Genkaku Picasso

Welcome to Kuriousity

News, reviews and features with a focus on manga, self-published works and a Canadian perspective. Enjoy fulfilling your Kuriousity!

SITE RETIRED - Thank you for the years of support and readership!

Reviews

Review: Absolute Boyfriend (Vol. 06)


Manga-ka: Yuu Watase
Publisher: Viz
Rating: Older Teen (16+)
Released: May 2008

Synopsis:
“Rejected way too many times by good-looking (and unattainable) guys, shy Riiko Izawa goes online and signs up for a free trial of a mysterious Night Lover “figure.” The very next day, a cute naked guy is delivered to her door, and he wants to be her boyfriend! Riiko has chosen her one true boyfriend, but she finds her life changing quickly after he decision is made. Will Riiko and her boyfriend have their happily-ever-after?”

Absolute Boyfriend, volume six, marks the end of this series. With Riiko having chosen Night as her true love, she discovers that Soshi is moving to Spain. Confused and torn, will Riiko and Night get their happily ever after? Remaining review contains minor spoilers.

Throughout this series, there has always been what seems like it would be the stereotypical shoujo ending. Riiko getting with her somewhat cranky, but loving, next door neighbour Soshi seemed more plausible than a perfect cookie-cutter ending with a perfect manufactured boyfriend. What happens here instead is a mix of clichéd moments that feels as though Yuu Watase had as much trouble choosing between the two men as Riiko did.

After finally consummating their relationship, Riiko and Night seem meant to be at last. Night’s body even seems to have repaired itself. A perfect ending is soiled for Riiko when she finds out Soshi is moving to Spain, a departure he executes with dramatic flair via the classic leave-without-goodbyes. The final ending itself is bittersweet which, though out of place for the mood this series has delivered so far, is an interesting turn of events that shies from concrete conclusion on all fronts.

Absolute Boyfriend takes up about half of this book’s 200 pages. Following it are two unrelated short stories: one is about a girl who can see spirits and the other about a boy with a gift for smelling. They’re both really cute and amusing stories that sum themselves up in their respective lengths very well. Taking up so much of the book may annoy some readers due to lack of more Absolute Boyfriend, but both are really fun stories that round the release out nicely.

For a series that had a strong start, its ending really doesn’t feel up to par. With a conclusion that tries too hard to please and final moments that lack a real sense of completion, it makes for a somewhat disappointing ending where nobody really gets what they want (at least conclusively). Readers who liked the series up until now will at least be able to enjoy the drama, humour and Yuu Watase’s beautiful artwork, even if it doesn’t deliver the most satisfying resolve. Bonus stories are atleast a great add-on and, making up such a good portion, make this book a worthwhile purchase for Yuu Watase fans who may not have enjoyed or collected Absolute Boyfriend.

Written May 4, 2008 by Lissa Pattillo
Book purchased in-store from Chapters

About the Author:

Lissa Pattillo is the owner and editor of Kuriousity.ca. Residing in Halifax, Nova Scotia she takes great joy in collecting all manners of manga genres, regretting that there's never enough time in the day to review or share them all. Along with reviews, Lissa is responsible for all the news postings to the website and works full time as a web and graphic designer.



Kuriousity does not condone or support the illegal distribution of manga online.
See an ad here linking to a scanlation website? Please let us know!

3 Responses

  1. […] Speed Racer: Mach Go Go Go box set at Comics Worth Reading. At Kuri-ousity, Lissa Pattillo reads vol. 6 of Absolute Boyfriend. A.E. Sparrow enjoys vol. 1 of J-Pop Idol at IGN. Connie reads Real Love and vol. 23 of GetBackers […]

  2. lol you made it to vol6 hehe

    TBH i never got past vol 2 for this series, it lacks a lot of the presence and feel her other series have had. I got the impression she didn't real think to much about it, and just drew.

    The story was shallow, and i found that at times her art went bad as well.

    I tried to write a review for this a while back, but couldn't get motivated for it hehe.

  3. Kuri says:

    @Tiamat: It definately lacked the charm of some of Yuu Watase's other series but I actually enjoyed most of Absolute Boyfriend.

    I enjoyed the humour most of all, the drama unfortunately was pretty stale and shallow. I was also coasting off the joy of one of my favourite manga artists using the boy-android angle after personally going through so many girl-android plots by other artists ;p It was refreshing, for all it's down times.

Leave a Reply

Take me back to the top!