Sky Hawk · review
The story starts with a man of Japanese origins finding a woman who has just given birth and therefore without strength as she gave birth alone, so the man takes her to his home and makes her regain her strength here we discover that in reality the woman she is a slave who escaped from a camp to save her little girl from certain death, their masters show up at the door of the two Orientals and ask if they see a pregnant Indian girl, they are looking for her not only because she escaped but also because before fleeing she took a bag ofgold nuggets, the Japanese returns the nuggets but the girl won't give it to her, so there is a general uproar and the two Japanese in a short time have the better of the girl's masters, with Judo moves, as the two Japanese are samurai fleeing the war that gripped Japan, the two Japanese are helped by the red skins and from that point there will be a change of front of the two Japanese who see the lands as their new home and homeland of America and the Indians, becoming Indians themselves, with names that recall animals and nature, and they in exchange teach the typical oriental moves to the natives of America who are surprised by the even more unknown features of the pale faces that come to invade their lands. What I can say about this graphic novel is cinematic, the action scenes are masterfully done, the two protagonists are very simple, we don't dwell on their past as samurai but on their present as Indians, but not forgetting their origins since in the battles that will follow in the story, they use tactics learned over years of experience as samurai still using their inseparable katana and their way of thinking is not typical of French, English, Spanish or any other colonizer. I don't know if it's true or is it a narrative device, but the graphic novel Sky Hawk uses the device of the Japanese who emigrates to America, a device that we find in other works by other authors, such as Isamu (Sam the boy from the west) or in Guns Frontier (by Leiji Matsumoto).
For the drawing there is nothing to say because I risk being repetitive but in this story there is an evolution in the line, or at least that's what I perceived while reading. In the introduction, before going into the story, we talk about what Taniguchi wanted to blend by taking inspiration from famous films that talk about this topic, for example "Dances with Wolves", "Avatar" or "The Last Samurai", The topics that I found in the story that fit with the movies are: the family found in a completely unlikely place for the protagonist, applying past knowledge with newly learned ones, adhering to a creed and making it his own as if it had been decided from birth.
To conclude I must say that this graphic novel is much more dynamic than those previously read by the same author, there is also something to reflect on here, but the battle scenes are phenomenal and they keep you reading, my favorite table is the scene which wants to be a joke to the scene of the last samurai where the legion has to bring down the defenses of the Indians and so they use the Gatling (machine gun that was used at that time) but is promptly shot down by sky hawk as if nothing happened killing the user with an arrow.
I give an 8 to the story and 10 to the drawings.