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スーサイドガール
40
10
Finished
Apr 17, 2020 to Jan 18, 2024
7.3/10
Average Review Score
50%
Recommend It
4
Reviews Worldwide
“Days go on, pretending that nothing has changed. Every now and then, I'll feel down over little things, but... Even then, we won't despair. We won't despair for a second time. Because we have the joy of life in our chests. Because the sun shines within my heart.” - Suicide Girl SPOILER FREE REVIEW!! Expectations- 5/10 I didn't expect much when I stumbled upon this manga, so my expectations were pretty low. The artstyle seemed childish at first glance, and the story seemed odd. Start- 6/10 The start surprised me because I quickly got into the story.Ending- 8/10 The ending was nice and beautiful, which surprised me since this was quite a short read. Story- 8/10 Suicide Girl tells the story of a high school girl who, after some attempts, realizes she can't die no matter what. Then, she learns that she was chosen to be a "suicide girl", a magical girl that stops others from ending their lives. Characters- 7/10 I personally didn't get attached to any of the characters, but it was fun to see them interact. The protagonist is also quite nice. Worldbuilding- 7/10 Art- 9/10 Although the art seems childish, it is quite well done. A "cute" artstyle mixed with gore themes is quite sometimes I like seeing. Enjoyment- 8/10 Recommendation note- I wouldn't recommend this to people who are sensible to topics related to suicide.
At first glance, Kirari Aokigahara appears to be an average, happy-go-lucky first-year high school student. But instead of running late for school one day, she finds herself running late for a meeting at Seaside Cafe hosted by Rushio, the admin of a website called Suicide Cafe. The sparkling, charming young lady stands out amongst the gathering's cast of suicidal individuals. She joins the group in swallowing sleeping pills and entering a car filled to the brim with toxic charcoal smoke. However, rather than dying, she wakes up from a dream about a girl's suicide and is surprised to see that the once-suicidal group appears to be revitalized. Upset that she did not die, Kirari goes home and attempts to kill herself, only to realize that she cannot die, no matter the method. Rushio then appears to tell Kirari that she has been chosen to save people from ending their lives, including the girl in her dream earlier, and become a magical girl of salvation—a "Suicide Girl." [Written by MAL Rewrite]
Suicide Girl is the most divided I've ever been about a work of art. It is a Mahou Shoujo, so you can bet it is light-hearted and fun, but it tries to do that while tackling a very heavy theme. I'm writing this review because the other ones don't seem to have seen the same manga that I did. With that said, let’s delve into what Suicide Girl is about and the themes it explores. We’ll also discuss if the beginning might be misleading, and how effectively it tackles its thematic elements. So, what is this show about? I don't feel like I have to answer that. Thetitle is VERY clear: It is combining Magical Girls with Suicide. Mahou Shoujo in general have very clear messages and suicide stories too, so I don't think this requires much selling in this front. First things later, let’s talk art. The art is one of the standout aspects of this work. It is what sticks it together. If it was any more realistic, it would not be as fun and lighthearted and if it was any less realistic it would be a complete mockery of such a heavy theme. It is VERY impressive how the artist manages to fall in a perfect sweet spot between those, so much so that there are multiple instances of pages with both aspect coexisting without being disconnected. The one thing I cannot praise are the fight scenes. Unfortunately, a great portion of them I still don't understand how they developed — But to be completely honest, it is so common for Mahou Shoujo to solves fights so trivially that I didn't even care about it anymore. So, how does it start? It hits the floor running. You'll either be laughing or hating this thing after the first volume. If you hate it because you feel it takes the core theme lightly, just drop it — It is how the author chose to tackle it. He maintains the same approach from beginning to end. If you liked it, I wouldn't guarantee that you'll keep loving it. The middle section is rushed, but I'll talk about it in the next section. The art and the immersion do get even better in the second half, though. So take that into consideration. What about the characters? There is no way around it. The volume count is simply too short. Characters in Mahou Shoujo are simple by design, they have to mean something easy to digest, and it does complement well with the message that seems to be intended by the author. But if they aren't given many details concerning their development, they need more screen time to warm up in the reader's mind, and there simply isn't enough time in these 10 volumes for all the characters. Kirari might be my favorite magical girl, but I don't really care about her companions at all, and I don't feel that I was given the chance to care. What about the story itself? The world building is quite competent and serves its purpose within the narrative with flying colors. The mysteries are not mind-blowing, but are very good. It is mostly episodic, but there is a final arc which is very good, with a LOT of symbolism and is decently well crafted, given what it has done before. Most of the engagement with it hinges in it dancing perfectly between the fun and the heavy moments, but that can vary a lot from reader to reader. Then, what did I think of it as a whole? It does what it tries to do quite, but is what it tries to do something that should be done? Really hard to say, I think it is personal. I don't think this should be a popular manga — copycat suicides exists, and I don't doubt this thing could trigger that somewhere, but I might be wrong. Read it if you think suicidal ideation should be tackled more, or if you don't really mind. Skip it if you think it is preposterous and that it could lead to unhealthy naturalization of it. I personally love the great metaphors it manages to put forth.
[Warning] Suicide (obviously) and self harm TL:DR Jumbled story and one-note characters that doesn't even say anything of worth about suicide. Don't read this. Description At first glance, Kirari Aokigahara appears to be an average, happy-go-lucky first-year high school student. But instead of running late for school one day, she finds herself running late for a meeting at Seaside Cafe hosted by Rushio, the admin of a website called Suicide Cafe. The sparkling, charming young lady stands out amongst the gathering's cast of suicidal individuals. She joins the group in swallowing sleeping pills and entering a car filled to the brim with toxic charcoal smoke. However, rather than dying, she wakesup from a dream about a girl's suicide and is surprised to see that the once-suicidal group appears to be revitalized. Upset that she did not die, Kirari goes home and attempts to kill herself, only to realize that she cannot die, no matter the method. Rushio then appears to tell Kirari that she has been chosen to save people from ending their lives, including the girl in her dream earlier, and become a magical girl of salvation—a "Suicide Girl." Story: 5/10 This is not as edgy as expected. The premise necessitates a little of it but this manga is actually fairly upbeat and positive, leaning more towards a cheery dark comedy than melodrama and self-indulgent angst. The story itself feels somewhat disjointed, like many things are all just happening because the plot demands it to and it felt like there was a major lack of connective tissue between some arcs. I will grant there are some genuinely good ideas and I was caught off guard a few times but, overall, it's pretty predictable and you can see some story beats from miles off. Except for the latter third where it gets more interesting, in a good and bad way. Positively, it ups the stakes and begins to explore it's world a little more. Negatively, it's ideas are a bit out there in a way that's not set up well enough and isn't given enough time to breath. Unfortunately it all feels a little rushed. Thankfully, the author ultimately manages to bring it together and the ending is actually pretty good. But was a decent ending worth all the mediocrity that came before? I would have to say no, it's not worth it. There is an emotional core to this manga, it strongly implores the reader to find the joy in their life and live the life they wish to. The issue is that it's all very surface level, we never really dig into what that actually means for the characters and how this influences them. Frankly the whole concept of the manga is just insulting. The idea that people don't really want to commit suicide and are forced to by magic demons and this can also be solved by magic girls killing the demons is bizarre. Look, I can forgive this, maybe it's a metaphor about how people really want to live and they're ‘forced’ to commit suicide by despair and you need someone to help you. Except that completely random people are also driven to commit suicide just by being in proximity of these demons so what's the message there? It leaves a bad taste in my mouth and I would suggest anyone who who was put off by the trigger warning at the top to just skip this one. Let's just chalk it up to a bad metaphor and move on. The more serious issue is that the manga treats suicide extremely lightly. For example, the ex-lovers of one of the main cast shows up and she tells them she never really liked them. They all go to commit suicide and this gets resolved off-screen while the whole thing is used for mild character growth that she should be a bit nicer. No insight into what the lovers are going through or feeling, they get two panels of background each for why they even care about her and they never show up again. Three potential suicides are barely given any attention at all and are used purely to develop a different character. And the worst part is that the whole chapter is topped off with a joke about how this whole event has taught the character she's a perverted masochist! Why the $#*!@ would you end the chapter like that!? This manga, despite it's premise, doesn't seem to actually care about suicide. Genuinely, if the whole premise was changed to be that the demons were making people murderers and the magic girls had to stop that, almost nothing about this manga would have to altered which really doesn't suggest that it treats suicide with any level of depth or insight. I personally believe that media should be able to depict anything but surely we should expect more from a manga that's chosen to engage with such an emotionally-charged and complex topic? Characters: 4/10 Kirari lost her childhood crush to suicide but is super cheery all the time. That is all. Manten is an idol who is a creepy stalker that's in love with Kirari. That is all. Akane is a 15 year old girl who's personality consists of being a creepy stalker in love with Kirari and having big breasts. That is all. Are you noticing a pattern here? Yeah the main characters are flat and one dimensional. They never develop as character, the few times the author tries to dig deeper are confined to a chapter or two per character and it falls flat. I do not really care about any of them. As the manga goes on, a few characters with a little more promise are introduced but they never get the screen time needed to really make them shine. Art The art for this manga is amazing. The characters are so expressive, they all have cutesy characters designs that complements the dark comedy tone of the manga. Yet the artist can also do intensive, bloody action just as well, with greats fight scenes that can be difficult to follow at times and the occasional panel that's too busy to make out what's going on. The monster designs are creative and suitably creepy with some strong body horror elements thrown in for extra measure. The way it depicts the monster's hold over their victims with empty, bleeding eyes and bugs crawling over them is incredible and really sells how terrible these things are. Honestly did not expect this kind of quality from this manga but I was consistently surprised by just how good it could be, I would even say that it gets better over time. Overall: 4/10 A good ending cannot save a jumbled story that rushes from one place to the next without ever really diving into anything it introduces. Filling the manga with one dimensional characters doesn't help. Fact is, the core concept of ‘Suicide Girls’ needs a deft hand to make it work and the author simply isn't capable of that, only superficially engaging with the topic. Honestly, the author barely seems to care about suicide despite writing a manga all about it. At least the art is good. I obviously do not recommend this.
Theme & Story Suicide girl is a Mahou Shojou first and then explore the topic of suicide second, Each character had its own perspective on suicide, and while its not explored that deep. It gets to the point where the reader could understand why each character does it. Suicide girl Also focus on the topic of life itself and what its meant to keep going. It also briefly touch on the topic on nihilism, both Existential nihilism and Moral nihilism. The comedy are played well and does not undermine the main topic at hand. Its juggled well, used sparingly and landed perfectly. Chapter count are not tooshort or too long, just the right amount, maybe a few more chapter so the final arcs has breathing room, but that's the only gripe i had. Art I was skeptical about the art at first, it look goofy and cartoony, but turns out its pretty banger. The amount of two page spread, horror imagery, and action poses are exceptional. Sure some of the fight are hard to understand and require some effort to understand, but its far and few between, and the amount of banger page compensate it enough. Overall its a solid read if you're in a mood for mahou shojou with overall positive tone that's not too edgy but still has some bite (Yuuki Yuuna fan approved)