llamareads
Written on Mar 24, 2018
This first collection of issues starts with the arrival of a new group of Kaiju to the prison, including one named Electrogor. While some of the other Kaiju are career criminals, he was captured while trying to get food for his two kids – apparently he was gnawing on the Trans-Pacific cable – and it’s through his eyes that we are first get introduced to the prison.
There’s a lot of smart and hilarious parallels to prison life, from using waterfalls as showers and weightlifting skyscrapers, to prisoners getting high off uranium, to the mech Kaiju preaching about the “Cloud” and nonviolence. The art is absolutely beautiful, cartoony and inked with bright colors, and the characters are widely expressive. It’s a weird juxtaposition, though, because this is at heart a gritty prison story, full of various gangs jockeying for position, corrupt guards, and prison rape and its consequences. Based on the art, I was not expecting it to be so dark. Watching Electrogor’s transformation from a single dad just trying to provide for his kids to the “mon” he’s forced to become in the prison was simultaneously horrific and sympathetic. There’s so many plot lines going on that it was initially hard for me to keep track of everything that was going on, but I think that may have been due to my lack of familiarity with the source subject matter.
I’m not usually a fan of prison dramas, but I finished this book desperate to know what happens with Electrogor and Whoofy, the not-too-bright son of a gang leader, so I will definitely be picking up the next one! If the thought of a gritty prison drama mashed up with Japanese monster movies sounds appealing, then you will definitely enjoy this!