PLUTO: Naoki Urasawa x Ozamu Tezuka, Band 001 by Naoki Urasawa
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is a review for the whole series, not just Pluto #1.
I read it on my smartphone. What a time to be alive!
There’s this I’ve noticed with manga, anime and how I take them in: very often, such series as Pluto, or Neon Genesis Evangelion while we’re at it, they start off strong and interesting, they throw you in well-crafted worlds with characters I want to know more about. The art is captivating and undoubtedly masterful. By the end, however, the plot’s typically so messed up I find it difficult to keep caring. And that’s precisely what happened with me and Pluto. Should I give up on “serious” manga?
That said, I concede that Pluto portrays a society where artificial intelligence has penetrated human society quite convincingly. A killer robot that’s left its (his?) past life behind and just wants to play the piano? Now that’s something I want to read more about.
Also, what’s with Urasawa and Germany? Monster also took place there and it seemed kind of arbitrary that it had to.
http://choco-bacon.tumblr.com/post/70134199457/momohasarrived-comparison-art-for-pluto-by
I remember this manga somehow left me feeling satisfied, probably because I rarely read “serious” comics like this one.