VIEWS TODAY: 9
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ADDED: 04.14.2008
AVG RATING: 5.0
TOTAL RATING: 1




3 of 5
By Mamiya Takizaki
Released in the US by TokyoPop
Slugline: Good characterization can save average plots. Nothing funny about that.
Kam
is an orphan (always a orphan) living in a post-apocalyptic fantasy
realm, with creatures called Rizom roaming the countryside in between
the walled cities killing those without protection. There is some under
the table skull-drudgery by the various political factions that are
trying to protect and control the remains of humanity, while Kam is
trying to escape the legacy of heroic father and leave the city before
friends and created family discover his secrets.
Whole
swathes of the story are fairly generic, but it is handled with a deft
hand so that the character motivations seem their own rather than
selected out of the cookbook. When Kam turns back to save a friend, it
is not because he is inherently noble, but because it reflects on his
character and the lessons he has learned. I think the power-up at the
end of the volume was not necessary, there was already enough of a
mystery about what is happening to Kam's body (no symbolism of puberty
here) there was no need to go there yet. Still, the characters make
sense, something that isn't always true in action titles.
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Element Line, vol. 1 is available from Right Stuf, Intl., an online retailer specializing in anime and manga.
-Ferdinand
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Exhibit A of how good characterization save average plots.