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How can anyone hate Saga when it has the most adorable gay couple in comics?
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# ? Jan 11, 2015 22:30 |
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# ? May 23, 2024 16:07 |
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I read the first few issues of Saga and didn't care for it all. The only thing I liked was the art but with a story and characters I didn't care one bit about that's not enough. As much as I liked Y and Ex Machina I was really surprised to be completely disengaged with a BKV book but I was.
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# ? Jan 11, 2015 22:33 |
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Chairman Capone posted:I like Saga, but I think it's steadily improved since it began. And I also think Y was better. Yes, the Whedon-esque character banter has subsided a lot this past arc. Now that the initial setup is over where all the main characters have been introduced the poo poo has hit the fan and things are becoming more serious. The series has always been funny even while it's being incredibly violent but this last arc was a turn around for every character and script has matched the tone. If you were put off by the series from the beginning I can't say that it's enough for you to struggle through the story up to Quietus but BKV has settled into a voice by then. And Staples' design is always top notch. When this series ends I'm going to make a collage and frame every cover.
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# ? Jan 11, 2015 22:48 |
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Senor Candle posted:Who the gently caress hates Saga? i don't hate it, but it's lost my interest. the art is at such a higher level than the writing.
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# ? Jan 12, 2015 00:06 |
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What's the general opinion on Annihilator? I'm in love with it so far after reading #4, but I'd like to hear what people have to say about it.
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# ? Jan 12, 2015 19:56 |
Uncle Boogeyman posted:the art is at such a higher level than the writing.
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# ? Jan 12, 2015 20:01 |
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Nah that's straight up true. I like the book and it has a nice mixture of character beats and shock moments but without Staples design or being able to bounce between sweet and gross the book wouldn't be getting as much of an impact given all the delays.
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# ? Jan 12, 2015 20:07 |
Waterhaul posted:
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# ? Jan 12, 2015 20:11 |
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I adore each volume of Saga as it comes it but also feel vaguely annoyed by it, I think y'all are touching on this feeling with the comments about smugness. It's still witty and gorgeous and more fun than most other comics I've seen, but drat is it impressed with itself. I'm catching back up on Deadly Class and read a scene about "superhero detox," I need to embrace the alternatives/indies harder than I have capes. Lady Killer, Bitch Planet, The Kitchen, Groo, Letter 44, The Woods, Wytches, Trees, Mind MGMT, Southern Bastards, Wicked + The Divine, Lumberjanes, Little Nemo: Return to Slumberland... all aces. East of West and Pretty Deadly have left me cold, though. I'll hold out for them in library trades.
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# ? Jan 18, 2015 07:31 |
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Saga is OK, but it's not a patch on his totally indie Private Eye.
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# ? Jan 18, 2015 07:45 |
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My comic book store dude told me the next weird 90s image reboot will be a Brian Wood Spawn. Prophet and Supreme: Blue Rose have been amazing, but even as a Wood fan I have some reservations about a new Spawn.
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# ? Jan 18, 2015 14:23 |
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:doublepost:
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# ? Jan 18, 2015 14:26 |
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The Image Expo announce that Paul Jenkins is taking over from McFarlane while he does a new creator owned book so the Wood thing ain't gonna happen.
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# ? Jan 18, 2015 14:31 |
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Space Fish posted:
I'm subscribed on ComiXology to Deadly Class an The Wicked + The Divine, love them both though TW+TD is probably my favourite. Considered going with Letter 44 and The Kitchen, but I'm just going with for the TPBs or whatever the digital versions are called, kinda tempted by Lumberjanes too after getting #1 either in a sale or FCBD.
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# ? Jan 22, 2015 00:45 |
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Anime_Otaku posted:I'm subscribed on ComiXology to Deadly Class an The Wicked + The Divine, love them both though TW+TD is probably my favourite. Considered going with Letter 44 and The Kitchen, but I'm just going with for the TPBs or whatever the digital versions are called, kinda tempted by Lumberjanes too after getting #1 either in a sale or FCBD. Wicked and Devine nailed it today. One of the best yet. So much good stuff. Woden as a horrible racist PUA nice guy was brilliant.
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# ? Jan 22, 2015 00:53 |
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Started reading Stray Bullets from the beginning. Excellent, but holy god do I want to jump off a cliff. Did the new miniseries actually come out this week? Haven't made it to LCS yet.
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# ? Jan 23, 2015 05:01 |
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profbobo posted:Started reading Stray Bullets from the beginning. Excellent, but holy god do I want to jump off a cliff. Did the new miniseries actually come out this week? Haven't made it to LCS yet. There really is no other comic quite like it. I don't believe the second new miniseries has begun, although the first was recently collected in a trade.
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# ? Jan 23, 2015 13:43 |
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Shitshow posted:There really is no other comic quite like it. I don't believe the second new miniseries has begun, although the first was recently collected in a trade. Yep SB: Killers just came out in TPB, while the new series SB: Sunshine and Roses starts February 4. It goes back to the past and I think we find out how Orson and Beth got out of Baltimore.
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# ? Jan 23, 2015 18:09 |
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Just finished killers. This series is so good but so soul crushing.
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# ? Jan 24, 2015 04:54 |
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profbobo posted:Started reading Stray Bullets from the beginning. Excellent, but holy god do I want to jump off a cliff. Did the new miniseries actually come out this week? Haven't made it to LCS yet. Man, I've been reading Stray Bullets for the past few weeks, from a digital bundle I picked up months ago--about 20 issues in now--and yeah, there's something amazingly compelling about it. What's especially cool is that each issue feels like a complete story, and yet they still build on each other. I want to know everything about all the characters; for once, I'm reading compulsively for character, not plot. I've also never read a comic that deals with time like this one does. Mostly, I love digital, but I feel like this is one that would really benefit from paper, so I could flip back and forth more easily to piece together the timelines. (Or I'll just look the timelines up online once I finish the run.)
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# ? Jan 26, 2015 18:12 |
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Anyone else following Zero? I'd stopped reading comics for a couple of years due to lack of interest in anything coming out but Zero's suckered me back in. The artwork is so-so but the plot is riveting - it's nothing new or ground-breaking but Ales Kot does such a good job of conveying the protagonist's mindset though so few words.
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# ? Jan 26, 2015 18:24 |
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Zero delivers meaty-rear end fights every issue now, awesome
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# ? Jan 28, 2015 19:05 |
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The Dying and the Dead was so great. Hickman can apparently do no wrong. And that Ryan Bodenheim art was spectacular.
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# ? Jan 28, 2015 20:42 |
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Just finished reading Asterios Polyp, and to put it succinctly: this is a comics textbook. Everything about it is incredible. The ending is a little strange and doesn't quite fit the tone of the book, but I think maybe it was Mazzuchelli's way of saying, "don't take this too seriously."
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# ? Jan 31, 2015 23:00 |
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I can't finish Asterios Polyp without crying. Partly at the melancholy of the story and partly at the pure beauty of the whole thing as a piece of art. EDIT: Oh and I guess, uh, farts, butts, buttholes and jizz farts.
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# ? Feb 1, 2015 02:00 |
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I just read Asterios Polyp too! It was good. Loved the relationship between 'Sterio and Hana. Especially the way it was represented visually, with the two art styles that represented them converging and diverging at different points. I also just finished Y: The Last Man. Goddamn it, 355.
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# ? Feb 1, 2015 06:59 |
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Baron Fuzzlewhack posted:Just finished reading Asterios Polyp, and to put it succinctly: this is a comics textbook. Along this line, one review I read (and agree with) thought it was significant that the visit to the crater happens in the middle of the book, so that dead center of the book is a big picture of a hole with the main character saying "that's quite a hole". Mazzuchelli is just acknowledging the holes in his own book.
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# ? Feb 1, 2015 07:41 |
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StumblyWumbly posted:Along this line, one review I read (and agree with) thought it was significant that the visit to the crater happens in the middle of the book, so that dead center of the book is a big picture of a hole with the main character saying "that's quite a hole". Mazzuchelli is just acknowledging the holes in his own book. Man, it's these details that make me appreciate the book even more, and it's why I call it a comics textbook. Mazzuchelli has an incredible command over comics design and visual cues, and he teaches comic book storytelling at a university, so I was musing that he wrote Asterios Polyp as a textbook for his own students.
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# ? Feb 1, 2015 08:30 |
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Hedrigall posted:I also just finished Y: The Last Man. Goddamn it, 355. The last issue of Y is probably my favorite series finale issue of any comic. I especially love how Yorick talks about how before growing up, you need to take the time to enjoy playing with cowboys and spacemen and robots, and it clicking on me that he's actually referencing stuff he did indeed do from the series. Also, while I think that Y is a comic that actually would make a good movie series, I'm really glad the attempt to film it with Shia LaBeouf at Yorick fell apart. Chairman Capone fucked around with this message at 22:41 on Feb 1, 2015 |
# ? Feb 1, 2015 22:38 |
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StumblyWumbly posted:Along this line, one review I read (and agree with) thought it was significant that the visit to the crater happens in the middle of the book, so that dead center of the book is a big picture of a hole with the main character saying "that's quite a hole". Mazzuchelli is just acknowledging the holes in his own book. I always thought of it as an admission of the failings of aestheticism, the intellectual/analytical nature of the book, and Asterios's own philosophy. There's not lots of holes (which would denote holes in the story to me), but one big gaping hole in the middle of it all. Whatever heart this book has is what you filled it in with, yourself.
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# ? Feb 2, 2015 05:53 |
I keep reading Manhattan Projects and I have no idea if I like it or not. I think the ideas are pretty cool and whatnot, but it could really benefit from having some focus. Years seemingly pass between issues and it just doesn't really feel like it's building up to anything. Like in trade 5, when Star City gets taken over, that seemed like a moment that should have had more impact, but it was met with a shrug from most of the other characters. A lot of the characters don't really feel fleshed out in a way that I would understand what motivates them besides SCIENCE! or really even anything about a lot of their personalities. Yet despite this, I find myself intrigued by it, but maybe I am just deluded by the hope that it will all culminate in something. I really can't explain it.
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# ? Feb 2, 2015 20:54 |
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I was actually kind of luke warm on Manhattan Projects when I first read it, but I've liked it more and more every time I've read it since then. I usually reread it right before a new trade comes out.
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# ? Feb 3, 2015 21:14 |
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I still can't believe that Hickman has plans to go to like issue 60 with East of West (well, I can believe it, but you know). I'm going to be downright elderly by the time it finishes.
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# ? Feb 3, 2015 21:22 |
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redbackground posted:I still can't believe that Hickman has plans to go to like issue 60 with East of West (well, I can believe it, but you know). I'm going to be downright elderly by the time it finishes. 16 issues plus a special in two years isn't really that slow at all.
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# ? Feb 3, 2015 21:24 |
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Endless Mike posted:16 issues plus a special in two years isn't really that slow at all.
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# ? Feb 3, 2015 22:10 |
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60 issues was the gold standard for ye olde Vertigo classics like Transmetropolitan, Y: The Last Man and Preacher.
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# ? Feb 3, 2015 23:07 |
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I think 60 is the perfect amount. 75 is really good as well. Long enough to do the big things, but not so long that it all goes to poo poo, ala fables.
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# ? Feb 4, 2015 02:30 |
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100 Bullets managed its admirable run just well, but the title itself called for such length and it always had the perfect balance of standalone stories to the big arc.
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# ? Feb 4, 2015 08:00 |
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fatherboxx posted:60 issues was the gold standard for ye olde Vertigo classics like Transmetropolitan, Y: The Last Man and Preacher. Or 300 for Hellblazer.
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# ? Feb 4, 2015 21:00 |
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# ? May 23, 2024 16:07 |
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Just read through the first two issues of Image's ODY-C, then read them again. Fantastic stuff.
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# ? Feb 8, 2015 00:14 |