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Hugh Likes Comics: Frieren – Beyond Journey’s End

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Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End Vol. 1
Written by: Kanehito Yamada

Drawn by: Tsukasa Abe

Published by: VIZ Media LLC

The Skinny: Fantasy manga grows up.

Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End is part of a new sub-genre of manga and anime that doesn’t merely adopt Western Fantasy tropes, but expands then into a deep examination of the characters and settings. After defeating The Demon King and restoring peace to the land, four adventurers go their separate ways. Elven mage Frieren goes back to her old life of wandering alone without much thought for her companions. When they meet again fifty years later, she finds that her companions have all aged, while she hasn’t changed at all. After their leader Himmel passes away, she realizes that she hardly knew anything about him, and goes on a journey both to learn more about her companions and herself.
With such a long-lived central character, author Yamada and artist Abe are able to explore the themes in unique and interesting ways. They transform what appears to be a standard heroic fantasy story into a poignant examination of loss, regret, and the passage of time. The creators are able to play with the pacing of the story in interesting ways, having months or even years pass between chapters. The manga is filled with page sequences where months pass like days. Rather than feeling rushed, however, these sections evoke a sense of stillness and calm.
The story also flashes back between the party’s original adventures and the current journey to great effect. Frieren often interacts with people she met in her travels who were children during their quest, and are now elderly. In one particularly interesting chapter, she visits a village where they sealed a demon, knowing that it will soon break free. This is somewhat of a one-off story, but the creators give a lot of insight into the world building and magic system of the setting. The demon was too powerful to defeat outright eighty years ago, but the development of magic has continued apace since he was sealed, in large part as part of an arms race to discover a defense for a particularly dangerous killing spell that the demon developed. Frieren unseals the demon, tells him that his king is dead, and after a short battle, kills him with his own spell. While he was sealed, the world, and the study of magic, had passed him by. His powerful magic became ordinary.
Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End is a melancholiac, thought-provoking, and beautiful examination of how we view the passage of time and our connections to others. It is available in print from your local comics shop or digitally from Comixology. There is also a new anime adaptation available through Crunchyroll!

Hugh Likes Comics: Sand Land

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Sand Land
Written and Drawn by Akira Toriyama
Published by Viz
Read in digital format on Amazon Kindle

The Skinny: Akira Toriyama’s “Mad Max”

With a major adaptation of Akira Toriyama’s short manga Sand Land set to be adapted into a video game this spring, I finally decided to fill a hole in my collection of the great manga artist, and I’m glad I did. This single-volume adventure is a charming delight. Originally published in 2001, the single volume is set in a post-apocalyptic Earth where the remaining survivors live in a desert ruled over by a despotic king with control over the dwindling water supply.
When the elderly Sheriff Rao embarks on a dangerous journey across the desert, he makes a deal with the demons for help, promising them not his soul, but a rare Playstation 6 video game console. Beelzebub, an apparently adolescent prince of the demons agrees to accompany him along with his servant, Thief.
The resulting adventures is a little bit ‘Fist ‘of the North Star,’ a little bit ‘Peewee’s Big Adventure,’ and it oozes Toriyama’s signature humor and charm. From a stolen tank in Toriyama’s signature bulbous design style to a family of bandits dressed as olympic swimmers, this version of the post-apocalypse doesn’t take itself too seriously, while still managing to have a hard-hitting, emotional story at its heart.
While not as long-running or complex as some of his earlier work, Sand Land displays all of the skill and humor that Toriyama is known for but sometimes gets lost amid the big fights and drama of his best-known work. It is a work created by a master given the opportunity to just play without the demands of continuity to previous works. The result is a book that is as joyful as it is dramatic, a satire and critique of hyper-masculine action-zests like Mad Max and Fist of the North Star, and an empathetic post-apocalypse where even the demons aren’t bad guys at heart.
I’m greatly looking forward to the upcoming video game adaptation of this story, coming this spring for PC and Playstation. Even if you don’t have any interest, I recommend picking up this heartwarming story about survival and justice after the end of the world. You can read Sand Land digitally from Viz and other comics retailers, or in print from your Local Comic Shop or wherever you buy manga.