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Thursday, May 16, 2024

Usagi Yojimbo: The Crow #2 Review


 


Writer, Artist & Letterer: Stan Sakai

Colorist: Hi-Fi Colour Design

Cover Artists: Stan Sakai & Emi Fujii; Jared Cullum; David Petersen

Publisher: Dark Horse Comics

Price: $4.99

Release Date: May 8, 2024

 

Yukichi wanders the streets. As bounty hunters mix with the locals, Yukichi’s thoughts dwell on Gen and Stray Dog. The young samurai wishes he hadn’t reprimanded them for pursuing a fugitive for money. Then again, Yukichi wishes he hadn’t helped Jimmu escape justice. Perhaps he should help Usagi’s friends capture Jimmu. But as Yukichi returns to Usagi and his cousin’s friends, he hears a cry for help. Will he aid a local beset by bandits? Or will Yukichi interfere with bounty hunters apprehending a criminal again? Let's grab our katanas, charge into Usagi Yojimbo: The Crow #2 and find out!

 

Story

Yukichi finds a boy clutching his leg in the alley. Yet when he kneels to help, Yukichi sees no irritation or swelling. The boy throws mud in Yukichi’s face. People rush toward Yukichi. As Yukichi wipes his face, he recognizes the bounty hunters who tried to apprehend Jimmu in the woods.

 

Yukichi and Usagi drove the bounty hunters off in the woods by bonking them with sheathed swords. But in Usagi Yojimbo: The Crow #2, Yukichi is alone, and it’s six against one. So Yukichi draws his sword and charges his attackers.

 

Usagi grows worried about his cousin. Yet when he rises, his friends counsel patience. Yukichi is a better-trained warrior than any of the bounty hunters in town. His cousin can take care of himself. Besides, Usagi has a more pressing problem. Yukichi has volunteered to pay for Gen and Stray Dog's meal. But the bounty hunters twisted his words and told the innkeeper the samurai would pay for all their expenses. After years on the road, living hand-to-mouth, Usagi knows how difficult it can be to fill your purse. But now Gen and Stray Dog expect the samurai to pay for a week's room and board!

 

In Usagi Yojimbo: The Crow #2, Stan Sakai focuses on what it means to be a samurai. Usagi and Yukichi’s code teaches them to do their best and live in the moment. Gen, who grew up in poverty, watching his mother die and his father scrapes by, has a cynical view of the world. Stray Dog may not mooch off others like Gen, but neither does he exhibit Usagi and Yukichi’s joy of living.

 

As Usagi admitted in the previous issue, Yukichi grew up in a sword school. He's new to life on the road. It’s easy for his cousin to look down on others who have watered down their principles. Sadly, Yukichi's inexperience will lead him into trouble in Usagi Yojimbo: The Crow #2. Pride cometh before the fall may not be a Japanese saying or a Bushido precept. Still, it is an essential truth of human nature. Gen and Stray Dog may be willing to overlook Yukichi’s contemptuous remarks. Unfortunately, the bounty hunters in the alley, whom the young samurai deprived of their prize, may prove less forgiving.

 


 

 

Art

A crow’s eye view reveals the scope of this village near the mountains. Locals and bounty hunters fill the dirt streets while boats ply the river flowing through town. Yukichi looks down as he walks, like so many around him. Tokage scamper past drunks slumped in alleys and a beggar kneeling before his bowl. Only when the young samurai reconciles a means to help Usagi and his friends without sacrificing his principles does he look up, and his usual alertness returns.

 

Stan Sakai populates Usagi Yojimbo: The Crow #2 with a heavyset bully, a mischievous urchin, and an older samurai with a scarred face. Gen smothers the pain of his upbringing with endless plates of food and bowls of saké. Gen’s partnership with Stray Dog evokes Bebop and Rocksteady’s brotherhood. Perhaps an abandoned temple outside the village converted to another purpose stokes Yukichi’s ire.

 

Hi-Fi Colour Design lavishes a loaded palette on Usagi Yojimbo: The Crow #2, as colorful roofs and clothing contrast with dirt streets and wooden buildings. The innkeeper and patrons spark life into the inn's browns, beiges, and grays. Puddles in the street reveal shading, highlights, and the ground beneath. As the nearby fields and forests exude a pastoral beauty, red suffuses a panel background in response to a brutal act.

 

Stan Sakai rewards readers with generously sized letters in white dialogue balloons. A giant shout swiftly becomes an ellipse and a colored exclamation mark, while a Pow and a skull follow a street scuffle. A Crack near the end incites horror. Yet this story of honor vying with pragmatism ends with a sigh.

 

Thanks to Dark Horse for providing a copy for review.

 


 

 

Final Thoughts

Yukichi’s lighthearted innocence has buoyed Usagi's lonesome journey. But a senseless attack on another samurai's honor could prove his undoing in Usagi Yojimbo: The Crow #2.

 

Rating 9.6/10

 

To preview interior art see my review at Comic Book Dispatch.

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