Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – October 4, 2014

October 4th, 2014

YNN_LissaYuri Events

Quick reminder that the next two weeks there will be no YNN, as I’ll be reporting from Geek Girl Con and Girls Love Fest one after the other.

If you are going to be in Japan for the Kaigai Festival, consider popping over to Kyoto for Fairy’s Residence, a Yuri event that appears to be replacing Maiden’s Garden in that city.

The Queers & Comics Conference is accepting proposals for their May 2015 event! Get your panel or workshop suggestions in today.

Not specifically LGBTQ, but the MoCCA event in NYC has also announced April dates and a new location. I find great indie stuff there every year,

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Yuri Anime

ANN reports that the voices for the leads in upcoming anime Yuri Kuma Arashi have been cast and that the staff for the Lyrical Nanoha Vivid anime has been chosen. They have the preview for the Yuru Yuri anime OAV that is getting a theater release in late November.

ANN also reports on a winter Psycho-Pass movie with the writing team of Urubochi and Fukami once again.

The Sasamekikoto anime  is getting a Blu-Ray Box  release in Japan.

And Maria-sama ga Miteru is also getting Limited Edition Complete Series Blu-Ray Box set release! So tempting….

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Yuri Digital Comics/Webcomics

Denise Schroeder’s fun little “Story A” Yuri comic Before You Go,  is now available on Comixology. Publisher Chromatic Press reports brisk sales and in a recent Facebook update hinted that there was more Yuri ahead.

YNN Senior Correspondent Erin S. has a follow-up to Mira Ongchua’s the mermaid and the sailor, which has now been enhanced and is available for download, for pay what you want. And she suggests we all take a look at Carey Pietsch’s The Witch’s Daughter.

From the Queer Comic group, I found Minority Monsters, “They didn’t know they existed, until they found. themselves.” They include Madame Lucie Decline the Asexual Succubus, Sir Fabulous the Bisexual Unicorn, Queen Ravishment the Polyamorous dragon and others. Totally wonderful. ^_^

Heidi MacDonald at The Comics Beat pointed out this free downloadable comic, Under The Apple Tree, by Sarah Winifred Searle about a time-traveling teen girl. You know what to do.

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Yuri Manga

Seven Seas has added Non Non Biyori manga to their line-up, so fans of that anime will be happy. ^_^

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 Other News

Comic Artist Mari Naomi has written an illustrated guide to Writing People of Color, (if you happen to be a person of another color.) If you are a writer of any kind, please read this and share it widely. It’s entertaining and helpful.

From Comic Natalie we learn that Sailor Moon isn’t the only series getting the premium accessory treatment. Check out this cute CardCaptor Sakura clutch bag bundled with the December issue of Nakayoshi magazine.

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Know some cool Yuri News you want people to know about? Become a Yuri Network Correspondent by sending me any Yuri-related news you find. Emails go to anilesbocon01 at hotmail dot com. Not to the comments here, please, or they might be forgotten or missed. There’s a reason for this madness. This way I know you are a real human, not Anonymous (which I do not encourage – stand by your words with your name!) and I can send you a YNN correspondent’s badge.

Thanks to all of you – you make this a great Yuri Network!



Light Novel: R.O.D., Volume 11

October 2nd, 2014

rodln11Exactly 5 years ago today I posted a review of the first R.O.D. Light Novel. Here I am 5 years later, reviewing the last volume of this never-to-be-finished series.

As we begin R.O.D. – Read Or Die, Volume 11, Yomiko is trekking across China with Ou-En; his boss, the head of Dokusensha, the deathless immortal known as China; her bodyguards the Five Sisters. They have been deserted by the deathless immortal Faust and are  being chased by deathless immortal Gentleman.

Joker is protecting the Queen, who is a deathless immortal, from…threats. Drake and his team are joined by Nancy (whether they want her or not) in the hunt for Yomiko.

Nenene and Wendy are in India, meeting a friend of Wendy’s, named Shark, an occult enthusiast, who is going to get them across the Himalayas into China to find Yomiko.

Bets on which of these plots gets wrapped up by the end of the book?

More interestingly, a good chunk of the book is taken up with a flashback look at how Yomiko became The Paper. Donny fails to carry out a mission as The Paper, and tells Joker that he’s just not into it anymore. Yomiko is known to the members of the British Library Special Division from a party  some years ago. Upon watching a video recording of the night that Yomiko and Donny danced in the Library (from Volume 9,) Joker realizes that Yomiko also has paper-user skills. He tells Donny to bring her in, where she interviews for a staff position. After an interview in which she vehemently states her love for books, she is accepted. She and Donny are assigned to serve the rest of the team their afternoon tea. (She and Donny drink Lapsang Souchong, if you care. I do.) Six month pass and Joker relents on his punishment. He reinstates Donny as The Paper, and assigns Yomiko to him as support and a protege. Joker discovers that his assistant Marianne is a traitor and has to capture her, (presumably opening up the position for Wendy when/if she returns.)

We have one last glimpse of Yomiko, flying on a paper airplane of her own making, across the Chinese landscape, vowing to resolve the whole situation peacefully, Gentleman be damned. It’s all about the love of books. Read. Or Die.

In the final scene we indulge in one last flashback. We see Donny entering his apartment where Yomiko sleeps peacefully (and naked, we are assured) in his bed. So we know for reals that they were lovers.

“To Be Continued” the last page assures us. It lies.

Well, that was fun.

It was an interesting exercise to read this book knowing in advance that nothing at all would resolve. But probably only because I know that ROD The TV exists and rewrote the entire story so it made sense. It vaguely amuses me that this book was published in 2006 and in all those years, Kurata Hideyuki had energy to work on Read or Dream, the ROD manga, the Read or Dream manga, ROD the TV and R.O.D. Rehabilitation.(all of which have been reviewed here in the R.O.D and Read or Dream categories)..but not the final novel of this series. I sympathize, but dude, you spent two whole novels digressing, you could have just finished it!

Ratings:

Art – Never any pictures of the good scenes
Story – 5 Exposition and setup for a climax that never comes.
Characters – 7 They deserved (and eventually got) better
Yuri – 0
Service – 4 A few scenes were we are are told in detais about torn clothing and nakedness. And Nancy.

Overall – This book, had it been the first of a two-part finish would have been a 7.

The series overall is still an 8, a score that rests solely on the broad shoulders of ROD The TV.



What Your Patronage Means to Okazu

October 1st, 2014

PatreonAt the end of August, I initiated the first ever Patreon campaign for Okazu to get content sponsors.  You, my dear readers, responded with typical generosity and enthusiasm.

The difference between Patreon and other crowdfunding platforms is that your money is funding the existence of Okazu, rather than one small fixed-point project. In effect, you are subscribing to the web magazine “Okazu,” that gives you feature articles, event reports, reviews of Yuri anime and Yuri manga and even interviews with top-name Yuri manga artists. For your contribution, you get 20-30 (depending on the time I have) articles a month, for as little as a few cents per article.

So, our first month of this new, rather exciting process, arrived and I wanted you to see what you have wrought. This arrived yesterday:

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Two boxes from Amazon Japan, purchased by…you. It is entirely due to you that for the next several months I will be reading these manga, thinking about them, reviewing them and writing them up for your reading pleasure.

 

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This month is exceptionally exciting as I am taking you with me, figuratively (and in a few cases, literally!) to Girls Love Festival in Yokohama, Japan, where you will be contributing directly to the economic well-being of  some amazing Yuri manga artists.

If you are not subscribing to Okazu, no worries! Feel free to read and comment and participate here as you always have. There is no tiered access, no members-only spaces. But for those of you who have contributed a few bucks a month, you have my sincere gratitude. For those of you who committed at our higher levels, the Okazu no Mikos, I especially thank you from the bottom of my heart. (Note to Bruce: Anytime you want to eat at Casa, let me know. I owe you ^_^)

Now, back to the readin’ and writin’ – made possible by you.

Want to know more about supporting Okazu on Patreon? Check out the Okazu Campaign!



Yuri Anime Sabagebu! (English) Guest Review by Elizabeth V.

September 30th, 2014

sabaaeIt is once again my sincere pleasure to welcome a brand new Guest Reviewer to the Okazu family! I want you all to please welcome Elizabeth V and give her your full attention. The floor is yours, Elizabeth!

Sabagebu – Survival Game Club!, is a madcap, sometimes hilarious series that doesn’t take itself too seriously, despite some actual violence.

Momoka Sanokawa, a new student at an all-girls school, is coerced into joining the school’s survival game club by its president, Miou, a pretty and popular upperclassman with a wide violent streak. As the series progresses, Momoka, Miou, and their friends in the club undergo a series of wacky adventures ranging from fighting off upskirt photographers to an all-out road war in the Australian outback against a senior citizens’ survival club. Other members include the beautiful model Maya, the quiet cosplay fanatic Kayo, and the bubbly but ultimately violent Urara, whose obsessive crush on Miou is speedily transferred to Momoka in the first episode.

Animated by Pierrot+ and airing on Crunchyroll (regional restrictions may apply) this past summer season, the series’ pacing is speedy and each episode after the first has two or three stand-alone stories. An unseen, adult male narrator helpfully offers additional, often sarcastic remarks which occasionally cause the characters to break the fourth wall. The seemingly sweet Momoka is swiftly revealed to be rather cold and ruthless, undermining the common “innocent, good-hearted moe heroine” trope. She violently reacts to Urara’s extreme advances, often punching and slapping the younger girl (who always returns with even more fervent, masochistic devotion), but while this relationship is mostly played for laughs, it doesn’t come across as homophobic or demeaning, and by the end we are led to believe that in spite of it all, Momoka doesn’t actually find Urara that objectionable.

One thing which might bother some viewers is the amount of violence in the series. Although the narrator reassures us in the first few episodes that the bloody gunshot wounds and subsequent “deaths” only occur in the characters’ imaginations as they play their games with pellet-firing replica guns, the gory visuals might be upsetting. I have to admit, at first I was not at all interested in this series after seeing a screenshot from the first episode in which a character lies “dead” with bullet wounds in both breasts, but I reconsidered and started watching Sabagebu in earnest. I’m glad I did, however, the imagery might be too off-putting for some, so view at your own discretion.

Overall, although the humor of a few of the stories fell flat, the series was funny and enjoyable. Fanservice was mostly concerned with Maya’s generous assets. The characters’ outrageous adventures kept me laughing throughout, despite my initial reservations. Aided by side characters such as a stereotypical otaku called Fried Chicken Lemon, Momoka’s bizarrely cheerful and equally violent mother, and the club’s danger-prone advisor Miss Sakura, the Survival Game Club managed to keep me entertained despite my initial doubts, and gave me a new appreciation for pretend weaponry and the “magical gun-toting girl” transformations that accompanied it.

Art – 7
Story – 7
Characters – 7
Yuri – 5
Service – 6
Overall – 7

Thank you, thank you Elizabeth for the terrific review – and for the reminder that I should watch the rest of this series. I quite enjoyed the manga volumes I read. ^_^ 



Yuri Live-Action: Edge of Normal

September 28th, 2014

EoNYTWeekends are for consuming media. This weekend was for watching the first season of Edge of Normal, a web series created by Amanda Overton and produced Tiffany L. Gray, Samantha Covington and Sarah Cahill. The series is presented in 6 webisodes, the first five all a few minutes long and the season climax final episode at a pretty-darn-full 10 minutes.

The series introduces us to a number of young women with extraordinary powers. Several of them know each other already. They band together to save a friend from a decidedly real-world threat and gain two new peers in the process.

The story is firmly rooted in our reality and the series is pretty up-front about presenting powers as more of a burden than a blessing. Their frustration with the way the world is, the way people are, is one of the things that the protagonists all bond over. They also don’t necessarily have control over their powers, which suits the setting well.

Each episode is named after and focuses slightly on one of the 6 characters. There is very little exposition in these short episodes, things are explained in visions and flashbacks. Although we get little time with any one individual character, the story telling is very tight and by the end of the 6th episode, not only do we have a pretty significantly developed plot, but a very decent denouement and a powerful postscript leading, I hope, to a second season.

There are two couples in the story, one in real time and one possible/who knows and both work. Given the time constraints, a single scene for each couple defines the beginning of what we’re obviously hoping becomes more.

There is some violence, of the triggering kind, if you have issues with parental abuse. Special effects were understated, and the whole thing looks like a good job done with a low budget. If they do go to a second season, I’d rather them pay everyone more and stay at the same level of production, rather than blow their budget on location or effects.

Ratings:

Character – 8
Story – 9
Yuri/Lesbian – 6 with lots of potential
Service – Nothing really, other than the violence

Overall – A solid 8

I blew through the first season yesterday morning and have to say, I honestly hope we get a second season. Edge of Normal was pretty damn good.