Closing out the con season with MangaNEXT 2010.

hisuiconMangaNEXT is a unique convention as it is one of the few convention sin the U.S. entirely devoted to manga. Although it is a smaller convention with an overwhelming emphasis on manga which is often the neglected sibling when compared to anime at most conventions. I am really looking forward to the MangaCast panel.  When Ed Chavez talks about manga you can’t help but learn something while getting wrapped up in his infectious love of the medium. It guarantee it will be the can’t miss panel of the convention. The Mecha: A Love Letter and 50 Manga Recommendations panels look very interesting as well. We are doing a panel called The Best Manga you Never Read on Saturday at 9:30PM. If you join us after dinner we will be talking about manga that are all in one way or another in a state of limbo that might be able to be revived if there is enough support from manga readers. Come see our picks for great manga that we think could be saved. We will only be able to attend on Saturday but if you are checking out the convention and you see us then say hello. It is always great to talk to a reader and fellow fan. Other than that is anyone is going on Friday and Sunday I would love to hear about the 80s Manga for the Modern Manga Reader panel, the History of Manga panel, and the Japanese Manga publishers panel. They all look interesting and I am curious how informative they are.

MangaNEXT is a baby of a convention, and certainly the smallest I have the pleasure of attending, but it packs a nice batch of things over the weekend. I know having it Halloween weekend has become their signature thing and I’m sure the cosplayers are more than happy with that arrangement. This time around I’ll only have time for Saturday events, but perhaps as the convention grows going on all three days will become more tempting. I’m glad to see Ed Chavez in attendance as well and  not just in his official capacity for Vertical Inc. Besides that, Saturday will be spent popping in and out of a lot of panels I imagine. I’m very curious about the U.S. Comics for Manga Fans panel as a fan of both already. Don’t forgot to come see our panel Saturday night! This is a convention where I always feel I learn a little something and of course it is more intimate than most that I attend.

NY Anime Festival & Comic Con 2010 Bonus Round!

The New York Anime Festival and Comic Con was amazingly packed with things to do, people to meet, exclusives to see, and panels to go to. No one could do everything they wanted to and no single person can give you a full picture of what when on. With that in mind your always relentless detectives Hisui and Natutaki along with mechanical field expert Patz from Insert-Disc try to share a bit of our experiences at this combo con. It is a frank discussion about how well we think the two cons worked with each other and what could be done to improve things next year.

Bonus Round – NYAF/NYCC Review

Lets Do the Time Skip Again

hisuiconIn a strange coincidence I have been partaking an inordinate number of properties that have time skips in them. On the manga front Zettai Karen Children and One Piece have recently had significant time skips. On the video game front Infinite Space has a 10 year time skip between the first and second parts of the game. And that are just what I have seen in the last month. I can also think of major time skips in Claymore, Naruto, Gundam 00, Gurren Lagann, Death Note, Twentieth Century Boys, xxxHOLiC, Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure. And that is just in series I am aware of. This started me thinking about time skips in general. What is the appeal of the time skip? What does it add to a narrative that it has become such a popular tool? Continue reading