[Thanks to Netgalley and Kodansha for an ARC in exchange for an unbiased review.]
Kaboku has made it to high school and he just wants to fit in, which isn’t the easiest thing in the world for him, due to his stutter. When he spots Wanda, his classmate, dancing on her own, it awakens both a possibility and a past trauma that he’s not sure how to deal with. But his response is to join the dance club along with Wanda, where he’s the only guy amongst a gaggle of girls. Can just one beat (or several) lead to communication?
This one creeps up on you pretty casually. It starts good, not great, gets better, gets better, and then by the ending it was impossible for me to not to be all in for watching Kabo and Wanda.
Partly this works because our leads learn (and the story expertly gets across) that they can be so expressive through dance, with none of the hang-ups they have normally. Wanda’s got far fewer issues with this, though she’s definitely a little more withdrawn from anybody who isn’t Kabo and isn’t the best verbal communicator.
Kabo has to deal with his stutter and the way that makes him stand out more from everybody else, even with practice, has dealt a sharp blow to his confidence. And, on top of that, while he’s captivated by the freedom Wanda encompasses while she dances, he had a very bad experience when he was in middle school that makes him even more self-conscious than he already is when dancing himself.
That’s a great way to layer problem upon problem and it’s a perfect way to lead into Kabo trying to work himself up to be the person he wants to be. Kabo has a strong friend group of dopey high school bros at the start, they take a video of poor Wanda dancing that has a flash of upskirt, which one of them distributes to cement their icky cred, but Kabo’s definitely adjacent to the group.
So, seeing him fall out of basketball, which he’s not bad at, and back into dancing, which he turns out to have a surprising knack for if he can get out of his own head, is a delight of a journey. And though it’s his own story, I think there’s a universal quality to a person trying to find how they can best express themselves.
And this book nails the dancing. Nails it. It doesn’t hurt that a lot of western music is used and it’s easy enough to hit YouTube to find a relevant video to get the gist of matching movements. It feels pretty spot-on, even if my own sense of rhythm struggles to quite link the two together.
They give a lot of time to instruction, courtesy of the third-year captain, Miyao, who’s a really great character in her own right, encouraging but realistic, and the dance club happily supplies a dollop of fan service, though it’s barely that, but it’s believable and realistic in a way almost no manga ever is with its costuming. I’m calling more attention to it than the book does just by mentioning it.
It knows when to go big and, appropriately for a hip-hop dance manga, it knows when to showboat itself. There’s a multi-page spread of every single member of the dance club, all unique, which is a mic drop from the artist the likes of which I haven’t seen since Negima. Toss in a snobby rival to Wanda in the making, plus the many dance competitions out there to attend, and you’ve got a club that has narrative potential for days.
And make no mistake, this is a story that knows what it means to be passionate about something and I genuinely don’t think it’s overestimating to say that Kabo and Wanda generate more heat just dancing together than most couples do in an entire shojo series. That scene with them at the auditions is electric.
Finally, huge props to the translation notes at the back. These are some of the most robust that I’ve seen in a while and they cover some basic ground like the shoe lockers, but also some much more important stuff as well.
This is like a version of Fame (I’m showing my age again, aren’t I?) with better music and two leads who are great together and look set to explode into further greatness. That much passion is not easy to convey and it speaks to the writing and how important this is to the mangaka.
Yeah, it’s your standard competitions-are-coming and we gotta overcome the things and be better, but the writing elevates this way, way up. It starts at a very solid place and it’s just killing it by the finale. Our leads are absolutely perfect together and the more time they spend dancing the better it gets.
5 stars - more now. Seriously, I want this released weekly until we’ve caught up. It’s this wonderful love letter to expressing yourself and dance and it deserves a huge audience and I’m already crossing fingers it gets an anime (those music rights are gonna sting though).