Posts Tagged ‘ comics

Strip Search: Egyptology, McCloud, and Comics

Jennifer M. Babcock reviews and recommends comic strips available in print and on the web.

I am in the land of Egypt, the land of pyramids. Of course, I wrote this LAST Thursday when I wasn’t in Egypt but let’s pretend I already know what it’s like to be there.

Man, it is HOT here!

Anyway, as many of you already know, in addition to being a cartoonist, I am also studying Ancient Egyptian art history at the Institute of Fine Arts at New York University. There are a lot of people at my school that don’t see any connection between my interest in Egyptian art and cartooning – I think many people see me as quite the oddity. More perceptive people or people who have read Scott McCloud’s Understanding Comics completely understand why I’m interested in both. If you’ve read it, you’ll recall that McCloud lists Egyptian tomb paintings/reliefs as some of the first examples of “sequential art” or “comics.” He also uses Trajan’s column, prehistoric cave paintings, and the Bayeux Tapestry as “early comics” though, so I don’t know if Egyptian art’s narrative qualities necessarily drew me to that field. But if that’s the way people are best able to cope with me having two different interests, that’s fine.

Read more

Media Madness: Blessed Are the Poor in Spirit

In Media Madness, Matt. Murray reviews, revisits and rambles about comics, cartoons and their interactions in and with related media.

Poor Frank Miller.

Twenty some odd years ago, after being at the forefront of a revolution in the comics industry with his legendary run on Daredevil and his seminal take on Batman (Dark Knight Returns and Year One) he turned his sites to Hollywood and was completely crushed by the film making machine when he was hired to write the Robocop sequels. Misunderstood and re-written to the point of barely being recognized as his work, Robocop 2 and Robocop 3 literally sent Miller back to the drawing board, where he would cook up Sin City and 300… which of course would become hot Hollywood properties which would revolutionize comic book movies to an extent.

Poor Frank Miller.

Although he was rightfully billed as “co-director” of Sin City and would get the reverential treatment he deserved from the actors, producers, directors and critics that he definitely deserved in the wake of the direct translation of City and the less literal adaptation of 300 (which was filtered through the directorial sense of Zack Snyder), anyone with a sense of history and an understanding of Mr. Miller’s ambitions could see that he was chomping at the bit to get the training wheels off… to take a shot at writing and directing his own movie.

Poor Frank Miller.

Read more

Die by the Pen: Manga Guilt Anyone?

Every Wednesday, Jared Gniewek discusses what feeds his fires as an author of comics, screenplays and radio dramas.

Friends…are you suffering from Manga Guilt?

Okay, you’re at the dinner party and the conversation of course turns to comics and graphic novels. I mean Bang Zoom Pow comic talks are for dinner parties nowadays not for stupid babies! Your friends in publishing start going on and on about manga and you nod politely while replaying through your brain the five issues of Lone Wolf and Cub you read way back in 1988.

Read more

Strip Search: Life According to Garfield

On alternating Thursdays, Jennifer M. Babcock reviews and recommends comic strips available in print and on the web.

I know I’ve recently talked about Garfield in this blog but a recent comics discovery compels me to turn our attention back to this sassy, lasagna-loving cat. While going down the list of comics syndicated on GoComics.com a while back, I found a strip called “Life According to Garfield.”

Actually, I shouldn’t call it a strip. Technically, “Life According to Garfield” is a panel comic, meaning that it consists of a single image with an accompanying caption. Other examples of panel comics include “Love is…,” “The Far Side,” and almost any New Yorker cartoon.

Read more

Die by the Pen: You Wanna Know How I Script?

Every Wednesday, Jared Gniewek discusses what feeds his fires as an author of comics, screenplays and radio dramas.

jmg

You Wanna Know How I Script?
or It Almost Seems Like Real Magic When the Process Works.

I wrote a script last week. It was for an artist I met at the New York Comic Con and it is a horror story. I wanted to share a step by step process that I use to translate that loose cloud of cosmic dust and nerve endings into a cohesive piece and do it in a way that won’t destroy anyone’s brain.

Read more

 
Better Tag Cloud