by putrocca » Mon Dec 18, 2006 2:29 pm
I also have that Three-Eyed One series (and please, let's be consistent and call it "The Three-Eyed One" not any other variant translation - that's the one used most regularly in English).
I agree that Three-eyed one is not likely to get picked up any time soon, since what's being most successful now are Tezuka's shorter mature stories. It's something to think about for a few years down the road, but not now. And, as Greg said, it's easier for publishers to look at the French Asuka/Akita editions than an old promo one (whenever I talk to executives about licensing this or that Tezuka series they always ask me to point them to the French edition first) so I think that single issue of Three-eyed one is more useful as a collector's item than a promotional one at this point.
Having read five volumes of it now, by the way, Three-Eyed One is not actually episodic. It consists of long-ish story sections which are somewhat independent but so far every single one of them has referred back to events from earlier ones, so reading it out of order like Black Jack or Astro Boy would be really confusing. I actually expected it to be more episodic like Tezuka's early stuff but I've been very surprised by its complexity and the very serious character development of Sharaku, who is certainly one of Tezuka's most tragic characters. It's skyrocketed to being one of my favorite of his works, despite various weaknesses, and I think that, of his kids/adventure works, it's actually most likely to succeed in a US publication, but not yet. A few more Vertical releases first, then Black Jack, then we'll be ready to push Three-Eyed One on people.
- Ada (site founder - TezukaInEnglish.com)