Artwork for sale by Sultans of Manga
Dead people don't need money | Tokyo Top Company's Thriller series #43 | Kashihon | Gekiga | Announcement
Ink
32 x 23.5 cm (12.6 x 9.25 in.)
(two halfs)
Price : 175 €
[$]
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Description
Double page of 'Dead people don't need money' published by Tokyo Top Company in their Thriller series - This was the announcement of #43 published in Thriller #42
Yoshiro Sato was one of the key players of gekiga, the movement that brought mature, cinematic storytelling into manga. Like Takao Saito, Yoshiro Sato blended sharp, realistic art with intense, slow-burning narratives.
He brought espionage, geopolitics and raw tension to his pages. Cold, cool and again like Saito, decades ahead!
Yoshiro Sato was one of the key players of gekiga, the movement that brought mature, cinematic storytelling into manga. Like Takao Saito, Yoshiro Sato blended sharp, realistic art with intense, slow-burning narratives.
He brought espionage, geopolitics and raw tension to his pages. Cold, cool and again like Saito, decades ahead!
Comment
Gekiga was a game-changer in manga history. Emerging in postwar Japan, it introduced a more serious, dramatic approach to comics. While mainstream manga leaned light and playful, gekiga dove into darker, more realistic territory — tackling subjects like crime, politics, and existential angst. It gave adult readers something they hadn’t seen before: stories that reflected real life, drawn with cinematic intensity. Gekiga expanded what manga could be, setting the stage for today’s graphic novels and indie comics around the world.
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