Eyeshield 21 19

May 17, 2008

Holy crap guys.  This volume had an entire chapter IN COLOR in the middle.  Like, real color pages!  When I started reading it and noticed some of the pages had red and blue borders, I thought it was a trim error for some reason.  I was totally pleased with that, and I hope that it happens more often in other series as well.

Most of this volume is just the end of the game with the Bando Spiders.  Once the main conflict of a game has been laid out (in this case, Bando has great special teams, which makes for an annoyingly hard game), if the solution to the problem is too long in coming, I start to lose interest.  There was an additional conflict introduced when high winds started blowing in the middle of the game, but I was kind of disappointed with the impact this had on game play.  This is the last game before Nationals, so the game is really built up and stretched out, but ends halfway through the volume.

I mean, I can’t talk about the next part without spoiling that outcome, but I feel like the series spoils it itself since it’s still running TO THIS DAY in Japan and Hiruma’s still in it (who is set to retire after this season).  The celebrations are legendary after the game, though.  I feel like the could have been exaggerated a little more comically, but I was still pretty happy with them.  The color chapter in the middle contains several 1 and 2 page gag comics (which are always very funny in this series), then the first chapter of what I assume is going to be the Kanto tournament arc, where all the best players gather for the lottery to determine team placement.  The next game is against the guy who’s been talked up as a real jerk for the past several volumes, and I like that the end of the volume introduces a conflict along the lines of… who’s more evil, this guy or Hiruma.  The difference between the two is that Hiruma’s a funny kind of evil and the other guy is a “I’m going to literally gouge your eye out of your head” kind of evil.  I’m excited to see where that goes.

Eyeshield 21 18

March 17, 2008

Well, the big thing in this volume seems to be that Sena finally revealed himself.  The scene where the Devil Bats were being introduced on the field before the game with the Bando Spiders was the best.  Mamori’s reaction (and the subtle Hiruma/Mamori hint thrown in for good measure) was worth the wait, and I’m glad she dealt with things the way she did.

The best reaction was from his parents, though.  That just made me laugh.  I also like that Suzuna seems to be able to get away with calling Hiruma “Elf Boy” or something like that (part of me hopes that it was actually “elf friend,” but I don’t think that was the case).

The game itself is intense, as you can probably imagine.  The complication this time is that Bando is extremely good at special teams, so they always take possession of the ball and score a touchdown, and there’s just not much the other team can do about it.  I liked that the star player on the other team, the one who was not constantly coming his hair and talking about how cool he was, always related everything to music and nobody else seemed to like this very much.  In fact, he was constantly being called out because music just doesn’t have anything to do with football.

Most of all, I just feel genuinely good when I read this series.  Even with this volume, where Deimon is being totally stomped, the characters are just so good it’s just gratifying to read.  I love this series.

Eyeshield 21 17

January 16, 2008

This volume was AGONIZING.  The entire thing is the game with Seibu, and they swing so wildly between dominating and losing horribly that you just can’t read fast enough.  You want them to win so bad that you have to know right now whether or not some trick or other will succeed.

The end of the game was by far some of the most intense storytelling in the series yet.  Without spoiling much, there are two things that contribute to this.  One is a situation where, if a few plays don’t go as intended, Seibu may win the game by just letting the clock run out, which is always a strategy that bugs me in football.  Another tense moment comes when Monta is trying to make a catch.

If you follow this series, this volume is what you’ve been waiting for.  As good as everything else has been so far, this blows all of that totally out of the water.  It’s wonderful.

Eyeshield 21 16

December 12, 2007

And why not throw in a volume of Eyeshield 21 for the road?  I’ve been reading a lot lately, and I’m a bit behind in writing these (I still have the last three volumes of 3×3 Eyes from over a month ago to talk about), so I may as well sneak one last review in before bed.

So in case you were wondering, yes, after sixteen volumes of nothing but football, featuring solid volumes like this one where only about half or less of a game is played, this series is amazing.  We get the first half of the game with Seibu Wild Gunman, and there is a lot of focus on Yoichi Hiruma and how he plays the game.  Seibu is revealed to be a team that isn’t easily outsmarted, and Hiruma has a number of angles to play against them.  He genuinely fails a couple times, but never gives up in true Shounen Jump style.

Also, a new teammate for Deimon!  Hooray!

Eyeshield 21 15

November 21, 2007

I’m a bit behind on this series, which is sad because it’s still really good, unlike other, more popular Shounen Jump series which sucked after they’d run this long.  Really, this could be a veiled reference to many series, but since Bleach pissed me off lately and hasn’t been good in a long time, I’m thinking of that one in particular.

We get the end of the game with the Poseidons,  which is predictably epic.  I had forgotten about the rivalry between two of the players, and I was really pleased that it wound up being the deciding factor in the game, especially since it was a Devil Bat who is often overlooked.

Things are wound up for the next game when a character for Sena’s past is introduced and just happens to play on the Football team of the school Deimon’s up against next.  This is the kid who taught Sena how to run, so they’re going to have a little run-off.  We’ll see how that goes.

One of the more notable things in this volume, though, is the field day event which Hiruma exploits as a training session for the football team.  Hiruma, Baldy, and Manager wind up on the team against everyone else on the football team, and somehow Hiruma convinces the two mild-mannered characters to be totally scary for the duration of the field day.  It was one of those hilarious character situations which so few authors can pull off well, and just goes to prove once again that this series not only has great characters, but an awesome sense of humor.  Well, for the most part.  I… wish it were more sympathetic sometimes.  Especially… you know.  It’s really bad at some things.

At the very end, we get more Musashi stuff.  I hope he’s finally drug into things after 15 volumes.

Eyeshield 21 14

June 26, 2007

I was a little put off by this volume because it was JUST a football game.  The Poseidon game takes up the entire volume, with none of the cute inbetween stuff I like so much.  It was annoying too, because the volume ends without you knowing the outcome.  Argh.

On the other hand, it still does a fair job of spotlighting the characters while they play.  Of course Fatty Jr. gets the most spotlight, and much of the first half of the volume is spent on his struggle to break through the Poseidon techniques and height advantage et al.  We also get to see a lot of technique evolution from Monta and Sena, more Sena than Monta, but these three were spotlighted in particular to show that “size doesn’t matter,” since they are all three pretty short.  The Hah Brothers get a brief moment where we see them using the delinquent murder method in the background, but the thing that shocked me was that Hiruma was praised.  Hiruma NEVER gets praised, even though he more than anyone else deserves it.  It was kind of a weird moment.  Kurita never gets praised either though he probably deserves it, and we see almost none of him this time around.   We also only get one scene with Natsuhiko, who’s one of my new favorites.  I missed him.

The best scene in the volume was when Mamori tried to signal to the field about how to deal with one of the Poseidon’s strategies, and everyone thought she was just cheering for them.  Plus, we get another covert Mamori/Hiruma moment, which are still really weird and welcome.

Even with a somewhat boring volume, I STILL can’t wait for the next one.  What a great series.

Eyeshield 21 13

April 10, 2007

Too much time spent inbetween games here, and too much time spent talking technique with the Poseidons.  I wonder about this fake Eyeshield 21 business.  Part of me hopes that the Eyeshield 21 of Notre Dame fame is actually Hiruma, which would make this series totally awesome.  Part of me also thinks that it won’t really be anything substantial.  We’ll see.

I felt bad for Fatty Jr.  He’s a good character, and he seemed above criticism until the tall guy beat him up with words.  It was cute when absolutely everyone was out looking for him, even Hiruma.  What got to me the most, though, was the language of strong men.  His note, which just said something like “so gone” Kurita interpreted into a rather eloquent and heartfelt goodbye.

Though he’s pretty annoying and bigheaded, I like the braggart from the Poseidons.  He doesn’t seem like that bad a guy, he just is certain that he’ll win because he’s tall.  What should’ve happened is having this team play Ojo, who’s got the tallest passers.  That would have been cool.  But we have tall guys up against Fatty Jr now.  We’ll see how sumo technique works.

Eyeshield 21 12

April 5, 2007

There was an awesome scene in this volume where they realized that they had to get Chin Fuzz to pass the entrance exam so he could play.  Actually, I don’t remember if this was in this volume or the last… I think it was this one, because they mention that he wasn’t going to be playing in the Amino Cyborg game anyway since he wasn’t actually a student.  Anyway, he’s as dumb as a post.  Baldy and Mamori have to teach him many things, with a football theme, in order to make it okay for him to play on the football team.  He’s… real funny.  I like him.

His sister the cheerleader is a bit more annoying than him, but I still kinda like her.  I hate how it’s sorta-kinda being set up so she’s some sort of romantic interest for Sena (or maybe not, this could just be speculation on my part), because I would rather see Mamori with Sena.  But on the other hand, I live for Mamori/Hiruma moments, so I’d have to give those up, too.  In either case, this series does not aknowledge anything like romance exists, so none of the above is likely, but still.

Actually, the coach assumes Mamori is Hiruma’s girlfriend at one point.  The face Mamori made was priceless.

What else… we get one of the quickest Devil Bats games in history, but also one of the saddest.  I kinda felt bad for the opponents.  Something tells me we’re in for a lot of watching unrelated football games, which I am not a fan of, but we get a really short one at the end of this volume involving their supposed future opponent.  Hm.

One interesting thing about this volume: in the 100th chapter, the 2-page spreads are all a collection of 3 4-koma strips per spread based around different themes.  All are hilarious.  I love this series SO HARD.  I hate football, but I love this all the same.

Eyeshield 21 11

April 5, 2007

Yay, finally everyone’s back in Japan.  One of the funnier scenes in the beginning was with Fatty Jr. and his father, where Fatty Jr. was just gesturing wildly with his hands and his dad was saying things like “You pushed a truck 2,000 k?  GOOD MAN!”

The tryouts were in this volume.  I was kind of surprised since I’m pretty sure the team is still short (and the people who sub for them at games mention this… Hiruma calls their names as having made the cut and several of them sound rather confused as to why they’re being called as regular members).  They did make a cut though, which made me extremely sad.  I guess… that’s this series way of not keeping the “you can do anything!” attitude that tends to pervade these types of series.  He’s sticking around though, so I’m sure he’ll come back later.

There was also a very funny scene where Sena got separated from the group along with Chin Fuzz, and the two of them jump on a bus under the latter’s direction and wind up in Nagano.  Chin Fuzz is one of my new favorite characters.  He’s AWESOME.  Unfortunately, I still can’t be bothered to remember his name.

Eyeshield 21 10

April 4, 2007

I think this is the only other Shounen Jump title I’m grossly behind on, with three volumes unread on the shelf and a fourth enroute.  Of course, every time I say that, I think of another title I need to read.  I”s.  There, I’m like 7 volumes behind on that one.  Great.

Anyway, I like this one, unlike I”s.  I think I let it sit because I did not like the prospect of training in America.  Though there are many funny moments, there’s just a bunch of weird stuff that happens sandwiched in between a bunch of boring running.  Sena tries out for a professional team accidentally.  The team makes the money for the coach’s debt and their plane tickets home in Vegas.  Ignore the fact that most of them don’t seem able to speak English and are underage… and won an astronomical amount at the blackjack and roulette tables.  I’m glad Monta lost his final bet though, that would have put me off a LOT.  It was a funny joke, too, because it had a Shounen Jump custom magical moment right before that lets you know whatever risk that’s going to be undertaken will come out okay.

We get a new character, and I kind of like him.  Apparently he’s really stupid, but mostly he’s just smarmy.  Hiruma doesn’t even phase him, but he’s got a relationship with Monta the same way the Hah Brothers and Fatty Jr. have.  It’s nice.