À peine entré à Geidai, Yatora déchante. Non seulement il se sent incompétent comparé aux autres étudiants, mais les professeurs lui font également comprendre qu’il doit commencer par oublier tout ce qu’il a appris jusqu’ici pour trouver sa propre identité artistique. Rien ne semble gagné pour Yatora, qui est aussi dépité qu’exaspéré... mais ouvert à la découverte d’autres centres d’intérêt !
"knowledge and techniques are powerful, but if you get too greedy or don't utilize them properly, the piece ends up looking mediocre."
"it's difficult for someone with weapons to beat someone with many."
Actual rating: 2.5
In sad thoughts TT, this volume was boring, too bad most of the mangas I've ever read get boring after several volumes. Well, I hope it gets better, I really don't want it to end up disappointing.
c'est toujours un des meilleurs mangas sur cette planète terre tout est parfait je peux même pas emettre une critique !!!! le dessin est beau, l'histoire est trop cool... merci pour tout
After last volume's melancholic ending, I was dying to see how Yatora will bounce back from this, and this volume was able to continue it nicely. This volume also introduced the start of another story arc, which is the school festival arc. As always, the dialogues here slaps once again, and you can feel what Yatora and the characters are going through. I also like how this volume gave the Gedai students more depth. Like it showed more of their personalities and the like, so I'm really excited to see more from them in the upcoming volumes.
This one is mostly about getting ready for the culture festival and has some good themes of working together. I am enjoying this series,but I miss Yuka. Yatora is very emotional, and I enjoy seeing that in a male protagonist, I also enjoy all the ecentrics he is around. Yatora definitely has the ennui and existential crisis down pat,but I really like how he works to overcome those and grow as a person and artist Check out my YouTube channel for bookish videos and monthly wrap ups!
Still reeling from his initial review at TUA, Yatora is at sea trying to figure himself out as an artist. His current assignment takes him back to a favorite subject, but is that a help or a hindrance? Then the story heads to festival town, but at an art school things are on a whole other level.
With two main storylines, this volume is literally split into two and one of them is more successful than the other, though neither are bad. We first rejoin Yatora’s breakdown, already in progress, as he struggles to improve himself.
One thing I do wish this story would acknowledge is that sometimes your professors aren’t just wrong, they’re dicks. Yatora took one particular criticism far too much to heart and it’s been dragging him down ever since.
Mercifully, this is a lot less mopey than the last volume, but this one is all struggle, although the solution that Yatora comes up with is pretty brilliant (and close to my own heart). In fact, in acknowledging that his reach may exceed his grasp, he learns a pretty valuable lesson.
The other storyline is the festival event, which turns out to be a massive month-long project that requires some serious hours. And most of the students, Yatora included, are volunteering as little time as possible.
In a way, this is a scenario that is directly impacted by Yatora’s current issues - he isn’t enjoying his art so he has no desire to spend extra time doing art things with his art friends/colleagues.
Now, if you think you know where this is going, I regret to inform you that you are completely correct across the board, as this does go to the tropes to get its story beats and character moments in. It’s still good, but there are legitimately no surprises.
What makes this such a brilliant bit of business, however, is the focus on Kinemi, who is easily one of the best new characters the series has introduced. I just love her volleyball-loving, super strong/thick design paired with her polite and gentle nature. It’s so good.
Naturally, having somebody with a strong competitive streak who’s also kind of a pushover leads to total chaos and it’s via this mess that Yatora reinserts himself into the narrative.
Frankly, it’s all worth it for the huge Kinemi focus and the late night conversation between her and Yatora. I’m not saying they HAVE to get together, but it wouldn’t be the worst pairing in manga history, that’s for sure.
There are still a couple of things I wish were different here - while it reflects going to university for many, I do wish we hadn’t lost so much of the old cast, who were really fun (Ryuuji, come back!).
It definitely feels like things have gotten a little sillier too, with much broader characters than before. Yatora’s professor, for example, looks like a dwarf rabbit that got tenure. Her design being short is one thing, but she looks young enough to be his little sister. In a way it also reflects a university experience, but still…
After just reading Run On Your New Legs, it’s hard not to notice the underwhelming job this volume does blending information and story. The first section has a huge museum tour section, while the bonus manga features an incredibly dull visit to a canvas factory.
It’s not that these things can’t be interesting, but they spend way too long telling you things than interspersing them with the characters. That bonus manga is particular egregious because it ends with a curry battle that’s a lot of fun and about ten times as engaging.
4 stars - it’s getting back to where it was, but it’s definitely not quite there yet. Blue Period has been an incredible manga at times and this volume gives me hope that it’ll achieve those same heights again in the future. It’s just got a little way to go still.
L'ho ripeterò fino alla morte: BLUE PERIOD ha il potere di esprimere il senso del mondo. È capace di sprimerti le meningi e di farti riflettere su come potresti migliorare le tue capacità in qualsiasi ambito. Le parole vengono scelte accuratamente e i messaggi che trasmette sono di un valore inestimabile. Continuo ad adorare questo manga sempre di più, non ne avrò mai abbastanza!❤️
Ho apprezzato meno questo volume, ma per il semplice fatto che avrei voluto vedere più avventure durante il periodo scolastico. Per Yatora sarà passato anche un semestre intero, ma a parer mio pare essere passato poco più di un mese...
P.s. adoro Yakumo.
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✨ CITAZIONI QUA E LÀ ✨
«... I sentimenti umani sono fondamentalmente gli stessi». Capisco, le case e le culture non esistono da sempre. Sono stati gli uomini a renderle ciò che sono.
"Dietro ognuna di quelle luci, c'è una vita. È come una riscoperta. Gli strati di una città sono gli strati delle sue culture. Gli strati delle culture sono gli strati delle persone. E anche ogni singola persona ha degli strati."
"Ricorda già l'inizio di un nuovo giorno, sia il momento in cui ci si addormenta. Quel mondo blu... anche quel mondo blu è fatto di strati."
"Niente è più da sfigati che lamentarsi senza nemmeno cercare una soluzione."
"E a volte il risultato è proprio migliore quando si incontrano delle difficoltà, piuttosto che quando fila tutto liscio."
Muy fan de Murai xDDDDD, sobre todo en la primera parte.
La segunda mitad ha sido... impresionantemente familiar. Es la misma sensación que me generó el anime. Quiza no tenga grandes dramas y la mayor parte del tiempo Yaguchi esté ahogándose en vasos de agua, pero es que son mis vasos de agua. Esa presión de grupo, la negativa de todos a trabajar, la falta de compromiso, la camaradería de la adversidad... 10/10
It's just a beautiful book and series, I will always love it. It inspires me to become who I want to, and it's not meaningless to do what I want to. I don't even know how to put it into words but I'll always like this work. I have been feeling so stupid, and just everything is just so stupid when I create something, but this makes me feel that it's not so stupid, and as long as I want to do it, it's fine even if it's stupid.
Prosegue questa narrazione un po' "lenta" che va avanti dall'ammissione alla Geidai. La parte del festival estivo l'ho trovata interminabile! Spero ritorni a brillare come gli inizi.
This was such a disappointment. Two-thirds of it dealt with the festival project which was so boring. I could care less about most of the new characters, except Murai. I want more of him and Yatora hanging out.
Another great volume of Blue Period! I love the new university characters, and seeing Yaguchi struggle with finding his place in college is so relatable and comforting!
Aviso: esta reseña contiene spoilers de los 7 primeros tomos de este manga, ya reseñados. Recomendamos esta obra encarecidamente, merece mucho la pena acompañar a Yaguchi en su viaje de autodescubrimiento a través del arte.
Yaguchi ha alcanzado el olimpo al aprobar el examen de ingreso a la Universidad Nacional de Bellas Artes y Música de Tokio. Ahora, él y su desmotivación se enfrentan a su próxima tarea: “paisaje de Tokio”. Mientras tanto, llegan las vacaciones de verano, donde le aguardan los preparativos de su primer gran acto en la Geidai: el festival cultural de la universidad.
Tras dejarnos a un Yaguchi destrozado en el tomo anterior, aquí volvemos a ver a ese chico perdido durante las primeras páginas. Sin embargo, a través de un monólogo interior, vemos cómo se recompone y evoluciona de una manera magistral, todo acompañado de viñetas preciosas y grandes composiciones.
En este tomo se nos presentan otros miembros de su clase, todos personajes muy peculiares e interesantes que te caerán mejor o peor, pero cada uno es muy realista y único. Destaca en este caso Kinemi, a la que conocemos un poco ya en el tomo anterior, pero en este tiene un papel más protagonista y ha logrado ganarse mi corazón.
Como siempre, Blue Period continúa sorprendiendo. Sí me da la sensación de que en este tomo pasan menos cosas, pero porque es más una presentación de personajes, se nos introducen nuevas problemáticas y compañeros para Yaguchi. Con este plantel tan variopinto, esta nueva etapa parece muy interesante y tengo muchas ganas de continuar.
a friend recommended this as a low-stakes story and it really is such an easy but still intriguing and engaging read. the thing that originally made me reluctant to pick it up - the depiction of life in a creative discipline - surprisingly ended up being one of my favourite elements.
i am an architecture graduate, i have been through multiple long days working at the studio, experimenting and mulling over ideas, multiple crits and presentations. i did not necessarily enjoy it. however, i was pleasantly surprised at how similar the environment represented in blue period is - nearly charming without romanticising - and how well i understood the woes of the characters.
on a grander scale, i enjoy how sympathetic the story is to its characters. it says it's okay to stumble; it says it is important to work hard but also to persevere. it also acknowledges the value in experience, in taking one's time in reaching their goals; and that sometimes you may put in a lot of work and still not succeed and that this is also okay, just keep on moving (a life lesson i, personally, learned from beyoncé).
En este tomo hemos conocido mejor a los nuevos personajes, tanto a profesores como alumnos, así como sus dinámicas, procesos, personalidades e intereses.
Recalca la importancia del trabajo en equipo a la hora de crear una pieza o un proyecto antes, y el ser siempre consciente de no llevar demasiada carga de trabajo, pues todas las partes deben ser responsables.
¡Muy bien! También tenía un episodio extra donde los personajes estaban de chill. Me gustó >:3