Pop Culture Gadabout | ||
Saturday, October 17, 2009 ( 10/17/2009 07:57:00 AM ) Bill S. WEEKEND PET PIC: In the menagerie that is OakHaus, the one cat and dog pairing that's developed over the years is 'tween Kyan Pup and Boo, the Arizona adoptee who came to our home last Halloween. Here's a fairly typical moment between the two: THE USUAL NOTE: For more cool pics of companion animals, please check out Modulator's "Friday Ark." # | Thursday, October 15, 2009 ( 10/15/2009 05:58:00 PM ) Bill S. SIGNS, SIGNS, EVERYWHERE ARE SIGNS: So I’m driving home for lunch, and I see this slogan outside one of Safford’s myriad Baptist churches. I ponder the thing the rest of the way home coz the sentence is a stumper. It says, “If truth is optional, error is permissible.” Okay, I think: what the heck is that supposed to mean? I know -- this being a church sign, after all -- that the writer does not believe that truth is optional: there is One Truth and that One Truth resides in our very particular interpretation of our Holy Book. So if truth isn’t optional, than, presumably, error isn’t permissible. But isn’t mistake-making a basic component of human experience? Isn’t trial and error one of the ways that we learn? Am I never to be allowed the chance to fuck up? Not according to the followers of non-optional TRUTH. This, I finally decide, is why I’m a heathen. # | Sunday, October 11, 2009 ( 10/11/2009 10:17:00 PM ) Bill S. This dynamic changes suddenly, though, when Maa’s older brother is killed while pushing his sister from the path of an approaching truck. “I should have died -- not Nii-Chan!” Masaga cries to Yasaka in despair. But “God does some pretty clever things.” Instead of traveling on, Shiro’s spirit takes refuge in his sister’s body, sharing it with her. Why is he cohabiting with his sis? Everybody thinks it's because he has some "unfinished business," but nobody knows exactly what it is. Perhaps his presence is connected to the school's upcoming Culture Fest, an event that the living Shiro was feverishly promoting, though more likely it involves his helping his sister become her own woman. A “Teen-Plus” rated manga series, Ken Saito’s Oh! My Brother (CMX) is like a high school variation on All of Me with male and female souls sharing the same body to comic effect. The idea central to both comedies -- that sometimes it can take two people to make a decent whole -- is good fodder for character comedy, and Saito makes smart use of her material. While some of the school-based tangents seem more than a little distracting (a subplot involving a former rival of Shiro's may pay off in later volumes, but it just seems irritating here), the primary sister/brother interaction is drolly convincing. Both of our leads clearly have stuff they need to work on: if our heroine’s mousiness keeps her from being noticed, our hero’s Type A cockiness has similarly restricted his life possibilities. “Could it be you were living so hard,” Masago thinks near the end of the first volume, “that God made an exception and gave you another chance to let you know there’s still so much to see?” Saito (a woman, I’m told, though the artist’s gender is masked in a four-panel side strip attached to the first volume’s bonus story) draws this fluff in a suitably feathery style: skipping over the grimmer moments to keep her Thorne Smith fantasy airy. At times, you may wish for stronger visual cues as to who is momentarily possessing Maa’s body (in a movie like All of Me, of course, Steve Martin’s performance made that clear before he even spoke), but the dialog quickly lets you know what’s up. DMX's translation (courtesy Alethea and Athena Nibley) pays particular attention to the layered social honorifics of the story's high school setting, and while I have to admit to being initially confused by the number of different names a character can have, in the end it added to the texture of this enjoyable sibling rivalry fantasy. "Even after I died, I possess you, Maa," Shiro crows in one of the duo's inner monologues. "It's hilarious." Maybe not hilarious, but decidedly amusing. Labels: sixty-minute manga # | |
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