Superwomen In Love! Honey Trap and Rapid Rabbit, Volume 5 Guest Review By Maru Malandra

November 1st, 2023

Two smiling women holds hands and lay back on a bed of lilies, with their giant mecha hovering behind them.Welcome today to our newest guest reviewer here on Okazu. ^_^ Maru Malandra is a VTuber affiliated with GATTAI!! The Live. She loves Yuri, mecha, idols and Tokusatsu! Find her streaming Gunpla and all sorts on Twitch, JRPGs on YouTube, and yelling about how gay she is on what’s left of Twitter.

(Shorthand Note: “kaijin” refers to person-sized humanoid monsters, while “kaiju” refers to giant ones.)

After finally confessing their feelings for one another at the end of  Volume 4, our heroines are enjoying their blossoming romance and a brief respite from Antinoid attacks. Has X given up? Can peace finally reign? I think we know the answer.

The final volume of  Tokusatsu/Yuri adventure, Superwomen In Love! Honey Trap and Rapid Rabbit, Volume 5 is simply a joy. Sometime-sensei shares her passion for both genres, and it all just works. The Tokusatsu references come in hard and fast, but rather than distract from the storytelling, they elevate it. Antinoid boss X is confronted by one of her generals in a philosophical battle meant to draw out X’s real feelings. This is one of the emotional and artistic highlights of the book, an all-out fight where Sometime-sensei showcases her talent for action that feels kinetic, laden with raw emotion, and evoke the page-turning momentum of the biggest names in Shonen manga or live-action Tokusatsu.

Our heroines’ rest is short-lived thanks to X’s transformation into a giant Kaiju, a process that revives all the defeated monsters… because of course it does! It’s a Tokusatsu endgame, and as the stakes ramp up, old enemies and allies alike come together to fight for a hopeful tomorrow. Moe, the kaijin-human hybrid, finds herself drawn to help, as her loving mamas (and former evil generals) Kyoka and Melt support her. The Hina sisters return and also join the fray with new hero suits.

Melt Out provides an upgrade to our ragtag group to battle X’s titanic form. In a dual tribute to the transformation poses of the Ultraman series and the combining robots of Super Sentai, our heroines grow into giant vehicles! Together, they form White Lily Queen, a church wedding-themed robotic behemoth piloted from enormous lily-shaped cockpits. Battle ensues, and it is not long before catastrophic urban destruction gives way to the battlefield of the soul.

It is here that Hayate and Honey face X one final time. The villain brings out all of her anger, her jealousy towards Hayate, and her unrequited love for Honey as she battles our heroines. But X cannot win against the power of kindness, compassion, and the sheer sentient need to love. As understanding is finally given to X’s wounded heart, a gigantic lily is seen erupting on Earth from orbit… and that’s as much of the story as I want to spoil!

While this may sound facile, the story lands its final story beats with aplomb. Superwomen in Love!’s central theme is a Tokusatsu staple: what defines a person? Is it their species, or what is in their heart? In 1971, Shotaro Ishinomori gave us Kamen Rider, the tale of a man who struggled with the meaning of his humanity after being turned into a cyborg against his will. The recent, adult-oriented series Kamen Rider Black Sun showed us a world where kaijin are second-class citizens. And yet, despite a ruling class that attempts to divide them, humans and kaijin are just regular people existing in an oppressive world. And when it comes to romance, hero-monster love stories are quite common. A week before this review was written, the current season of Super Sentai King-Ohger, showed the engagement of a Ranger hero to a former kaijin villain, as they looked after children in the post-apocalypse.

At the end of the day, Superwomen in Love! follows in the footsteps of its Tokusatsu forebears. It is our capacity for both hatred and kindness that defines our personhood. This very kindness lets former enemies become lovers—lets them embrace their former enemy and confront her messed-up feelings.

This manga exceeded all of my expectations. It’s an exciting Yuri romance as well as an entire Kamen Rider season’s worth of stories, all in a tight 5-volume narrative. Despite its frequent references, I feel this is a perfect starting point for Yuri fans wanting to dip their toes into Tokusatsu, and vice versa!

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – 9
Characters – 10
Service – 0 Salaciousness, 10 in terms of Tokusatsu fan service!
Yuri – 10 (There’s giant lilies everywhere while the volume studies what love actually is)
Suit and Monster Design – 10 (I want figures of every hero and monster! Especially with all those cool transformation diagrams from Sometime-sensei!!)

Overall – 9 (Give me an anime!)

If you enjoyed this journey and would like to check out some Tokusatsu, I strongly recommend Kamen Rider W (“Double”) for live-action streaming on Youtube, or SSSS.Gridman, streaming on Crunchyroll for anime.

Thank you for reading! This is Maru signing off, and as always…

Fight Forever, Heroes of Hope!



Amongst Us, Volume 1: Soulmates

October 30th, 2023

In front of a backdrop of the sky through large windows, two women embraces enthusiastically. The taller, with long, white hair, holds the shorter black-and-white haired woman in her arms.In Amongst Us, Volume 1: Soulmates, we meet cellist Veloce and her girlfriend, conductor Blackbird. Veloce is a rich kid who ends driving her brother to meetings in their family car, Blackbird loves sweets and can’t cook. Their life is full of pleasant bickering and they are very in love.

They are also alternate universe incarnations of characters of the same name from creator Shilin Huang’s epic fantasy comic Carciphona – a comic begun in 2006 that now is in it’s 8th volume. In that world Veloce is a hunted, broken magic user and Blackbird is the otherworldly being who wants her, one way or another. Magic in that world is expressed by music. They are both so lovely together, even from the beginning, Huang would post AU versions of the two characters, in lovely and contentious situations in our real world. Amongst Us the webtoon began about 6 years ago and in 2020, I contributed to a Kickstarter for the comic and, so reviewed this volume previously.

Luckily for all of us, Seven Seas has licensed this beautiful AU story (although not the original fantasy comic as of yet….) so we can enjoy a much goofier Blackbird and a less broken, but no less handsome Veloce, as well as other visitors from the Carciphona cast in what is mostly a rather light-hearted odd-couple comedy slice of life. The strips have been adapted from webtoons quite well and Huang’s art is…always…breathtaking. As I said when I reviewed the Kickstarted volume, Huang’s art is always worth coming back for. And here I am at, more than a decade later, still coming back for more.

Seven Seas’ edition here is lovely, full color and just…gorgeous. Since there was no translation this time, I’m going take a moment to thank everyone who worked on the production side here, Production Designer Stevie Wilson, Production Manager Lissa Pattillo, Prepress Technicians Melanie Ujjimori and Jules Valera, Print Edition Editor Robin Herrera, Cover Graphic Designer: M. A. Lewife and Shiling Huang for the logo and cover art. Why am I pointing out all these people? Because it has always been my position that if manga fans knew how many folks it actually took to do the work of getting books out to you, they would appeciate how much work publishing really is! So thanks to the folks at Seven Seas and to Shilin Huang for drawing us pretty magical musicians.

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – A goofy 8
Characters – 8 Divorced from their origins, they still seem pretty intense. ^_^
Service – 0 That postcard of Veloce in an evening dress was smokin’. But no, not really.
Yuri – 10

Overall – 9

Many thanks to Seven Seas for the review copy and reminder that links to books go to affiliate accounts. Your support is greatly appreciated!

 



Today on Yuri Studio – S04 E15 – Yuri Adjacent with Amy Martin and Luce

October 29th, 2023

Join us at 12PM Eastern US time for the premiere of the next Yuricon 2023 video! Amy Martin is joined by guest Luce to discuss the value and fun in Yuri-adjacent series.
 

 



No YNN This Week

October 28th, 2023

We’ll be back tomorrow with more Yuri reviews!



Hana no Asuka-gumi Infinity, Volume 7 (花のあすか組 ∞インフィニティ)

October 27th, 2023

Young girl in middle school Japanese sailor-collared school uniform holds a 500 yen coin on a chain in a defensive posture, surrounded by half an Infinity symbol in hot pink.Buckle in, folks, today’s review is going to be a lot of expository commentary for a payoff that may seem small to you, but is hella powerful to me.

Our story begins in 1985, with the creation of the Hana no Asuka-gumi! (花のあすか組!) manga series by Takaguchi Satosumi. It ran for 10 years and, in that decade, told the story of a suicidal girl Kuraku Asuka, who was saved by a manipulative and sociopathic two-bit criminal, Kijima Yohko, who happens to be the half-sister of Asuka’s best friend Doumoto Miko. Yohko was a horrible person and Asuka and she fell passionately into a toxic and unstable relationship. Neither of them had the emotional wherewithal to confront what we can see were intense feelings for one another, so like the street gang kids they were, they just kept beating the crap out of one another. Yohko functionally sold Asuka to the leader of all the girls gangs in Tokyo, where Asuka became Hibari-sama’s favorite toy and Minister of the Left. When Asuka left Hibari-sama, she never forgave Asuka and has spent the last nearly 30+ years trying to get her back. Yohko ends up dying in a fire to save Asuka from…well from the next shitty thing she’d do to Asuka, really.  

In 2003, in Shin Hana no Asuka-gumi! (新・花のあすか組!) Asuka returns from America, and is immediately dragged into another war with Hibari’s organization, the Zenchuu Ura, (which is pattered after the Imperial Court, with area masters from the 23 wards of Tokyo, unaffiliated “outside” groups and absolute HORDES of special teams, which I will not list, because we could be here for ever.) Suffice it to say, typically Asuka “saves” the life of a young girl, who was dragged into shit over her head, fights off the Zenchuu Ura and shrugs. This  series ended in 2009, but in Volume 5 something unbelievable happened. I reviewed that volume in 2007, but let me quote a passage. I assure you it is salient:

In Volume 5, something I wrote in a Hana no Asuka-gumi Fanfic actually happens. Now, that’s really no big deal. I make it a point to try and stay in character when I write fanfic…or at least write the characters in a way that’s plausible, unless it’s total crackfic. But in this case, I did something sort of odd, even though I thought it completely plausible. I had the dead Yohko talk to Asuka in her head. Imagine my complete surprise, nay, shock, when I started reading the chapter in Feel Young magazine and dead Yohko started talking in Asuka’s head! I think my reaction was something like this:

“Oh. My. God.”

/still pause/

“Oh. My. &^$!ing good god.”

/Me holds the book up and suddenly breaks out into a spastic dance of hysterical fangirly joy./

P.S., I wrote the story years before the new series ever began.

To make it all better, Miko’s reaction to Asuka’s confession that dead Yohko is talking to her practically came out exactly the same as in my story too.

So since the ’00s, my weird little conceit has been canon – dead Yohko talks to Asuka inside her head. Exactly the way I imagined she might, even the same sentences, in the same way, for the same reason. A+ for plausibility, Erica.

In 2018, 9 years after Shin Hana No Asuka-gumi! ended, Hana no Asuka-gumi! BS Hen (花のあすか組! BS編) ran for two volumes. This was mostly focused on cyberbullying and expanding Hibari-sama’s influence. NOW she has groups outside Tokyo though the Honeybees, a kind of fan club that also runs underground contests and other miscellaneous money- and victim-making prospects. I think this story was mostly to see if this series still had selling power. Welp, yes it does, because the next year, Hana no Asuka-gumi Infinity (花のあすか組 ∞インフィニティ) launched. It is now finished at 9 volumes. And let me tell you….a LOT has gone on.

But you don’t care about the School Wars or all the new groups that have popped up, or that Tenshi has now ascended from pretending to be a boy in a boy band to running her own special forces, along with other godly-named fighters. Or that Asuka LOST this battle and was unable to save the girl and – for the very first time – she completely lost her cool and had a major meltdown.

Here is why I am telling you about Hana no Asuka-gumi Infinity, Volume 7. Of course…it’s Yohko. Dead Yohko whose voice can still be heard by Asuka, as clearly as if she were standing there.   The thing is no one but Miko and the rest of the Western Outside Group knows about Yohko. Well, Hibari-sama and her aide-de-camp, Kasuga, but they don’t care.

So, as the School Wars are about to start – once again it’ll be Asuka vs everyone – former Area Master (head of a Tokyo Ward gang) Akae comes back, with her hair shorn to look like Yohko. She knows Yohko is Asuka’s only weak spot – and she seems to know the whole story. She tells the others that Yohko is the only person Asuka cared about, that she was everything to Asuka.

In the final page, Akae, looking like Yohko, walks out to face Asuka who is in the middle of a battle.

Friends, I screamed.

It’s been almost 40 years since Asuka met Yohko, while nursing a broken hand after a fight she lost in Shinjuku, it’s been 30 years since Yohko died in fire. Asuka is one year older and Yohko is still the most important thing in the world to her. I love this series so much. ^_^

My reviews here about this series have been sporadic and mostly incoherent as I try to explain the complicated structure of the Zenchuu Ura and the whole series, but there is a category for it: Hana no Asuka-gumi. Of these reviews, let me suggest these two for fun.

2006 – Drama CD: Hana no Asuka-gumi Gaiden (花のあすか組外伝) – this was one of two Drama CDs for the series. I still haven’t found time to listen to the other, but this one is one of my prize possessions for reasons that will become obvious if you read the review.

2011 – Yuri Artbook: Kuraku Asuka Mairu! (九楽あすか参る!). This was another item that absolutely centered my obsession with Yohko and Asuka’s relationship, in a literal sense. As well as giving space for Hibari-sama to be a complete freak.

So, look, I know none of you are running out and reading 52 volumes of an untranslated 40 year old gang girl series  – except Ashley, love you! – but IF you want to read a 40 year old gang girl series with 52 volumes of manga, two movies, a live-action TV show, 2 anime OVAs, 2 Drama CDs and 2 novels, make it Hana no Asuka-gumi!.

Ratings:

Overall – 10

Seriously, I screamed.