Reviews

Muse, Vol. 1: Celia by Denis-Pierre Filippi

whatchareadingheather's review

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adventurous lighthearted fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? N/A
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? N/A

3.5

Very eye candy, but still beautifully illustrated. I'm invested enough in the story to at least read Volume 2.

cg439515's review

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fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? N/A
  • Strong character development? N/A
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? N/A

2.0

madzsmiled's review

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funny lighthearted mysterious medium-paced

3.75

cactusrae's review

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adventurous lighthearted mysterious medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.0

jassmine's review

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2.0

Alright, this gets two stars, because the art was very pretty and the heroine was hot while almost realistic, but otherwise... what was this?! (I'm writing this review with the knowledge with the ending of the second volume and I'll just probably treat them as one...)
1. A lot of people seem to be upset about Coralina's various state of undress. Not me. I have a thing for historical clothing and while this wasn't exactly accurate (corsets on bare skin! ouch...) it was better than most, especially for erotica and what can I say, I quite enjoyed that.
2. Visually-wise this was mostly win. The art was pretty, and Coralina was beautiful, but the men... why?
description
3. In the whole story we don't get one pleasant male character. Or a good looking one. Why? The main "hero" is a child, which made me very uncomfortable, but we'll get to that later. Then we get one stalker and then the characters in dreams that just flat out try to rape our heroine, like... am I supposed to be turned on? I'm really sorry the author didn't consider making Eckhart (or what was his name...) a pleasant character and romantic interest to balance out the weirdness of the plot.
4. I keep mentioning how pretty Coralina is... well, that's because she's anything else - she isn't kind, she isn't particularly smart, but you know, she likes to go around half naked, so... I forgive her. (Not really...)
5. Fine, now to the plot. In the first volume Coralina has some strange dreams - one pirate dream, one cannibal dream and one fairy-tale like dream. All of them are very weird and none of them are particularly sexy. The cannibal dream has the biggest potential, alas it goes nowhere. And you know, I'm really into pirates, so the first one could work for me too, but it was way to gang-rapey (but once more, nothing really happens so... what was the point of all this). We know that something is going on here, but we don't really know what. And once you know, trust me it doesn't really makes things better.

To sum it up, this was all teasing and nothing was actually delivered. There is a lot of abusive sexual behavior and the whole time you have a feeling that a kid is somehow mixed in all of this so... The resolution the second volume offers in not really worth it. Some pictures are pretty sexy though - when you take them out of context...

gudzilla's review

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2.0

Sublime artwork, unrealistic female body image, strange story.

nwhyte's review

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3.0

https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/3669597.html

I saw this recommended somewhere: two albums written by French author Filippi, best known for his writing for young adults, and illustrated by Dodson, better known for his Marvel and DC work on superheroes.

I'm not sure that I'd repeat the recommendation. Our heroine, Coraline, takes a job as governess to a teenage boy who invents lots of machines in his spare time. At night she has strange dreams which always seem to end with her clothes falling off. The end of the second volume reveals What Is Really Going On, and I have to say that it makes no sense at all in terms of what we have been told of the story. Also notable that the titles of the volumes are the wrong way around - vol 1's title is "Celia", but she is the sister of Coraline, the main character, and not otherwise mentioned until halfway through vol 2. The art is lush and gorgeous, but basically it's two short books about boobs.

reddjena's review

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4.0

Rather short and the story isn’t very deep; however, I absolutely love the art style and if you like naked breasts, there are plenty here. Ends on a cliffhanger (basically the middle of a scene).

lucie_the_reader's review

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2.0

1. Boobs everywhere
2. Not sure what the plot is supposed to be
3. This feels like teenage boy fantasy
4. The art was fine

kikiandarrowsfishshelf's review

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1.0

As far as I can tell, the sole point of this book is to draw the heroine in various stages of undress. I mean, really very few women in the time period period that this seems to take place in would do what she does on her bedroom balcony. Honesty, it is just teen male wish fulfillment. (While lesibans might enjoy it, I doubt that they are the target audience). Nice art in places. And at least no slut shaming.