Thunder 3: Aliens, the Multiverse and Hiroya Oku

Thunder 3 burst onto the scene in May 2022 as an exciting mash-up of style, where cartoonish characters find themselves transported into a highly detailed parallel world. The manga has gone from strength to strength, selling upwards of half a million copies, though little remains known about its author Yuki Ikeda, which some commentators suspectContinueContinue reading “Thunder 3: Aliens, the Multiverse and Hiroya Oku”

5 Manga With Unique Art Styles

Pioneered by artists such as Osamu Tezuka and Machiko Hasegawa, modern manga has a history dating back almost eighty years. A recognisable style has formed over the decades, with notable techniques both across and within each demographic, but the medium is never short on creativity, with artists continually experimenting and innovating with distinctive methodology. WithContinueContinue reading “5 Manga With Unique Art Styles”

Manga Review: Inuyashiki (Oku Hiroya)

Inuyashiki solidifies my belief that Oku Hiroya is the Roland Emmerich of the manga world. The series is bombastic and action-packed, with many compelling ideas, but like an Emmerich movie, the exciting premise is bogged down by surface-level details, with a plot and characters that could be much more persuasive and captivating than they everContinueContinue reading “Manga Review: Inuyashiki (Oku Hiroya)”

Review: GANTZ:O (2016)

I have a soft spot for Gantz. The manga, for all its flaws and shortcomings, is a fantastic piece of entertainment. This film manages to capture a nugget of that, and while it is objectively lacking in detail and plot for audiences unfamiliar with the source material, it nonetheless presents some semblance of story andContinueContinue reading “Review: GANTZ:O (2016)”