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The Strange Tale of Panorama Island

di Suehiro Maruo

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Follows the twisted path of failed novelist Hitomi Hirosuke, who bears an uncanny resemblance to a former classmate, the son of a rich industrialist. Learning of the rich man's sudden passing, Hitomi fakes his own death, digs up and hides the other man's body and then washes himself up starving on a beach near the home of the dead man's family. Stunning artwork by master manga artist Suehiro Maruo deftly illustrates this Japanese pulp classic in fine detail.… (altro)
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I have been looking forward to Suehiro Maruo's The Strange Tale of Panorama Island with great anticipation ever since the license was announced by Last Gasp in 2009. After years of delay, the manga was finally released in English in 2013 as a gorgeous, large-format hardcover. Maruo's The Strange Tale of Panorama Island was originally released in Japan in 2008. The manga is an adaptation of the renowned author Edogawa Ranpo's novella Strange Tale of Panorama Island which was initially serialized between 1926 and 1927. (Coincidentally, the novella was also released in English for the first time in 2013.) After reading Ranpo's Strange Tale of Panorama Island, I couldn't think of a more perfect artist to adapt his work than Maruo. I didn't think it was possible, but I was somehow even more excited for the release of Maruo's The Strange Tale of Panorama Island after reading the original.

As the Taishō Era draws to a close, failed novelist Hirosuke Hitomi finds himself behind in his rent and the prospect of his work being published slim. His latest novel, The Tale of RA, is a utopian fantasy which allows him to dream about what he would do if he had limitless riches. His editor encourages him to write about something closer to his real life instead. Months later Hitomi is confronted with an almost impossible opportunity that could be straight out of his novel. His former classmate Genzaburō Komoda, to whom he bears an uncanny resemblance, has unexpectedly died, leaving behind an immense fortune. Devising an outlandish scheme to take Komoda's place and take control of his wealth, Hitomi plans on devoting all of it to the creation of a hedonistic paradise, Panorama Island. The plan proceeds surprisingly well, but there is still one person who could reveal Hitomi as a fake--Komoda's wife.

I have been an admirer of Maruo's work ever since I first discovered it. At this point, only two other volumes of Maruo's manga have been published in English: Mr. Arashi's Amazing Freak Show and Ultra-Gash Inferno. As I have come to expect, Maruo's illustrations in The Strange Tale of Panorama Island are exquisite. With its sensuality, eroticism, and shades of the macabre and grotesque, Maruo's artwork is ideally suited to Ranpo's story. Even in all of its beauty, The Strange Tale of Panorama Island has an ominous and vaguely disconcerting atmosphere that is extraordinarily effective in setting the mood of the work. Hitomi's paranoia and madness is captured in ink for all to see. And then there's the island itself--Maruo's portrayal is breathtaking with stunning reveals, careful attention to detail, and beautiful design and perspective work. The art in The Strange Tale of Panorama Island is simply marvelous.

Maruo's The Strange Tale of Panorama Island is a superb adaptation and a spectacular work in its own right. The manga is not at all a slavishly executed interpretation. While staying true to Ranpo's original, Maruo allows himself to put his own touches and flourishes on the story. The ending is admittedly abrupt and somewhat disorienting (this was true of the novella as well), but what comes before more than makes up for this weakness. In part, Maruo's The Strange Tale of Panorama Island is about the end of one era and the beginning of the next, the start of a new life after the old has been discarded. Hitomi begins as a penniless author only to become intoxicated with his own ideas as he slips into a life of debauchery and excess. Maruo's vision of his descent is both captivating and unsettling, alluring and abhorrent. In the end, I am absolutely thrilled that The Strange Tale of Panorama Island is finally available in English.

Experiments in Manga ( )
2 vota PhoenixTerran | Aug 9, 2013 |
Ce livre avait de bon atouts de départs : un scénario prometteur, où un artiste prend la place et la fortune d'un millionnaire, ce qui lui permet de réaliser un parc utopique, et un graphisme de haute qualité.

Malheureusement, la réalisation pêche. Les potentialités du scénario ne sont pas développées, conduisant à des personnages sans profondeur. Les illustrations elles tombent vite dans le très racoleur, avec de nombreuses scènes de sexe inutiles à la progression de l'histoire (deux planches suffisent à ce que le lecteur comprenne ce qu'est une orgie, pourquoi en faire tant ?). Du coup, les très nombreuses allusions (*Le sommeil* de Courbet, *Le Jardin des délices* de Bosch) sont reléguées au rang d'éléments secondaires alors qu'elles auraient pu constituer un trame et une atmosphère évoquant la combinaison de plaisirs artistiques aux plaisirs des sens abondamment représentés.

Au final, l'impression d'un scénario gâché et d'opportunités manquées, alors que le programme graphique, avec la ré-interprétation par un Japonais d'œuvres emblématiques de la peinture occidentale, avait de quoi séduire. ( )
1 vota MathieuPerona | Jan 26, 2011 |
Mostra 2 di 2
Une merveille de raffinement et de perversité, un séduisant cauchemar bien dans la manière de Suehiro Maruo, maître incontesté du genre ero guro, à la fois érotique et grotesque.
aggiunto da miniwark | modificaTélérama, Stéphane Jarno (Jun 8, 2010)
 
aggiunto da MathieuPerona | modificaBD Gest, M. Natali (Apr 29, 2010)
 

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Follows the twisted path of failed novelist Hitomi Hirosuke, who bears an uncanny resemblance to a former classmate, the son of a rich industrialist. Learning of the rich man's sudden passing, Hitomi fakes his own death, digs up and hides the other man's body and then washes himself up starving on a beach near the home of the dead man's family. Stunning artwork by master manga artist Suehiro Maruo deftly illustrates this Japanese pulp classic in fine detail.

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