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08.18.06 by Widge @ 3:32 am ![]() Platypus Comix has posted a roundup of incredibly rare material by Bill Watterson, including stuff pre-Calvin & Hobbes, the one Calvin & Hobbes strip that has never been reprinted (for some unknown, bizarre reason), and scads more. Nice. Categorized as: Comics
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08.17.06 by Widge @ 3:19 am ![]() This Comic Book Archive is trying to get all DC Comics online that were published between 1936 and 1980. So they're stopping short long before the fanboys started running the asylum. Categorized as: Comics and Stimuli
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06.25.06 by Widge @ 12:52 am ![]() Friday's Dork Tower by John Kovalic puts Lovecraft into a place where Lovecraft just shouldn't go. So of course we love it. Enjoy. Update: Sadly the original link appears to be dead and the Dork Tower site appears to be iffy at best. If it comes back up and there's a new link, somebody let us know, yes? Categorized as: Comics
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06.17.06 by Widge @ 12:48 am
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06.04.06 by Widge @ 4:21 pm ![]() I'm so glad I-Mockery's Tales From the Longbox is here to show me that I'm not alone in thinking that Frank Miller and Jim Lee's new All-Star Batman and Robin is complete and utter crap. I don't think I could live in a world where I was the only one. Check out their full vivisection of DC's latest waste of paper here. Categorized as: Comics
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05.09.06 by Widge @ 5:26 pm ![]() I suppose you're all wondering what the hell these Civil War banners are all about. Well...here's the skinnee. Categorized as: Comics
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04.05.06 by Widge @ 3:24 pm ![]() The entirety of Transmetropolitan #8 If you've never checked out Transmet, you should. Issue 8 was actually the first one of the series I picked up...and I didn't quit until the series did. So go read the issue, then buy the first trade. Update: Sadly, that entire LiveJournal account is toast. But go check out the trade. Trust me, you'll be glad you did. Categorized as: Comics
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03.24.06 by Widge @ 4:39 am ![]() Unless you've been following TwoMorrows' Jack Kirby Collector, you probably wouldn't know these existed. So for those of you not in the know, Data Junkie has posted unpublished pages from a Prisoner comic book...drawn by Jack Kirby. My personal favorite? Sweet. Categorized as: Comics
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03.21.06 by Dindrane @ 2:05 am Art: Art by: Makoto Nakatsuka Juror 13 is a stand-alone volume of manga that tells the story of Jeremy, whose day opens with watching someone else save the life of a stranger right in front of him at a crosswalk. Subsequently, Jeremy finds out that his boss thinks he's slipping, and we also learn that he has lost his fiancée, Dawn, for reasons left unexplained. Then, Jeremy receives a mysterious jury summons from "the Superior Court." The rest of the volume is a working out of Jeremy's perceived betrayal by both Jake and Dawn, as well as his problems at work and personally. It is nice to have a complete story in one volume; that's pretty rare in manga, unfortunately. To get the complete arc of a story in your average manga, you could spend upwards of $100, all told. Juror 13, however, is complete and contained. The art is nice, if a bit generic. It's a bit of a hybrid between the typical manga style and American-style hero comics, which shows up best in the copious face close-ups. The characters are nicely expressive, though Jeremy looks a lot younger (like about fifteen) than he probably should. Jake is nicely smarmy, and Dawn is, well, a little cheap-looking, as she should be. It would have been interesting had the style changed a bit as Jeremy's shattered world got more complicated or his paranoia deepened. Art can help a bit where storytelling fails. The manga attempts to cultivate an almost Kafkaesque sense of paranoia and social betrayal, but really just succeeds at being confusing and predictable. The twist at the end with the real meaning of "Juror 13" is less clever than just lame. If compared to your twist, Shyamalan is logical and satisfying, then you know you're in trouble. A twist should be surprising, but also consistent with the rest of the story. Merely pulling something out of the air is just cheating your story, your characters, and your audience. The ending, Jeremy's reactions to what he's done, could be powerful and a revealing comment on the nature of choice and tragedy, but instead is just stripped of all emotional resonance by the attempt to be clever, the author saying "ta-da!". Another missed opportunity was with the homeless man who sings when Jeremy watches the rescue at the beginning, and then again when he returns home from his tenure as Juror 13. More of a connection could have been made with Jeremy's choices and with the homeless people Jake was using in the taxi incidents. Basically, if you really love mysteries or "twist-style" endings, then go ahead and give Juror 13 a read. It's worth the half-hour it'll take you to read it and then roughly $10 you paid for it. It is, perhaps, important to be less than 100% satisfied by an individual volume in order to support the industry in general. However, it's not the sort of manga that really redeems the genre, and I doubt it'll win many new fans to the art. Categorized as: Comics and Reviews
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03.03.06 by Dindrane @ 2:30 pm Art: Art & by: Bisco Hatori Ouran High School Host Club is billed as a romantic comedy, but the emphasis is clearly on the comedy. Haruhi is a poor-as-a-church-mouse scholarship student at exclusive private school Ouran High. While searching for a quiet place to study, she stumbles upon a Host Club, a place where rich, idle, handsome men provide companionship for rich, ideal, pretty girls. While there, Haruhi breaks an $80,000 vase, and to work off her debt, which she could not possibly pay, she agrees to serve as a host, concealing from her eager fans the fact that she is indeed a girl. The girls who visit the Host Club merely see Haruhi as a particularly pretty boy (very bishie!), but the inevitable cross-dressing confusion is only half the fun. Categorized as: Comics and Reviews
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