Wagamama Chie-chan review

Papitaa3
Apr 08, 2021
tl;dr: this is a beautifully honest and detailed look into the daily life and emotions of a girl with BPD.

わがままちえちゃん (selfish / self-centred / hard-headed / fickle chie-chan) is a story which many people will have a hard time understanding. Looking through amazon.co.jp, there are lots of reviews saying things like "this heroine is crazy" or "the plot is too fragmented" or "this makes no sense at all..." etc.

Because this story is told uncompromisingly, laying out Chie's internal monologue without third-party exposition, it can easily pose a challenge to those not already familiar with her frame of mind. If you don't have personal experience with dissociative disorders etc, you'll likely come away frustrated or head-scratching. Taking this approach, however, means it can be told with more subtlety, and be more in-depth and poetic than other stories with similar subjects (Girl, Interrupted, to give a well-known example) which devote half their time to explanations for an unfamiliar audience.

--- story: 10 ---

This is a story where the "plot points" are used primarily as a setting to give life to the little details. Because of this, the "story" is really an extension of "character", so i'll go into greater depth in that section.

--- art: 10 ---

志村先生's way with faces has only gotten better over time, and it fits this story perfectly. This is a story told even more through images than words, and she's able to, with a single glance, answer questions and convey emotions that might take another artist a full page of text. Chie needs only turn and look back, and i'll find my chest tightening and spine shivering. Several of the cover images feel like they're about to float off the page, like someone who's forgotten just how gravity works, and anyways can't be bothered.

And, of course, the watercolour spreads are an added bonus.

--- character: 9 ---

If this were a story involving only Chie, i would give this section an easy 10 as well. I found myself repeatedly recognising in her feelings i know intimately but would never have put into words. This way of sharing, completely honest and unfiltered, has shown up in other places in 志村さん's works, particularly in the shorter, less popular stories, but in Chie it finally takes centre stage.

What felt slightly disappointing, however, were the tantalising glimpses into the other characters in this story. Chie's aunt, "girlfriend", and fortune-teller "friend" all have their own brief moments in the spotlight that hint at more complex characters underneath. This does help the feelings of realism and honesty, but still find myself wanting to get to know these characters better. As an aside thing, her aunt feels a little like an author's self-insert character, though that's not really a bad thing here.

--- enjoyment 9 ---

As a whole, this manga left me feeling drained, warm, and detached. If you're the sort who needs those feelings to somehow stay sane, this will definitely fit (would also recommend taking a look at 岩井俊二's things). The slightly truncated feel in the end, regarding the other characters, was a bit annoying, but that feeling may have actually helped. I'm not quite sure any more.
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Wagamama Chie-chan
Wagamama Chie-chan
Auteur Shimura, Takako
Artiste