Yuri Manga: Love Flag★Girls!! (ラブフラッグ★Girls!! )

April 5th, 2010

Every once in a while, it’s nice to take your brain out of your head and give it a rest. If you don’t have the leisure of doing that, a really goofy, predictable manga will have about the same effect. And who among us hasn’t watched pirate movies and thought, “This would be so much better if the Pirate King was a Pirate Queen and she and the damsel in distress were getting it on”?

Clearly Takahashi Itsumi thought that and created Love Flag ★ Girls!! (ラブフラッグ★Girls!!) in which the Pirate Queen’s Daughter and the Princess find a kind of happily ever after sailing the oceans. But not right away. First there’s *drama!*

Queen Beatrice never stops crying about the loss of a cross she once owned. She blames the Pirate Queen Maria for its loss. Princess Lucia heads out to infiltrate Maria’s crew and retrieve the cross, but finds herself adopted as the playmate and pet of the Pirate Queen’s daughter, Eleana.

Lucia has a hard time adapting to pirate life, but the fact that Eleana’s a goofball and the crew seems to be easygoing helps. Isabella, Maria’s former second in command is less thrilled, but she’s busy pining away for Maria and doesn’t have the oomph to make Lucia’s life miserable.

Lucia finds herself fighting against the navy with her crewmates and decides that this whole going after pirates thing is dumb in the first place – and is pretty sure that what her mother is suffering is heartbreak. She goes home, where she is rejected and told that ONLY the return of the cross can abate the Queen’s never ending tears. By this time, Lucia’s pretty much had it with Mom (I had had it with Beatrice about two pages in) and tells Beatrice that she’s just heartbroken and horny….and ends up in jail for her pains.

Eleana and the crew break Lucia out and they return to the high seas only to be pursued by the navy – lead by an extra bitchy Queen Beatrice.

Lucia and Eleana are saved by the most obvious plot complication ever, but it’s okay – everyone lives happily ever after.

Ratings:

Art – 6
Story – 7
Characters – 8, except for Beatrice who is a jerk
Yuri – 9
Goofy – 9
Service – 5

Overall – 8

My brain feels better already.



Yuri Manga: Rakuen Le Paradis, Volume 2

April 4th, 2010

Volume 1 of Rakuen Le Paradis was hardly perfect. But I liked how it bucked convention and did whatever it pleased. Volume 2 is no less unconventional and sometimes, as a result, it’s downright disturbing. But even with a few stories I didn’t care for, I found this volume intriguing.

Because this is a Yuri blog, I’m going to focus on the Yuri stories, but the magazine has much the same lineup as last time, so if you like any of those artists, it’s worth a look. And at least two of the straight stories were very good, IMHO.

The most important story is the second chapter of “Collectors” by Nishi UKO. If you’ve been following Okazu for any length of time, you’ll know that she is one of my favorite artists – I love her clean lines and the unabashedly adult sensibility with which she imbues her stories. Nishi Uko-sensei often writes stories in what I am calling (as of this week) the Yuri Gap.

The Yuri Gap is that space after “zOMG! We’re in love!” and even after the obligatory first sexual encounter, but before “we’re an established couple.”

As I posted recently on the Yuricon Mailing List:

1) There’s Yuri in which a character is perceived to have a one-sided crush. (There’s TONS of “Yuri” in which there is no one-sided crush, but fans decide there is and interpret everything to fit their idée fixe.)

2) There’s first love Yuri in which two girls/women realize – to their shock – that they love one another.

3) There’s PWP Yuri in which two girls/women, for virtually no reason whatsoever, suddenly have a physical relationship.

4) And there’s relationship Yuri in which two women are a priori living together as a couple.

There are *of course* exceptions to these. But in my opinion, there’s a distinct gap here. The gap is that bit that interests me most, to be honest.

It’s obviously easy to sell 1) one-sided and crushy Yuri – no commitment is needed from the reader to make the relationship work. And it’s pretty easy to sell 4) a pre-existing relationship to a reader because, duh, it’s pre-existing so you either accept it or you don’t read the manga.

Most of “Yuri” fits neatly in 2) and 3). First love stories are titillating in an emotional way, and sex in a physical way and sometimes either kind of story can be titillating in either, or both ways.

And yet…I can’t help but notice a gap.

The gap is that bit after “we’re together as a couple” and before “we living together.”

This is the kind of story I covered in “Playing House” in Yuri Monogatari 4 and what “Fufu” is doing in Yuri Hime S. This space when two women are past building a physical relationship out of an emotional one and trying to translate that into real life. Moving in, getting furniture – dealing with bills and budgets and family and food and…stuff.

In “Collectors,” the couple isn’t living together, but they are together. But the stories are about the little things. The very little things. Sharing space and sharing clothes and little pieces that finish off the big life puzzle. And for that reason I like that story more than I can convey simply. And this chapter was funny, too.

Takemiya Jin covers the newest most popular Yuri couple with the high school girl and the college student tutor that fall for each other in “Omoi no kakera (2 piece).” It’s kind of safe territory, but the author gets to play around with the kind of character she does best – apparently amoral, but actually very nice character.

And in “Parfum” Nishi Uko once again deals with one of the important little pieces – when a couple fights for no goddamn good reason at all.

In “Sukina Hito” a sister’s nighttime affection for her older sister is starting to put some cracks in her relationship with her boyfriend.

There’s also at least two stories that cover “Girl’s Talk” episodes, and which are true enough to life that most folks will automatically write the relationships in as having some physical component when it really doesn’t, because clearly when women are complaining about their boyfriends, the only logical conclusion is for them to have sex together. It’s not really there, but I know my audience. :-)

My only disappointment with volume two is that this time there wasn’t any BL included. I very much liked that the last volume had some (even if I didn’t actually like the story itself.) Based on the kinds of stories being included in this volume, the readership is skewing strongly female, so I’m really hoping to see some more variety in the next volume.

Ratings:

Overall – 8

Like all anthology magazines, I don’t expect to like all – r even most – of the stories in this magazine, but I seems to be enjoying about half the work in this magazine. That’s a pretty high “like” ratio. :-)



Yuri Network News – April 3, 2010

April 3rd, 2010

Look, I’m still jet-lagged, so although there is a TON of news, this week’s report will be short. Bear with me while I re-assimilate to this time zone.

Live Action Yuri

The big news in the world of Yuri this week is the announcement of a Live-Action Maria-sama ga Miteru movie, as announced in this Cobalt Salon ad. (PDF) And there is already a movie website, with the lead actresses listed: Miki Honoka as Yumi and Haru as Sachiko. I note that the leads appear to be teen idols who modeled for young men’s magazines. There are an endless supply of women who become idols and end up doing that kind of modeling – the actresses from the Live-Action Sailor Moon were found through the same route. It pretty much guarantees interest from a male audience for what is otherwise just another chick movie.

And thanks to ANN for ferreting out that Kakera: A Piece of Our Life, the movie based on Erica Sakurazawa’s Love Vibes, will be showing at Raindance and is going to have a UK theatrical release, followed by a DVD release. (Trailer here.)

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Yuri Manga

YNN Correspondent Darkchibi07 notes that Ichijinsha’s Yuri Hime Website has a nice new feature. If you click a volume on the scrolling banner, it leads you to a page on the Ichinjinsha store – if there is a GREEN link on that page, click that and you will be able to read that volume for free with their online e-reader. No, there are no translations – this is after all a Japanese manga, on a Japanese site, for a primarily Japanese market. (I will refrain from once again explaining why fansubs are not really connected to sales and I’ll ask that you please refrain from insisting that if the publisher put time and money into translating an e-edition into English it would somehow translate to better sales. Thanks.)

Takemiya Jin’s collection Girlish Sweet is available for pre-order. I love his work – although I don’t think he’s ever going to surpass his amoral/evil Noriko fan works with any of his original stuff. I keep hoping though!

Three new Ichijinsha comics about which I know nothing are slated for release this month: Kimi Koi Limit, YuriPop and Honey Inferno. I suppose I should actually read the ads in Yuri Hime one day…. Also I note that Raubritter, another Ichijinsha publication was came out while I was in Japan, but although I saw it, I just blanked. For some reason, I remember the cover putting me off.

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Other News

Manga Curmudgeon David Welsh came up with JiriRabu, a comic about gay married-in-all-but-name life by a gay guy in Japan. I thought it interesting enough to share. ;-)

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That’s a wrap for this week.

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!



Yuri Manga: Yukemuri Sanctuary

April 2nd, 2010

Amano Shuninta’s cell-phone manga, Yukemuri Sanctuary reminded me strongly in several ways of the old Mist magazine stories. All of them are near plotless, the story merely existing to frame the sexual encounters, with the  thin connective tissue of the OniYuri onsen to combine them into a whole, much as in Wako’s compilation from Mist, Kiseki Goten.

The OniYuri Onsen is an old, run-down little hot spring – not so famous, not glitzy, but a onsen reviewer falls for it – and for the woman who works there, in the first story. A stripper finds it’s charms irresistible and consequently, designs some irresistible charms to sell at the onsen. A famous idol finds love in the bad eyesight of one of her fans, and uses her fame to help the onsen gain visibility. The woman who works in the Ero-museum attached to the onsen finds true love with the woman she lusted after.

And in the inevitable final story, the cool, aloof, hotel conglomerate president is reunited with the onsen owner and forgets her threats to take the onsen over and replace it with a golf course.

There’s nothing particularly compelling about these stories, but nothing particularly reprehensible, either. As I said, it reminded me strongly of Kiseki Goten. Which brings me to the one, completely, utterly unreasonable complaint I have about this book. Because it did remind me so much of Mist, I kind of was annoyed at the low quality of the art as compared with the realistic(ish) and detailed art in Mist. I know, styles change over time, but if the art was even half as good as Wako’s I would have liked this book a *lot* more. As it is, it kind of just made me pine for the days when good art was a requirement even in porn.

Ah well.

Ratings:

Art – In comparison with Mist, 3, so I won’t go there. Let’s say 7
Story – 7
Characters – 5
Yuri – 9
Service – 7

Overall – 7

Yukemuri Sanctuary is a fluffball read that probably would have been a lot of fun as a monthly cell-phone installment of Yuri.



Lucky Star OVA (English)

April 1st, 2010

Well, this was it. This was the big moment I had been waiting for – the moment when it would *all* be revealed and I too would see the thing that was so obvious to everyone (except myself and everyone I respect). I was all primed to see some really tight connection between Kagami and Konata – that tension between two women that says, “I’ve got my eyes on you – I think about you – I want you.”

In Lucky Star OVA, the audience is once again told flat out by Konata (the character that the audience is supposed to identify with) that Kagami is tsundere. Because fans are apparently highly suggestable and are often inclined to see relationships between characters based on the fanfic, fanart, promotional art, etc and their own desire, only a little direction is needed. The statement that Kagami is passive-agressive and her wink, wink, nudge, nudge response of “I am not!” just about proves the fact.

Except…it doesn’t. I mean, if you just look carefully, I mean REALLY look and listen to every word Kagami says – you might have to watch frame by frame to see her true expressions – she really isn’t tsundere. She’s just tsun at Konata. Kagami – with whom I completely identify, so of course I understand her better than the creators themselves – is affectionate towards her sister, feels half frustration at and half admiration for Miyuki and is wholly and completely irked by Konata’s inability/lack of desire to rise above her obsessions. Kagami, who tries so hard, works constantly, strives to be the best she can be, only to be outdone in everything by Konata who does NOTHING to make herself better…it’s maddening.

Kagami wants to like her childhood friend, but cannot.

And that, my dear readers is the true story behind Lucky Star. A tragedy of friendship that cannot be fulfilled and feelings that cannot be expressed for fear of being labeled incorrectly…and therefore misinterpreted.

Just like this review.

Overall – 5

Many, many thanks to Okazu Superhero Dan P. for providing me with today’s momentary pleasure, by sponsoring something from the Yuri Wish List! :-)