Yuri Drama CD: Maria-sama ga Miteru Premium CD Volume 1

January 19th, 2010

Maria-sama ga Miteru Premium CD Volume 1, which should not be confused with the Maria-sama ga Miteru Special CD, Volume 1, because they are two different things with the practically the same name, was wonderful. Absolutely squee-worthy.

The dramas alone were a full hour or so and cover the most pertinent bits of Souer Audition, i.e., Tsutako and Shouko reunited for the first time since they first met (squee!), and “Joanna,” the short in which we see Yumi manipulating Touko by being honest, sincere, enthusiastic and loving. (squee!) Poor Touko…there was no hope for her after that. lol You’d have to be a very evil person to not love Yumi at that point and Touko was never evil.

The discussion portion had Ueda Kana and Nabatome Hitomi discussing – among other things – cream-filled doughnuts and Russian fairy tales. I love the idea that they are on the clock eating shu-cream filled doughnuts. If I didn’t know that the rest of their job was beastly, I might envy them.

We now have all of the Tsutako x Shouko story on various CDs. If they are smart – and they are, I have no doubt – they will package them all together as a Drama CD with figurines of Tsutako Shouko and we’ll all cough up *another* pile of cash to get it. ^_^

Now all I need to make me happy is Kira Kira Mawaru and Margaret ni Ribon on CD and I will be the happiest of fangirls. ^_^

Ratings:

Overall – 9.5, because this is just about the best Tsutako x Shouko scene until Kira Kira Mawaru

Squee!



Yuri Manga: Kimochi no Katachi, Volume 1

January 18th, 2010

You know the old stereotype of an old person crying tears of joy, saying something like, “I’m so glad to have lived to see this day”? I am that old person. ^_^

Almost all of my favorite original doujinshi artists have been discovered, their stories collected, their work recognized for its innate value.

Today’s review is a collection of a series I talked about five years ago. Sakuraike was one of the first original Yuri doujinshi circles I began collecting, and we had the incredible pleasure of being able to include some of their work in our Yuri Monogatari 5 anthology.

Kimochi no Katachi (きもちのかたち) is the collection of all the Tact doujinshi series in two volumes.

The first arc of the volume is by Kitao Taki and introduces us to Mako, a boyish, athletic, but sweet and kind and soft-hearted girl. Her best friend Takemi is protective of her, but not grasping. When another female student falls for Mako, Mako resists primarily because she’s already been burned for having feelings for another girl. But Rina is nothing if not persistent. Mako’s relationship with Takemi suffers because she can’t find it in herself to tell her best friend what’s obviously going on. Takemi knows – she’s not an idiot – but she needs Mako to be the one to say it. Takemi’s right, too. Mako needs to be able to be honest with herself.

Rina is fighting to get Mako to say her name, when Mako’s former love interest shows up to complicate things. Mako has to move past her old unrequited love, her fear of her own feelings and plain old embarrassment. But she does, and by the end of the arc captured in this volume, Makoto and Rina are finally able to be a couple.

The second arc, by Mitou Kana tells the story of Satsuki, who falls for her sempai in the Library club, Kano. Satsuki is very well aware of how people perceive women who love women, and she carefully draws an imaginary line between behaviors that are acceptable and those that are not. By accident, she meets a lizard who teaches her the meaning of “being gross” and “being different” and learns to accept her own feelings.

Satsuki is assisted in this by her friend Mana, who sees immediately what’s going on and – like Takemi in the first arc – demands that Satsuki be honest with herself. At the end of the first volume Satsuki admits to Mana that, yes, she does like Kano. Since the very first 4-koma of the arc shows the two of them as a couple, we can relax…a little bit. ^_^

When I first discovered Sakuraike, I was enchanted by their characters. They were doing what everyone else wasn’t. Their characters were talking about, thinking about and dealing with the reality of being in love with another girl – territory that’s *still* pretty rare in Yuri. Thanks to the leveling up of artists and circles like Sakuraike, UKOZ, Morinaga, Takashima, Tadeno and Morishima, we’re getting more and more realistic situations in our Yuri.

Artistically speaking, there’s some good and some less good in Kimochi no Katachi. Remember, Tact is pretty old now (I started collecting it in 2004 and it had already been a round for a while), so as artists, both Taki and Kana have improved since then. Taki’s art tends towards a loose playing-free-with-proportions style, and Kana’s style is more 4-koma cute.

For me, it’s the characters that rule here. Satsuki is instantly likeable, Kano is fun and you know, when Rina’s aching because Mako’s so cute…you feel it, you really do. The story lines might appear to be paths that have been well-trod, but they weren’t – not when these stories were first written. And they still hold up today, I think.

If I wanted to give a good Yuri manga to a young woman who was questioning her right to love another woman and worried that people might think she was weird, this is the manga I would give her.

Ratings:

Because this volume is a collection of doujinshi that were released over years, the ratings are amost all variable.

Art – From 3-7
Story – From 6-8
Characters – 8-9
Yuri – 9
Service – 1

Overall – 9

I am so glad to have lived to see this day. I mean that. Holding this book in my hand was like a gift from heaven. 18 days into it, 2010 is still the best year of my life (so far!)



The Hows, Whats, Whys and Why Nots of Manga Blogging and Reporting

January 17th, 2010

This week has been very interesting in the manga blogging corner of the world.

It started with Brigid Alverson on Mangablog writing about how to set up a manga blog that’s User-Friendly. Her advice is all good, solid, basic web-building advice.

This was followed by David Welsh on his newly renamed Manga Curmudgeon, pointedly teaching fledgling journalists how to report on Manga properly.

Last night on Twitter, Deb Aoki from manga.about.com wrote some writing tips for manga bloggers, so they can write better blogs. (Compiled by animemiz)

Late breaking Entry! Mangacritic Kate Dacey just added her incredibly important 2 cents to the issue, with this morning’s post Why Editing Matters.

And few nights ago, I had a discussion on Twitter with a bunch of the manga bloggers on why – and why not – to start a manga blog. This article is the compilation of those basics, so we can have all four pieces of writing in permalink spots. :-)

Why You Shouldn’t Start a Blog

1) To get free stuff.

No one owes you and no one cares about you – until you prove you’re worth caring about. Once you have an audience and a reputation for fair and creative reviews, you’ll have a base to stand upon to ask for review copies. But still, remember – no one owes you anything.

2) To pick a bone with a company.

Boy you hate Company XYZ. Everyone you know knows it. Now you want to share your issues with the world. You hate their font, their voice actors, their translator, their cover artist and you’re going to rag endlessly about it, and while you’re there talk about some stuff you like too.

3) To share illegally shared material.

You stay right on top of the sub and scan scene and you know just where to get every sub and scan and how cool is that? It’s not. You dealing in stolen IP and that makes you an accessory. Fines and jail time are so uncool.

Why you should start a blog

1) To get writing experience

Blogging is a great way to build your writing and editing skills, to learn to keep a deadline and to experiment in a safe way with your writing. Non-fiction is, by and large, easier to write than fiction, but writing on a steady schedule is still work.

2) You have a unique viewpoint or interest.

Obviously, the reason I started this blog was that no one else was writing on Yuri, and I was starting up a Yuricon and needed somewhere to write about it. 8 years later there are other Yuri blogs, but I hope I’m still bringing something unique and critical to the table. Many of the bloggers I respect have a unique focus, interest, genre or perspective.

3) Other people keep telling you it’s time.

On the whole, I’m not moved by what “other people say” but for many successful bloggers, it all began when someone else asked them to write for them. It might have been a guest post or as a staff writer on a larger site. In some cases, the blogger had been discussing manga or anime critically for ages and it just finally seemed like the right thing to do. Permalinks are so much more useful than conversations that float away on a breeze. :-)

***

So – there you have it. The world’s first compilation on Manga Blogging 101, brought to you by Brigid Alverson, David Welsh, Kate Dacey, Deb Aoki and me. :-)



A Yuricon Outing in NYC

January 16th, 2010

No news today, because we’re going to be out having some fun – and you’re welcome to join us!

I plan on dragging my suburban ass into to New York City for a day of otaku-ing hardcore. Anyone who wants to join me is welcome to do so.

12PM – Meet Kinokuniya on 6th Ave/Bryant Park. We’ll be shopping *without* squeeing with our outside voices.

After that, we’ll wander over to Book-off, for our used manga, j-pop and other random media fix.

Then we’re going to ride the subway downtown to 9th street where depending on the size of the crowd, we’ll find a nice Japanese restaurant or a dive, if you all embarrass me. :-)

And for the piece de resistance, we’re going to show up at Drom, 85 Avenue A Between 5 & 6th at 4:30PM for a performance of Promise, a home-grown J-pop idol group that is composed of Friend of Yuri Leanne F. and her sisters. (You may remember them as the excruciatingly adorable Maria-sama ga Miteru cosplayers from Otakon a few years ago.) They’ve launched themselves as a j-pop idol group “Promise” and have been performing as the opening act for Akihabara moe idol Reni, who is working NYC these days. Reni will also be performing, but I don’t care. I’ll be there for Promise. This show has a $10 cover charge.

There’s no RSVP necessary, just nab my attention at Kino at noon. If you don’t know me, look for Sean – he’s the tall guy in the hat. Trust me, you’ll find us no problem. We’ll be hovering in the vicinity of the cafe.

If you do come, try and bring a sign that says “I heart Promise!!!!!!!” or something equally girly, so we’re all on board with the uber-cute ness there. :-)

I hope to see you there, and we’ll be back with the news next week!



Yuri Anime: El Cazador de la Bruja, Volume 2 Disk 3 (English)

January 15th, 2010

El Cazador de la Bruja, Volume 1Disk 3 of El Cazador de la Bruja is when it all happens. Everything that was building up to a climax is shifted around and everything we thought was important is set aside.

Disk 3 of El Cazador de la Bruja is when the things we never noticed become the things we stare fixedly at, and the things we thought we noticed stare back at us, challenging us to deny their existence.

Disk 3 of El Cazador de la Bruja is about one conspiracy becoming less important than we thought and another, even more obscure conspiracy, stepping in to take it’s place.

Disk 3 of El Cazador de la Bruja is about love. Tough hitman Ricardo loves his little adopted daughter Lirio, who clearly loves him back. We learn that Ellis loved the professor who ran tests on her, and that LA, as far as he’s capable in his cracked and broken way, loves Ellis. We learn that even Rosenberg, as selfish and miserable a man as he is, is capable of inspiring love. And above all, we can see that Nadie loves Ellis, even if she can’t quite see it herself – and Ellis loves Nadie enough for the whole world to see.

Disk 3 of El Cazador de la Bruja is about myths come to life and fantasy and scifi stories that are real.

Above all things, Disk 3 is when we realize that we will be singing the Amigo Tacos jingle for weeks on end and will never get it out of our heads.

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – 8
Characters – 9
Yuri – 5
Service – 3

Overall – 8

And again, our sincere appreciation goes to to Okazu Superhero Amanda M. for sponsoring today’s review!