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Jason Thompson's House of 1000 Manga - Spider-man: The Manga


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vapwaazu



Joined: 23 Jul 2008
Posts: 115
Location: Sydney, Australia
PostPosted: Wed Aug 18, 2010 11:29 pm Reply with quote
I still need to get the first volume of this Sad . I bought most of the reprint from Book Off a few years ago. It was soooooo strange, I just remember the weird scenes like, what appears to be a total drug freak out and when like 50 students on a stair case fall on top of each other.
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Anime World Order



Joined: 05 May 2006
Posts: 389
Location: Florida
PostPosted: Wed Aug 18, 2010 11:40 pm Reply with quote
I also have most of the Japanese editions of this manga, though since I can't read any Japanese I can mostly just look at them in somewhat befuddled amazement. Still, now that I know there are 31 chapters that were released in English, I now have new marching orders handed down from up on high:

GET ME PICTURES OF SPIDER-MAN!
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YoSoyJaponesa



Joined: 11 Apr 2010
Posts: 65
Location: Behind my desk, doodling...
PostPosted: Wed Aug 18, 2010 11:47 pm Reply with quote
I found a copy of Vol. 4 in Japanese. I like the realistic art style, but it's definitely not the Spider-Man I'm accustomed to...

Doesn't mean it's not pretty cool though...
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Zach



Joined: 15 Aug 2010
Posts: 16
Location: Seattle, WA.
PostPosted: Wed Aug 18, 2010 11:53 pm Reply with quote
I just checked out Ebay to see how easy this would be to pick up, and it seems pretty easy to find bundles of the individual issues Marvel published.

I remember checking out some of the Marvel issues of this back when it first came out and being befuddled by them at the time. What I find most strange is Marvel hasn't so much made a peep about possibly publishing U.S. editions of the Japanese digests in the U.S. The audience that picked up Bat-Manga! would probably pick them up at least as a curiosity item.

Speaking of Batman, he's had a much more expansive transition into manga form a few times. Other than the aforementioned Bat-Manga!, Batman was adapted for the Japanese market by Kia Asamiya in Batman: Child of Dreams, by Katsuhiro Otomo for a short story in the Batman Black and White anthology book, and the less than successful Batman: Death Mask by Yoshinori Natsume.
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GATSU



Joined: 03 Jan 2002
Posts: 15333
PostPosted: Thu Aug 19, 2010 2:18 am Reply with quote
Quote:
Twice he fights an evil impostor pretending to be Spider-Man.


Is that where they got that shitty clone arc in the American series? Laughing

Quote:
Some of them were skipped for content reasons, such as the one when Yu discovers masturbation. Seriously.


But this is fine? Rolling Eyes
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Moomintroll



Joined: 08 Oct 2007
Posts: 1600
Location: Nottingham (UK)
PostPosted: Thu Aug 19, 2010 4:39 am Reply with quote
There's also Junko Mizuno's take on Spider Man from Marvel's Strange Tales anthology:

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Vent



Joined: 22 Aug 2009
Posts: 318
PostPosted: Thu Aug 19, 2010 6:06 am Reply with quote
GATSU wrote:
Quote:
Twice he fights an evil impostor pretending to be Spider-Man.


Is that where they got that shitty clone arc in the American series? Laughing


No, "guy pretends to be Spider-Man" is a pretty traditional storyline that's been around since close to the beginning of the character's appearance.
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Nephtis



Joined: 21 Jul 2005
Posts: 138
Location: Australia
PostPosted: Thu Aug 19, 2010 6:38 am Reply with quote
Quote:
"I was born in the Australian wilderness. I always ran around with the kangaroos! But later in life, I came to realize I had a special ability…the power to jump higher than kangaroos!"


Uh-huh. As an Australian, I do very much enjoy things like this, good times. Laughing

I wonder if his legs have that crazy kicking power as well.

I'm not much of a manga/comic fan but this was a very...unique series that I otherwise would probably have never seen. Great article.
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prime_pm



Joined: 06 Feb 2004
Posts: 2338
Location: Your Mother's Bedroom
PostPosted: Thu Aug 19, 2010 8:40 am Reply with quote
God, and I thought Tobey Maguire was overly emo in 3.

I think what qualifies as the "most out there" Spiderman adaptation, however, would be the Turkish film 3 Dev Adam. In this one, the evil Spiderman and his Spider Gang causes havoc around Istanbul (not Constantinople). There are scenes where he feeds a man's eyeball to a hamster, shoots a gun, multiplies himself (talk about clones), and shaves a woman's face off with a boat propeller. He even breaks into some unknown woman's house for no reason whatsoever and strangles her in a bathtub with a telephone cord.

Coming to save the day? Captain America, his girlfriend Julia, and Mexico's El Santo.

Take a moment to process all this.
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Fronzel



Joined: 11 Sep 2003
Posts: 1906
PostPosted: Thu Aug 19, 2010 8:51 am Reply with quote
Quote:
This Spider-Man is an antihero, but not a "cool" antihero like Rorschach or the Punisher, who kills and hurts people because he's such a badass, because he's had a hard life, etcetera.

Alan Moore is angry; Rorshach isn't a cool guy, eh eats cold beans he stole from a friend and doesn't bathe for anything.

Quote:
In one scene, Ikegami copies hideous faces from Hieronymus Bosch's painting Chris Carrying the Cross

That Chris is quite a fellow.
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jgreen



Joined: 14 Mar 2005
Posts: 1325
Location: St. Louis, MO
PostPosted: Thu Aug 19, 2010 9:42 am Reply with quote
Actually, there was a Marvel supervillain named the Kangaroo that pre-dates the Ikegami one: http://marvel.com/universe/Kangaroo_(Frank_Oliver)

I bought the Marvel US edition of Spider-Man: The Manga and remember it being terrible, but so completely bonkers that I just had to keep buying it. Kind of amazing that the first issue of this sold almost 23,000 copies considering how weird it was.
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Lord Geo



Joined: 18 Sep 2005
Posts: 2560
Location: North Brunswick, New Jersey
PostPosted: Thu Aug 19, 2010 11:24 am Reply with quote
Man, and I thought the tokusatsu show featuring Leopardon the giant mech was an odd one... Though considering how you can actually watch the entire tokusatsu show subbed on Marvel's website now, they should try out the manga one more time.
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The Xenos



Joined: 29 Mar 2004
Posts: 1519
Location: Boston
PostPosted: Thu Aug 19, 2010 1:41 pm Reply with quote
Nice. I remember finding a Japanese volume of this randomly in an underground comic shop in Harvard Sqaure years ago. It was volume 2 and just seemed so odd I needed to get it. Later I learned it was Ikegami whose art I had I since really come to like. Now hearing the rest of the story, it's even more amazing. Wow. That is crazy. Then again I missed all of the 1970s. Maybe I should be glad...
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ptolemy18
Manga Reviewer/Creator/Taster


Joined: 07 May 2005
Posts: 357
Location: San Francisco
PostPosted: Thu Aug 19, 2010 2:52 pm Reply with quote
Fronzel wrote:

Alan Moore is angry; Rorshach isn't a cool guy, eh eats cold beans he stole from a friend and doesn't bathe for anything.


Rorschach is an extreme version of an 'antiheroic superhero', but basically he's modeled on the same archetype as the Punisher and other characters like that. They're both really tough angry sinister dudes who don't have much of a personal life because they are dedicated to fighting evil.... SO MUCH THAT THEY HAVE BECOME EVIL THEMSELVES WOOOO0000! That's what they have in common. -_-

Contrarily, in Spider-Man: The Manga, Peter -- I mean Yu -- spends so much time worrying about becoming evil that he tends not to do anything. Instead of "turning to the dark side," he stays a depressed self-doubting person for pretty much the whole story. But in their different ways, both Spider-Man: The Manga and Rorschach in Watchmen are attempts to pick apart superhero comics morality.

Quote:

That Chris is quite a fellow.


Oh yes indeed! He's iconic! -_-
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KumarSivasubramanian



Joined: 04 May 2010
Posts: 20
PostPosted: Thu Aug 19, 2010 6:04 pm Reply with quote
I read a few volumes of this and it just got crazier, more feverish, and emotionally intense. The painted covers on the Japanese editions alone are worth the ticket price.

KS
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