MPD-Psycho, the most-requested manga series in recently memory, has found a fitting home at Dark Horse Manga, where it will be presented uncut and uncensored in all of its controversial and unflinchingly grotesque glory! If Takashi Miike's MPD-Psychotelevision series still has you confused and reeling, the original manga series that inspired the show is sure to take you on a longer, darker journey into madness. and he's on the verge of making a deal with a laughing devil! Toguchi, the tough, one-eyed video journalist, now feels that he deserves a worldwide spotlight. More clues on the Gakuso Group emerge, and their top "company man"-the white-haired, maniacal Zenitsu-just can't stay out of the Isono Lab's business.
His latest mystery involves a serial killer who uses body doubles and is actually famous for his macabre murder scenes and attempts at dark humor. The Isono Criminal Research Lab trusts that Kazuhiko Amamiya, their maverick multiple personality detective, can crack any murder case-as long as he can keep all of his other personalities in check. The uncensored, uncut MPD-Psycho manga series continues, with another volume of creative crimes, slippery criminals, and an enormous, disturbing puzzle that's slowly unraveling with each inventive atrocity. Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service Volume 13
Mail was recently made into a live-action Japanese horror movie starring Chiaki Kuriyama - "Go-Go Yubari" from Kill Bill.The answers lie in the secret basement of a shunned house. When the negatives in the darkroom reveal hidden horror, it's time for the magazine to hire Akiba. But someone's thrown their trash away here: human bones. Volume 1 of Mail opens with a model's photo shoot at what was a lovely riverside. digging a divine grave to lay to rest the evil dead. And not unless you carry a gun that can kill what isn't alive, like Akiba's aptly named Kagutsuchi, "the tool between God and earth". But you may not want to open such strange mail from beyond-not unless you can see the ghostly attachment, like Akiba can. They are actually encounters with the dead-their way of sending us a message. Private detective Reiji Akiba has a theory about those awkward moments and weird coincidences we all encounter in life. It's a warped Saturday-morning cartoon for grown-ups." -David Welsh, Comic World News What originally seemed to rely on gross out spectacles has continually proven to be a remarkably smart take on spooky standards." -Ain't it Cool News * "I was sold by the first few pages. and why does Sasayama insist on dragging the Corpse Delivery Service into it? "Volume nine is back to the hyper-informed horror synthesis of ideas that has made Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service a favorite. Can a girl who committed a brutal murder in grade school ever truly return to society.
Paint it black! Designer Bunpei Yorifuji darkens the iconic cover design in honor of the sinister Class Cutter in Kurosagi's longest story since volume 2, inspired by one of the most infamous Japanese crimes of recent years.