7 Nudity, which was fine and a long straight sex scene I could have done without.
Yuri – 4  It had potential, but…

Overall – 7

Thanks again to Ted, for giving me the opportunity to have a good long thought about what I want from my entertainment!



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – December 4, 2021

December 4th, 2021

Event News

There’s still time to register for Shojo Manga: The Power and Influence of Girls’ Comics sponsored by the Japan Foundation of New York. I’m looking forward to it so much and hope to see you online for this fabulous talk, featuring Deborah Shamoon, Mia Lewis, Kazumi Nagaike and me.

Okazu Patrons will be receiving their invitations to our Online Holiday Party shortly, and while I know that this time of year is just the worst, I’ll be happy if as many of you can come as possible. We have a lot to talk about…and I am really hoping that we’ll be able to do a book cover reveal for By Your Side: The First 100 Years of Yuri Anime and Manga.

This summer’s 20th Anniversary of Yuricon Discussion Event is now live on Yuri Studio! I’m super sorry it took so long to get done, things just kept getting in the way. But this makes 8 videos for Yuri Studio this year, which is 2 more than my original goal, so yay us! Thank you very very much to Ashley for your video editing, you’ve been a tremendous help, and thank you to Okazu Patrons!

One last bit of serious news. I’m sure most of you have heard that there was a omicron variant case who was at Anime NYC. It’s 2 weeks today and I have had no symptoms, but I’ve got an appt. for a test as soon as I could get it, because I care about people who have seen me since. I expect it to come back negative. Let me be clear – everyone at the con was vaxxed and masked the whole time and I expect no more than a handful of folks will test positive. Nonetheless, I couldn’t help but make the worst joke about it all. ^_^;

 

 

Yuri Manga

School Zone Girls, Volume 3 hit shelves this week. More wacky school fun.

Seven Seas announced another Comic Yuri Hime license, Yuama’s The Summer You Were There. I’m still tapping my foot impatiently waiting for Odoriba ni Skirt ga Naru. ^_^

Not manga, but equally as fun: Jacqueline Lesnick has released all of her Girly collection for free on itch.io. I was and am, a fan of that gonzo Yuri series. She’s also making You Suck available and the first several chapters of her current story Princess Panic. These are name your own price and I hope you’ll all throw her a few bucks for the time, effort and entertainment these offer.

ANN’s Rafael Antonio Pineda offered me a new reason to re-up my subscription to Rakuen Le Paradis magazine, with the news that Mizutani Fuuka is wrapping up her 14-sai no Koi series and starting a side story about Aoi and her relationship with the school doctor.  I referenced that relationship a few years ago in a review of Issue 26. ^_^ I’m kind of interested how it goes. That magazine – indeed, that very manga series – is full of problematic relationships, so it will hardly be alone in it’s “urk” value.

 

Live Action News

The next Sailor Moon Musical, Kaguya-hime no Koibito, will stream online in the new year, through Live Viewing Japan. Alex Mateo has details on ANN. I watched the last streaming musical because of course I did. ^_^ Nogizaka46 members are perfectly fine in their roles.

 

Yuri Light Novel

Look. I know, I am the only one who care about this series. But it’s my blog. ^_^ The Kunoichi Bettegumi ~ Igarashi Satsuski series has a fourth volume! I finally managed to make time to read Volume 3, review to come eventually, and I am actually glad that it’s continuing. I wish J-Novel club would pick these up. They are absurd, yes, but no more absurd than Girls Kingdom. A definitely-gay-probaby-a-vampire, a maid, a samurai and a ninja in a historical drama. Seriously. This series is a hoot.

Yen Press has released The Executioner and Her Way of Life, Vol. 3: The Cage of Iron Sand ahead of the 2022 anime.

 

Thanks to our Okazu Patrons who make the YNN weekly report possible! Support us on Patreon to help us give Guest Reviewers a raise and to help us support Yuri creators!

Become a YNN Correspondent: Contact Us with any Yuri-related news you want to share and be part of the Yuri Network. ^_^



Futari ha Daitai Konna Kanji, Volume 3 (ふたりはだいたいこんなかんじ)

December 2nd, 2021

One of the defining characteristics of an adult life is facing setbacks. You can work really hard, gambare with all you have and still not achieve the goal. Sometimes it’s hard and sometimes it’s just life. In Futari ha Daitai Konna Kanji, Volume 3 (ふたりはだいたいこんなかんじ), its both.

Sakuma and Wako work very hard to achieve goals and sometimes is just doesn’t work out. But that is not the point of Volume 3. Of course, it is part of the plot, but what makes this, like the previous two volumes, work is not what Sakuma and Wako do…but how they do it. And how they very much do it together. This is not a happily-ever-after type story. This is a two people who love each other very much, live lives and eat meals and sometimes life is a step forward and sometimes it’s a step back.

I would gladly read this series for decades and watch these two look at each other like that and be there for one another. ^_^ This series is not about Yuri tropes, like Ikeda’s Whispered Words, it is not about office romance, or relationship melodrama…it’s a wonderfully told and drawn story about two decent people making their way through the world and us rooting for them rooting for each other. ^_^

Oh, and their friend gets some sex, finally.

Ratings:

Art – 9
Characters – 9
Story – 8
Service – 5 Light nudity
Lesbian – 10

You’ll get to read this series in April 2022, when Seven Seas releases Volume 1 of The Two Of Them Pretty Much Like This, which is already available for pre-order through this convenient Amazon affiliate link.

In the meantime, get yourself someone who looks at you the way Sakuma looks at Wako.  ^_^



Otherside Picnic, Volume 6, Guest Review by Sandy F.

December 1st, 2021

Welcome back to Guest Review Wednesday on Okazu. We’ve had 17 guest Reviews this year, 10 of them since September. Thank you so much to our Okazu Patrons for making this increase possible! I’m super excited to have more voices on Okazu and different perspectives for work I like (and works I don’t! Hint, hint: tune in next week. ^_^)

In the meantime, welcome back Sandy F. with a look at the most recent release in one of my favorite scifi-horror series. Take it away, Sandy!

Otherside Picnic Volume 6, out now from J-Novel Club, starts with Sorawo and it quickly becomes clear that something has happened to her. We discover she has lost her memory and her connection with the Otherside and the people she knows through that connection. Though she hasn’t lost her appreciation of Toriko’s beauty.

So begins what is a change from Iori Miyazawa’s usual approach for Otherside Picnic. Instead of a collection of Files, we have one narrative. And much of the actions happens in our world, with a number of trips into Interstitial Space, a phenomena we have encountered before. And Hah! there is a new player, T, for Templeborn, who pursues Sorawo and others involved in the exploration of the Otherside.

In this File of Otherside Picnic we follow various encounters between T for Templeborn, Sorawo, Toriko and others as they confront T’s agenda, with chase scenes and quite a bit of action including a trip to the DS Facility. The glimpses of Interstitial Space are fascinating and mysterious. But I felt that Interstitial Space is more of a distorted reflection of our world, and I missed the Otherside and its glimpses of mysteries beyond human understanding.

There is only one substantial scene in the Otherside and to me it was like a tweet from the Yuri Manga Bot, a twitter account that suggests Yuri plot ideas. In this scene we witness Sorawo and Toriko sharing in the joy of construction. A delightful scene and a reminder that as well as its terrors, the Otherside is a haven and a place of connection for Toriko and Sorawo.

In this File we continue to follow Sorawo and her tentative progress of confronting her own personal terror, personal relationships. There were a few Sorawo and Toriko scenes when I squeed just a little bit. They are definitely making some progress, with Sorawo surprising Toriko, and me, with her willingness to be more open about how much Toriko means to her.

I also appreciated watching Sorawo deepen her relationships with other people. For example, in a conversation between Sorawo and Akari ‘Karateka’ Seto, Sorawo confronts the disturbing reality that despite what she may think of herself, people might want to get to know her and like her.

And we are also given some glimpses of Toriko’s childhood that I believe gives us insights to why she enjoys exploring the Otherside with Sorawo.

One quibble I had was I thought this File was a bit busy with other characters such as the reintroduction of Runa Urumi as well as the girl from File 19. Sometimes I wondered if their role was to fill some space in the story, rather than contribute to the narrative itself.

The art was an interesting mix of action shots and characters, with more evocative images thrown into the mix. One with Akari I found particularly haunting.

I enjoyed the translation, especially the odd British word or phrase a feature that I associate with this series.
All in all, a great read, as always worth the wait. And now after the recent release of the album cover for Volume 7, the wait begins for the next great read!

Ratings:

Story – 8
Character – 9
Service – 4
Yuri – 7

Overall – 9

Erica here: Thank you Sandy! For me, the most impactful part of the series is that stunning opening, which really calls everything into question.

And, of course, since that amazing cover to Volume 7 was released, we’re all looking forward to the next book. ^_^ It hits Japanese shelves in a few weeks and I expect we’ll be hearing more about that soon from J-Novel Club. ^_^



Whisper Me a Love Song, Volume 4

November 30th, 2021

When we left Himari and Yori-sempai at the end of Volume 3, they had finally, officially begun to date. I don’t know why this series was graced with continuation after the conclusion of Story A, but I am deeply thankful.

So here we are, in Whisper Me a Love Song, Volume 4, in which Yori and Himari negotiate the shape of their relationship, and we get a whole new plot! How exciting! Seriously.

First, though, Himari and Yori need to figure out how they want to be with one another and for one another. There are a few missteps, but they work it out pretty clearly by, wait for it, talking with one another. Crazy, right? Like that ever happens in a manga. When that happened and we were only halfway through the volume, I figured something was up. Any other manga, them not talking would have been the whole story.

So, when Yori admits to trying to be a “cool” date partner and Himari belly laughs and thinks that’s adorable, I knew we could sit back and relax. And, so the story heads into the tension filled Battle of the Bands arc that is still developing in monthly issues of Comic Yuri Hime, the January issue of which is waiting for me in the bookstore.

The first thing Takeshima-sensei does for this arc is give SSGirls a rival band. Woooo~~~ It’s great, too, because as the story plays out, there are a LOT of complicated personal relationships involved that criss-cross these two group and make for a fun story. Except for one thing. One person. Shiho. We finally meet Shiho and the more I spend time with her, the more I want to sit that girl down and give her a stern talking to. However, so far Takeshima-sensei hasn’t let me down and I trust that the story is going in the right direction.

The art has firmed up into an absurdly cute and wholesome style that really works for this series. Kodansha’s team continues to provide me with translation and character voice that sounds so real, I can *hear* the characters as I read. Terrific work, especially by Jennifer Skarupa for doing excellent retouch and lettering (I see you working on those word balloons behind the characters heads) and Kevin Steinbach for an approachable translation.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8
Characters – 9
Service – 0
Yuri – 8

Overall – 8

Whisper Me a Love Song continues to charm and delight…and now the Battle of the Bands is heading our way. Is there anything more high school than that? (Well, yeah, there’s the school musical and prom, and finals and whatever, but you know what I mean. ^_^)