Archive for ◊ February, 2010 ◊

Author:
• Friday, February 19th, 2010

Even though the American constitution doesn’t protect obscene media as its goal, it does and will alway will because of subjectivity.

As selective enforcement grows, more and more normal well meaning people will be guilty of crimes that they may or may not know exist. That’s not to say one should be anti-government as government is only as good as the people who put leaders in power.

Manga is fiction, media, and art. If sexual material is deemed obscene then so should violence. So if one makes a murder crime movie, the buyers of the movie should be charged with the crimes relating to movie or the thoughts and planning of committing such a crime. Extreme example, but relevant.

One may say to themselves that they would have fought these charges to the bitter end, but then you may realize that you’re about to lose everything and that this effects your friends and family.

I believe anyone put into such a situation should not give in. Try to be respectful, but surely give them hell when someone says or implies something outrageous. Punishment of normally lawful citizens should not be accepted with this. Good intentions of people involved with this case is debatable. On one hand it’s just simply not knowing, but it soon become ignorance after a point in time.

Background:
Christopher Handley is a fairly long time manga fan who served the US Navy, managed to gather a collection of well over a thousand such books, a comfortable career in computers, and is in good will with his family. The guy also plays games online, but apparently that is not socially acceptable in the state of Iowa even in 2010. Before the official sentence, a push to ban the person from computers was made like how some places ban alcoholics from buying liquor. Makes one wonder how often such suggestions are made with actual pedophiles.

Basically his order of manga that he imported was inspected before being picked up and driven home. On the way home he has a face full of cops and serious biz dress up people raiding him. Roughly 80 of his 1200 manga were seen as offensive in the case with many of those being yaoi and lolicon. There has been information about how characters in the yaoi comics were pushed to be seen as underage.

CBLDF or Comic Book Legal Defense Fund is a consulting group that helps people charged with obscene comic related cases and the people representing them. The CBLDF believes comics should be treated as any other form of expression. If you’d like to find out more about them or if you wish to donate, visit CBLDF.org

The image above is more of an expression of emotion than anything else.

Feel free to drop a comment here with your view or post in the recent related forum thread about this case and how it impacts manga.

Category: Anime Coverage, Manga Coverage  | Tags:  | One Comment
Author:
• Sunday, February 14th, 2010

Pluto is an eight volume manga based on the Astro Boy series with a dramatic, mature, and mystery aspects to appeal to older fans. It’s a master piece put together by legendary mangaka Osamu Tazuka and Naoki Urasawa with Viz as it’s English publisher.

First volumes start off as a crime story that jumps into humanity and what humanity is. It’s post-war and robots have been given rights so they may live normal lives among people. Suddenly the greatest robots and the great human minds that made them are one by one taken down by a mysterious foe, but the story develops in such a crafty way that you have no clue what could happen next or that the cruel acts are much more serious.

Characters are drawn in a much less typical way to allow more emotional attachment to what the characters are feeling. European or Western looking people are actually just that. No lolicon here or perversion here, sir (or ma’am?).

One creepy and personally impactful moment in this manga was with Atom the Tobio appearing robot and his creator Dr. Tenma. They’re comfortablely sitting together with a meal and the genius father asks him a load of awkward questions. All of the questions Atom answered were those of a good boy, not the real Tobio.

Laon is a Korean manwha with a single volume out now from a set of six in English by Yen Press. A human like being sent to earth after a lost bet with a lady of an unknown relationship with the main character Laon. It’s name Laon may happy in Korean, but the the character lives with a low wage guy who is using the gifted creature. So Loan? Laon?

Art wise this manga changes quite a bit with how thick lines are, how clueless ‘n cute Laon can be, and the mood. One may say it’s inconstant, but to me that’s always been a strength when quality isn’t going down hill the further you go.

This creature has some neat powers that include turning parts of pictures to real objects, going through walls, and some less clique tricks that are hinted by what Laon is (a Korean fairy tale creature known as a gumiho). That last part about powers really had to be mentioned due to the couple very arguably minor mature pages, especially the part that suggest the act of rape. With that said, I don’t see this manwha a smut, but I am a bit confused to who the original target readership was upon it’s original release.

The potential of depth is fairly high. You will wonder who the cruel lady who made the bet is, what the bet was, and how Laon earned nine tails that were lost because of the bet.

One Fine Day has one volume currently out by Yen Press and has been in their manga magazine since the very first issue. The first thing you’ll notice is how insanely cute the magical world that’s in this story. A young man named No-Ah is living with and care taking of a kiddy dog (Nanai), mouse (Pritz Rang), and cat (Guru). The story is day to day like and… Screw it. The main thing to tell is how so damn cute they are and nothing the naughty bunch of cuteness can do makes No-Ah mad. The gang are drawn mostly as human kids with animal parts, but that’s basically what they are. Kids. Just so cute and not a single page goes without it.

To stir some more light hearted fun while keeping things interesting, the story does introduce a villain from No-Ah’s past. The fact that One Fine Day is so playful and continuously interesting at the same time makes it a neat read.