9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A pleasantly optimistic read that belies the lurid superficialities, December 18, 2009
This review is from: Beast Master, Vol. 1 (Beast Master (Viz Media)) (Paperback)
Seventeen-year-old Yuiko Kubozuka loves animals. Unfortunately, they definitely don't love her back. (She is always trying too hard, apparently, and scares them away.) Then one day--an appropriately stormy one where the rain is falling in sheets and bolts of lightning are lighting up the heavens--she meets him, a boy who is practically a wild animal himself. The boy, as it turns out, is actually a transfer student at Yuiko's school who had been living abroad for many years, and his name is Leo Aoi.
The student body is terrified of the scruffy, much-scarred, and wild-eyed Leo. Yuiko soon learns, however, that Leo is actually more kitten than lion, and the two develop a fast friendship. It's all going swimmingly until Leo manages to get on the wrong side of the wrong crowd. When they try to beat him into submission, he goes berserk, ready to kill everyone in sight with his bare hands. And he would have, too...had Yuiko not intervened to stop his rampage. Apparently only she is capable of stopping him once he sees fresh blood. Will Yuiko be able to keep Leo tame, or will this beast ultimately be the one to take his master's life?
Despite the lurid illustration of a chained and bloodied Leo embracing a sorrowful looking Yuiko from behind, the first volume of Kyousuke Motomi's Beast Master is, like Leo himself, more mellow than monstrous. And, as the title correctly implies, it is more about the "Beast Master" Yuiko herself than it is about Leo. This, like the best sorts of shoujo manga, is about a girl who grows into adulthood. For Yuiko specifically, this means learning how to relate to others in a compassionate way that fulfills their needs and desires, and not just her own, and she gradually comes to realize that smothering someone with affection is not the same as love.
Of course, Leo is an appealing character after his own fashion as well. A dead ringer of L from Death Note, he is a character design type that has won legions of fans around the world, and Motomi almost certainly drew him with his antecedents in mind. Actually, character design is one of this title's strongest assets. Although the quality of the artwork and layouts on its own terms is of the expected standard for mainstream shoujo manga and no more, the mangaka uses just the right combination of supporting character archetypes, from bald gangster to geeky father, to keep up the momentum of the story.
This volume of Beast Master also includes a standalone bonus story titled, "Fly." Unrelated to the main plot, it depicts a young woman who wants to become a pilot even though her parents want her to become a doctor, and with the encouragement of her boyfriend, she decides to follow her dreams. If this manga has a theme, it is that people cannot realize their individual potential alone, and the person to help them along the way is already right beside them. All in all, a pleasantly optimistic read that belies the lurid superficialities. Recommended.
-- Casey Brienza
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Beauty Within the Beast (3.5 Stars), December 5, 2009
This review is from: Beast Master, Vol. 1 (Beast Master (Viz Media)) (Paperback)
Yuiko has a problem: she loves animals, but she smothers them so much that they hate her. She's kind of like Elmira from "Tiny Toon Adventures", only not insane. One day, a strange boy named Leo rescues Yuiko's cat from a tree. He looks scary, but he seems to get along with animals really well. It turns out that he's a new transfer student at her school. All the other students are afraid of Leo, but Yuiko is interested in him. She finds out that Leo was raised in the wild in a foreign land, which explains his appearance and sensitivity to nature. As they become friends, Yuiko discovers what a sweet guy Leo really is. Until someone makes him angry, that is...
I thought Leo was a great hero. He looks scary when he first shows up, but he ends up being really cute. He's a very light-hearted character. He doesn't understand about social boundaries, and he's openly affectionate to those he likes. It frustrates him that he can't make friends, but he's really happy to have Yuiko and considers her very important to him. Yuiko was fine, but she didn't have as strong a personality. She's pretty much an average-high-school-girl kind of heroine. I did admire the fact that she reaches out to Leo, though, when everyone else shuns him. Some of the minor characters are interesting, too, especially "Boss".
I would've given this manga a higher rating if it hadn't been for the plot. It's episodic, and the episodes don't seem to really lead anywhere. Most of them revolve around showing off Leo's kind and cute nature. He has to rescue Yuiko at least three times during the first volume. I guess it makes it a little more interesting that Leo goes wild with rage when angered, although the nice-guy-with-a-violent-side is kind of cliche. It doesn't help that only Yuiko can reach him when he gets in that state. There's plenty of cliched mushiness like that.
I suggest taking a look at this manga and deciding for yourself whether it's worth reading. Leo's charm may be enough for some. I've just read too many similar shojo to be interested in this.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Surprised me!, October 24, 2011
This review is from: Beast Master, Vol. 1 (Beast Master (Viz Media)) (Paperback)
I went against my own policy and judged this book by its cover from the first time I saw it ages ago-- I thought it looked rather suggestive and creepy. Then I got an I phone and I had a free download for the first chapter and thought, "Hey, what the heck?"
Oh. My. Goodness. I learned my lesson. LOVED IT! Must buy!
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