JohnnyEnzyme

joined 1 year ago
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[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago (3 children)

I'll give you a couple hints:

  1. It's one of the ~four core characters of the series.

  2. At the time he's just a low-level type, working for the keeper. And we already know he's not Marvin the dragon.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 5 months ago

Yes. RanTanPlan, excellent.

Sillage (Wake) is the best sci-fi series I've ever read in BD. I'll have to turn the spotlight towards that one soon!

[–] [email protected] 3 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (2 children)

Oh, 8 must be the brothers dalton?

Very good. Now who did they meet there?

Also looks a bit like Smurfs.

Absolutely correct. The first appearance of the Smurfs was in J&P, and they were disguised as we see above. (notice the blue foot and hand sticking out)

[–] [email protected] -1 points 5 months ago

Nice job portraying all that as Biden's specific work.

In any case, if you want to see the US go hardcore on Israel support, then by all means Trump will do that.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Side note: another example of Gallagher more and more seeming to disregard his model sheets for the characters.

I mean Iggy, here. He looks like sort of a bigger, redneck version of the character. Or maybe it's just his stunt double and they goofed up the take.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago

Nr 8 one of the Daltons

The Daltons have already been established at that point, so the new character is someone they're about to meet. Astrid might not like them.

Nr 10 maybe Pirlouit\Peewit\Pfiffikus because there is his goat in the last panel.

Yes, nice, it's from the Johan & Peewit series!

[–] [email protected] 3 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (4 children)

Two & five are correct! Very nice guessing Kriss, as that was one of the hardest ones IMO.

Should have more Jommeke, Kiekeboe and Suske and Wiske!

I can definitely do the latter at some point, but of the first two, I suspect they aren't well-known outside Belge. Feel free to post about them here sometime to help people get a taste..

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago

Really cool to see Caspar Milquetoast utilised as some grist for the mill. (and Magritte of course)

The Timid Soul is super-dated in some ways, but I think speaks rather eternally to the neurotic in all of us.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Very cool. I post roundups like this on a regular basis for my community, and let's just say that a certain 'labor of love' needs to be involved.

Anyway, I like these 'empty, meditative landscapes.'
So often we seem to think that a landscape needs lots of things going on, but these work perfectly well I think, with their sense of 'stretching to infinity.'

Btw, in case this is of interest, one can have the images expand with a click, for example:

(click the "source" button to see the code used)

[–] [email protected] 8 points 5 months ago (3 children)

In retrospect, I wouldn't have minded if Steve's total frat-boy narcissism had been toned down a bit, initially.

That way when Bobbi and Steve first dated, we might have gotten the initial illusion that there was a semi-spark of mutual interest, setting up Bobbi's later realisation that Steve was just a hopeless idiot. In that way we would have had the pleasure of seeing Steve's ego actually bruised, with life offering him a teachable moment.

As is, with Bobbi's indifference right from square one, Steve had the luxury of bullshitting himself without getting truly invested, as he did with pretty much everything else in life.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago

I seem to recall a couple of the Lucky Luke films were surprisingly good, too. "Daisy Town" was one, I think.

By contrast, I thought the Tintin series failed to capture any of Hergé's magic.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago

Haha, I don't know about Alabama specifically, but it's definitely a redneck / hillbilly kind of stereotype. Funny how historically it's pretty common amongst royals and hicks both, but not so much everyone in-between. :P

 

Girl: Arms up, coyote! Keep your hands well away from your hardware!

Jolly Jumper: Here we go again...

Lucky Luke: Tsk, tsk. Little girl, it's not safe to play with your daddy's rifle...

(sound): *BLAM!*

Girl: One more word about my daddy and you get the next volley of lead where it counts!


This will be published by Dargaud, and is created by the singular Blutch, a huge talent and one of the main innovators in BD, it says here.

Thanks to Jérôme Lachasse's Mastodon 'tweet' [here] for the news!

 

Jan Lööf (b. 1940) is a Swedish illustrator, author, comic creator, and jazz musician.

From 1967 until 1973 he created his most famous comic strip Felix, which soon gained popularity in many parts of the world. Mixing humor and adventure, Felix has sometimes been described as a more naivistic or underground-style version of Tintin in terms of the drawing, but in its themes and morale it is also somewhat leftist.

Later, Lööf created other comics, such as Bellman (a humor strip about a Stockholm hobo) and Ville (1975–76), a "comedic adventure" about an unemployed Stockholm author, teaming up with Olof Palme and Carl XVI Gustaf to fight the bad guys. This was originally serialized in the Swedish periodical Vi.

His children's books are continually popular, both in Scandinavia and elsewhere. Among them are The Story of the Red Apple and Uncle Louie's Fantastic Sea Voyage. Based on these books Lööf produced his own children's show, the animated Skrot-Nisse och Hans Vänner (Scrap-Nisse and his Friends) for Swedish National Television in 1985. --WP

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Angela is no "cheesecake," but actually the star pilot of the series, navigating a world of largely chauvinistic men during wartime.

This is a terrific series, and I'll have to do a proper review one of these days.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

https://imgur.com/a/JoRYmmd

Here's a fascinating throwback story about an 'outsider' chess champion who gets discovered during a pleasure cruise. The gaming aficionados on board eagerly press him to play a few matches, and he finally agrees, insisting that everyone team up against him in order to produce a fair match. Naturally, he crushes them with sloshing ease, game after game.

That is, until an unknown stranger saunters over and begins suggesting moves and strategies to the local group. Remarkably, his play serves to stalemate the champion. *Who* is this guy, anyway, who evidently doesn't even play chess? The answer turns out to be rather astonishing.

I thought the art and storytelling in this work really captured the spirit and discipline of both chess and the specific timeframe in a way I'd hardly thought to see in a BD. Thumbs way, way up for this lovely album.

CREDITS: The original BD is called Le Joueur d'échecs, published by Casterman in 2017, based on a Stefan Zweig novel Schachnovelle, from the 40's. Major thanks to Philly-Willy for producing a scanlation, as I don't believe this one's been published in English yet.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 6 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Lucky Luke: Finally, we've arrived at the home of the Shava-Shava. We can spend the night here; it's a tribe of old friends.

Man: Gosh! They have amazing totems!

Ran-Tan-Plan: These Indians are crazy!

This panel is from a tribute collection, Asterix & His Friends, with art by "Achdé."

 

Across both manga and Euro comics, I've never seen electric-pastel covers like these before!

On the whole, this series seems to have some BD-influences, such as cinematic storytelling, experimental and 'sketchy' artwork, as well as tight, historically-driven scenarios. It makes me wonder if there was some cross-fertilisation going on between manga and BD during this period (60's to 80's). For example, I could easily imagine figures like Moebius, Jodo, and Osama Tezuka borrowing ideas from each other.

Anyway, about the manga itself? It's one of my favorites, altho dated. [SAMPLES] I like it because there are fascinating themes of discovery, danger, and sacrifice that you rarely quite see in BD's & GN's.

One thing I've noticed about manga is that the writers commonly love to 'go for it.' For example, one of the main samurai - heroes, and a highly sympathetic one at that, gets badly disfigured whilst escaping a firebombing which took out most of his clan. So for the rest of the series he's sort a chilling 'no-face,' whilst remaining exactly the same principled character. It creates an interesting kind of tension, in that we typically associate heroes with handsome, virile-types, and not maimed, disfigured characters. Which perhaps hearkens back to Shelley's Frankenstein, in which the suave scientist is the villain, and the monster, the real hero.

Final thoughts? This is a super-good, nuanced, humanistic series, with plenty of action & drama. More HERE, and there's also an animated series, which doesn't seem terrible. [YouTube]

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

NOTE: This list needs a big update, and hopefully we'll get to that soon. Frankly I'm a bit spooked working on our community documents, since the last time I did that, I accidentally deleted the whole community for a day. :S

BONUS:

  • Try the randomly-generated Tintin quiz.
  • Try Johnny's "Who Are these Ten First Appearances?" quiz. And here's the answers.
 

If you don't know any French, you should still be able to recognise a bunch of the album names, which are helpfully placed in chronological order. (or just click google's "translate" option)

In fact the quiz can be played in four different ways: 1) all panels are displayed, 2) only panels with text are displayed, 3) only panels without text are shown, 4) only text is shown without any panels at all.

These quizzes can be played endlessly, so see how high you can score (out of ten questions). Whoever scores a ten, please add a comment below! :D

EDIT: If a web-savvy person wanted to host a site like this, for example with a general-BD theme, I'd be happy to provide plenty of good-quality art samples.

1
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

This is from the "Super Antics" series by Kerry Callen, as collected on his blog:

http://kerrycallen.blogspot.com/search/label/Super%20Antics

 

(click the links for art samples)

Green Manor (Vehlmann & Bodart, 2001) is a superb, darkly-hilarious historical fiction series, consisting of a delicious collection of short stories about murder and mayhem, in which the main participants are members of a famous gentleman's club in 1800's London. There's a 'Sherlockian' kind of vibe running through these albums, altho in this case the stories mainly focus on the perpetrators and victims. One other fascinating aspect of these works is the butler's framing story, who now resides in a mental ward, recounting all these stories to a visiting psychiatrist. In his deranged state is he making it all up, or did these fine gentlemen and pillars of society indeed sink to such sadistic depths through the years?

The Golden Compass (Philip Pullman, with Melchior & Oubrerie, 2014). This is a part one of a BD adaptation of the modern classic series His Dark Materials, set in a sci-fi / magical realism genre. In this world, humans have animal familiars ("daemons") able to shape-shift until their host reaches adulthood, at which time "dust" begins to shut down that ability, a sort of counterpart to original sin in the biblical sense. The series' protagonist is a young girl believed by many to have a great part to play in the world's destiny, even as her estranged, obsessive parents are attempting to abolish the effects of said dust, each according to their own scientific approach. The unusually original story can be a little obscure to get in to, but makes comfortable sense about halfway through. Still, the adaptation isn't amazing, and one might want to start with the source novel over the BD.

Centaurus (LEO / Rodolphe / Janjetov, 2018) is my favorite of LEO's space series, right behind his excellent Trent books. The premise here is a "life ark" situation, in which the survivors of a dying Earth set out for a new world in the Alpha Centauri system. Against many odds they manage to reach the target and send out a reconnaissance crew. Unfortunately, they swifly lose communication, and what's more, discover to their shock that someone or something has tampered with the ship's navigation system, and they are *not* in fact at the destination planet. What's more, it's discovered that the same intruder presence mated with some of the colonists two decades earlier, producing a generation of children with various paranormal powers, one of whom is a member of the ground crew(!) Meanwhile on the ground, the landing party explores the surface, occasionally struggling to survive dangerous wildlife, even as they're dumbfounded to discover what seem to be human ruins. Things only get more intense from there, as they struggle to understand who or what is responsible for the mission going sideways. As usual, LEO's characters are a bit on the 'mannered' side, as if this was all something of a stage production, but the excellent story more than makes up for that quibble. Indeed, there's a tangle of mysteries in this work, some interesting personal dynamics, all set against a dire survival situation, that makes this series shine.

Hasib & the Queen of Serpents (David B., 2015) - a wondrous adaptation of one of the lesser-known Scheherazade stories from One Thousand and One Nights. We begin with Hasib, son of a sage, struggling to make a career for himself. He eventually finds work as a woodcutter, only to be betrayed by his colleagues, trapped in a cave and left for dead. It's from there that we embark on a sinuous, nested group of tales, many of them involving the terrifying Queen of the Serpents, a mostly benevolent being whose main work involves torturing the dead in hell(!) Eventually the tale winds back to Hasib, who escapes with the Queen's aid, and must make his way through a series of betrayals to save his dying ruler. With all that said, the stories aren't so much the main focus as is the wonderful art, framing of words and images, and storytelling process. I found this work almost beyond rational judgement, rather something to absorb more than "read." It has something of a children's storybook quality, but speaks to some mythological, emotional, and archetypical realities, if that makes sense.

Islandia (Marc Védrines, 2007) is a 3-book series set in 17th-century Iceland, and wow, was it tough to review(!) Did Islandia work as a concept, and would I recommend it? Yes and yes, but with some qualifications I'll get in to later. Also worth noting is that the series may have special relevance for Icelandic folks, and perhaps even Christians who enjoy a certain Old Testament dynamic, in which God takes an active hand in the proceedings. Getting to the story, a fresh-faced French lad has recurring visions of strange symbols and specific places that he believes may be related to Iceland, and stows away on his dad's fishing boat in hopes of making his way there. Things don't go smoothly for him, however. He's continually mistrusted and even physically attacked, forced to flee from one place to another before finally reaching what seems to be the specific place he had visions of. Whilst there, he meets a sorcery-practicing woman who helps him understand what it all means, and who he really is, before they're caught by the local authorities, placed at the stake, and burnt alive! That sums up the first two volumes, and from there we go on an intense whirlwind of changing 'vessel-characters' (I don't want to give too much away), plus an important new character, who helps our antihero understand his terrible, traumatic past, the very one which sent him down this sorcerous path, hounded perpetually by God's minions. Finally, many years later, our character's existential crisis is resolved, and as a bonus, we even get an interesting look in to major events of Icelandic history, which I absolutely was not expecting.

My impressions are like this-- I found the lead character to be unusually sympathetic, which made it truly unsettling to see how poorly life treated the young lad throughout the story. Now yes, it did make sense in later context, but still... wow. Regardless, I suppose that this is really a tale about humanism and perhaps 'thwarted love turned to generalised hate,' so to speak. Major credit here to writer-artist Védrines, who does a noteworthy job portraying the historical settings and character of 17th-century Icelandic folk. Although to be honest? It wasn't entirely flattering. That is-- everything was permeated by a wretched, gloomy commonness of paranoid superstition, leading to much pointless blame, death and tragedy for the simple people of the time. Still, to be fair, I suppose it was a relatively accurate portrayal. *shudder*

In the end, apart from the Icelandic settings, I almost felt like the way we conduct ourselves and treat each other as humans was the main theme of the series. Overall, this was a sharply unique tale, the like of which I doubt I'll ever see again.

 

This mini-essay is in response to THIS post, which explored the idea of doing a 'Heathcliff without Heathcliff' strip as a response to its competitor Garfield's succesfull 'Garfield without Garfield' fan-made series.

Now to be frank, Heathcliff is a comic I already considered far more interesting & amusing than Garfield long ago, yet I've been generally disappointed by it since around 2010, and feel that creator Peter Gallagher recycles way too many jokes these days.

Which I consider to be a real shame, because for a while there he was not just evolving past the formulaic, funny-animal template his uncle George Gately started with back in 1973, but taking it to genuinely wild new heights. Indeed, starting around 2000 (I think it was), Gallagher started taking the strip in some pretty gonzo, surreal directions, breaking various comics conventions along the way, but doing so mostly successfully. In truth, he added an enormous breath of new life in to the strip as I see it. You can check this out yourself starting in 2002, HERE.

A couple years ago on Solrad there was even a pretty amazing series of unusually complimentary articles, exploring what made modern Heathcliff so unique and interesting. Those can be read HERE.

I agree a lot with @[email protected] about this strip in question not really needing the cat's presence to work, but what's more interesting to me is that you can also see traces of Gallagher's weird inventiveness going on. For example, how does one *possibly* drop a reanimated mummy (lol) in to a surfing / beach scene, and how is it that the kids view the spectacle as anything remotely ordinary? The delight here is that there's no context whatsoever, and little of anything helpful in past strips to help explain it, other than the likelihood of the character being used before. Or quite possibly used many times, as with "The Garbage Ape" who typically runs along the streets, swinging welded-together trash cans for no apparent purpose. (I wish I was making that up)

Somehow and unexpectedly, as a one-off event, it simply works. And really, as a very occasional repeat, I think it also works. For me, where it begins to annoy is when it's used more often that that, in which the lack of any added information & context actually works against the gag. So we rarely if ever learn anything more about the demented ape (or the surfing mummy), or see him in an amusing new light, but are still expected to be entertained as readers, so to speak. That's kind of emblematic of the problem with modern Heathcliff, in that there's somewhere under a known set of a ~dozen types of once-gonzo gags, with Gallagher mostly rotating endlessly between them, calling it a day and expending little if any artistic effort in the process.

Nice gig if you can get it, I suppose, and maybe that works for some readers, but personally I moved on ages ago. Still, I thought the strip had a brilliant run and evolution in the 2010's or so, not unlike the Simpsons animated series having a great run in the 1990's, so maybe we should just be satisfied with that?

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