Japan 2007: The Osamu Tezuka Manga Museum & Takarazuka

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Hi there, and welcome back to the ongoing chronicles of my 2007 Trip to Japan! You can check out previous entries by clicking “Japan” under the categories tab to the right.

This time out we’re heading to The Osamu Tezuka Museum in Takarazuka, Japan, just outside of Osaka. Although the man needs no introduction, I’m gonna do one anyway: Osamu Tezuka is the God of Manga, one of the originators of the medium and undeniably a pioneer. His numerous creations include Tetsuwan Atom, known to the west as Astro Boy, Kimba The White Lion, Phoenix, Black Jack, Princess Knight, and many more. In fact, the full range of his creativity is on display in the museum, and the whole thing is a testament to his amazing work and career. The Tezuka Museum was definitely one of the highlights of my 2007 trip, and I highly recommend it to anyone visiting the country as an essential stop.

CONTINUE READING AFTER THE CUT:

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Link all aquaintances, now be forgot.

I was just cleaning out my feed-reader again, and I came across more links and stories of note. I’ve tried to add a little more in the way of commentary this time out. Hope you enjoy!

[WEBCOMICS]

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There’s an awesome artist named Kate Beaton that I just found out about 15 minutes ago, which is the exact length of time it took me to read all of her fantastic comics about Christmas in Cape Breton (that’s in Canada, on the East Coast). I have family on the east coast and this is exactly correct and hilarious. I actually thought that her drawing of her cousin, John MacMillan, was really kind of cute until I realised my second cousins are the MacMillans, most likely of Cape Breton, and we’re probably related. Anyway, it turns out that she’s got a whole awesome website of OTHER comics as well, http://katebeaton.com, and I’m going to go read all of those next. {Link: Rich}

[THE TOP MANGA STORIES OF 2007]

1. Over at Precocious Curmudgeon, David Welsh looks at the top manga-related stories of 2007. It’s a good list, and it’s made me want to post about it and give it a little more space than this format will provide. Look for a post about David’s post shortly…

2. Meanwhile, Icarus Publishing’s Simon Jones feels that the biggest manga story of 2007 was instead the debut of Aurora Publishing, the American wing of an established Japanese publisher of women’s comics, who has decided to forego the licensing game and publish directly in Japan. Without a doubt this was a pretty big deal, but the biggest story of the year? There have always been companies who have expanded into foreign markets directly, or by partnering with other businesses in a mutually beneficial fashion, or just by buying out someone in the market you want to crack. There are a number of successful business models for publishing, and while I think it’s interesting that Aurora has made a go of it on their own here in North America, I don’t think that’s going to be the right fit for every publisher. The number of domestic, New York book publishers that 4 and 5 years on STILL can’t figure out how the Direct Market for comic shops works is staggering, which means (to me) that Japanese publishers are going to have an even tougher go from half-a-world and 13 hours away.

[BEST OF 2007]

1. One of the many fights I picked this year was over Chris Ware’s guest-edited Best American Comics 2007, a collection of Ware’s favourite works with a decidedly specific focus. Apparently that focus sat… generally quite poorly… with the mom of comics journalist Laura Hudson, and the results can be found at her blog Myriad Issues:

Mom: “I can’t read this. This is awful. First of all, the panels are so busy. They’re jammed with lines and clutter, and it makes you want to get out of the panels as fast as you can. He has all these hash marks and no negative space. This guy just–he has this compulsion to fill everything. The only thing that has any space is the balloons… It’s too busy. And disconnected and rambling. It shouldn’t be published.” – Laura Hudson’s Mom on Jeffrey Brown’s Little Things

It’s worth noting that one of Brown’s many 2007 releases, Cat Getting Out Of A Paper Bag released by Chronicle Books, sold fantastically well and merited a second printing. I could never see that work getting picked for the Best American anthology though. I’m fantastically interested in the growing divide between comics ‘aficionados’ and newcomers, what’s easier and more interesting to read for someone without a dedicated interest in the medium. Comics fans dismissed Fun Home on release (and for quite a while afterwards) but it still made Time Magazine’s book of the year…

2. Man-oh-man. My personal bugbear seems to be bad best-of lists, but Ron Cox’s “In year of comics mediocrity, a shining dozen” takes the cake for piece of crap. No matter which respected comics critic you talk to or what’s on their best-of list, the one thing you’ll find is that none of them thought it was a particularly mediocre year. Maybe that’s because Ron’s dirty dozen includes 10 books from the front of the Previews catalog and two licensed books, indicating exactly where Ron’s attentions lie and why he might be finding so much of what’s released so excessively up… and down.

3. Back at Precocious Curmudgeon, David Welsh picks Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms as his favourite graphic novel of 2007. Created by Fumiyo Kouno and published by Last Gasp, the book technically came out in the waning months of 2006 but both David and frequent commenter Huff feel like the book deserved a lot more attention than it got. David does a good job of tracking down conversation about the book, but it really is an excellent graphic novel and I feel like a heel for forgetting it from my own Best of 2006 list, so I’ll be including it on my best of 2007 list. Because. Now:

[GO READ THIS:]

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Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms
By Fumiyo Kouno
$9.99, 104 pages, Published by Last Gasp
9780867196658

Available everywhere.

[INTERNET PRIVACY]

Noted fantasy author Guy Gavriel Kay recently gave an interview during which he discussed the downside to information availability online, the complete lack of privacy that an author can experience.

Kay: “We are, in other words, always “on” now, at least potentially, always in a wider public than might appear to be the case, and it compels adjustments, and some regret.”

I know that I can’t have a conversation with more-or-less anyone in the context of comics and the industry without it being prefaced with some variation of “Now, this isn’t for print, but…” though I am at least getting the meat of the point still. Most likely because I’ve got a track record for not spilling people’s secrets all over the net (though I have SO MANY SECRETS). But yeah, the biggest lesson I learned in 2007 came at me twice, once from Calvin Reid and once from Darwyn Cooke, and it was essentially “People are listening to what you say, so make sure you’re right and make sure you want people talking about it.” And I learned my lesson. Do I have any sympathy for the foot-in-mouth disease of noted comics assholes like Chuck Dixon or Mike S. Miller? No, hang’em high as far as I’m concerned. But at least I’m running a tighter ship, and their unfortunate series of boners (and Kay’s own regrets) should be all the warning anyone needs about privacy in the digital age…

[FREE COMIC BOOK DAY]

Johanna Draper-Carlson has new news that long time FCBD-contributors Keenspot (and Co.) have been rejected for FCBD 2008. In an interview with Keenspot/Blatent Comics owner Chris Crosby, he reveals that his participation has been denied by “The FCBD Comittee”. Aside from the very obvious notion that the books should go out and the market should decide their viability (you know, like CAPITALISM!?), who the fuck is the FCBD Comittee? Seriously, who are these people making these decisions? Is it Diamond employees who’ve given themselves a neat new name and an arm’s-length for criticism? is it retailers? Other publishers? Why is it every time I hear about Free Comic Book Day something shady is happening/has happened/is going to happen, and no one is allowed to know why?

If this is truly the medium’s new holiday, then why is so much of it decided behind closed doors, without any input or participation from actual people involved in the industry? Johanna, I hope you can get someone from the organisation on record about this.

[FREE COMICS EVERY DAY: SCANLATIONS]

The guys over at SAME HAT! SAME HAT! bring us another awesome scanlation (a Japanese comic that has been unofficially translated into English by fans) by Erotic-Grotesque author Shintaro Kago. They’re up to 5 or 6 works online right now, and it’s truly wonderful and complex comics work as obsessed with formalist exploration as it is with dirty fucking. You can find a link to all of the author’s previous works on their website.

[SUPERHERO DECADENCE]

Videogame website Kotaku, a division of Gawker Media, announced their Best Games of The Year for 2007, the first time that the website had held the awards. They also announced their worst games of the year, with Marvel Comics licensed properties taking home two awards. It looks like “Fantastic Four: Rise Of The Silver Surfer” was as good a game as it was a movie, and the kiddified “Spider-Man: Friend Or Foe”… well, nothing clever here folks, it just sucked. You’d think a licensing company like Marvel might pay closer attention to the quality of those licenses…? Although it’s not like they’ve been paying much attention to the quality of their comics…! ZING!

[FRIENDS OF MINE]

Just wanted to take a sec to give virtual respect-knuckles to my buddy illustrator Dom Bugatto, who got a pretty sweet gig a few weeks back doing a music-related comic for EMI Music that appeared in Billboard Magazine. Apparently the art director came in and said they wanted something “graphic novel,” which is pretty cool and strangely gratifying to hear. I think Dom did a great job on it too, make sure to leave him a comment letting him know whatcha think.

That’s it for now! Thanks for reading.

– Christopher

A Yaoi Primer For Gay Dudes

xtra-yaoi.jpgIf you head over to Xtra.ca, the website of Canada’s twice-monthly free gay newspaper, you can see my second article for the paper, a primer on Yaoi manga from a gay perspective. It’s actually based on a blog post I made here from 2 and a half years ago, which in and of itself was adapted from an article I wrote for a U.S. based gay newspaper, but which never appeared in print because they had weird rights issues. Anyway.

What struck me when rewriting it (and I think it only shares maybe 1 or 2 paragraphs with the original) was how much the yaoi segment of the manga market has changed in just a few years. Where once upon a time there was only Be Beautiful, DMP, and those guys that did Skyscrapers of Oz, there are now so many different publishers and imprints and sub-imprints producing more than 20 volumes a month! What was once an emerging category is now full-blown, and it was a real treat writing an introduction to the genre/phenomena for a gay male audience.

Even better? The story ended up as the cover-feature of the print version of the magazine! My name, finally in lights. My friend Eric Kim, illustrator of Love as a Foreign Language for Oni Press (amongst other comics work) was comissioned to do the cover illustration, and you can see it up on the right there. He did a great job (thanks Eric!) and the paper really pops in the newspaper boxes. You can click on the image to see a larger version.
So, yeah. I’m a paid journalist now, which means I’m Completely Entitled! I get _paid_ for these opinions of mine, which makes me fabulous and insufferable! Bwahahaha!

Love,

– Christopher

The Video Game Review Thing

I’m sure no one is coming here for my opinion on the Video Games Industry, but there’s a little bit of a hubub that went on over the last week or two at Penny Arcade. Basically, one of the proprietors of that fine site said that video game review sites were corrupt, slaves to the almighty videogame ad dollar.

Part One: http://www.penny-arcade.com/2007/11/14 – Second Post
Part Two: http://www.penny-arcade.com/2007/11/26 – Second Post
Part Three: http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2007/11/28
Part Four: http://www.penny-arcade.com/2007/11/28
Part Five: http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2007/11/29
Part Six: http://www.penny-arcade.com/2007/11/30

Also, video game reviewers are in themselves broken, terrible gamers because they play games the wrong way, to complete and rate them, and not to enjoy them.

Now I’m not saying I agree with the Penny Arcade fellas or anything, but I got to play the game that kicked off the whole to-do, Assassin’s Creed. All I did for 30 minutes was run around an giant, immaculately-rendered version of Jerusalem in the middle ages, stabbing people to death. It was beautiful and satisfying and complex, and man, I sure did like killing people.

So, yeah. The Penny Arcade guys are totally right. But the point is, it’s nice to know that reviewing is corrupt in every industry! I just wish there was more money in comics to justify the kow-towing to Marvel and DC.

– Christopher

P.S.: The Penny Arcade guys are raising money again for Children’s Hospitals across North America. Check out ChildsPlayCharity.org.

The Copyright Debate: Since When Do You Know Best?

Due to unforgivable oversight, I hadn’t linked Christopher Bird’s website MightyGodKing in the side-bar here… Mr. Bird just showed up in the store here (he’s local) and I recognized my oversight immediately. Anyhow, Chris and I got to talking about the current state of the comics industry and his most recent blog post. I don’t want to misrepresent Mr. Bird’s position so I’ll only talk about my own: I may be a loud-mouthed jerk with a blog, but I know I don’t know better than the creators of my comics when it comes to how those comics are distributed.

I really don’t understand the entitlement of a fan/torrent distributor/comics scanner to say that their desires supercede those of the people who create the work that we’re scanning, distributing, and/or possibly enjoying? I appreciate that Marvel is a terrible corporate and comics citizen, that their online initiative is naive and their promotional interviews are content-free and full of double-speak; it’s all a terrible situation but so what? That doesn’t change the fact that they’re the ones who say what goes with Spider-Man at the end of the day. My frustration extends as far as the end of my nose… and my fingertips as far as the blog is concerned… but no farther than that. Just because Marvel’s comics have a shitty interface or an unwanted run of Gambit comics doesn’t validate my pirating their stuff, it doesn’t excuse or justify it or give me any moral or ethical high-ground. If I’m stealing their IP then I’m a thief, and I either make my peace with that or I don’t, and stop stealing.

Which isn’t to say I’m not a thief, a criminal. We all are, in different ways. Jaywalking, taking a free refill when you’re not supposed to, parking illegally for 5 minutes because “you’re just running in and out”. Whatever, we all break the law every day. The difference is the rhetoric surrounding these infractions and the ones against creators, both ‘real’ and ‘legal’, of our favourite entertainments. In the latter case, it’s a bunch of people screaming very loudly that information wants to be free (or variants thereof) and that the market will sort itself out as long as they get to do whatever they want. In the former case, there is no rhetoric because everyone knows they’re doing something wrong, they’re just taking their chances and maybe donating a few extra dollars to The United Way at Christmas so they feel like a good person.

No matter how egregious, wrong-headed, or flat-out stupid the online policies and initiatives of the publishers of our favourite comics, at the end of the day that’s their business, and they’ll fail or succeed on their merits. Making, hosting, or distributing material that’s illegal? I just don’t have any sympathy for folks getting shut down for that, no matter how good their intentions are.
On the other hand, a work that’s transformative? That parodies, significantly alters, or illuminates an existing work? Excerpts for review? Educational purposes?  Making fun of shit on your blog? Go for it! I’m right there with you! Which is why I wanted to link to Christopher Bird’s MightyGodKing in the first place, because he does superhero comics parodies better and on a more consistent basis than anyone, and he makes me laugh… I just can’t say that I agree with his positions all the time.
– Chris

Comics Event: The Word On The Street, September 30th

Thanks to my friend, comics creator Eric Kim, I’ve just been provided with some photos of this fall’s The Word On The Street, the outdoor literary festival in downtown Toronto that attracts hundreds of thousands of attendees. This year was particularly notable for having a full day’s compliment of comics and graphic novel programming. I’d like to thank Eric Kim for providing us with some photographic evidence of the event, and I encourage you to all check out his website at http://www.inkskratch.com/!

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I was the co-host of the graphic novel programming for the day.

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Scott Chantler (Northwest Passage), Zach Worton, and Jeff Lemire (Essex County) on the Great Canadian Graphic Novels panel.

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The audience sits with rapt attention.

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Following the panel, Scott Chantler signs copies of Northwest Passage for fans.

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The lovely ladies of the graphic novel sales table.

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Cartoonists getting the most out of the green room. It’s (from l to r) Jim Zubkavich (Makeshift Miracle), Derek Haliday (who really oughtta have been working, I think!), Tyrone McCarthy (Courduroy High), Ryan North (Dinosaur Comics), and Kean Soo (Jellaby).

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Look who the boys ran into in the green room! It’s Canadian Environmental Legend David Suzuki, and a flustered Eric Kim!

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Meanwhile, back at the street festival the Scholastic booth was busy the whole day long…

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On stage for the “promoting yourself using the internet” panel it’s Ryan North, Nadine Lessio (designer of comics212.net amongst other spots), John Martz (Drawn.ca), and Jim Zubkavich. Everyone looks a little incredulous at something Ryan North is saying.

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Chip Zdarsky and Jim Zubkavich have a chat after a very long day.

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The audience was pretty impressive the whole-day through, and the feedback was generally very positive. Here’s hoping to many more successful WOTS events!

– Christopher
(All photos Copyright Eric Kim, except for the one with him in it, I’m not sure who took that one.)

Linkblogging: Dumbledore is a homosexual.

+ Let’s see what joys the internet can provide for us today, shall we?

“Fan Fiction is an Internet site where fans can speculate, converse and write on books, movies, shows, etc.
“One branch of the site is dedicated to Harry Potter, and explicit scenes with Dumbledore already appear there.”
– Christian Broadcasting Network News

Thanks to Mike for the link, we find that J.K. Rowling outted Dumbledore in a reading last week and that this move will likely have Christians more upset. As usual, they’ve made sure to get their facts straight before rushing to the internet. Oh, Christians, you’re the worst part about Christianity.

+ Meanwhile, the comics journalism debate was ended this week way before I threw Beaudelaire at it, by Tom Spurgeon. A rumour reverberated throughout the industry about long-running indy comics show APE, The Alternative Press Expo, moving from it’s “first show of the year” placement to pretty-close to the last show of the year in November. What would this mean? Why would they do this? Why didn’t anyone pick up the phone and actually just call and find out what was going on? Congrats to Tom Spurgeon who actually put the effort in to find out the how and why instead of just the ‘what’, in this interview with David Glanzer from Comic Con International (the folks behind APE as well as well as the big show in San Diego). If the blogosphere had put as much effort into actually doing comics journalism in the past few weeks as they’ve put into talking about why no one does comics journalism, the question itself would cease to be.

decarlo1.jpg+ At MisterKitty.org, Dave uncovered a ‘plot’ by Archie to try and whitewash the actual creators out of their creative history. Archie comics re-uses stories from throughout their publishing history all the time, making small updates to the art or dialogue to try and make them more contemporary for today’s youth (although how they get away with those fashions is beyond me… I guess with the electro revival a few years back all their 80s reprints would’ve been cutting edge for a little while there).

Anyhow, one of the more recent reprints does a lot more than alter a pop-culture reference like “Burt Bobain” to “Bernard Bay” to make it relevant, it changes a breaking-the-fourth-wall moment with Betty acknowledging top-notch artist Dan DeCarlo as the creator of the story she’s in, to a general “The Archie Comics Staff”. I think that I can take it for granted that you, my audience, find this as gross as I do, but let’s talk about the reason why. Dan DeCarlo created the characters/properties of Sabrina, The Teenage Witch and Josie and the Pussycats, and aside from not acknowledging DeCarlo with any finanicial consideration considering the other-media successes of both properties, Archie Comics has steadfastly maintained that DeCarlo was just the artist, and that an employee of the company (and not a freelancer) really came up with the ideas when all evidence points at that as being a load of bull.

Poor guy got fucked over by a major corporation even WITHOUT signing a contract that effectively says “I didn’t create this thing I’m creating, AOL/Time-Warner did, or possibly Stu Levy.” Wait until they erase this generation’s names off of their own work in ten or fifteen years…

Anyway, if there’s a bright-side to all of this, it’s that when they re-lettered Betty’s word balloon they did it in what looks to be a computer-generated ‘lettering’ font without changing any of the other lovely hand-lettering, so the whole thing has the air of a creepy, computerized “Mis-terrr Ann-derrr-son…” voiceover. Maybe today’s young Betty & Veronica readers will see through Archie Comics’ attempts at erasing the human hands that built their empire? One can hope, until then, we can all linkblog the hell out of it.

– Christopher

The Viking Book of Aphorisms

“I am unable to understand how a man of honor could take a newspaper in his hands without a shudder of disgust.” – BAUDELAIRE

“If one wishes to know the real power of the press, one should pay attention, not to what it says, but to the way in which it is listened to. There are times when its very heat is a symptom of weakness and prophesies its end. Its clamors and its fears often speak in the same voice. It only cries so loud because its audience is becoming deaf.” – TOCQUEVILLE

“My business is to teach my aspirations to confirm themselves to fact, not to try and make facts harmonize with my aspirations.” – T. H. HUXLEY

– Christopher, from The Viking Book of Aphorisms, by W. H. Auden and Louis Kronenberger, Viking Press, 1962.

Follow-up to yesterday’s post about that terrible piece of writing.

I’ve been invited to dismiss, point by point, the… let’s be kind and say “unsupported” notions in Heidi MacDonald’s essay yesterday. It’s quite tempting to do so, but to what end? You don’t get to write something like that and then play the “I was just trying to encourage debate!” card. Quite honestly, I don’t find that the arguments that Heidi has set forth are worth debating, or really, that they’re arguments at all. Further, I feel like even engaging it gives it an unwarranted weight, and I’m sorry for two posts on the subjects in as many days.

Essentialy, I feel like this commenter at The Beat got it:

“The vagueness of Heidi’s argument (more like a collection of complaints) demonstrates the lack of intellectual rigor and attention to detail that so much comics “criticism” trades upon – particularly, but unfortunately not only, in an online forum such as this one. Only through generalizing conflations such as those employed by Heidi can one reduce an entire art form to polarizing binary categories, which then sinks the whole discourse to the dumb level of attacking and defending.

“Sweeping, provocative opinions need to be supported by analysis of detail in order to avoid coming off as mere gut reaction or the whims of taste.”

– Stephen Hirsch
http://pwbeat.publishersweekly.com/blog/2007/10/12/can-anyone-here-tell-a-story/#comment-458874

I can’t see saying much else about the situation as it currently stands. I just don’t think there’s anything worthwhile there, despite, as Tom mentioned, the ‘broad emotional appeal’ of the piece. It sounds a lot like my cartoonist friends bitching after a few pints at the bar, and I tend to hold that to a slightly different intellectual standard than criticism or debate. Usually I just order them another drink, secure in the knowledge that they’ll feel better in the morning.

– Christopher