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Review: Dororo Vol. 1 and Black Jack Vol. 1April 30, 2009Review: Dororo Vol. 1 and Black Jack Vol. 1 Osamu Tezuka was one of the most influential figures in manga as a medium. The depth and breadth of his work is apparent even today, as American publishers release more and more of his series, like MW, Apollo’s Song, Black Jack, and Dororo. These last two sagas, Black Jack especially, have been eagerly anticipated for the quality of story-telling and character development that is a hallmark of Tezuka’s work. Today, I have reviews of the first volumes of both Dororo and Black Jack. Let’s see if they live up to their reputation! Black Jack Volume 1 Nobody is born whole… Dororo Volume 1 Black Jack chronicles the travails of an enigmatic surgeon-for-hire who is more good than he pretends to be.
Dororo’s plot may seem a bit outlandish to those unused to manga. A power-hungry lord sells his first-born son to 48 demons in order to become the ultimate ruler of the entire country. The demons make good on their promise, and the lord’s son, Hyakkimaru, is born with no eyes, nose, ears, arms, legs…the list goes on and on. Terrified by this physical representation of the evil deal he made, he sets the child in a wooden cask in the river to Black Jack takes a different approach to story-telling in that the individual chapters aren’t connected by anything more than Black Jack, and his “assistant”, Pinoko The episodic plot allows us to slowly peel back the layers of The art is similar in both series, with big eyes, over-exaggerated expressions, and long skinny figures. Dororo has a bit more of a fairy tale-esque aura to the design of the backgrounds and monsters, which reminds me of the style Tezuka used for Buddha, one of his prior epics that is available in English. I’d consider Black Jack to have a bit more of a modern-magic bent to it, since Black Jack’s operations and treatments are usually performed in situations where the patient has been labeled as terminally ill or inoperable. Tezuka drew on his experience as a doctor for the medical procedures, which are depicted in graphic detail (so I’d keep this one away from the little ones until they can handle the blood and gore). As a side note, the book covers are done so excellently that it could pull in a potential reader just by the sheer originality of its book jacket design. The art style that Tezuka popularized throughout the decades pervades nearly every work we read today and touched every major movement in the manga industry as it developed. Though Osamu Tezuka may not be right for first-time manga readers (it would be akin to handing The Wall to someone who’s never listened to music), it’s definitely a great fit for anyone who’s delved into the world of present-day manga and has been left wanting something more, something meaningful. Tezuka’s themes (some of which are happiness and suffering, prejudice and acceptance, friendship and love, and life and death), are universal. They cross cultural boundaries to touch the hearts and minds of people of every race and creed. If ever there was a true genius of the manga medium, it was Osamu Tezuka. Posted by Sabrina Fritz on April 30, 2009 | Comments (1) Industries: Graphic Novels
May 2, 2009
In response to: Review: Dororo Vol. 1 and Black Jack Vol. 1 SonyaSunny commented: Can i take a one small pic from your site?
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