Sunday, April 28, 2013

REVIEW: One Piece


One Piece (manga)
By Eiichiro Oda
One Piece
Began monthly publications in Shonen Jump starting 1997 to today
·         As per Shonen manga series premiers for contemporary manga, One Piece opens up with a two page spread of all the important characters initially since the beginning of the series (Luffy, Nami, Zorro, Shanks and Shanks’ pirate crew). It is to note that Shanks’ cast does not show up as much since the pilot first volume. (Page 5)
·         The story in fact starts with a prologue of sorts where Luffy gains his powers though this makes the manga go REALLY slow in terms of pacing. As a One Piece fan, I admit that the pacing of One Piece since the beginning first arcs is extremely slow and hard to take in.
·         Zorro as a character and first mate doesn’t show up until Page 91. Nami doesn’t show up until the end of Volume 1 too.
·         It is to note that the first volume’s villains are defeated relatively easily and quickly, taking no more than a few chapters at most. This is a common trend in Shonen manga first volumes so as to establish protagonists being relatively strong in their introductions and to introduce character motivations and possible recurring characters.
·         Luffy is like a baby faced Western character (ie Tintin) where he looks like a young adult (eighteen years old when the series started) and yet he manages to do things that even trained adults cannot do.  Unlike tintin however, Luffy is noted to actually be aged by the author as with Tintin it is ambiguous to how old Tintin actually is.
·         One Piece is a noted example of a “three group friend” Shonen manga where there is a happy-go-lucky protagonist, a more practical male friend and a headstrong female friend. This is noted in series like Naruto (Naruto, Sasuke, and Sakura), Rave Master (Haru, Hamiro, and Elie), Magi (Aladdin, Alibaba, and Morgiana) Yu Yu Hakusho (Yusuke, Kuwabara, and Boton), and other Shonen manga.
·         It is to note that besides the barkeep in the beginning and Shanks, Luffy’s parents are never addressed and neither his relationship with the others that live in his island town. While this is addressed MUCH, MUCH later in the series, it could be seen that Luffy was like Doctor Who in that he did amazing things and yet we knew nothing about him, allowing us to mask ourselves into his situations and the like.
·         As this is a manga, the pages are printed black and white save for Page 5 where a bit more detail towards grey scales are given to the print. This may be as the original serializing of One Piece in the Shonen Jump monthly publication was originally in color and yet the reprint into a serial for One Piece by itself had it so the inking was noted instead of coloring.
·         One Piece admittedly is not a great series when it first came out; as it carried many of the troupes that contemporary manga has today. However, unlike its contemporary Shonen Jump titles like Bleach and Naruto, it seems to me that One Piece keeps getting better and better with each new arc. Naruto and Bleach are notable as series that started off really strong yet eventually reached a tournament story arc that drew readers away or lasted much longer than need be due to the goading of editors. One Piece is noted to be only half way done since 1997 so if the series was to continue on in the vision that Oda planned it we would not see the end of One Piece until 2028.
Bibliography:
Oda, Eiichiro, and Lance Caselman. One Piece. Romance Dawn. San Francisco, CA: Viz, LLC, 1997. Print.

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