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Delica L400's in Hajime No Ippo (Fighting Spirit Manga)

Posted: Tue Jan 12, 2010 2:05 pm
by Mr. Flibble
I am reading Hajime No Ippo, (In English: Fighting Spirit) A Japanese Manga about Boxing. I found it amusing that from issues about 220 to 230, the characters drive into the mountains in 2 L400 Delicas. The Delicas are drawn in a number of the backgrounds of the issues.

The things you notice when reading Japanese Comics...

Re: Delica L400's in Hajime No Ippo (Fighting Spirit Manga)

Posted: Tue Jan 12, 2010 8:49 pm
by danfromvan
I would think that L300s would be more Manga-like!

Can you view them online?

Re: Delica L400's in Hajime No Ippo (Fighting Spirit Manga)

Posted: Tue Jan 12, 2010 9:52 pm
by Mr. Flibble
You sure can view them online, no mistaking the L400 though in these panels and the ones afterwards:

http://www.onemanga.com/Hajime_no_Ippo/231/11/

Re: Delica L400's in Hajime No Ippo (Fighting Spirit Manga)

Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2010 4:20 pm
by Mr. Flibble
An interesting side effect I have noticed about this comic, is that the characters only got into the Delica's to go on a "long" drive into the country. You almost never see them get into a vehicle for any other reason whatsoever. Even when going between major cities, they always get on a train.

Re: Delica L400's in Hajime No Ippo (Fighting Spirit Manga)

Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2010 5:44 pm
by Green1
Mr. Flibble wrote:An interesting side effect I have noticed about this comic, is that the characters only got into the Delica's to go on a "long" drive into the country. You almost never see them get into a vehicle for any other reason whatsoever. Even when going between major cities, they always get on a train.
That's Japanese culture. and that's why we can find so many genuinely low mileage 15 year old vehicles.

Re: Delica L400's in Hajime No Ippo (Fighting Spirit Manga)

Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2010 6:41 pm
by marsgal42
I love all the "sound words" in the background. I understand Japanese has lots of them.

The other comic you see lots of cars in is Tintin. Hergé was a car nut, and it shows. There is historical accuracy, like why the baddies in one story were chasing Tintin and Milou/Snowy in a 1938 Opel. Nazi Germany was trying to build up foreign currency reserves just prior to WW2, and knew then, as now, that German cars were highly exportable.

...laura