Samurai Champloo, Vol. 1
By Leroy Douresseaux
July 3, 2006 - 13:47
Tokyopop
Writer(s): Masaru Gotsubo
ISBN: 1-59182-282-3
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TOKYOPOP recently published a two-volume manga series adapted from the popular Cartoon Network anime "Samurai Champloo" (original title: "Shimoigusa Champloos"). Written and drawn by manga-ka, Masaru Gotsubo, Samurai Champloo is meant to be a samurai tale dressed in traditional trappings, but executed with a hip hop flair. Its sensibilities lean towards being an action comedy with strong action violence and character-based comedy. Although the setting is rural, the tale does have an urban flair, and fight fans will find swordplay galore.
Gotsubo is a skilled storyteller with an excellent sense of page layout and panel design when it comes to creating narrative momentum. A skilled draftsman, he does seem to lean on super-deformed at inappropriate points in the story. However, his art is in total service of plot, character, and setting. It’s pretty and slick, but none of it is surface and shallow.
Although listed as a teen title (“13+”), Samurai Champloo has a fair amount of violence that would earn MPAA “R” rating were this a film.
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