Member Reviews
This is the first graphic novel that I've ever read, so perhaps my thoughts should be taken with a grain of salt. I love reading anything about horror, space, and other cultures. I was very impressed with both the illustrations and the originality of the storyline. The only critique I would possibly give is that the dialogue is somewhat elementary; however, I'm not sure who the target audience is meant to be. In my opinion, this would be a good YA read. |
This title wasn’t as good as some of his other works like Uzumaki. I still like his horror style of writing. It always brings out the worst in humanity during crisis. Hope for humanity rests on just a small group of survivors seeking a new home after Earth. |
This book is great. It prompted me to go out and read everything by junji ito I could find. I look forward to more translations from him in the future. |
Junji Ito does it again! Remina is a nightmare-inducing horror manga about a foreign planet that slips through a wormhole and threatens imminent collision with Earth. The scientist who discovers this planet and his daughter (who he names it after) become the target of a global witch-hunt to stop Remina in its path of destruction. Are they responsible? Is the namesake daughter somehow an avatar for this hellish, threatening force? It hardly matters, as humanity has no real chance of escaping total annihilation. Every facet of this story was horrific to me, most notably the parts when Planet Remina literally consumes the rest of the solar system. The imagery of Remina’s atmosphere and surface were tremendously illustrated as well. I was impressed by how effectively Junji Ito was able to storyboard the resulting massively chaotic natural disasters while maintaining a plot line that flowed and made sense. As always with his work, beautiful execution and a mind-bending, terrifying concept. Thank you NetGalley and VIZ Media for the ARC! |
Holy crap. Ito is a force of nature. To say that Junji Ito is the "Japanese Stephen King" doesn't give Ito his full justice. The layers of horror in Remina are breathtaking to experience. The story is disturbing. The people are disturbing. The visuals are out of this world. The book itself being its tale in media res, then jumps backwards and proceeds to catch back up to itself. In some books or movies, I find this style sloppy or formulaic. Here, it isn't. Ito uses it brilliantly to shock and pull you into the story and its world. Absolutely fantastic. The only criticism I can level against the book is that the main character, Remina, is underdeveloped. She is subjugated to a series of trying ordeals, but her personality is minimally shown or investigated. This is not a huge knock against the book as a whole as she is set up more of a foil against whom all of the other characters are measured and contrasted. I've been saving Junji Ito's books to read down the road so that I know I have something good and truly scary to anticipate. This book proves that I was right...but also wrong to wait so long. I'll be starting in on his other works a lot sooner than I had planned. Goodbye sleep ever again. Disclaimer: I received a free digital copy of this title from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review. |
I received the ARC of this graphic novel from Netgally in exchange for an honest review. (Please check the blurb of the book as here I'm only giving my opinions) Absolutely brilliant cosmic horror story. This is the first Junji Ito book I ever read, and won't be the last. Images are so well drawn and you can feel the movement and action through out the whole story, some frames are really well detailed that are still hunting me. I have to stop the book last night as I was getting a little bit dizzy with the whole world going around and around. I didn't like that the main character Remina, needs to be saved all the time, there was always a guy grabbing her hand and taking her out of trouble, I would've like to see strong female leads. In contrast most men are a bunch of idiots. Which made it hard to relate to the characters,s but I still loved the story. I highly recommend this book as a "palette cleanser" by that I mean,a book you can read in between books or when you aren't sure what to read next. |
Very disturbing with graphic images of death and torture. Very fast read for a book that is over 200 pages. Good for YA horror fans. |
Jeremy G, Librarian
Remina is what you'd get if Fletcher Hanks wrote horror Manga. Deeply bonkers from one panel to the next and a book you'll either fall in love with or just throw across the room depending on your tastes. |
Tessa F, Librarian
I wanted to like this one more than I did. I love Junji Ito’s work, but this one just didn’t keep my interest like his others have. I didn’t really feel satisfied with the conclusion of the story, and I found the fact that we don’t learn anything about The planet Remina a little off putting. Was it creepy? Yes. Well drawn? Yes. Did I love it? No, sadly. I’ll still end up purchasing it for our library, I’ll probably recommend it to my horror loving patrons that also read manga. But I’ll likely leave this one at being read once, because I don’t think I need to read it again. |
Over the years, I have heard rave reviews of Junji Ito's body of work. Every time I've looked into one of his stories, I fail to see what is so impressive. The same holds true for Remina. While an over-the-top, Lovecraftian chase story seems like a fantastic concept, I was once again left feeling unimpressed by the alleged master of horror manga. Perhaps Ito's style of storytelling loses a lot of subtlety in translation. While I am certain that existing fans of Ito's work will enjoy this, I did not. |
Originally published at: https://frekingsmithbooks.com/2020/10/31/remina/ Junji Ito either needed more hugs as a child or he’s just good at this. I’m not sure which is more worrying. CW: Death, spirals, graphic images, language HAPPY HALLOWEEN! Junji Ito is the eminent horror mangaka. Uzumaki is genuinely the only manga or comic or book that made my skin crawl. If you haven’t picked that up, DO IT. Everyone talks about Uzumaki when they bring up Junji Ito, but he is a prolific writer. He has tons of short stories and novels (all manga, of course) that have been translated. If you are into short horror stories but don’t have access to the manga, Funimation Now has the Junji Ito Collection for streaming. I just started watching it a few nights ago to get in the mood for this review and it is SPOOKY. Remina is the most recent translation and, boy, does it deliver the spook factor. But in a more Lovecraftian, Cosmic Horror kind of way. The year is 20XX. There are flying cars and space travel. Professor Oguro is becoming a celebrity all around the world due to his discovery of a new planet, which he names Remina. The planet’s namesake, his daughter Remina, becomes an instant icon. Fan clubs, debuts, all sorts of stuff. Soon, though, one of the lead researchers discovers that the planet is moving towards Earth… and leaving nothing in its wake. The people of Japan are terrified and restless, looking for someone to blame. The brunt of the anger is directed at Remina (the girl) and her father. The mob believes the only way to prevent the planet from being swallowed by Remina (the planet) is to kill the Oguros. However, when Remina (the planet) is within Earth’s orbit, it stops. A crew is sent from the moon to investigate the planet. What the crew discovers on the planet is worse than what anyone could have imagined. I don’t want to get into spoiler territory and this book truly needs to be read to get the full experience. Ito is just an incredible artist and writer. The way he shows how people descend (spiral) into madness and chaos is nothing short of masterful. In light of all of the things happening in the world, there are definitely parallels we can draw from Remina’s story to our current events. There is a pandemic ongoing that has claimed over 200,000 Americans, a presidential election next week that will most likely lead to unavoidable civil unrest, and we are all looking for someone to blame. Granted, I have a tiny bit more faith in our world than Ito does, I don’t think we will try to sacrifice at 16 year old girl… Hopefully. As for the book itself, I thoroughly enjoyed it. I love horror manga so I was surprised when I saw that this was a translation/reprint that I already hadn’t read it. What I love about this is that the horror doesn’t come from the Remina (the planet), although you do get some really unsettling imagery. It comes from how people react to Remina (the girl). Immediately, people fawn all over her, but turn on a dime when she is considered a witch. People who she considered allies were only in it for their selfish desires. Even at the end of the world, people have an angle. You can’t depend on people you thought were there for you. And that’s what’s scary. I’m going to give this a 5/5, 9/10. If you need a bit of a palette cleanser, I get it. Here’s a video of Junji Ito reacting to people’s cats. Enjoy. This Digital ARC was provided by VIZ Media and NetGalley. Thanks so much for letting me terrify myself! |
Librarian 346133
An apocalyptic nightmare comes out of space and causes the people of earth to panic. Of course the men decide to sacrifice a female and her lovers try to save her from the mob. I liked the obsession and creepy tones, but the damsel in distress was just pathetic and unrealistic. |
A longer review is forthcoming on review sites, but this was another excellent work by Junji Ito. A gripping page turner in every sense. |
3.5, rounded up because even if it's a bit too on the nose it's still very effective. The story blends science fiction and horror to show how quickly people can turn into monsters when a scientist names an evil sentient planet after his daughter. It's really a statement on idol culture in a lot of ways, with Remina the Girl being regarded as everyone's property, including Remina the Planet's, and her life very quickly slipping out of her control because of it. What was meant to be an honor invites disaster as the planet charges towards its namesake and four very different men try to protect the girl from the literal pitchfork-waving mobs (led by guys in pointy hoods; very subtle) but three of them succumb to their need to own Remina the Girl in some way. It's scary on a social level, and while the lack of subtlety does hurt the book, it still works as a reminder that humans are only one good scare away from the least intelligent animal, ruled by their fear and superstitions. |
A sci-fi horror manga set in Japan in the near future. An astrophysicist discovers a new planet, whose existence seems to prove the reality of wormholes to other dimensions. A pretty significant discovery! And one that wins the scientist both the Nobel Prize and naming rights to the new planet, which he calls after his teenage daughter, Remina. Remina herself is soon a media sensation, becoming a pop star and advertising celebrity. Of course, this is a horror story, so things begin to go wrong: the planet Remina turns and somehow heads towards Earth at nearly the speed of light, and other planets and stars in its path disappear. As Remina comes closer, it becomes clear that it's not quite a planet, given that it has a massive eye and tongue; that it's eating everything it passes; and that Earth is its target. People unsurprisingly panic, and a cult suddenly arises, playing on these new fears to put the blame on Remina and her father. The cult argues that the Oguros have somehow summoned the planet, and the only way to save humanity is to sacrifice them. The middle and late section of the book get a bit repetitive as the same plot plays out over and over again: the cult finds Remina, attempts to kill and/or torture her, a man saves her, she escapes. The only change from one round to another is that Remina's clothing becomes ever more tattered and scanty. That said, there are some fantastically creepy images throughout: Remina tied to a cross as a massive eye opens in the sky behind her; a nuclear-blasted corpse, its skull grinning through heat-tightened skin; a body melting into goo when exposed to the toxic atmosphere on the planet Remina; the constant mob of screaming mouths and reaching hands, shouting "Kill Remina!" and "Remina the witch!". Overall, it doesn't reach the heights of terror Ito is capable of in stories like 'The Enigma of Amigara Fault' or 'Uzumaki', but it's nicely scary little story about cosmic horrors and why the brutality of man is scarier than anything out of space. https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/3617756085 |
Chuck K, Librarian
It's pretty good, it reads as accurate to how people would behave in times of planetary crisis. Not by favorite Ito but an odd interesting tale. |
Junji Ito’s Remina is a wonderful change from his standard horror tales. Instead of body horror and terror of our own planet, here the terror comes from the cosmos. That said, there is still many aspects of Ito’s work that his die hard fans will see. Ito’s ability to draw characters that express grief, terror, or madness is fully on display here. As an entire planet sinks into madness and fear, Ito is able to capture that and, as he has done in all of his other work, translate that to the reader. Remina is a quick, visceral, and entertaining read. It probably wouldn’t be the book I would recommend to someone who has never read Ito before, but it is a fantastic pick up and change of pace if you are already familiar with his work. Thanks to Netgalley and Viz for the advanced copy in exchange for an honest review. |
Dr. Ogura discovers a new, unique planet that has emerged from a wormhole. He names the planet after his sixteen-year-old daughter. Remina (the girl, not the planet) is shy and does not crave the spotlight, but her beauty quickly captivates the press and the public. Her star rises quickly, complete with legions of obsessed fans and clubs dedicated to the reluctant celebrity. Her star isn’t the only celestial body on the move, however. Unfortunately, this time it’s a literal one. It is discovered the planet Remina is on a collision course with Earth, destroying everything, including planets, in its path. Could there be some connection between the girl and her namesake planet? Could she be to blame? I was pretty excited about this book. I have been hearing more and more about Junji Ito, but I had not had the chance to read anything of his yet. I have never really liked manga very much, though not from lack of trying. I generally find manga characters mostly two-dimensional and melodramatic. Therefore, I can never really find myself caring when the inevitably hyperbolic action starts. I have even read books about mangaka in order to understand what it is about manga that so many love. Am I missing something in translation, whether literal or figurative? With my love of horror and Ito’s reputation, I thought I finally might have stumbled upon a manga I would connect with. Alas, it was not to be. I found the characters, including Remina, to be poorly developed and their expressions of feelings to be melodramatic and unrelatable. While the premise and story are good and the art is satisfyingly creepy, there just isn’t enough heart here to care about what happens to the characters once the action grows (predictably) bonkers in the third act. Though this book didn’t really work for me, I understand and appreciate that many readers will enjoy it. This is why I am giving it three stars instead of two; I recognize that it is a decent manga that many will love. I think it will especially appeal to readers who enjoy manga, science fiction, and horror. As for me, I won’t give up on manga or Junji Ito’s work. I will keep sampling and maybe one day connect with it. *Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for providing this ARC in exchange for my honest review. |
Librarian 737520
I'm torn about this one. It has an extremely intriguing opening premise, however, the middle bit wanders and the final act is truly bizarre. It wasn’t as enjoyable a read as other Junji Ito works, but still had a sufficiently creepy story to keep me wondering what was going to happen next. |
Amanda S, Educator
I have heard great things about the author, Junji Ito. I had never read a manga before, but I was excited to try one. If you are a frequent reader of manga and are comfortable with certain tropes of the genre, this is a very fast-paced sci-fi thriller that reads surprisingly quickly. The art is beautiful and the premise of the story was intriguing. When a star seems to change course and move straight toward Earth, the scientist who discovered it becomes the focus of mass panic. The scientist had named the star after his daughter, Remina, and many people believe that she is the reason that the star is now on a collision course with Earth. I was surprised at how quickly the plot moved; every page held some new twist. However, it was difficult for me to finish because of the many misogynistic tropes and uncomfortable themes. The main character, Remina, was one of only two women in the entire story, and every man feels they have a romantic claim to her. As someone completely unfamiliar with manga, the story was well-written and well-paced but the characters were two-dimensional. I struggled to tell them apart with nothing to define each individual beyond all of them continually fawning over Remina. |








