Hey everyone, Kenn here with part one of my top 10 Manga list. This list is held to a few restrictions, since if I didn't hold myself to them, I'd just wind up posting only works by a few authors. Namely, I cannot post multiple works from any one author. Instead I take my favorite work by a given author and post it as high as it deserves. This is going to be a two-parter, because I realized if I wanted to give each manga the in-depth treatment it deserves I'd need to take up two updates. This list isn't meant to do anything but express my views and open up discussion. If you feel there are manga that I left off or didn't give the treatment they deserved, please, mention them in the comments. Maybe next time I post a list they'll make it on!
And now, without further ado, let's get this started.
#10
FLCL by GAINAX and Haijime Ueda
Let's start this list off with one of the first manga I ever read. FLCL is about Naota, a gradeschool kid who's got a lot of problems on his plate. His older brother has left to play baseball in America, leaving behind his girlfriend, Mamimi Samejima, who's now beginning to come on to Naota. On top of that, someone has been starting fires around town, and Naota suspects Mamimi. All of these troubles come to a head when a beautiful alien from outer space assaults him with a guitar from atop a vespa and begins pulling robots out of his head.
Contrary from the norm, the manga is actually based on GAINAX's popular anime. It takes a lot of departures from the series, particularly in the second volume. The series is much darker, more violent, and more sexual, a change in tone that is exemplified by a scene unique to the manga in which Haruko beats up Naota's friends and then tells him to go see them and that they're "bleeding all over their porn." The class president gets a larger role, with the robot coming out of her head being a permanent cast member, and the ending is a lot sadder. The manga is particularly impressive because of Ueda's striking art style. His use of ink to create heavy outlines and shading makes the art striking, and perfectly captures the change in tone. The manga is hilarious, striking, and has surprising depth, but in my opinion still falls short of the anime. A great manga nonetheless, and a must-read for fans of the anime.
The FLCL manga is a completed series published in the US by Tokyo Pop, and is currently out-of-print. It can be hard to find in bookstores, but is worth the hunt. Or you could do a quick search to find it on Amazon.com.