Monday, September 15, 2008

Manga Review: Kekkaishi v. 1 (w/ bonus mini-Manga Review: Othello, v. 1 + 2)

Today I’m taking a look at two works from different ends of the spectrum: the “uber shonen”-style Kekkaishi and the winsome shojo Othello. First, Kekkaishi...






Although Yoshimori has inherited the power and abilities of his family’s demon-hunting art, he’s reluctant to truly commit himself to his duty of carrying on the family business of protecting the community…until his neighbor (and crush/childhood friend), rival demon-hunter Tokine is seriously injured by his inattention and half-heartedness. 5 years later on, Yoshimori is far more committed - but his stubbornness, uncontrollable sweet-tooth, and unabated crush on Tokine are still causing problems. As their local high school/junior high is the magnet for all sorts of ghouls, ghosts, and goblins, Yoshimori and Tokine (along with their spectral canine sidekicks, Madarao and Hakubi) have to learn to stop butting heads and instead team up to fight the endless array of evil spirits threatening their school.

Kekkaishi is prime example of the current shonen style of manga: an excitable, impetuous young hero who’s enormously talented (but stubborn and sort of lazy) has to hunt down rouge spirits and angry demons with the help of a loyal but wise-cracking sidekick; some readers out there will probably recognize this as being the exact plot as Bleach. The “excitable but lazy young guy” has long been a stock manga hero, but “demon-hunting” heroes seem to be especially popular these days; in fact, I’d say it’s replaced the Dragonball Z-style “ultimate fighter”/brawl as the shonen formula de jour (The “supernatural” has long had long been a popular topic in Japanese culture, and an astute anime/manga buff can observe it has provided the base of a wide range of current manga and anime – see XXXholic, Princess Resurrection, Hell Girl, Vampire Rosario, etc).

Still, formulaic as Kekkaishi is, there are some redeeming qualities. The occasional use of traditional Japanese ukiyo-e “ghost pictures” is a nice contrast to the sturdy, simple artwork that makes up most of the manga. The clan rivalry between Yoshimori’s and Tokine’s families harks back to old samurai traditions, but it’s cleverly played for humor: the “rival clans” act more like argumentative neighbors fighting over lawn clippings rather than inheritors of a proud warrior culture.

Although it’s not breaking any new ground, Kekkaishi at least succeeds in being a straight-forward and accessible take on the current shonen formula; older readers will have probably seen it all before, but younger ones will eat it up.
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I also wanted to mention Othello…yes, the Shakespeare classic. Haha. Naw, by Othello I mean Satomi Ikezawa’s shojo manga, named for the board game Othello. Longtime readers know I usually steer clear of the shojo stuff (those huge, glistening eyes just creep me out, honestly), but a chance reading of vols 1 and 2 reveled Othello to be an entertaining take on the old Jekyll and Hyde formula: Yaya is a quiet, shy, bullied high school girl who occasionally transforms into Nana, a flamboyant, bad-ass rocker chick that’s prone to acting on Yaya’s repressed yearnings…specifically, enacting revenge on Yaya’s cruel classmates and boldly flirting with Moriyama, the handsome musician Yaya’s been quietly crushing on.

With a tight, plot-driven structure, Othello lacks the complex social/romantic structure of many shojo manga, and focuses more on purely Japanese growing pains – bullying, Loligoth cosplay, J-Rock, and a still-traditional relation between the sexes. The artwork also tends toward realism, i.e. no over the top bishonen/bishojo, chibi sidekicks, or overly cutesy characters. Both of these factors will make Othello attractive to older or occasional manga readers – guys too.

Monday, September 8, 2008

Excuses, Excuses....

Yes, it’s been over a month since my last update, and I might as well apologize now for not having posted a review for such a long time. My excuse? Well, I moved in with my girlfriend a few weeks ago, so that has been sucking up a huge part of my free time and prevented me from being able to read or watch much in the way of “modern Japanese visual culture”; in fact, I’ve got Mushi-shi and Beck: Mongolian Chop Squad DVDs gathering dust on top of the TV and Excel Saga, Kekaishi, Dororo and The Wallflower at the bottom of my bookbag accruing overdue fines.

So Gomennasai (ごめんなさい。) everyone….I will return to my normal schedule (i.e. still irregular but more frequent) of posting before long - I’ll be taking a look at a couple of the afore-mentioned series and coming back with news from the New York AnimeFest in a few weeks to boot.

Until then, enjoy this creepy cosplay picture. Yikes…..