Gekiga
For week three I read a bit of Golgo 13 and Cigarette Girl, two very different styles of manga that somehow fit into the same genre. The first 18 pages of Golgo 13 are minimally colored, but the use of bright reds really emphasizes the intensity of the (somewhat ridiculous) situation at hand. This utilization of a single color really helps to move the reader's eyes around the page as well. I felt this manga, at least the portion that I did read, was much wordier at times than what I'm used to. While somewhat more text-heavy than what I'm used to, Golgo 13 was much more similar stylistically to more modern manga compared to Tezuka's work which we had read previously.
Cigarette Girl is more like slice of life but with adult themes. It's very different from Golgo 13 art style-wise and almost reminded me of Osomatsu-kun. I didn't read as much of it as Golgo but found it to be much more relatable than the latter story-wise and also just more enjoyable in general.
Cigarette Girl is more like slice of life but with adult themes. It's very different from Golgo 13 art style-wise and almost reminded me of Osomatsu-kun. I didn't read as much of it as Golgo but found it to be much more relatable than the latter story-wise and also just more enjoyable in general.
Now that you mention it, "Cigarette Girl" was stylisticly similar to "Osomatsu-kun".
ReplyDeleteI agree though that it is more relatable and easier to consume (word wise) than "Golgo 13".