No snark for this one. These two have a hard enough time.
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Monday, February 07, 2011
Art Show: Cat Women
By Rick Burchett. [From the graphic novel he's working on with writer Christopher Mills]
Fanciful Submarines
By Andrew George Brown. [Lots more at Etsy by way of Wondermark]
From the Depths
By Matt Wiegle. [Seriously, if you're not reading his and Sean T Collins Destructor webcomic - from which this is a page - you're missing out.]
Aquaman: King of the Seas
By Braden D Lamb.
A Naiad
By John William Waterhouse. [Golden Age Comic Book Stories]
Princess Pantha
By Alex Schomburg. [Golden Age Comic Book Stories]
Ka-Zar, Shanna, and Zabu
By Brent Anderson. [Giant-Size Marvel]
Jungle Girl
By Red LYUBA. [More here]
Tigra
By Jason Barton.
Monday, September 20, 2010
Art Show: Ape and Human United Against Mutated (and Tentacled) Monsters
By Grant Gould.
By Jessica Hickman. At some point I asked Grant and Jess to draw me as a pirate. I can't believe I've never shared these before.
Too Heavy to Fly
By Jeremy Vanhoozer.
After the break: giant fish, Planet of the Squid, merpirates, and DC's undersea heroines
Thursday, January 07, 2010
Books and Comics News: Aquapeople, Holmes, and Turf
I'm always interested in ways to fix Aquaman's public image, because I don't think it should be as hard as DC seems to think it is. I mean, look at how cool he is in Batman: The Brave and the Bold. Neal Adams gets it too:
All he's ever needed was … hmmm … to be … oh, 6'3". To have the densest muscles of anyone on Earth … to swim like a powerboat with a costume that turns him into a creature OF the sea … and what he's always had … the ability to command any creature of the sea to drive RIGHT UP YOUR … imagination.I'd add that he needs a defined personality that people actually like, but otherwise that works for me.
Big plans for Mera
Speaking of Aquaman, his wife has seen a lot of action in Blackest Night and Blackest Night: Wonder Woman lately, but according to Geoff Johns it's not going to end there. In this interview with Newsarama, Johns says, "She’ll be someone I’ll be working with in 2010, 2011 and beyond." It's about time she got some of the spotlight. [The Aquaman Shrine]
Sherlock Pulp
I'm planning to finally see Sherlock Holmes tonight. My expectations have been lowered by lukewarm reviews, but I'm still excited to see it. I haven't asked too many questions of my friends who've seen it for fear of spoilers, but I wonder whether they're turned off by the shift from mystery genre to action. I'm looking forward to finding out.
Which brings me to the above image: Hard Case Crime's decidedly non-mystery-looking cover to one of Arthur Conan Doyle's Holmes novels. It's obviously not marketed to hard-core Holmes fans. Looking at it through my Holmes-fan eyes, I'm bothered about how it removes pretty much everything I like about those stories. But viewing it as a pulp fan - as Ron Fortier does - I think it rules. I suspect that my enjoyment of Guy Ritchie's movie will depend heavily on my ability to take off my Deerstalker and put on my Mickey.
Turf
I don't know much about this series, but I know all I need to. It's vampires vs. 1920s gangsters and aliens. I need this like I need love.
Wednesday, December 03, 2008
Dork of the Sea
The Comic Treadmill is creating an index of the various aquatic animals that Aquaman has recruited in his efforts over the years. It's very snazzy, but the reason I'm talking about it is an observation TCT made while collecting the data.
I caught a change in tone of the series that slipped by me when I indexed the original Aquaman run. Specifically, for most of the Silver Age stories, Aquaman (and Aqualad) patrolled the seas on the surface atop dolphins or porpoises. In 23 instances from stories between Adventure Comics 268 (1960) and Aquaman 18 (1964), dolphins or porpoises were the mount of choice.TCT doesn't cast any judgment on that and neither will I, but it's another piece of the puzzle in trying to figure out if Aquaman makes a better Undersea Fantasy character than an Aquatic Superhero one.
However, beginning with Aquaman 20 (1965), the Aqua-duo (along with Mera) began patrolling on Giant Sea Horses under the seas. Accordingly, Aquaman went from being an ocean surface adventurer to an undersea adventurer, a big change in the tone of the adventures.
Mark Waid on Fixing Aquaman
This is apparently Mark Waid's pitch for an Aquaman comic that never came to be. He doesn't go into a lot of detail about plot, but I think he's dead-on in terms of the character's feel:
The Cast of the AnglerFor the last ten years or so, the way we've been scrambling to combat Aquaman's "Dork of the Sea" image--and I've been guilty of trying this, too--is by making Aquaman increasingly darker, grittier, and tougher, the brooding, angry king beset with trouble. Each incarnation of the character seems grimmer than the last, to the point where all that's left for us to do is give him two hooks. And a peg-leg.
OR--here's ANOTHER thought. Yes, the seas can be turbulent and stormy, but y'know what? Far more often, the ocean is a universal symbol for peace and contentment. It's a calming influence. If it weren't, Bermuda would be deserted and Hawaii would be an industrial trade port. It is most people's "happy place." Yes, the ocean is the set piece for A Perfect Storm, but it's also the world of Finding Nemo and The Little Mermaid. I have never yet met anyone of any age who didn't come away from Sea World envying the guides who swim with the whales and porpoises.
Here's an Aquaman fan film. From the '80s it looks like. It starts off really slow, but I peeked ahead and it picks up later on. I haven't had 20 minutes to watch the whole thing yet, so I'm not vouching for it. Just throwing it out there. Casting it, even.
Aquaman papercraft
Maybe while you're watching the movie, you can work on making this cool Aquaman out of paper.
Aquawomen
The Aquaman Shrine has reminded me lately about a couple of Aquaman's supporting characters that I've been neglecting saying much about. And considering that they're women and I spend a lot of time talking about women here, it's a bit odd.
Or maybe not so odd. I talk about Marvel's Namora a fair bit, but she's part of a team that Marvel's actively generating a lot of buzz around. These two characters haven't been seen for a while.
I just talked about Mera the other day. I know next to nothing about her, but I've always liked her, mostly due - I'm sure - to the long, red hair and fish-skin catsuit. My memory of most of the comics I've read with her in them though is that she was often arguing with Aquaman about where his allegiances lie. This is another problem with the Aquaman as Superhero paradigm. If Aquaman's the King of Atlantis, there should be plenty of adventures he can get into in defense of his kingdom, rather than in neglect of it. If he's always off with the JLA fighting aliens, you're always going to have Mera at home resenting him for it. No fun.
Dolphin I'd completely forgotten about. I know less about her than I do Mera. I briefly read Aquaman in the '90s and she was in some of those issues, but I never got who she was or what her relationship was with the Aqua Family. Another one to learn more about.
And while I was doing a little research on those two, I was also reminded that there have been four different Aquagirls, though a couple of them were throwaway characters only appearing once each.
Lagoon Boy gets points for looking like the Creature from the Black Lagoon, so I'll probably look into him as well.
I don't care at all about Aqualad for some reason. Maybe he'll get interesting as I dig into these comics more, but right now he's a Robin rip-off in my head.