Forum - View topicJason Thompson's House of 1000 Manga - Raika
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Yorozuya
Posts: 332 |
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Well it sounds like fun but I doubt I'll ever get a hold of this manga. Though you have made me feel a little embarrassed as I just realised Naruto is the only ninja manga I've ever read (besides a few weird shojo things).
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Lord Geo
Posts: 2680 Location: North Brunswick, New Jersey |
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The name "Raika" sounds familiar to me, but it's probably just from passing when reading something about Legend of Kamui. An interesting find, though, Jason. It is always kind of funny to see the term "Master Roshi", though, since Roshi means "master"... So it's like calling that person "Master Master". At least Viz's release of Saint Seiya kept it simple by calling Dohko "Roshi", without the master before it.
True, that is amazing refreshing, which is funny since it predates Naruto. That should really say something when the older titles are starting to feel "new" and "different" enough to be fresh once again. |
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Psycho_Despair
Posts: 376 Location: East of Eden |
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I just find it interesting that Raika takes place before Japan was named Japan, which very refreshing because now a days we just get regurgitated shows, and manga of the Unification of Japan and the Three Kingdoms (Chinese History, though).
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vashfanatic
Posts: 3495 Location: Back stateside |
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Yeah, this shows up in Tezuka's Phoenix, too. The Chinese account of Himiko's death says this, as does the Nihon Shoki for other emperors, and yet there is zero archeological evidence for human sacrifice at burials in Japan (whereas there is in very early China). There have probably been papers written on this, but it's always both bothered and intrigued me. The Nihon Shoki can be explained by how the whole book attempts to mimic Chinese history, but Himiko's is much more interesting. Was Himiko's sacrifices an isolated, extreme incident? Was it Chinese propaganda, since by then it was starting to disappear in China? Was it a simple Chinese misunderstanding of the purpose of the haniwa placed at burial mounds? Sorry, that got rambling. This sounds like a fascinating manga, and I love anything that delves into unusual parts of Japanese history (and prehistory). Usually you just get events during the Gempei war, the Sengoku era, a little bit in the Tokugawa, and then the Bakumatsu. There's a whole lot more to Japanese history than just that. |
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Apollo-kun
Posts: 1213 Location: City 7, Macross 7 |
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O_O I owned a used copy of this when I was like ten, from a used book store in the redneck town I used to live in. Think my friend stole it though, along with my good deck of Yu-Gi-Oh cards and some of my other manga volumes that mysteriously turned up at his house later. Point being, I'm happy to know I wasn't the only person to hear about this entertaining work. ^^
Oh yeah, needless to say, once I moved that guy wasn't my friend anymore xD |
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Youkai Warrior
Posts: 505 Location: Sarayashiki |
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Great article as always, Jason. I've never heard of Raika, but it sounds good. Definitely different from much of the manga today, especially ninja-related manga.
@ Apollo-kun
Well I would hope not! Friends shouldn't steal from eachother. Did you get your stuff back? |
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MangaNeko
Posts: 139 |
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I loved this series. I still have my issues. I think Sun Comics did manage to put out a Trade paperback that collected like issue 1 - 8
of Raika. I found the other Sun Comics title about the high school James Bond interesting, cause of the soundtrack the translator put in the comics different scenes. In hindsight I am sure the mangaka used jpop songs, but recognizing the various English tunes chosen was fun. |
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belvadeer
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A shame any and all Narutards will just look at this manga and probably think, "God how lame is that? They're not doing any kind of cool ninjitsu at all!". Well take that Naruto, this is where real ninja were born!
Although the frog summoning thing seems to be equated to early ninja works too. Not giant ones of course, but utilizing them to some degree. |
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Gyt Kaliba
Posts: 712 Location: Arkansas |
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A bit off topic, but I've been meaning to ask - is there like an archive of all the manga that have been reviewed thus far? I'd like to flip through and read on all the stuff I've also seen and read or heard about, but I can't locate a backlog thing like there is for other articles.
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Treetastic
Posts: 164 Location: Canada |
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Interesting! Off the top of my head, I can't think of any manga that take place in the 200s. Apparently this was released in French, though I don't know if it was complete-- five volumes?
Here you go. (It's under "views", for future reference.) animenewsnetwork.com/house-of-1000-manga/ |
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Gyt Kaliba
Posts: 712 Location: Arkansas |
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Thanks! Now I can peruse the older entries at me leisure.
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Apollo-kun
Posts: 1213 Location: City 7, Macross 7 |
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MangaNeko
Posts: 139 |
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My understanding from the artist's website is there are 11 volumes to the series, which may make the French version incomplete. |
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littlegreenwolf
Posts: 4796 Location: Seattle, WA |
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Oh please. Only an idiot will go around assuming any and all people who read and like Naruto are like that. Quit trying to categorize a group of fans as one thing because blanket assumptions are pointless and just show how developed your thought process is. I've been reading Naruto from the get-go and it is far from my first manga, far from my first ninja oriented manga, and I still to this day try and enjoy tons of other manga outside of Naruto - a number of which actually involve ninja. |
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belvadeer
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This coming from someone who used the word Narutard on another topic. Quit trying to lecture me, hypocrite. |
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