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Manga Spotlight: Ooku: The Inner Chambers
Volume 1
by Fumi Yoshinaga
Released by VIZ Media

Based on the anticipation, the admiration for Fumi Yoshinaga's Antique Bakery, and based on the quality of the work, I'm confident that Ooku will be a contender for the most praised manga release of the season, and I wouldn't be shocked if it's the overwhelming favorite. While I don't anticipate the kind of non-specialty notice that Yoshihiro Tatsumi's A Drifting Life received, I expect glowing praise to illuminate the online manga discourse at least into the fall.

Presuming that I'm correct, and presuming that the reviews look how I think they're going to look, I'm not going to disagree with them. It didn't take me long to recognize Ooku as the kind of work that I can intellectually appreciate, but which leaves me cold. Farewell My Concubine, A Tale of Two Sisters, Ooku.. these are works that I'll insist I "got," but which didn't effect me.
I'd like to think that the dispassionate reaction isn't a matter of genre. Ooku runs in the anthology Melody, which is considered a josei magazine (I think the only other Melody manga published in North America is Gaccha Gacha from Tokyopop). Josei is a genre for young women in their upper teens, into adulthood. I'd point to Moyoco Anno's Happy Mania and say that I'm a fan of the genre, but my taste veer towards the down and dirty, relationships between individuals trying to be adults. The smart and sensible Ooku captured my attention on a cold, analytical level. In an emotional respect, I wasn't inclined to meet it half way.

Ooku speculates from an alternative course of history. The manga opens with a fatal mishap in a small village. The episode seems like it would have been a memorable experience that would mark life in an agrarian community, but given what happens in its wake, the event takes on symbolic, near religious significance. That village becomes the home of the patient zero in a Redface Pox epidemic that will kill off the majority of Japan's male population. 80 years later, Japan's male population is one quarter the count of its female. Consequently, from laborers to leaders, women have become the primary agents of the society while men have largely become a commodity for their reproductive value.

The historic Ooku was the residence of the female members of the shogun's retinue, including his family and concubines. The political intrigue generated by this separate world of women who could not leave of their own will and could not see men outside the presence of the shogun has been reflected in a few of the anime/manga released in North America. For example, it was an element of the succession conflict behind the ninja death match captured in the story that's been titled The Kouga Ninja Scrolls, Basilisk, or Shinobi: Heart Under Blade across its various media presentations.

Fumi Yoshinaga's Ooku is a harem of beautiful men, reputed to number in the thousands, closed off and sworn to absolute secrecy. None of this is as salacious or as titillating as it might sound, as Yoshinaga is more concerned with sussing out the distinctions between form and function and examining the humanity of her subjects than any sort of spectacle.

After that village mishap introduces Ooku's conceit, the manga skips ahead the better part of a century and settles on a new focus. Hiroyuki Mizuno conforms to the standards of a romantic hero. With a love of fencing, he's a relic of a lost age. He's also the son of family with noble lineage (that stretches the point a bit; he's a Hatamoto rank samurai) and no money. For the trifecta, he has a long time paramour whose family finances would not raise Mizuno's to a point where they could afford to find a spouse for his sister. Rather than accept being married off, Mizuno utilizes a family connection to find a position in the Ooku. Through some adept political jiu jitsu, Mizuno is able to crank his way up the ranks of the inner society... perhaps outsmarting himself in the process.

An essential aspect of Mizuno's and Ooku's mature perspective is the willingness to face reality. Specifically, Mizuno mediates his goals. Rather than betray his love, he embraces a circuitous route that allows him to provide for his family while maintaining his values. The character and his handling by the manga exhibit both intelligence and sentiment. Even my stone heart was moved a bit as Mizuno faces what he needs to do without being able to forget his attachments.

The other key figure of the volume is 8th Tokugawa shogun Yoshimune. This is the zenith of the hierarchical society, and, in theory, the Ooku exists for her benefit. Like Mizuno, Yoshimune operates from a realistic perspective, that is never the less shaded by sentiment. As a ruler, Yoshimune is keenly aware of the essential elements of ritual, such as appearing as a gender balanced populous to foreign visitors. At the same time, she's looking to sift form from function. She's keenly aware of the depleted finances of the shogunate. With the aim of properly administering the domain, she looks to scale back and adjust unessential drains where she finds them - like in the Ooku.

Both Mizuno and Yoshimune prove to be thoughtful, principled outsiders entering into a staggeringly complex world, governed by both arcane, proscribed rituals and active agendas. With these characters planning and thinking quickly to ensure that they don't loose their footing, Ooku's first volume proves to be both thoughtful and eventful. At the same time, Ooku, is a notably dialog-verbose manga, and with distinctions emphasized by use of archaic grammar, it's not a quick read. Despite the amount of speech, the manga is not overly packed with exposition. Analysis is still needed to pick up the full meaning and intention, and as such, Ooku is superlatively dense manga. While the subject, style and priorities could not be more different, in terms of requiring that the reader process a large number of ideas in a small space, I'd compare Ooku to Masamune Shirow works.

Down to its planned serialization, Ooku is a distinctive work of manga. While most manga have a beginning and ending planned by the author, and a length determined by editorial and popularity dictates, Ooku is intended to convey its story across 10 volumes. Ooku is not necessarily a manga that I'll be tracking with anticipation, but it's impossible to neglect strongly recommending a manga that handles its characters this intelligently and humanly. Regardless of whether you're interested in the premise, Ooku manga that's worth reading.


Manga Spotlight: Blade of the Immortal
Volume 21: Demon Lair II
By Hiroaki Samura
Released by Dark Horse Manga

Excerpted from Hiroaki Samura Interview: from Quick Japan 38 (August 2001)


Interviewer: About what volume do you plan to go with Mugen no Juunin (Blade of the Immortal)?

Hiroaki Samura : Originally I said, "I'll end it at 5 volumes." Now that I've already done 12 I don't really know, but it's true that I want to finish it within the next 3 years.
....
Interviewer: In any case you thought of it as something "new". While you can't help classifying it into a genre I suppose, as I've said I haven't seen anything like it before. Please give us your honest thoughts on this.

Hiroaki Samura: It's something I wanted to do while I was still young. So then after I'd turned 30 I thought, "I'm not going to be young forever, perhaps the time is now?" So I drew Ohikkoshi. Now someone might say, "This is what you wanted?" (laughs) As for it not resembling anything else, I think almost everything I do is a mismatch from the pattern. On top of that, I didn't think I had the ability to draw a gag manga. When I asked myself if I could draw one I realized for the last 8 years I truly hadn't done anything outside of Mugen no Juunin. So when I read the letters on this new one I feel like I'm wearing work clothes and really earning my livelihood! You see, I'm really not that kind of person.

Blade of the Immortal is around 24 volumes in its Japanese release, and in the midst of what's theoretically its final storyline. And, in recent years, author Hiroaki Samura seems to have been hard at work ensuring that he's not locked in and typecast as the guy playing Othello every night. He's produced an eclectic and often disturbing set of post Ohikkoshi (a collection available in North America via Dark Horse) stories, including western one-shot Emerald, quasi-Victorian social commentary Bradherley’s Coach and recently, the surreal Halcyon Lunch - featuring an appearance by refrigerator with the face of a baby and cockroach appendages.

Probably for similar reasons, Blade of the Immortal has deviated from its original course. I imagine that Samura did this to keep himself interested and was allowed to do it by his editors to keep his popular manga series running years after he planned to wrap it up.

If you follow mixed martial arts, you'll have heard of Anderson Silva. He's currently the UFC's middleweight (185 pound) champion, with an 11 fight win streak going back to January '06 (25 - 4 career). In his weight class, he's decisively beat all of the contenders, such that it's difficult to imagine anyone posing a legitimate threat to his championship. So, he spoke about retiring, and he's spoke about competing outside MMA in a boxing match against Roy Jones Jr. The solution, at least on a temporary basis, has been for him to take fights in the light heavyweight division (205 pounds). It was a gamble, and so far it's paid off. On August 8th, he decisively beat Forrest Griffin, a former champion and arguably one of the top five fighters in the 205 weight class. Silva's still been talking about retiring, but the possibility hasn't been as credible as it was before he began testing light heavyweight.

I imagine Samura largely felt that he did what he was going to do with the chambara-samurai revenge story. This is a rather experimental artist, who been working at applying traditional artistic techniques to manga, finding new ways to mix in modern and unorthodox sensibilities, and doing it since 1993. It does not seem like he'd relish producing more of the same until Blade of the Immortal's fans were satiated and the manga's popularity was exhausted.
The gamble that Samura took wasn't so much along the lines of a 185 to 205 vertical jump as it was a lateral one.

He locked down the manga. He took its strong sword arm and bound it. Since volume 16, Samura has been exploring the depths of the capacity for dehumanization, with the active hero and a stock of disappeared criminal serving as test subjects locked in the cells below Edo Castle. With Blade of the Immortal evoking uncomfortable subjects, such as World War II history concerning the Imperial Japanese Army medical research project Unit 731, Samura has literally hamstrung the manga's capacity to deliver on genre action. And, it's been on this "Prison Arc" longer than it dwelt on the hunt down the exotic foe and kill him in a spectacular fashion stories that originally constituted a large part of Blade of the Immortal's appeal.

If you follow anime, you're probably aware of a more recent contender for the most alienating experiment in a popular work. Haruhi Surumiya is a light novel based dramady concerning a circle of friends constructed around the eponymous girl who only expresses interest in "ESPers, time travelers, and aliens." When Kyoto Animation first adapted it, I said Haruhi was THE anime for the anime fan. It was keyed to getting self-indentified fans excited and thinking about the series. It could intelligently poke fun at conventions of anime without being an outright parody; it could indulge in those conventions without being hypocritical. The philosophy presented might not have been on par with something like Ghost in the Shell, but it was appropriate, and the series was reliably adept at throwing out intriguing suggestions and letting the fans debate.

In its second season, Kyoto Animation took their hit and proceeded to adapt the prose story "Endless Eight." The short story in question saw Haruhi enjoying her summer break so much, that it was caused to repeat on loop 15,498 times. To capture that in anime, KyoAni opted to repeat an episode of anime eight times with minor variations distinguishing each iteration. Blade of the Immortal's "Prison Arc" has been called tryingly long and less exciting than might be desired. For a bit of perspective, unlike "Endless Eight," it's never been called a prank or a "troll job."

Volume 21 - Demon Lair II closes out this Edo Castle medical experiment/experimental phase of Blade of the Immortal, and in doing so it deliberately reintegrates what could be called the elements of Blade of the Immortal-Classic. The objective of the manga was once to assassinate iconoclastic sword school leader Kagehisa Anotsu in revenge for his murderous destruction of the Asano dojo. He's back. As are some other surprising figures. In an interesting approach to reintroducing the characters, Samura re-arranges and re-uses panels from a character's earlier appearance to form a background montage. In another graphical note, "death mural" elaborate splash pages capturing the terminal end to a hard fought battle, also make a return appearance.

Demon's Lair's finale might feature the return of the death mural and abundant armed combat, but it could hardly be thought of as Samura relenting. This is what he's built to, in keeping with the long term sentiments of the manga. More than the chief swordsman being unchained, the end of this story marks the victory of an antiestablishment uprising in which women and disenfranchised minorities smash the product of unrestrained authority. As the wives and mothers of the disappeared riot at the gates of the castle above, the manga's protagonists cross blades with a literal Frankenstein's monster produced by governmental ambition and science amuck without moral guidance.

Blade of the Immortal's premise is that its hero is a scarred, one eyed swordsman who was tricked into ingesting sacred blood worms that gave him the ability to heal almost any wound. More skilled than most, but less skilled than many of his adversaries, most battles saw him ripped up, even torn to pieces before his unique fortitude gave him the opportunity to turn the tide on his foe. Consequently, Blade of the Immortal was never clean and rarely heroic. In keeping, the victory that caps off Demon's Lair is harly glorious.

Westerns, and spaghetti westerns in particular, are apt to feature dusty subjects. Kenneth Branagh's Battle of Agincourt comes to mind for a battle in which the actors are an absolute mess. As does the climax of the Seven Samurai. Manga has had its fair share of bloodied, torn up combatants, but I can't think of any where the subjects are as filthy as Demon Lair's, or an artist who'd be as capable as Samura at rendering it. Battling in a flooded cave, where some have been locked away, it's not just the standard design model with some splashes of blood. They're wet, disheveled, and bloodied. In this way, Samura ensures that his battle looks like raw business rather than anything heroic.

The personality of this volume matches that muck covered look and demonstrates how Samura is as talented with characters as he is with pens, pencils and charcoals. The dark irreverence is outstanding. The doctor who performed the medical experiments of the story runs through the flooded caves looking for a savior, and stops at a cell...
"Two Itto-Ryu Kenshi are running amok in the cell block. You three take them down! Show me your stuff!"
"Itto-ryu?! are you nuts!?" "That's no deal!" "Go, die, he tells us..."
"You can win! look at you! Hei-54: cut up a man while enraged after being expelled by the Yagyu" "Kour-107: former bandit leader from Hokone" "Otsu-19 ex-Kanjo Gata, took bribes for doctoring Daimyo rice records"
"I'm just an accountant..." "Bandits aren't good at hand-to-hand.." "I was only a Yagyu for six months..."
The combatants who actually make it into the fight include famous shogun's executioner Yamada Asaemon portrayed as a home remedy obsessed oompa loompa, our immortal samurai with one arm still chained to the wall, and an above six foot tall hulk who settles matters in a manner similar to the climax of Ninja Scroll. Even when Blade of the Immortal was deeply mired in this prison section, it was the sort of provocative story that makes manga worth reading. I think that the prison business was more about Samura keeping himself engaged with Blade of the Immortal than keeping the readers engaged. That's not to say that I found it uninteresting, but I do see how it could be read as alienating. Now that Samurai's distinctive approach is refocused on the manga's more crowd pleasing elements, it is an excellent time to re-embrace Blade of the Immortal, or even given the prison section a second chance if you didn't enjoy it from an initial impression.

Dark Horse editor Philip Simon has graciously offered his thoughts on this significant Blade of the Immortal volume...

This "Prison Arc" has been a very long, extended arc for most Blade of the Immortal fans, but my hope is that readers will come to appreciate this story line, Rin's growth during this time, and Samura's handling of multiple backup characters throughout. I feel that this story arc is similar to Samura's "Road to Kaga" arc in several ways and that he accomplished much of what he did here as he did there, in terms of Rin's character growth -- though on a much larger scale in the "Prison Arc." Our designer on the trade series, Scott Cook, was just marveling at the fact that we've been "traveling through" this arc for the entire three and a half years he's been here.

I'm really close to the material, though, and I've read the series multiple times through at different points, going from assistant to associate to editor -- and having this series on my plate pretty much the entire ten years that I've been here at Dark Horse makes me really fond of it. This has been the longest and strangest arc, for sure.

Well, now that things have quickened, I hope you have fun reading it! The story moves really fast in this Volume 21 outing, and I love how all of Samura's different plot threads come together. Our next volume after this one is really fun, too.


Anime Spotlight: Claymore
Chapter 4: The Rumors of War
Chapter 5: The Sisters in Arms
Chapter 6: The Awakening
Released by FUNimation

While I don't feel that my early reticence towards embracing Claymore was unfounded, after the series coalesced midway through, I actually found myself engaged by its characters and fantasy.
These days, anime is not producing many works that are evocative of the Western fantasy epic. I can list a host of manga, but in anime... Claymore, Guin Saga... Queen's Blade has some D&D underpinnings...For something like My-Otome, you really need to start stretching definitions...
I don't necessarily think that this phasing out is lamentable . Well constructed titles with smart character and world development like Berserk were never in great abundance. If it's just going to be a monster slashing spectacle, let video games handle the genre. These days, the games will probably look as good as the anime, and there, the monster hunt will at least have the visceral quality of an interactive medium.

At its half way point, Claymore stopped being the monster slashing quasi-horror fantasy that was just filling the niche and started developing an identity. It embraced what I call its "Daughter of Kenshiro" quality, in which its vehement adherence to shounen fighting manga conventions were mediated with shojo sentiments. It became recommendable, not just because of the scarcity of competition. A camaraderie developed between the characters that distinguished their relationship from anime's standard surrogate family dynamic. With sisters in arms caring about each other, a reason to connect with these characters was established, and as they launched into battles with the odds stacked against them, Claymore became genuinely exciting.

The representative Claymore tableau that will stick with me crops up late in the series. It's on a snow swept forest north country. A contingent of silver armored blonde women are fighting, and to a large extent losing, against an onslaught of gray beast-men. On one hand, the foes are generic, rampaging semi-humans. On the other, the imagery of blonde valkery painting the snow red is provocative, not necessarily in a good way. The optics here almost constitute a challenge...sadistic, misogynous, Nazi fetishist, would-be shocking runner up to innumerable fantasy video games. Yet, Claymore does not really appear to be intent on striking those nerves. Though inspired by western aesthetics and western fantasy tropes, down to the Mount Doom climax, and though it references cultural touch stones such as Hamlet, it is divorced from the full force that its imagery might have had if it was really was rooted in the western tradition. In this case, I think that a sword wielding blonde woman slicing up a snake monster is only supposed to be signifying an attractive woman in an exciting situation. I see little evidence of deeper symbolic ambition. Claymore succeeds or fails based on its ability to deliver arresting confrontations between warrior women and a supernatural world, not based on whether its wrong headed in invoking touchy subjects. That might sound apologetic, but, I wish it was a smarter.

That scene does capture an aspect of Claymore that does work in its sense of a group of women against the world. These are mission driven warriors with no alternative except to rely on each other. The men who govern their actions are duplicitous. The populous treats them as a necessary evil or a reviled threat, depending on whether there's a demon salivating on their doorsteps. Once the series moves beyond its initial phase, in which one of these women is humanized by adopting a little brother surrogate who wishes he could protect her, these women begin working together and the anime gets interesting.

What the manga does with that cadre of women couldn't be closer to the shonen standards if the chief heroine was Goku in a skirt, but the way in which it escalates threats and abilities is still involving. The latter part of the series goes from a suicide mission, to an ad hoc skirmish against an entrenched, overwhelmingly powerful foe to an expedition force of the women against an invasion army of monsters.

These later engagements also do Claymore the favor of partitioning the conflict off into remote areas. It's been my contention that the quasi-medieval society of Claymore is distractingly dysfunctional. At least it should be. It's plagued by monsters who can adopt the form of humans and consume whole families in a night. It's not the lone vampire in the boondocks scenario. These fiends are pervasive and given to attacking large cities. As such, it seems like all local, not to mention inter-community trust should have broken down. It shouldn't be Ye Olde quasi-Europe with monsters and hunters chasing each other. From what I read about the manga, this is ultimately explained, but... first, that doesn't help the anime. second, from what I gather, it an "everything you knew was wrong" revelation.
Moving the fighting into remote forests, ruins and frontiers allows this to be ignored.
Dramatically this works in having the heroines fight desperate conflicts far from where anyone would know if they lived or died.

The heroes' escalating abilities is also baked into the premise of Claymore, but in a consciously twisted manner. While not strictly unique, it does work for the anime. The more the heroines use their abilities to fight their monstrous foes, the more they risk becoming monsters themselves. Given that most chose to become warriors to avenge the deaths of family at the hands of the foes, it's meant to be a gut-wrenchingly tragic prospect. The successful use of this facet is not consistent. Sometimes it's overly obvious, expressed in platitudes. Other times, it is striking to watch the women try to hold onto their humanity while struggling to overcome a powerful foe in mortal combat. The interesting aesthetic rejoinder is that this transformation disfigures the anim's attractive leads. The appeal of the anime owes much to watching attractive women in exciting battles, but as the battles become more heated, the woman often become more monstrous.

The Claymore anime's ending has proven to be a controversial topic among fans of the original manga. I haven't read the manga beyond the first volume and have no allegiance to the original form, but I do know that with the manga ongoing, the anime hit the not-uncommon problem of needing to put together an original ending to lend the work some sense of closure. I could've hoped for something gutsier... either more open ended like Berserk or more original in its conclusion like Full Metal Alchemist. Instead, (spoilers) it teases a fight with the Raoh figure/ultimate antagonist in a way liable to displease viewers regardless of whether they've read the manga or not.

In most respects, Claymore is an anime that is an engaging spectacle that isn't quite as smart as it could have been. The animation for example... It's snowing throughout most of the final story line, and that is a perfect mood setting effect. When the foes meet action is fast, and with sword on tooth and claw clashes, quite kinetic. At the same time, there are propensities for receptiveness and short cuts. It's not unusual to see a ricochet repeated. Too many times, foes become locked in a contest of strength with one pushing up, while another pushes down... often on of the contestants is a monster, pushing with one claw, while the other potentially decisive appendage simply idles. I don't think it's saying much to call Claymore one of the best fantasy anime in years, but I do still think it is one. It's not as good as it could have been, but it is good enough.

Ponyo, Miyaki and Ghibli

Because I lost a week, some of this is a bit old...

Deb Aoki rounds up Ponyo impressions

Kai-Ming Cha rounds up all things Miyazaki

Even if you're exhausted by Ponyo talk, read AniPages Daily's piece

AP says Animated `Ponyo' is beautiful nonsense


From there, the pieces feel a bit scattered. Mom feels compelled to leave her son and the fish-girl home alone while she battles rain, winds and flooded roads to get back to the senior center where she works: "You're only 5 but you're very smart," she tells Sosuke. Could she be the most neglectful mother ever?

Tasha Robinson on Ponyo at AV Club

While the story is modeled on a traditional fairy tale and a traditional love story, it’s more primal than it looks. In keeping with Miyazaki’s usual motifs, Ponyo’s attachment to Sosuke is an unthinking force, as avid and single-minded as the decapitated forest spirit in Princess Mononoke, or the crazed, murderous Ohmu in Miyazaki’s Nausicaä Of The Valley Of The Wind.

Underwire Simple Artistry Trumps CGI in Miyazaki’s Ponyo

Ponyo’s innocent transgression knocks the natural order of things out of balance in the sleepy seaside village she once lived beneath. But unlike the War on Terra of Miyazaki’s previous films Princess Mononoke and Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind, the Academy Award-winning director has lightened his audience’s load by keeping the environmental activism of Ponyo to a minimum. Instead, he keeps the proceedings lighthearted and uses his paintbrushes to revel in the planet’s pulsating possibility.

The Otaku Ohana blog on Ponyo's box office performance in its premiere weekend
NY Times reviews Ponyo
On a list of per-theatre earnings

  1. Spirited Away (limited release, Sept. 20-22, 2002): $17,301 (26 screens)
  2. Cowboy Bebop: The Movie (April 4-6, 2003): $12,338 (19 screens)
  3. Howl’s Moving Castle (June 10–12, 2005): $11,888 (36 screens)
  4. Pokemon: The First Movie (Nov. 10-12, 1999): $10,199 (3,043 screens)
  5. Pokemon The Movie 2000 (July 21-23, 2000): $7,113 (2,752 screens)
  6. Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence (Sept. 17–19, 2004): $6,760 (47 screens)
  7. Blood: The Last Vampire (July 10-12, 2009): $5,501 (20 screens)
  8. Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li (Feb. 27–March 1, 2009): $4,156 (1,136 screens)
  9. Yu-Gi-Oh! The Movie (Aug. 13–15, 2004): $3,934 (2,411 screens)
  10. Ponyo (Aug. 14-16, 2009): $3,868 (927 screens)
  11. Steamboy (March 18–20, 2005): $3,490 (39 screens)
  12. Pokemon 3 (April 6-8, 2001): $3,080 (2,675 screens)
  13. Pokemon 4Ever (Oct. 11-13, 2002): $2,879 (249 screens)
  14. Spirited Away (post-Oscar wide release, March 28-30, 2003): $2,483 (711 screens)
  15. Digimon: The Movie (Oct. 6-8, 2000): $2,322 (1,823 screens)
  16. Dragonball Evolution (April 10-12, 2009): $2,181 (2,181 screens)
  17. Appleseed (Jan. 14-16, 2005): $2,157 (31 screens)
  18. Pokemon Heroes (May 16-18, 2003): $1,328 (196 screens)

The Beat on the topic

In its second week it fropped from 9 to 13. It earned a little under $2.5 million and has accumulated just above $8.1 million.

AWN spoke to longtime Studio Ghibli animator Katsuya Kondo

On NPR Ponyo: A Role Model For Kids With Autism?

Family 411 on the flick

Tim Maughan on the film

Otaku USA look at Miyaki's Berkeley appearence - more on the appearence here

LA Weekly on Hayao Miyazaki On Ponyo

A Catholic view on Ponyo

LA Times on color designer Michiyo Yasuda


orn in Tokyo in 1939, Yasuda joined the ink-and-paint section of the company Toei Doga -- now Toei Animation -- before she was 20. After honing her craft working on commercials and television series, she met animation legends Isao Takahata and Hayao Miyazaki and joined them on the production of 1968's "Little Norse Prince."

"Mr. Miyazaki and I were on the staff of the same film during my time working at Toei Doga," Yasuda says. "As a color designer, I have worked with Mr. Miyazaki since the 1976 television series '3000 Leagues in Search of Mother.' I have respected Mr. Miyazaki since our days at Toei Doga, and I have always loved his way of thinking."

Since then, she has dedicated her career to creating color designs for both Takahata and Miyazaki on films, including 1978's "Future Boy Conan," 1984's "Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind," 2001's "Spirited Away," 2004's "Howl's Moving Castle" and Miyazaki's latest film, "Ponyo," the story of a goldfish who wishes to become a little girl.

Reuters - Japanese director Miyazaki seeks breakout U.S. film

Yahoo's Miyaki 101 feature

KPBS on the film


Hayao Miyazaki insists that Ponyo's Sosuke is not based on his son Goro

The artist formerly known as Moriarty on his Ponyo screening

Anime News Network's topical podcast

Helen McCarthy's (Anime Encyclopedia) Caging the Mermaids: Ponyo’s Older Sisters


As Jonathan Clements and I observe in The Anime Encyclopedia, the film (Howl's Moving Cast) was a love letter to Miyazaki’s wife Akemi Ota, who gave up her own career to raise his children and create a home in which the workaholic spent very little time. The final shot shows Sophie in the arms of her wizard, the centre of his world, accepting it as her own.

Ponyo has been given extra layers of significance by the assertion that boy hero Sosuke is based on Miyazaki’s son Goro, whose directorial debut at Studio Ghibli was attended by widely hyped tales of a father-son feud. Is the heroine merely a cipher inserted for the hero to play off, a magical girl for him to tame and bring into the human world? I don’t know yet, but I’m looking forward to finding out.

Screen Daily on distributing Miyazaki films


Ghibli may be flexible when it comes to translating the dialogue but it has a strict policy forbidding distributors to edit the film itself, which originated when Miyazaki’s 1984 classic Nausicaa Of The Valley Of The Wind was dramatically recut for US release as Warriors Of The Wind. Indeed when Harvey Weinstein suggested cuts to Princess Mononoke for Miramax’s 1999 US release, he was given a categorical no.

Ponyo Toy Chases Ham in Your Tub

Ponyo icons

Ghibli World reports that Ghibli co-founder Isao Takahata's first movie his water color style adaptation of family comic strip My Neighbors the Yamadas will be a retelling of 10th century Japanese folktale Taketori Monogatari (The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter)

From Ghibli World

Taketori Monogatari is considered to be Japan's oldest extant narrative and tells the story about the life of a mysterious girl called Kaguya-hime. Discovered as a baby inside the stalk of a glowing bamboo plant (note: a similar scene interestingly also appears in Takahata's My Neighbors the Yamadas), she is said to be from Tsuki-no-Miyako (The Capital of the Moon) and has unusual hair that "shines like gold".

a summary of the Tale of the Bamboo Cutter

An overview of the work of Isao Takahata

Ghibli Museam photos

Reverse Thieves on early Miyazaki Animal Treasure Island

Mono no aware on early Miyazaki/Ghibli movie Castle in the Sky

Cartoon Brew on Yasuji Mori and Hayao Miyazaki


AniPages Daily on Miyazaki on influencial animator Yoshinori Kanada

Astro Boy News

The full Astro Boy trailer


23-year-old actress Aya Ueto has been cast as the Japanese voice of Astro Boy (aka Atom) while Koji Yakusho (Tokyo Sonata) has been cast as father/creator Doctor Tenma.

The English language cast includes Nicolas Cage, Kristen Bell, Donald Sutherland, Nathan Lane, Bill Nighy, Eugene Levy, Matt Lucas and Freddie Highmore.

USA Today has a preview of the IDW comic adaptation

Astro Boy makes a Cracked list

Project Atom wallpapers

Astro Boy crew tee

Astro Boy Hush Puppies

*

Siliconera reports that the adaptation of the Imagi Astro Boy will ship on three platforms in North America, the PSP, Wii, and a DS adaptation not handled by High Voltage. Only the PSP version is heading to Japan

Rains confirmed that only the PSP version is heading to Japan.

A game video

Going Hollywood

Maggie Q (Mission: Impossible III, Live Free or Die Hard, upcoming King of Fighters) has been cast in the Scott Stewart adaptation of Korean horror western Priest. Karl Urban was cast as the vampire villian. Additional casting announcements include Stephen Moyer (True Blood) and Lily Collins (90210)

Paul Bettany and Cam Gigandet have also been cast.

*

Anime News Network reports Battle Angel Alita producer Northrop Davis confirmed at the Saturday grand opening of the New People cultural entertainment center in San Francisco that he pitched the Berserk, Baki The Grappler, and Barefoot Gen manga to studios in Hollywood.

To a question posed by panel moderator Patrick Macias about projects that Davis has developed or is currently developing, Davis responded with the following:


We were involved with [Kentarou Miura's fantasy adventure story] Berserk, and it almost happened, but that is not quite there. Train Man has been a very [long] two-year, ongoing negotiation — very complicated. Phil Rosenthal, who created [the American television series] Everybody Loves Raymond, wants to remake the show in the United States. Phil wants to really adhere to the wonderful work that the Japanese creators did on that. And, also, we're involved in [Keisuke Itagaki's fighting tournament story] Grappler Baki.
And one that is really close to our hearts is Barefoot Gen. We're really, really trying to find someone to make Barefoot Gen because we feel that it is incredibly important to bring the message that that conveys to the world. [Creator Keiji] Nakazawa has given us permission to work on that. For those of you who don't know, that's the atomic bomb project, where [the author] was in the atomic bomb fallout, survived it, and went on to create a wonderful series. If you've never seen it, you should read it.

On Twitter Ed Chavez notes Guin Saga, MW, Ode to Kirihito and Summer of the Ubume have been pitched recently as well

Upcoming in North America

War of the Worlds: Goliath mecha versus World of the War martians trailer

Bandai Entertainment
The Robert's Anime Corner Store blog notes that November Bandai releases include
Gundam 00 , Vol #3 DVD (Eps #18-26)
Gundam 00 , Vol #3 DVD Special Edition (Eps #18-26)
Hayate the Combat Butler DVD Bundle #3 (2 Disks) (Eps #15-21)

In addition to Bandai's new release announcements, they have also delayed four releases:

Ghost Slayers Part #3 DVD Bundle (Eps #21-30) - bumped from Sep 1 to Sep 15
Sola Complete Collection DVD Boxed Set (Eps #1-13 + 2 OVA's) (Anime Legends) - bumped from Sep 15 to Sep 29
Gundam 00 , Vol #2 DVD (Eps #10-17) - bumped from Sep 15 to Sep 29
Gundam 00 , Vol #2 DVD Special Edition (Eps #10-17) - bumped from Sep 15 to Sep 29

CMX
Deb Aoki took a look at 5 CMX Titles to be released in 2010

51 Ways to Save Her by Usamaru Furuya - September 2010 (the San Diego Comic Con announcement that excited me most)

Nyankoi! by Sato Fujiwara - July 2010

The Phantom Guesthouse by Nari Kusakawa - July 2010

Shissho Holiday by Otsuichi and Hiro Kiyohara - July 2010

Tableau Gate by Rika Suzuki - August 2010

Dark Horse


BERSERK VOLUME 33
Kentaro Miura (W/A)
On sale Jan 27
b&w, 232 pages
$14.95
TPB, 5 1/8" x 7 1/4"


BLADE OF THE IMMORTAL VOLUME 22: FOOTSTEPS
Hiroaki Samura (W/A)
On sale Jan 13
b&w, 232 pages
$19.95
TPB, 5 3/4" x 8 1/4"

BLOOD+ KOWLOON NIGHTS
Hirotaka Kisaragi (W/A)
On sale Jan 20
b&w, 176 pages
$9.95
TPB, 5" x 7"

In his years as a Hong Kong police officer, Nishi Tatsuyoshi has never seen murder victims like the ones being found in the abandoned Kowloon Walled City. Bodies completely drained of blood are showing up every few nights, and rumors of vampires are swirling. The closer Nishi gets to the truth, the more obstacles are thrown in his way. Someone doesn't want him to discover what's really going on! Forced into an uneasy alliance with the Chiropteran-hunting Red Shield organization, Nishi works with a mysterious cello player named Hagi as they try to find the source of the murders and bring down the Wong family--which peddles a miracle drug they claim will give users immortality!


BRIDE OF THE WATER GOD VOLUME 5
Mi-Kyung Yun (W/A)
On sale Jan 13
b&w, 184 pages
$9.95
TPB, 5 3/4" X 8 1/4"


CHOBITS OMNIBUS EDITION
CLAMP (W/A)
On sale Jan 27
B&w, 720 pages
$24.95
TPB, 5 1/8" x 7 1/4"

Some people buy their personal computers based on style . . . and in near-future Japan, the hottest style for your "persocom" is shaped like an attractive android! Poor student Hideki, fresh off the farm and trying to get into a Tokyo university, has neither money nor a girlfriend--then finds a persocom seemingly discarded in an alley. Taking the cute robot home and activating it, Hideki finds her affectionate, but amnesiac, able only to say the word "Chi"--and so he names her.

But who is this strange new persocom in his life? Instead of being his digital assistant, Hideki finds himself having to teach Chi how to get along in the everyday world, even while he and his friends try to solve the mystery of her origins. Is she one of the urban-legendary Chobits--persocoms built to have the riskiest functions of all: real emotions, and free will?


GANTZ VOLUME 9
Hiroya Oku (W/A)
On sale Jan 27
B&w, 232 pages
$12.95
TPB, 5 1/8" x 7 1/4"


THE KUROSAGI CORPSE DELIVERY SERVICE VOLUME 10
Eiji Otsuka (W) and Housui Yamazaki (A)
On sale Jan 13
b&w, 216 pages
$10.95
TPB, 5" x 7"

Drawn & Quarterly


Same Hat has learned Drawn & Quarterly will be publishing Red Kimono by Oji Suzuki on March 16, 2010


This is exciting news for gekiga fans and fits in well with their editorial direction of late; Suzuki was an original broham of the alternative manga scene, and part of the GARO 1-2-3 trio of cartoonists, alongside Shinichi Abe and Masuzou Furukawa

Anime on DVD forum goers heard back from Dark Horse on release plans for volume 4 of Ghost Talker's Daydream


Ghost Talker's Daydream has been a marginal title, and is basically on hiatus during this crappy economic slump. We've basically cut back to the safe bets for now. I hope we can revisit the series in the future, but given how long it takes for economic trends to correct and compensate, it might take a while if it makes it back to the schedule.

Funimation
11/10/09
Tsubasa: Season One - Blu-ray

12/1/09
Gunslinger Girl: Season 1 Collection - Blu-ray - $59.98
Gunslinger Girl (OVA) - $14.98

12/15/09
Basilisk: Complete Collection - Blu-ray - $79.98
Samurai Champloo: Complete Collection - Blu-ray - $79.98

12/29/09
Blassreiter: Complete Collection, Part 2 - $59.98
Ichi: The Movie - Live-Action - $24.98
Ichi: The Movie - Blu-ray - $34.98

FUNimation Entertainment yesterday announced the first four voice actors cast in the upcoming anime series Soul Eater:

Death the Kid - Todd Haberkorn
Liz - Jamie Marchi
Patty - Cherami Leigh
Death Scythe - Vic Mignogna

About Soul Eater

Unapologetically surreal and action-packed, Soul Eater is the tale of living weapons who team with human masters to hunt evil souls. Only after these dark forces are consumed can these partners hope to join the ranks of the famed Death Scythes.

Maka and her weapon, Soul, are among the new students at a university run by Death himself. As they learn the ways of collecting souls, this fresh class of reapers must work together to keep witches, werewolves, and zombies from unleashing evil upon the world.

FUNimation Entertainment will release the series in four half-season sets beginning in early 2010.

From Robert's Anime Corner Store
The MSRP on the upcoming El Cazador de la Bruja Part #1 DVD Box (Item # FN-09870) from $59.98 to $49.98 - Samurai 7 BluRay DVD Box from $99.98 to $69.98 - Full Metal Panic 2nd RAID BluRay DVD Box from $99.98 to $69.98 - DragonBall Z Season 5 DVD Boxed Set (Eps #140-165) (Re-Mastered)from $49.98 to $34.98 - 009-1 Complete Collection DVD Boxed Set (Eps #1-12 + Bonus Ep) from $49.98 to $29.98

Marvel
Not manga, but of note...

Strange Tales #3 (of 3)
Written by Peter Bagge, Max Cannon, Chris Chua, Becky Cloonan, Nicholas Gurewitch, Paul Hornschemeier, Jonathan Jay Lee, Corey Lewis, Stan Sakai, Jay Stepehens & More!
Art By Peter Bagge, Max Cannon, Chris Chua, Becky Cloonan, Nicholas Gurewitch, Paul Hornschemeier, Jonathan Jay Lee, Corey Lewis, Stan Sakai, Jay Stepehens & More!
Cover by Stan Sakai
You won’t believe your senses!!! Marvel is proud to present the final issue of this hotly anticipated three issue anthology showcasing Marvel’s greatest characters re-imagined by the best and brightest talents working in independent comics today. Don’t miss what’s sure to be one of the most exciting collections of comics short stories ever produced!!! Every issue stars a stunning array of the best, most exciting cartoonists on the planet—showcasing the Marvel Heroes as you’ve never seen them before! Featuring the long-awaited Peter Bagge “Incorrigible Hulk” serialized over all three issues!
48 PGS./Explicit Content ...$4.99

Sky Doll – Doll’S Factory #1 (Of 2)
Written by Barbara Canepa
Adapted by C.B. Cebulski
Pencils & Cover by Alessandro Barbuci
Exclusive US Variant by Claire Wendling
Fans and true believers, rejoice! An awesome treasure chest is finally at your disposal, filled to the brim with drafts, sketches, roughs, illustrations and all the painstakingly collected research material which allowed Barbuci and Canepa to raise the Space Fantasy saga to an all new level. Creating their own blend of drama and fun, mixing sci-fi and cyber culture with religious concepts and elements of design from the ‘60s, they have created a universe to dive into and delight in! So, raiders shift your gears to plunder and set your sights on the sexiest bounty in the comic book universe! Pages and pages of exclusive and previously unreleased magic can be found in this collector’s issue! Including a 10 page exclusive never before seen file on the birth of Noa!
64 PGS./Mature ...$5.99

Media Blasters

11/3/2009


MORIBITO: Guardian of the Spirit - Vol. 7 of 8, Eps. 21-23 - 1 Disc

11/10


HUNTIK: SECRETS & SEEKERS: Legacy of the Argonauts: Journal 2, Eps. 8-13 2 Discs

GIANT ROBO LiteBox - Volumes 1-3, Eps. 1-7 - Contains all 7 OVA episodes of Giant Robo and 3 OVA episodes of the Ginrei Special - 4 Discs ($19.99)

11/17


PRINCESS PRINCESS - LiteBox - 3 Discs - $19.99

KUJIBIKI UNBALANCE - LiteBox - Volumes 1-3, Eps. 1-12 - 3 Discs - $29.99

11/24


BLADE OF THE IMMORTAL - Volume 2 of 6, Eps. 6-10 - 1 Disc

IKKI TOUSEN DRAGON DESTINY - Romance of the Three High Schools - Volume 1, Eps. 1-4 - 1 Disc - $29.99
TEKNOMAN - LiteBox - Volumes 1-3, Eps. 1-43 - 6 Discs - $19.99

Giant Robo
It is a new dawn for mankind. The Shizuma Drive has brought clean, limitless energy and launched humanity forward into an age of prosperity. But even in this Eden of technology, there lurk the shadows of envy and greed. The BF Group is one such evil force, a secret brotherhood whose only goal is to drive the world towards chaos. Protecting the peace are the Experts of Justice, a team of operatives assembled from around the globe to stop the ultimate disaster of the Eternal Night. The key to everything is the bravery of their newest member, a boy named Daisaku Kusama, and the mighty machine he commands.
Episode 1 Commentary with Kappei Yamaguchi (Daisaku) & Sumi Shimamoto (Ginrei)
Episode 3 Commentary with Kazuyoshi Katayama (Episode Director, Storyboards, Settings) & Akihiko Yamashita (Character Design, Animation Director, Storyboards)
Episode 5 Commentary with Masamichi Amano (Composer, Arranger, Conductor) & Yota Tsuruoka (Music Coordinator, Sound Director)
Last Episode Commentary with Masami Ozono (Character Design, Mechanical Settings, Animation Director), Kenji Hayama (Animation Director), Akihiko Yamashita (Character Design, Animation Director, Storyboards) & Kazuyoshi Katayama (Episode Director, Storyboards, Settings)

IKKI TOUSEN DRAGON DESTINY
The Romance of the Three Kingdoms continues on in modern Japan, as the rival high schools involved in the retelling of the epic saga struggle to achieve dominance. The focus begins to shift to other high schools and the interaction of their front runners. In the backdrop, the dragons of the remaining two great leaders are awakening, leading to growing mayhem. As ancient artifacts are acquired and events unfold, the battles keep raging on with enough intensity to rend flesh and clothing.

The manga was released in North America by Tokyopop as Battle Vixens. A previous anime was released by Geneon, and later FUNimation. According to Robert'a Anime Corner Store, Media Blasters could not secure English language cast for the original Ikki Tousen for the Dragon Destiny dub.

KUJIBIKI UNBALANCE
Hapless Chihiro Enomoto's luck changes for the better (or worse, depending on how you look at it) when he is randomly chosen as a candidate for the next student council president. Unfortunately, that means he must undergo a year-long apprenticeship with the current ruling body, accomplishing one impossible, punishing task after another.

With its nonstop, side-splitting, world-within-a-world hilarity, it's no wonder Kujibiki Unbalance is a favorite among the Genshiken crew. And speaking of Genshiken, each volume includes a new episode of Genshiken as a special bonus feature!

Princess Princess
Tooru Kouno left a sad family life to live at a prestigious all-boys boarding school. From his very first day, he feels like he's fallen into another world. The boys in his class seem to be strangely interested in his pretty-boy looks. He's shown around by Class President Sakamoto, who is mysteriously bowed to by everyone, even the upperclassmen. Tooru even catches a glimpse of an enchanting red headed Princess. A graceful blonde named Shihoudani finally reveals the school's secret. To inspire the student body, campus pretty boys are required to dress up as girls... and Tooru is on the list!

TEKNOMAN
The year is 2087, and humanity is about to lose its position as the dominant life form on planet Earth. An endless swarm of biomechanical beings known as the Venomoids descend from space. Earth's Space Knights are no match for the Venemoid champions, the Teknomen. When the young pilots Ringo Richards and Star Summers find a wounded stranger named Blade, humanity gains one last hope. Blade is able to transform into a Teknoman, but he has no memories and fights to protect Earth. His opponents are not only the endless alien menace, but also the other Teknomen -- who were once human, and his family and friends.

Live Action
11/10/2009


ZEBRAMAN - Special Edition - 2 Discs - $24.99

11/24


Akihabara @ Deep Movie

Art Of The Devil 3

DEVILMAN - Special Edition - 2 Discs - $24.99

Shout! Factory

Transformers: The Complete Series will be released on October 13th, 2009 for $169.95

Shout! Factory will release Audition 2-Disc Collector’s Edition Blu-ray ($29.99; DVD has a $ 24.99) on October 6th. The set features a new high-definition master with a new 5.0 digital Soundtrack and over 75 minutes of bonus content, including all-new interviews with the cast and new audio commentary with director Takashi Miike and screenwriter Daisuke Tengan.

SYNOPSIS
Deceptively innocent at first, Takashi Miike’s Audition finds Shigeharu Aoyama (Ryo Ishibashi, Suicide Club, The Grudge), a middle-aged widower of many years, urged by his teenage son and his film producer friend Yasuhisa Yoshikawa (Jun Kunimura, Ichi The Killer) to get out and start dating again. To help Aoyama meet women, Yoshikawa devises a plan to hold a fake audition for a leading lady. Reluctantly agreeing, Aoyama auditions 30 young hopefuls and falls for the silent beauty of Asami (Benetton model/actress Eihi Shiina), a former ballerina with a dark past. Their courtship veers from quiet romance to psycho nightmare.

Special Features Available on Blu-ray™ High-Def:

Disc One: (Blu-ray)
DVD Introduction with Director Takashi Miike and star Eihi Shiina
Audio Commentary With Director Takashi Miike and Screenwriter Daisuke Tengan
Disc Two: (DVD – Standard Definition)
New Interviews With Cast Members Ryo Ishibashi, Eihi Shiina, Renji Ishibashi And Ren Osugi
International Trailers
Booklet Essay By Author Tom Mes (author of Agitator: The Cinema Of Takashi Miike)

Standard DVD Bonus Features

DISC ONE:
DVD Introduction with Director Takashi Miike and star Eihi Shiina
Audio Commentary with Director Takashi Miike and Screenwriter Daisuke Tengan

DISC TWO:
New interviews with Cast Members Ryo Ishibashi, Eihi Shiina, Renji Ishibashi and En Osugi
International Trailers
Booklet Essay by Tom Mes (author of Agitator: The Cinema Of Takashi Miike)

Otaku USA


Editor in Chief Patrick Macias previews the September/October issue of Otaku USA


The fruits of a vast and shadowy conspiracy have paid off with a cover story on Evangelion 1.0, timed for the R1 release courtesy of FUNimation. New contributor Sean McCoy (he, of several Eva DVD audio commentaries) pens the main feature while Erin Finnegan, Matt Alt, and Gilles Poitras don plug suits for sidebar duty.

Other crazy stuff in this issue: Daryl Surat pens the ultimate review of M.D. Geist, Joseph Luster contemplates which Dragon Ball Z movie truly is “the greatest of them all”, Jason Thompson drops his usual massive manga review bomb, Clarissa Graffeo and the ransom note font make way for NANA, Mike Toole unravels the Full Metal Panic and Slayers sagas, Mike Dent uses the word “jive” in his Samurai Champloo piece, Zac Bentz grills Kanon Wakeshima over the Q&A coals, and Patrick W. Galbraith gives you the first-ever English interview with cosplaying K-1 kickboxer Yuichiro Jienotsu Nagashima!

Right Stuf
Anime producer and distributor Right Stuf, Inc. and Nozomi Entertainment announced that RENTAL MAGICA Part 1 DVD Collection will be released on November 24, 2009. The four disc set will retail for $49.99

The Part 1 DVD Collection will offer the first 12 episodes of the series in both “broadcast order,” as seen on Japanese television (and on the Japanese DVD release), or “chronological order,” according to the timeline presented in the novels that served as the anime series’ inspiration. Additionally, the release will include a book that features well over 100 pages of background information about the series and its mythology. (These supplemental materials were originally included with the Japanese limited-edition DVD releases.)

A supernatural action-adventure, Rental Magica is set in a world where magical organizations – staffed by specialists wielding both Eastern and Western disciplines – vie for work, prestige and power.


RENTAL MAGICA © 2007 MAKOTO SANDA/pako/KADOKAWA SHOTEN/Rental Magica Partners.

Sony
Season 2 Blood Plus DVD Boxed Set will be released on October 20th

Blood +: Part Two debuts in a five-disc DVD Collection on October 20 from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. The collector’s set contains all 25 episodes from the second half of the series, featuring an all-new assemblage of behind-the scenes interviews, packaged with a manga sampler and a collectible beanie skullcap. Blood +, the dark and visually impressive Adult Swim series, aired on The Cartoon Network and is based on the anime film Blood: The Last Vampire released in 2000. Blood +: Part 2 will be available for $119.95 SRP.

Tokyopop
Deb Aoki on 17 New Manga Titles for Fall/Winter 2009-2010

wo new late summer / fall releases that they're quite buzzed about:

Bloody Kiss by Kazuko Furumiya: Vol. 1 - August 8, 2009

Domo: The Manga by Clint Bickham, Lindsay Cibos, Jared Hodges, rem and Sonia Leong - September 1, 2009

Game X Rush by Mizuho Kusanagi -July 6, 2009

Zone-00 by Kiyo Qjo - August 4, 2009

MariaHolic by Minari Endou - September 1, 2009

Mikansei No. 1 by Majiko! - November 3, 2009

Portrait of M & N by Higuchi Tachibana - February 2, 2010

Momogumi Plus Senki by Eri Sakondo - August 4, 2009

Alice in the Country of Hearts by quinrose and Hoshino Soumei - February 2, 2010

Mad Love Chase by Kazusa Takashima - September 1, 2009

Mad Love Chase Volume 1 will be out in Sepember 1, with Volume 2 to follow on January 5, 2010.

Karakuri Odette by Julietta Suzuki - September 29, 2009

Happy Café by Kou Matsuzuki - January 5, 2010

Haru Hana by Yuana Kazumi - March 2, 1010

Kokaku Detective Story by Yoshitsugu Katagiri - April 6, 2010

Cause of My Teacher by Temari Matsumoto - September 29, 2009

Liberty Liberty! by Hinako Takenaga - November 3, 2009

Madness by Kairi Shimotsuki - December 1, 2009

Next volumes...

V.B. Rose Volume 6 by Banri Hidaka - October 1, 2009
Aria Volume 5 by Kozue Amano - November 3, 2009
Princess Ai: Prism of the Midnight Dawn Volume 2 by Christine Boylan, D.J. Milky and Misaho Kujiradou -December 1, 2009
Fruits Basket Ultimate Edition Volume 4 by Natsuki Takaya - January 5, 2010
Tactics Volume 8 by Kazuko Higashiyama, Sakura Kinoshita - January 5, 2010
Trinity Blood: Reborn on Mars Novel Volume 3 by Sunao Yoshida - November 3, 2009
Chibi Vampire Novel Volume 6 by Tohru Kai, Yuna Kagesaki - April 6, 2010

Udon Entertainment
Udon Entertainment will be releasing The Art of Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney in October. Inside the book are character designs, promotional art, game covers and character profiles from all 3 Phoenix Wright™: Ace Attorney games. Also included is the complete artwork from Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney, featuring Phoenix Wright’s upstart young successor. Miles Edgeworth, Misty Fey, Dick Gumshoe, Larry Butz, and all the rest of Phoenix Wright’s friends, rivals, and clients are all here in this complete artwork archive.

Viz
11/3
BLEACH Uncut Box Set 4 Part 1
Ichigo and his friends return from the Soul Society to the World of the Living and try to resume their normal lives. But when strange abductions start happening, it's up to them to solve the riddle. More Soul Reapers arrive to help uncover the truth behind a mysterious clan known as Bounts. Will these allies be strong enough to stop the Bount leader from stealing human souls and feeding his dangerous ambition?

11/10
NARUTO SHIPPUDEN THE MOVIE

11/17
Bleach, volume 22

11/24
NARUTO UNCUT SEASON 1 VOL 2 BOX SET - $39.98
NANA UNCUT BOX SET 2 - $59.90
NARUTO SHIPPUDEN VOL. 3 - $24.92
POKÉMON ELEMENTS VOL. 5 (ICE) - $9.98

VIZ Media has released Novala Takemoto's novels of obsession, alienation, love, rococo and haute couture fashion, and punk rock and rebellion, MISSIN’ and MISSIN’ 2: KASAKO. . The novels from VIZ Media’s SHOJO BEAT imprint will be available separately for $8.99 US / $10.50 CAN each or as a slip-case packaged set for $16.99 US / $19.99 CAN.


How far can you go to get what you want before you lose your mind?
Enter a strange world created by novelist Novala Takemoto (author of KAMIKAZE GIRLS, also available from VIZ Media) where music and the lost art of maidenly virtues walk hand-in-hand with madness. His characters stress, obsess, and sometimes get what they want... but often the life they thought they wanted is not always what they expected!

MISSIN’ focuses on obsession and how it can bring one to the brink of madness. In this bittersweet short story, the themes of KAMIKAZE GIRLS (rococo, punk rock, high fashion and rebellion) are pushed even further toward the edge of reason. A young woman estranged from the modern world longs for the feminine ideals and companionship depicted in the tales of a bygone era. When she finds her mentor in a rebellious punk rock singer named Missin, how far will her infatuation take her in a world where no one understands? And in "Little Shop at the End of the World," the designs of the legendary Vivienne Westwood keep a young woman with a secret from losing her mind.
MISSIN 2: KASAKO is the stylish, stressed-out sequel to MISSIN'. Stalker turned rock star Kasako has everything she ever wanted. But between the restraints of forbidden love, a suffocating record deal, and fans overdosing at their concerts, Kasako must find a way to keep hair-trigger tension pitched to a dangerous high without destroying herself. Kasako has never been what you'd call a stable girl--and this new fast-paced life may be just enough to finally push her sanity over the edge. Be careful what you wish for. You just might get it. And your dream life may turn out to be a nightmare!

Warner Home Video
Peanuts: 1970's Collection vol.1 will be released on October 20th for $29.98

Justic League: The Complete Series will be released on November 10th. The 91 episode, 15 disc set will retail for $99.98

Superman: The Complete Animated Series will be released on November 24th. The 7 disc set will retail for $53.82

Cool Figurews News

A trading figure based on the young womanga ninja Azumi from the manga and like named movie

Akira Kaneda figure

The cup noodle Gundam figures

Lucky Star x Macross Frontier Crossover Prize Items New Images

Upcoming Revoltech Getter figures

A sparkly Gundam Big Expo Limited HG 1/144 RX-78-2 Gundam Ver. G 30th

Kamen Rider decade figure
S.I.C. Kamen Rider Knight & Others

Diecast flying drill submarin Atragon

Gloomy Bear Revoltech

A new Soul of Popynica Sword Fish II from Cowboy Bebop model is scheduled for November

On CollectionDX


BEAMS/M1 to release new collaberation - Matango and Tetsujin 28

For Macross fans...
VF-1S Stealth Veritech San Diego Comic Con 2009
VF-22S Gamlin Type

And, for Kaiju fans
X-Plus Daikaiju series Green Mons
X-Plus Daikaiju series Gudon
X-Plus Daikaiju series Skydon
Barom 1 Antman Set from Rainbow

Big O Tamashii Parts Set available for preorder at Anime-Export

SDCC 2009 - SUPER 7 (Stormtrooper Jumbo Machinder )
S.H. figuarts Rising Ultimate Kuuga from Bandai

Gundam USB

On the custom front
Lego Voltron

New and Upcoming in Japan

Something Berserk?

Previews

First Squad intro

Readline trailer

King of Thorn

Sekirei ~Pure Engagement~ - bishojo fighting

Yatterman: Shin-Yatter-Mecha Daishugo! Omocha no Kuni de Daiketsdan da Koron! (animated movie)

Tales of Symphonia: Teseara Chapter OVA

To Aru Kagaku no Railgun

Tatakau Shisho: The Book of Bantorra

Onnanoko Monogatari

Vicky the Viking (live action)

The Legend of Kamui (live action)

Ballad: Namonaki Koi no Uta (live action)

Anime
A Yuu Utsuo meeting at Bandai Visual has lead to rumors that a new Code Geass is in the works

The anime adaptation of the Mobile Suit Gundam Unicorn novels will be formated as six 50 minutes direct to video OVA episodes. The series will be released internationally in Spring 2010. The anime, which will capture the plot of the first two novels are set three years after the "Char's Counter Attack Entry" of the franchise's Universal Century timeline (after the original Gundam, Zeta Gundam, and ZZ Gundam).


Wizard school teacher shonen manga Negima may see a movie adaptation if creator Ken Akamatsu has his way. The movie will apparently continue off from the end of the new OAD series.

Gainax are bringing back their robot madi in Mahoromatic: Tadaima Okaeri - a two part TV special scheduled for October

via AnimeNation
Hikaru Nakamura's relationshop comedy Arakawa under the Bridge will be adapted into anime

A third Stitch! (of Lilo and Stitch fame) is in the works. Stitch! ~Itazura Alien no Daibouken~ (Stitch! Great Adventure of Lightning Alien) is due for October

A two episode Zan Sayonara Zetsubou Sensei Bangaichi OAD will be bundled with limited edition copies of the 19th volume of Koji Kumeta’s Sayonara Zetsubou Sensei manga, scheduled for Japanese release on November 17.


Karino Takatsu’s four panel comic strip, resteraunt based Working!! will be adpted by A-1 Pictures (Kuroshitsuji, Kannagi) with Yoshimasa Hiraike (Kaleido Star, Sketchbook ~full color’S~) directing and Shingo Adachi (Ryusei no Rockman) providing chara design and serving as animation director.

Geijutsuka Art Design Class OVA is scheduled for release on April 2, 2010

Hiro Fujiwara’s shoujo manga Kaichou wa Maid-sama! (Student Council President is a Maid!), released in North America by Tokyopop, is being adapted into an anime series.

Anime no Chikara will be developing Zaidanhoujin Occult Designer Gakuin (Occult Designer School, Incorporated) from Hiroyuki Kitakubo (Blood: The Last Vampire, Robot Carnival) and Senko no Night Raid (Flash Night Raid) from Persona -Trinity Soul- director Jun Matsumoto

Animator Yamamoto Yutaka will be producing a music video for Black Rock Shooter

Thriller Restaurant ~ Kaidan Restaurant based on the ghost stories anthologies by Miyoko Matsutani & illustrators Yoshikazu Takai and Kumiko Kato will debut in October. Episodes will contain three short stories, an “appetizer,” “entree,” and “desert.”

Rumor is Tsutomu Mizushima (Crayon Shin-chan films, Ookiku Furikabutte, the Genshiken OVA, Kujibiki Unbalance, and xxxHOLiC is set to direct the upcoming anime Mudazumo Naki Kaikaku. The anime will adapted the comedy manga in which international diplomatic matters are settled with mah-jong.

Religious group Happy Science (Kofuku no Kagaku) will be producing an anime adaptation of founder Ryuho Okawa's book The Rebirth of Buddha (Buddha Saitan), directed by Takaaki Ishiyama (Sakura Wars). - Colony Drops has a post on their previous work

Manga
The Blade of the Immortal Mailing list notes that the Afternoon anthology announced that "Sister Generator: A Hiroaki Samura Short Story Collection" is due to be released next month. The volume will collect his one shorts, including "Emerald" and "Brigit's Supper." It also promises material from magazines beyond Afternoon.

Katsura Hoshino's Victorean fantasy/action Shounen Jump manga D.Gray-man is back after a six month hiatus. Rather than Weekly Shounen Jump, the manga will be part of monthly Jump Square

Monthly Comic Beam annonced that Masatoshi Usune's Desert Punk (Sunabozu) will be returning after a hiatus of over four years.

Live Action
Manga author Fukumoto Nobuyuki will be making an cameo in the live action adaptation of his gambling manga Kaiji

A second season of the adaptation of con manga Liar's Game is scheduled for November, A movie will hit Japanese theatres in February 2010

Ryou Mizuno's (Lodoss War) new light novel series, Blade Line will launched with its first volume pubslished September 1st, 2009

Misc
Picture books based on Moyashimon - the argricultural manga about micro-organisms are scheduled to be released soon. Ehon Moyashimon Kin no Oryzae -Te wo Araou- (Picture book Moyashimon Bacterium Oryzae -Let's Wash our Hands-) is the first of eight scheduled book. The manga will be released in North America by Del Rey.

The Business

Godzilla rights owners Toho is suing comcast and ad agency Goodby, Silverstein & Partners for use of the kaiju in the "Comcast Town" without Toho's premission or conscent.


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San Franciso's manga rental "cafe" Manga Cafe Mika is going out of buisness. While manga rental outlets have bee part of the Japanese manga industry, the San Fanciso based manga kissaten was unable to establish a customer base.


"It was the wrong business," Nakahida said. "We misread the anime and manga business in the U.S. -- it's completely different (than it is in Japan)." He also observed that "America doesn't have the cultural awareness of this kind of business."

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Anime has proven to be one of the few catagories that sells on Blu-ray in Japan.
Japanese animation continues to account for over 50% of the yen spent on Blu-ray Discs (BD) in Japan during the first half of 2009.

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ICV2 toy market declined 2% in the first six months of 2009, according to a report released by NPD Group.

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The business of Uglydolls

Event News

Figures fans, Super7 Florida's grand opening takes place August 29th, 7pm

Super7 Florida
720 2nd Street North
St. Petersburg, FL 33701

Super 7 will also be attending Atlanta Dragon Con, September 4-7th

And, if you're in Japan, Tokyo Underground2 Book Release and Tour takes place October 31-November 3, in times for Tokyo Toy Festival

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Evangelion 1.0 will be playing for a week at San Francisco's Sundance Kabuki Cinema starting September 4th

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Jerry Beck's Animation Tuesdays will present Technicolor Toons September 1st at the Cinefamily in LA. Tickets can be purchased here


Here’s something you won’t see on TV, DVD or on the internet: a full evening of archival animation eye-candy, 16mm and 35mm film prints of classic animated cartoons in glorious Technicolor. The program will include rare Hollywood animated shorts featuring some of your favorite characters in their original uncut theatrical versions, as you’ve never seen them before! The old Technicolor IB process, not used in over 35 years, made cartoon color pop! You’ll drool over the cyan, magenta and yellow hues: the spinach is greener, the rainbows are brighter -- even the colors themselves are funnier! Also, a peek at cartoons using other color processes, like Cine-Color and KodaChrome, and how color was used in wide screen formats like CinemaScope. Compiled by cartoon historian Jerry Beck (www.cartoonbrew.com), who will introduce the program.

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Tickets are on sale for the September 11th LA screening of White on Ruce. Though currently planned for one weekm it may be extended.

Tucson, AZ, August 27th 7:00pm at the Loft Cinemas sneak peak

- Pasadena, CA September 9th 7:30pm at the Laemmle's Pasadena Playhouse 7 sneak peak

White on Rice will be hitting Salt Lake City and Provo on September 25th, where it will be playing at the Century 16 (33rd S and State) and the Cinemark 16 Provo Towne Center. A feature on the film is up on Film School Rejects
.
A summary of reviews can be seen here

*

New festival screenings of animated "documentary" intersticial series Intergalactic Who's Who Festival have been announced

Ottawa International Animation Festival
Ottawa, Ontario
September, 2009
The Vegetation of Zig 5 has been selected for the Canadian Showcase, an out of competition screening of the best Canadian animation currently being produced.

Ming Short Film Festival
Calgary, Alberta
August 23 - September 2, 2009

All 5 episodes are in competition at this local screening event hosted at Ming

Tuesday, August 25
7:00pm
Ming Eat Drink
520 - 17 Avenue S.W.
Show up to the screening and vote for IWW as best film that evening.

Gimli Film Festival
July 24 - 28, 2009
Gimli, Manitoba
The Pork 'n' Being screened in the Hot Dogs and Monsters short film program.


*

Bruce Alcock’s Vive la Rose world premieres in competition at the 33rd Montreal World Film Festival (August 27–September 7, 2009). The animated short interprets an 18th-century French song sung by celebrated Newfoundland fiddler Emile Benoit; illness takes the unrequited love of a simple man, who sings of his anguish and isolation.

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J-Pop explodes: New People mall opening in S.F. - SFGate on the New People opening

ANN Reports

Otaku USA on the opening

LA Times offers some photos

Christopher Butcher wonders Are Viz courting the post-otaku at New People?


I think I mentioned that this fall I was lucky enough to see a presentation on Otaku by Professor Kaichiro Morikawa, an expert on Otaku, Japanese culture, and the export of Japanese culture outside of Japan. One of the most interesting points in his lecture (and the whole thing was phenomenal) was that Otaku spaces are generally _closed_ spaces, hidden from the public eye, and that non-Otaku spaces are all about being clear and visible and open to the public. The manga, software, doujin, and toy stores in Japan have their windows blacked out, and popular clothing and mainstream culture stores have big glass windows inviting eyes inwards. Otaku are introverts, ashamed of their purchases, non-otaku are extroverts flashing their shopping bags with massive brand-name labels on them

On About.com:manga, Deb Aoki's
Photo Gallery: Manga, Movies and Fashion Converge at New People

Same Hat's New People Opening & Yuichi Yokoyama - NEW People Arrive On Earth


On Anime Vice New People: The Building - and here and here

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Doujinshi (fan comic) mega-expo Comiket drew 560,000 attendees over three days, up from 550,000 last uear


Patrick W. Galbraith's Comiket 76 coverage

Akihabara News on the cosplay

more here

*

Collection DX East Coast Summit photos and video

Moe Hello Kitty at Comiket - more here

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World Cosplay Summit - Who are the World Champions in Cosplay?

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Jonathan Clements report on Locarno

*

Gundam Big Expo Big Gallery

Anime and Animation on North American TV

VIZ Media, has announced the debut of the animated Naoki Urasawa’s MONSTER featured by Starz Media’s Manga Entertainment on Syfy beginning on October 12th as part of the latest season of the network’s Ani-Monday programming block. MONSTER is based on the critically acclaimed manga series by Naoki Urasawa that is published in North America by VIZ Media.

New episodes of Naoki Urasawa’s MONSTER, rated TV-MA will air each Monday night on the Syfy Ani-Monday block and will be re-broadcast on SyFy’s sister channel, Chiller the week thereafter. Chiller airs a variety of horror and suspense-themed programs. Check local listings for specific airtimes.


What would you do if a child you saved grew up to be a monster? An ice-cold killer is on the loose, and Dr. Kenzo Tenma is the only one who can stop him! Tenma, a brilliant neurosurgeon with a promising future, risks his career to save the life of a critically wounded young boy named Johan. When the boy, now a coldhearted and charismatic young man, reappears nine years later in the midst of a string of unusual serial murders, Tenma must go on the run from the police, who suspect him to be the killer, to find Johan and stop the monster he set loose upon the world. Conspiracies, serial murders, and secret government experiments set against the grim backdrop of the formerly communist Eastern Europe are masterfully woven together in this compelling work of suspense.


*

Revolutionary Girl Utena and Demon Lord Dante have been added to Anime Network's VOD offerings for cable and satellite.

September premieres include Alice Academy, Legends of the Dark Kings: A Fist of the North Star Story and Babel II: Beyond Infinity.

Alice Academy
Best friends Mikan and Hotaru grew up in a small town in the remote countryside. When Hotaru moves to a school for geniuses in Tokyo, Mikan misses Hotaru so badly that she decides to travel to Tokyo herself to find Hotaru. She finds Hotaru in a school called "Alice Academy," and finds that the school is actually for people with special powers called "Alices." Narumi-sensei, a teacher at the school, discovers that Mikan also happens to have an Alice, and Mikan is permitted into the academy.

Legends of the Dark Kings: A Fist of the North Star Story
In the wastelands following the great nuclear war, a legend grew of a man. Hokuto No Ken - The Fist of the North Star. Master of a legendary fighting technique. A man of impossible strength and endurance. Yet before Ken claimed the title of the Fist, there was another master, trained in the art of Hokuto Shinken, the King of the Fist, the Divine Fist of Heaven. Raoh: the ultimate assassin, the ultimate warrior.

Babel II: Beyond Infinity
Koichi Kamiya is a normal student, but one day, a mysterious voice wakes him up from his dream, and asks him to fight against evil in the name of Babel II. The next day, he meets Juju, Wong and the powerful Lord Yomi, who is trying to gather a powerful group of people with psychic powers to take over the world. But first, he needs Babel's Legacy, a tremendous power which can only be used by Babel's successor, and this successor is, of course, Koichi. With the help of Rohdem the black panther, Robross the giant bird and Poseidon the giant robot, he will protect the Earth from Yomi's evil forces.

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Bleach: Memories of Nobody will run on Cartoon Network September 5th.

*

NY Times on Cartoon Network gambles on live action


It's moving away from its animation roots -- under the guidance of Rob Sorcher, who helped AMC develop 'Mad Men' and 'Breaking Bad' -- but almost all its new reality shows are flopping.

LA Times Blog on the topic


There are myriad reasons why Cartoon Network is shifting its focus. For starters, it has become a perennial also-ran to Viacom's Nickelodeon and Walt Disney Co.'s Disney Channel. Also, advertisers, particularly in the food and beverage categories, that used to spend heavily on networks aimed at children are cutting back. Cartoon Network wants to skew older in the hopes of luring new advertisers of products including video games and consumer electronics.

The network recently greenlit new animated comedies Regular Show and Horrorbots, along with more The Marvelous MisAdventures of Flapjack and more scripts for Adventure Time.

Regular Show follows a 6-foot tall blue jay and a hyperactive raccoon working as groundskeepers. Horrorbots follows a pair on teenage robots trying to fit into highschool.

Andrew W.K's Destroy Build Destroy has been greenlit for a second season.


Slated to begin production on the new episodes in October, the new episodes will increase the action as two teams compete against one another, with the guidance and assistance of professionals, as they destroy a large structure, rebuild it into something different and then destroy it again. Host Andrew W.K. is back to moderate the mayhem, as each week new teams face new challenges to build from the debris, with strategy, wits and teamwork deciding which team's creation out-performs the other and whose hard work goes up in smoke.

Anime x Games

Screenshots of Macross Ultimate Frontier for the PSP

Mobile Suit Gundam Senki: U.C.0081 for the Playstation 3 screenshots - more here


boxart

Super Robot Wars Neo Scans

Sgt Frog in Tales of Vesperia

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Phoenix Wright almost turned up in anime and game character mash up fighter Tatsunoko vs. Capcom - the game is due to be released by the end of the year - hands-on impressions

“Because Phoenix Wright only has one move, 'Objection!', we struggled. We designed a move for him: when he says objection, the actual writing attacks the opponent. However, 'objection' in Japanese is 'igiari' - it's four characters, whereas 'objection' becomes ten. When we localize, the balance of the game gets destroyed because the move becomes bigger. There'd be no way of avoiding it! We had to remove him for this reason. In the future, it is one of our aims to get him in.”

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SD Gundam G Generation Wars for PlayStation 2 topped Japanese game charts for the week ending week ended August 2 with 175,000 units moved

*

The upcoming, lower price PlayStation 3 Slim model will be available as Gundam bundle in Japan. The Playstation3 Slim with Gundam Senki will retail for ¥38,359

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Classic Megatron, Optimus Prime, Star Scream, Ratchet and Sideswipe will be showing up in Revenge of the Fallen as dowbloadable content

*

For the truly daring, a look at Queen's Blade Spiral Chaos for the PSP

Digital Distribution

FUNimation Entertainment and the Japanese consortium of producer Toei Animation Co., Ltd., publisher Shueisha, Inc. and broadcaster Fuji Television Network, Inc. have agreed to continue the U.S. and Canadian online simulcast of the studios' signature animated series "One Piece".

Starting Saturday, August 29th at 9:00 p.m. CDT, just one hour after airing in Japan, FUNimation and the consortium will mark the return of “One Piece” online simulcasts with the Amazon Lily Saga story arc beginning with episode 415, via the official One Piece website www.onepieceofficial.com followed soon thereafter by FUNimation partner sites.

Each new episode of the current season will be rolled out weekly as "One Piece" continues its Japanese television run.

In addition, beginning Friday, August 21st FUNimation will stream episodes from the Sabaody Archipelago Saga story arc starting with episode 391. FUNimation will add three episodes at 9:00 pm CDT daily leading up to the simulcast of 415.

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NAMCO Bandai has announced plans to launch a Bandai Channel distribution service for Japanese animation in America, Europe, and Asia simultaneously at the beginning of next year. Bandai Channel, the NAMCO Bandai Group company which handles video distribution, began streaming all 43 episodes of the first Mobile Suit Gundam series in Japan using Adobe Systems' Flash technology on July 20

*

TOKYOPOP announced the release of a number of its original series exclusively on TOKYOPOP.com here.

The service will launch with PSY*COMM volume 3.

Upcoming plans include continuing volumes of BOYS OF SUMMER, EARTHLIGHT, KAT & MOUSE, PANTHEON HIGH, UNDERTOWN, GYAKUSHU, and others.

Following the time-honored tradition of New Comics Day, the first chapter of PSY*COMM volume 3 debuted pm Wednesday, August 12, with subsequent chapters releasing each following Wednesday. BOYS OF SUMMER will debut Wednesday, September 23, followed by EARTHLIGHT and KAT & MOURSE.


In PSY-COMM volume 3, Jason Henderson, Tony Salvaggio and Ramanda Kamarga conclude their thriller about the ultimate reality show: War. Set in a future where warfare is entertainment -- scheduled, televised and rated -- this critically acclaimed series ("[A] great story ...a commentary on corporations, the media, war, and relationships, all wrapped in an interesting action manga with a driving plot and compelling characters." --Ain't It Cool News) concludes with a truly awesome finale.

Robot 6 spoke to Tokyopop Director of Marketing Marco Pavia about the initiative

On About.com:manga TokyoPop, Earthlight Creators Talk About New Online Manga Program

*

4Kids Entertainment has been forced to take Japanese audio, English subtitled episodes of Yu-Gi-Oh from YouTube. Initials, the reason was attributed to a complaint by one of the original Japanese voice actors, but the statement was changed to reference "a rights issue."

*

Live action Dragon Ball Evolution topped the Playstation Network download in its premiere week.

*

A Digital Comics reader will be launched for the PSP. Marvel titles (featuring Spider-Man, X-Men, and Fantastic Four), Transformers, GI Joe, and Star Trek comics from IDW, and comics from Archie and Image via i-Verse. will be part of the initial offering on the Playstation Store

*

LongBox Digital - Pre-Beta Screencast

Kaze no Stigma Author Passed Away

ANN reports that Takahiro Yamato, author of the Kaze no Stigma, on which the Gonzo anime was based, passed away on July 20th.

*

Melinda Beasi on DMP's eManga.com

Katherine Dacey Liveblogging the SIGIKKI Site

Worth Checking Out

Insight
Serdar Yegulalp has presented Gross Anatomy: Black Jack Butchered In The Remaking


There’s an irony in that if the stories had been redrawn with the exact same panel layouts and internal details, it might not have been as bad; at least then I could accuse the creators of this wreck of mere unoriginality, instead of both unoriginality and aesthetic homicide.

Junko Mizuno on her Marvel Strange Tales work

Jason Thompson on Shigeyuki Fukumitsu: The Most Emo Man in Japan

On Colony Drop - 1991 Oav Cartoons That AnimEigo Was Probably Smart Not To Release: Wizardry OAV


Not a lot of people realize that the pioneering US anime company Animeigo, who was in large part responsible for the explosion of the anime video market, was co-founded by Robert Woodhead. Woodhead, in turn, co-created the equally pioneering computer role-playing game Wizardry. And do you know who really loves that game? Japan. There have been stories that Mr. Woodhead’s geek cred made Japanese animation companies– staffed by serious nerds, naturally– quite a bit more receptive to his plans to bring their cartoons to the West.

Iwa ni Hana - The creepy and beautiful

Ogiue Maniax on Style Born out of Necessity - a topic relavent to Tezuka discussion and the original on televised anime

Roland Kelts on The Soul of Japan Japan's crisis is not political, but psychological. - W. David Marx expresses his dissenting opinion

Kuriousity on the first volumes of Sumomomo Momomo and Zone-00

Patrick W. Galbraith review Mamoru Hosada's (the Girl Who Leapt Through Time) Summer War

Joseph Luster on Little Fluffy Gigolo Pelu vol. 1

Jog surveyed Jirô Taniguch's A Distant Neighborhood

MangaBlog on Four-Eyed Prince, vol. 1

Melinda Beasi Doesn't Grok Ken Akamatsu (Love Hina)

Lori Henderson reviews Black Jack volumes 1-5

TangognaT goes through the complete Marmalade Boy melodrama

Chris Beveridge's 10 Most Underrated Anime Series (released in 2008)

Jonathan Clements on Ghost in the Shell: Solid State Society


“Nowadays it is getting difficult to create cool, global science fiction. It is because reality has surpassed the future we imagined. Cool SF stories turn up just before the big bang of a new social infrastructure. This time, it was the Internet. Ghost in the Shell was the forerunner and a favourite.” — Kenji Kamiyama

David Welsh wishes for more Ai Yazawa manga licenses - Delinquent Girl Detective (Sukeban Deka) too

A day in the life at Tokyopop

Okazu presents an interview with Gunjo's Nakamura Ching - only, the blog features a review of historic girl's baseball anime list of Okazu manga

Variety's impression of Mamoru Oshii's Musashi: The Dream of the Last Samurai


Most likely the first example of the anime form being used for a documentary, "Musashi: The Dream of the Last Samurai" is a larky, restlessly inventive look at 17th-century master swordsman Musashi Miyamoto, from the pen of the famed Mamoru Oshii ("Ghost in the Shell"). Full of digressions (even into Western and Chinese culture) and self-mockery, the pic can be appreciated by all Asiaphile viewers.

Comics 212 on Moyoco Anno's Tokyo Kamon Girls
another href="http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/theampersand/archive/2009/08/15/bits-amp-bobs-manga-makeup.aspx"> blurb on the topic - on SFGate

AniPages Daily on Crimson Wolf


Each era in the history of anime has its distinguishing qualities. One of my favorite periods is 1990-1995, when you get OVAs with a sort of crazed energy in the directing and storytelling, and realistically tinged yet fun and manic animation. Unlike in the late 80s, one of the things in the air at this period was realism, presumably influenced by things like Akira, and a lot of animators were producing realistic yet highly expressive and individualistic animation that after all these years remains extremely appealing, sitting as it does comfortably in the zone between pure, stale realism and over-the-top Kanada-school chaos.

- also Relic Armor Legaciam - Tomonori Kogawa's Cool Cool Bye - Dragon's Heaven

A horror review's take on Hell Girl

Sam Kusek on Midnight Eye: Goku, Private Investigator, Issues 1-6

Matthew Brady on Oishinbo A la Carte: Fish, Sushi, & Sashimi

The 10 most badass sci-fi battlesuits ever

Tsundere Evangelion: The Catharsis of Emotional Intelligence

Michael Olivarez on Toradora!

i <3 manga! on local fave Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service volume 2 volume 3 volume 4

Alt Japan asks Are you a YAPPIE? and offers a look at The Average Yappie

Japanese words of anime fans, by anime fans, for anime fans - datsu otaku - and Helen McCarthy on Dangerous Addictions: Cautionary Tales For Otaku

Also, Helen McCarthy on Revival! Ghost In The Shell 2.0 Remastered and Semantic Shifts: Where ‘The Tudors’ Resembles OEL Manga

Anime News Network spoke to Eyeshield 21's Riichiro Inagaki & Yusuke Murata

Aya Hirano (the voice of Haruhi in The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya) shares her thoughts on the contraversial Endless Eight

About.com:manga spoke to Ikki editor in chief Hideki Egami

BABY, The Stars Shine Bright fashion show, the NEW PEOPLE stage featured a Question & Answer session with one of BABY’s designers, Kumiko Uehara

Deb Aoki's interview with Patrick Macias and Colin Turner about the release of Junko Mizuno's manga, and interview with Mizuno herself

Media
Little Fluffy Gigolo Pelu previews

New Ninja Assasin photos

Ninja menko cards

Murakami and others and the upcoming Louis Vuitton book Art, Fashion and Architecture


Horror manga artist Kazuo Umezu's Got Talent

Instrutional manga concerning writing a last will and testment - and economic growth manga

Summit of the Gods Preview

Photos of the Tezuka Museum


Josey Wales and the Pussycats by Nina "Space Coyote" Matsumoto - also Avatar fanart

cyborg 009 1966 asahi sonorama

Tatsunoko VS. Capcom : Ultimate All Stars art

Hiroaki Samura on Dororo - on Sayonara Zetsubou Sensei
characters as modern high schoolers
Brutal Love - The twisted art of Samura Hiroaki


Anime Time Capsule 1989


Same Hat has hightlights form Chapter 3 Of Suehiro Maruo's Imomushi, also the amazing Cyber Blue

1986 Akita University animation club parody vide - indie anime Megane

Tributes to Akatsuka Fujio by other mangaka

Eden animation by Tatsuya Yuk

Fantastic shojo: Ayumi Kasai

Soil by Bambi and Her Pink Gun creator Atsushi Kaneko

Gainax is Epic

Tezuka mural at Takadanobaba station




Gokusen (live action adaptation of yakuza heiress turned school teacher manga) anti-drug campaign

Felipe Smith checking in. PEEPO CHOO update

King of RPGs preview

Onigiri Neko starring Megadeth guitarist Marty Friedman

Kamen Rider galore, Shinjuku Station

Ghost paintings by Kyosai

Cultural Notes
Internationally popular soccer manga Captain Tsubasa is being used to boost Tokyo's 2016 Olympic bid

Douglas Rushkoff ventured into "The web's dirtiest site," 4chan - "Where do the Internet’s most deadly viruses, filthiest porn, and sophomoric pranks come from? The Daily Beast’s Douglas Rushkoff goes inside the underground site Web giants can’t kill."

Misc

On Alt Japan, Yokai & Yurei & You

IDEA NO. 336 : Designs for Manga, Anime & Light Novels (Vol.2) - also here

A Tezuka library in miniature

Nice Mecha King ghidorah puzzle

kaiju tote

Andrew WK on his Gundam Album

Evangelion 2.0 Mari Zippo

Lil' Voltron cosplay

Pokemon: The Ride

Bleach creator Kubo Tite draws covers for classic novels Ryunosuke Akutagawa's Jigokuhen and Ango Sakaguchi's Darakuron

Godzilla: the 1954 Shinto Purification Ceremony

The digital restoration of Mothra - also NYT on the new release

The fan translation of Metal Gear creator Hideo Kojima's PSOne cult classic Policenautsis complete

“Sita Sings the Blues” Source Files now on Archive.org


For more commentary see the AICN Anime MySpace.



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Firsties
by Little Beavis
Aug 24th, 2009
02:08:23 PM
Sadly its says alot about the flawed mentality in the US
by Geomancer21
Aug 24th, 2009
02:45:44 PM
Japan Blu-Ray sales
by EddieBlake
Aug 24th, 2009
03:26:45 PM
...want to find out about Ghibli and Takahata...so much....
by FlickaPoo
Aug 24th, 2009
04:09:05 PM
LITTLE SCHOOLGIRLS AND PENIS TENTACLES
by uberman
Aug 24th, 2009
04:14:10 PM
He has machine guns in his butt... just so we're clear
by Johnno
Aug 24th, 2009
04:19:06 PM
I look forward to these posts
by sanzaru
Aug 24th, 2009
05:06:56 PM
"Cartoon" Network
by Mr.FTW
Aug 24th, 2009
05:50:37 PM
Disappointed...
by rxse7en
Aug 24th, 2009
06:41:40 PM
To see Ponyo earn so little in the US
by rxse7en
Aug 24th, 2009
06:42:33 PM
Monster is a Masterpiece...
by Henry Fool
Aug 24th, 2009
06:47:18 PM
Henry Fool, you are correct sir.
by Roketopunch
Aug 24th, 2009
07:17:17 PM
Henry Fool, you are correct sir.
by Roketopunch
Aug 24th, 2009
07:17:22 PM
shia labeef is barefoot gen!
by ironic_name
Aug 25th, 2009
05:16:41 AM
Funny
by Lain Of The Net
Aug 25th, 2009
06:00:14 AM
Miyazaki's movies would make more if they got a wide release
by Geomancer21
Aug 25th, 2009
11:31:25 AM
Sean McCoy doesn't know the first thing about Evangelion
by _V_
Aug 26th, 2009
09:01:08 AM

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