Manga of the Month: Master Keaton

Master Keaton (MASTERキートン)
by Naoki UrasawaHokusei Katsushika, and Takashi Nagasaki

hisui_icon_4040 Master Keaton definitely has an interesting history in the United States. I’m sure there were fans of Naoki Urasawa before 2003 but Yawara! A Fashionable Judo Girl never had anywhere near the success of its sister anime Ranma ½ in the English-speaking fandom and all the fans of Pineapple Army could probably fit in one room. So when the Master Keaton anime was released by Geneon on June 10, 2003 it hardly had any name cache. The series was a critical darling but a financial flop. Despite that the anime garnered itself a small but devoted following. Then jump ahead to February 21, 2006 when the Monster manga is released. That was the title that made Naoki Urasawa a name in otaku circles. 20th Century Boys and Pluto only solidified his reputation. So that small fandom for Master Keaton finally had hope that maybe the manga that spawned the series they loved might be released in English. But that was not meant to be.

Apparently the title was tied up in a legal battle between Naoki Urasawa and Hokusei Katsushika’s estate. The battle was fierce enough that not only could the title not be licensed in the US but they could not even reprint the series in Japan. So it seemed like a series that would always just be out of reach. Then in March of 2012 Naoki Urasawa started Master Keaton Remaster, a sequel to the original series, as sort of capstone to the end of the legal battle that had engulfed Master Keaton. It seemed that there was hope again and on Viz licensed Master Keaton. So after that long journey December 16, 2014 marked the day fans could finally buy Master Keaton. I have talked about the series several times on the blog but now I can official endorse it as a series that you can just order on-line and buy.

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The December 2014 Line-Up

narutaki_icon_4040 There were still a few delightful presents to be had in licensing department. And this is the time of year when the winter simulcasts start getting announced, it seems like Funimation has swooped in to grab just about everything big this time around. We’ll see what CR has up their sleeves in January.

hisui_icon_4040 Sgt. Frog has to be the most surprising license I have seen in quite a while. There are some other shockers but Sgt. Frog is a whole other level.

The Line-Up is a monthly rundown of new anime, manga, light novel, artbook licenses, streaming/broadcasting announcements, crowdfunding projects, anime/manga projects, and live-action anime/manga adaptions.

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Top 7 Type-Moon Moments for 2014

hisui_icon_4040 There will be very nearly 250 Type-Moon related posts on the blog by the time I post the article. It is presently 15% of the total content of the blog. I mostly mentioned that so if you see that I am no longer writing for the blog after this post then you will know why. Thankfully Kate’s eyes mostly gloss over anything that says Type-Moon on it so I am probably safe. For now.

Until the time in which I am mercilessly kicked off my own blog I feel it is my honor and obligation to do an overview of the highlights of the year in the world of Type-Moon. If anything else much like the “Narutaki & Hisui VS. The Best of” posts these articles help me look back on what I loved about Type-Moon every year. It is easy to remember the annoying fan wankery, ugly flame wars, delayed titles, or untranslated gems just slightly out of reach that can easy sour you to everything. But when you see all the great things that happened in 2014 it easily makes you excited to see what we are going to get in 2015. Hopefully if you are a fellow Type-Moon fan than this post will do the same for you.

This is hardly the definitive list of the coolest things that happened with Type-Moon this year. But it is a list of the things that meant the most to me.

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