1. GoGo Monster: And here's Taiyo Matsumoto and the best comic of 2009, a tale of two schoolboys in their third year of classes, one of whom spends most of his time fading in and out of a world of invisible spirits facing an even more obscure threat; it was published in Japan in 2000, right before No. 5 began serialization. I've had a review half-written for a little while now -- the book came out pretty recently -- so in lieu of that I'll provide a sub-list of Reasons Why This is Great to compliment my Top Ten Funnies and Best of Show Disclaimers rundown:
John rated it really liked it
Taiyo Matsumoto is an amazing illustrator and writer but he seems to do the same story in all the works that I've read: two teenage male characters have a coming of age experience with some fantasy or magical realism elements. Typically, one of the characters is exceptional in some regard (an amazing fighter, a great Ping-Pong player, an excellent student) and seems to have some connection to an invisible world, sometimes in the form of a doppleganger. In GoGo Monster, as in Ping-Pong, the magical realism elements appear to be mostly in the mind of the Peko/Yuki character. Whether or not Super Star and the others are real, Yuki, Ganz and IQ all believe that they effect the world outside of Yuki's head. The art in this book is not quite as polished as in Sunny or Tekkonkinkreet (both of which I believe were published later?), but it's still engaging. If you're looking for a typical manga with this book, you'll probably be disappointed and/or bored as it's very long, very slow and very strange, despite the fairly mundane setting of a middle school.
“Picture a Batman and Robin story put through a Peter Pan filter by Takeshi Kitano and you’d only be halfway to conceiving the unique, terrible beauty that is Tekkon Kinkreet, previously published under the name Black & White.”
“Matsumoto’s stark, black-and-white imagery won’t be to every reader’s taste; I’d be the first admit that many of the kids in Blue Spring look older and wearier than Keith Richards, with their sunken eyes and rotten teeth. But the studied ugliness of the character designs and urban settings suits the material perfectly, hinting at the anger and emptiness of the characters’ lives. Matsumoto offers no easy answers for his characters’ behavior, nor any false hope that they will escape the lives of violence and despair that seem to be their destiny. Rather, he offers a frank, funny and often disturbing look at the years in which most of us were unformed lumps of clay — or, in Matsumoto’s memorable formulation, a time when most of us were blue: “No matter how passionate you were, no matter how much your blood boiled, I believe youth is a blue time. Blue — that indistinct blue that paints the town before the sun rises.””
“I felt dizzy after reading this.”
Taiyo Matsumoto is tough for me to write about in any kind of formal fashion. Not sure why. I think maybe some of it may be that he’s such an old influence for me—like I came into his work before Nihei or Daisuke Igarashi—maybe even before Inio Asano-though Asano hasn’t really influenced me artistically—but I think how I got there was I was reading Stray Toasters because when I was first sort of starting to figure out how to draw, I practiced by redrawing Frazetta and BWS, but I was looking at like Sienkiewicz and Ashley Wood—anyways so I was reading Stray Toasters, and my wife of the time saw one of the panels in it, and was like “oh wow, that’s Klimt”—so I went and looked up Klimt and was like “whoa” which led me to Schiele which was a life changing moment. As soon as I saw Schiele I knew there was something in there that I just FELT, and I wanted to explore that feeling through my own work and find my own expression through it.
So in trying to figure out how to take Schiele into comics I ran into Taiyo Matsumoto’s work. I think Tekkinkinkreet was the first work of his I read, then No. 5, then Gogo Monster, then Ping Pong, then Takemitsu Zamurai, and now Sunny. Ping Pong and Takemitsu Zamurai are prolly my fave works by him, with Gogo Monster a close third. But these works were huge to me, and I mean eventually I found Daisuke Igarashi—and I think Daisuke is even closer to my like platonic ideal of comics than even Taiyo is—but Taiyo was key. Maybe THE key. At least after Schiele. So there’s a lot of emotional investment with Taiyo.
I think fundamentally the strength of Taiyo’s work for his whole career is that he doesn’t just tell you here is a boy doing this thing—he gives you something more about the boy at that particular time just in the way his line jitters, or the way the shadow will cloud a face—and maybe the shadow will be these impressionistic brush strokes—or maybe it will be more traditional cross hatching techniques? But the choice always was about communicating something beyond simply what is physically there in the scene.
- Sarah Horrocks
5.0 out of 5 stars A masterpiece.
By Luca Vitale on September 22, 2007
Format: Paperback
This might be the best graphic novel ever written, and I don`t say that lightly. It`s a shame that it doesn`t have a wide circulation in Europe and US. It`s pretty much impossible to compare to anything else, Tekkon Kinkreet it`s the most lyrical and at at the same time the most anti-conformist comic you`ll ever read. Think Miyazaki, Tank Girl and Takeshi Kitano all wrapped up in one story that is so good it hurts. Just get it, if you like indie comics chances are this is your new favorite one.
1.0 out of 5 stars very bad
ByEvzenie Reitmayerovaon January 28, 2010
i dunno about the story.
the pictures are so bad it is hard to follow what is actually going on.
it looks like it was drawn by a 2 years old kid with no talent.
i started to read this book a couple of times but couldnt finish it.
it proves even manga can be drawn very bad.
what a dissapointment.
Joey Comeau rated it it was amazing
Shelves: recommendations
This is one of my favourite comic books. It's surreal and sort of mystical in a way that isn't lame, but is instead psychological and unexpectedly violent. I was very surprised by this book.
UPDATED REVIEW:
Two years after first reading this book, I have come back to it again and again, each time finding more to love. This has gone from being a really nice surprise and "one of my favourite comic books" to being my favourite BOOK, period.
(A) It's the most furiously cartooned book I've read all year, a no-assistants one man show of total vision penmanship that leaves its 'realistic' scenery vibrating; buildings literally wave and curve in the background while characters adopt scribbly or sharp appearances based on minute shifts in mood. It's like Matsumoto seized on the propensity of manga characters in stories where boys see spirits to shift to superdeformed mode when something funny happens and exploded it into three-dimensional sphere of hypersensitive bodily flux.
“Although, I’m still not sure why the book is called Gogo Monster.”
4.0 out of 5 starsFantastic Book
ByChristopher Luceroon January 27, 2013
Format: Paperback|Verified Purchase
All-in-all the book is just an amazing read and a must for everyone. My only problem is that when it came in the mail, the very top part of the slip cover was wrinkled because the shipping. Its kinda annoying but still, the book is something to own rather than just read online.
(B) Gone is any trace of the punkish action comics posture of Tekkonkinkreet. Why is that a virtue? Because GoGo Monster functions as a stealthy follow-up project; there's no doubt in my mind as to why Viz selected it to follow that long-brewing success, since it's functionally a loose remake, at one point even replicating a plot twist. The trick is, the work formerly known as Black and White concluded with its heroes extricating themselves from the heroic narrative as a means of growing up. Thus, GoGo Monster rips the explicit fantasy out and presents another two boys in a similar story that's nonetheless entirely different, more delicate, daydreamier. Better.
Mabomanji rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: bd-comics, friend-s-recommendation
J'adore le style de Taiyo Matsumoto, il dessine avec beaucoup de détails mais surtout avec beaucoup de dynamisme en choisissant des points de vue inhabituels. Il y a une qualité cinématographique à son dessin et à son travail de découpage des planches et d'enchaînement de l'histoire, un vrai travail de montage. Je me suis retrouvée embarquée dans cette folle poursuite à travers le monde entier et j'en ai oublié où j'étais. Le monde futuriste brossé est fascinant et on apprend à chaque chapitre un peu plus sur ce qui s'y passe. Politiquement c'est intéressant avec cette organisation pour le maintien pour la paix qui voit ses jours comptés car elle arrive au bout de sa mission. Reste de le mystère de cette femme libérée par Number 5, elle semble être innocente et pourtant elle a un pouvoir magnétique et semble attirer toute la nature à elle. Un tome passionnant dont j'espère la suite au même niveau.
5.0 out of 5 starsDevoted Comics Fans Should Not Pass This One By
ByGraphicNovelReporter.comon December 8, 2009
Format: Hardcover
Yuki Tachibana is an outcast at Asahi Elementary School. He sits alone, drawing on his desk and occasionally shouting out weird exclamations. If he talks to the other children, it is only to warn them about the "others," beings kept in check only by the power of Super Star, the boss of the other side. Yuki's only friend is the school's caretaker, Ganz, though he sometimes talks to IQ, an older student who is academically gifted but interacts with people only through the box he wears over his head. When Makoto Suzuki's school is shut down for mysterious reasons, he is sent to Asahi Elementary and placed in the desk next to Yuki. Despite the other students' warnings about Yuki's strange behavior, Makoto befriends the boy and soon finds himself wondering how much of Yuki's tales are true.
Matsumoto, manga-ka of Tekkonkinkreet, offers a tale that is part fantasy, part horror, and part mind-trip. On the one hand, it can be read as an exploration into the thought process of a child with autism or a similar disorder, a child who does not see or react to the world the way the rest of humanity does. But on the other hand, Yuki Tachibana might be right and Super Star may be the only thing keeping the beings of the other side from riling the children of Asahi Elementary School to rebel against their teachers, do poorly in class, and be mean to one another. However, it may be that GoGo Monster is neither of those things, or both at the same time.
Matsumoto doesn't offer an easy read. His plot twists and turns. The dialogue is spare and often consists just of overheard comments that are not necessarily relevant. The characters are mostly inscrutable. And frankly, that is much of the fun of reading GoGo Monster. It is a story to dive into, allowing it to wash over you, and then, later, after it has swirled around in your brain for a time, to dive into again.
The art is as off-kilter as the plot, keeping you searching the panels for hidden details and meanings that may or may not be there, not allowing you to turn the page immediately. Matsumoto's style is rough, purposefully sloppy. Some characters are realistically portrayed, while others have a messy, cartoonish quality. The drawings within the panels do not always correspond with the dialogue going on at the same time, forcing readers to look deeper for the connection and the meaning. As Yuki is drawn further into the world he sees, the images are terrifyingly subtle. The monsters are never obvious, which heightens the sense of a young boy caught by unimaginable and unseen forces. There is also a lot of beauty in the United States edition of GoGo Monster because of VIZ's high-quality printing job. The book is hardcover, with the story starting right on the endpages of the front cover. Bright, colorful monsters cover the outside of the book, even overlapping onto the edges of the pages, which are tipped in red and burgundy. A slipcase completes the package.
Readers looking for an artistic read, one that requires that the brain be fully engaged, will find much to appreciate here, as long as they don't mind taking their time. Other than the typical comments on poop and sex that fourth-grade boys make, there is little to keep this out of the hands of readers old enough to appreciate the strange story. It's not for every reader, but devoted comics fans should not pass this one by.
-- Snow Wildsmith
“Did you know that Matsumoto made this manga entirely on his own (no assistants) and did it in one shot. So it never ran in a magazine, he just sat down for a long while and cranked out 448 pages of genius. Seriously who does that?!”
"Tekkonkinkreet melted my mind.”
Charlie rated it did not like it
Shelves: graphic-novels, young-adult, japanese
I read this because it was by the same person who made Sunny, and because I couldn't find Sunny: Volume 2 online. This one wasn't very good. Mostly it's just left me feeling gross. I don't even really know why.
“Creating manga is kind of like you’re a child who’s stolen some money, and when asked about it you lie and say you found it on the ground, but then the grown-ups keep asking more and more questions, and you have to keep making up more and more lies and make it more real. Like, I’ve already gone and said that I’d make this series, so now I have to follow through on that original lie to the end and make it look like something real. People who are good at making manga are really good liars, I think.”
Taiyo Matsumoto, in a 1997 interview.
“When people turn into grown-ups, their insides melt into a mushy glop and their brains get hard and stiff,” he tells Makoto. “They get infested with maggots and a purple stink.”
(C) But you don't need to know that part. GoGo Monster is also a lovely self-contained unit, an original hardcover graphic novel, even in Japan, where such things are pretty rare. Every bit of the format is exploited, with a cardboard slipcase giving way to a wraparound cover that doubles as the work's first page, although the 'first' page is actually page "-8," which leads into page -7 on the inside-front cover, then -6 through -1 on tinted pages, followed by several pages of black to indicate a narrative break of two years, and then full-color titles on page 0, thereafter counting to over 450 in crisp b&w. You bet your ass the solid black inside-back cover is significant - it's another break in time, one we can't see past.
“Unnormal gut.”
Yanakano_san rated it it was ok
Dirty hopelessness, absolute inanition, students with their clapping game of bloody happiness - young people who were too old and apathetic since the very, very first moment of life.
Matsumoto may call them "the heroes of my youth" - I call them "the lost generation".
Because something (strangely sounds like "oh shit!") happens, always did and always will, and let it happen - who cares anyway? Who? Is there any point? Has there ever been?
They know the right answer (which is "no, never").
They are able to kill for nothing, to die for a far, ghostly goal and to live without feeling alive in the mess of blood, flesh and madness of Japan; their spring is blue, and their summer will come only to make them all finally fade.
(D) The main action of the book takes place over five chapters: Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter... and Spring. This is a cycle, though, not a schematic. If anything, GoGo Monster is reminiscent in tone (not style) of John Porcellino at his sensation-of-moments airiest, with seemingly half the pages in the book devoted specifically to evocation: word balloons floating idle chatter in the air, familiar characters' faces gazing out, words repeating, images repeating, airplanes, rabbits, scribbles on a desk, not so far from the scribbles that are the children.
5.0 out of 5 stars A uniquely brilliant manga.
By hi on 11 May 2010
Format: Paperback
Taiyo Matsumoto is not your average manga artist. Blue Spring, one of his earlier works, is a collection of short stories about adolescents in the transition between youth and manhood. They refuse to conform to what they see as a bleak present and an even bleaker future, as if confused and angered by it all, with Matsumoto showing their detachment through their daily escapades with the yakuza, society and themselves. It is unflinching in depicting the harshness of their realities with the stories ranging from a deadly rooftop game to a group of young baseball players reminiscing over a game of mahjong with 'Revolver' being my favourite and most complete of the stories.
It struck a chord with me because the anxieties they felt were very human while their brash actions and sometimes extreme violence depicted how we would act if we rebelled against our inhibitions. The characters all had recognisable qualities in them but at times felt quite disturbing, especially in 'What do you want do be when you grow up, Yukio?' The content is quite explicit throughout underpinning the nihilistic lives that these youths lead with the raw art style reflecting this.
I didn't expect to like Blue Spring as much as I did but definitely feel lucky to have found it. It doesn't try to act as a social commentary, it simply acts as a depiction, with the author himself putting it best when describing youth as a blue time:
"Blue - that indistinct blue that paints the town moments before the sun rises. Winter is coming."
(E) Dotting this mental-temporal landscape are startling scenes and images, ranging from a multi-page depiction of a boy swimming in front of an adult -- every page-topping wide panel set outside the pool exactly the same while below are jagged, tense variations of working through water with a cramp -- to one of the indelible character designs of 2009(/2000) in the form of the story's semi-antagonist I.Q., an older boy wearing a silly assortment of boxes over his head, always with a single hole cut out to reveal a spectacularly eerie photorealistic cross-hatched eye, always the most detailed bit of anatomy on any given page. Cross-hatching serves as the looming presence of adulthood throughout the book, finally erupting in a classic I-am-a-master-cartoonist-and-I-can-do-ANYTHING-I-WANT visual blowout climax in which all panels become filled with infinitesimally minute cross-hatches and stippling so that the reader is forced to stare deeply into every panel, slowly navigating as if literally in a dark room, just barely making out faces or legs or terrible animal shapes, and it's actually scary.
By L. Martin on August 3, 2015
Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
This is a very strange manga. It is BEAUTIFULLY set up (pretty covers and slipcase, unusually high quality paper) which suggests to me that someone thought it was somthing extraordinarily fine. And yes it a fine manga—of a particular type. It is a story of an boy who is an outcast at school and lives in his imagination instead. This is a deeply meaningful subject for me because I was such a boy, and the first half or more of the book does a great job of showing how that feels, and what a great thing it is for a boy like that when he makes a friend. However, not much beyond that ever happens! No matter how symapthetic one is to the MC, I think any reader would like some events, developments, changes etc., and particularly a nice ending. I was waiting for some of any of those things, perhaps building interestingly upon the boy's being able to further develop his new friendship with a second boy in the school, this one also being a semi-outcast like him, but instead all I got was an incomprehensible ending. I was disappointed.
The first half or two thirds of this manga tells such a moving story of the child outcast life that I can recommend it for that. Be prepared to deal with a mysterious ending, and perhaps you'll love it as others here have.
(F) All of this seems absolutely effortless, from the most worked-over panels to the (far more plentiful) pages of perfect, energetic doodling. I have no problem believing that Matsumoto may not have known what would be two pages ahead of him at any given time, though I doubt that's true, it's too complete a work. The book is best read in one sitting; it's a breeze of a comic, sincerely refreshing. So great is its artist's expressive power that even the book's chilly, ill-fitting English typeface seems outright alien, as if drawing attention to the futility of translation. Aesthetes may still object, and they wouldn't be wrong.
__________________
Writing
https://letsfallasleep.wordpress.com/2008/10/29/taiyo-matsumoto-and-michael-arias-influences/
http://marvelous-coma.blogspot.co.uk/2009/12/no5-vol2.html
http://www.cartoonstudies.org/schulz/blog/matsumoto-taiyo-a-comic-essay/
http://sites.gsu.edu/awalsh6/portfolio/critical-reflective-statement/
Podcast with great links below
http://www.factualopinion.com/the_factual_opinion/2013/06/taiyo-matsumoto-and-his-comics.html
All numbered and lettered points pertaining to Gogo Monster are written by Joe McCulloch and can be found in their original form by scrolling down at this link -
http://joglikescomics.blogspot.co.uk/2010/01/most-equivocal.html
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p.s. Hey. Today the mighty musical and other artist plus d.l. Jamie McMorrow is back in control of this stretchy white space, and he wants to take this 24 hour -> ∞ opportunity to emphasize the amazing work of Taiyo Matsumoto, and you, kind folks, are the beneficiaries, so please use your gift time luxuriously and speak to Jamie about your experiences. Thank you. And thank you supremely, Jamie! ** Jonathan Bryant, Hi, Jonathan! Whoa, good to see you, pal! Oh, cool, re: Coburn, me too, obviously. Thanks! How's stuff with you? What's going on? ** Dóra Grőber, Hi! Yeah, well, you can do it yourself if you can build all the sets and get your friends to star and stuff, and some great films have been made that way, but, yeah, we need a little more than that this for this particular film. I think it'll be okay, knock on wood. Yes, those three River scenes you mentioned were exactly my favorites too! Oh, wow, your tattoo is indeed really awesome! And the photos are beautiful. I'll share, okay? Everyone, artist and d.l. Dora Grőber gave herself a tattoo, and it's relative to Richey Edwards, and it's very cool, as are the photos of the thing and the creating of the thing, so you should go have a look. Did you get extended friend time? What else happened? I did work, as usual, duh, and also this writer I really like, Lily Hoang, whose new book 'A Bestiary' was in my most recent 4 books loved post, is visiting Paris, and I'd never met her, so we hung out, and I went to see her do a reading last night, and which was great, and so is she. And I saw some other pals, and it rained and rained and rained. That's my weekend's story. ** Jamie McMorrow, Salutations from wherever the stuff that constitutes me is generated! Thank you, thank you for this great post. Another artist I didn't know before, and now I'm hooked. I hope you enjoy the day here. Weekend good? Make music, see movies, sip the dark brew? There's a mouse in my apartment too. I have my door open a crack hoping that he or she will get bored and decide to enlarge his or her world. Yeah, the planning stuff for the book that ends up being graphed out, I keep. The earlier ones are in NYU library and the rest are in folders here or in LA waiting to go to NYU. Ooh, I like that story story plan? Are you going to write it? You know music is a big generator for my writing, so I totally get that. Nice. Today I might see the visiting writer I mentioned to Dora, and I have a lot of blog post-making work I need to do, and tonight there's the opening night of this tiny film festival taking place in someone's apartment -- they're showing 'LCTG' on Thursday -- and Zac and I going to that to see what it is. Should be interesting. And you? Big love, me. ** New Juche, Hey! Yes, thank you for the emails! I'm going to set up the post today and launch it in a couple days, I think. Just like a sampling of the book and a link to where to get it, I think. The channel that's considering the series at the moment is ARTE, which is this kind of often very good co-German/French arts/cultural channel. At the moment the series is in English, and we're hoping that we can do it in English both because it's written that way and because our main star doesn't speak French. But we don't know what they'll require if they're interested. It would be hard to give a specific example of the structure experiment/ planning because it's usually a combination of graphs and notes and all kind of other stuff, and they're kind of coded/shorthand just for me, and I think that, outside of my own head, they wouldn't make much sense. Maybe I'll go try to find some of the stuff I used for 'The Marbled Swarm' if I can find it and share it at some point if I do. Thank you for asking! I hope your weekend was really great! ** David Ehrenstein, Hi, David. I'm with you. I love his hip comedy stuff the best, like 'TPA', 'TLO', the 'Flint' films, etc. Peckinpah got great stuff out of him too. And I think he really is spectacular in his Academy Award-rewarded part in Schrader's 'Affliction'. Stevie Smith! ** Steevee, Hi. I remember 'Cross of Iron' as being pretty sober for Peckinpah, but I haven't seen it since its original release. ** Misanthrope, Hi, G. Well, gee, that's something of a mixed blessing without very much blessing in it. Shit, man. What is the surgery? Is it very invasive? Can they do it with, like, lasers or something? Man, I'm sure fingers crossed are probably an overreaction, but you've got mine. Let me know how it goes, obviously. Lots of love, Dennis. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. I think you would like or find interest in Coburn's hip '60s stuff, especially 'The President's Analyst', if you get the chance. 'Candy' is on youtube if you can bear watching films that way. Cogent contribution. Yeah, that's hell of a big seeming mess, that whole Brexit thing. ** Bill, Hi, B. Oh, thanks. I haven't read 'Father of Lies'. Hm. Good idea. Did the weekend manage to soothe your soul or any stretch of it? ** Bernard Welt, Hi, B. Oh, yeah, I decided not to put 'The Last of Sheila' in there, but I can't remember why. Maybe he wasn't in any clips? I haven't thought about that film in ages. Right, Sondheim, so curious. I haven't thought about Dyan Cannon in a million years either. Huh. I wonder if a DC post would be fun. ** h, Hi. My pleasure, of course. New Narrative is kind of a funny term. I mean every narrative is new. You probably know there are kind of two schools of thought about what constitutes New Narrative. There's one that a tight definition where NN writers are only ones who studied with Robert Gluck in San Francisco. And then there's a broader, more inclusive one, which I think Kevin and Dodie are using in the anthology, where NN would include writers further afield like me, Kathy Acker, Lynne Tillman, and others. My weekend was pretty nice, too rainy, but that's Paris. Still, give me constant rain over a hot, moist sky, ugh. Your weekend sounds really, really nice. I just saw a new documentary film about Elizabeth Bishop by Barbara Hammer. It was a mixed blessing, but JA was great and funny in it. ** Okay. Be with Jamie and Taiyo please until further notice. Thanks a bunch. See you tomorrow.