Category Archives: reviews

Cats of the Louvre

By Taiyo Matsumoto. Released in Japan as “Louvre no Neko” by Shogakukan, serialized in the magazine Big Comic Original. Released in North America by Viz Media. Translated by Michael Arias.

In the beginning there was Rohan at the Louvre, a one-volume collection published by Musée du Louvre Editions in an effort to publicize the famous museum. It was written by Hirohiko Araki, the author of JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure, and I believe also serialized in Ultra Jump. Then we get Guardians of the Louvre, by the late Jiro Taniguchi, author of The Walking Man (he gets a cameo signing said manga at the end of this volume, which made me tear up.) Both of these were published here by NBM Publishing. And now we have Cats of the Louvre, by Taiuyo Matsumoto, author of Tekkon Kinkreet and Sunny. Each of these volumes, despite all being about the Louvre Museum, have also been books you can pick up and immediately know who drew it. They are all very distinctive artists. And this applies whether we are seeing cats, humans, or the odd cat-human hybrids that Matsumoto decides to use through the story, a choice I was not a big fan of at first but grew to like. Best of all, the plot is terrific.

The cat on the cover is the main protagonist, Snowbebe, a small white kitten who has remained small and a kitten for about six years now. He’s one of many cats that live secretly in the museum, helped out by the night watchmen who know they’re there but don’t say anything. There’s also Cecile, a middle-aged Louvre tour guide who dislikes large crowds and is therefore not at peace with her job. She sees Snowbebe during one of her guided tours, but then he vanishes. Talking about it with the night watchmen, Patrick and Marcel, she is asked – as Marcel has asked everyone for the decades he’s worked there – if she can hear the voices of the paintings. Turns out there’s a very good reason for this question, which ties in with his sister, who also disappeared looking at a painting – but unlike Snowbebe, she did not return. Can the cat really walk through paintings, and if so, which painting is the one Marcel’s sister went into?

This is the basic plot, but I’ve left out all the other cats who also inhabit the Louvre, many of whom have personalities of their own and one of whom is very unhappy with Snowbebe wandering through the museum and paintings when he pleases and getting them in trouble. Usually with a book like this you’d expect to empathize with Snowbebe’s innocent sense of wonder, but after a while you start to see the other cat’s point – it’s looking less like innocence and more like a refusal to grow up (you never age in paintings, which is why Snowbebe is still a kitten). I also liked the minor plotline with Cecile trying to find the correct painting Marcel remembered, and then trying to meet with her old teacher, who is restoring it – we hear that she was on the fast track to be a restorer as well, till her father died and she had to leave school. I do wonder if she might be enticed back to that side of the business, which seems far more her speed.

The plot and characters are very good, but I’d argue the art and mood of the book is the main reason to get it. Matsumoto’s quirky, “indie” art style fits the Louvre well, and there’s many times when I found myself having to go back and read the dialogue as I’d been concentrating too much on the images. This deluxe hardcover edition should be read by anyone who loves manga.

Also, the art opposite the title page has Snowbebe looking just like Kitten Kong from the Goodies, which I loved. Whole lotta cat…

Full Metal Panic!: Trembling Into the Blue

By Shouji Gatou and Shikidouji. Released in Japan by Fujimi Shobo. Released in North America by J-Novel Club. Translated by Elizabeth Ellis.

This third book in the series serves as the climax of the first season of the anime, and thus is quite well-remembered. It takes place mostly on the Tuatha de Danaan, as unfortunately Sousuke inviting Kaname to spend time on a south sea island is thwarted by the plot: terrorists are attacking US Special Forces, supposedly for ecology reasons, but in reality it’s all related (as indeed everything in this series is) to Tessa’s brother, still unseen but controlling things from afar (apparently giving orders while having sex too, in case we didn’t dislike him already) and Gauron, who it turns out- surprise! – is not as dead as first thought. Combine this with some evil moles within Tessa’s own people, and you have the basis for another action movie, which is what FMP does best. Unfortunately, Kaname is upset thinking that Sousuke is only with her out of a sense of duty, and Sousuke is still having trouble dealing with his Very Special AS, so they need to get past mental burdens before the day can be saved.

After briefly appearing to be more of a femme fatale in the second book, Tessa slides into the girl we know and love here, who loves Sousuke but has a sneaking suspicion that ship has sailed, and more importantly is more devoted to her ship and crew. She gets to be extra badass here, helped by Kaname, who finally gets to learn more about what she is and how it’s both valuable and incredibly dangerous. The rest of the crew are mostly just names, with the exception of our designated traitors and designated victims of said traitors. Their identities are fairly obvious as they’re the ones who are constantly moaning and bitching about being in MITHRIL while on this mission, and (unlike Kurz) are easily swayed by money and/or racism. And then there’s Gauron, far more competent than any of them but again seemingly just in this for the lulz rather than any sort of agenda. Fortunately, he’s blown up AND drowned at the end of the book, and I’m sure we’ll never see him again.

There are some funny parts of this book, rest assured. The first fifth or so is hilarious, going from Sousuke’s festival fortress to the way that they have to board the Tuatha de Danaan, which seems designed solely to be animated. And I won’t even get into Kaname and Tessa both singing Get Up (I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine. Which I’m fairly certain was NOT in the anime. But once the terrorists arrive, the mood quickly turns serious. You’re especially reminded that neither Kaname nor Sousuke are quite what the other one thinks of them: Kaname is beset with self-doubt and hesitation, belying the idea that she’s always the confident “hits him all the time” tsundere. And Sousuke screws up a LOT in this book, to the point where Kurz punches him in the face for making Kaname cry. He’s certainly not the stoic superman Kaname thinks he is. They’re made for each other, honestly.

All in all, an excellent addition to the series, and fans of the anime will want to read this to see what else was left out besides James Brown. Next time we get the series’ first two-parter. Oh yes, and thank you, Elizabeth Ellis, for keeping the iconic “everything is gonna happy” from Kaname’s “I’m good at English but not great” message to the crew.

The Way of the Househusband, Vol. 1

By Kousuke Oono. Released in Japan as “Gokushufudou” by Shinchosha, serialization ongoing in the magazine Comic Kurage Bunch. Released in North America by Viz Media. Translated by Sheldon Drzka. Adapted by Jennifer LeBlanc.

Sometimes, it has to be said, an author comes up with a premise that is so magical that you are tempted to say that it writes itself. This is never a good thing to say, especially to the person writing it, but let’s face it: the premise of this manga, which is that a yakuza thug is trying his hardest to go straight and become a househusband, is magical. You should read it for that alone. Fortunately, the execution is also very good, showing off a minimal cast and going in several directions that I wasn’t expecting. I have to admit, I suspected that the gag would be how good the husband is at typical housewife things, but no. He’s really good cooking with knives (a holdober from his former job), but is otherwise trying to learn on the job, so to speak, and we see him fail several times. There’s also the matter of his face. Let’s face it, he has a face that yearns to stare someone down and yell “Huuuuh?!” menacingly.

At some point in the past, our hero met his wife, fell in love, and decided to give up his unlawful career to be a homemaker while she became the breadwinner. In general the series falls into three different scenarios: one where he’s trying to do a housewife thing, and we are amused at the results and at the faces he makes; another where he’s interacting with his wife, who can seemingly beat him up (we see her strongarm him through a window when he overreacts to buying her a birthday gift she had already by cutting off his pinky) and loves PreCure; and interacting with an old member of his gang, who looks up to him and wants to get him back into the old yakuza (mostly, from what I can tell, so that said guy can be protected, as he’s a bit of a wannabe schlub). Through it all, our hero makes it clear: being a househusband is what he does now. And he’s going all in.

Again, the author knows his strength, and it’s in drawing that “Huuuuuuh?” face that our hero wears seemingly all the time. He may no longer be “the Immortal Dragon”, but his face seems to be stuck that way, causing lots of misunderstandings. Sometimes this causes problems for his more down-to-Earth wife, who has to explain to the store clerk that the “white powder” he wants is flour. At one point she tries to do something about his image by dressing him in less stereotypical clothing, which leads to a series of hilarious fashion disasters. It’s also the best chapter for showing off their marriage, as we see them fighting but also trying to accommodate each other. They make a pretty great couple. Oh yes, they also have a cat and a Roomba, and the two combined may make the funniest chapter in the book, at least for pet owners.

There’s not much plot development here beyond the basic premise, but why would you want it? I hope at some point we see a flashback as to how our couple met and fell in love. But other than that, the main reason to get this is that it’s funny. Recommended.