Crayon Shinchan 6
November 3, 2008
I generally have a rule not to read volumes out of order (a rule I may find myself setting aside soon), but this is a gag series with almost no continuity, so it’s pretty safe to pick up at random.
I’m still a little put off by this, much like the first volume. My impression was extremely negative at the beginning of the volume, actually, since the first 30-50 pages were a continuous plotline involving Shin and his family being dropped into a parallel universe where his favorite TV superhero exists and the threats of evil are real. I really liked the initial joke (the bad guy here is something along the lines of “the high cut swimsuit empire”, and everyone who’s been brainwashed suddenly finds themselves wearing swimsuits with a high-cut leg and making a particular strange gesture), but after it had been repeated ad nauseum for the entire length of the plot, I was a little less enamored. Plus, the strangeness in the series being part of reality just didn’t mix right for me, for some reason.
This is followed by a second continuous plot, which I liked much better and was about Shin and his parents taking a trip to Guam. There are the expected jokes (Shin on the plane, Shin in a souvenir shop, Shin’s parents not speaking the language, etc), but I still liked them. I was actually a little disappointed this didn’t go on a little longer.
The rest of the volume was more what I was expecting, the one-shot shorts with maybe two or three strung together with continuity. I like these one-shots best of all since if a topic isn’t working, the subject gets changed after a few pages. The flip side is, of course, what really works also doesn’t last very long (there was a really funny story about Shin being entered in a kindergarten sumo contest that I would have loved to see more of). These are generally really hit and miss, and again, I got a little tired of reading the same jokes over and over. Reading over my last review, I should probably take my own advice and read this in short doses. There were plenty of jokes that were funny the first time, so maybe reading a whole volume at once just isn’t a good idea.
My favorite gag didn’t come until the end of the volume. Shin and his mom run into one of Shin’s friends and her mom at a restaurant. After various things that drive the friend’s mother batty, she goes into the restroom, takes a comically huge stuffed rabbit out of her purse, and starts punching it. For whatever reason, this just struck me the right way. I absolutely died.
In short: more continuity, but read in short doses because it’s pretty repetitive.
This was an ARC provided by CMX.