Kampfer Manga, Volume 2

April 6th, 2015

Kampfer2At the beginning of the year, I was ambiguously pleased to review Kampfer, Volume 1 on Kindle, the manga of a short-lived and utterly forgettable anime series about a guy who turns into a girl and has to fight for reasons that remain obscure through the series. Now, through the good will of Okazu Hero Day, I am able to assure you that two volumes in to Kampfer, we are no more well-informed about the situation than we were.

In Kampfer, Volume 2,  on Kindle, from Digital Manga Publishing, Natsuru has to get into the girls’ section of the school. In a normal situation this would not be particular difficult, but this school has strict segregation, enforced with high walls, security (and barbed wire fences, probably.) Why? Who knows…add it to the list of “whys?” for this series.

Natsuru has learned that the President of the Student Council is a little smarter than the rest of the Kampfers – in order to force Natsuru over to the girls’ side, she’s kidnapped Sakura. Natsuru plays the hero(ine) and rescues the happless damsel, who was already in love with her girl form and is now completely gaga over her. Sakura asks girl-Natsuru out on a date, causing boy-Natsuru to die a little inside.

For no reason, Natsuru accepts and we are “treated” to girl-Natsuru dress-up dolls. No new plot information is revealed. So, basically, the entire volume had a single chapter’s worth of content.

I am shockingly not filled with despair at the idea of a third volume as, at this point, I want to see how long they can string this along without having to actually do anything with the plot. Much like the Battle Club manga, I expect nothing from Kampfer. Not even so much as an explanation, much less a resolution.  It’s already had the same Yuri we saw in the anime.

At the end of Volume 2 we have exactly the same amount of no idea at all why anything is as we did at the end of Volume 1. On to Volume 3 for more nothing!

Ratings:

Art – 7 Good enough that with all the service, I can’t read it in public
Story – 3 Nothing, with a side of who cares
Characters – 4 Sakura would be cute if she weren’t a doofus
Service – 8
Yuri – 3

Overall – 4

Bets on Volume 3 being any better? I didn’t think so.

Along with Kampfer, there is some actually good Yuri manga available on the Digital Manga page of the new Yuricon Store. Check it out for titles old and new for your Kindle device or app.



Fun Home The Musical on Broadway

April 4th, 2015

funhome

***Special Superlative Alert. This review will contain an overuse of superlatives. Be warned. If you know of a superlative that was not used in this review, consider it implied.***

In 2006, Alison Bechdel, creator of the Dykes to Watch Out For serial comic, (the origin of what is now called the Bechdel-Wallace Test,) winner of a MacArthur Foundation “Genius” grant, published a graphic memoir of her life called Fun Home. When I reviewed the book here, I said about it “Fun Home was incredibly good, and it simply doesn’t matter whether I liked it, or not.”  It was brilliantly written, unremittingly intelligent, with breathtaking honesty about the lack of affection and emotional engagement in her family. And now…it is a play. A musical no less.

When we’re children, most of us have a good laugh at the idea of our lives as musicals. You’re standing with a sibling in the kitchen, and you break into a tuneless song about cereal and laugh. And here you are, Alison Bechdel, and this is a thing. Imagine that.*

A few weeks ago,  the extremely kind folks at Fun Home the Musical  invited me to see their show. I was very excited about this, and then, the reality sort of set in – this is a play…of a graphic novel…and it’s a musical. My first thought was “Really? Do I want to do this? I don’t even like musicals.”** But, yeah, I wanted to do this. Happily, my wife joined me for the evening. She was going to be a good barometer for whether the show held up for someone with no preconceived notions of or experience with the book.

I’m going to skip to the punch line and tell you that, as we stood waiting for our car at the parking lot, sobbing, we agreed that it was an amazing show. Absolutely fantastic in every way. In fact, she gave it the score 11 on a scale from 1 to 10.

You do not need to have read Fun Home*** to enjoy this show. It was so tightly put together that you could walk in cold, with no idea who Alison Bechdel is or what the book was about and still walk away impressed. My wife, who has not read the book, is emphatic about this. As a musical adaptation of a graphic novel, it was enormously successful. The play begins and ends with the concept of comic art, and the adult Alison “captions” the action from the side, reminding us that these are drawings, memories, a cartoon, even as the drama sucks us in.

Let’s start with the cast. It’s a small cast, and with a group that size, if there is even one weak link, it really shows. There were no weak links in this cast. All three of the ladies who play Alison Bechdel as a child, a college student and adult, were fantastic. Of them, I wish I could say which was best, although, as my favorite song “Ring of Keys” was sung by “Small Alison,” Sydney Lucas, I’m slightly partial to her. But in truth, they were all incredibly strong. Here’s “Ring of Keys “for you to enjoy…but she was even better in tonight’s performance.

My wife’s favorite song was sung by “Middle Alison,” Emily Skeggs, who was…perfect. She was so adorable and geeky, with awkward body language and introvert physicality – any one of us would instantly see ourselves in her.  Here’s Emily, singing “Changing my Major” – I’m only sorry there’s no video.

But, when Beth Malone, as adult Alison, and Michael Cerveris who played Bruce, her father, sang their final duet, pretty much everyone on my side of the theater lost it. The sniffling on the stage may have been acting, but no one in the seats were faking it. (No link to this song. I want you to see the play live, so it gets you in the gut the way it was meant to.) Michael Cerveris deserves a nod for his performance. Pent-up, frustrated, awkward, desperate, pathetic, he was genuinely masterful. And Judy Kuhn as Alison’s mother…wow. Just…wow. Her solo song is crushing.

The rest of the cast is equally exceptional. Roberta Colindrez as Joan was funny and sexy in a college dykey way and Joel Perez, who played several characters, really nailed the tawdryness of Bruce’s affairs. Zell Steele Morrow had gap-toothed little brother appeal in every way, and Oscar Williams was charismatic as Alison’s brother Christian. Every single performer had a great voice, but we felt that the three youngest, Lucas, Morrow and Williams, really stood out as exceptional singers and established the show as something to be taken seriously musically.

Which brings me to the songs. They were fantastic. One of the things that has me depressed about Broadway recently, has been the lack of…everything. Quite a lot of what’s playing are tried and true hits, stage adaptations of movies and a number of retreads from the past.  Gigi was playing across the street, for instance. I was looking for something fresh that I would not have seen or heard before. With the exception of one song, which was still good, just rather Broadway-musical-esque, I found exactly what I had hoped in Fun Home. I’ll be singing “Ring of Keys” for days to come. As Bechdel comments in her comic, it’s a lesbian anthem. Kudos to Tesori and Kron who did the music. Absolutely stellar. I especially liked the leitmotif of “I want…” in several of the pieces.

Even the theater did the play justice. It’s currently playing in Circle in the Square, so seats are in set all the way around the stage floor – and the actors really use the space well. The audience, which was pleasantly mixed gender- and age-wise, with a strong lean towards the LGBTQ side, was on their feet immediately as the clapping began.

Obviously, the scenes of identity and sexual awakening resonate like crazy for me…and based on the reactions of the audience, for many. Did it have as much resonance for the non-LGBTQ audience members? (I asked a straight friend who had seen it off Boradway and he said that yes, while of course the ring of keys was not a specific trigger, he too had that moment when he saw an adult in a bookstore and thought, “I know you.”)

I have only one thing left to say. If you can see this play, go see this play.

Friends of mine from out of town, if you want to see this play, I’ll give you a bed, put you on the right train and pick you up at the station when you come back.

Okazu Readers – you, especially, need to see this play. For so many of us, this is us. This is our lives and our songs.

 

Ratings:

Overall – 11

It was a a play…of a graphic novel…and it’s a musical. So it gets an extra point.

Go see Fun Home. It was, in every way, an extraordinary show.****

 

Notes:

* Bechdel drew a comic (of course) on her feelings about the play. And she’s drawn a coda to Fun Home specifically addressing her parents and how they might have felt about it.

**Except for 1776. I will always love that musical. And, in retrospect, an awful lot of the musicals I’ve seen had some relation to comics: Annie (it was my sister’s 11th birthday present); Scarlet Pimpernel which I first read in classic comic form; Rose of Versailles, of course; Hakushaku no Reijou, the last Takarazuka thing I saw; Zsa Zsa Zaturnnah, which was amazing. Clearly this is a thing with me.

*** You should read Fun Home. Buy it, borrow it from the library, but you should really read it.

**** It won 5 Tony Awards last night and deserved every one of them.



Rokujo Hitoma no Nekogami-sama Manga (ろくじょ~ひとまの ねこがみさま)

April 2nd, 2015

nekogamiMinamoto Hisanari-sensei is coming off of several very decent manga series for Comic Yuri Hime. Following his stellar series Fu~Fu, he’s had a few fun short series collections. So despite my disinterest in all things cat-related, (it’s really more like distaste, no, more like full-on loathing of all things cat) I picked up his newest collection from Yuri Hime Comics, Rokujo Hitoma no Nekogami-sama (ろくじょ~ひとまの ねこがみさま). And, even setting aside the cat thing, it had a major problem. In this review, even as short as it is, I have already given you a clue to what that problem is. Can you guess?

Mino-san moved into a room with a small shrine on one wall. Unbeknownst to her, there is a cat spirit (who calls herself a ‘god’) living in the shrine. Chaos and comedy and cat jokes and wackiness ensues.

In the final few chapters, we meet Kanade, who really, really, really, REALLY likes food. So she joins the Tabearubu – the school food club whose reviews are the talk of the town, only to learn that they train hard, so they can eat hard.

You can see the problem I had with the manga, yes? At several points I picked it up to check it really was a Yuri Hime Comic because, try as I might, I could see no Yuri of any kind. In the first story, one might, if one wants to make a story out of whole cloth, pretend that Mino’s friend Fudou has a thing for her, but we can do that only because Fudou never actually says a word, so we can make up anything we want about her.

Kanade’s story is shockingly mixed company – actual boys with names exist and are good people. The story itself was really very cute, especially the second chapter, but again, if you’re finding Yuri there, you have made it up. Which is perfectly fine, mind you, but why is this a Yuri Hime Comic? Why not print it under the Rex Comics imprint, which it seems far more suited for? Very odd.

Ratings:

Art – 6 Hisanari (and Fujieda’s) brand of moe hyper cute.
Story – Nekogami was a 5, Shuuran Gakuen Tabearbu was a 7
Characters – 6
Yuri – 0
Service – 1

Overall – 6 Not bad or anything, but why Yuri Hime?



Yuri Manga: Yuritetsu Volumes 2-4 (ゆりてつ~私立百合ヶ咲女子高鉄道部) Guest Review by Bruce P

April 1st, 2015

Yuritetsu2Wahoooo! It’s Guest Review Wednesday and we have a Guest Review! Fresh from the keyboard of the always stellar Bruce P, today he looks at three manga at once (presumably because the idea of reviewing them each individually was soul crushing.) Take it away, Bruce!  

***

“Make a remark,” said the Red Queen: “it’s ridiculous to leave all the conversation to the pudding!”

And there really is no other reason for a review of Yuritetsu ~ Shiritsu Yurigasaki Joshikou Tetsudobu Volume 2Volume 3  and Volume 4 (ゆりてつ~私立百合ヶ咲女子高鉄道部) by Matsuyama Seiji. The review of Volume 1 should have been quite enough. But in the face of good taste Yuritetsu has thrived, even making some minor noise out in the real world. I would hate to leave the final word to a pudding. A response is called for. Here it is:

Eww.

You might notice that this also effectively described Volume 1.

Which is not to say that Volumes 2-4 are just more servings of the same goo. The author has made a number of significant changes. Though calling anything in this manga significant seems kind of silly.

Yuritetsu3High school girls Elsie, Lacie, Tillie, and Peanut are still doing what members of the Yuritetsu (Yurigasaki Girl’s High School Railway Club) do best: looking like four-year-olds, acting like three-year-olds, and providing railway maps and information for train fans. Train fans who don’t much care where their maps and information come from, provided they come from girls who occasionally take their clothes off. Elsie, Lacie, and Tillie continue fighting over Peanut, while Peanut continues displaying no reason why they should actually want to. Maybe it’s a pheromone thing. It’s certainly not an intellect thing.

The big difference from the first volume is that the girls no longer do their interpersonal squirming in isolation from the rest of the world. Quite the contrary: in their travels they now encounter an astonishing assortment of other ambulatory pumpkin seeds—friends, relatives, and acquaintances, starting with their new traveling companion, the club’s faculty advisor Konomi-Sensei. She looks five, giving her the best of it, though she doesn’t act that mature. As a teacher, she’s just happy not to live in New Jersey, or in any number of places where they insist on background checks; at Yurigasaki she can squirm against Peanut all she wants. Pheromones, ick.

AYuritetsu4rtistically Yuritetsu isn’t so much a mess as a collage, which makes it sound intentional.  Stylistically different (but equally embarrassing) crossover characters from the small world of train-themed manga randomly drop out of the blue for a little inbreeding. Among these artistic inconsistencies are several creepy crossovers from one of the author’s own titles, Tetsuko na Sanshimai, about three sisters who travel around on trains (well, when you specialize, you specialize). One of these sisters is definitely not drawn as a Yuritetsu –style four year old, and in fact does not even constitute a structural possibility. As Elsie (or is it Tillie? Dopey?) says when they first meet: “Oneesan! Your boobs—and your camera lens—are huge!!” The art might be questionable, but the sophistication of the dialogue makes the series sparkle.

And here’s the peculiar real world part. In the final chapter the girls visit the Yuri Kogen Railway, a tiny line in the mountains south of Akita. In a clever bit of marketing, or desperation (it’s a very tiny line), the Yuri Kogen last year decorated an operating railcar in a Yuritetsu illustration scheme. All pink and yellow and oversized bubbleheads. Looks like desperation to me. The Yuritetsu railcar has actually been out there, trundling Peanut and her pals, along with confused Yuritetsu fans wondering why all the car-side characters seem so fully clothed, back and forth through the daffodils.

If there’s a special hell for railway motormen, it probably looks like this.

Toy maker Tomytec has jumped into the act with a scale model:

Yuritetsu Car

The item above was obtained for research purposes. Just being thorough.

As for the Yuri: the characters in Yuritetsu remind me of nothing so much as those tiny, rather pointless insects that form hyperactive clouds over water on summer afternoons. Among the little bugs in these mating swarms there may well be some rudimentary Yuri flirtations going on (who knows?), but it wouldn’t warrant a four volume treatment and a specially decorated swamp boat.

Ratings:

Art: 5.  Well, the train illustrations are still pretty good.
Characters: 2. Dropping in some doofus ex machina characters hasn’t helped this number at all.
Story: 2.  Starts low, falls through a hole at the bit with the strawberry.
Yuri: 2.  Don’t ask about the strawberry.
Service: 10.  No really, don’t.

Overall: 3. Somewhere between eww and ick.

It’s been a lot of fun, chewing these four volumes up. But now of course I will have to make a trip to Akita. For research purposes.

Erica here: As long as I don’t have to be seen near that train, I’m in.

Thank you for yet another fantastic review of a book I wouldn’t touch with a 15 meter pole.  This seemed like a perfect April 1 review. If you buy these books, the joke is clearly on you. ^_^



Puella Magi Tart Magica Manga, Volume 1 (魔法少女たると☆マギカ The Legend of “Jeanne d’ Arc”)

March 30th, 2015

91RxF+0Ue0LYen Press is releasing the Puella Magi Tart Magica manga in April and, as I am wont to, I wanted to get a good look at the Japanese version in order to compare and contrast. So today, let’s take a brief look at the Puella Magi Tart Magica (魔法少女たると☆マギカ The Legend of “Jeanne d’ Arc”) manga.

For anyone already familiar with the Madoka Magica universe, Tart is an intriguing idea. We know from historical records that Joan of Arc testified to talking to angels and saints, that she was charismatic, passionate about France, driven, and used by every one in power at the time for their own purposes. It’s almost a no-brainer to see her in the context of a “magical girl” focused on her wish, not needing to distinguish between Witches and England in order to fulfill her contract with Kyuubey, and ultimately overwhelmed by her desire.

The story begins with Jeanne and her team of “pucelle” fighting a Witch (and the English) and freeing  a castle. We then look back to Jeanne and her sister Katrine attacked in the woods and saved by Lise, a Homura-like girl who is accompanied by Kyuubey. Instantly, Kyuubey pegs Jeanne as having magical girl potential, but it’s not until Katrine is killed that Jeanne makes her contract with Kyuubey. She and Lise set off to fight Witches…and the English.

The story is layered with actual historical events, and chilling narration, such as this line, after Jeanne meets Kyuubey, ” 1425 – A young Jeanne first hears an angel’s voice.”

Masugitsune, the artis,s has a clean, utterly typical moe style. It’s not quite rough enough to handle the horrors of the world Jeanne inhabited and not stylish enough to give us the amazing Witches the medieval mind would have imagined. I was genuinely disappointed that we weren’t getting illumination-style medieval horrors.

Yuri is little to none, but Lise’s attention to Jeanne, despite Katrine’s open admiration (and better sword handling) can be cheerfully misinterpretated any number of ways. ^_^

The thing that is vastly different in this Magica spin off series is that we already know the ending. And it is not a good one. Even if we the reader in Japan, did not know the ending of Jeanne’s story, the manga opens with it in color, so there is no way to avoid the inevitable knowledge of the brutal ending to Jeanne d’Arc’s short, but incandescent life.

Jeanne d’ Arc was 19 years old when she was burned at the stake.

The idea that Jeanne d’Arc, the Maid of Orleans, was a “magical girl” is not only appealing, but intriguing.

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – 8
Characters – 5 Neither as obsessively Christian as they should have been nor as ignorant, they read like any character in any manga.
Yuri – 1 *Someone* will see something between Jeanne and Lise, because.
Service – Shockingly little, except some moderate, almost coy violence, with the exception of Katrine’s death, which was not subtle.

Overall – 8

I’m looking forward (well, no, but yeah) to reading Volume 2 and the English release of Volume 1 next month.