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Sunday, May 11, 2008

  • Mx0 to end

    Its pretty much comfirmed now. Mx0 would be ending in the upcoming few issues of Jump.

    Godspeed.

    Mx0 has always been one of my favorite manga ever since I first came across it. To hear that its going to end just when its getting into the nice parts isn't nice. After all, Kuzumi has worked long and hard to get to where he is now. I would have wanted to see him all the way to the end, and to see how his relationship with Hiragi turns out. Instead, he got the rug pulled out from under him just when he's starting to get his act together. *D'oh*

    At least Kano is setting things up for a return. With the latest developments in the manga, it is entirely possible that we might see this series surface again, perhaps in another manga serialization. I would certainly hope so. There's still so much more than can be done in the Mx0 world for it to go out like this.



Saturday, May 10, 2008

  • Chocolate Coronet Vs. Melon Pan


     

    KKnM, The Anime House and Nandemoya are proud to launch our
    Chocoloate Coronet VS Melon Pan Campaign from 10th May to 25th May!

    For every $30.00 spent at The Anime House, Nandemoya and KKnM,
    customers will be entitled to one lucky draw coupon which will also
    act as a voting slip.

    We will also have a mini event from 24th May (Sat) - 25th May (Sun)
    to close off our mini canpaign ^_^.

    Lucky Draw winners will be picked on the 25th May (Sun)!

    Here are the prizes for the Lucky Draw:
    1st Prize: Nintendo DS Lite
    2nd Prize: Lucky Star Nendroid Set (Konata and Kagami)
    3rd Prize: 6 Months Subscription to Megami Magazine
    4 x Consolation Prizes: $25 Vouchers from Nandemoya

    From the winning side, we will pick one lucky person and you will
    receive a mystery prize from us ^_^
    ***


    ...Or, in other words, yet another promotional campaign between two  products made popular by two different series of anime, namely Lucky Star and Shakugan no Shana. So feel free to drop by KKnM from now to 25th May to decide who wins. Who knows? You might just be the one to get that DS Lite (Or that Lucky Star Nendroid set. I have my eye on that one)

Friday, May 09, 2008

Saturday, May 03, 2008

  • Bitter Virgin, and on Child Rape

    So recently one of my friends introduced me to this manga series called Bitter Virgin. He gave it a stellar review and recommended me to give it a try. And so I did. After the second chapter, I was hooked.

     

    Plot Synopsis: Suwa Daisuke is the ladies man of his small town high school, and he has his eye on almost every girl, except for one. Aikawa Hinako isn't his type, but when he overhears a deep dark secret of hers, he finds himself thinking of her more and more.

     

    The story was what drew me in. That, and its realistic portrayal of what one would do if one is in the same shoes as the characters in the story. I felt that they were real, that they behaved like a real person would, not your typical cookie cutter character that you can find in most shounen mangas (Bleach and Naruto comes to mind). As the story progressed, I came to feel for them, to laugh with them, to cry with them.

     

    One can only imagine the kind of pain that female lead Aikawa had to go through. Getting raped by your own step-father (not once, but at least twice) is not a fate that I would want to wish on anybody. And this brings up a very good point. Rape cases among young children do in fact happen, more often than anybody would like. Reports on child rape cases might tend to exaggerate the figures to state a point or to get themselves an edge in the Great Game (read: politics), and while other reports would understate them for the very same reasons, I, for one, believe that the stats are in fact understated. Reporting that you got raped isn’t easy. The sense of shame, anguish and pain that that act of violence brings to the victim makes it difficult for the victim to come out to the open. Rape victims are often seen in a bad light by society - spoilt goods, if you would. Take rape victims in strongly Islamic nations, for example.  On June 25, 2006, a Muslim rape victim, Sabia, was ostracized in Bihar, India. The entire village, as a whole, boycotted her and her family. It’s as if they turned into ghosts, non-existent entities that are beneath the notice of society. And it is through no fault of their own that they are forced to face this type of treatment. You just have to see how Satoko in Higurashi no Naku Koro ni lives to understand how it feels to be treated as if you were a ghost by everyone. It hurts, let me tell you. It really hurts. No one would want to experience that kind of pain, which is why I believe that a large number of child rape cases choose to keep it in the dark. I suppose that they would behave as Aikawa did, showing a strong face to society while shouldering the pain inside them. That is, of course, if they are strong enough to pull off such a feat in the first place. Pity those that aren’t.

     

    Ah, this reminds me. Child rapes, in most cases, are usually committed by someone that the victim trusts, or is close to. Aikawa was raped by her step-father, and the same was done to Mayu from Elfen Lied as well. A quick search on the Internet revealed that only 10% of child rape cases are committed by total strangers (this is what I would call pedophiles – stone them!). That they were so betrayed would, without doubt, cause an even bigger wound to the child than it would if the deed was done by someone they don’t know (that is not to say that the anguish is any less if it was by a stranger. That, of course, is wrong.) To use one’s position of trust to so violate an innocent weaker than yourself is downright sick. It completely disgusts me. Its even worse if the person the victim goes to for comfort (if she does in fact seek help) doesn’t believe her, or worse, knows about it, but does nothing or even blames the victim (Mayu’s mother, of course. One can only guess what’s going through her head at that time.)

     

    All these, and how it was portrayed in the story, impressed me a great deal. It is not often that one comes across a manga that delves so deeply into the issue of child rape, and to pull it off like it does is enough to make me take my hat off to the mangaka. Sure, a critical reader would recognize the entire rape story as just the backdrop of what is essentially a romance story between Daisuke and Aikawa, but so what? It sets the story up well enough, all the while reminding us about a terrible truth that takes place in society.

     

    It also touches on the subjects of single mothers and how unfairly they might be treated by society, and on how Hell has no fury like a woman’s wrath, but that is another post, for another day. For now, I’ll stop here, and wait eagerly for the next chapter to be released.

     

     

     


Monday, April 21, 2008

  • International SaiMoe: Aquamarine comes to an end

    After many struggles, toils, and troubles, the Aquamarine part of the ongoing International SaiMoe league has come to an end, with the Flame Hair Blazing Eyed Hunter Shana taking the converted prize of the Aquamarine Necklace. Tometeto, Shana! Guess water and fire can mix sometimes. And so begins the next leg of the competition - the race for the Topaz Necklace. Who shall win it this time?


    Poor Kotomi-chan. Try as she might, her violin failed to break the power of Nagato's guitar solo. Its okay, Kotomi - one loss doesn't mean much, especially against a powerhouse character like Yuki. The fact that you only lost by 30 votes speaks for itself. You did well Kotomi. You did well.

Stifler_leonheart

  • Visit Stifler_leonheart's Xanga Site
    • Name: Stifler
    • Gender: Male
    • Member Since: 8/25/2006

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