Mecha Mecha Media

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Summer Round-Up Part One

This is the first in a three-part series.

I recently attended the Sports Day (undou-kai) at the Portland Japanese School at Hazelbrook Middle School in Tualitan, Oregon. It was on an especially hot Saturday at the end of June. At PJS they teach a 100% Japanese curriculum, which includes the traditional all-school Sports Day. For the day-long event the school is divided into two teams, red and white, and a variety of games are played in the summer heat. From traditional relay races and tug-of-wars to interpretive cheerleading challenges, students of all ages participate in their own way. The red and white designation is pretty arbitrary. The real challenge of the day is showing unity and strength against the almighty sun, which put up a real challenge to the PJS students this year. I was reminded not only of my Sports Days in the Japanese high school I worked at a decade ago, but also there is almost always a Sports Day episode in every high school-themed anime. "To Heart" gives one of the best representations, but my favorite is the over-the-top telling in “Shingu”. The preparation and events themselves cover several episodes, and every student basically drops what they are doing to be involved, whether as athletes, reporters, announcers, referees...I used to think the Japanese Sports Day was much ado about nothing until I realized the day is an exercise in bonding for Japanese students that I am not sure students in the US ever experience.

After much buzz and anticipation, the official English release of the first volume of GANTZ is finally on shelves. This title is well known for its violence and nudity, but GANTZ is not simply a fan-service escapade. I am a sucker for mind-shattering openings and the first 60 pages of the first volume of GANTZ throw the reader on one of the best manga mind-scrambles of recent memory. What starts as two high-school chums jumping to rescue a drunk who fell on Tokyo subway train tracks leads to a tale that is part "The Sixth Sense", "Running Man", "Battle Royale" and "The Cube". A rag-tag group of strangers who have just escaped(?) death is stuck in a tiny Tokyo apartment. It isn't long before the unique group (in various states of undress) is given a few moments to prepare for their first mission. This is where our inner-city castaways find a way out...but to what violent ends? The close of the first volume is as engaging as the opening and I can't wait to see what happens next.

For mature manga fans this is the summer of Dororo and the second volume of this three-book series has hit shelves (the final volume came out this week). This volume finds our hero, Hyakkimaru and his thief ward, Dororo at each other's throats, and in quite a pickle. A mysterious wall in the middle of nowhere sets the stage for a dark and sometimes shocking second act. If you read the first volume of Dororo, you will want to read all three. If you haven't, then start at the beginning of this Osamu Tezuka classic and read it all the way through.

The manga series I look forward to reading more than any other is MPD-Psycho, and the fifth volume of this 11-volume series is the second loop-the-loop in an awesome roller coaster ride of a tale. MPD-Psycho is about schizoid detective with multiple personalities that might be one of the more sane residents in a Tokyo full of some truly homicidal nutcases. A well-known American profiler comes to Japan to help solve an old child murder case (and embarrass Det. Sasayama) but this profiler is a lot more than he seems on the surface. Not only is the action getting darker, we are given some pretty solid clues as to what really is going on in Nishizono and Amamiya. MPD-Psycho Vol. 5 is available now. Volume 6 comes out September 10.

An iron stomach isn't required to watch the recent DVD release "Wakeful Nights", but earmuffs might be. The Japanese funeral traditions are strict and somber, and therefore a perfect subject for a comedic lambasting. However your ears might turn red in this tale of a traditional rakugo story-teller's death (which opens with one of the funniest erotic mix-ups on film). The sensei's adult students relish in the all-night drunken story-telling at his wake, and the challenge is to tell the most moving and/or funny story as the sake flows and the inhibitions break down. Is it in bad taste to look forward to the next death in the circle? Professional story-tellers shine at the blue tales they tell, and this is a translator's nightmare of Japanese dialogue as nasty as "The Aristocrats".
Hope to see you or have seen you at Kumorinon this weekend!

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Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Detroit Metal City movie based on manga in Japanese theaters

Straight-up nutty manga Detroit Metal City has made it to the big screen, but not as an anime, but as a live-action death metal comedy freak-fest. A friend saw in Osaka last weekend and gave it two thumbs up.

Can you recognize the main actor from another recent manga-to-live action film?

So when are we getting this one in English, guys?

Official website (Japanese)

Click image for desktop-sized poster.

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Sunday, August 24, 2008

Kumoricon this weekend!


This Labor Day weekend is the annual three-day Kumoricon Anime convention for the Portland-Vancouver area. If you are local then you need to be going. It's a real blast with tons of panels and events, though my favorite is the people-watching. I haven't heard for sure yet, but I might sit on Dark Horse's translator panel again this year. I will post again once I know it is a go or not. Please come and ask questions about Blood+ and Dirty Pair. I will also be taking pics for The Yuuyake Shimbun with an article in the October issue, so check that out, too.
See you at the con!
EDIT: Will find out about the translator panel on Tuesday...but I don't see it on the posted schedule so far, so it may not be a go.
EDIT2: Sadky, there will be no translator panel this year, but I will be checking out the Dark Horse panel at the very least, so you might find me there.

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Friday, August 15, 2008

Tokyo+Zombies=Rock!


Tokyo Zombie
by Yusaku Hanakuma
One of my pet peeves is the "Is Manga a Genre?" debate. The answer is in the question, as manga (comics from Japan) are as diverse as comics and graphics novels released in the English-speaking world. Speed lines and SD sweat drops do not a manga make. I have have been very happy to see an increase in titles that expand the envelope for English-speaking readers of manga in recent years. Last year's Tekkon Kinkreet: Black and White by Taiyo Matsumoto is one fantastic example of a "non-traditional" manga that is also an amazing mind-scramble (and went on to win a well-deserved Eisner Award).

Tokyo Zombie is probably not on the short-list for an Eisner but it is on my short-list for Best of 2008. Not only does Tokyo Zombie blow the doors off what manga can be, it is a succinct and kick-ass comedy horror story that defies any reviewer not use profanity at least three times in his review. (1 out of 3 covered.)

At least to me, Yusaku Hanakuma's Afro and Hage characters are best known from their appearances in the monthly magazine Eiga Hiho (or "Cinema Treasures"), basically the Japanese version of Fangoria. Tokyo Zombie is his first long-story usage of the the two quirky buddies, and the results are both shocking and satisfying.

Our two main characters are factory workers by day and martial arts aficionados by night...or during the day, too. An untimely trip to Dark Fuji, a garbage heap of a mountain full of as many discarded corpses as dead computers, leads to witness of the the beginnings of the Tokyo zombie invasion as the dead rise to do what zombies do.

These opening scenes are rather brutal (and don't let up), and the impact is only slightly softened by the sketch-book style of the artwork. This style is called "heta-uma" or "skillfully shitty" (2 of 3 swear-words tagged), but it is all Hanakuma's and wouldn't work at all if it wasn't matched with the dark and dry humor that peppers this apocalyptic tale.

There are some surprising twists, and eventually we are presented with Tokyo where the humans live in a secure fort surrounded by blood-sucking zombies trying to get in, but the need to entertain themselves fuels the actions of the still-living and wealthy. This is no "28 Days Later" or "I Am Legend" zombie apocalypse. Think professional wrestling with zombies in a Gladiator or Thunderdome setting, and you can begin to imagine the jaw-dropping audacity some selfish humans have, even in a world of chaos.

Simple on the surface, Tokyo Zombie satisfies on several levels. From flying heads and genitalia chomps to wicked twists and not-so-subtle social commentary, this one-shot does a lot in its 150ish pages.

Simply put, Tokyo Zombie is the shit (3 out of 3 profanities complete).

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Thursday, August 14, 2008

Google Maps Street View Japan is Live

Street view is now available for many of the big cities in Japan.

A good place to get started.

This is kinda funny.

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Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Digital Manga Goes Digital Manga

Digital Manga announced a new online manga service tonight. It is still in beta, and yaoi heavy, but act fast and you can be one of the first 100 registered users to get 500 free points (at least according to the email I just got...but the press release says 400, which matches with the going rate for a full volume) Like I said, it is still in beta-mode, but I will be curious to hear how people like the interface. There are free samples, too, and I was able to make it in time for the sign-up bonus. The press release and links are below:





Digital Manga Inc, one of the industry’s most unconventional and innovative
companies, is pleased to announce the launch of emanga.com Beta – the industry’s first publisher sponsored manga rental site. “We are pretty excited,” explains marketing manager Rachel Livingston. “Everyone asks if we do digital comics
since our name is Digital Manga. I can finally say yes!” At emanga.com, customers can view sample pages for free or view the entire book by paying for a time-based rental. “All content available through eManga is streamed to your computer through Adobe Flash player,” explains Director of Operations Miguel Balauag, “You can trade eManga points to rent titles for a limited amount of time. If you later decide to rent the same title again, it will be automatically upgraded to an "unlimited" rental, which does not have time restrictions.”

The emanga.com site features a unique manga viewer that allows readers to view single pages,double page spreads, or each individual panel. In some cases, readers will be able to press play and have the panels scroll automatically for a hands free experience. “We are trying to get some of the people in the office to do voiceovers for a few of the titles,” teases Production Manager Wendy Lee. “With the player, the possibilities are endless!”

The site will be in beta testing for the next month. Readers are invited to take a look at the free samples currently available on the site – including L’ Étoile Solitaire by Yuno Ogami - and email us at support@emanga.com with any comments or feedback. The first 100 readers to register will receive 400 free points with which to purchase additional content.

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Thursday, August 07, 2008

The Art of Japanese Animation Exhibit in Portland

The first Thursday of August will be the opening night for The Art of Japanese Animation Exhibit at Moshi Moshi Gallery located at 916 Burnside in Portland. This is extra cool, as it will coincide with Portland's Kumoricon on Labor Day Weekend. Here's the details:
(click image to engorge)

Moshi Moshi Gallery will be presenting "The art of
Japanese animation" from August 7th - September 3rd - with the
opening reception from 6pm-9pm on Thursday August 7th. Keep an
eye on moshi-moshi.com for more
details...This Exhibition will feature original animation cels and backgrounds
used in the production of Japanese cartoons from the 1970's through the current
decade featuring:
Nausicaa
Last Mystery of the 20th Century
Astroboy
Microman
Porco Rosso
GeGeGe No Kitaro
Guyver
Urusei Yatsura
Star Blazers
Robot Carnival
& lots more....

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Wednesday, August 06, 2008

Hiroshima Day - Two Manga Help Us Reflect

Manga is fantastic at taking us away to far-away worlds. From Japanese classrooms (that's far away for most of us) to distant planets, the pleasure is in the fantastic voyage set apart from our own reality.

But manga and graphic novels don't always have to be journeys away from reality. Sometimes the most moving journey is one to a reality almost all of us will thankfully never experience.

This August 6 marks the 63rd Anniversary of the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. The bombing of Nagasaki happened three days later on August 9th.

Purely by coincidence, I just laid hands on two titles that thrust the reader very honestly and directly in the reality of that time in World War II.

Both are moving on different planes in the same setting and one could be called a shoujo title where the other is more shonen. Both titles are about Hiroshima, and although Fumiyo Kouno was born well after the war in 1968 in Hiroshima, Keiji Nakazawa was six years old when the bomb struck a kilometer from his home.

Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms opens in 1955, a full ten years after the atomic bomb in Hiroshima. The water-color cover and light-hearted title disguises the pain and confusion the young Minami goes through as she traverses a post-war Hiroshima.

"Nobody talks about it. I don't understand what happened even to this day," she narrates.

Minami's rejection of affection is directly related to her feelings of guilt about survival in an emotional journey full of moving flashbacks that resonate even more knowing they are based in reality.

The same is true for the now-classic series Barefoot Gen which is in the middle of an impressive 10-volume rerelease by Last Gasp (which also released Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms). This is the more shonen of the the two titles, but the path is the same. The difference here is author Keiji Nakazawa actually survived the Hiroshima atom bomb, and this is a semi-autobigraphical tale with a brand-new translation by Project Gen, a group dedicated to having this tale properly told.

Both these tale pull at heartstrings in different places. Town of Evening Calm is more subtle and emotional, and Barefoot Gen is a bit more visceral.

Both of these Hiroshima stories are moving on a level manga doesn't often take us. The level that is historical reality.

As we mark the anniversaries of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki this week, please take a minute to consider how the world has changed and how individuals have been affected by the events of this week 63 years ago. If you are not sure what to think, then Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms and Barefoot Gen are two moving and emotional tales that give some real insight.

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