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Forum - View topicJason Thompson's House of 1000 Manga - Pineapple Army
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prime_pm
Posts: 2369 Location: Your Mother's Bedroom |
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Man, when I looked at the picture on the top right preview of the article, I thought to myself "Ghostbusters?"
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Akcoll99
Posts: 280 |
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I found a copy of the trade for this sitting on a dusty bookshelf in the back corner of a comic book store a couple years ago and snatched it up. I hadn't realized before I found it that Urasawa had been brought over to the U.S. so long ago. It's ashame PA didn't catch on. I agree about its flaws, but I still enjoyed it and would love it if Viz gave it another go now that Urasawa HAS finally broken through to American readers...
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xScar
Posts: 288 |
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Eh! I had no idea this had ever been published in English! Definitely about to go find a copy.
Does anyone happen to know if all the stories in the single issues were collected in the single volume version? Even if it's lackluster, in both presentation (being a few stories out of the whole series) and story in general, it's still extremely interesting to see Urasawa's progression in the manga world. Really hate that there would not be enough sales for a company to put all his works out -- or at least Master Keaton and Billy Bat It really surprises me that no one has got Billy Bat yet, since it could easily be sold to anyone who like Pluto, Monster, or 20CB. Maybe once it finishes up. Master Keaton, especially now that it's started back up, could pull Black Jack-type fans ;S |
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skafreak51
Posts: 212 |
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Oh wow. I'm a huge Urasawa fan, I always looked at the Pineapple Army color pictures in the Urasawa artbook I have, but I never ever knew it got translated.
I'm at Book-Off and other manga-esc stores all the time and have never ever seen it... Time to go on a quest. |
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vashfanatic
Posts: 3495 Location: Back stateside |
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Remember Urasawa didn't write it. That might help. But it's also old and didn't have the staying power of other Urasawa-affiliated projects (like Yawara!; it seems everyone knows Yawara! in Japan). I have a few issues of the singles Viz released for this that I picked up in a give-away box at a nerd's night out. It's definitely weak Urasawa, particularly in the art department. Master Keaton and Yawara!, both of which I partly own in Japanese and wish would be translated into English, are already vast improvements in drawing style. You can really tell in Pineapple Army that he had no professional training and was just imitating someone else's art (which he apparently is really good at, having done Tezuka-style sketches in early concepts of Pluto). |
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Snomaster1
Subscriber
Posts: 2908 |
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This is an interesting manga,but it seems to be a bit flawed. Like the character in the manga,most Vietnam veterans aren't crazed lunatics. Most came home to America and lived peaceful lives. Raising families,things like that. But,it is interesting that there was a Japanese-American character that was the lead in this. I once saw the manga "Cipher" and it did reasonably well and it too was from the eighties.
It's a shame that Urasawa didn't do this on his own. I think it would have done better. |
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Joe Carpenter
Posts: 503 |
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I love Urasawa's art style, it screams "Japanese" without being stereotypical "anime/manga style" you know what I mean?
also, I can't think of Pineapples without thinking of this http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GgYEualAq-8 |
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Adonisus
Posts: 20 |
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Actually, Urasawa was mega popular long before Monster or 20th Century Boys.
Pineapple Army was actually a side project from his main, solo serial: YAWARA!, which was a HUGE seller during its serialization and made Urasawa a superstar. |
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xScar
Posts: 288 |
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Yes, but the popularity discussed in this column is about his popularity in America. While Yawara definitely put him in the spot light in Japan, it's nothing we'll ever see over here in America AnimEigo tried with the anime, but it flopped. Jason talks about Yawara's popularity in Japan:
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