AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH.
I am yellinggggg as much as my lungs allow it. What is this series??? Do you know the word masterpiece? Well, it's an understatement to say this was a masterpiece. We should create new words to describe how awesome this manga is.
Well, I'll take a breath and then explain further why I became insane after reading 20th Century Boys. But before diving in, I didn’t know there was a spinoff called 21st Century Boys that actually continued the series. I thought it was done, and when I finished the 11th volume (I was reading the double edition), the only thing that spared me from yelling like a crazy person who had fled from a psychiatric hospital was the fact that I was in a library. I already ordered the spinoff and will try to survive until then.
Now, back to this mind-blowing series. Guys, everything—EVERYTHING—was incredible about it.
First, the drawings. I am particularly thinking about the double-page spreads—so breathtaking.
Second, the characters. The complexity of the characters, the relationships between them, and their evolution from children to adults. The portrayal of their mentalities and souls is so sincere and true that you can't not be touched by it and identify with them. We get to see a canvas illustrating the contrast between the mind and soul of a child and the transformation life forces upon them as they grow up.
Children, so full of life, thinking they own the world, dreaming, having such vast imaginations that they could swallow all of us—only to be reduced to mere robots. A perfect caricature of what adult life is supposed to be. Deprived of their dreams, their faith, and most importantly, their pure, strong souls. But ghosts of the past will come back and force them to ask themselves the right questions.
Will they fight back and become the heroes they wished to be when the light was still shining in their eyes, or will they let this dull existence chain them forever?
And this is the journey we follow, trying to understand the present and the future. Grasping the depth of this friendship, this bond between Kenji—our main character—and his friends. How everyone has and had a part to play. How much they have faith in each other and in Kenji, who wasn’t just their friend but the symbol of their old selves. The symbol of their strength, their hope, their faith, and perseverance.
And now, we get to the third point that makes this series exceptional: the plot, the storyline, and the plot twists.
The story starts with Kenji and his friends, making us believe they are the protagonists—until one volume hits, and suddenly we are transported from the year 2000 to the year 2014, where we follow Kanna, Kenji’s niece.
We shift from a journey of self-discovery, the contrast between the me of the past and the me of the present, and the wishes we hold for the me of the future—to a chaotic present, urgent decisions that must be made, a haunted past, and a terrifying future waiting to be unravelled.
Kanna took everything from her uncle—his faith, his strength, but most importantly, his sense of justice. And in times like these, when the world has crumbled, when a dystopian reality has turned life into a nightmare, her sincerity, kind smile, and determination made a difference. It is this lionhearted spirit she inherited from her uncle and his friends that made her the hope the characters in the story—and we, the readers—believed in.
I haven’t even talked about the sci-fi elements, the action, or the world-building to keep this review spoiler-free, but Naoki Urasawa is a true architect when it comes to such matters.
I’m so emotional that I still want to talk so much about it, but my review is already too long, I think. If you were touched by my words—go pick up this manga. It’s freaking marvellous.