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Hot Road · review

★
Top reader Mar 10, 2026 · 3 min read
↑ Recommended
8 /10

The expanse of the night. Headlights. Motorcycles roaring loudly. The 80s were the heyday for the bosozoku as they took reign of the roads and terrorized the old by bringing chaos wherever they went. A social phenomenon that caused as much indignation as it did fascination, with plenty of fictional works, either at the time or later on, taking inspiration from them. Whether through the bombastic, gruesome portrayals of how the bosozoku operated, or more light-hearted, comedic even, depictions of bosozoku, there is no shortage of titles to choose from. Hot Road is a special case where it actually feels like a lived-through experience of thattime, in part thanks to the introspectiveness of the narration, and in part thanks to the art. The background art is dazzling, particularly when scenes of the road are depicted and emphasized. Dialogues unfold in spread-out sequences across panels, causing the scenes to appear fragmented, going along with the characters’ intense state of mind.

The protagonist, Kazuki, is an extremely interesting character. It's through her inner world, her lenses, that the story takes a down-to-earth, almost intimate approach. A messy home environment and a sense of justice as she defends a classmate from harsh scrutiny lead her to say goodbye to the "good girl" facade and embrace the recklessness of youth as she starts skipping classes, dyeing her hair, and meeting with her local biker gang members through a friend of a friend. There she meets resident bad boy Haruyama, a high-ranking member of the "Nights." Although they have an awful first encounter, they soon realize they're more similar to each other than they thought: kids misunderstood not only by their parents, but by every single person around them.

It is through Haruyama that Kazuki starts feeling alive; the way he drives his bike at such a speed, how he gets into fights without thinking and luckily comes out of them in one piece—all of which in a certain way makes her gender envious, an envy for freedom that Kazuki's been denied until then due to performing strict gender roles. It's a thorough read on the no-consequences attitude all teenagers act upon or admire. Small details, such as Kazuki trying to ride a motorcycle for the first time, peers from her age group that she isn't exactly friends with but who still agree to invite her over to their houses when she runs away from home, and having small but difficult conversations with her concerned teacher at school, all make Hot Road such an authentic depiction of what it's like to be young in that stage of life where everything to you is a do-or-die. It is no wonder why, to this day, it's a well-regarded work in Japan.

While reading this manga when it first came out, back in the '80s, must have felt uniquely special, I think it's a work that will continue to be worth a read. It's no easy job to transport readers to a time and place different from our current one. But in Hot Road's case, you don't need to be well-versed in Japanese culture or the particularities of it at that time. It's enough to have been young once to get it.

My only gripe with this manga is that the ending lacked a punch—a very standard “surrender to social norms.” Otherwise, it is still a great work I highly recommend reading at least once.

Mark
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