LGBTQ Comic: The Infinite Loop, Issues 1-4 (of 6)

August 21st, 2015

TIFL1When I first heard that Pierrick Colinet and Elsa Charretier’s series The Infinite Loop had been licensed by IDW, I was immediately intrigued. For one thing, this series is a Bande Dessinée (BD), a French-language comic. We in the USA are just starting to get a real grip on the breadth and depth of the BD industry. International comics shows that specialize in cross-cultural exchange, such as Toronto Comic Arts Festival, Tokyo International Comics Festival and Angoulême International Comics Festival are making it easier than ever before for fans and creators to reach past borders and get to know the broader range of comics globally.

In addition, The Infinite Loop is a science fiction series. I know I’ve mentioned this from time to time, but when I was in my early years of reading all the lesbian literature I could find, a great deal of it was science fiction. The speculative nature of that genre and fantasy were comforting to LGBTQ writers who were not yet afforded a place on bookstore shelves.  In recent years, LGBTQ sci-fi and fantasy have been vital and thriving…but not so much in comics. Scifi particularly, and comics have mixed less than one might suppose, given the crossover fandom.

So, yay, a BD about a lesbian that is a sci-fi story! Win, win, win.

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Teddy is a time traveler, whose job it is to clean up time anomalies, left by tourists and terrorists and anyone fucking with the time stream. Agents have a relatively short shelf-life, as infinite possibilities and selves play havoc with their sanity and Teddy is the agent who has been active the longest. Teddy’s good at getting rid of anomalies, until she encounters one that looks like a beautiful woman who is in danger. Teddy immediately protects her and takes ‘Ano’ to safety.

Teddy’s partner is Ulysses, a meaty guy with an overt crush on his partner. But he’s put in a very tight spot when Teddy violates the rules.

The art is adorable in a retro futuristic way, almost Jetson-y. The color palette is vibrant. I love the panel design, the crazy paving works especially well when Teddy is having schizophrenic conversations with herself, or multiple things are happening simultaneously in various timelines.

I generally like the story, and will certainly read it to the end, but there are some problematic areas. Of these, the first real problem is something I can only express as a “man writing a lesbian as if she were a female-shaped man.” Now, I am aware that there are crass, vulgar women on the planet, but of the lesbians I myself know, none of us are in the habit of referring to other women as having “nice boobs” except, perhaps, in bed. There is a male-gazeness about Teddy that grates on me ever so slightly. This continues throughout, with dialogue that is supposed to be cutesy, sexy jokes, but just come off as icky-making, eye-rolling double entendre’s. I’ll hope that the humor was merely lost in translation. The writer himself outs himself in the afterword, so it is not an issue of “straight guy writing lesbian wrong,” just a guy writing lesbian oddly. ^_^

This is a small, but persistent irritation, but not my biggest complaint. And even this is not “big” it just really stands out. On Twitter I commented “Writers, please do not introduce characters for the sole purpose of treating them badly to prove the bad guys are bad. It’s weaksauce.” And, in a nutshell, that’s the problem. Spender and Prospekt are the bad guys (so far). They are two more meaty guys who arrive on the scene with a load of misogynist, homophobic and transphobic insults, this way we know they are bad people. Then they kill a perfectly innocent person so we know they are really bad. Really, really bad. Yeah, we got it. They could have been multi-faceted, complex characters, instead they are just two-dimensional violent sociopaths who have somehow made it to the top of the organization, while Teddy, who is at least as skilled, is persecuted for her relationship. I think I’ve read this one before.

Once again I find myself wishing this was in manga page count, rather than western comics “squeeze the story in quickly, then spend 4 pages on a sex scene! Hurry Hurry!” mode.

The Infinite Loop is not yet available as a single volume, but the collected volume is being released in December 2015, it is listed on the Yuricon Store. I’m reading individual issues on Kindle. (Issues 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5| 6 TBD). The kindle app breaks the complicated  panels up for slightly easier reading, but also allows a full page mode to see the full effect. Overall, a very decent reading experience.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Character – 8
Story – 7, could be higher, depending on the resolution
Service – 7 there is a sex scene
Yuri – 8

Despite minor distractions, there are some genuinely interesting turns of the story. As I say, I’m still reading and looking forward to the resolution.



Hayate x Blade 2 Manga, Volume 2 (はやてxブレード 2)

August 19th, 2015

615EVWBRbLLI gotta be honest with you. Every time I finish reading a volume of Hayate x Blade, I award myself a little mental achievement badge. Partially because for a goofball comedy, this is some of the most difficult Japanese I read on a regular basis, but also because it’s such a tremendously excellent series that I feel I have gained something critical with each volume. ^_^

In Volume 1 of the new series, Amachi Hitsugi rolled out the new dorms and the new Hoshitori rules. In Volume 2 of Hayate x Blade Nyan (はやてxブレード 2), she commences the Summer Festival, in which she turns the Tench Academy students’ lives into an unending extreme obstacle course.

First, there’s the entrance to the resort island where the festival will take place. The ladder game used for decision making, Amidakuji, is reproduced as a thin scaffolding crossing the ocean. The bars are coated in oil, so students may slip off into the water. Only those students who make it across will be part of the Summer Festival.

Those who make the crossing successfully find themselves assigned to cottages which include members of both the Tenkuu and Daichi dorms. Right away, cottage members are assigned as teams to run the multi-part obstacle race to gather food and utensils in order to make their evening’s dinner, which is of course, curry. They collect seafood from the ocean, carry heavy portions of rice through the jungle, spelunk to find equipment to cook with and are, if they gain the required items in the time allotted, awarded with the curry powder they need.

To celebrate achieving their first goal – and eating dinner – the Tenchi students annoy the shit out of the Black Group by having fun and lighting fireworks.

Character development-wise, we finally start to crack open the safe that is Nagi. Nagi’s mask slips a bit when she’s paired with Ayana who already knows her weakness for the dark from Hayate. And she is further challenged when Hitsugi basically rips the emotional mask off her in the blunt, but decent manner she has. “Do you love the sword?” she asks…and Nagi doesn’t really have an answer.

While Hitsugi challenges Nagi’s worldview, Hajime does the same to Hayate. You are weak, the Black Group leader tells Hayate, you are dogs who come at Hitsugi’s call. Hayate fights back with – we’re not dogs, we’re having fun, duh.

Hayate thinks she’s weaker than Nagi, but in this volume, it becomes ever more clear that it’s probably the other way around.

A bonus chapter has Visual Band ZLAY (Strawberry Shake crossover!!!) visiting the island and performing in all their Yuri glory, which confuses the heck out of some of the students. Ayana’s all in when they start to play a series end theme she really likes. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – 9
Character – 9
Yuri – 0
Service – 1 We get a little Hitsugi dress-up.

Overall – 9

As always, the action is top notch, the characters are complex, multi-facted, complicated and interesting and the comedy is low and broad. What a great read. More please! Never stop! Achievement unlocked!



Yuri Drama CD: Grand Stage #1 “Hiou Akito” (グラン・ステージ 第1幕「陽央あきと」)

August 16th, 2015

61nJzN3SPAL._SX425_Imagine, if you will, a dating sim, without your participation. It would sound like half a conversation. Now take away the visuals. You’d have half a conversation, with random bits of exposition that wouldn’t actually need to be said if you were part of the conversation.

Grand Stage is a Drama CD series by étriere that introduces us to 5 women who play men on the “Grand Stage” of an engikidan, a musical revue troupe, (not that famous all-female musical revue troupe.) Each one of the 5 otokoyaku have a individual Drama CD, in which they discuss their lives and love with us, their “partner,” as we share a day with them.

 

 

 

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The first track is a group song, which features all of the otokoyaku (I’ll get to them in a sec). This is followed by 3 longish tracks in which we and Akito spend an evening and morning together before we perform Romeo and Juliet on the stage. Apparently we are very nervous, so Akito and we share a bed and snuggle to settle our nerves. Akito jokes about seducing us, but does not go so far as to actually do so.

The next morning we make Akito oyakodon, (which is very delicious) and we leave to  make our appearance on the Grand Stage. This is followed by another song, this time a solo piece called “Always be myself” sung by Akito.

Needless to say, this is a blast for those of us who are Yuri fangirls of seiyuu who have a habit of being cast as male characters…and lesbians. Oh yes, this is a six degrees of Yuri series. Akito is played by Ogata Megumi, best known to us as Sailor Uranus/Tenoh Haruka, but trust me when I tell you the rest of the cast is just as much geared towards us.

Here are the promotional videos for the series on Youtube:

Hiou Akito – Ogata Megumi

Subaru Ryoya – Toyoguchi Megumi (You might remember her as Satou Sei from Maria-sama ga Miteru)

Peter Pan – Kazmiya Eru – Inoue Marina (Naitou Shouko in Maria-sama ga Miteru)

Kohaku Minami- Kitamura Eri (Sayaka in Puella Magi Madoka Magica)

Akabara-no-kimi/Soukou Yui – Saiga Mitsuki (Chie from Mai HiMe and Mai Otome) Akabara-no-kimi is a Heian-period Top star, so all the credits are in Japanese calligraphy.

All 5 character CDs, plus the group CD are available through the Yuricon Store on the Drama CD page. Collect the whole set. ^_^

Ratings:

Overall  – 8

This was a very fun little waste of time crafted specifically for us, I hope you’ll listen to the song tracks on Youtube at the very least. ^_^



YNN Vacation Souvenirs for You

August 15th, 2015

I’ve just returned from a whirlwind tour of NJ Shore points (5 amusement piers/boardwalks in 3 days) and, after all that ice cream and fried food, have no energy for news. Instead, I spent a good hour trying to get decentish photos of these from various boardwalk stores for you  as a souvenir.

If these were what the Disney Princesses looked like, I’d own massive amounts of Disney gear.  ^_^ Really give the tattoos a close look.

Baddisney - Alice

Baddisney - Ariel

Belle’s T-shirt is the Beauty and the Beast musical on Broadway logo. Clever.

Baddisney - Belle

Cinderella’s tattoos were my favorite.

Baddisney - Cinderella

Anna and Elsa have each other’s names tattooed in hearts. Awww….

Baddisney - Elsa

Baddisney - Anna

Baddisney - Jasmine

Baddisney - Snowwhite

Baddisney - trio

There were also  a series of police booking images. Here’s Alice. It made us giggle.

Baddisney - Alicebooked

No, there are no online vendors as these are a wonderful example of double copyright violations. It’s the kind of thing you go down the Shore and get, or not.

Happy Summer!



LGBTQ: Manga de Tsuzuru Yurina Hibi /まんがで綴る百合な日々

August 13th, 2015

download5-e1429832392551Tanu is a careerwoman, Negi is her lover, and their story – how they met, what their life is like together, what their plans for the future are – make up this non-fiction comic essay, Manga de Tsuzuru Yurina Hibi (まんがで綴る百合な日々).

Their story is fairly typical – they talk about recognizing that they liked women in school, how they met at a drinking party and became friends, then lovers and eventually moved in together. The very calm predictability of it is what makes it worth reading. It’s utterly relatable. The end of the book is a Q&A with Tanu and Negi, moderated by lesbian talent and author, Makimura Aasako (author of Doukyonin no Bishoujo ga Lesbian Datta Ken and Yuri no Real.

The text is all handwritten, which makes this book a challenge for readers like myself and the story is not exciting, per se, but this is another great addition to our comic essay library of adorable examples of lesbian life in book form.

Ratings:

Art – 5 Cute cartoons, rather than sophisticated art.
Story – 6 Slice of life
Characters – 7

Overall – 7

I would have given this book a higher rating if Tanu and Negi were comfortable enough to show their faces. As it is, they are clearly not out, so the normality of their life depends upon a certain amount of secrecy and is therefore not actually normal.  I sympathize, but….