Misumisou

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Des alternatives: English: Hepatica Nobilis
Synonyms: Misu Misou
Japanese: ミスミソウ
Auteur: Oshikiri, Rensuke
Taper: Manga
Volumes: 3
Chapitres: 21
Statut: Finished
Publier: 2007-05-07 to 2009-05-07
Sérialisation: Horror M

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3.6
(14 Votes)
14.29%
42.86%
35.71%
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7.14%
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Des alternatives: English: Hepatica Nobilis
Synonyms: Misu Misou
Japanese: ミスミソウ
Auteur: Oshikiri, Rensuke
Taper: Manga
Volumes: 3
Chapitres: 21
Statut: Finished
Publier: 2007-05-07 to 2009-05-07
Sérialisation: Horror M
But
3.6
14 Votes
14.29%
42.86%
35.71%
0.00%
7.14%
0 En train de lire
0 Veux lire
0 Lis
Sommaire
For Nozaki Haruka, moving from Tokyo to the small town of Ootsuuma was life-changing... but not in a good way. Half a year later, Nozaki is miserable; she is relentlessly bullied by her classmates, who use her as an output for their pent-up rage and frustration. Though she could, Nozaki does not retaliate nor tell her parents, as she does not want to worry them. With this mentality, she is prepared to endure until graduation.

But when her bullies put her through a particularly harrowing ordeal, her parents become aware of the situation and allow Nozaki to stop attending school. However, this only instigates the bullies, forcing them to take an irreversible step which shatters her world forever. Now utterly devastated, a burning ferocity begins to swell within Nozaki, one which her bullies can only hope to escape from.

Mots clés
horror
school
josei
Commentaires (14)
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Misumisou review
par
Omegabyyte10
Apr 08, 2021
Haruka has it rough. She moves to a school in the countryside due to her dad's family getting a new job and gets tormented every day by a group of bullies. Her family and a boy named Aiba seem to be the only traces of happiness in her life, but will this happiness last?

Hepatica is a brutal depiction of middle school bullying and the cruelty of children. The torment Haruka goes through ranges from regular verbal abuse, being pushed into garbage, and the event which kicks off the revenge plot of the entire manga: her house gets burned down with her family. This is the final nail that turns Haruka from an innocent school girl to a cold-blooded vigilante.
The children in this manga are so twisted not even the puppy killers from Elfen lied or the cast of Narutaru felt this vile. They bully Haruka extensively for the sole fact she’s an outsider and even after her family dies, they taunt her over it. I’m usually not a fan of revenge stories because the victim turns into a perpetrator, but the bullies here deserved every bit of suffering they received. Never has the murder of middle school students been so glorious.

Some readers might find it hard to digest that children could even be this sadistic and I do admit that the events are a bit overblown, but some children out there are fully capable of being psychopathic monsters. What doesn’t help is when the teacher enables the bullying and even seems to be afraid of her own students. Even Aiba, Haruka’s only friend, shows to have a hidden dark side that comes into play during the final chapters. As we read on, we find that some of the bullies have their own troubled lives they want to escape from. This in no way excuses or lessens their behavior, but it does show how a cycle of bullying is created.

I give Hepatica a 7.5/10. The character drama resonated with me and I rooted for Haruka the entire way. The plot twist near the end genuinely left me shocked and the final pages were heartbreakingly brutal. Reading this was similar to how I felt after reading Metamorphosis by ShindoL. My only complaints are that the art can feel too rough/ amateurish at times and the story can verge into juvenile edge territories. Surprisingly enough, this is a josei manga which makes it the first manga I’m reviewing here for a female audience.


Misumisou review
par
mmchan7
Apr 08, 2021
Revenge tragedies have proved incredibly popular throughout the ages. Shakespeare's 'Hamlet' is still studied in institutions all over the world while 'Berserk' is one of the best selling manga series of all time. 'Assassin's Creed 2' is one of the most critically acclaimed video games of the 21st century while 'Gladiator' is among the most memorable live-action films of the 2000s. Good revenge stories are filled with captivating characters, intrigue and the potential to elicit an emotional response from the viewer. Rensuke Oshikiri's 'Misumisou' fails to achieve any of this and then some. It is truly one of the worst pieces of fiction I have ever had the displeasure of experiencing.

'Misumisou' is about a middle school student, Nozaki Haruka, who moves from Tokyo to a small backwater town following her father's new job. Unfortunately, Nozaki immediately becomes a victim of bullying in her new school. Nozaki's trials and tribulations become increasingly severe with each passing chapter until our protagonist reaches breaking point and goes on a murdering spree. Now, the plot in and of itself is fine, if a little simple. Where the series really falls flat is in its execution. Particularly, the crux of the series' problems can be found in its characters.

The characters in 'Misumisou' suffer from the same weakness that plagued 'School Days'. That is, the characters are essentially caricatures in a series which is supposed to be based in realism. This is most obvious with the bullies. The bullies pierce Nozaki with tacks, steal her possessions, push her into a ditch filled with garbage, call her names, attempt to shoot her with a crossbow, assault Nozaki's father on school premises with tack-studded shoes, invade Nozaki's home and ultimately set her house on fire with her family trapped inside. That's not all: it turns out that Nazoki's home-room teacher is the only recurring member of staff in the series and is revealed early on to be in cahoots with the main bully. All of this takes place within the opening three chapters, no less. Their motives? They did not want the new kid to be part of their graduation ceremony. Sorry, but that is utterly ridiculous. That 14-year-old kids could commit such reprehensible acts and not feel even an iota of remorse is too outlandish an idea for any critical reader to get behind. One simply can not suspend their disbelief while reading 'Misumisou'. None of the bullies have any redeemable qualities and little effort is made by the author to provide any sort of backdrop or fleshing out of these characters. There was one instance where a flashback was shown just before one of the bullies meets their fate, but it was awkwardly tacked on, almost as if an afterthought.

Unfortunately, the rest of the cast do not fare much better. As the protagonist, Nazoki assumes the role of the innocent beauty turned killer. Nazoki's grandfather takes the role of the frustratingly ignorant relative. Aiba is Nazoki's only friend and also just so happens to be a psychopath. It may feel like these one-sentence descriptions are doing the characters a disservice, but in all honesty there is only so much one can say about what are effectively cardboard cut-outs. The mangaka doesn't give the reader much to work with: character development is non-existent and attempts at fleshing out come at a premium. In any other series, seeing the antagonists get their comeuppance would be cathartic, but not here. If the author doesn't put the effort in to making the protagonist likeable or the antagonists realistic, then why should the reader care about their fates? A good indicator of the quality of a cast of characters is how many of them you can remember by name and, in the case of 'Misumisou', it was just one. It is difficult to see any positives in what was a completely forgettable, unrealistic cast of characters. It's an extremely poor effort, it must be said.

If the characters and contrivances of the plot didn't already kill the series off then the art made sure to finish the job. Honestly, the character designs look awful. Eyes are drawn too far apart, the faces are not drawn consistently from panel-to-panel and ultimately it never felt as if the mangaka was comfortable drawing his characters. There is also a disgusting expression that the mangaka draws on all of his characters when they are angry. Needless to say, it looks more amusing than it does threatening, at least until it begins to feel nauseating due to how grotesque it looks. While the character designs were a huge let-down, credit must be given for some of the backgrounds. In particular, there is one panel in chapter three where Nazoki and Aiba are drawn as silhouettes looking up at the starry night sky. It looks stunning, so much so that it feels out of place in a manga of this quality. The mangaka also appears to have talent for drawing weapons - lots of detail went into the crossbow and pistol. These instances are rare and it doesn't make a massive difference to the overall package, but it at least saves it from attaining the lowest possible marks.

Overall, I went into 'Misumisou' with extremely low expectations and still managed to come away from it feeling disappointed. This was my first taste of Rensuke Oshikiri's work and chances are it is going to be my last. 'Misumisou' reads like an amateur's debut work, so to see that Oshikiri is an already established mangaka with a large body of work behind him came as a major shock. The characters are flat and unrealistic, the plot twists are contrived and the art is highly unpleasant, save for the odd panel here and there. I'm still not sure what message the mangaka was trying to convey, but in any event he failed. In all good conscience, I could not and would not recommend this manga to anyone.
Misumisou review
par
WhoCanPeliCan6
Apr 08, 2021
*Disclaimer*
Just personal scratch.
Advised, possible spoilers.
Opinion & Informal

Art: 4/10
The anatomy and proportions in this manga were something else lol. I won't give examples but the anatomy and proportions were really off in this and I don't think it was intentional. However, what I do think was intentional was the contrast in facial distortions between people based on changes in their state of mind and their natures. For example, people who were being evil had slowly evolving changes in their facial features that made them look progressively distorted. However, good characters and characters who eventually tried to redeem themselves had nice-looking faces. There were no showcases of the artist's skill such as panoramics or other things. There were no nice looking nature showcases. The impact shots didn't look like they were a cut above the regular art. The impact shots also looked a bit meh. There was a lack of supporting tones as well as detail in a lot of the objects and environment. For what I think overall...the art was pretty bad...

Panel Progression: 5/10
The panel progression was average. The layout was plain and uninteresting. Panel-cutting was kept at an absolute minimum. The pacing was at a good speed, but there were a lot of places where I would have liked a few more panels for context. There were multiple times that it felt like a few more panels could have made the interactions or action sequences clearer. Overall, the panel progression didn't have any flair and was just about average.

Characters: 5/10
The character designs were mostly normal-looking but I didn't feel like anything was done to make any of the characters memorable. Most of the characters actually had very similar faces and facial structures so it would have been hard to tell characters apart other than by their hairstyles or context. The character development was a bit underwhelming too. The reasoning behind the bullying was sort of lame and all the craziness didn't have a good foundation to make anything believable. The blond girl who wanted to be a beautician was alright. It was nice how she came to her senses and eventually wanted to reconcile, but all of that hopeful development was quickly buried just like how she was became buried in the snow after she died a few pages after her redemption. The camera boy was stupid. Sure, it was a good twist that he was actually a terrible person but after the blond girl died, it felt like the story was going to head into a very predictable ending. The growth of the MC was also not too eventful. After losing her family all of her interactions past that was just killing the people who wronged her. I sort of wished that there would have been some sort of personal aside or contemplation about her state of being during this time. I didn't want the rest of the story to just be an exercise in revenge and nothing else; unfortunately, it was just that and that ended up making most of the latter half pretty boring and predictable.

Plot: 5/10
The setup was nice. The flower, hepatica, and what it represents was a good way to introduce the plot and the coming events. The whole, "blooms after the winter snow" was a good foreshadowing to what the manga would be about. I liked the initial setup of the plot.

Development: 5/10
While I did like the plot setup, everything else development wise was a bit boring; girl gets bullied, eventually gets pushed over the edge, kills everyone. That's about it. None of the characters showed any redeeming or likable qualities. A majority of the characters were made to be mindless scumbags just to fit the narrative of the plot. A few of the more notable bullies got some background stories and were fleshed out a bit, but they still ended up being lame. None of their past tragedies or circumstances made any difference in how I felt about them while they were alive or when they were dying/dead. The only thing I liked about this manga was when the blonde girl tried to redeem herself and reconciled with the MC. It was a kick in the shin when the blonde girl ended up dying a few pages after this event.

Conclusion: 6/10
All the questions or plot points that should have been resolved properly didn't need to be answered because everyone was dead. The final fate of the MC was fine. She gave up being a flower and as a result it was appropriate for her to wither away in the snow storm. A hepatica, which she no longer was and was something that she willingly chose to lose, blooms when the snow clears. It was appropriate for her to die in the snowstorm because she gave up everything for her revenge.

Overall: 5/10
This was entertaining enough. The initial plot setup was neat and I liked the foreshadowing it created. I also liked how at least one of the characters, the blonde girl, tried to redeem herself and the character development of this manga. I disliked how linear/straightforward the development became after the MC went over the edge. It was so linear that it made the later half of the manga very predictable: MC goes around getting revenge then either gives up on revenge and moves on or dies in the end because of her path of revenge. This manga was entertaining for what it was, but the art and development choices were turn-offs for me.
Misumisou review
par
MasakiHana9
Apr 08, 2021
This manga definitely isn't for everyone, as it is very often misinterpreted and trivialized. Many mention being lost in the manga, calling the bullies "lunatics" and "insane". Through all manga of Rensuke Oshikiri I've read, no character has been inherently bad, mentally ill nor plainly evil. There has always been a cause, and it is the point of the manga and a common theme occuring in his works - abuse breeds abuse.

Very heavy with a painful message, it requires more from you than passive reading. It is not to be read for enjoyment. I've started reading Misumisou as I've looked for series similar to Higurashi, not knowing what I get myself into. Most readers (me included) expected a classic revenge plot filled with gore. It is only an illusion after reading the synopsis.

The characters and bullying are exaggerated, yet the message is painfully real and applying to the world we live in. Each of the kids carried on the abuse they have received from their parents and surroundings - like a curse, it was carried through different vessels. The protagonist wasn't the only victim, violence became a way to cope for many deeply broken characters. The group bullying and flowing violence, turning abused children into monsters themselves is most likely a reflection on Japanese society (although it is most likely a problem in every country, it is not as severe as in Japan where bullying is a subject of many media for a reason).

Rensuke Oshikiri's art is my personal favorite together with widely acknowledged Junji Itou. It is perfect for what it is supposed to visualize - the ugly core of humanity, the part of the world nobody wants to see or think about. Which is shown by most viewers finding it very repulsive, going as far as criticizing the author's skills although they should never be questioned seeing the author's use of flow, perspective and overly realistically shown emotions. It obviously has its flaws (some expressions become repetitive after a longer while), yet calling the art "bad" is blasphemous.

This manga is very heavy, touching subjects nobody wants to think or know about. It is not about bullying and gore, it shows a very real part of society. The children are not mentally ill nor born monsters - they are victims, desperate for affection.

In the end, a very heavy scene occurs where one of the male characters steals the scene with seemingly bizarre behavior. It is very difficult to read, seeing the desperation and thirst for affection and love they have never received from their parental figure, which together with misery and extreme fear of abandonment bred shocking violence.

For someone expecting a "slasher", this is not the right manga. If you look for something very heavy, referring to very real problems of Japanese society and worldwide domestic violence, I sincerely recommend you to read Misumisou.
Misumisou review
par
TravisBickle15
Apr 08, 2021
A story about unblissful revenge. A sea of hatred with some islands of love, but those islands are in the middle of nowhere: this is what this manga is. It's also about kids being severely bullied, or in messed up families, or with broken dreams. The manga is a sad story where if someone does an inhuman and horrible thing, the victim doesn't rise above the hatred, but succumbs into it. It's an endless cycle of hatred in an unrealistic world where people are their worst thoughts. Imagine the worst thoughts one can have, and actually incorporate them into the actions of an individual, and you get what some of these characters did. Their actions are horrible and only making them become more miserable. It is a Hinamizawa small town of bullying and victims that eventually become bullies. There's no ray of hope for anyone, everyone joins the vicious cycle and gives in to the fear and anger provoked by their traumas that come from bullying or domestic abuse.

The only redeeming quality is the fact that "Misu Misou" actually succeeds in transmitting the feelings of being a victim and of becoming a perpetrator. It's too bad that it lacks the realism element due to the insane actions that are happening. The incredibly cruel and numerous deeds that are happening in such short spans of time would exist only in the imagination. And realism is necessary here since everything is about the real problems of bullying and domestic abuse. The art style very beautifully grounds the dark nature of this manga, characters may have some creepy body proportions and sillhouetes, which again reflects the creepiness of the world, a good thing overall.
Misumisou review
par
futanaripeen4
Apr 08, 2021
Among stories that have left an impression so deep that I can say they've affected my perspective on something and that I constantly carry around with me there's an oddity, Misumisou. The reason for that is honestly really ordinary, it's short. That's it. But, it's surprising what can be achieved with only 22 chapters. But enough of beating around the bush. It would be funny if my review ended up longer than the manga itself is. Maybe it's actually a legitimate possibility considering that the notes I took 2.1k words worth of notes while rereading for this review.

This is a review that I've actually prepared for, unlike my other reviews, so I'll hope to make it more structural. Anyway, what I'm going to be breaking down is the characters, the themes, and why the story was written. Other than that I'm also talking a bit about the art, the motifs, and how this story has a lot of interpretability. Basically I'm attempting to dissect almost everything about this manga.

***BEWARE OF SPOILERS FROM HERE ON!***

I'll begin with the themes of the story, from which I can go onto characters that I can then comfortably tie back into the themes.

There are three main themes that you might've already seen listed in the summary of this review. They are: neglect, bottled emotions, fear of being stuck in a place where you don't feel like you belong.
These three concepts are the driving forces behind the bullies and consequently drive Haruka to her actions, and who, by the way, is of course also acquainted with these. But let's go over each one.

Neglect.

Perhaps the simplest one, and the one that's most recognizably displayed via its subcategory, being ignored. If you noticed the manga occasionally drawing characters as dark silhouettes, that's a part of this. A shadow can't be interacted with and the characters in the moments where they're portrayed as them seem as merciless walls to the onlooker.

The character who most clearly relates to this theme is Yoshie. It's shown that her parents neglected her, using her as a mere tool to ease their own self-destructive life-style of alcohol. That's all her character is about. She's frustrated, she feels powerless at the two silhouettes in the darkness demanding that she'd go and get something other than sparkling wine. But she isn't able to do anything about it, which makes her participate in bullying Haruka. It includes her in a group where she's among others instead of behind them, not alone.

Though this theme isn't that basic. It doesn't pertain to just the bullies and their parents. Actually characters like Haruka's grandpa, Kyouko, and you could even say, "everyone", has a share of guilty in allowing the situation to transpire. I'll get to talking about them when I start to dissect characters one by one. Yoshie is convenient to use here as she's a minor character that'd be weird to have a whole separate section for.

Bottled up emotions.

Exactly like the previous theme, this one is also a very prominent issue in the real world. It's difficult and scary to open up and it might feel easier to hide them, but sometimes the environment forces people to hold everything in with its hostility, that's largely what's happening in this story. Bottled emotions might appear to be quietly in the background though, practically invisible, but that lasts only until they're released in an explosion, and when that happens, that bang is heard louder than any amount of venting.

The example character for this is Ikegawa. Although his character wasn't fully "articulated" as it's an uncomfortable one. Basically, he was obsessed with Haruka, something technically kin to love, but warped by having been held in. Seeing he wasn't in the right headspace anyway, it turned into a jealous feeling of ownership and entitlement. He basically wanted to own Haruka. Maybe it could've been a more genuine feeling if the environment was better, with how it was, if he had tried to be sincere and had talked to Haruka, he would've become the enemy of the rest of the class. Honestly, I might be actually giving him too much credit with this analysis, but I feel that's the concept behind his character. It's a really deranged mindset that we see from him, but as to why it's like it is, this seems to be the explanation. But anyways, this brings me roughly to the next theme.

Feeling stuck.

The crux of this is the setting of the story, the small town of Ootsuma. A barren place with nothing interesting going on and where even the school is about to be closed, also seemingly having a big infestation of Hepatica Nobilis. But it serves as one of the core factors for why characters are so on edge.

Like characters iterate a lot, there's nothing to do for them. The only one with a reasonably hobby is Aiba. But people, especially kids and teenagers, require something to spend time on. It's not only bent up anger or whatever that can have huge repercussions. It can just as well be ambition or boredom.

Most of the characters don't appear to have dreams or hope. They simply spend time finding twisted pleasure in banding together against someone and feeling proud of being their school's last set of alumni. It's bleak. All potential talent and passion they might have has nowhere to go. This idea is actually quite similar to parents not allowing kids to have hobbies and forcing them to only study, which also ends with them breaking under the pressure.

On a side note, many of the bullies cite Haruka as the catalyst of their deeds, practically blaming her for their own actions. They say that her existence is what lead them on the wrong path. I'm a bit uncertain on how to tackle this theme. To say that an outside element is what tipped the scale is blatantly a self-justification, especially when you take into account that they bullied Rumi before. But this is something that I thought I should bring up.

Well, those are the main themes, but themes exist through characters who serve as vessels to explore them and make them compelling.

Haruka Nozaki.

As a main character, she's really interesting. Although we follow her journey, her actual character and personality is rather open. We have a general understanding of what she's like and what her values are, mainly the love and care for her family, but she's quiet and we don't see into her mind all too often. There are a lot of vague panels that are left up to interpretation. For example, a good question is: how exactly does Haruka feel about her revenge?

Getting into her relation with the themes though. She falls under bottling emotions. She tries to endure the bullying and hides it from her family to not worry them, especially her sister that was previously a victim of bullying in Tokyo. Her strength is admirable and she's actually able to largely pull through, partly thanks to Aiba actually offering genuine support too. But the bullying gets a chance to escalate and she ends up becoming a murderer, and the whole situation ruins lives of many people and literally no one wins.

She's also tied to the motif and the title of the series, Hepatica Nobilis. The flower that endures snow and blooms in full beauty in spring.

Sidetracking a bit, the flower has multiple roles. It symbolizes Haruka and exactly like Haruka, the flower isn't able to endure snow forever and a bit over the halfway point of the story, the flowers are all covered by a thick blanket of snow. In a more interesting way, it actually becomes a symbol to Haruka in the story too since it's connected with feelings of love to her. Seeing the flower seems to give her strength multiple times.

Mitsuru Aiba.

Yeah, chapter 15 was a shock to read on a first time. On a reread I spotted all types of sketchy signs surrounding him, like how he keeps a copy of the Haruka/Shouka photo. But on a first read, he truly seemed like a ray of hope, which he kind of is for Haruka, although there are sinister and deranged notions of love under it, he does manage to help Haruka remain sane at first.

I feel his character is hard to pinpoint. He grew into the person he is by being abandoned by his mother after he tried to protect her. From that point on he appears to have a mindset that she needed to be controlled and abused, he thinks she didn't know what was good for her. To be honest, her mom is on levels of fucked up that are hard to comprehend too, and I've got little clue about defining her without any more context. But that mindset extends to Aiba's own target of obsession, Haruka. And to "protect" her and garner her attention he's willing to to awful lengths. At one point it becomes so delusional he goes out of his way to separate Haruka so she wouldn't have anyone but him left. And he makes an absolutely disgusting comment about being the only one to not abandon her even if her sister dies, implying her sister would be "abandoning" her.

He probably falls under all themes. Since his parents can't be called that he was hence neglected. Before he attacked his dad he had bottled all of his fear and anger up. And he also felt stuck because he couldn't understand people and to him it seemed like everyone around was deserting him. He couldn't understand anyone.

Anyway, there are tons of interesting panels and details in this manga, but in regards to Aiba, there are two that I want to bring up.

The first is his excuse for taking the picture of Haruka's dad and Shouko in the fire, which he tries to explain as him admiring the father's heroic act. I think this reason might contain a bit of truth, the contrast of his father and Haruka's father could've evoked something like that.

The second thing is the final page of chapter 14 where Aiba steps on a Hepatica Nobilis but looks completely unfazed despite having compared the flower to Haruka. I believe the implication is that he's oblivious to his own actions and that he really doesn't see how he hurts people.

Taeko Oguro.

The third theme is most prominent in Oguro. She has a dream, unlike people around her (from what we see at least). But it can't be fulfilled in Ootsuma. She literally does feel stuck and she pleads to be allowed to chase her wish, but isn't permitted. This once again results in someone bottling up their emotions; ambition and even hatred for the place that holds her down. She starts too view everyone around her as abnormal for being content on the surface, even prideful of their alumni status. She even openly denies her dream. The outcome is that she uses everyone to feel in control and leads everyone against Haruka.

Her relationship with Haruka is probably the most notable thing about her character. She was immediately interested in Haruka as she came from Tokyo, but she quickly becomes disappointed because Haruka doesn't really want to go back unless her family does. She becomes spiteful as she, someone who'd give everything to go there, can't, but the one who could isn't even interested. In her eyes it must be a great injustice, which, well, could be argued. Besides all of that though, she's jealous of Haruka's attention which only inflates her spite.

As a side note, one interesting detail is how she prefers to hurt Rumi's hands. For her hands are important because she'd need them for her dream job. Also, her way of inflicting self-harm is biting her hands.

Rumi Sayama & Kyouko Minami.

I'm bundling them together because they're similar and I'm trying to condense this review.

Both are depictions of someone who is completely cornered, basically a wild animal that can only turn around and attack the hunter. As for Rumi, she's also got the thing with obsession and disillusionment going on.

The circumstances of these characters are tragic. When it's shown how casually Rumi is bullied despite being one of the Ootsuma people and her perpetual state of hear, it's terrifying to think what she's been through. Her design often looks monstrous and she was indeed molded into one. She's been broken through sheer abuse by her classmates. Totally cornered between Oguro and Haruka. She's at a stage where she thinks it's better if she dies liberated than to continue being abused. And the layer of her admiration for Oguro just muddies this into something so indescribably disgusting.

Kyouko is in a quite a similar position, but perhaps even more tragic. She tried to redo her school life and get a new start, for it to end up exactly the same, being bullied by her own students. Even an adult isn't invincible, the scars she's gotten are nigh irreparable. She falls into the two latter themes.

Grandpa.

Usually a grandfather character in a story is a relatively straightforward character. That rings true for Misumisou too. At least on the surface. He's simply a character who supports Haruka. But, there is something more to him, the fact that he is quite likely aware of Haruka's actions.

Firstly, assuming he actually does believe Haruka and thinks she's attending school, if that's the case, I'm still worried because he shouldn't let her. Haruka absolutely shouldn't be going to school in her situation. But I don't think this is it. There's a scene where he is looking through Haruka's clothes and in a very cryptic panel we see him find what appear to be bloodstains on her jacket. It's hard to believe he's oblivious to what it could indicate.
Also, at one point Haruka questions him about why he hasn't asked anything, and grandpa also very enigmatically states that Haruka can tell him when she's ready to do so.
Although the final chapter would suggest that he actually didn't knew anything, it might be that his mind isn't clear at that point and that his sentiments aren't to be taken as facts. Well, he does see an illusion of Haruka after all.
But if the possibility that he knew what Haruka was doing is true, that's a disconcerting prospect. It's true neglect. Also it would actually parallel one of the parents who was glad about their child being a perpetrator instead of a victim because it'd mean there "wouldn't be anything to worry about".

Okay, these are all of the main characters. I don't think I need to bring the minor ones up. Maybe the breakdown isn't as complete and thorough as I imagined, but this covers it about anyway. The review is getting lengthy and I still have other subjects to go over.

The story's intent.

Short stories are fascinating. When a story is so short, assuming it's not because of being axed or anything, it indicates that it's written for a more defined purpose, maybe even for a goal. The author has something they want to say or share or put out in the open, whatever. And so, with this in mind, what might be the purpose of Misumisou?

Well, the answer is quite obvious, isn't it? In a broad sense, it's a message about what neglect leads to. But I feel it's a very particularly crafted story and it isn't just trying to explore a concept. I feel it's actually trying to gut punch the reader to wake up about the topic and make them feel strong feelings towards it. Trying to hammer in how ugly the consequences can be. The grotesque manner of depicting the bullying is like it is for that purpose, I think that it is, at least.

The atmosphere and the interpretability.

One of the standout aspects of Misumisou for me is the art, particularly the style. It's both unique and fitting. Cutesy round characters that have whiplashing contrast with the carnage and horror. And the backdrops are slim and beautiful, although bleak of course. I really like the atmosphere, it's lonely and isolate, but also fresh because of the touch of winter and cold. But the ever-increasing amount of snow feels like a representation of things escalating. At the start of the manga, it's all quiet, only light snowfalls, but as the revenge story begins, it drastically intensifies.

But as for what I appreciate the most, it's the ambiguity. So many panels leave a lot of room to interpretation. Despite having read the story a couple of times and taken notes of it as well as having discussed it, there are still many moments where I don't understand the full depth behind an expression or a line of dialogue.

The conclusion.

I think Misumisou is a fantastic manga. The issues it showcases are very prevalent in the real world. I've talked about this manga with a couple of people whom I've convinced to read it, and one of them in particular feels that the story focuses too much on the gore and doesn't really explore its themes. Well, I can see where they're coming from, but I do believe that the order of priorities is very much intentional. It's a wake up call, not a study. And I think that's fine, I actually think it offers a lot in that regard, because when I think of this manga, I feel uncanny as I realize that this story doesn't feel that unreal. That's certainly a thought.

Well, this review is long. I think Misumisou deserves a lot of effort because it's so obscure and I'd like for there to be at least something about it on the internet, at least in English anyway, I'm not sure how the situation is in Japanese. Also, it's a short enough story that a full breakdown is plausible. Also, my first serious review was of this, but that was a terrible attempt and it was practically just praise without any analysis or substance to speak of.

I haven't even recommended the manga yet. But then again, it's not really about that. I'm attempting to counter the more negative opinions which I've seen circling around. Although if you haven't read Misumisou, then most importantly, how did you even scroll all the way down here? But do go and read Misumisou, lol
Misumisou review
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Tyrraell8
Apr 08, 2021
This manga is extremely sad. filled with killing intent and hate. I can totally understand how the main protagonist feel when she is in that situation. it makes you want those bullies to die as well. this sort of stuff happens daily, most of the time teacher/ family won't be able to support those victims which only makes the situation worse.

the story is mainly around someone who gets bullied almost daily and there are alot of F-word up shit everywhere. Reminds me of how i got bullied when i was in secondary school. the intent of wanting to kill someone when being bullied is understandable, those stages of being bullied by someone is fricken horrible. if only my country allowed people to buy guns i would probably went mad and ended up getting killed by the police, after several counselling and enduring i am glad i am all grow up now and its in the past so life is all good.

if something like what is happening to the MC in the manga happens to someone in real life they will probably end up killing someone as well.

this reflects the amount of school shootings and mass killings in schools, most of the penetrators who started those killings were mainly caused by excessive amount of gaming/ bullying. If hell really exist it would still take ages for those who needs to be punish to end up being in hell, and people will eventually reach their limit and ended up killing some body. Which is also like suicide.

Think twice if you ever think about bullying someone
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