Yuri Network News – April 10, 2010

April 10th, 2010

More Maria-sama ga Miteru Movie News

Courtesy of YNN correspondent senbei, here is more information on the Live-Action Maria-sama ga Miteru Movie:

From Eiga.com News

Work has begun on a live action film version of Konno Oyuki’s popular teen novel series Maria-sama ga Miteru. Starring Miki Honoka (未来穂香 [born March 7th 1997, a resident of Chiba]), a model attached to the fashion magazine Love Berry; and Haru (波瑠 [born June 17th 1991, a resident of Tokyo]), a model attached to the fashion magazine Seventeen.

Based on the original light novel work (boasting sales of 5.4 million copies), the series was made into a much-discussed anime by TV Tokyo. Terauchi Koutarou (director of the recent films Karasuko Raida and Ikemen Bank: The Movie [as well as the 2006 film, Boys Love]) , takes the megaphone again as director of this film. Ostensibly, the content of the movie is based on the thirty-seven published volumes as well one volume [series?] of manga.

The stage is set at Lillian Girl’s School—a preeminent Catholic women’s school in Japan. Here there exists a system of bonding between upper classmen and underclassmen known as the soeur system. The story centers on the Yamayurikai: the student council organization of youth on campus. As the film opens, Fukuzawa Yumi (played by Miki), an ordinary female high school student, is called to stop by her upper classmen, Ogasawara Sachiko (played by Haru). Here in depicts a complete change in her daily life at the academy.

Miki, the chosen lead, innocently comments, “I am very very happy. Thinking back, I had said, ‘I want to work as an actress my whole life.’ I think it’s fate that I got this performance.” With considerable enthusiasm she went on, “Maria-sama ga Miteru is my fated film [debut]. With no less than all the energy I can muster, I will strive to tackle this role. I want this to be a good performance,” she added.

Regarding Miki’s costar, Haru, she told us that, “While on the one hand I’m happy, I’m also surprised to find myself asking, ‘Am I good enough?’ Even just in the role of “Oneesama,” one gets the sense of being a lean, well-bred woman. So as not to disappoint fans of the original work, I want to bring that visual Sachiko and my internalized Sachiko as close together as possible.”

Maria-sama ga Miteru will be distributed by Jolly Roger and open in theaters [in Japan] this autumn.

Thank you so much for this translation, senbei – we’re all very appreciative of your efforts on our behalf! :-)

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Yuri Anime

On the Yuricon Mailing List, YNN correspondent Nick P pointed out that Blue Drop is going to get an English-language dub courtesy of an “upgrade” program from Sentai Filmworks.

Crunchyroll has announced that they’ve licensed Shin Koihime Musou 2nd. Here’s hoping for more cringe-making Yuri-service. :-)

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Yuri Manga

Okazu Superhero and YNN Correspondent Eric P. calls our attention to news that Seven Seas has announced omnibus collections for Hayate x Blade and Strawberry Panic!, and has rescued some other Dengeki Daioh titles that had lapsed licenses.

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Other Yuri News

YNN Correspondent Erin S. gladly shares a link to the Toranoana website with a description and pictures of the Fujieda Miyabi art exhibit that I was able to attend while in Tokyo. Although the exhibit is over, the pictures give you at least an idea of what it looked like.

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Other News

Neither of these are related to Yuri in any way, but I thought them of interest – in Japan, a mangaka named Shuho Satou who has had issues with several of the larger publishing companies, started publishing his work online directly with a fair amount of success. Now he has launched MangaWebOnline.com, a site for other manga creators who want to take their work directly to their audience.

And in North America, several former Tokyopop OEL creators have teamed up to do exactly the same thing with Bento Comics.

In both cases, while right now these can be seen as the online equivalent of an artists’ cooperative, if successful will find themselves in the position of becoming a publishing entity. I think it’s worth keeping your eyes on both these efforts to see where the future of manga may very well lie. There’s a real possibility that webcomics and manga are about to give birth to some really interesting kids.

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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: GUNJO, Volume 1

April 9th, 2010

(Note to people looking for scanlations of this book. The author does not work herself to the bone and pay money out of her pocket so you can steal her work. Scans are not cool – they are theft. You want the book, click the picture and go buy it. Otherwise, you’re devaluing her time and effort and there is no justification for it, other than you are selfish.) 

“Is it settled?”

“It’s settled.”

With these few words begins one of the most profound, most emotionally engaging manga I’ve ever read.

Gunjo, Volume 1 (羣青 上)by Nakamura Ching is a journey from madness to madness, from profound misery to profound misery and from derision and fear into depths of despair where there is respect and even love.

It begins in the moments after a horrible crime has been committed. A woman has asked someone to kill her husband for her. She has asked someone she knows she can use – another woman, a lesbian, who has been in love with her since high school. The woman who requested the death is abusive, derisive. The woman who committed the crime is passive, almost apathetic. She flinches in the face of the other’s harsh words, but doesn’t fight back.

In between incredible, sudden violence, at moments when their existence is most tenuous, there is tenderness. No, it’s more like that there is only tenderness in the moments when they are most fragile.

We only learn later that the one woman has been serially abused by her husband, after a life with an abusive father. And we only learn later that the other woman walked away from a relationship and a life to commit this act of violence for her.

There is no real moral ambiguity here – these two women are violent and broken. They are insanely bad for one another and have together done something unspeakable. And yet, in the darkest moments, they realize they want to live and try to create something like a life out of the chaos they’ve created.

Nakamura-sensei’s art is detailed and realistic – and in those moments of terrifying violence it reaches the level of sublime. Her writing is subtle – and painful and hurtful – and breathtakingly beautiful especially when the situation is uncertain. There is a mastery of tension of just about every kind in every word and line of this story.

Moving, brutal, sublimely gorgeous and profoundly disturbing.

I’ve said it before and I’ll continue to say this – Gunjo is the best manga I have read to date.

Ratings:

Art – 10
Story – 10
Characters – 10
Yuri – 7
Service – 1

Overall – 10

I would love to hear from those of you who bought Volume 1 of Gunjo – what did you think of it, now that you’ve had a chance to see it for yourself?



Yuri Anime: Blue Drop, The Complete Collection

April 8th, 2010

Man, does this series have one of everything. It’s got an alien race of women and a Japanese schoolgirl and a loyal crewmember and a vengeful crewmember who lost her lover in an accident that couldn’t have been prevented. It’s got a character who writes fanfic and a character who is not what she seems. There’s one complicated family situation and one set of deceased parents who were killed by the unstoppable accident. And the alien and the girl have met before as a result of the unstoppble accident.

It has a sneering bad guy who can take the blame for everything.

It’s got noble sacrifice, and tragedy and drama and a play within a play and a school play that eerily echoes the real situation and comedy and fun and friendship and love.

It has moe 2-D animation and the ships are in 3-D CGI which give them a sort of cool unworldliness.

It has thoroughly likable characters and a story that ends ironically, but it definitely ends.

It has good and bad and moral ambiguity and questionable decision-making and two women who fall in love, so it doesn’t really matter if it all makes sense. But for the most part – it all makes sense.

Blue Drop: The Complete Collection is a fun watch from beginning to end. It’s well presented, complete in one box and with no significant extras. Totally worth a watch whether you’ve read the original Blue Drop manga or not.

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – 7
Characters – 8
Yuri – 5
Service – 1

Overall – 8

Given the watchability of this story, I’m even more bummed by creator Yoshitomi Akihito’s decent into mediocrity in his recent manga work. I think he needs to return to this world once more and have a little fun.

My sincere gratitude is once again directed at Okazu Superhero Daniel P. for his sponsorship of today’s review and his ongoing support of Yuri. ^_^



Flat & Flow Manga, Volume 1

April 7th, 2010

Hana and Natsu share an apartment. And food. And a budget. And lives.

Hana and Natsu have very little money for extras…like dinner.

Hana and Natsu make up silly games for themselves to pass the time, since they don’t have books or TV.

Hana and Natsu get to the beach by hitchhiking.

Hana and Natsu are very hungry.

Hana and Natsu play with the kid downstairs, whom they call “Doctor.”

Hana and Natsu make newspaper armor.

Hana and Natsu sometimes whack each other for making bad jokes.

Hana is the boke and Natsu is the tsukkomi unless it’s the other way around.

There is no reason to think that Hana and Natsu are a couple, except all of the above.

Ratings:

Art – 5
Story – 5
Character – 6
Overt Yuri – 0
Implicit Yuri – 5
Service – 1

Overall – 5

Flat & Flow (ふら・ふろ) is not a 4-panel comic, but it might as well be one. It’s silly, easier to take in small chunks than large ones, full of poverty-stricken-slice-of-life gags.



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.