Kininatteru Hito Ga Otoko Janakatta Drama CD, Special Edition (ドラマCD 気になってる人が男じゃなかった)

September 30th, 2024

Pictured: On a green background, a person in a hoodie, glasses and a mask, with a wrist tattoo of a musical frequency, crouches down to look at us, while a high school girl with long, wavy hair stands above them, looking down at them with a shocked expression.Last week, I was able to review the upcoming Yen Press release of Sumiko Arai’s popular manga The Guy She Was Interested In Wasn’t A Guy At All. It was a pleasure to share that review because Yen had done a very good job.I hope you’ll all read that review, and pre-order the book.

While I was on vacation, I took the Kininatteru Hito Ga Otoko Janakatta Drama CD (ドラマCD 気になってる人が男じゃなかった) with me to listen to on the plane.  And it, too, was fun. The cast did a terrific job, with the OTT reactions of the story. Ise Mariya as Mitsuki and especially Kito Akari as Aya really carried the narrative.

Going into this, I was very interested in how they would handle the issue of the music, since 90s 00s music are at the heart of this story. As popular as this series is, there was no way they were going to license every song mentioned in the manga. The approach they took was interesting. We mostly hear the music as if we are listening to someone else listening to them on earphones, so the notes are muted and the tune is implied by a short riff or a bass line. It worked well if you are familiar with the songs in question.
At the climax of the CD, they did license one song, Radiohead’s Creep – a great choice for the story and for Ise’s voice.

The Special Edition includes an booklet with a new, short manga showing us little Aya’s discovery of western rock, and a cute scene between her and Miysuki in story time.

Ratings:

Art – 9
Music – 9 The climax is on point
Story – 9
Characters – 9
Yuri – 7

Overall – 9

Like most Drama CDs, nothing new is added to the story, but it gives us a new perspective on the characters as we hear them now as they torture themselves. ^_^ It was a fun time with characters we’ve already grown to like, which is what we want from a CD. And if Ise and Kito are the voices used for the anime…they’ll be great. 



Movies on a Plane Mini-reviews

September 29th, 2024

I am of an age to remember the classic Justice League cartoon, so was interested in this new version of the team. It was a bit of a readjustment with new characters and new people playing some of the superheroes, but I’m pretty flexible and picked up on who did what on the League side pretty quickly. I finished watching RWBY not too long ago, so was solid in my Remnant lore. Thus fortified, while on a plane I found myself watching a surprisingly fun cross-genre mashup. Justice League x RWBY: Super Heroes & Huntsman Part 1.

I loved the change in art for the JL to match the RWBY style and as, always, found the fight choreography well-executed. Yang’s reactions to Golden Age DC comic tropes was amusing. The main story interested me less than two side stories. I really liked Bruce Wayne and Weiss bonding. It was a good match of energies. And watching a young Bruce Wayne struggling with whether he even belonged in Gotham was pretty solid, as well. Even more powerful, I loved the bond that formed between Blake, Diana and Yang, as fellow warriors. Jaune and Jessica bonding also was pretty fantastic.

The relationship between Blake and Yang was only hinted at, which was predictable in a DC story, but still a bit meh. My one genuine complaint was Clark being a tad condescending to Ruby when he learned she was the team leader. He walks it back later, but I am never okay with any portrayal of Superman that allows him to be bitchy – he’ll always be the embodiment of tolerance and support I remember from my youth.

Overall, this was entertaining enough that when I came home, I watched Justice League x RWBY: Super Heroes & Huntsman Part 2. Again, I enjoyed the shift in art style, and had some fun with Yang’s reactions to Golden Age tropes. Blake was given a moment to indicate that she’s closer to Yang than just teammates, but no more than that. Once again, the main story was not as interesting as watching each of our characters coping with the change in circumstances. There were several important stories of loss, trauma and lonesomeness that were surfaced, that might have made for good character development scenarios, that I would have loved to see developed, but there was no time, so Flash’s trauma is set aside for “oh, it’s fine now.”

Once again, the fight scenes were great, something I’ve always come to expect from RWBY, and the main story played out as it had to. If one had little knowledge of the Justice League, but knew RWBY, I think the story would hold together, but without Ruby’s exposition at the beginning of Part Two, if one had no knowledge of Remnant, I think it might be harder to follow – unless one is good at learning from context. For instance, a line to Weiss about the loss of Atlas hits harder when you understand that Atlas was her home city, not a dog or a ship or house, or something.

For two completely different media franchises with no overlap at all, both halves of this was a solid outing.

On the way home, I watched Furiousa: A Mad Max Saga. I’ve watched all of the Mad Max movies, some of them multiple times for whatever reason. I mean, Thunderdome was really popular, okay? I had also watched Fury Road on a plane, as it happens.  It still has all the extended chase scenes through the Australian desert by fantasy vehicles as imagined by a bunch of 12 year olds and explosions and gross deaths we expect.

As Mad Max stories go, this one actually made sense, which puts it at the top of the heap. It even explained a handwave from Fury Road. Is it “good”? I dunno, but it was  a couple of hours of loud stuff and creatively awful armor. ^_^ Anya Taylor-Joy and Chris Hemsworth were interesting as absurdly pretty people playing ugly people. Alyla Browne is outstanding as young Furiousa.

I can’t help but notice that DC has done a good job getting their movies onto planes. I guess Disney is just hunkering down over their IP and demanding everyone come to them.

Well, that’s my movie consumption for 2024. ^_^



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – September 28, 2024

September 28th, 2024

A blue silhouette of a girl with a white flower in her hair, embracing the earth. Blue block letters read YNN Yuri Network News. Art by Lissa P. For Okazu.

First of all, my very sincere thanks to Luce, who covered YNN last week. It’s always a lot of work and she did a great job!

Yuri Manga

We’ll pick up right where Luce left off, with the fascinating saga of Love Bullet by creator inee (pronounced eye-ni).  I’ve gone ahead and added it to the Yuricon Store. You can also read sample chapters in Japanese directly on Comic Walker.  Via Unseen Japan (a terrific resource I highly recommend,) journalist Kyama Ryuji has interviewed inee-sensei about the work’s cancellation and the overseas fandom-driven campaign to save it.

Kinokuniya has announced an exclusive variant cover for the upcoming release of The Guy She Was Interested In Wasn’t A Guy At All. I have a lot of thoughts about this, as you may imagine. ^_^ On the one hand, I really like that the largest Japanese bookstore chain in America  is so highly engaged with this title.  This also is an interesting shift in the way manga is being marketed here. In Japan, different outlets often have different extras – booklets, original sketches, even acrylic standees. So a JP bookseller having a unique item rather than going through a generic online store seems like a reasonable marketing campaign for the US. On the other hand, it is easy to see variant covers as a cash grab, as they can be in Western comics sometimes…but, they also are great for anthologies and multi-creator titles, so you can support the artist you like best. It will be very interesting to see how this pans out.  For those going the digital route, Bookwalker Global is doing a point boost on pre-orders.

I was in France last week and saw a copy of the French edition – it was raining very hard and I did not have  coat or an umbrella so I didn’t buy it as I had a long, wet slog back to the hotel. ^_^; Interestingly, it was released with an English title that was only half of the whole title. That prompted some discussion on the Yuricon Discord as to why that choice was made.

Handsome Girl and Sheltered Girl: The Complete Manga Collection from Seven Seas is on EN shelves now. This story of “mistaken identity” takes the joke a little too far, but has a nice enough end, as I found when I read Volume 1 and Volume 2 in Japanese. You’ll get to read the whole story at once in this complete manga collection.

Kiyoko Iwami’s raunchy high school drama continues in My Girlfriend’s Not Here Today, Volume 2, out now from Seven Seas.

Via Ashley, Osananajimi BIG LOVE (幼馴染) is a rom-com about a girl who had a friend who was a perfect angel and when they meet up again in high school, she finds her angel has turned into a gal.

Via YNN Correspondent Sister Carmilla, the official X account for Watashi o Tabetai, Hitodenashi says that the series will be featured on the cover of the December issue of Dengeki Maou.

To celebrate the 5th anniversary of the Bloom Into You manga’s completion, Kadokawa has announced that they will be releasing new merchandise on their Kadokawa Store.

Takeshima Eku is getting a solo art show which includes work from Sasayakuyouni Koi Wo Utau /Whisper Me A Love Song!  From the announcement on X: Approximately 50 digital original drawings from Takeshima’s series will be on display at the Kibi Kawakami Fureai Manga Museum in Takeshima Sensei’s hometown in Okayama.

Watashi no Oshi ha Akuyaku Reijou, Volume 9, is headed towards JP bookshelves next week and Ichijinsha has announced extras for the bookstores and their own shop, while Melonbooks has announced an acrylic standee of Cardinal Lily and Rae. As son as we get an official cover, I’ll add this to the Store.

 

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Yuri Anime

Via YNN Correspondent Cryssoberyl and Comic Natalie, for the 25th anniversary of the Shoujo Kakumei Utena anime, The Adolescence of Utena movie will be get a theatrical showing in Tachikawa Cinema City in Tokyo from October 11th to 17th. A special talk show event is scheduled for October 12 with Director Ikuhara Kunihiko and manga creator Saitou Chiho. That event is supposed to include a special “superb sound screening.” I hope someone writes up a report of that! All I can think of is that Castle Car scene and how great it looked on a big screen.

 

Yuri Live Action

Via sad tuna on X, GL manhwa Request to Resign is getting a short drama series featuring TWICE Jihyo’s sister Lee Ha Eum. Something to keep an eye out for.

The Ayaka-chan ha Hiroko-sempai ni Koishiteru TV Drama will be getting a Blu-ray Box set this winter.

 

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Yuri VN

Ebi-hime is at it again, this time with the upcoming Yuri VN Cage of Roses, which they describe as “A haunting gothic romance set in the 19th century. Follow Meike, a young woman from an impoverished noble family, as she’s swept off her feet by the mysterious Magdalena: a vampire who possesses a dark secret. “

Looking for more Yuri games and VNs? Don’t forget that the Yuri Game Jam is on now – keep an eye out for the amazing new stuff that will come out of that.

I hadn’t seen this when it came out, but “Life After Magic is a queer, retro visual novel that follows jaded ex-magical girls as they reconnect, deal with young adulthood, and face off against one last threat before Y2K hits.” It honestly looks adorable.

 

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Kiss the Scars of the Girls, Volume 3

September 27th, 2024

Two girls in dark, one with long black hair and the other with pale hair tied up in a bow, wearing school uniforms with white frilly collars and cuffs, smile happily as they run holding hands in front of blue background, as flower petals swirl around them.by Christian Le Blanc, Staff Writer

Eve dreams to give travel a whirl,
While Lucce wants to unite the world.
Emille’s dream, less global,
She claims is quite noble;
Emille wants to spoil younger girls.

If you’ve ever gotten into collectible trading card games and built your own Magic: the Gathering decks before, then you know that synergy helps to make stronger builds. It’s not enough to just put a +1/+1 counter on something, you want other cards on your board to also provide value when that happens.

I attended a prerelease event on the weekend for the latest set of cards, which happens to be horror-themed. When I went home and started working on a deck using my new pieces of cardboard, I remembered that I can’t always take the coolest-looking cards and mash them all together into one deck, because there may be conflicting effects that keep things from working harmoniously together. Sometimes throwing in random different things that I like means the deck ends up being less than the sum of its parts, or at least inconsistent. 

Kiss the Scars of the Girls, Volume 3 from Aya Haruhana and Yen Press is also horror-themed, and full of many different plot ideas and tones: for example, the book is set in the future with vampires, but in a Catholic school (even the students question what a church is doing on campus) with antiquated uniforms and Class S sensibilities. Can Emille Florence’s bright, cheerful optimism overcome Eve Winter’s unapproachable manner to find sisterhood, in a world where they have to rely on their combat training to avoid vampire hunters when they go into town to feed on humans? Do all of these different elements hang together, or does it feel like the author sticking together a variety of cool ideas as they come to her?

Our final volume begins with tertiary character Violetta Emme (sounds like: Violent Femme) upset with Lucce Ruth (secretly half-vampire / half-human…just like Blade, the Vampire Hunter!) because Lucce got the top score on a test. Naturally, swordplay ensues. 

This leads us to the nurse’s office, where Emille, recovering from their bloodless battle, makes Violetta apologize to her opponent for calling her Lucce the Loser (which, if we’re being honest, isn’t as derogatory as her birth name, Lucce Ruth…parents can be so cruel). 

In a comedown from the action that starts the book, Emille lets herself get talked by the school nurse into helping clean up the nurse’s office, having been promised stories of what Eve was like when she was younger (from, you know, all of two years ago). Eve, sensing complete horseshit, comes by to collect Emille and scream at the nurse for exploiting students for free labour and trading in gossip. On their way back to their room, Eve confides that she has a dream: to go future-vampire-version of backpacking across Europe in her dead older sister’s place, which Emille thinks is very sad…mostly because it doesn’t include her. 

Later that night, Emille accidentally spies two students drinking each other’s blood and getting all makey-outey on the stairs, claiming that what they’re doing is a “sister vow.” Hard smash cut to Emille waking up Eve, all breathless smiles and sparkle-eyed, demanding “SISTER VOWS!” As Eve tells her to get out of here with her unlicensed porn-parody version of the oath, Emille acts entitled to this intimate exchange, whines that everyone else is doing it, and even attempts to drink Eve’s blood without her consent while she’s unconscious later. To say that Emille is being a vampire brat at this point would be a huge understatement.  

Some childhood flashback chapters help explain why Emille has been acting so clingy and desperate with Eve. A maid explains that Emille rolled a natural d20 in Charisma, which makes friends and family alike get into awkward cringe fights over her. Exposition Maid continues to explain that she’ll only find happiness once she can get someone immune to her overpowered vampiric Mesmerize abilities to fall in love with her. Eve, who, when they met, had as much use for Emille as a bicycle has for an ashtray, was therefore the perfect tsundere for Emille. 

Eve admits to Emille that she’s not opposed to the idea of fluid bonding after all, but she just needs to go at her own pace. I won’t spoil whether or not Eve and Emille consummate their sister vows by book’s end, but I will say that Eve brilliantly tells her that doing the deed does not magically guarantee they’ll be together forever, a refreshing bit of honesty and realism for the genre.

We also get a nice bonus chapter at the end, where Lucce pays Violetta a compliment which she may or may not realize was also a bit of a dig, and so a lovely friendship begins to bloom. 

Ratings:

Characters – 5
Story – 6.5
Service – 1 I think there’s an attempt at service in the opening splash pages, where the cast are wearing flower crowns on their heads vertically instead of horizontally, looking out at the viewer like they’re very confused as to how these things are supposed to be worn.
Yuri – 8

Overall – 7.4

For a three volume series, Kiss the Scars tries out many different types of tones, plot beats, metaphors and types of conflicts. Aya Haruhana says in the Afterword that this was her first attempt at serialization, and I feel that once she has more time to create a setting where these different tones and characters find a harmonious, synergistic balance, she will be a force to be reckoned with. Haruhana does bring up very cool ideas and subversions of tropes in these books, and the art between volumes one and three has vastly improved. I actually enjoy the series the more that I think about it. As a Magic deck, this may not consistently win at your local gaming night, but it has enough cool things going on that people should at least remember it fondly. 



Sasayakuyouni Koi wo Utau, Volume 8 (ささやくように恋を唄う)

September 26th, 2024

Two girls in Japanese school uniforms stand back to back, visibly pouting at one another.In Volume 7, Shiho finally addressed the elephant in her room and admitted that the source of her bad temper was unrequited love. Having shot her shot, it remains for Aki to respond. In Sasayakuyouni Koi wo Utau, Volume 8, (ささやくように恋を唄う) she does, in a very public way.

Remember – it is still the Battle of the Bands during the school festival. Aki chooses the intro of their final song…a song she changes the set list to include…to explain to Shiho that she has never rejected her, and would actually be happy being together. Their rivalry was mostly created out of whole cloth by Shiho as a way to deny her feelings and Aki’s response is to do a cover of a song she and Shiho performed when they were in their original band together. Once again, Himari has to be the crowbar that makes Shiho’s immovable object move. Of course Shiho was going to run from Aki…because that’s what she’s been doing for this entire time. Thanks to Himari, Shiho was right there to jump on stage and accept Aki’s feelings.

And then we learn that despite that added bit of show, the SSGirls still came in second to Lorelei. Boo. But it was all in good fun and now Shiho has got to learn how to be a human again. ^_^

This volume has fantastic paneling, absolutely wonderful. When contrasted with the sad little affair of the anime, the pages here are even more vibrant, fluid, varied and imaginative. How frustrating to have had one’s work mauled by a low budget and uncaring production committee. I really feel for Takeshima-sensei, the animators and seiyuu who all worked so hard. The battle of the bands would have been terrific musically, even if the animation was basically PowerPoint slides. Instead of gnashing my teeth, I’ll recommend reading this volume and imagining how amazing it might have been.

Ratings:

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

Himari and Yori are a couple, now Aki and Shiho…who is even left at this school unpaired? Well, there is someone. But first, Shiho has got to learn to be a human again. ^_^

Whisper Me A Love Song, Volume 8 is out now from Kodansha, so we’re caught up to this point in English. Volume 9 and Volume 10 are out in Japanese and I have to catch up!