Postby Haibane Shadsie » Tue Jan 06, 2004 1:05 pm
1. Do you read any American comics?
I never was into the "superhero" comics growing up, but I read a lot of the funny-type comics, "Garfield", "Peanuts", "Calvin and Hobbes", and the like. I still enjoy those. I don't have much of an interest in American action comics... though I've read a little of "Johnny the Homicidal Maniac" and "Squee", (though I don't know if you can call those action, more like horror) and I want to get the Matrix-based comics. I'm not all too knowlegeable in the ways of American superhero comics, though.
2. If not, why not?
I was just never into them. No comic shops nearby when I was growing up, my older siblings were not into them, ect. My rabid manga love is even fairly recent.
3. What do you think American comics lack that manga offer better?
I think the whole approach in manga is diffrent. I think of manga in the same terms as I think of novels. I'm a reader and I love fiction novels. I find that, though manga has a lot of "cartoony" elements, faical exaggerations and such, that the stories are approached very seriously, with a lot of character development and worldbuilding. The genres also come in a great variety. I enjoy manga in sci-fi and fantasy, but I also enjoy historical drama in manga. The stories are not locked into "funny or superhero" genres like most people think of comics . I find in mangas the same kind of storytelling and approach to the storytelling that I find in novels and novel series', and that is why, I, as a novel-reader, gravitate toward manga rather than American comics.
4. Is there anything American comics do better than manga?
Hmmm... variety in style. Yes, diffrent manga artists draw in a vareity of styles, but there seems to be, in most, an overall "manga/anime" style... American comics seem to have more of a variety of visual styles - absurdly cartoonish, typical "action/superhero" style, to... even fine-art drawing/painting style. A lot of American comics are also done in color, and color can be very nice.
5. Considering that the average imported Japanese manga is around $5, and translated manga range from $10 to $15, do you feel you get better value for your money for manga as opposed to American comics?
It doesn't matter much to me. I like getting my mangas in graphic novel format, rather than short thin book format, anyway. To me, buying a manga is like buying a novel - and they run about the same price most of the time.
"We will never give up and despair, for we are on a mission from God." __ Hellsing, Vol. 2.