Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō

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Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō

Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō volume 1
ヨコハマ買い出し紀行
(Yokohama Shopping Log)
Genre Drama, Science Fiction, Slice of life
Manga
Author Hitoshi Ashinano
Publisher Flag of Japan Kodansha
Demographic Seinen
Magazine Afternoon
Original run June 1994February 2006
Volumes 14
OVA
Director Takashi Annō
Studio Ajia-do Animation Works
Episodes 2
Released May 1998 and December 1998
OVA: Quiet Country Cafe
Director Tomomi Mochizuki
Studio Ajia-do Animation Works, SME Visual Works
Episodes 2
Released December 2002 and May 2003

Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō (ヨコハマ買い出し紀行?) is a science fiction manga written and illustrated by Hitoshi Ashinano. The title can be translated Yokohama Shopping Log or Record of a Yokohama Shopping Trip. One tankōbon volume and the second OVA series have the subtitle Quiet Country Cafe; and in South Korea it is known as 카페 알파 (Kape Alpa; Café Alpha). The series is often referred to in wapuro romaji as Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou, or simply abbreviated as YKK by fans outside of Japan.[1]

The manga was serialized in Kodansha's Afternoon magazine from June 1994 to February 2006, with a concluding postscript episode in July 2006, and collected in 14 tankōbon volumes. Parts of the story were adapted as two OVA anime series of two episodes each.

The series depicts the daily life of a robot who runs a coffee shop some time after the Earth's ecology has collapsed. It is noted for its beautifully spare pen-and-ink drawing style, as well as its calm, meticulously paced stories and engaging characters.[2] Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō won the 2007 Seiun Award for best science fiction comic.

Contents

[edit] Story

Logo of Café Alpha
Logo of Café Alpha

Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō is set in a peaceful, post-cataclysmic world where mankind is in decline after an environmental disaster. Exactly what happened is never explained, but sea levels have risen significantly, inundating coastal cities such as Yokohama, and Mount Fuji erupted in living memory. The reduced human population has reverted to a simpler life, and the reader is told this is the twilight of the human age. Instead of raging against their fate, humans are quietly accepting.[3][4]

Alpha Hatsuseno is an android ("robot person") who runs an out-of-the-way coffee shop, Café Alpha, on the lonely coast of the Miura Peninsula of Japan, while her human "owner" is on a trip of indefinite length.[5] Though she spends much of her time alone, Alpha is cheerful, gregarious, and—unlike the slowly declining humans—immortal.[4]

Most chapters of Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō are self-contained slice-of-life episodes depicting Alpha in quotidian activities, either alone, with customers, or on occasional trips through the countryside or into Yokohama for supplies (from whence the "shopping log" of the title). Whole chapters are devoted to brewing coffee, taking photographs, or repairing a tiny model aircraft engine, sometimes with only a few lines of dialogue. Through Alpha's experiences, the author brings out the small wonders of everyday life and makes the reader aware of their passing: the aircraft engine runs out of fuel; her scooter breaks down; the rising ocean encroaches on her coffee shop; the neighborhood children she loves grow up and move away. In evoking a nostalgia for this loss, Ashinano follows the Japanese tradition of mono no aware (sadness for the transience of things).[6]

Though often self-contained, the stories have continuity—relationships grow and change, and seemingly insignificant details reappear later.[4][5] Ashinano explains few details of Alpha's world, leaving mysteries that engage the reader[7] as the series unfolds in a meandering progression, by turns funny, touching, and nostalgic.[8][9]

[edit] Characters

Alpha (left) and Kokone (right) from a color page of the manga
Alpha (left) and Kokone (right) from a color page of the manga
Alpha Hatsuseno (初瀬野アルファ Hatsuseno Arufa?)
A type A7M2 robot, one of only three production prototypes, who runs Café Alpha in the absence of her owner. Alpha is cheerful and thoughtful. She enjoys talking with her few customers, but is initially socially awkward and sheltered—despite being her model's prototype, at the start of the series she has met only a few people and no other robots. Because of this, when her owner departed, she declined to travel with him. As the series progresses, however, she grows more confident in her social skills, enough so that she spends a year traveling herself, and becomes more attached to her human friends even as they age and depart. In her spare time, Alpha plays a gekkin, carves small art objects with fish designs, and travels the local countryside on her scooter, investigating the remains of humanity's previous age and the emerging world to come. Voiced by: Hekiru Shiina
Kokone Takatsu (鷹津ココネ Takatsu Kokone?)
A type A7M3 production robot who works as a courier in what remains of Musashino, Tokyo. She is the first robot that Alpha meets, when she delivers a package (containing a camera) and a message from Alpha's owner. They become fast friends, and Kokone eventually develops romantic feelings for Alpha. Kokone is sweet, shy, and somewhat intellectual, but because of her job she has more experience with people than Alpha, and can sometimes pass for human. After meeting Alpha, her "older sister" production-wise, Kokone becomes curious about the history and nature of robots. Voiced by: Akiko Nakagawa
Ojisan (おじさん Ojisan?, "Uncle")
A middle-aged man with a perpetual grin, he is Alpha's closest neighbor and a regular customer at her café. He runs a gas station and sells vegetables on the side. He is a grandfather-figure to Alpha and the actual grandfather of Takahiro. Ojisan refers to himself as a bum, and seems to regret not pursuing a relationship with Sensei when they were younger. His real name is never given. Voiced by: Mikio Terashima (OVA 1), Shozo Iizuka (OVA 2)
Sensei (せんせい? , "Doctor")
An older woman, she a doctor for both humans and androids. She was involved in the creation of the A7 series of robots,[10] and hosted Director Alpha in her home, possibly as Director Alpha's owner.[11] When she was younger, she rode motorcycles and raced hovercraft, and was Ojisan's senpai from school. Her surname is Koumi'ishi (子海石? , lit. "child-sea-stone"), but she is always addressed by just her title. Voiced by: Ikuko Sugita
Takahiro (right) and Makki (left) from the second OVA
Takahiro (right) and Makki (left) from the second OVA
Takahiro (タカヒロ?)
The grandson of Ojisan, who lives with his grandparents. He meets Alpha at age nine, and she quickly takes to him as if he were a younger brother. He is the first character in the series to meet the Misago. As he grows up, Takahiro becomes fascinated with engines of all types and eventually moves away in his mid-teens to work for Nai. Voiced by: Akio Suyama (OVA 1), Toshiyuki Toyonaga (OVA 2)
Makki (真月?)
A girl a few years younger than Takahiro. She likes Takahiro and is initially jealous of Alpha. Makki eventually becomes close to Alpha after learning the latter would never consider having a relationship with Takahiro because mortal humans move through time in a different way than immortal robots. She is skeptical of Takahiro's stories of the Misago until she meets the wild-woman herself. In her early teens, Makki works for a while at Alpha's café, before moving away to become a courier with Kokone's company, and then later to Hamamatsu to be with Takahiro. Her name is short for Matsuki. Voiced by: Miki Nagasawa
Misago (ミサゴ? , "Osprey")
An ageless wild-woman who lives in the inlets and bays near Café Alpha. She is always naked, and eats raw fish caught with her short fangs and inhuman speed. She only shows herself to young children, and shies away from contact with adults. She does not age and, according to omake material, does not understand how children grow up. According to Ayase, she existed "decades before" robots were created.
Ayase
A wanderer who travels endlessly, relying on his kamas (a large predatory flying fish) to live off the land. He likes to see the curiosities of the world, and is especially fascinated by the Misago. Because of Makki's affinity for the Misago and his kamas, he tries to convince her to travel with him as a sort of protégé.
Koumi'ishi logo
Koumi'ishi logo
Director Alpha
The A7M1 prototype of the A7 series, and thus "older sister" to the other A7 robots. Like Alpha Hatsuseno, Director Alpha acquired her given name because she is the initial model, or "alpha-type", of a robot series. She is the director of a stratospheric aircraft called Taapon that circles the Earth without landing, observing the world's changes from above. Her surname is Koumi'ishi, the same as Sensei, and she has a pendant with Sensei's logo.
Maruko Maruko (丸子マルコ Maruko Maruko?)
A type A7M3 robot with a prickly personality. She is an artist who lives in Yokohama and works as a waitress and then shopclerk as a day job. She is unusual among robots for having changed her surname to one of her own choosing rather than adopting her owner's. Her given name is pronounced the same as her surname, but spelled in katakana. She likes Kokone and is jealous of Alpha for "taking" her. Nai sometimes sends her sensory impressions, delivered by Kokone, which she uses in her art.
Nai
An A7 robot of unknown model. He is unusual, in that for unknown reasons male robots rarely survive long. He runs a delivery service, flying a modified T-6 Texan aircraft. Nai is quiet and impassive. Voiced by: Ryo Naitou
Saetta
The young daughter of Makki and Takahiro. She is the last character to meet the Misago.

[edit] Reception and awards

Even though it has not been published in English, Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō has received significant attention from reviewers outside of Japan. Many reviewers praise Ashinano's drawing style, meticulous pacing, and engaging characters.[3][4][5][7] Dirk Deppey wrote in The Comics Journal, "Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou isn't just one of my favorite manga stories; it's one of my favorite comics, period."[2] Derik A. Badman wrote, "This is light years beyond almost all the manga being translated and published in the US."[12] A reviewer at Uknighted Manganime wrote, "Artwise, Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou ranks as the most impressive I have ever seen," adding, "Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou is, in short, the finest manga I have ever read, and I don’t see it being surpassed anytime soon, if ever."[13]

Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō won Afternoon magazine's Four Seasons Award for debut works[citation needed] and the 2007 Seiun Award for Best Manga.[14]

[edit] Influences and themes

Flying and flight recurs through the series. Alpha herself has repeated visions of flying. Planes that appear include Nai's airplane, the always-flying Taapon, and the model airplane engine that Alpha finds but never flies. The A7 series of robots is named after a line of Japanese WWII warplanes that never saw production,[citation needed] and the character Saetta's name may be inspired by an Italian WWII warplane built by Aeronautica Macchi. Takahiro leaves ("flies away") to work for Nai. Ayase's kamas is a kind of flying fish. In the postscript episode, the unnamed character travels by glider.

The series contains elements of Chinese culture and mythology. Alpha's gekkin guitar is of Chinese origin, and the Taapon aircraft is named after the mythological bird Peng (taapon is the Japanese transliteration of da peng).

Some character names appear in the geography of the Yokohama area. For example, there is a bus stop named Koumi'ishi to the south of Hayama, and Atsugi airfield, where Alpha meets Nai, is located in Ayase. There is a place called Maruko in Yokohama where Maruko's gallery is supposed to be.

Map of the setting of Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō, showing how the coastline of the Miura Peninsula has changed
Map of the setting of Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō, showing how the coastline of the Miura Peninsula has changed

That several details of Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō are left unexplained, or have answers only hinted at, is frequently mentioned in reviews of the series as contributing to a tone of mystery.[7][13] Some are mysteries to the characters, which they speculate about without reaching conclusions, while others are presented to the reader without comment. Among the most prominent are:

  • What is the nature of the natural disaster that caused the world's oceans to rise?[7][12]
  • Who is Alpha's owner, and where did he go? Why does Ayase call him "sensei"?[7][12]
  • Why were robots created? Since none are slaves or servants, what is their purpose? In what sense are they, as Kokone claims, humanity's children?[5][7][15]
  • Why are the humans in Alpha's world dying out?[7]
  • Why are male robots so rare?[16]
  • Why is Alpha, unlike other robots, allergic to animal proteins?[17]
  • What are the "water gods", strangely beautiful mushrooms with human faces, that have started growing in the wilds?[18]
  • Why have trees that mimic streetlamps and fungi that mimic buildings begun growing? Are they really, as Alpha and Ayase speculate, the "recollections of people that the earth remembers"?[19][20]
  • When was the eruption that removed Mount Fuji's top, and was it related to the ocean rise?[21]
  • What is the Misago? Why does she only show herself to children, and why is she unable to comprehend that they become adults? If, as Ayase claims, she is not a robot, then what is she?[7][22]

Comparisons have been made between Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō and Aria, noting that they are both quiet slice-of-life stories in a futuristic setting.[23] A reviewer at Uknighted Manganime wrote, "What the two have in common, though, is a bright look at the future and a generally optimistic view of humanity, despite our failings."[24]

[edit] Media

[edit] Manga

A total of 140 chapters were published, collected in 14 tankōbon volumes by Kōdansha's Afternoon KC division. The series is in Japanese, with official Korean, Chinese, and Indonesian editions.

# Release date ISBN
1 August 1995 ISBN 978-4-06-321050-7
2 February 1996 ISBN 978-4-06-321055-2
3 July 1996 ISBN 978-4-06-321061-3
4 March 1997 ISBN 978-4-06-321066-8
5 February 1998 ISBN 978-4-06-321081-1
6 February 1999 ISBN 978-4-06-321095-8
7 February 2000 ISBN 978-4-06-321110-8
8 February 2001 ISBN 978-4-06-321120-7
9 March 2002 ISBN 978-4-06-321134-4
10 March 2003 ISBN 978-4-06-321147-4
11 March 2004 ISBN 978-4-06-321159-7
12 November 2004 ISBN 978-4-06-321165-8
13 July 2005 ISBN 978-4-06-321171-9
14 23 May 2006 ISBN 978-4-06-321176-4

In addition, a six-page postscript episode was published in the July 2006 issue of Afternoon. Titled "Touge", this story does not have a chapter number and was not included in the final collection.

An artbook (ISBN 978-4-06-330196-0) and a postcard book (ISBN 978-4-06-330041-3) were also published.[25]

[edit] Anime

Parts of the manga have been dramatized in two OVA anime series of two episodes each.

  • The first OVA series was released in May 1998 and December 1998, and covers selected events from volumes 1–3.[26]
  • The second series was released in December 2002 and May 2003, covering selected events from volumes 7–9.[27]

[edit] Drama CDs

Three drama CDs of Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō have been produced:[28]

  • Volume 1 (released October 2002) dramatizes events from volume 1 of the manga, ending with the meeting of Alpha and Kokone.
  • Volume 2 (released October 2002) dramatizes events from volume 2 of the manga, picking up immediately from where the first CD ended.
  • Volume 3 was released December 2002.

In all three, Alpha is voiced by Hekiru Shiina and Kokone by Akiko Nakagawa.[3]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou (manga). Anime News Network. Retrieved on 2007-09-14.
  2. ^ a b Dirk Deppey. A Comics Reader's Guide to Manga Scanlations. The Comics Journal. Retrieved on 2007-07-11.
  3. ^ a b c Ivevei Upatkoon. Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou. EX. Retrieved on 2007-07-10.
  4. ^ a b c d Erica Friedman. Yuri Anime: Yokohama Shopping Log. Retrieved on 2007-06-07.
  5. ^ a b c d Janet Crocker. A Quiet Vision of Hope. Anime Fringe. Retrieved on 2007-06-08.
  6. ^ Jonathan Maniago. Yet another review of Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou. Retrieved on 2007-12-16.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Eric Luce. Yokohama Shopping Trip. EX. Retrieved on 2007-06-26.
  8. ^ Erica Friedman. Yuri Manga:Yokohama Shopping Log Volume 14. Retrieved on 2007-07-10.
  9. ^ Michel Galle. Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou - Quiet Country Café (French). Retrieved on 2007-07-10.
  10. ^ Ashinano, Hitoshi. "Chapter 28: Connections", Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō, Volume 4 (in Japanese). Tokyo: Kodansha. ISBN 978-4-06-321066-8. 
  11. ^ Ashinano, Hitoshi. "Chapter 82: Kuromatsu Road", Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō, Volume 9 (in Japanese). Tokyo: Kodansha. ISBN 978-4-06-321134-4. 
  12. ^ a b c Derik A. Badman. Quiet Country Cafe. Retrieved on 2007-07-11.
  13. ^ a b Northlander. Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou manga review. Uknighted Manganime. Retrieved on 2007-07-11.
  14. ^ 2007 Seiun Awards announced. TokyoGraph. Retrieved on 2007-09-04.
  15. ^ Ashinano, Hitoshi (March 2003). "Chapter 93: Flower of Humanity", Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō, Volume 10 (in Japanese). Tokyo: Kodansha. ISBN 978-4-06-321147-4. 
  16. ^ Ashinano, Hitoshi (February 2001). "Chapter 70: Water", Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō, Volume 8 (in Japanese). Tokyo: Kodansha. ISBN 978-4-06-321120-7. 
  17. ^ Ashinano, Hitoshi (February 1996). "Chapter 11: Protein", Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō, Volume 2 (in Japanese). Tokyo: Kodansha. ISBN 978-4-06-321055-2. 
  18. ^ Ashinano, Hitoshi (July 2005). "Chapter 129: Solo", Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō, Volume 13 (in Japanese). Tokyo: Kodansha. ISBN 978-4-06-321171-9. 
  19. ^ Suguru. Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou - End. Suguru's Dame-Dame Anime Blog. Retrieved on 2007-09-05.
  20. ^ Ayase: Ashinano, Hitoshi (July 2005). "Chapter 129: Solo", Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō, Volume 13 (in Japanese). Tokyo: Kodansha. ISBN 978-4-06-321171-9.  Alpha: Ashinano, Hitoshi (May 2006). "Chapter 140: Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō", Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō, Volume 14 (in Japanese). Tokyo: Kodansha. ISBN 978-4-06-321176-4. 
  21. ^ Stig Høgset. Yokohama Shopping Trip: Quiet Country Cafe. THEM Anime Reviews. Retrieved on 2007-09-14.
  22. ^ Ashinano, Hitoshi (March 2002). "Chapter 87: People of the Bay", Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō, Volume 9 (in Japanese). Tokyo: Kodansha. ISBN 978-4-06-321134-4. 
  23. ^ Dirk Deppey (2007-01-24). ADV's Abandoned Manga. The Comics Journal. Retrieved on 2008-01-01.
  24. ^ Northlander. Manga review - Aria. Uknighted Manganime. Retrieved on 2007-07-11.
  25. ^ Peter Van Huffel. Ashinano Hitoshi 芦奈野ひとし (English). Ultimate Manga Guide. Retrieved on 2007-08-31.
  26. ^ Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou (OAV). Anime News Netork. Retrieved on 2007-07-02.
  27. ^ Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou ~Quiet Country Cafe~ (OAV). Anime News Netork. Retrieved on 2007-07-02.
  28. ^ Erica Friedman. Yuri Drama CD: Yokohama Shopping Log, Volume 2. Retrieved on 2007-07-11.

[edit] External links