Panorama of Hell
| Panorama of Hell | |
| 地獄変 (Jigokuhen) | |
|---|---|
| Genre | Horror |
| Manga | |
| Written by | Hideshi Hino |
| Published by | Hibari shobō |
| English publisher |
|
| Published | 1984 |
| Volumes | 1 |
Panorama of Hell (Japanese: 地獄変, Hepburn: Jigokuhen) is a 1984 one shot Japanese horror manga by Hideshi Hino. It was published in the United States by Blast Books[1] and in France as Panorama de l'enfer by Éditions IMHO in 2004.[2] Star Fruit Books published the manga in English in 2023.[3]
Synopsis
A painter who was conceived at the moment of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima is driven to create a grand panorama of hellish suffering, using his own blood as blood. He introduces the reader to his unconventional family, and tells stories about his abusive parents, who escaped from Manchuria after World War II, and his violent childhood. Eventually, his plan to paint a final masterpiece, a full-scale "Hell on Earth" unfolds.
Analysis
Scholar Rajyashree Pandey analyzes that in the narrative, the titular "hell" is not a metaphysical elsewhere but is manifested in the corrupted, post-nuclear contemporary world. She notes that the climactic nuclear apocalypse painted by the protagonist is not presented as a tragic end but as an "exhilarating" moment of total annihilation. This perspective inverts a Western horror framework, such as Julia Kristeva's concept of the "abject." Rather than viewing bodily disintegration and death with horror as a loss of self, Panorama of Hell presents it as a potential release from a world that already is hell. This aligns with the Buddhist doctrinal view of the body as impermanent (mujō) and foul, a pedagogical tool to overcome attachment.[4]
Reception
It was nominated for Best Album at the 2005 Angoulême International Comics Festival.[5]
References
- ^ "Backlist". Blast Books. Retrieved 2 February 2012.
- ^ "L'Enfant Insecte chez IMHO". AnimeLand (in French). 6 October 2010. Archived from the original on 9 October 2010. Retrieved 2 February 2012.
- ^ Hazra, Adriana (1 August 2022). "Star Fruit Books Releases Sawanabe Zombie, Town of Pigs, 6 More Horror Manga Under New Blood Orange Imprint". Anime News Network. Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ Pandey, Rajyashree (1 December 2001). "The Pre in the Postmodern: The Horror Manga of Hino Hideshi". Japanese Studies. 21 (3): 261–274. doi:10.1080/10371390120101452. ISSN 1037-1397.
- ^ "La sélection officielle Angoulême 2005". AnimeLand (in French). 17 January 2005. Retrieved 2 February 2012.
External links
- Panorama of Hell (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Review at cinemasie.com (in French)
- Review at Anime News Network