Reviews for Yakitate!! Japan
Back to MangaWhat we have here is truly a manga of a different "flavor"; If you're looking for a story that "rises" to the occasion, you "knead" not look further! (okay, I'll stop... for now.) Obviously, this is a manga about cooking; more specifically, the art of bread-making. How can you make a story centered around making bread, you might ask? Just follow the simple recipe the Japanese use for making "Instant anime material!" (entertaining characters + special "powers" revolving around the subject of the story + drama. Lots and lots of drama.) The result is Yakitate!! Japan. My rating for the story is a high/low average.The high point is that Yakitate takes such a seemingly-random concept and turns it into an enjoyable and endearing read; besides Addicted to Curry, the field of cooking series remains desolate. (As long as you don't count Fighting Foodons. I sure don't.) You might scoff at first, but a few chapters in and you'll most likely be hooked. It gets even better with the natural shonen style of characters having special powers when it comes to bread-making; The main character, Kazuma Azuma, is blessed with "Solar Gauntlets", unnaturally-warm hands that are a great benefit in his trade. Later on, you see different abilities that rivals bring into play, probably the funniest (and creepiest) being the Goddess Hands. As for the other side of the story; this is a popular shonen. Meaning it drags on for AWHILE. Like, longer than the Naruto manga, minus Shippuden? And, unfortunately, it can't really keep up the pace for the whole thing. Later on, the story gets into a bit of a rut, with the characters participating in enormous tournaments, with not much plot development at all; just one match after another, which also get tiring because the focus shifts to the obscure Japanese pun that results from the "scoring" of either team's culinary creation. Not that these "reactions" aren't entertaining; it's just that you should get used to them...
The art style was great at its best, and satisfactory at its lowest. This guy does know how to draw his chicks smokin' hot (and that goes for the guys too, when he feels like giving a rare nod to the ladies), so a bit of fanservice every now and then is greatly appreciated. His style also holds out well when illustrating the increasingly-bizarre "reactions" of the judges, and anyone who unwittingly eats food so good, they bend over backwards, try to strip, or even turn into various animals...
The characters were all fairly memorable and endearing. I normally don't feel very attached to the main character of any given series, but Azuma clicked with me fairly well. He had the same ceaseless-motivation-bordering-on-arrogance that's common in protagonists, but pretty much none of the machoism; you might even mistake him for a girl at first, along with almost-androgynous, pink-haired Kanmuri. Fangirls, take note. The minor characters were also great; many make return appearances, or get connected to the main cast in various ways. They're also pretty well-developed; Azuma does have a couple break-downs, despite his optimism, and everyone has their various trials or problems to overcome. Oh, and I can pretty much guarantee you'll hate the main villain's guts. Like, really, really hate her.
I've pretty much covered enjoyment in the story section; you'll get hooked at first, but might loose interest farther in. Nevertheless, I still soldiered through it all, and enjoyed 95% of it. It's really just that good. Early on, you'll get a kick out of the reactions, and drama that arises from a simple contest. Oh, and this is one of those manga that *gasp* you might actually learn something about food chemistry! (Or you can just blow past it. Never been into science, myself.) But you'll definitely come away feeling more knowledgeable about different foods than you ever thought.
Overall, I'm giving this series a 9, despite it's drawbacks. This manga pretty much took up two weeks of my life, sitting in front of my laptop, blowing through almost 200 chapters. And I plan to invest in the tangible English editions once I get a windfall. Looking for a longer, less-known series to which to sink your teeth into? Something fresh and hot, that sticks together under it's strange crust? (alright, these are getting pretty bad...) Anyhoo, pick this up. It reminds me of Hikaru no Go in alot of ways; unconventional concept, excellent results! Bon appetit~
It's a great manga at least until the end of world competition in monaco. what next? regression is not an option, so he ventured outside of the premise. It's no longer about bread, but about all food and the heroes will travel to entire part of japan. while the idea is good and refreshing, it's proved to be too overwhelming for the manga. He constantly has keep looking for a new theme and new setting. So he endep using a template and rushed the story. The opponents are far more interesting and colourful than before, but they alwaysvanish into thin air, they don't reappear, save have an impact onthe story.
Eventhough the opponents are the best in the world in their field, Azuma magically always find a recipe to defeat them,. The manga start to make no sense at all, The author seems to make fun no disrespect culinary experts.
The gag is repetitive and boring, our heroes always stay at a sstrange inn that seems to be a pun of the place's specialty.
The manga was great at the beginning. The ideas for different kinds of bread were fresh and interesting. The characters seemed alright. The reactions to the bread were also unique to this manga and provided some comic relief. After a while, you will notice that the characters have absolutely no development. Most of the characters are in fact reduced to observers, and the MC is an undefeated champion with absolutely no personality. The bread ideas became more and more ridiculous and unreal, to the point of being completely disjointed from reality. And as the funny reactions became more and more ridiculous, they started to seem forcedand unnecessary.
Near the final chapters, it's apparent that the manga was axed and had to be brought to a sudden and unsatisfactory end.
The manga would have greatly benefited from proper planning: it should have been much shorter, the side characters should have been much less passive, and the reactions should have not become the center point of the manga.
Yakitate Japan is manga about making bread. For me, this was my first experience with cooking related manga right after Cooking Master Boy. What is different is that Yakitate Japan is solely about making bread rather than cooking in general. It does expand a little to cover other things that are related to bread making, but bread is the focus. The story is about a young boy named Azuma Kazuma who gets into making bread because of the nearby bakery. He really enjoys it and attempts to make bread on his own. His first goal is to get his grandpa to enjoy his bread. Heeventually expands his goal to making the first true bread that can be associated with Japan. To do this, he must obtain work at Pantasia by passing their exam. From there, Azuma can start building the one true Japanese bread. It starts off as a local competition, but it eventually turns into a global competition and the creation of a bread focused TV show. Towards the end it also decreases the emphasis on bread and begins to focus on what can go into bread. However, the story ends a bit abruptly.
The artwork for the series is surprisingly good. The character art improves over the course of the series, but it is by no means bad in the beginning. Lots of diverse environments and characters are featured in the series and it really does showcase the author's talents. The backgrounds are detailed and included in many frames unlike some people who try to get away with drawing as little of the environment as possible. This carries over to the extras that the author does including making special pages for some of the real bread recipes that are included in the volume release.
The main problems that I have with this series is the characters. While Azuma is someone who is heavily focused on his dream of creating a Japanese bread, at no point does it ever feel like he is moving closer. He creates a lot of new breads using different methods, but we almost never see his inspiration or thought process. His relationship with Tsukino does not make significant progress during the course of the series. His co-workers are eventually downgraded to commentators when they can no longer keep up with the development of new bread.
If you enjoy cooking anime or manga, Yakitate Japan is a good series. There are a good number of jokes and a huge cast of characters that react to the food as they eat it. It has all the standard surprising cooking technique twists and strange ingredients placed into food. The main character is dedicated to his craft and gifted at it. There are a few surprising twists though the main character almost always wins.
Overall, Yakitate Japan is one of the better manga that has been made about cooking. The problem is that the characters never really develop and if they do, it is quickly ignored because the supporting cast simply cannot keep up with Azuma. If you are in it for the strange and wild foods along with over the top reactions to them, then Yakitate Japan might be what you are looking for.
I'm not one to often write a review, so don't take this commentary too seriously. (I've read everything but for the sake of my mental sanity, for the moment, I'm not taking into account the 70 last chapters that... well you'll see) I understand why some people wouldn't appreciate this manga and the old fashioned humor but as a whole I think it manages to et over the lack of solid story or its weak set of orginal characters. The characters are clearly copy pastes of a lot of similar mangas but honestly they still get their own little characteristic trait permitting them to have their own"mini- development arc" (except Kinoshita-boy, tho he is the real MVP).
As for the story, (tho I'm really biased as it was one of the first mangas I read when I was 7 or 8) it's just a blast to see so much goofiness, and I feel like we don't need to care if everything transitions well or if things actually make sense one by one. Because I'm just focused on the page I'm reading, and I'm not gonna lie, I was actually super involved in the dramatics moments even when it just mix into the comedy, the characters are so extremely serious about it, I just get into the story a little too much.
The art is really correct and pretty much similar to most of this type of manga of the time, but the breads drawings are super cool and made me actually hungry.
So as I said it's a 100Pourcents sure that I have no real objective vision but as I re-read it 10 years later, I still think it's as much fun as I remembered from beginning to... maybe not the end, and a pretty wild ride into another world of "gourmet reactions" type manga. (I actually prefer the type of "reactions" we get in Yakitate ja-pan than what is in food War which get a little old as it doesn't differ a lot, when here... Everytime it just gets better - until chapter )
(WARNING FROM THERE IT'S JUST A TOTAL MESSY RANT TO HELP ME COPE WITH THE ENDING)
.... And I would have loved to stop here but... What the heck? I discovered I never read the last volume of the manga when I was a kid and... I honestly never should have. The author was obviously on a cruel rush to finish in a way or another may it be satisfactory or not.
I mentioned how I loved the reactions, their originality and "unoriginality" at the same time. Same for every characters that managed to have a specific role throughout the story. But, man, right after that katsuo duel.... Everything went downfall, every character just became unfunny running gag, they lost every flavors that made them appealing and were just ghost of the past struggling to sruvive in the publishing world through incoherent and an even more poorly storyline than ever before.
It's not hard to understand what went though the author mind who, more than ever, doesn't hesitate to break the 4rth wall and comment on the bad absurdity he pushed onto his own work.
Thing is, it's not like the humor is drastically different, he didn't either brought out a new plotline with brand new characters out of nowhere. No, everything is built over what was alaready presented and developed but... I think the author just stopped caring, and tried to satire his own work.
The story was never a seriously thought out, solid one but everything that made it... so refreshing didn't even just disappeared it went straight to the trash. I'm just so sad to me, to discover how one of my now ex-favorite manga ended and collapsed on itself.
I just needed to say that, no need to go into the analysis od the"arcs" or "characters in themselves, just read it and it'll speak for itself; nothing to debate honestly.
Sorry for the super long review, I have a really complicated relationship with this work.... (and like I said, no need at all to take evrything I said seriously))
Okay so.... if I can summarize my thoughts on this ENTIRE manga series, I would liken it to riding a roller coaster. As I was reading the first arc, I felt like I was going up with the cuteness and the light-heartedness of the story. Aside from that, I also enjoyed the breads and the challenges they were having. By the time the first story arc was over, I was really craving for the breads baked and at the same time, extremely excited for the next battle arc. However, as the 2nd story arc started, I felt like the roller coaster was going down andI found myself showing disinterest to not only the story itself but to the characters as well. As soon as the 2nd story arc was over, I was so glad it was done and I was honestly considering if I should still continue reading the series or drop it. However, I am glad I continued on because the third story arc is probably one of my favorite arcs of the series. It brought back the lightheartedness and the great bread/creations they were making that made me like this series in the first place. The bread/food they were making all throughout this arc were all so good and I also loved how it showed us the different parts of Japan. AAAND I wished the story ended here on such a high note. However for some reason, the author decided to make this series extremely wonky with the (spoiler alert) maou gopan and the global warming arc and honestly IT DID NOT HELP the series one bit. By the time the global warming arc was finished I was left unhappy and unsatisfied instead of the joy I felt when I read the first and third story arc. If anyone here is thinking about reading this I highly recommend y'all stop after the Yakitate 25 arc so that you can at least end this series in a happy note.
Yakitate!! Japan is one of those series where I can not even begin to guess what was going on in the author's mind as the series progressed. It's obvious that the initial pitch was a comedy food manga that was equally interested in using food science in creative and interesting ways while also being a bit of a screwball comedy. The "reactions," as they become to be labeled, are initially pretty tame, relying on puns and visual metaphors to hyperbolize things. The initial battles are pretty simple, and the manga seems to be shaping up to be a pretty standard comedy battle shonen involving breadinstead of physical fighting. But then we get to the international competition.
Where once this was a comedy manga *somewhat* grounded in reality, it's clear that the author was trying to find a way to spice things up and stand out. Suddenly we have a circus clown that can do Naruto shadow clones, a French team that is basically a PG body horror monster, a guy in a Pyramid that can dig under the entire Pacific Ocean. What was once a moderately tame shonen comedy was now a Looney Tunes adventure of death defiance and reality-shaping foods. But the biggest thing that really separates Yakitate from its contemporaries is how every single gag is not a one-time thing. A bread causes a person to transform? They are like that for several more chapters, possibly even the rest of the manga. A bread causes a person to time travel? That has permanent consequence on the story's world. A bread causes someone to do something to another character, that can shape how they interact for the rest of the story. The author repeatedly points out how ridiculous it is that the manga has evolved to this point, but it's clear he can't stop, he won't stop, not until he makes it so bread changes the entire world as we know it.
I think it's the author's unapologetic attitude towards this shift in absurdity, as well as the genuine quality of the gags themselves, that endears this change to me rather than alienating me instead. It also helps that by now I've read enough manga and watched enough anime that also portray insane nonsense such as this that I've grown accustomed to it. Just look into if you enjoyed Saiki K or Gintama (the nonserious archs).
i watched the anime many years ago, decided to read the manga now as i was bored and curious to know if there are a lot of changes made in the anime as compared to the original storyline. i think the manga started out okay, however towards the last few volumes of the series, the storyline was getting more and more ridiculous. i was losing interest already but wanted to complete the series so i forced myself to finish it. i think the author just went a little too crazy with the storyline development in the last few volumes that it kinda missed the mark forme.
It starts out like your typical sports shonen but with an absurd premise (substitute sports for baking bread). Halfway through the story the author realizes how ridiculous that sounds and stops taking the manga seriously focusing purely on comedy and reactions, it's funny at times but it's shocking (even if it makes me laugh) how the author stops giving a shit about his own story to the point of basically bastardizing the entire cast of characters just to add to the ridiculousness, it would be more acceptable if he had made his intentions clear from the beginning. It is what it is.