HOTEL HARBOUR VIEW |
Escribir un comentario
Conviértete en señor
|
Alternativas:
海景酒店; Kaikei Saketen
Autor:
Taniguchi Jiro Sekikawa Natsuo
Artista:
Taniguchi Jiro
Escribe:
Manga
Estado:
YES
Publicar:
1983-01-01 to ?
Leyendo Quiero leer Leer Eliminar |
Leyendo
Quiero leer
Leer
Eliminar
3.0
(2 Votos)
|
0.00%
0.00%
100.00%
0.00%
0.00%
|
0 Leyendo
0 Quiero leer
0 Leer
Alternativas:
海景酒店; Kaikei Saketen
Autor:
Taniguchi Jiro Sekikawa Natsuo
Artista:
Taniguchi Jiro
Escribe:
Manga
Estado:
YES
Publicar:
1983-01-01 to ?
Puntaje
3.0
2 Votos
|
0.00%
0.00%
100.00%
0.00%
0.00%
|
0 Leyendo
0 Quiero leer
0 Leer
Resumen
[From Manga-Sketchbook]:
Female assassins mix sex and death in a pair of hard-boiled well-drawn film-noir stories of love and murder.
From Baka-Updates:
Two linked stories, both revolving around a deadly female assassin. In Hotel Harbour View, a Japanese expatriate in Hong Kong spends his time drinking whisky, photographing a high class prostitute and waiting for death at the hands of the assassin he knows is coming for him. In Brief Encounter, a notorious Parisian assassin is himself marked for assassination and his hunter is no stranger to him.
Female assassins mix sex and death in a pair of hard-boiled well-drawn film-noir stories of love and murder.
From Baka-Updates:
Two linked stories, both revolving around a deadly female assassin. In Hotel Harbour View, a Japanese expatriate in Hong Kong spends his time drinking whisky, photographing a high class prostitute and waiting for death at the hands of the assassin he knows is coming for him. In Brief Encounter, a notorious Parisian assassin is himself marked for assassination and his hunter is no stranger to him.
Reseñas (2)
Escribir un comentario
HOTEL HARBOUR VIEW review
Hotel Harbour View is set firmly in the noir world of the Fatal Woman. The two stories that make up the book read like cliches from an also-ran hard-boiled novelist - the kind of script Jim Thompson might dash off in 20 minutes in exchange for a shot, a beer, and a pack of cigarettes.
The artwork, too, is very western. I'm not faulting it for that. I quite like it. It's just that in pretty much every way - except that the story and art were provided by a couple Japanese guys - this is a western genre comic. I'm curious about Netsuo Sekikawa, the story writer. He wasn't prolific and it appears he tended to focus on this type of noir-ish style. But on the back cover where the bios of artist and writer are shown, it says that he didn't want his profile attached with this work. Wonder why. It's not a bad work. It's just not particularly unique or interesting. |