YAY! I found the BR topic. I'm a huge fan of Battle Royale. I have the book, both movies, and 9 volumes of the manga. The first time I saw it was when a friend brought volume 1 of the manga to school and I flipped through it. I thought it was the grossest thing I'd ever seen, lol, and I told myself I'd probably never think about reading it. But then I decided to snag the book and was hooked. The storyline was interesting and I was really drawn into the characters. Shogo Kawada rocks! There are way too many horror stories and war movies where people just die randomly with no character development. Anyone who has seen a Jason or Freddy movie knows about this; characters who are there JUST to die. Battle Royale isn't like this at all. Almost every student in the class is given some sort of background exploration, so you end up caring about nearly everyone. I didn't want anyone to die . Even the villainous students, Kazuo and Mitsuko, have character development. After I finished reading BR I had dreams about being in the game myself, and the ending almost made me want to cry, it was hopeful and sad at the same time. After I finished the book I picked up the Manga and movies. The Movie isn't as good as the book, but it does turn the teacher into a sympathetic character and it did a good job with the students. I was worried that in the limited time the movie had it wouldn't flesh out the students enough, but it turned out alright. I think the manga is the best incarnation of the story, actully. It's now one of my three most favorite manga series (the others being X/1999 and Evangelion). It adds MORE character development than even the book had. For example, in the book when the main character walks out of the school he's attacked by the kid with the crossbow, Akematsu, and runs away with Noriko, just like in the movie. But in the manga he actully stops and tries to talk Akematsu into joining him, and they have some flashbacks to show some of Akematsu's character. I know the manga is REALLY violent and has strong sexual content (volumes 3 and 8 are hentai) and I can understand how it can make some people sick, but that's the whole point. I don't think the violence in the manga is really gratitous and pointless, it serves the story. I think part of the point of the Battle Royale story is that violence and fighting are often pointless. The kids are forced into this horrible situation where no one wins, where friends and lovers have to turn against eachother, and the strong violence is needed to give a sense of just how horrible the situation is and how pointless and wasted all the killing is.
Noriko: (after overhearing that Shuya has a crush on her, thinking to herself) "Get a grip, your friends are still dieing out there. The program, it's still on. The program is still on and Shuya cares, talk about bad timing, way to go Nori. No one asked for this, bad timing is just...bad timing. I bet this happens all the time, even with war and famine and all the horrible things in the world, people find one another. People learn to care. (spots an eagle flying over head) How much have you seen from up there? How many games have you witnessed? Did friends come together, or were they lost to one another? Did they play to win, or just to survive? Did any of them learn to care?"
The sexuality aspect is also important for the character of Mitsuko. The stuff in Volume 8 especially is used to show just how screwed up and tragic a life Mitsuko's had. The only problem I really have with the manga is the language. I don't think having a bunch of profanity ever serves any functional purpose. Most of it was probably added to the english translation just to make it even more mature. Anyway, the overall positive message and social criticism behind the plot of the movie still comes through, even stronger in my opinion, in the manga. I could probably go on for hours about all the positive story elements of the manga ^_^. It's just admittedly harder to notice all of them when your stuck on the artwork.
Some random BR trivia: The book came first, and I think the manga and movie were released at the same time. The manga is based on the book, not the movie, and it's still running in Japan, where volume 13 was the last release. It was predicted to end with volume 14, but now fans estimate it will end with 15 or 16, because there is NO WAY they could fit the final battle between Shuya-tachi and Kazuo AND the ending into one volume. A second manga series, based on movie 2, started running recently. Both manga series are written by Koushun Takami, who wrote the book. The movie is not banned in America, several companies actully wanted to release it here but Toei refused to sell the rights. The japanese version of Kill Bill begins with a dedication to Kinji Fukasaku, the director of the first BR movie, and Quentin Tarrantino was offered a role in Battle Royale 2 as the president of the US, but couldn't accept because of scheduling.