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Post by Cei-U! on Dec 16, 2015 8:39:41 GMT -5
I' m a bit hazy on the specifics on the when and how of my first exposure to the subject of today's post. At some point in my preadolescence I ran across a collection of cartoons from that paragon of taste and style, Playboy, a collection old enough to include Jack Cole's work for the magazine. But it wasn't Plastic Man's poppa who caught my attention. It was a cartoon of two Eskimos staring up at a bunch of westbound Russian missiles passing a bunch of eastbound American missiles, one of the pair calmly stating, “Well, that's the end of civilization as they know it.” That was the moment I first fell in love with #9. Gahan Wilson When, a few years later, I discovered that this sultan of sick humor was a regular contributor to National Lampoon, his strip therein became the first thing I turned to every month (yes, even before the boob-filled Foto Funnies). As the sample above indicates, “Nuts” was a look back at childhood dependent not on nostalgia but on a hilariously unblinking exposure of the fears, neuroses and confusions of our supposedly innocent youth. Even that monthly dose proved not enough, so I began checking his books out of the library, beginning with the cartoon collection “I Paint What I See.” The award-winning Wilson is still with us at age 85, still drawing. His work is still packed with the morbid, the gross, the twisted… and I wouldn't want it any other way. Cei-U! I summon the modern day master of macabre mirth! By the way, this is the selection inspired by a casual comment of shax's over in the Advance Warning thread. Something he said took my mind to the great Charles Addams, from whence Gahan Wilson was just a hop, skip and jump away. Thanx, shax!
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Dec 16, 2015 9:12:20 GMT -5
9. P. Craig RussellThere's little doubt in my mind that Russell's strongest work was always done with a collaborator, particularly the Elric stories he did with Roy Thomas for Marvel and Pacific, but much like pizza, even bad P. Craig Russell is still P. Craig Russell. Even when the writing or the art falters a little, it's still so completely epic in expression and magnitude. The best solo Russell work I've seen is his version of Ring of the Nibelung. There just isn't another artist in the field like Russell, he's a decent storyteller to boot, and his taste in fantasy source material is...well...fantastic.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 16, 2015 9:18:48 GMT -5
Number 9 - Dale Messick - Creator of Brenda StarrI'm a big fan of the redheads and Brenda Starr is no exception and one of the classiest female reporter in Comic Book History and I read Dale's stuff in both Comic Books and Newspaper and I could not get enough of her in the 70's to the mid-80's when my local newspaper pull the plug on Brenda. I have close to 30-50 Comics Books and bunch of Newspaper Clippings of her during the 70's that I wished that I still have them. Speaking of Redheads - Brenda Starr was created by Dale Messick who happen to be a big fan of Rita Hayworth and so do I. I love Brenda and Rita on an equal level and that's why I adore redheads ... check out my Avatar and you see why! Speaking of Comic Books, this book below you is my prized Comic Book of Brenda Starr and I consider this one of the iconic Brenda Starr stories ever. I have one in Near Mint Condition and it's in my Bank Vault for safekeeping. Gorgeous Colors and Sizzling Romance too!
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Dec 16, 2015 9:51:34 GMT -5
9. P. Craig RussellThere's little doubt in my mind that Russell's strongest work was always done with a collaborator, particularly the Elric stories he did with Roy Thomas for Marvel and Pacific, but much like pizza, even bad P. Craig Russell is still P. Craig Russell. Even when the writing or the art falters a little, it's still so completely epic in expression and magnitude. The best solo Russell work I've seen is his version of Ring of the Nibelung. A few excerpts: [/spolier] I agree with your assessment of the amazing work Russell did on The Ring, but... that second image is by Gil Kane! The first image from Siegfried (I believe I saw it in Epic magazine #2) always struck me as the perfect rendition of Wagner's vision. I much prefer it to the way Russell depicted the same event in his Ring of the Nibelung comic; it was somehow more magical.
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Dec 16, 2015 10:06:02 GMT -5
On the fourth day of Christmas, my psychedelic fantasy and sci-fi provider gave to me... #9 Philippe Druillet
I made a conscious attempt to limit my list to creators that had a good chance of being known by American readers, and so bypassed European favorites like Cosey, Auclair, Greg, Franquin and several others... but even if his work hadn't been seen in Heavy Metal, Druillet would have been a shoo in. It's pretty hard to describe the impact Druillet had when he presented his astonishing pages in the journal Pilote. Nobody, but nobody, drew the way he did. His pages were massive things filled with twisted creatures and architecture, straight out of a drug-induced dream that a H. P. Lovecraft might have had. Filled with artistic or psychological references, Druillet's art was basically the stuff that dreams are made of. He was one of the first artists to depict the world of Michael Moorcock's Elric (a match made in heaven if ever there was one), and these scenes from Yragael show us what a Druillet graphic novel starring the albino prince would have looked like: Druillet's signature character is the adventurer Loane Sloane, who started as a pre-Han Solo type space rogue and ended up something of a sorcerer... (He was a huge influence on my own comics, I must admit). Later on, Druillet adapted Gustave Flaubert's novel Salammbo into a space/fantasy adventure. Lovely, lovely stuff. More recent works (the end of the Lone Sloane series, and notably the long-awaited Delirius II) were disappointments... but in the '70s, nobody touched Druillet. He was in a class all his own.
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Post by hondobrode on Dec 16, 2015 10:47:52 GMT -5
9. P. Craig RussellThere's little doubt in my mind that Russell's strongest work was always done with a collaborator, particularly the Elric stories he did with Roy Thomas for Marvel and Pacific, but much like pizza, even bad P. Craig Russell is still P. Craig Russell. Even when the writing or the art falters a little, it's still so completely epic in expression and magnitude. The best solo Russell work I've seen is his version of Ring of the Nibelung. There just isn't another artist in the field like Russell, he's a decent storyteller to boot, and his taste in fantasy source material is...well...fantastic. Another work he did that burned into young Hondo's mind early in his fandom was the Eclipse graphic novel Night Music. Russell's work is poetry. There are only a handful of artist's I could appropriately use that term with. Highly recommended
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Dec 16, 2015 10:55:16 GMT -5
but... that second image is by Gil Kane! Thanks for this! I was posting from work veeeeery quickly, and our network blocks most images, so I grabbed the first few I could and slipped up in the quality control department. I didn't think it looked up to Russell's quality but just assumed with a quick glance that it was the recoloring or inking.
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Confessor
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Post by Confessor on Dec 16, 2015 11:21:52 GMT -5
My #9 pick has appeared on a few people's lists already, but Gary Larson's The Far Side is hands down my favourite series of newspaper cartoons ever. While he's maybe not technically the most incredible artist in the world, he's very adept at getting the mechanics of his gags across, with a minimum of fuss and confusion. Larson's work frequently makes me properly laugh out loud too, as opposed to Charles M. Schulz and Maurice Dodd (both of whose work I also really like), who tend to elicit the occasional snigger from me, rather than a full out laugh. There's also a nice thread of surrealism in Larson's work that greatly appeals to me as well. Anyway, they say a picture is worth a thousand words, so here's some Gary Larson greatness... ...and possibly my favourite Far Side cartoon of all..
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Post by hondobrode on Dec 16, 2015 11:32:36 GMT -5
My # 9 comes in from the Depression. He wrote and drew about heinous crimes with oodles of blood, mobsters, dames, shoot-outs with coppers, hard-nosed detective work and a guy named Dick. Chester Gould did it all and he did it for a long time, from 1931-1977 with a rogue's gallery that could rival Batman. Extreme charactures molded into personalities like Flattop Jones, Shaky, Mumbles, Breathless Mahoney, Pruneface, and countless others. While his drawings are primitive, they are primary-colored panels bursting with action and motion. I used to cut the Tracy strips out of the Sunday funnies and collect them and had a separate shoe box full of Crimestopper's Textbooks, each week giving another tip to decent citizens on how to protect themselves or spot clues when something's up. One of my younger brother's memories was when I read him the Dick Tracy limited collectors edition DC put out in the 70's. I can still remember how I read Flattop with a heavy nasal-y voice. Years later, I would move to Oklahoma, home of Gould. My father-in-law was in the same frat as Gould. I've been to the Dick Tracy Museum in Pawnee, OK, Gould's birthplace. Officially the Pawnee County Historical Society Museum and proud owner of my black and yellow Tracy mug I have my coffee with every morning before work. Strips, cartoons, comics, movies, radio shows, etc. Timeless eternal classic Dick Tracy and the gang, one favorite I never tire of.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Dec 16, 2015 11:49:54 GMT -5
Coming in at number 9... Will Eisner. Beyond his ground-breaking work on The Spirit (and yes I know he had a number of assistants and ghosts, but it was still Eisner's show) he made the graphic novel a viable format in the U.S. and in many ways was at the forefront of making comic books respectable. He also did something that almost nobody else has managed to do...he made slice-of-life comics interesting to me. Overall I find that sort of thing devolves into navel-gazing. But with Eisner it never was anything less than entertaining and interesting. His graphic novel The Dreamer is still my favorite look at the early history of the comic industry. And To the Heart of the Storm is arguably my favorite original graphic novel and is a brilliant look at the end of an era.
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Crimebuster
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Post by Crimebuster on Dec 16, 2015 11:51:50 GMT -5
but... that second image is by Gil Kane! Thanks for this! I was posting from work veeeeery quickly, and our network blocks most images, so I grabbed the first few I could and slipped up in the quality control department. I didn't think it looked up to Russell's quality but just assumed with a quick glance that it was the recoloring or inking. I think your new second image is still Gil Kane! The last panel up-the-nose shot gives it away.
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Post by coke & comics on Dec 16, 2015 11:53:33 GMT -5
9. Darwyn Cooke...for his work on DC: The New Frontier Everything needs its meta-masterpiece. One great work that ties is all together, drawing on what has come before. The Marvel Universe had Marvels, a love letter to the universe from Busiek and Ross, showing what it was like to live in the Marvel Universe, to experience its great moments of triumph and tragedy, as somebody just outside those events, taking us from the Golden Age through the end of the Silver Age. DC had a couple stabs at this. James Robinson’s Golden Age. Kingdom Come by Waid and Ross. For DC, their meta-masterpiece is Darwyn Cooke’s New Frontier. It tells a story at once on three levels, giving us a fresh take on events within the comics, letting those events reflect what was going on behind the scenes in the comics publishing world, while at the same time what was going on in America. It is about as perfectly realized a tale as I could imagine. I first encountered Cooke in 2000 with Batman: Ego, a really cool little psychological Batman thriller and liked it. I encountered him sometimes as a writer, sometimes as a penciller, sometimes as both. He wrote a couple great stories in Spider-Man’s Tangled Web, a series filled with great stories from great creators (Brubaker’s Last Shoot being my favorite). He really made his name for me telling Slam Bradley-focused Catwoman stories in Detective Comics with Ed Brubaker, before the two split ways over creative differences. Cooke would not leave noir behind, as his Slam Bradley work was basically warm-up for his eventual acclaim adapting the stories of Parker. But it’s New Frontier I love the most. The comic has only grown on me over the years. I reread it just a few months ago and loved it far more than I did upon my first read more than 10 years ago. It also adapted nicely into an animated film, perhaps the best of its type they have put out.
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Crimebuster
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Post by Crimebuster on Dec 16, 2015 11:58:11 GMT -5
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Post by MDG on Dec 16, 2015 12:48:05 GMT -5
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Dec 16, 2015 12:51:52 GMT -5
I really didn't think that New Frontier was old enough to allow Cooke to meet the criteria. Holy Shit I'm getting old.
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