Mujirushi

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Des alternatives: Synonyms: The Sign of Dreams
Japanese: 夢印-MUJIRUSHI-
Auteur: Urasawa, Naoki
Taper: Manga
Volumes: 1
Chapitres: 9
Statut: Finished
Publier: 2017-10-20 to 2018-02-20
Sérialisation: Big Comic Original

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4.7
(3 Votes)
66.67%
33.33%
0.00%
0.00%
0.00%
0 En train de lire
0 Veux lire
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Des alternatives: Synonyms: The Sign of Dreams
Japanese: 夢印-MUJIRUSHI-
Auteur: Urasawa, Naoki
Taper: Manga
Volumes: 1
Chapitres: 9
Statut: Finished
Publier: 2017-10-20 to 2018-02-20
Sérialisation: Big Comic Original
But
4.7
3 Votes
66.67%
33.33%
0.00%
0.00%
0.00%
0 En train de lire
0 Veux lire
0 Lis
Sommaire
A man and his daughter meet a mysterious man who has more than a few secrets and tall tales to tell about France and The Louvre Museum. What awaits for those who dare to follow their dreams?

(Source: MU)
Mots clés
mystery
drama
seinen
Personnages
Commentaires (3)
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Mujirushi review
par
AngelCharms9
Apr 08, 2021
Urasawa is a masterful storyteller - known for his sweeping epics, characters, and thrilling stories capable of holding the reader captive with mystery and page-turning thrills. Fans will experience all of their favorite Urasawa-isms in Mujirushi - fitted nicely into a charming, compact one-shot. 

This was an odd one though. I took a leap of faith and dove into Mujirushi not knowing anything about the story and was immediately immersed into the familiar space I know and love about a Urasawa-story - mysterious atmosphere, several concurrent plot threads, and lovable minor characters. The atmosphere in particular should be noted; it always amazes me that a scene can carry an underlying sense of discomfort - or even horror - just from a character's facial expression or gesture.This was certainly the case when readers first encounter 'The Director'. 

As I am reading, I can't quite shake off that this is only 9 chapters. As the chapters go on, more story threads are added and mysteries unpacked yet a climax is yet to be reached. Astonishingly, it's not until chapter 9 - the last chapter - that everything comes together in both a brilliant and obviously rushed manner. This may remind you of yet another Urasawa-ism - one I am not crazy about - were the ending never quite satisfies you in the same way the epic journey did.

Should you dive into this one? Yes. This is a nice, light afternoon read. You will want to turn off your cynical brain knowing this is a collaborative advertisement piece for the Louvre in Paris and just enjoy the quirky, Francophile, charming story. You will also want to stay away from the temptation of recommending this to a friend new to Urasawa and just have them read 20th Century Boys or Monster.