By Eiji Otsuka and Housui Yamazaki. Released in Japan as “Kurosagi Shitai Takuhaibin” by Kadokawa Shoten, serialization ongoing in the magazine Young Ace. Released in North America by Dark Horse.
Also known as ‘the one horror series I read’, Kurosagi continues to deliver on the horror, yet also have intriguing plot, characterization, morality, and laughs.
The first two stories, comprising about 2/3 of the book, are stand-alones with no ties to the overarching plot, though the first may introduce a new semi-regular. Someone is going around town resurrecting recently dead corpses, which is only leading to new corpses, as the dead have revenge on their minds. There’s a very intriguing bit here where Karatsu is taken in for questioning regarding one of the murders, and the police essentially try to force a confession out of him even though they’re aware it wasn’t him. Shades of Law and Order-type cop shows.
The actual person behind all this not only has a tortured motive and murky ethics, but an old-fashioned afro, giving the story a nice retro look. (Really, so much of the times and places of this series are carried purely by the artwork and fashion – it’s not just about the corpses here.) In the end, we see him actually manage to save a living person, and the implication is that we may see him again.
Next up (after one of the best splash pages of the entire run, featuring the whole cast sticking their tongues out at us), we find the team in what appears to be Niigata, on the coast of Japan, a popular place for Russian emigres. (Thanks as always to Carl Horn’s expansive liner notes for pointing this out.) They’re supposedly there to help out an old colleague of Sasayama’s, whose marriage to a Russian woman is being held up by her guardian. This being the Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service, this leads to heroin smuggling, Korean boat people, and lots and lots of corpses.
Of note, by the way, this volume may set a record for least appearances of the female cast. Makino comes along with them for the last case (but doesn’t really do much), and Sasaki as always is there to be called and give intel, but it’s definitely a 3-person (and one puppet) volume we have here. We don’t even get the traditional shot of Sasaki’s nipples in a sheer top.
The last story is the only one to deal with the background of one of our heroes. Since we already know about Sasaki, Makino, and Yata’s pasts through previous volumes, and Karatsu’s is clearly meant to be one of the final mysteries, that leaves Numata. Helping a TV show that employs a psychic, they run into Numata’s old teacher, who taught him how to dowse for dead bodies. As the back cover notes, we actually get a rare shot of Numata taking off his sunglasses. (Spoiler: he has normal eyes.)
The last story ends on a downbeat note, with Numata sad and frustrated in the rain. I gotta say, for a series with as much humor as this one (albeit dark and morbid humor), there’s a whole lot of tragedy here. And as always, there’s some nasty gore shots and occasional naked woman shots. In this volume, it’s the same thing, with fanservicey shots of the corpse’s breasts. You get the feeling the artist is doing this on purpose to make people uncomfortable.
Not an amazing volume, just solid and dependable. One of the best horror series coming out these days, and I look forward to the cover design change for Vol. 11.
Thank you as always for your awesome, insightful and great reviews. I find that my thoughts mirror yours with alot of the series I read and definitely check them out once I've read the volume – it also gives me a chance to reminisce about the volume and maybe notice things I didn't before.About this particular volume – Is it just me or has the Spirit thing behind Karatsu become distinctly more feminine? With tinted – lipstick? – lips and 'curled' eyelashes..Before I always felt that 'it' was more asexual with no clear gender – maybe male because of that extra/omake of the past a few volume back.What are your thoughts?