Female Wrestling in Manga

A place to talk about our love for the art and artists of Japan, as per their depictions of women's professional wrestling.

Sunday, December 24, 2006

...to all, and to all a good night.




















Best for the Holidays to all out there; May Santa bring you what you asked for (Where'd this guy find HIS Santa ... I never get this in MY stocking!).


Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Support you local manga artist!

Say, just wanted to point out to those that follow "Tanuki's" site, that there is a new (12 - 17) manga available for download: Paradise Dolls - Mika Style. As you know, I'm a big believer in the idea that only by showing our support of the artists, will the artists continue to create new work for us all to enjoy. This makes the fourth story that Tanukisan has released, counting the free one on his site, just in case you've missed them ... he doesn't seem to mention them as "upfront" at his site as he had been with number two. The following are free samples from the download site; actual sizes larger in zip format delivery. http://dl.getchu.com/index.php?action=gd&cp=&gcd=D0000812

Monday, December 11, 2006

"my name is antonio. my question is : there is a golden age in the manga female wrestling (pure wrestling not lesbian)?"

I know we've talked about this in the Yahoo group before, but for those that may have missed the postings (quite a while ago), I'll offer my personal thoughts here as well. Please note the word "personal" ... I'm no authority on this; just conclusions I've formed based on what I've seen.

The earliest manga featuring a female wrestler within a story, at least of those I have in my collection, dates from 1969. While there may be earlier images than that, I've yet to find them. So, let's say we start there as the "beginning" of a time line.

Moving forward into the '70's, there are publications, mostly the weekly-manga type magazine's, which had a few stories that would include wrestling at some point along the way. Here and there, a female character would show up in the story, but for the most part, the story focused on the male wrestlers. At the same time, in real-life Japan, Western-style pro-wrestling, as a spectator sport, was gaining popularity around the country. This was echoed through the artwork of the manga. The more "everyday" readers may have been watching wrestling, the more the writers and artists were likely to use wrestling as a story line vehicle. As the popularity of the women in the sport grew, more and more manga began to feature the "Joshi" wrestlers in larger doses. By the late 70's and though much of the 80's, the women took their place with the men as per having their own stories devoted to them. This is the period when "Red Eagle Maki" and "Beniko" were published.


















Neither of these stories ever saw publication as books unto themselves, but rather, each were given space in issues of a weekly mag. For the fan to buy an issue, 24 makes the full story, it cost around $3 per week ... that's one "book" for $72! To find the original magazines, you have to be in the right place at the right time, and be willing to shell out a LOT of money ... the few copies of "Red Eagle" I have, I found though a private-company auction (I was up at 3AM, my time, for the final hour of the auction to end in Tokyo) : $125 per issue, sold as individual copies, plus commission and postage; I got 6 of 8. Yeah ... compulsive. The set of "Beniko" magazines (same auction; 22 issue set ... for some reason this story never had it's final 2 chapters published!) , and yes, that IS what the auction highlighted the magazines as being, was sold for $2,750. Add in the commission, and that makes $3000 for an unfinished story in it's original magazines! Told you the collectors in Japan bid this stuff up. At 18 pages per issue, that's $7.50 per page! Tell THAT to the next person that gives you a hard time for collecting this stuff! It's an investment!!

Anyway, back to the main question, the 80's saw the publication of at least four 200+ page GORAKU Comic manga, along with many 150+ page stories from other publishers. The Joshi Puroresu shows in the country's arena's were at their most popular during this time, often out-drawing the men's at the box office. Anime shows started featuring the shows heroines watching, and sometimes taking part in, wrestling, as their favorite lady wrestler would compete against her arch foe in the ring. The idea of women being empowered enough to fight their own battles in life, as in the ring, in a country that still has strong sexual stereotypes, called out to the young women watching the shows ... writers, artists, and publishers saw this and responded with manga after manga, many featuring school-age girls that would join their school's wrestling club and try to balance the struggle of being a sedate Japanese girl with the competitive need to win which most people have to some degree. To say that the manga were all geared to the adolescent crowd would be naive, but even in the ones that would feature the more "comely" wrestlers from this time period, they would rarely venture into the bedroom; if so, it was discretely done and male/female. With the onset of the 90's, things began to change.

Most likely due to the upturn of musical artists (Japan's version of MTV, etc) and movie/TV stars as being the role models for the masses, Joshi wrestling in the real world began to lose their fans, many of the operations have gone out of business at this point. As the influence on the streets began to wane, so, too, did the need for the stories from the publishers. Now, having taped out the main vein of the mine, the publishers, artists and writers had to begin to tailor the stories to the niche readers of their manga. To some, the addition of higher sexual themes, lesbian action, degradation of females, hit the right spot. Manga continue to feature wrestling, but very few treat the characters as athletes competing in the hard life of women making their livings in the professional ring, instead, we find them, more and more, in seedy night clubs ... outcasts, a step above prostitutes. For the one or two pages they will be featured, the artwork is great, but that's all there will be; a side note in the story, much like a police show on TV where the detectives need to find the criminal in the bar and there will be two women mud-wrestling in the background. The genre was being handed over to the hentai crowd. Luckily, there are some bright spots on the horizon.

With the publication this past year of the "Rumble Roses: part 1" manga,













along with the manga and anime version of "Fighting Beauty Wulong", maybe the industry has seen that, even without the sex, there are those of us out here that will buy what they put out. It's really up to the male fans in Japan, I suppose, since we outside of Japan don't even make a dent in sales ... if all they will buy is the hentai, then ...

Friday, December 08, 2006

"magicalex84 said... +1 Steel Chair of Head-bashing"



















Here's that one, I think. Hmmm, looks like SOMEone can read the kanji on the pages better than the rest of us! There's also this one, for fighting outside of the ring:

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Staying with the same, for now, a few more "moves"



Not a wrestling move; they also allow for the use of weapons, it seems.

Monday, December 04, 2006

Some moves (art) from the books





Along with the "scene" art within the books, there are also several pages of wrestling moves the player can use in the game. I'm guessing that on some charts (the +/- pages, maybe?) are listed the resulting damage points that would follow a move, right?

Saturday, December 02, 2006

Never let it be said, I won't try to help, if I can ...

OK, for those that had wanted to see the "rules", I've scanned the pages that looked right to me. WAYYYYYYYY too much Japanese for my limited abilities, but, for those that have the kanji skills to work this out, be sure to report back to the rest of us!

Also, let it be known that I've never played a GURPS' game, so maybe for those of you that have, these will all make sense ... Greek to me, well, Japanese, but you know what I mean ... I'm more of a "Wild Arms" (best ending-credits sequence EVER!) / "Final Fantasy" person; let the PS2 do the math for me.













As you can see by the page numbers, there's a LOT of stuff in the book. There are the pages that show the +/- points at various levels, etc. Need those, too? Or is that all pretty "GURPS" standard? There are 11 characters in the first guide, plus the blank page to write your own, and 4 new characters in book two. Need those to make it work for you?