The Loyal Pin

September 18th, 2024

Promotional poster for the series The Loyal Pin, showing Freen as Pin and Becky as Anin.It’s been less than two years since Rebecca Patricia Armstrong and Freen Sarocha Chankimha put Thai live-action yuri on the map with their appearances in GAP: The Series. GAP racked up hundreds of millions of views and inspired a host of other Thai yuri series seeking to match its success. Becky and Freen have now returned to put to flight the pretenders to their throne, in their new series The Loyal Pin, based on the novel of the same name by Mon Maw. (The Loyal Pin is currently streaming on YouTube; this review covers the show through episode 7 of 16.)

The “throne” is almost literal in this case, as The Loyal Pin, a period piece set in the 1950s on, tells the story of Princess Anin (Becky), a member of the Thai royal family, and Lady Pin (Freen), her childhood friend and (as the series progresses) lover. Unlike GAP (for which its production company Idol Factory famously had no sponsor), The Loyal Pin is lavishly funded (by the Thai Ministry of Commerce, among others). Every baht of that shows up on the screen, from the beautiful sets to the top-notch cinematography to the lovingly-photographed Thai cuisine. As befits what is in many respects an advertisement for Thailand (part of the Thai government’s “soft power” strategy), The Loyal Pin also presents an idealized view of a (fictional) Thai royal family, depicted (at least thus far) as uniformly nice people.

To put it simply, The Loyal Pin is a romantic fantasy of a princess finding true love — except that in this case the princess is a lesbian. Princess Anin and Lady Pin have been extremely close since they were children, when Pin was adopted by her aunt (another princess) after the death of her parents. While Pin is attending university, Anin returns from studying abroad in England to express her “burning desire” for Pin. Pin, an introverted young woman (and outranked by Anin to boot) is initially reluctant to respond in kind, but eventually gives in to her own desires. But trouble is on the horizon: now that their studies are over, Anin and Pin will no doubt be expected to marry eligible suitors arranged for them. Anin has rejected a multitude of hopefuls thus far, and may escape that fate (there is real-life precedent for this), but it’s likely that Pin cannot. The remaining episodes of the series will presumably see this drama play out.

Freen and Becky’s previous appearances in GAP and other works and their history as an Idol Factory-promoted khu jin or “imagined couple” have given them a level of trust and comfort with each other that makes their characters’ on-screen romance completely convincing. Becky has improved her acting since GAP, and effectively portrays a princess who can be imperious with servants and would-be suitors, and dominant in her love scenes with Pin, but who is ultimately subject to the constraints of her position as a young woman in a patriarchal family.

Freen has less dialogue and the character of Pin is shy and retiring, but she compensates for it using her eyes, facial expressions, and gestures to convey Pin’s emotions. The camera focuses on her when Pin finally confesses to Anin, and rightly so — it’s an achingly romantic scene. Finally, I would be remiss if I didn’t mention Nam Orntara Poolsak, who plays Anin’s maid and confidante Prik. Nam, who played Sam’s friend Jim in GAP, is truly hilarious as the wingman for Anin and Pin’s relationship; she deserves to have a lead role someday in her own show.

Ever since GAP, fans have been waiting for “FreenBecky” to appear on screen again. Another production company featured them in the science fiction film Uranus 2324, but that movie has not yet been widely released outside Thailand. Now with The Loyal Pin Idol Factory has created a more than worthy successor to GAP, one that further cements Freen and Becky’s position as Thai yuri royalty.

Story — 8
Characters — 9
Production — 9
Service — 5 (sensual without being explicit)
Yuri — 10
LGBTQ — ? (a final score must wait until the full plot plays out)
Overall — 9

Incredible production values, an affecting story, and solid performances by Freen and Becky make The Loyal Pin the best Thai live-action yuri series to date, a sapphic storybook romance that should delight their current fans and attract new ones.



The Executioner and Her Way of Life Manga, Volume 5

September 16th, 2024

A girl with blonde hair tied up in a black bow, in blue and yellow, holds her hand up and out, palm facing us, as she powers up for a spell.As you know if you read Okazu regularly, I have been following the Light Novel series by Mato Sato, The Executioner and Her Way of Life, and the resulting anime. I haven’t, however, had a chance to read the manga at all and wanted to see how it holds up. Since I know the story, I felt it was perfectly acceptable to jump in at any volume. Thanks to the generosity of Yen Press, I have a review copy for just that purpose. So, here I am, beginning with The Executioner and Her Way of Life Manga, Volume 5, with character designs by nilitsu, illustrated by Ryo Mitsuya. 

Also, as you may remember, I have not been a fan of the art for the Light Novels, as they until recent volumes favored portraiture over illustration – a common enough issue in Light Novels and artist alleys alike. Overall, I find the manga artists for Light Novels have to do a great deal of work – especially in early arcs – to build up the look and feel of a world. I say especially, because in many cases, Light Novels that began as webnovels aren’t really fully featured in the writing, either. But now, having gotten to the 8th volume of this series in Light Novel and finding both story and character settling in to a fairly rich narrative, how would it feel to step backwards to those early days?

It wasn’t bad, honestly.

Mitsuya-sensei does a very solid job of conveying both the horror of the Human Error “Evil” and the action of the fight, in a way that the narrative did not fully communicate. The art still does not portray Menou as an unusual beauty, although Akari’s chest is portrayed as prominent. I do think that going forward the use of the word “boobs” is going to have to be a point off, though. Like “spicy” for a book with sex scenes, breasts, chest, decolletage even, but boobs will always feel infantile to me. As does the portrayal of said breast tissue moving in ways that they certainly do not naturally move. That said, due to the original character designs being followed pretty closely, it was easy to recognize everyone on sight.

A story like this, with a great deal of fighting, action and dramatic spellcasting really seems to do better with a more visual medium. I had enjoyed the anime, which did a decent job of paring down some of the early story building. Jumping into the manga at this point, might not be something a new reader could do, but I was able to skip a lot of the clumsiness of the early arcs.  This story still is an isekai, but it is not just a “game world” or a simple reflection of generic feudal life. The history and politics – and the magic use – in this world are worth delving in to.

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – 7 (not my favorite arc, the story will get better from this point on)
Characters – 7 People’s motivations are still a bit muddy, something else that will become clearer as the story progresses
Service – Besides the aforementioned breasts, shockingly little in this volume
Yuri – 4 Momo’s feelings for Menou, toxic as they are, Menou’s feelings for Akati, as unfocused as they are

Overall – 7, but I hope to move quickly past this arc into the Mechanical Society arc, which I quite liked.

 



Search and Destroy, Volume 1

September 15th, 2024

Looming over a crowded and grim cityscape, with scenes of war and loss, are a motley young person and a wide-eyed girl in fur, rendered in dark tones of gray, black and brown, with the book title in bright yellow 3-D block letters. Come, the incantation sing,
Frantic all and maddening,
To the heart a brand of fire,
The Furies’ hymn,
That which claims the senses dim,
Tuneless to the gentle lyre,
Withering the soul within.

– “The Song of the Furies,” from The Eumenides, by Aeschylus.

Search and Destroy is, simply put, a science fiction re-telling of Tezuka Osamu’s manga Dororo, the tale of a young man whose father bartered his son’s human parts for power in feudal Japan. In Search and Destroy, Volume 1 the young person in question is Hyaku, a girl whose body is ravaged by cybernetic beings known as “creech” (i.e., “creatures.”) who were formerly humanity’s enemy, but have now forged a tentative peace with humans. That peace covers a myriad of horrors with each side still set on control over the other, but it has resolved into crime and politics, rather than outright war.

As in Tezuka’s original Dororo is a gutter-dwelling child who survives by stealing what she can, when she can. On the run from the law, she encounters a foul-smelling person(?) creature(?) who quite incidentally saves her. Over and over Dororo and Hyaku encounter one another, as Hyaku seems to be targeting specific powerful creech’s in order to reclaim her human parts.

This manga, by Atsushi Kaneko, is a grim, finely detailed look at the underside of human society in the future. Kaneko’s art is extraordinarily detailed, and can be very beautiful, but his work tends to highlight the grime beneath the glitz. We are constantly given views of human, animal and creech parts ripped open to be seen as  kind of clinical specimen. They are drawn with equivalence, showing a metallic” spine” or “bones” with exactly the same emotional weight as a humans’. And yet, when human parts are removed from creech parts, it feels more like a release than a removal.

The story is taught with anger, violence, disability, social inequality and the specific kind of social unawareness we cultivate as humans so as to not have to “see” the unfortunate around us. And yet, we can’t help but watch as Hyaku’s rage carries her along her path to regain herself, piece by piece. 

I could not put this manga down when I picked it up…even knowing what it would bring me. Of course I am familiar with Tezuka’s manga, but I also had subscribed to Mangasplaining Extra for a long while, as I strongly support the work of the folks at Mangasplaining. I unsubbed when Substack decided that Nazi money was worth more than people’s safety, but I am still in support of the work the Mangasplaining team is doing. Okinawa  by Susumu Higa was an amazing license that I immediately donated to my local library.

Search and Destroy is not light reading. But if you too are raging at the inequity of society and looking for a force for vengeance to attach one’s self to, as Dororo does to Hyaku, this is a very good manga.

Ratings:

Art – 9 It is grim and complicated, but beautifully detailed
Story – 9 Same
Characters – Same
Service – Yes, but less T&A and more in the “emotionally torturing humans for pleasure” sense

Overall – 9

In 2024, what woman is able to read a book like this and not feel the rage Hyaku feels at having herself carved up and sold off in pieces as a commodity? Not me, for sure. I spent every page singing songs to the Furies asking for vengeance over those who demand control over women’s bodies.

Many thanks to Fantagraphics for the review copy.



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – September 14, 2024

September 14th, 2024

In blue silhouette, two women face each other. One wears a fedora and male-styled attire, one is in a dress and heels. Their body language is obscure - they may be dancing, or laughing or fighting. Art by Mari Kurisato for Okazu

Yuri Events

Yuri Kissaten LeLis is running a one-day event at Cafe Fuze in Sangenjaya, Setagaya. Join the staff on Sunday, November 10 for a lily-scented tea time.

Girls Love Fest is happening once again on October 6 in Asakusa, Tokyo.

 

Yuri Manga

Seven Seas has a new license for fans of their 18+ works, 12 Dirty Deeds to Unite the Princess and Her Heroine by Moridam. Sentiment over this in the comments on X was pretty mixed with a few enthusiastic endorsements, but more negative comments.  My thoughts were this: The description of the manga  reads in part, ” This fun and spicy tale follows a princess and the knight she loves—who returns from an epic battle as a pervert!” I replied that it really lost me with the word “spicy.” I know there is a lot of censorship of certain words on social media which has required us to find euphemisms for terms about sex, bodily functions, disease and death, but…it exhausts me. Of course if you like to refer to adult content as “sexy times,” I won’t stand in your way, I’m just finding some words more infantile than others. (This theme will be revisited next week, I should warn you. ^_^;)

I’ll also remind folks that just because we suggest something be licensed, doesn’t mean it can be, or that it will be with any alacrity. If you’re reading a Yuri manga you love, it’s going to take time to get it licensed. In the meantime, publishers are also licensing work they think will sell. If, for instance, Yuri with explicit sex is outselling adult-life office romance…guess which one gets prioritized by publishers?

Yuri Times wants you to know that Spoil Me Plzzz, Hinamori-san! is headed our way in English from Kodansha. This story follows the perfect student at the school who just wants someone to make her feel taken care of for a change.

 

Galette magazine has another form of support for folks who want to back creator-owned Yuri manga. The Galette Fanclub offers similar plans to those on Pixiv Fanbox and Fantia, but it looks like they are cutting out the middlemen for support and sales of their books and upcoming goods, which is great. Their first new book is Namae no Nai Tenshi by Nui!

Nomiya Rion’s Shakaijin Yuri series Watashi to Kanojo no Kawaii Koi no Hajimekata (私と彼女のかわいい恋のはじめ方) is available on Pixiv. Read the first few chapters then  start following from the current chapters.

Comic Newtype (!) announced a interspecies Yuri anthology,  Umare ha Chigaedo – Koi Takushou Ishuzoku × Yuri Anthology (生まれは違えど一恋托生 異種族×百合アンソロジー), which, based solely on the cover, looks kinda cute honestly.

Via Comic Natalie, Yokubare Ningen-san! (よくばれ! 人間さん) is a Yuri comedy about a lethargic human female and a caring angel and devil.

 

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Yuri Live Action News

Via Yuri Navi, Aniplex has announced a new live-action imprint to bring non-Japanese Asian Yuri drama to Japan, ALiL. YNN Staff Writer Frank Hecker found this article on the aLiL distribution deal:  and an interview with Kyoko Ota, who headed the team at Aniplex / aLiL responsible for distributing GAP: The Series in Japan, both subtitled and dubbed. Frank goes on to say that “It seems to have been very much a “passion project” for her and the other folks at Aniplex who volunteered to work on this.” This interview mentions ANCHOR rainbow port Tokyo, which happens to be running a Thai GL collaboration through October 7th, so I gather this is a specifically timed announcement. ^_^

 

Anime News

MediaOCD is offering the Bubblegum Crash! Blu-ray for the nostalgic price of $24.95 for three episodes. Experience the 1990s all over again!

Via SugoiLite on X, There’s No Freaking Way I’ll be Your Lover! Unless... will be getting an anime series. This Light Novel series is written by Teren Mikami, with illustrations by Eku Takeshima and a manga adaptation by Takeshima-sensei. Both Light Novels and manga are available from Seven Seas.

Egan Loo reports on ANN that the Girls Band Cry anime is getting two compiliation films.

DokiDoki PreCure is getting a novel set ten years later written by the anime’s head writer. Rafael Antonio Pined has the story at ANN.

 

Support Yuri journalism on Ko-fi!

 

 

Yuri Voice Drama

SukeraSparo has announced a Voice Drama for their Yuri VN, Lip Trip Lip Plumper, Lip Trip ~ Henshū-chu (Boss) ha Watashi no Genetsuzai (リップ・トリップ~編集長(ボス)はわたしの解熱剤), which is a follow-on story of the original VN with original illustration drawn by Minori Chikusa.

 

Other News

This week was a hard one for those of us who love Sailor Moon, with the news of the passing of Shinohara Emi, who played many important anime roles, but will forever be Kino Makoto, Sailor Jupiter to me. Ken iikura-Gross reports on the condolences from those who knew and loved her in the industry. I was okay, until I read some her fellow original Senshi VA’s tweets.  (T_T)

inori-sensei noted that the non-credit opening song for the I’m In Love With The Villianess anime has passed 500K views on Youtube. Why not go listen to Raise Your Hands! once again and smile at our ridiculous girls. ^_^

 

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American Manga Awards, Event Report by Sean Gaffney and Erica Friedman on Anime Herald

September 13th, 2024

America Anime Awards logo, designed by Nate Piekos of Blambot.I promised you a really exciting look at AnimeNYC and today I can share that Sean Gaffney and I were absolutely honored to cover the first-ever American Manga Awards for Anime Herald!

The American Manga Awards – An Historic Moment For The Manga Community

Sean did the lion’s share of the work, while I came in with the shiny stuff at the end.  ^_^ Thank you so much Sean, I could never have done this without you. I also want to thank Samantha Ferreira of Anime Herald – she does great work over on her site. Anime Herald is almost as old as Okazu!

The American Manga Awards was an extraordinary experience. I hope you’ll all read our report and keep your attention out for the next one!