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Rhyno posted:I'm clearly trolling and have been since I mentioned ADTRW%^*&whatever the gently caress it's called. Jesus guys. That doesn't mean that manga isn't terrible. Hey if multiple people are asking you if you're trolling it's not clear dogg. That is kind of what clear means.
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# ? May 23, 2018 04:16 |
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# ? Jun 4, 2024 19:54 |
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CharlestheHammer posted:The whole point of my post was pissing contests between two similar mediums was stupid. You're terrible at posting in that case.
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# ? May 23, 2018 04:16 |
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purple death ray posted:Hey if multiple people are asking you if you're trolling it's not clear dogg. That is kind of what clear means. Well FINE. We need sarcasm tags back.
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# ? May 23, 2018 04:17 |
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Skwirl posted:You're terrible at posting in that case. Lol how Think before you post my dude
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# ? May 23, 2018 04:21 |
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# ? May 23, 2018 04:22 |
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Rhyno posted:Well FINE. The world mourns the loss of the sarcmark.
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# ? May 23, 2018 04:25 |
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Gynovore posted:The world mourns the loss of the sarcmark. Way back in the day we had vb code for sarcasm since nobody was able to tell if anyone was being serious about anything. https://forums.somethingawful.com/dictionary.php?act=3&topicid=277
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# ? May 23, 2018 04:32 |
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Thats my secret, captain Im always sarcastic
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# ? May 23, 2018 04:36 |
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CharlestheHammer posted:Lol how Go gently caress yourself troll.
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# ? May 23, 2018 04:41 |
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So, an office worker gets stuck in a time loop. Groundhog day-style, he wakes up every day on the same morning, and at night he's taunted by the ghost of a kid he knew in highschool. ( read right to left ) From Mizukami Satoshi's anthology of short comics. What I find inspiring about Mizukami's work is that you can find almost every comic he's ever made, from his high-school scribbles to his modern big-budget anime-adapted projects. You can watch his writing and artwork evolving over twenty years of dedication to his craft. As a general thread question, who's your favourite creator who's evolved most over their career? Share some inspiring improvement!
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# ? May 23, 2018 05:31 |
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Skwirl posted:Go gently caress yourself troll. What are you talking about I think you mixed me up with Rhyno
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# ? May 23, 2018 05:52 |
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Skwirl is Mah Waifu, he ain't mixing us up.
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# ? May 23, 2018 05:56 |
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Okay maybe he is an extreme comics partisan. In which case chill out dude
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# ? May 23, 2018 06:00 |
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Life must be hard for some BSS posters, any time they see something remotely tied to those filthy "animes" they transform into frothing berserkers, eager to defend the sanctity of good, pure, american Comic Books from the corrupting touch of Japan. If you guys saw a real life Japanese person would you just like, explode? uh oh watch out here comes some of that filthy manga from earlier in this very thread Mr Wind Up Bird posted:I'm gonna dust these off again since we're posting sad dog panels fuuuuuuuuuuuck
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# ? May 23, 2018 07:53 |
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I've never read that boxing comic before, and I don't care about boxing particularly, but those pages were really beautifully paced and inspired me to start reading the whole thing. I think sometimes the differences in the way Western superhero comics and other kinds of comics are structured, and the rhythms their respective formats tend to encourage or cultivate, make it difficult to post brief snippets in threads like these (I've seen pages from various shonen that really worked in their context as payoff to pages of choreography of years of emotional build-up fall flat when presented here as just, "hey, look at this"), but a lot of the time I think people are just digging in their heels and sticking with a kind of provincial formal defensiveness that felt hoary 15 years ago.
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# ? May 23, 2018 09:59 |
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Comics people drive like this, and anime people drive like this!
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# ? May 23, 2018 10:51 |
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I read those panels from Hajime No Ippo. And I am sure that Infinitium got a lot from them. And I believe that it probably acts as a perfect final act to 30+ years of story. And it is almost certainly thematic for a story about boxing and strength that the ultimate opponent is time... But I laughed my rear end off after all the build up of information given in Infinitum post and the panel posted is showing the main character knocked flat on his rear end.
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# ? May 23, 2018 10:54 |
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Mangas are good but it's hard to post climatic sequences because they're not contained like american comics and most of you folk don't have the encyclopedic knowledge about their characters like you have with western ones, so if you want to post a cool moment you gotta make a little effortpost like Infinitum did to catch everyone up and even then it probably won't be very effective.
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# ? May 23, 2018 16:42 |
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Nah, pretty sure there are multiple panels in every single issue of Lone Wolf and Cub that you could post. Panels that are only badass if you’ve been reading hundreds of issues of buildup aren’t in fact badass. Oops. This isn’t the badass thread, where this argument normally breaks out. Same goes for touching / inspiring though.
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# ? May 23, 2018 18:18 |
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Jordan7hm posted:Nah, pretty sure there are multiple panels in every single issue of Lone Wolf and Cub that you could post. I mean Lone Wolf and Cub is kind of interesting to me in that I've often thought about putting scenes of it in the badass thread, but run into fundamental differences in pacing and rhythm that make it difficult to include a satisfying build-up and a satisfying climax within the limited page count these threads have to work with. As a thought experiment, take, say, the justly famous scene early on in which the bad-guy, his throat slashed open, hears the wind singing in the cut-- one of the slickest and most poetic bits of economic violence in all comics-- and try to convey what works about it without the much different tempo of the pages on either side of it to throw it into relief. Lone Wolf and Cub is exceptionally good at a trick I think a lot of good action manga has taken from it, namely using rapid shifts in how time progresses from panel to panel to manipulate tension and generate excitement. (Sarah Horrocks has a provocative essay about this principle and how it works in Blade of the Immortal here) Western comics, I think, treat the space of the "fight scene" as more of a tableau, in which (well, ideally) legibility and clarity of expression take precedence over cinematic techniques. Jim Steranko's classic Nick Fury splash-pages are where my mind immediately goes-- that beautiful frozen-in-time sensation of knowing exactly where all the players are positioned, with the necessary crash into action and mayhem being left to the imagination of the reader. Even Kirby, who was often much less interested in tight choreography than pitching the drama of a fight, treated his figures, imo, more like sculpures than actors, with his super dynamic and distorted poses used to condense the psychic drama of a character rather than to imply a logical "next" panel. If you see a Kirby of the panel of the Thing getting ready to clobber, you immediately know where Ben Grimm's head is at even if you can't necessarily guess just where his punch is going to land. Aside from the fact that most of us reading this forum are more accustomed to Western comics and therefore have just internalized a lot of the tricks and grammar that suddenly look weird if you think about them too hard (I remember the first time I read Understanding Comics, going back and flipping through some random Rob Liefeld X-Force I had lying around, and trying to figure out how the hell I'd stitched a cohesive throughline out of what he'd actually put down on the page), I think the Western style just lends itself better to the 1-4 page excerpt, because the panels are, often, doing a different, denser kind of visual and narrative labor. I mean, people talk about decompression in American superhero comics as a symptom of bloat, but some of the most thrilling fights I've seen in this medium were stretched out over dozens of manga chapters, while others took up a handful of tight Ditko-drawn pages. I don't think that's really a condemnation of either so much as an endorsement of both. How Wonderful! fucked around with this message at 20:10 on May 23, 2018 |
# ? May 23, 2018 19:29 |
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Choco1980 posted:Comics people drive like this, and anime people drive like this! Checks out. I drive and read American.
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# ? May 23, 2018 19:49 |
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Archyduke posted:I mean Lone Wolf and Cub is kind of interesting to me in that I've often thought about putting scenes of it in .....
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# ? May 23, 2018 19:51 |
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What's funny to me about Hajime no Ippo is that his coach is, by all rights, a complete loving moron. His oh-so-wise strategy for Ippo boils down to "tank that punch with your head!" and "FIGHTING SPIRIT!" I don't know if he even taught Ippo how to dodge punches. His teachings are the main reason Ippo's been forced to retire so early, and absolutely no one calls him out on it. I'd even say he's the main antagonist here. The series could've been a lot better if it explored the idea of Ippo getting away from his coach's toxic influence and found someone who could actually teach him how to box better. Instead it just kept teasing Ippo will rise to the next level and spun its wheels. There's also Ippo's completely hosed up relationship with his kinda-sorta-girlfriend, but that's another can of worms.
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# ? May 23, 2018 20:18 |
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Jordan7hm posted:Nah, pretty sure there are multiple panels in every single issue of Lone Wolf and Cub that you could post. What that’s not true, it’s in fact the opposite. Panels with no real build up are generally lame or trying way to hard.
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# ? May 23, 2018 21:15 |
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amigolupus posted:What's funny to me about Hajime no Ippo is that his coach is, by all rights, a complete loving moron. His oh-so-wise strategy for Ippo boils down to "tank that punch with your head!" and "FIGHTING SPIRIT!" I don't know if he even taught Ippo how to dodge punches. His teachings are the main reason Ippo's been forced to retire so early, and absolutely no one calls him out on it. I'd even say he's the main antagonist here. It's shocking how long Ippo's career has been considering his best defensive strategy is "Run face first into their fist before they can fully extend" Also kind of hilarious how little concern Coach has for Ippo's health considering his backstory. edit: I adore HnI, but it's definitely got its share of problems, my "favorite" being the casual racism peppered throughout.
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# ? May 24, 2018 00:27 |
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There is nothing casual about the racism in HnI.
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# ? May 24, 2018 00:40 |
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Cuchulain posted:fuuuuuuuuuuuck WE3 is great. OK, it's essentially The Incredible Journey meets Short Circuit, but it has the best splash pages I've ever seen.
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# ? May 24, 2018 01:13 |
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Archyduke posted:As a thought experiment, take, say, the justly famous scene early on in which the bad-guy, his throat slashed open, hears the wind singing in the cut-- one of the slickest and most poetic bits of economic violence in all comics-- and try to convey what works about it without the much different tempo of the pages on either side of it to throw it into relief. This is a good post and I need to read Lone Wolf and Cub now. Would you mind posting these pages? I'm really curious how the pacing of that sequence works.
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# ? May 24, 2018 01:32 |
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Bit of a derail, but... Lone Wolf and Cub is fantastic.CharlestheHammer posted:What that’s not true, it’s in fact the opposite. Panels with no real build up are generally lame or trying way to hard. Panels and pages can be better with build up but still stand on their own. These are three pages from the first DH volume (reversed for my western eyes) that I think stand pretty well on their own. It's even got a sweet action hero one-liner at the end. They are still better if you've read the first part of the issue where he fights his way through the eight gates (women warriors) before this scene. They are yet better if you've read a ton of LW&C and understand the character better, and the themes and tone that Koike and Kojima use throughout the entire work. But I think they stand up against almost everything we see in the badass thread. Archyduke posted:a good post That said I don't really disagree with this. I have a lot of trouble with manga in general because it doesn't fit the storytelling structures I'm used to, even as somebody who reads a ton of bizarre indie stuff. I struggle with pages long fight scenes without dialogue. I think so many western comics have specifically riffed on LW&C that it's a much easier read for western audiences. We've come at this very specific type of story from the other direction, and we're already used to a lot of the conventions. e: And to bring it back to touching / inspiring moments, I think this type of story makes touching moments a lot harder to pull out in single panels or pages than badass moments. It's a story about a samurai assassin who kills 1-100 people every issue. There are a ton of badass moments. The touching moments are kind of on the margins, and really do have more weight when you know the characters. I was going to post some great Daigoru moments but then I realized they are way more badass than touching. That kid is hard as hell. Jordan7hm fucked around with this message at 02:35 on May 24, 2018 |
# ? May 24, 2018 02:27 |
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Jordan7hm posted:Bit of a derail, but... Lone Wolf and Cub is fantastic. A lot of panels in this thread don’t really work unless you are familiar with the character which most of are gonna be.
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# ? May 24, 2018 03:03 |
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Jedit posted:WE3 is great. OK, it's essentially The Incredible Journey meets Short Circuit, but it has the best splash pages I've ever seen. Yeah WE3 is fantastic (read: heartbreaking). So is Stargazing Dog.
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# ? May 24, 2018 03:15 |
*whispering* I didn't care for We3
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# ? May 24, 2018 03:19 |
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Lurdiak posted:*whispering* I didn't care for We3 Cool. Meanwhile I'm looking at the panels Cuchulain posted and legit getting teary-eyed. We3 was fantastic.
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# ? May 24, 2018 12:49 |
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Rhaka posted:This is a good post and I need to read Lone Wolf and Cub now. Would you mind posting these pages? I'm really curious how the pacing of that sequence works. Sure. For the sake of the argument, and for brevity, I've tried to reduce it to the fewest pages possible. Note that these are from the Dark Horse edition so they read left-to-right. Now just for fun I guess, here are the three pages just prior to those, in which not a lot happens per se but which, I think, contribute to what makes the scene iconic-- it's kind of basic but I think a good translation into a static medium of the long walk-up you see in so many Westerns and chanbara flicks: And the one page after it, the final page of the issue. The caption in the last panel is pure macho camp, way excessive, but I love it: This is all from vol. 3 of the manga, The Flute of the Fallen Tiger, which is $6 on Comixology right now. How Wonderful! fucked around with this message at 15:48 on May 24, 2018 |
# ? May 24, 2018 15:44 |
So someone's been posting basically the entirety of What If #44 - What If Captain America Was Revived Today? on twitter and pointing out its social relevance in these current times. That's as good an excuse as any to post the climax here. If you haven't read this comic, you really should go and do so, it's probably the best Captain America story ever written. It's available on Comixology, physically as part of the What If Classics collection TPB, and on Marvel's Digital Comics Shop. Don't confuse it with the 1994 comic of the same name! Anyway the context is: Cap's frozen body was never found, thus the Avengers didn't last. Then the paranoid xenophobic "commie-smasher" Cap and Bucky from the 50s were unfrozen by a so-called patriot, and while pretending to be the real deal, he was used as a prop by fascists to gain power and turn America into a racist fascist nightmare with walled ghettos, armed guards on every street corner, and racism codified into law. Then the real deal gets unfrozen, sees what's happened, and joins with an underground resistance led by Nick Fury to take on the impostor. Now here is the really important part. After the fight is over, Cap addresses the crowd. Gavok's favorite line from this great comic is "Get up so I can knock you down!", which is pretty classic. But mine is "A nation is nothing! A flag is a piece of cloth!!". It's something we could do well to remember in these jingoistic times. Lurdiak fucked around with this message at 21:17 on May 24, 2018 |
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# ? May 24, 2018 21:10 |
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Is it okay to ask for the twitter link or is that ? I'm interested in reading that analysis.
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# ? May 24, 2018 21:43 |
AnonSpore posted:Is it okay to ask for the twitter link or is that ? I'm interested in reading that analysis. I'm gonna say it's unless someone tells me it isn't.
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# ? May 24, 2018 22:03 |
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if its an analysis and not just a flat out pirate link to the book i dont see what the harm is
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# ? May 24, 2018 22:54 |
site posted:if its an analysis and not just a flat out pirate link to the book i dont see what the harm is Its literally every single page in a twitter thread. One of them even still has the watermark for the piracy site.
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# ? May 24, 2018 23:53 |
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# ? Jun 4, 2024 19:54 |
Servoret posted:Cool. Meanwhile I'm looking at the panels Cuchulain posted and legit getting teary-eyed. We3 was fantastic. Those are the pages that get me every. loving. Time. "U. R. Bandit."
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# ? May 25, 2018 01:42 |