Things may have settled down in terms of introducing suitors for Ranma and Akane, but the ones they already have are more than enough. After a madcap delivery race, Genma and Soun’s master, Happosai, makes an appearance and if anything in this series shows its age it’s this guy. Or the gender stereotypes.
There are some good stories here - the comedy and ridiculous back and forth between the characters can carry just about anything, but the delivery race is a ton of fun as deadly techniques are put into action. If one other story wasn’t here and wasn’t incredible, it would be the stand-out.
The incredibly useless Kuno, who likes girl-Ranma or Akane best depending on which way the wind is blowing, ends up as the race finish line in one of the sweatiest jokes that also sees his sizeable ego waiting for one of the two to just show up and be his lover.
By far my biggest laugh in this omnibus is Kuno showing up at the Tendo breakfast table, then being landed on my Ranma, who is himself landed on by Genma. The energy in this series just does not stop and it’s better for it.
After this, Happosai shows up and, boy, does he ruin a good hundred pages. Of all the things to be left in the past, this panty thieving pedophile was definitely the one and he’s just the worst. My tolerance for such characters is very, very low (I think I have been able to put up with Tenchi’s dad?) and I do not care for him at all.
Luckily he fades into the background later on, though he comes roaring back for a story where Ryoga and Ranma become convinced there’s a drowned man spring underneath the girls’ locker room, which is so insane and sees Ranma get into so much trouble that Takahashi nearly pulls it off.
Much better is the Romeo and Juliet story, which is pretty much the high point of the volume, minus one very sketchy chloroform joke (yikes). The premise, that the drama club who wins an upcoming competition will get to go to China, just leads to absolute mayhem. Shout-out to one hilarious two-page spread of several drama clubs, including one guy who is dressed like Jesus and running along tied to a cross.
This several chapters long arc is basically aan excuse for four guys to wail on one another over Akane and it goes wall-to-wall with the slapstick. It’s got the frenetic energy that really defines a good Ranma story, but it also has a very sweet (and very rare) moment of sentiment at the end from Ranma (the audience undercutting this with their ‘OOH’ is perfect).
Regrettably it leads to the most chauvinistic attitudes of the book too. I know reading Ranma with a modern lens is going to lead to these sorts of disclaimers, but the book really sells Akane short.
It gives her guff for being too violent and also for not being feminine enough, neither of which are fair appraisals. She gets her vengeance enough that it’s tolerable, but she ends up needing rescue more than she should, given her skill set.
These are not deep characters, but they are fun ones, mostly. Genma and Soun deciding to be meddling fathers pushing Ranma and Akane together gets a lot of mileage and gives them something to do, although Genma is amazing in his own right.
Not that plot progression means much in a series like this, but I also like when Ranma and Akane have the occasional real moment showing how much they care underneath all the behaving like garbage to one another.
3 stars - the bloom came off the rose with this one; Happosai is an awful, archaic stereotype with no redeeming qualities and I’m pretty sure my enjoyment of subsequent volumes will be directly correlated with how much he appears in them. Which is too bad; that Romeo & Juliet staging is the best use of THAT trope that I’ve ever seen.