What is despair? Spoilers ahead. https://i.ur.com/cESGRRx.jpg Despair. At first it is almost an alien word to us. A definition of the lowest points a person has seems inflexible on paper. Despair. You now go back a bit in time and point out the significant moments in your life. Your achievements victories downfalls breakdowns and pauses. You begin to witness again records of your struggles from past to present. All those done deeds appear small compared to the obstacles you are about to face anew. All those opportunities taken and lost have brought you to this point still breathing still standing. Would you still struggle and continue forth? Despair is a word REAL expounds into the fore and pounds into a central force like gravity. Its everchanging weight on our shoulders pushes us down but unlike gravity its not spread even. Some people have already sunk into the soil but some were already born sunken deep in the ground. Life becomes an everyday chore of pushing up this exasperating weight and when you get strong you either close yourself to this individualistic pursuit or you give a hand to others who cannot raise the weight themselves. Or you climb up from the seemingly endless ground all your life. Its a word that disperses itself into a rainbow of many synonymous parallelisms. Inoue masterfully weaves these discordant elements into the focus of REAL and with it he presents a message with all its glories and disgraces. A central theme readers could easily mention would be living the hard life but that statement doesnt fully cover all of what REAL strives to be. A hard life is different for everybody and its not that easy to measure and show to people who have not experienced it for themselves and I am pretty sure everyone wishes to be replete with a good health and a good life. Yet in REAL the main characters that we meet at first are already put in this spotlight of a hard life. Togawa a disabled wheelchair basketball player has dreams of putting his team into the championships. Nomiya slips and falls repeatedly throughout the story but in each comeback he remains steadfast in his pursuit of purpose. Takahashi is met with a terrible and injurious fate and in his wretched state is an untying of invisible gaps that stretch from his past. https://i.ur.com/rqqBt74.jpg Each of these individuals undergo an everchanging metamorphosis of character and identity throughout REAL and through their eyes their every struggle their every second of loneliness we find them breaking shattering morphing and changing under every realization of their manifesting hopes and fears. Its aweinspiring its enthralling and its riveting to be completely engrossed by the way they written as human as we are are given immense capacity to be paragons of the way we can break past our very limits or give us an honest eyeopener of how our very lives can be snuffed out in any second. But the body and the mind that has tasted the verge of death is never far away from the reach of hope and you will see this theme echoed in Inoues writing every time. https://i.ur.com/HyhAWhm.jpg I am quite sure that in REAL Inoue has confidently achieved all the quintessential tool sets to make a compelling chef doeuvre surrounding a difficult subject of disabilities. He presents it as it is showing how disheartening it is to the affected person and its inevitable emotional damage to the persons close ones how inescapable are the countless stigma almost inherent in it and the huge negative influence it has on the disabled how helpless we are most of the times to assist them with all our strength. In REAL this inopportune situation and its weight upon almost all affairs of human nature is relayed truthfully in the story. This is mostly the gravity in the story for two of our main characters and in different perspectives we see how they dealt and reacted to it. Both of Takahashi and Nomiyas lives are filled with melancholy and exasperation that is almost hard not to relate to. To be reading and seeing them in their lowest points in their lives and knowing out there in the real world someone is in the same difficult situation as them is a powerful synchronicity to keep in mind. This aspect of Inoues depth of storytelling is sharpened by embracing a pushandpull with pathos for the three main characters have their human flaws but their flaws and shortcomings transcend them above their disabilities above the entirety of who they are. They become motivations themselves that enrich the REAL story and experience. Through how they defeat their old selves we inch ever closer to defeating ours. Through how they come to accept themselves we inch ever closer to accepting ourselves. https://i.ur.com/HM5DVq1.jpg The characters aside from the main ones are written excellently as the three. They all have their own unique share of purpose and presence that ties immaculately within REAL. Like with the patient Azumi we see her touching perseverance to understand and accommodate Nomiyas disability and his cold and often rash attitude. From childhood to growing up shes been the only one who knows how intense Nomiyas mentality towards pursuing a goal can be. The broken relationship between Takahashi his mother and his father cascades into an sudden outpour of unsaid words that has been repressed by years of fond memories and the absence of a loving father. Thus before his disastrous fate he was already swirling into a directionless teenage life leaping here and there fitting into molds which he had no intention of doing so. The bottled Takahashi metaphor shows his rigid plasticity very well and it was only when he was released by meeting various people in his life that he arrived at a liberating revelation of his own. The unbottled Takahashi now has the drive to find his own purpose and learns to open himself up to others. https://i.ur.com/IjdQItD.jpg Nomiya is my favorite main character in the series. My connection with him only grows stronger each chapter. What separates him from the two is his solitude Togawa and Takahashi are surrounded by characters that deal with and influence them while most of the time Nomiya has to bear all the burden by himself. Even with his relationship between the two they have a little impact on his path overall. He is passionate and determined a man with wellversed knowledge and attention to things around him except within himself. https://i.ur.com/IHqApZe.jpg At first Nomiyas life is wracked by guilt of involving a certain girl Natsumi into a devastating accident leaving the latter disabled for life. Accepting this damning responsibility we get a glimpse at his initial character. He is unswerving in his attempts to seek atonement from Natsumi a seemingly impossible request for what he has done. But we see his willingness to fix his mistakes from here starts his journey his search for his own path. Hitting deadends opportunities slipping away and bad choices Nomiya remains steadfast believing in shortterm goals in order to anchor himself from one point to the other. Thats one of the things that actually got him back on his feet but in the longrun the shortterm goal he had proves that it doesnt really give him the clearest path ahead. He acts on his emotions too much he gets angry he is pulverized by jealousy and he is easily pulled back into his lowest by the slightest inconvenience. And this is where Inoues trademark storytelling really shines and like I said a pushandpull with pathos allows us to embrace the pathetic Nomiya and in return with our faith in him we get to see Nomiya work hard to achieve great things even within himself. Basketball is a huge theme in REAL and its a unifying sport that ties all of our main characters lives. Its a sport that has saved them bestowed them meaning or it was their whole life. We see this in Nomiya being spurred by the sight of the sport or Togawa reflexively assuming a shooting position out of muscle memory or Togawas fiery sportsmanship being either the bane or spirit of the team. Inoue really loves basketball and hell make sure you acknowledge how significant it is in the manga with little moments like this: https://i.ur.com/7Jbj8gJ.jpg These are all poetically entwined with Inoues art. Its full of visual metaphors and wonderful implicit storytelling. His art has a start a middle and an impact you can see how this complements the pacing of the story. In one panel Inoue will set up the purpose and in the end he will have you deeply moved by the resulting impact. Moments of tears moments of defeat and moments of resolve are all given a sentiment of power and triumph. Inoues unique panelling ties all these up to finalize a lasting impression. He could show an emotional breakdown through a series of glassshard panels or wide urban shots to emphasize a transcendent emotion. Being a mangaka that has authored the monumental Slam Dunk he never fails to deliver that rush of adrenaline and sweat whenever he draws sport sequences. You can feel the speed the hot air the collision of bodies and gears in his majestic art. Perhaps the strongest message REAL tells us is our mishaps do not determine our ends. We see these main characters all have their share of suffering and in their shoes we might not even survive a day. Yet REAL constantly assures we are not alone and our stories do not end until we run out of breath. Through the main characters even the most discouraged of us might find the will to get back on their feet and start walking even if theyre small steps. Inoue really encourages us to celebrate our small improvements and our small victories and to never stop finding our own path. There will never be a manga like REAL. It is a work that I will forever adore and share its glory to others. Nomiya Togawa and Takahashi will always inspire me in my life and I hope you find them as inspirations too. https://i.ur.com/M8qgxhI.jpg
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