Not exact matches
Here's a rare
picture of me (and my
girls), notice the beautiful
Japanese Weekend nightgown and my happy face.
Or that would be the case if the
picture weren't fashionably intoxicated with the
Japanese conceit of the scary little
girl ghost, this time named Jodie (Isabel Conner) and commissioned to befriend moppet Chelsea (Chloe Grace Moretz), whom no one will believe until it's almost too late.
From his early days as a school boy cartoonist who becomes overwhelmed with giddiness upon meeting Osamu Tezuka to his trail - blazing days as a leading artist in the gekiga, or «dramatic
pictures» movement, Yoshihiro Tatsumi weaves post-WWII
Japanese history with his personal recollections of manga legends like Takao Saito (Golgo 13) and Masahiko Matsumoto (Cigarette
Girl).
This wasn't going to be a bunch of text, accompanied with dithered
pictures of
Japanese girls of questionable age, nor a menu intensive attempt at regulating the temperature of my mech suit as I face the existential crisis of deep space combat.