Zetsuai 1989
Zetsuai 1989 | |
Cover of the Japanese VHS release of the Zetsuai 1989 OVA | |
絶愛-1989- (Zetsuai 1989) | |
---|---|
Genre | Romance (male homosexuality) |
Manga | |
Written by | Minami Ozaki |
Published by | Shueisha |
Demographic | Shōjo |
Magazine | Margaret |
Original run | 1989 – 1991 |
Volumes | 5 |
Manga | |
Bronze: Zetsuai Since 1989 | |
Written by | Minami Ozaki |
Published by | Shueisha |
Demographic | Shōjo |
Magazine | Margaret Comics |
Original run | 1992 – 2006 |
Volumes | 14 |
Original video animation | |
Directed by | Endo Takuji |
Produced by | Masao Maruyama |
Music by | Kenji Kawai |
Studio | Madhouse Studios |
Released | 29 July 1992 |
Runtime | 45 minutes |
Original video animation | |
Bronze: Cathexis | |
Directed by | Rintaro |
Produced by | Masao Maruyama |
Studio | Madhouse Studios |
Released | 6 July 1994 |
Original video animation | |
Bronze: Zetsuai Since 1989 | |
Directed by | Kawasaki Itsuro |
Produced by |
Mitsuhisa Ishikawa Youichi Ishikawa |
Music by | Kow Otani |
Studio | Production I.G |
Released | 16 July 1994 |
Runtime | 45 minutes |
Light novel | |
Zetsuai Since 1989, Kaen Danshou | |
Written by | Akiyama Rin |
Illustrated by | Minami Ozaki |
Published by | Shueisha |
Original run | 1997 – 1998 |
Volumes | 4 |
Manga | |
Bronze: Zetsuai Gaidan Kaendan-Shō -Tenshi Kōtan- | |
Written by | Minami Ozaki |
Published by | Shueisha |
Demographic | Josei |
Magazine | Chorus |
Original run | 28 January 2011[1] – present |
Volumes | 1 |
Zetsuai 1989 (絶愛-1989- lit. Absolute Love -1989-) is a Japanese yaoi manga known for its melodramatic, almost operatic plot,[2] its "semi-insane characters", and for the controversial style of its artwork.[3] The word "Zetsu-ai" is a compound created by Minami Ozaki which has been translated as "desperate love". Ozaki's preferred English translation is "Everlasting Love".[4] Many western yaoi fans got their introduction to the genre through this series, which defined the genre for them.[3]
Synopsis
Kōji Nanjō is one of the most successful rock stars in Japan, with his hauntingly beautiful voice and very attractive features. But beneath all the fame and glamour, he is a damaged and hurt young man who has absolutely no happiness or interest in life.
One night after a string of bar-hopping, Kōji passes out in a heap of trash in the rain. He is found, taken in, and cared for by Takuto Izumi, a soccer prodigy. Despite the fact that Izumi is a complete stranger, he moves Kōji deeply, and Kōji soon develops an intense obsession with Izumi. It is later revealed that the reason Kōji sings is to find the person he fell in love with at first sight six years earlier, whom he remembers for showing extreme ferocity on the soccer field and for a particularly penetrating gaze. Kōji knows the person's name is 'Izumi,' but he thinks the person he saw was a girl, so initially he believes it was Serika Izumi, Takuto's sister. It is only when Takuto looks at him angrily that he realizes Takuto is the 'Izumi' he was looking for. His body goes into shock, and from then on his obsession with Izumi knows no bounds.
As Kōji forces himself more and more into Izumi's life, he exposes Izumi and his loved ones to his dangerous lifestyle and extremely dysfunctional family. When Takuto's little brother asks Kōji if he is gay, Kōji replies, 'No, I am not gay. I am only in love with Takuto. Even if you were twins, I could only love Takuto.' At times, the hurdles the relationship faces become too difficult to bear. In the midst of it, Kōji temporarily loses his voice and is forced to go back to his brother and family.
Due to the manga artist's illness, the manga ended at volume 19 without a proper ending. When she recovered, she drew the dojinshi Ai ni Obore, Ai ni Shisu (愛に溺れ、愛にしす lit. Drowning in Love, Too much Love, also known as Dekishi (溺死, lit. Death by Drowning)), to give readers a proper 'final meeting' scene.
Characters
Kouji Nanjo (南城市 浩二 Nanjo Kouji) Voiced by: Sho Hayami
Takuto Izumi (泉 拓人 Izumi Takuto)
- Young Takuto Izumi Voiced by: Miyuki Matsushita
- Adult Takuto Izumi Voiced by: Takehito Koyasu
Serika Izumi (泉 芹香 Izumi Serika) Voiced by: Kumiko Nishihara
Yugo Izumi (泉 ユーゴ Izumi Yugo) Voiced by: Etsuko Nishimoto
Nanjo Akihito (明仁 南城 Akihito Nanjo) Voiced by: Masami Kikuchi
Madoka Shibuya (渋谷 まどか Shibuya Madoka) Voiced by: Omi Minami
Mieko Minamimoto (皆本 美恵子 Minamimoto Mieko) Voiced by: Rei Igarashi
Toshiyuki Takasaka (タカサカ 俊之 Takasaka Toshiyuki) Voiced by: Tohru Furusawa
Takuto's Mother (拓人の母 Takuto no okasan) Voiced by: Tomoko Munakata
Publications
While the series has been published in several languages, it has not been published in English.
It was started 1989 as a legitimate spin-off of the author's Captain Tsubasa doujinshi Dokusen Yoku. The pairing between Tsubasa's Kōjirō Hyūga and Ken Wakashimu,[5] the pairing featured in Dokusen Yoku,[2] is immensely popular and has been compared to the classic slash fiction pairing of Kirk/Spock. The usual dynamic in Kōjirō-Ken doujinshi is that their relationship is "based on trust". Kōjirō is the man of the family due to his father's death. Ken, on the other hand, is heir to a martial arts school, and is constantly under pressure to quit soccer, and suffers an injury from trying to be the best in both fields. The boys support each other, and eventually their deep friendship becomes love.[5] The series Zetsuai was abandoned after 5 volumes. The author, or manga artist, Minami Ozaki picked the story back up after a few years with Bronze. So far, Bronze has outpaced Zetsuai and has 14 volumes. The story arc it is currently in is called Restart.
Two OVA's were made, one taking place in Zetsuai [Since] 1989, and the second during Bronze: Zetsuai since 1989 (also called Bronze Zetsuai[6] or simply Bronze). Koyasu Takehito plays the part of Izumi Takuto, and Sho Hayami plays Koji Nanjo. Radio dramas and CDs (with some lyrics composed by Minami Ozaki) were produced. The actors themselves often provided vocal parts for music. Five original music videos were made and compiled into a video called Cathexis.
As of 2003, fan translations of the first eleven volumes of Zetsuai / Bronze were available.[7]
Zetsuai 1989 was licensed in French (by Tonkam), German (Carlsen Verlag), Korean, Spanish (Glénat España) and Italian (Panini Comics) languages.
Zetsuai 1989 was the first shōnen-ai manga to be officially translated into German.[8]
Manga volumes
Zetsuai 1989
Bronze: Zetsuai Since 1989
No. | Japanese release date | Japanese ISBN | English release date | English ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|
— | — | |||
Izumi is tormented by nightmares after sleeping with Koji. Koji tries not to aggravate the situation. He spends nights with women, and Izumi is insanely jealous when he detects the smell of their perfume. The soccer/football association of Italy invites Izumi to train there, but he is not ready to make a decision about moving abroad, so the coach invites him for a brief visit to Italy instead. Koji makes a speech during one of his performances, saying he has decided to end his career as a singer. The next morning Izumi leaves for Italy, leaving a note promising to return in a week. Koji drops everything and races to the airport on his motorcycle, but on the way he gets into an accident and falls into a coma. Izumi finds out about this upon returning to Japan. Shibuya blames Izumi for what happened. Both Izumi and Shibuya keep hoping that Koji would wake up, but time passes, and nothing happens. The soccer coach cannot understand why Izumi is hesitating and stalling, and finally warns him that Italy will not wait forever. Izumi decides that he must keep living, even if Koji dies. | ||||
2 | 28 July 1993 | ISBN 4-08-848113-5 | ||
3 | 30 January 1994 | ISBN 4-08-848173-9 | ||
4 | 30 May 1994 | ISBN 4-08-848213-1 | ||
5 | 30 July 1994 | ISBN 4-08-848233-6 | ||
6 | 21 December 1994 | ISBN 4-08-848283-2 | ||
7 | 20 December 1995 | ISBN 4-08-848436-3 | ||
8 | 21 December 1996 | ISBN 4-08-848585-8 | ||
9 | 24 March 1997 | ISBN 4-08-848624-2 | ||
10 | 30 November 1998 | ISBN 4-08-848883-0 | ||
11 | 30 January 2000 | ISBN 4-08-847165-2 | ||
12 | 30 March 2003 | ISBN 4-08-847609-3 | ||
13 | 30 September 2003 | ISBN 4-08-847665-4 | ||
14 | 24 March 2006 | ISBN 4-08-846040-5 |
Soundtrack
Several albums were released relating to the Dokusen Yoku doujinshi, Zetsuai 1989 and Bronze since Zetsuai between 1988 and 1996.
Light novels
Several light novels were published by Shueisha. They were written by Akiyama Rin with illustrations by Minami Ozaki. The plot of novels is mostly connected to Nanjo family (Kaen Danshō series in particular), for example Kouji's elder brother Nanjo Hirose.
# | Title | Japanese title | Released | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Kaen Danshō | 華冤断章 小説 | June 1997 | ISBN 4-08-702004-5 |
2 | Zetsuai Since 1989 | 絶愛 Since 1989 | December 1997 | ISBN 4-08-702008-8 |
3 | Kaen Danshō — Uragirimono no Matsuei | 華冤断章-裏切り者の末裔-小説 | January 1998 | ISBN 4-08-702010-X |
4 | Kaen Danshō — Yami no Sumu Ie, King no Umareru Machi | 華冤断章-悪魔の棲む地下 帝王の生誕れる街-小説 | August 1998 | ISBN 4-08-702012-6 |
Reception
At the time of its writing, the genre as a whole was not commonly recognised by those not creating it, but Zetsuai 1989 is considered one of yaoi's "major works"[9] and "one of the greatest icons of shōnen-ai".[4] Koji and Izumi have been described as shōnen-ai's Romeo and Juliet. There is little explicit sex in the series. Instead, the series is "angst-ridden", and includes "a lot of blood" via themes of self-harm and accidents.[4] Ozaki's works have been described as "prolonged erotic psychodramas", and Zetsuai 1989 is the "most famous" of these.[10] The depiction of love in the series has been described as "nearly violent", which is regarded as a "true revelation" for female readers.[9] The character of Izumi's mother has been criticised by Kazuko Suzuki as an example of yaoi showing "extremely negative images of mothers".[5] Anime News Network has criticised the melodramatic tone of the OVA Bronze: Zetsuai Since 1989.[11] Aestheticism.com describes the art style of Zetsuai as being "like a fashion designer's workbook",[2] but Anime News Network says that the character design is "horribly mutated" and "disgusting".[11] Matt Thorn describes the relationship between Koji Nanjo and Takuto Izumi as an "intense and often grim love story",[12] saying that "if you like your shônen-ai (or "slash") intense, look no further."[13] Jessica Bauwens-Sugimoto describes Zetsuai 1989 as being a controversial work, noting that it was one of the early yaoi works to "enjoy widespread popularity abroad". She labels it as being bad when read through a gender studies perspective, and not representative of the yaoi genre. She characterises it as showing "violent, obsessive and abus[ive]" sex scenes. She notes that it was written during a period of yaoi history where most stories ended in tragedy. Bauwens-Sugimoto posits that because of the time gap of ten to twelve years between publication and when it was translated into German and French, audiences who read it in translation would have found it "out of touch with the times", and thus extrapolate to the yaoi genre as a whole being "backwards".[14]
References
- ↑ http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2010-12-27/bronze-zetsuai-boys-love-manga-returns-in-2-part-story
- 1 2 3 http://www.aestheticism.com/visitors/reference/list-classic.htm
- 1 2 Johnson, M. J. "A Brief History of Yaoi". Sequential Tart. Retrieved 1 February 2010.
- 1 2 3 Clements, Jonathan; Helen McCarthy (2001-09-01). The Anime Encyclopedia: A Guide to Japanese Animation Since 1917 (1st ed.). Berkeley, California: Stone Bridge Press. pp. 460–461. ISBN 1-880656-64-7. OCLC 47255331.
- 1 2 3 Suzuki, Kazuko. 1999. "Pornography or Therapy? Japanese Girls Creating the Yaoi Phenomenon". In Sherrie Inness, ed., Millennium Girls: Today's Girls Around the World. London: Rowman & Littlefield, p.243-261 ISBN 0-8476-9136-5, ISBN 0-8476-9137-3.
- ↑ John, A. (2004). Lent Comic art of Africa, Asia, Australia, and Latin America through 2000. p. 157. ISBN 0-313-31210-9.
- ↑ Sabucco, Veruska "Guided Fan Fiction: Western "Readings" of Japanese Homosexual-Themed Texts" in Berry, Chris, Fran Martin, and Audrey Yue (editors) (2003). Mobile Cultures: New Media in Queer Asia. Durham, North Carolina; London: Duke University Press. ISBN 0-8223-3087-3. page 74
- ↑ Malone, Paul M. (2010), "From BRAVO to Animexx.de to Export", in Levi, Antonia; McHarry, Mark; Pagliassotti, Dru, Boys' Love Manga: Essays on the Sexual Ambiguity and Cross-Cultural Fandom of the Genre, McFarland & Company, p. 29, ISBN 978-0-7864-4195-2
- 1 2 Kadokura, Shima; Kakizaki-Raillard, Misato (2008). Nicolas Finet, ed. Dicomanga: le dictionnaire encyclopédique de la bande dessinée japonaise (in French). Paris: Fleurus. p. 621. ISBN 978-2-215-07931-6.
- ↑ Paul Gravett (2004) Manga: 60 Years of Japanese Comics (Harper Design, ISBN 1-85669-391-0) page 90
- 1 2 Agnerian, Maral (2002-02-09). "Zetsuai & Bronze - Review". Anime News Network. Retrieved 2009-06-26.
- ↑ http://www.matt-thorn.com/shoujo_manga/girls_stuff/gs94-01-10.html
- ↑ Thorn, Matt. "Recommended Shôjo Manga". Retrieved 2009-06-26.
- ↑ Bauwens-Sugimoto, Jessica (2011). "Subverting masculinity, misogyny, and reproductive technology in SEX PISTOLS". Image & Narrative. 12 (1). Retrieved 2011-03-22.
Further reading
- McCarthy, Helen (1 January 2006). 500 Manga Heroes and Villains. Barron's Educational Series. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-7641-3201-8.
- McCarthy, Helen, Jonathan Clements The Erotic Anime Movie Guide pub Titan (London) 1998 ISBN 1-85286-946-1
- Animerica April 1993 (vol. 1, no. 4)
- Namtrac (2008). Brient, Hervé, ed. Homosexualité et manga: le yaoi. Manga: 10000 images (in French). Editions H. pp. 88–89. ISBN 978-2-9531781-0-4.
External links
- Official Site
- Onami's Dojinshi Central
- Sadomina's Zetsuai Shrine
- Zetsu's Zetsuai & Bronze Fanpage (in four languages)
- English translation of some songs
- Zetsuai 1989 (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia