5 Manga With Unique Art Styles

5 thoughts on “5 Manga With Unique Art Styles

    1. BLAME! is my favourite. I love the sombre atmosphere and imposing settings, which Nihei renders beautifully in an exceptionally gritty and nebulous fashion. Abara and Biomega continue in a similar vein, before he adopted a more refined style with Knights of Sidonia. I didn’t get into the latter much, but I know a lot of people are very fond of it. I’m reading through Aposimz now and am enjoying it a lot. I think it’s very effective and unique in its presentation, however Nihei’s early work is far and away his best in my opinion! But all of his series seem to exist in a rather vague shared universe which is interesting. Do you have a favourite?

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      1. I own BLAME, Abara, and Biomega and reread them every few years, but have never really given the post-Biomega stuff a fair shake. That’s why I was asking actually — I adore that earlier stuff and sometimes I feel like I should read Knights of Sidonia or something like that, so I was wondering what your opinion was. I don’t read much manga these days so I tend to just stick to rereading from my old library.

        I don’t know if you’ve read this, but I think maybe his being a little dismissive of those BLAME years has soured me on the new stuff: https://mangabrog.wordpress.com/2016/02/29/a-2016-interview-with-tsutomu-nihei/

        I reread Abara a couple of months ago and the main thing that struck me was how much of its DNA has been absorbed into Chainsaw Man. It’s sort of a failed project in that the second volume feels rushed in a way that you can’t just chalk up to Nihei being weird; the art quality drops around the same time and you can see that clearly SOMETHING happened. But even in that sort of incomplete state it’s SO impressive, especially that first volume, that it must have really stuck with Fujimoto (among other artists) — the fight with the bomb devil, specifically, feels like he’s just straight-forwardly doing a gauna. And it was just nice to think that this semi-aborted two-volume thing kind of went on to contribute to this massive hit, and it’ll sort of live on in that way.

        Anyway, I usually like it when artists try to reinvent their art style mid-career (like Matsumoto Taiyo has done repeatedly, for example), so I probably should pick up one of Nihei’s new post-grunge works, although I’m not sure which one to go for.

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      2. Knights of Sidonia is probably his manga I’m least familiar with, though I did watch half of the anime. My impression of it is that it’s probably one of his most accessible works for a more casual audience. Not that it isn’t challenging or esoteric, but it certainly seemed to bridge the gap toward a more mainstream work for Nihei, notably in the characters. Still, it’s his second highest rated series on both MAL and Manga Updates, outranked only by BLAME, so perhaps there is something special to it. Now I’m curious to give it another go after Aposimz.

        Thanks for linking that interview! I have a vague memory of it — perhaps I read it a long time ago. That’s probably where I got the notion he was going for mass appeal with Sidonia, since he says as much. Interesting that he was even considering changing his pen name. He certainly seems to have distanced himself quite drastically from his early style.

        The bomb devil was one of my favourite arcs in Chainsaw Man, and I know Tatsuki Fujimoto has explicitly stated Abara as an influence, but I didn’t make that connection before. You detailed it eloquently! It’s always fascinating seeing manga overlap and given new life in later series as influences and homages. Recently, I really loved Inio Asano’s creative spin on Doraemon in his manga Dead Dead Demon’s Dededede Destruction.

        Matsumoto is such an exciting innovator. Sometimes I miss the energy and vividness of a series like Ping Pong, but equally his painterly style in more recent manga like Sunny and Cats of the Louvre is just as spellbinding, despite being almost antithetical in ways.

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      3. Yeah, as much as I LOVE the way he drew Sunny and the like, I do sort of wonder what it’d look like now if he tried to go back to doing some version of that cruder, cartoonish style he started out with. He’s only 55, so it feels like he’s got at least one more reinvention left in him…

        I’d be interested to know what you think of Knights of Sidonia if you ever do end up giving it another shot, since it sounds like you and I are in a similar place with Nihei.

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