
I’m somewhat reading through all the volumes that I bought as e-books.
Isn’t this an incredible masterpiece after all?
sai
rama
The very first cover looks pale.
>>2Don’t speak ill of my friend.
It’s the work that saved Tezuka, which was considered irrelevant at the time.
There is an impression that doctors like manga.
>>4The medical aspects may be somewhat exaggerated due to the era and the fact that it’s a manga.
I believe the underlying humanism is consistent.
You’re saying something quite late, aren’t you?
“Someone who has dispelled the atmosphere that says ‘Tezuka Osamu is so outdated these days!'”
It was a horror comic, right?
Don’t forget the early horror direction!
>>7The story of performing spiritual surgery to extract a baby like Miura Jun happened before the appearance of Pinoko.
It feels like the early blatant horror direction.
At first, wasn’t there a setting where I received a skin transplant from a half-African friend?
After absorbing a story close to the original episode in the 2004 anime, I am now consuming an almost original story in the OVA.
I wonder if the electronic version includes all the episodes properly.
The complete set of treasured editions I bought at the secondhand bookstore had some stories omitted.
>>11That’s impossible.
>>15Was the one with six fingers that had the lock no good?
>>19That may be true, but there are actually quite a few unpleasant episodes of pleasure.
I also own all the volumes of BJ, and I can really read them over and over again; they are amazing.
I’m also somewhat of a doctor.
There’s nothing better than saving a life…
>>13Basically, we send back anyone other than those who we judge have no other treatment options.
The scene of Dr. BJ’s appearance in the first episode is reminiscent of the gekiga that was thriving at that time.
The story of the older brother who went crazy from severe burns and finally unleashed himself, burning his younger sister to death, is terrifying and frightening…
>>16The stitches of the final form are coming undone, right…?
And the tangled heart, twisted by various loves and hates, is beyond help… a bitter ending.
One green tourmaline that was a hassle to read quietly has been published in a book.
The reason for the unreleased story is quite a tale… It’s a shame that the second part of the Akita Shoten edition, where the cause of the plague was the military’s satellite, was not included.
Everyone is a traveler searching for the meaning of life.
I wonder if there is a way to read while sitting in pleasure.
>>24Printing the April 1975 issue of Champion at the National Diet Library…
>>24I have read it, so there is probably something there.
It seems quick to read it being reprinted online without permission, but there are ways like buying a used copy of the issue or using the National Diet Library.
I wanted to hear those words.
It seems that Tezuka himself said he has regrets about casually depicting the dangers of lobotomy surgery in his manga, despite knowing the risks.
Maybe I’m used to it now; the process at the National Diet Library was really smooth, yes indeed.
>>31There are likely quite a few people who come upon stories about unrecorded episodes, not just regarding BJ.
I was researching, but it looks like I can read the general summary and images on the blog “Seat of Pleasure.”
I like the arm of the pirate…
>>34I like that girl.
An old man who encouraged a boy who was about to commit suicide after failing high school.
Wavering between life and death in a major accident during construction.
I really love the story of the boy watching over that surgery.
For some reason, there was only one book at our place… it was about a vegetative state caused by pollution and had twins with their heads connected.
I read it during the free release quite some time ago, but I was moved to see that things like the chapter with the first child have become normal not to read in hardcover books.
I can’t imagine the era when he was neglected because I’ve only read Tezuka’s masterpieces.
>>38The main serialized work during the time before the threads were dried should have been Phoenix, so it’s also difficult to imagine.
>>41Is Alabaster before this?
>>38The people who are later called geniuses were probably just like that back then.
>>45If there hadn’t been a rise like BJ, it is possible that the treatment would have been lighter or that the achievements wouldn’t have been conveyed.
>>49At the very least, it’s quite questionable whether Phoenix was treated as a regrettable unfinished masterpiece…
>>45A few years ago, when I read up to the point where Aizen is defeated in the free publication of Bleach, I thought that the period where everyone kept saying things like “diluted Calpis” would begin afterwards. Then I remembered the shock of finding out that we had already entered that period around the time they were fighting the Espada.
>>58The impressions can differ between what’s serialized and the standalone volume…
During its serialization, Steel Ball Run faced an incredible onslaught of criticism.
>>77I wonder what kind of world I am being forced to read.
I do not deny that it was such a world.
>>77I don’t think the evaluation of the Jump era has changed that much even now…
Using all the usable parts of the first brain-dead brat was a bit traumatic.
>>39This and the president has indeed served the people well, but it’s quite a gruesome story, isn’t it?
This manga has various pages that have been poorly edited, which is frustrating.
Early formidable enemy Pinoko
Which episode is it where Kiriko leaves with a high laugh in the last panel, and the teacher says, “But I will still fix it!”?
>>46I remember the entire plot, but I can’t recall the title.
>>50There are many stories like that.
>>46Are they two black doctors?
The episode that effectively marks the proper debut of Kiriko due to the actual adaptation of the initial episode.
>>56Is Kiriko’s first appearance the one where she treats people infected with an unknown virus?
Even setting aside the fact that the techniques and storytelling of current manga are completely different from those of the past,
Even in the currently readable version of Phoenix, there are quite a few ups and downs, and when reading ones that don’t come up much in the complete works, I often find myself going… uhn… a lot regarding God’s manga.
Even if it was said that I was on hold, it shouldn’t have felt like my work was interrupted in the case of a boys’ magazine.
Is it because it’s a comic that there doesn’t seem to be any real misses?
I feel like there are many interesting manga in short stories that are masterpieces.
Or rather, there are many erotic ones in short stories.
Despite being long, it’s amazing that there are no dull episodes and it’s consistently interesting.
The story of the parasitic cactus and the new one has become incomprehensible due to word hunting…
>>59Buds of the tree, buds of the tree.
>>59Not a patient!!
No, it’s a patient…
>>70Is this still labeled as “sick person”?
In the past, during a time of strict self-regulation regarding Fujiko F. Fujio’s works, “Kiburi Jijii” became “Jijii” and “Pansuke” became “Machi Shou” (street prostitute), but now they have been reverted back to “Kiburi Jijii” and “Pansuke.”
I wonder how it works with Hand’s works regarding such rejections.
I went to the original art exhibition, but it was really tough to have the news about the current topic of the baby locker playing endlessly.
>>60Is that your child? I like it when the author gets slapped on behalf of it.
Kiriko, who was able to transform from a really pathetic villain to a character with strong convictions during the process of publishing as a standalone book, is impressive.
The story was about Kiriko and Chenche, lamenting that together we are powerless!
>>66It was a boy who had been sleeping for several decades in some kind of mine and rapidly aged before dying just like that.
>>66We’re fools! This is the episode of Urashima Taro.
>>66Is it the case where a patient who has been in a vegetative state and hasn’t aged suddenly ages and dies after being cured?
>>66I thought it was the story about Kiriko’s dad having a valve in his airway, but maybe I was wrong.
>>95You slapped Kiriko, who had given up on life-saving measures just a moment too soon, and asked what he thinks life is!
>>104I’m sorry, I see.
The star system is really too convenient.
It was more like being treated as an old-timer who couldn’t keep up with the changes of the times.
>>69It’s a different work, but there’s a scene in Neo Faust where Tezuka is told by an editor, “Your time is over!” I guess he really held onto that.
>>87But you know… I’ll die hanging in Neo Faust…
>>99So I read a hundred tales.
It seems that it was heavily criticized as not being medical at all!
>>72It’s half fantasy, so it can’t be helped.
When I read it after a long time, I remember, oh! There was this story! I’ve forgotten it just enough.
The Kiriko episode is great, isn’t it?
I like to quickly send back the suicidal teenager.
It’s an external work, but no matter how Kiriko is treated, I feel that being faced twice with patients suffering from lethal doses of radiation sickness (both being close women) and ultimately releasing them from their pain will definitely be viewed negatively.
Was it Urashima Taro?
I like that story because I think it shows that Kiriko is a doctor trying to save lives.
>>78I’m also a part-time doctor.
It’s best if you can save your life.
The story about how BJ took Kiriko’s patient and treated them but then died in a car accident made Kiriko laugh out loud at the end, but the final panel, showing him with his shoulders slumped and leaving dejectedly, is just so incredibly well-done in the manga.
>>81Is that from a Korra or something…?
>>86I think it’s the scene where I heal people!
It seems like various scenes of Professor Honma are mixed in.
>>86We are fools! That guy is…
If I helped a boy who was unconscious, he died of old age.
A real god comes down to heal.
If there are aliens (tentative), it’s foolish to poke fun at them.
I saw something on YouTube that talks about the differences between a standalone book and the published version.
I just learned that Blackjack appears as himself in other serialized works for the first time.
I think it’s a quite good conclusion that, after all, it feels like a doctor who prioritizes the patient’s quality of life the most, Kiriko.
I also like the relationship between Hyakkimaru-sensei and Chenchei.
Kiriako is a doctor with a strong sense of integrity.
BJ doesn’t quite like Kiriko…
I have no interest in mere murderers.
I know it’s out of order to say this, but Kiriko is like TETSU…
>>94I heard that the name TETSU comes from a very twisted glass.
It is common for old comics to be frequently revised.
It’s become something outrageous like Devilman.
I like the story of a death row inmate asking to be shot in the head so that their surgical scars won’t be damaged.
>>98The question of whether healing is to kill is a profound conflict that resonates well with the readers…
We are idiots! It seems like we’re all mixed up.
It looks like the last Kiriko is trying to skip a step while climbing the stairs.
A rather trivial story, yet I can’t forget the title of the monkey’s paw.
What’s more outrageous than Devilman is that…
I love talking about sushi restaurants.
Wonderful…!
Talking with the dead feels like a news story that has recently come to mind.
If there were a popular character ranking, Kiriko’s younger sister would likely rank quite high in a subtle way.
>>110Because it’s sexy.
>>110I still don’t know your name…
>>110The Yamamoto version spin-off is great, isn’t it?
The story about implanting a human brain into a deer makes me wonder if I was tired or something…
I don’t think there isn’t a story like “What is this?” even in BJ.
The reward being a large sum of money is for buying a deserted island, turning it into a minefield, and unleashing my mother’s revenge, is that okay?
>>117As for the uninhabited island, it’s a minefield, right…?
>>121It was originally a minefield.
Bought up such an island.
>>117“I want to find my mother’s killer and buy a deserted island for nature conservation, as described.”
Was it that the manga with exciting synopses that stir the hearts of boys was not well-suited for the gods, or have I become too accustomed to current storytelling? Reading it now makes me go, “Hmm…”
Specifically, it’s the third one, Dororo.
There was a story about repairing the hospital’s computer.
A computer that starts to say it’s sick.
>>120This story was interesting.
I forgot the punchline.
>>146The guy who was trapped with me hesitated to pay, and I thought that’s how things would end.
>>233It was definitely a story about being trapped while bragging about building a shelter.
>>233Isn’t that another story about being trapped in a underground shelter with the rich?
>>233It’s a story about being trapped in an elevator.
Separate from computer repairs.
>>233That should have been when you were trapped in a disaster shelter.
>>249Aren’t we talking about being trapped in an elevator instead of a shelter, and since there are only a few wires, you have to find them by touch to cut them?
>>256Wall palpation and cutting wires is correct, but it should be a shelter.
It’s a story where a demonstration makes the computer think there is an earthquake, causing the shelter door to close, but since no one is outside, it can’t be opened and people get trapped.
This turned from a horror development into a human interest manga.
I feel that K has turned from a battle development into a human drama.
The popularity vote has confirmed that BJ Pinoko is in first and second place, so is Kiriko in third place?
>>125I have a feeling that Mr. Hyakkimaru, Mr. Shiitake, and the doctor who became the ship’s doctor might also come there.
Even if there are misunderstandings, it might be a story I haven’t read, so I can’t really point that out…
In a story related to Kiriko, there is a strange disease where water builds up in the abdomen, and Kiriko herself gets it and seeks treatment; I remember being impressed by a remake written by someone else that was a bit erotic.
There aren’t many other frequently appearing named characters either.
>>128Omukaedegonsu
A nice girl who aspires to be a doctor that I met in Vietnam!
My sister was trying to save people by different means than mine!
I ended up being by their side as they both suffered from irreversible radiation damage!
It’s Kiriko!
>>131Don’t kill the main character in the spin-off…
That being said, especially Kiriko’s sister.
Black Queen and so on…
Money is free to move in general.
It is used for nature, to repay kindness, and also for revenge.
Sure, the mummification surgery and the invisible ghost surgery were each in separate episodes, right?
>>135It’s different.
The ghost is from the early days and still carries the vibe of creepy manga.
The mummy is the one who helps as a thank you.
The president of Rh…
Isn’t the story about leaving someone in a minefield a different story from the one where villains tell the snake on a deserted island to kill them?
I don’t remember anymore…
>>139Separate
The former is a story about a mother’s revenge.
I heard that the artwork has passed its prime, is that true?
>>140Osamu Tezuka’s drawings change quite a bit, but I don’t have the impression that they’ve deteriorated even as he got older.
My partner’s total hysterectomy and Chen Chai are both quite tough jobs.
There was an episode with a superpower user who performed surgery with bare hands, right?
>>143It’s the one with no head, right?
Thanks to this story, “The Summer of the Cuckoo’s Egg” was really interesting.
The landmine field’s unexploded ordnance contractor, die! Was it the ones who abducted Chen Chei?
I’m not a great person with some lofty mission or anything like that, you know, teacher.
I prioritize my emotions and do things the way I want, so I’m quite moody.
The only thing I’m consistently dedicated to is helping those who sincerely wish to live.
Since I’m not fixed on just one use.
For the sake of a small but irreplaceable person’s kindness, I would even buy a hospital.
Even when I read it back then, I was thinking, “What does this mean?” But now, reading it again…
It’s not exactly gender reassignment but rather a hysterectomy, yet the way it’s handled… you can feel the era, can’t you?
I’m going to treat it because the rival horse annoyed me.
I’ll do it out of stubbornness.
It’s generally interesting.
How did they wrap up the story of a man who could only love his wife, whose brain was swapped with that of a deer?
Is the husband’s brain also transplanted into a deer?
>>153That’s not BJ.
>>153I think during that transplant, the brain became enlarged and turned into a monster.
>>153What I did in BJ is that the brain is constrained by the skull, so there are limits to its growth! If you embed a separate container with extra space in the chest and move the brain there, the brain will grow and become the completed genius strongest deer! A monster has been created!
The guy who embedded the recorded tape of his deceased wife’s voice in his dog’s throat.
There are somehow about two organizations that are like a physicians’ union, right?
>>154The thing from the Japan Medical Association about that viral sensation.
The overseas physician’s federation will kidnap Pinoko and it will be the end for her.
>>154日本と世界じゃなかったっけ?
The praise from the world is welcomed, but they should have no interest in a Japanese medical license.
I love Mr. Kuroo, who is not swayed by money and is an ambitious old man.
I love the playful side of Blackjack…
Pinoko wants to go to school, but it turns out it’s impossible… I love this bittersweet story.
Frog
>>159Kill him!
What was done in that way was not a deer but a horse.
The Nippon Television version of the anime is generally adapted to have a happy ending, which feels kind of heartwarming.
Is Largo a single-character?!
>>165I’m glad to be alive…
>>169Moreover, there was an earthquake just before the first appearance, so it became a dog that was suddenly there.
Since he’s a quack doctor, it’s pointless to expect ethics from him, but isn’t it quite something when he says, “I was told to pack gems, but I filled it with imitations” and “I donated the gems”?
>>166Huh? I embedded the real one and it got burned together with the body.
>>166Chenche is not a good person, anyway…
>>174It seems that it was ultimately done by Master Hyakkimaru.
>>166Wasn’t that done by a regular doctor?
>>188That’s even better!
>>188BJ did it first and is redoing it, so give it back! → It burned up, huh? → It’s just an imitation.
So the doctor made the same choice as BJ in the end.
>>194I looked over the magazine version and the paperback version the other day, and it turns out the rewritten paperback version feels better.
The intonation of Nadare felt really off in the anime.
A story about a man who hit his head and thought of a cat as family, and a story about a man who could make his dog mimic the voice of his deceased lover, and the dogs and cats are so erotic.
>>171I’ll kill you.
In the commentary book, besides Kiriko as a rival, people like a spiritual healer and a blind acupuncturist were also introduced, but they really don’t have any significant role at all, do they?
He’s a good guy, but cases where he dies are quite frustrating.
The changes in the Heisei version are somewhat understandable.
21 is garbage.
>>178Drama version…
I love stories where I get crushed by a similarly greedy internist saying the kinds of things I usually say.
I received a story about helping the president of the medical association’s grandchild or something, but I don’t need it!! I just tore it up!
…It seems like, in that case, the registration as a doctor itself is done, but it’s just not placed in a visible location?
>>180Was it the one where a mafia or something tried to get their kid treated by BJ, but the chairman said no, and as a result, they were shot in revenge?
I think that despite the number of appearances, Biwamaru leaves a deep impression.
I saw that the anime was being streamed for free, and it was interesting how various stories were mixed together.
They probably made it that way to wrap up the story, but do we really need the Phoenix element?
What a guy… to cure five people so easily…
Dead men tell no tales!