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Showing posts with label Anime/Manga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anime/Manga. Show all posts

Tuesday, 12 June 2012

Pluto Jilid 1–8 (Tamat)

Pluto Jilid 1 (Sumber: SF Signal)

Saya pernah cerita sebelum ini tentang hadiah hari lahir termahal yang pernah saya belikan untuk diri sendiri, iaitu seluruh set manga berjudul Pluto edisi Bahasa Inggeris. Ada dua sebab kenapa saya telah borong kesemua lapan jilid sekali gus.

Pertama, kerana ia oleh Urasawa Noaki. Urasawa sebenarnya terkenal dengan karya yang berjilid-jilid panjang seperti Monster dan 22th Century Boys, yang tamat pada jilid ke-18 dan ke-22. Pluto hanya 8 jilid. Waktu saya mula-mula ke kedai, jilid pertama Pluto telah habis dijual. Lalu saya tempah senaskhah dan kira-kira dua minggu kemudian saya sambar kelapan-lapan jilid. Bimbang kalau akan ada jilid lain pula yang akan habis. Dan itu sebab kedua.

Keistimewaan Urasawa Naoki ialah beliau sangat cekap menulis cerita-cerita yang penuh dengan plot twist yang membuatkan pembaca tidak senang duduk. Semakin dekat kita dengan penghujung cerita, akan ada sesuatu yang Urasawa akan campakkan yang akan memesongkan jangkaan atau sangkaan kita tentang cerita itu. Satu lagi kelebihan Urasawa ialah keupayaan beliau dalam melahirkan rasa simpati terhadap watak-watak yang beliau perkenalkan, termasuklah watak jahat dan sampingan.

Pluto adalah penceritaan semula sebuah jalan cerita dalam siri Tetsuwan Atom (Astro Boy) berjudul Chijô Saidai no Robotto atau Robot yang Terkuat di Dunia. Tetsuwan Atom adalah karya Tezuka Osamu, yang juga dikenali sebagai Bapa Manga dan Anime.

Perbandingan di antara Chijô Saidai no Robotto (atas) dan Pluto (bawah). Sumber: du9

Dengan restu dan kerjasama dari anak mendiang Tezuka Osamu, Makoto, Urasawa mengadaptasi Chijô Saidai no Robotto dengan  memberikan watak-watak asal ciptaan Tezuka wajah dan bentuk yang lebih hampir dengan dunia yang kini. Hasilnya, sebuah cerita yang bukan sekadar menumpang kekuatan dari sumber asal tetapi mempunyai perspektif, persoalan, serta identitinya yang tersendiri.

Pluto mengambil tempat di sebuah dunia di mana manusia dan robot hidup di samping satu sama yang lain. Kehidupan harian manusia dipermudahkan dengan bantuan robot domestik. Keamanan turut dipantau oleh polis-polis robot khas. Kemajuan teknologi telah meningkatkan hubungan manusia-robot ke tahap yang hampir simbiotik.

Tidak seperti manusia, robot mempunyai jasad yang pelbagai bentuk. Ada yang kelihatan seperti kotak atau perabot bergerak, dan ada robot canggih yang begitu mirip dengan manusia dari segi rupa serta keupayaan intelek. Malah ada robot yang mempunyai pasangan hidup dan berkeluarga. Kekurangan mereka yang paling ketara ialah kemampuan untuk mengalami, memahami, dan mempamerkan emosi.

Salah sebuah robot canggih ini ialah Gesicht, seorang (sebuah?) detektif di Europol Jerman. Dia ditugaskn untuk menyiasat pembunuh misteri sebuah robot pemelihara hutan bernama Mont Blanc. Pemergian Mont Blanc yang juga simbol keamanan sejagat ditangisi ramai orang di seluruh dunia.

Pembunuhan itu disusuli beberapa kematian yang hampir serupa modus operandinya. Tiada kesan organik tubuh badan manusia seperti cap jari atau DNA yang ditemui di tempat kejadian. Hanya satu persamaan yang ada pada setiap pembunuhan; sepasang batang atau kayu atau dijumpai terpacak pada tepi kepala mangsa.

Apabila bukti dan petunjuk gagal menunjukkan sama ada pembunuh tersebut manusia atau robot, Gesicht ke Jepun untuk memohon bantuan dari seorang robot berteknologi tinggi bernama Atom. Atom mempunyai tubuh kanak-kanak dan cuba sedaya mungkin untuk hidup seperti seorang kanak-kanak normal. Inilah impiam Atom yang mungkin tidak akan tercapai.

Atom mengetahui satu rahsia yang menyayat
hati tentang Gesicht (sumber: Muttpop)

Mont Blanc, Gesicht, dan Atom tergolong di kalangan tujuh robot yang terhebat di dunia. Ketujuh-tujuh robot ini pernah terlibat dalam perang yang dikenali sebagai Konflik Asia Tengah ke-39. Selepas terbunuhnya tiga daripada tujuh robot yang dimaksudkan, Gesicht dan Atom percaya bahawa mereka bakal menjadi sasaran, dan kemungkinan besar pembunuh ini mempunyai kaitan rapat dengan konflik tersebut yang telah mengorbankan ribuan manusia dan robot.

Persoalan tentang perbandingan robot dan manusia, misalnya, menyebabkan saya terfikir. Dari satu segi, robot boleh dilihat sebagai abstraksi manusia. Saintis mungkin berjaya mencipta robot yang dapat mensimulasikan aspek fizikal manusia, namun cabaran besar masih menanti mereka di bidang emosi dan kognitif.

Bagaimana pula robot dapat mengimbangi fizikal dengan emosi? Pluto, robot pembunuhan dalam cerita ini, dikatakan mempunyai kekuatan luar biasa di samping emosi dendam yang bersemarak. Dendam ini menjadi sumber kekuatan Pluto. Manusia mampu menimbang dan memaafkan. Inilah pengaturcaraan tercanggih oleh pengaturcara teragung.

Sesuatu yang amat menarik untuk diamati idea bagaimana emosi boleh dikuantifikasikan sebagaimana berat atau ketinggian. Pluto sebagai sebuah manga sains fiksyen mengingatkan saya kepada firman Allah di dalam Surah At-Tin, tentang manusia selaku sebaik-baik kejadian. Dalam mencipta robot yang mirip-mirip manusia, aspek fizikal, emosi, dan intelek perlu disintesiskan dan diseimbangkan. Sejauh mana manusia telah sudah serta akan berjaya, hanya Yang Esa sahaja yang tahu.

Dan adakah saya akan buat sesuatu yang sebegini untuk hari-hari lahir akan datang, hanya Yang Esa sahaja yang tahu.

Pluto Jilid 8 (About.com Manga)

Thursday, 23 February 2012

Hadiah Hari Lahir termahal

Tahun lepas saya menghadiahkan diri saya hadiah hari lahir termahal yang pernah saya hadiahkan seseorang.

Ayat tadi berbunyi seolah-olah saya ini mengutamakan diri sendiri melebihi diri orang lain, bukan?

Tidak, tidak. Bukan begitu. Sebenarnya hadiah itu mahal kerana ia bukan satu hadiah. Ia satu set siri manga 8 jilid yang telah saya beli sekaligus. Percayalah, saya jarang membeli sesuatu yang sebegini mahal. Saya bukannya orang bergaji besar (atau bergaji tetap).

Saya memutuskan untuk memborong keseluruhan set ini selepas beberapa lama berfikir sama ada saya mampu atau tidak. Dan patut atau tidak?

Selama ini saya banyak membaca manga secara percuma di Internet. Inilah cara yang paling mudah untuk membacanya. Di Malaysia tidak banyak manga yang diterjemahkan. Yang ada bukanlah jenis yang saya minat.

Zaman budak sekolah dahulu saya rajin membeli serta meminjam Dragonball, Dragon Quest, Yu Yu Hakusho, Slamdunk, termasuklah Sailor Moon; edisi Bahasa Melayu keluaran Comics House. Saya tidak pasti berapa harganya sekarang tetapi waktu itu harganya RM3.50.

Oh, sekarang RM4.80 rupanya
Jauh bezanya dengan harga manga hadiah hari lahir saya tahun lepas. Melebihi 10 kali ganda. Bukan sahaja harga yang beza, tetapi kualiti cetakan, jilidan, dan terjemahan.

Inilah beza barangan import dengan barangan tempatan, barangkali. Sekali pandang, manga import kelihatan seperti barangan premium.  Apabila kualitinya taraf premium, saya harap ia akan tahan lama dan kertasnya tidak cepat menguning.

Pluto Jilid 1. Bukan untuk kanak-kanak
kerana ceritanya berat
(sumber: SF Signal).
Kenapa (tamak sangat) sampai 8 jilid? Tentunya membeli jilid demi jilid lebih murah. Saya borong kelapan-lapan jilid kerana kali pertama saya mencari di kedai buku, jilid satu sudah tiada dalam stok. Saya mencongak-congak wang di tangan, dan memesan keseluruhan set.

Selepas beberapa minggu kemudian, stok baru jilid satu pun tiba. Saya membayar harganya sambil diperhatikan orang rumah saya yang tersenyum-senyum. Malah dia yang lebih banyak tersenyum daripada saya. Entahlah kenapa.


(Memang saya meminati Pluto dari dulu lagi. Percayalah, ini bukan belian impulsif.)

Monday, 28 November 2011

Preview: Chihayafuru



Josei is a Japanese word meaning lady or feminine or female.

As the meaning suggests, josei is also a specific genre in anime and manga is caters towards a largely mature female audience, ranging from late teens to senior citizens. The stories in this genre tend to have a more realistic plot that are reflective of the female experience, and they feature characters that are often seen by the audience as believable and relatable.

Confession time: I'm josei fan. I like any story that have interesting characters that I end up caring about, like Daikichi the single father from Usagi Drop. Since josei isn't the most popular genre out around, there's little wonder why few people have heard of josei shows.


This year's fall season welcomes the première of Chihayafuru, a josei show based on the manga by Suetsugu Yuki. The original manga had won the prestigious Kodansha Award and the Manga Taishō Award, which is a good sign indeed. Understandably I was looking forward to it, until I learned it was going to revolve around a competitive card game called Hyakunin Issu Karuta. I wondered if things could get complicated.

The concept behind karuta is actually rather simple. Cards from a deck are laid in rows in front of two or more competing players as they sit facing each other. The cards have a name or phrase on them. An announcer will read aloud the name or phrase on one of the cards and players will try to identify the card mentioned from the rows of cards. The first player to grab that card wins the round.

There are several variations of karuta based on the type of deck, and one of the most competitively played in Japan is the Hyakunin Issu or a hundred poems by a hundred poets. Each card in a Hyakunin Issu deck contains single line waka poem. Highly skilled players build their advantage by memorising all 100 poems, which is the names of every card in the deck.


While Hyakunin Issu Karuta is somewhat a national sport in Japan, simpler variations of karuta are also played at the elementary school level that may use picture cards instead.

Suetsugu Yuki was a member of the karuta club during high school, so I guess rather than let all those experiences go to waste she channelled all that into writing a story about competing and winning, for a championship title or for love.


Ayase Chihaya is a younger sister of an up and coming famous model. To her, this was probably the biggest thing that could ever happen in her life. However deep inside, she longed for a dream of her own.

The quest for that dream began incidentally with Wataya Arata, a newly transferred boy in her class, who was constantly ignored or made fun of because of his Fukui accent. Chihaya began to sympathise with Arata and defended him against the rest of the class, including her close friend Taichi.

Chihaya soon discovered that Arata is actually a junior level karuta champion and a grandchild of a karuta grandmaster. Arata invited Chihaya to give the card game a try and as she experienced for the first time the complexity and beauty of karuta, she realises that becoming a karuta champion could the one dream she had been searching for.


Joined by an fumingly jealous Taichi, the three of them embarked the same dream together, only to see it foiled by reality. Arata was going to return to Fukui when the year is over and Taichi had been accepted to a better school. With the team mates gone, can Chihaya singled-handed keep that dream alive?

Chihayafuru may not be the best example of josei, mainly because (so far) the characters are still in school and the issues they struggle are not much beyond the usual lost friendship, love triangles (I think), and becoming competitive in something. What gives me some hope that Chihayafuru will become another memorable story is the characters.

Chihaya may share her sister's beauty, but the isn't type of girl who worry about breaking a nail or ruining the mascara. She believes strongly in karuta and goes all out to become champion by her own right. Her beauty coincidentally becomes an unrealised advantage, something she herself is unaware of and something her male opponent find very difficult to ignore.


The two leading young men are flawed in their own ways. Taichi is the overachiever of the bunch. He excels at nearly everything mostly because his family expects that from him, but in return he gets very little praise or recognition, almost the same amount of support Chihaya gets from her family in her karuta endeavours.


Arata is the brooding, misunderstood social outcast. He cherishes Chihaya's friendship more than anything (well, maybe except karuta), and is almost single-mindedly driven to become as good as his grandfather.

At first the common tie between Taichi and Arata is Chihaya's sudden interest in karuta. Taichi couldn't be bothered at first but he can't stand seeing Arata hogging all of Chihaya's attention.

After a few episodes, the story skipped a few years to high school. Time, as we know, changes everything in different degrees. Chihaya's dream remained unwavered but someone among the other two has unexpectedly given up karuta altogether, sending her on a new quest, to rekindle her old team mates' love for the game.


Hyakunin Issu Karuta is an interesting game to watch. It's not as complicated I first suspected, yet there's aspects of it karuta that makes it challenging. Players arrange the cards differently for every game. They must remember and forget the card positions quickly since karuta matches are often played consecutively, sometimes up to seven matches in one single day. Concentration, excellent hearing skill, and mental strength are determinants that set the excellent players apart.


Chihayafuru would be dull show if it revolves around only Chihaya, Taichi, and Arata. Episode six and above will introduce new characters and players as Chihaya rounds up members for her school's newly formed karuta club. 

I really hope the pace would pick up as the story progresses, but I don't feel should worry too much. The show is in good hands with Asaka Morio in the director's chair. Asaka has handled many shows that feature strong female characters, including my personal favourite, Gunslinger Girl. Gunslinger Girl started out with a group of little orphan girls who were secretly trained to become deadly assassins and slowly progressed into an examination the various types of mentor-protégé relationships.

True blue josei fans including myself will definitely stay tuned for 25 episodes lined up for the whole season. The jury is still out on whether or not it will rank among the most memorable josei shows, but Chihayafuru is easily one of the best shows the 2011 fall season has to offer.

Tuesday, 6 September 2011

Preview: Usagi Drop



Although it's been quite some time since I last wrote anything about anime, it's not because I've given up watching anime. Not yet, anyway. It's because I haven't found anything worth writing about. There's a couple of reasons for that, and the main one is I'm no longer a teenager. Most anime cater for the younger crowd, and I want more than the usual giant robots and high school love triangles.

Which is why I find Usagi Drop a breath of fresh air.


I was initially reluctant to watch it because of the rumours about its ending. It's a controversial one to say the least, feel free to Google it if you wish. The manga it's based on ended earlier this year, and myriad of reactions ensued. I snooped around a few anime discussion boards before deciding to the first episode a try.

And I'm glad I did. I found a lot of things that resonates with current stage in life. The lead character, Daikichi, is also about the same age as me. I think this is the first time I found myself actually relating to an anime character.

Much of Usagi Drop is grounded in reality. Daikichi is a regular middle class, working guy whose grandfather passed away recently. He gets ready to attend the funeral, and is greeted with a surprise at the doorstep in the form of a six-year-old girl.


The girl is introduced as Rin, the illegitimate daughter of Daikichi's late grandfather. As preparations for the funeral goes underway, Daikichi notices that everyone seems to avoid talking to or about Rin. The whole thing is understandable since the idea of an octogenarian fathering a small child is a tad squeamish for some people to accept. And compounding the confusion further is the fact that Rin's biological mother is nowhere to be seen.

Daikichi makes several efforts to reach out to Rin, and in doing so gains her trust. He begins to sympathise with Rin who's too young to understand the situation she's in.


When the family finally sits down to discuss about Rin, things get a little heated. Nobody seems ready to welcome Rin into their home, and somehow perhaps due to confusion and embarrassment, the big picture is lost on everyone, except for Daikichi. He stands up, calls out to Rin and asks if she wants to go home with him, leaving everyone with their jaws on the floor.

Daikichi is single and living alone, and as the story has reveals even he realises that taking in Rin would severely affect his chances of finding a girlfriend.

I must say that I really admire Daikichi's guts. A character like him is rare in anime (heck, even in real life!), and this is reason enough for me to sit and watch till the end, no matter how it's going to end.

The next few episodes finds Daikichi making several important, life-changing decisions, including taking a demotion, as he hopes to spend more time with Rin at home. Having a child changes our life in huge ways. I suspect when one day I have one of my own, I'd be pondering over similar issues. I wonder too about whether there are young men like Daikichi out there, who'd selflessly give up the pleasures of the single life in order to care for somebody else's child. (And in Daikichi' case, the child is his own aunt!) I really hope do they exist.

Yeah, I know I'm starting to get all sentimental. Because, hey, I'm a 30-something-year-old anime fan. I'm supposed to.


Wednesday, 24 March 2010

Previu: Bokurano


Plot Summary: During a summer camp, 15 children, 8 males and 7 females, find a grotto by the sea. Deep within they discover working computers and some electronic equipment, and later the owner, a man called Kokopelli. Kokopelli claimed to be a programmer working on a brand new game, in which a large robot has to defend the Earth against fifteen alien invasions. He persuades the children to test the game and sign a contract. All but one of them signs, barely a moment later they mysteriously awaken on the shore believing what happened was just a dream. (ANN)

Ketika Bokurano mula-mula disiarkan pada 2007, saya tidak begitu memperdulikannya kerana  menyangka yang ia satu lagi "cerita robot besar" (yang juga dipanggil genre mecha). Saya kurang berminat dengan cerita-cerita seperti ini.

Selepas membaca beberapa tentang resensi serta pandangan peminat anime, dan mendapat tahu yang Bokurano bukan hanya sebuah lagi cerita robot besar (walaupun ada robot besar di dalamnya, sila lihat gambar di atas), saya mula menilai semula pendapat saya. Ada yang sehingga berpendapat bahawa Bokurano adalah di antara siri anime yang terbaik dekad ini. Ini bukan pujian sebarangan.  

Dari beberapa episod awalan, saya mula dapat maksud mereka. Sudah agak tidak muncul siri anime yang sebegini mendalam dari segi emosi, pengolahan cerita, isu dan falsafah.

Sunday, 22 June 2008

A Naruto chapter to remember

The latest chapter of the Naruto manga really hits me at the core. In it, Naruto is grieving over the death of his teacher, Jiraiya.




I know that feeling...


Naruto and Jiraiya in happier times.

Naruto chapter 405 will be noted as one of its most memorable chapters, IMHO. (At least by me.) Well done, Kishimoto Masashi-sensei.

Sunday, 13 April 2008

This year's?

Girl from Class F. Guy from Class A. Girl has crush on guy. Girl confesses to guy.

Guy rejects.

Girl is speechless.

Guy explains.

Everyone is speechless.


Could Itazura Na Kiss be 2008's Lovely Complex? :)



Sunday, 25 November 2007

Card-bo!

I played around with Inkscape some more, and ended up with...


Card-bo! (Complete with coin slot on the top left side of its chest!)


Hope you like it. Originally from the pages of one of my favourite(st) manga, Yotsuba to!

Wednesday, 26 September 2007

Wondering...

I saw this in a special episode of Honey and Clover called Chapter F, and thought how this one frame seems to mirror the state I'm in at this of point in life... the sky, the wind, hair that needs cutting, the mind lost in thoughts, wondering...

Have a great Ramadhan, everyone.

Sunday, 27 May 2007

Preview: Lovely Complex

Lovely Complex (LoveCom) is based on the manga by Nakahara Aya which tells the oft-told tale of high school love with a twist: height complexity. Koizumi Risa is the unusually tall girl and Otani Atsushi is the guy who wishes that he could be taller (since he's in school basketball team).

Right from the start it can be sensed that there's chemistry between the two, and they ended up being dubbed by their teacher as a comedy duo ("All Hanshin-Kyōjin"). The rest of the first episode had me laughing to the point of tears.

Both Risa and Atsushi are considerably unlucky in love, so they decided to hook-up one another with a friend. The plan backfired instead (the friends fell for each other), so they made a bet to see who gets a boyfriend or girlfriend first. And that also seems to backfiring too as Risa begins to develop feeling for Atsushi...

LoveCom is the series I've been waiting for some time. Shoujo comedy is a sadly ignored genre.

Shoujo is difficult genre to describe. The best way is experience it yourself. I'm drawn to shoujo mostly by the way how the characters are made central to the story. Most of time the emotions of the characters affect the plot greatly, instead of the other way around. In the end, you can't help but to feel acquainted with the characters, after seeing and feeling what they've been through in the story.

Unlike in other genres, shoujo characters don't wear the same clothes all/most of the time. Same goes for hair. The lead is usually a plain Jane, pining for for the shining armour-clad knight. And flowers bloom in the background, when feelings of love surfaces (an almost sure sign of something being shoujo).

So far the series, after 7 episodes, is a bit inconsistent in the comedy department. Some episodes like the first had me in stitches, while the rest focused more the story's progression. Not that it's a bad thing.

LoveCom's charms lie in its characters' foibles. Who really haven't struggled with a complex of their own? Risa struggles with a confused feeling towards Atsushi and the possibility of finding a guy to match her height. Atsushi himself also suffers from an inferiority complex, after a former girlfriend broke up with him for a tall guy (that's what Atsushi seems to believe, anyway). Plus he's all blur, unable to pick up on Risa's feeling although the clues are very clear.

LoveCom may not be the funniest or most original story I've seen, but interesting enough to make want to stay for the rest of the season.

(Many apologies for an image-heavy post.)

Friday, 9 March 2007

Say it already

NY Times' Manohla Dargis has this to say about the upcoming anime movie, Paprika:

Evidence that Japanese animators are reaching for the moon, while most of their American counterparts remain stuck in the kiddie sandbox.
Thanks for saying what's on my mind for ages.

I mean, after so many, many years, American animation has manage to bring us... well (in the nicest way I can think of) nothing much that can't even compete with the average-quality anime. No wonder they are no longer appealing to many: too juvenile and mostly male-oriented. As an observer, I find this situation baffling. Mistakes I see them make often include spending too much on technology (CGI) and trying too hard to be funny, while neglecting the most vital ingredients, i.e. the story, characters, plot and so on. Anime, on the other hand, owes its success to these elements.

Meanwhile, the trailer of Paprika looks incredible, as if director Satoshi Kon took the Matrix idea and made it several hundred times more amazing.

Thursday, 1 March 2007

Naruto new season. Now with Sasuke

(Warning: image-heavy post.)

It's a natural progression. Dragonball went on to become Dragonball Z. Sailor Moon preceded Sailor Moon R. And Saiyuki spawned Saiyuki Reload. Sometimes in anime, a new season means we get to see additional letters or words in the original title.

And Naruto becomes Naruto: Shippūden (Hurricane Chronicles). The new season premiered on 15/2 on TV Tokyo.


Hurricane because, as discovered recently in the manga, Naruto is a wind-element ninja.

The new season opens with a one of pivotal scenes in the Naruto saga. It's more of a preview because it's not supposed to take place until later in the season.

Now's here the quick update: two and a half years has passed since Naruto's former teammate, Uchiha Sasuke severed his tie with the ninja village of Hidden Leaf to become a follower's of Konoha's enemy, Orochimaru. Sasuke is seeking to avenge the death of the members of the Uchiha clan at the hands of his brother, Uchiha Itachi, an Akutsuki member. To become stronger, Sasuke has chosen the darker path: to train under Orochimaru. Naruto meanwhile trained under Jiraiya, a master of Orochimaru's calibre as well as his former teammate.

In a mission to infiltrate Orochimaru's secret underground hideout, Naruto and Sakura ends up in a unexpected reunion with Sasuke.





Chills down my spine, this one. A good way to kick off the new season, since Sasuke has been missing from the series for some time now and many (including myself) have been waiting for his return, which will definitely shakes things up.

Bring on the next episode of Shippūden!
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