cerusee: a white redheaded girl in a classroom sitting by the window chewing on a pencil and looking bored (the covers of this book are too far apar)
Manga:

Watase Yuu: Ceres: Celestial Maiden vol. 3
(this is the only major Yuu Watase work I never made any progress on, and I'd really like to finish it, even though [livejournal.com profile] m00nface says it broke her heart and ripped it into shreds and then taped the shreds back together and ripped them up again and stomped all over them for good measure, or words to that effect. I just can't help it; I'm a Yuu Watase fangirl, and I will be until I die.

This manga is more frighteningly violent than I remember it being. I think when I read the first two volumes, several years ago, I took this level of violence in comics a little bit more for granted. There's a deep sense of menace in the regular, eerie, spontaneous combustions, helicopter attacks, mind-controlled assaults, and telekinetic attacks. Aya's naive in trying to live a normal life despite everything that's been revealed to her, but it's the disruption of normality that makes this violence so scary, the way trustworthy elements of her daily life are gradually revealed to be corrupted. Coupled with that is the way her family has been destroyed--all Aya has left of that is her brother, who is in the hands of her enemy--this is not something she can really run away from.

Even though Watase's famous, or so I have been told, for reviving epic fantasy shoujo, this is a recurring motif in her works--no matter how far you go, or where you travel, there's no running away from danger. It always, always comes home to you in the end, and that's where you have to fight it. Watase's battles are always domestic, and that makes them rather horrible.

Speaking of Aya's brother, I really like the kid, and that fills me with forboding, because another recurring motif in Watase's manga is the loved, trusted, dear friend who is loyal and well-meaning, but becomes corrupted and turns into a deadly enemy. I can feel my heart getting ready to break already.

The art, as always, is spectacular. Watase excels at creating the impact page, visually interesting and emotionally evocative, although I tend to need to take a break after an action sequence, or I stop being able to absorb what I'm reading.

Side note: I love Suzumi, who is a neat-o character all around, but I am constantly distracted by the fact that she looks exactly like Count D from Matsuri Akino's Petshop of Horrors in a kimono).



Kanari Yozaburo, author, Sato Fumiya, artist: Kindaichi Case Files: House of Wax
(this was no less ridiculous than the other volumes of Kindaichi Case Files I've read, but I enjoyed it more, I think because Akechi figures prominently in this one.

Read more... )

The murder methods were also engagingly gruesome, which of course never fails to entertain).



Ohba Tsugami, author, Obata Takeshi, artist: Death Note vol. 1
(reread. I just wanted to refresh myself with the manga so I could compare it better with the godawful movie, and as I replied to a comment in a different entry, it's a much better execution of the concept (and not just because it originated the story).

It is a problematic work. )
cerusee: a white redheaded girl in a classroom sitting by the window chewing on a pencil and looking bored (I wasn't doing anything)
Well, that was quite bad. I think it would have been bad anyway, but unfortunately, the limited theater release version was a dub, and not a good dub. The English voice actors ranged from passable to "probably would have been good if they'd been recorded in the same room"; the English voices did not match the mouths of the Japanese actors, and this was painfully obvious most of the time. Many, many pieces of key information were delivered via Japanese text--none of which was translated into English. I was able to follow the plot because I knew it already, but my companions were extremely confused. One of them was unaware that Death Note is chock-full of English text, and assumed they were simply translating the text inconsistently, until I explained on the car ride home.

They changed the plot of the arc this movie covers in some key ways. The changes tied together coherently enough that I don't think I would have minded, had they done so in a manner that resulted in a good movie. Alas.

Despite it being bad, I really enjoyed it! It made me nostalgic for those days of yore when Death Note was just developing its English-language fanbase via scanlations, when it was still one of the best manga I'd ever read, before the spoilery things I shall not name, and back before it disappointed me. I loved this thing hard, and it was exciting to be in the fandom when it was young, although I forswore the fandom in fairly short order for being largely populated by pretentious dickheads.

The movie audience was a fun, noisy, young crowd--pretty much the con-going crowd, complete with L cosplayers. They were loud and obnoxious, cheered vigorously when L made his first appearance, and shouted out snarky remarks every time something particularly stupid happened or whenever something really important was conveyed via untranslated Japanese text. Since the movie was so bad, I think most of the audience (myself included) was deriving its primary entertainment from making fun of it, until an attendant came in and made everyone shut up. It's possible someone had gone and complained, but I sort of doubt that, since nobody in the audience evinced the slightest inclination to shush the theater before that. (And if they did, shame on them, because they ruined the fun of most of the people there, including my non-fandom companions.) This was not intentionally a fandom/con venue, but the zeitgeist was definitely that of a anime/manga con, and it's a pity that that was quashed.
cerusee: a white redheaded girl in a classroom sitting by the window chewing on a pencil and looking bored (Default)
I posted this at Anime Blog Muyo way back in December, right after I first discovered Death Note. Unfortunately, ABM is not a very active forum (the manga section is particularly decrepit), so I couldn't start a good discussion. I thought about posting this to death_note, but the archive is so confusing, I can't navigate it properly to establish that I would not be violating the rules of newbie etiquette by reopening a discussion that was concluded *&^&*(% years ago, dammit. So I'm inflicting it on y'all. SPOILERS up to about Ch. 57 or so.

The question was, if you had the Death Note, would you do what Light does? Duh, no. )


Death Note is not a morality play. )

September 2012

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23 242526272829
30      

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 27th, 2025 12:40 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios