PDA

View Full Version : Manga Review: Pet Shop of Horrors Tokyo


Ranma4699
02-14-2008, 02:24 AM
Pet Shop of Horrors: Tokyo GN 1
http://beta.bordersstores.com/ProductImages/products/00/57/11/a/57119960_a.jpg

Synopsis:
They say there is a mysterious shop where you can buy exotic pets—some so exotic that they can actually take on human form. But even more mysterious is the owner of the shop, Count D, who has recently moved his storefront to the seedy Kabuki-cho district in Tokyo. The location may be new, but the clients are as plentiful as ever: a single mother looks for a guardian to protect her from her abusive ex-husband, but finds that her true problems lie deeper within. An aspiring writer discovers her muse, but pays a terrible price for success. A yakuza underling adopts a dog so loyal that it would go anywhere for him ... even when he tries to escape the mob. And in a chilling 20th-century flashback, we learn that Count D's grandfather once sold a pet to a certain Führer.


Review:
Who doesn't love a good tragic ending? Luckily for horror fans, the infamous Pet Shop of Horrors is back in business, and while the setting has switched to the other side of the Pacific Rim, the stories are just as chilling as ever. You know the drill by now—an unsuspecting individual wanders into Count D's shop in need of a pet, walks out with some freakish creature/human/thing, and ultimately meets a bitter end (which may or may not involve death). This is at once the series' greatest strength but also its weakness: the plot formula makes it easy to dish out just the right amount of human drama, but those familiar with the Pet Shop will see each twist coming—and may even find some of them to be too far-fetched. Ah, such is the price we pay for a good jolt of horror.

The first story in the book shows how Matsuri Akino cleverly puts the focus on human characters, rather than the creatures themselves: the central characters in "Domestic" are a single mother and her school-age son, one of the most powerful familial bonds. As the characters' lives are fleshed out, we gradually become sympathetic towards them, which makes the conclusion that much more dramatic once fate finally strikes down upon them. A different sort of love emerges in the third story, "Dust," but again the same principle applies: this time it's a yakuza flunky trying to save his girlfriend from the clutches of a mob boss, and his lowly status makes him a heroic underdog. In fact, the pet doesn't even become a major factor in the plot until the finale, but what a striking finale it is. But the most striking idea is the one Akino saves for last—a historical flight of fancy where Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun take in a pet that somehow resembles the perfect Aryan child. It's almost too weird and tasteless, yet the dramatic pull of Braun's ill-fated romance, set against the epic collapse of Germany in World War II, makes for a uniquely heartbreaking story.

So how does the ancestor of a mysterious Chinese count end up selling pets to the Nazis in Berlin? That's anyone's guess; Akino's historical contrivance is one of many holes in the storytelling. And it's because of these holes that the second story, "Double-booking," hasn't even been discussed yet: its abrupt, inconclusive ending makes the whole story weak, and the background principle guiding the plot (something about cicadas' mating cycles?) is just plain confusing. Even the good stories have their weird and wacky elements: a creature that eats dreams, a unicorn-dragon thing—it's at points like these that the stories stop being dark and dramatic and enter the realm of silly. And let's not forget that the stories are so bound to their formula that you can almost predict each key event: the shock at Count D's recommended pet, the bizarre animal/human duality, the surprise revelation at the end. If only Akino would give us a real plot twist by actually changing the pattern once in a while.

Despite its label as a horror title, the art of Pet Shop is not particularly horrifying: there is little gore or creepiness to be found, even when the pets reveal their true nature. If anything, the art is more in line with the typical drama or romance, which actually makes sense considering the strong focus on characters and relationships rather than pure shock value. Unfortunately, this aesthetic does mean that the character designs end up looking quite plain, and the background work is the usual catalog of screentone patterns and city scenery. The war story does make for an interesting change of imagery (swastikas galore!), but it's clear that Akino struggles with any artwork beyond the usual range of attractive young men, fashionable women and the occasional bizarre creature. Despite this artistic averageness, though, there is one area that's done quite well: the pacing and layout, which always manages to guide the eye in the right direction even when navigating through angled and borderless panels. It's also these well-planned layouts that lead to a number of dramatic scenes, especially in the last story as the Third Reich falls apart.

Aside from just panel layouts, dialogue placement is also a key in presenting the story visually: there is a lot of conversation in these stories, and being able to follow along is essential. Fortunately, the orderly sequence of text bubbles and characters' strong personalities make it easy to keep track of the dialogue. The writing is not particularly witty or eloquent—save for a couple of monologues where Count D muses on the frailty of human life—but neither is it dull or confusing. Sound effects, meanwhile, are kind of a half-done job: there aren't too many in this volume, and they get translated when they're essential to the plot (like a door opening or a gunshot), but are otherwise left alone. A couple of cultural footnotes also sneak their way into the text, but it's actually Akino who provides a majority of the background information, discussing mythical animals in the back of the book and explaining the nature of the "pets" featured in each story.

Those with an interest in exotic creatures will certainly find some worthy specimens in Pet Shop of Horrors: Tokyo, but they may also find that the human owners are just as interesting. And that's what makes this volume (and presumably, the rest of the series) worth reading: more than just a collection of freaky-monster horror tales, it's really more about human drama, and revealing the follies of the most advanced species on the planet. It may not be the most artistically striking, and it falls victim to a number of ridiculous plot devices, but there's still some good food for thought here. How far would you go to save your child? What price will you pay for fame and success? Do you have to guts to turn against a criminal organization? And who could love the world's most ruthless leader? Only Count D has the answers.

Grade:
Overall : B-
Story : B
Art : C
+ Achieves dramatic effect by focusing on the doomed relationships of the human characters.
− Mysterious and supernatural "pets" lead to some silly plot contrivances; rather average in the art department.

Ranma4699
02-15-2008, 01:56 PM
King of Thorn GN 1-3

Synopsis:
Shy Kasumi and her more outgoing twin Shizuku have been infected by the Medusa virus, an incurable and little-understood plague which lies dormant in victims for six weeks before petrifying them in a matter of hours, resulting in a painful death. When Kasumi is one of 160 victims chosen to go into suspended animation until a cure is found, she only reluctantly goes at the insistence of her twin, but wakes up after an indeterminate amount of time to a reality out of a nightmare. Thorny growths abound and monsters stalk the ruins of the facility as she and a handful of others infected with Medusa scramble for their lives and try to discover what happened. Sometimes separated by cir***stance, they slowly start to gather the pieces of the puzzle, but they also learn that some amongst them may know much more than they let on, and everyone seems to have at least a few secrets, including Kasumi herself. Meanwhile a mysterious girl with a malevolent smile watches from the shadows.

Review:
It is an unwritten rule in sci fi media on both sides of the Pacific that nothing good ever comes from going into suspended animation. Something nearly always goes wrong; you sleep too long, people die from malfunctions, or you wake up to discover that the world has gone to hell in your absence. King of Thorn chooses the latter option to spin a horror-laced adventure story whose first three volumes manage to entertain despite a decided shortage of originality.

Sometimes something fresh can be made by borrowing elements of unrelated stories and combining them in a new way, but that is not the case here. The basic premise – a hero/heroine with an incurable disease put into suspended animation until a cure can be found, only to wake up to a reality fraught with people-eating monsters – was either influenced by, or outright ripped off from, the anime series Blue Gender, while the personality types amongst the sleepers represent a cross-section of common archetypes seen in group survivor stories: the shy girl, the kid, the big guy, the bad boy, the smart one, the self-centered rich/powerful one, and the motherly woman. (In fact, the characters so tightly fit into their roles that most beyond Kasumi do not have names by the end of volume 1 and one of the survivors does not even have a name by the end of volume 3.) Naturally a bigger picture exists, some of the survivors know more about it than others, and everyone seems to have some kind of secret. The girl observer who periodically pops up in the background also reeks of Common Plot Device.

The series does show some sparks of creativity, however. The nature of the Medusa virus, as silly as it may sound on paper, is effectively horrifying in application, and that cloud hanging over the characters helps reinforce the tension and desperation of the survivors' situation. Kasumi's repressed secret, when revealed in volume 3, is a genuine shocker, and manga-ka Yuji Iwahara wins points for making one of the nasty dinosaur-like monsters abnormally clever for voracious critters of its type. Iwahara loses nearly as many points for the amphibian debacle in volume 3, but wins some of them back by at least occasionally giving main character Kasumi (the requisite “wilting flower” character) a backbone.

The main selling point of the series so far lies in its effective establishment and maintenance of a high degree of tension and danger. Whether internal threats like the Medusa virus or external threats like monsters, the thorny vines, or drowning, the characters always seem at risk, even when in comparative safety, and some of the situations they find themselves in get truly nerve-wracking. Add to that numerous involved action scenes, concerns about what bad-boy Marco Owens is really up to, and (possibly unfounded) suggestions made to Kasumi that the survivors have a traitor in their midst and you have an excitement level that rarely falters.

On the downside, the series concentrates so much on building up tension that it skimps on opportunities for character development. We get to see inside Kasumi's head enough to know what she's about, and Marco's character gradually comes into focus, but so far the rest of the cast has not progressed beyond one-note performances.

Iwahara's drawing style is so detail-rich that it cries out either for the use of color or for larger pages to exploit all the thorny growths and nasty critters, and in fact the handful of color pages at the beginning of each volume show the artistry at its best. As is, some of the fine background details get lost in all of the dark shading, as does a full appreciation of the inventive critter designs. Beyond Marco's intricate tattoos the character designs are not the sharpest, and in some cases take on a cartoonish look, but they do strongly visually delineate the characters and are effective at conveying mood and emotion. Iwahara offers no shortage of well-planned and crisply-executed action scenes and spares little effort in background detail or setting design; they never get dull or give a run-of-the-mill feel. While the series offers no actual nudity and little that could be considered fan service (contrary to the image on the cover of volume 3), it has plenty enough graphic content to justify its Older Teens rating.

Tokyopop's releases of the series always opens with four color pages, followed by a brief plot summary beginning with volume 2. Each closes out with a couple of self-referential bonus pages by Iwahara and an advertisement for the next volume. Most of the time the sound effects remain untranslated, which in this case is to the content's detriment since several instances come up where the sound effect being used is not clear from context and would be beneficial to know.

As the series progresses into its third volume it starts to give off a vague video game vibe, but that does not detract from how involving the tense, action-packed story of these survivors in a hostile environment can be. Its lack of complicated ideas and light use of flashbacks makes each volume a quick read, and it poses enough drama and mysteries to keeps its readers coming back.

Grade:
Overall : B
Story : B
Art : B
+ Tense and involving.
− Little originality, sound effects should be translated more.

Ranma4699
02-16-2008, 11:05 PM
http://ec1.images-amazon.com/images/P/1598166743.01._SS500_SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg

Title: Trinity Blood Volume 1
Story by: Sunao Yoshida
Art by: Kiyo Kyujo
Character Designs by: Thores Shibamoto
Publisher: Tokyopop
Serializes in: Asuka (Kadokawa Shoten)
Genre: Shoujo, Action
Rating: Older Teens; 16+


Consider this:
If humans lives on the flesh of cows and birds,
and vampires live on the blood of those human,
follow that..
something must be behind the vampire's blood.

Trinity Blood tells the dark story of a distant future, a time when civilization and technology are in decline, where vampires and humans are in an ongoing war of survival. In Istavan, Esther encounters Father Nightroad--a priest who is appointed by the Vatican State Special Service to her church, St. Mathias--to help battle the overpowering vampires. As more tragedies befall Esther, she becomes more dependent on this friendly and enthusiastic stranger, who seems to possess some sort of luck that pulls him through any dangerous situation. However, when fighting the immortal vampires, is luck the only thing that helps him overcome each conflict, or is there something else? Something special that qualifies him as the candidate the Vatican Special Service chooses to fight this enduring battle for the sake of the human race?

The artwork is definitely one thing that I should emphasize in Trinity Blood. The elaborate and detailed artwork, where everything from background designs to character expressions are carefully laid out, is embellished by extravagant toning and inking. The different situations are well conveyed to engage the readers and situate them in the story. For example, all the action scenes are emphasized by powerful speed lines, while close-ups and soft tones are applied to the emotional scenes.

The genre of this series is quite conflicted; aren't "shoujo" and "action" the biggest oxymoron when put together? No doubt a gothic vampire story appeals to most girls, but to highlight that with remarkable action scenes means that the series can be appealing to both boys and girls. On top of that, the character design is also extremely noteworthy. Abel Nightroad's clumsy and caring personality contrasts greatly with his dark and mysterious identity, while Esther's naiveté and innocence secure the sympathy of the readers.

Finally, on Tokyopop's adaptation; the effort put into the translation and English adaptation is obvious and is greatly appreciated, but the font choices are questionable; I feel very uncomfortable about the fonts even after reading the entire volume. In particular, the "normal dialogue font" seems extremely unfit and gives the impression that it should be used in a more comedic series. As for the sound effects, they are the same as in all other Tokyopop's series, which means they are neither translated nor edited. I find the series quite recommendable to anyone, whether you are someone looking for gorgeous artwork, a dark bewitching shoujo manga or intriguing action.