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Title: Comics, graphic novels, etc...


samf - January 5, 2006 10:37 AM (GMT)
Well, I haven't seen Sin City at the cinema, but instead I went right back to the source material, the graphic novels by Frank Miller. Family Values and Booze, Broads and Bullets are both excellent. Some of the best stories are the ones with a fairly simple storyline but intense, spectacular images - "Silent Night" in Booze, Broads and Bullets is awe-inspiring.

Any other comic/graphic novel readers out there? (Needn't be "arty" or "alternative"; I'm a fairly keen X-Men fan myself...) What are your picks?

Senor - January 5, 2006 10:46 AM (GMT)
Johnny the homicidal maniac. johnen vasquez. awesome that all that can be said about it, saddistic and witty, ultraviolent yet charming. its fucking brilliant.

Maus - January 17, 2006 02:26 AM (GMT)
I really enjoyed one that a friend of mine lent me, but helpfully can't remember the name. V is fo' Vengance or something. Bit of a twist on ye old 1984, but a more human version of totalitarianism. Made by the same folks who gave us that other comic I can't remember the name of, featuring aging superheros with no powers. The Family Men, or something.

It was really good, anyway, and is apparently being turned into a second rate movie as I write. I also recently read the issues of Swamp Thing where he discovers that he's a vegetable, but to be honest wasn't all that blown away by it. I guess you have to be a bit more involved in the ongoing story.

weirdo - January 17, 2006 10:52 AM (GMT)
I have The Crow graphic novel. it rocks. Wouldn't mind the Sin City ones either, I liked the movie.

Maus - February 1, 2006 02:48 AM (GMT)
How awesome is this?

QUOTE
Award-winning graphic novelist appointed Literary Fellow
26 January 2006


Dylan Horrocks, award-winning graphic novelist and comic artist, has been appointed University of Auckland/Creative New Zealand Literary Fellow 2006.

Mr Horrocks is the author of Hicksville, an award-winning graphic novel, and many shorter works in comic form that have been published around the world. He has lectured on writing, art and the history of comics, has presented papers at academic conferences around the world, and has written extensively on graphic novels, comics, art and literature for magazines and journals in New Zealand the US.

"In recent decades, the graphic novel has become an increasingly important literary form," says Mr Horrocks.

"Many writers and artists are now choosing comics as a means to create serious fiction, autobiography, history and even journalism, and the distinction between the graphic novel and the traditional prose novel is becoming increasingly blurred. Comics are now widely studied in universities around the world.

"This appointment is an exciting opportunity for me to focus on writing and drawing new work, as well as engaging with fellow writers at the University. It's also very gratifying that the University recognises the growing literary role of the graphic novel."

Head of the Department of English, Associate Professor Peter Simpson, says that Dylan Horrocks has achieved international standing as a comic artist and graphic novelist.

"The English Department and the Faculty of Arts are delighted to have such an innovative and ground-breaking writer and artist as our Literary Fellow for 2006."

Hicksville, which explores geographical and cultural colonisation in New Zealand, was named one of the best five books of the year by the USA's leading magazine of comics criticism, The Comics Journal. It won an Eisner Award (USA) in 2002 and was nominated for five further awards in the USA and Europe. As well as being translated into three foreign languages, it has been included in a number of university courses in the US and Europe, including courses on 'Comics as Literature' at Yale University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

Dylan Horrocks has contributed short stories in comics form to many anthology books and comics around the world. He has been a scriptwriter for commercial comics such as Batgirl in the USA, has drawn regular comic strips for New Zealand Listener and Investigate magazine, and has contributed cartoons and illustrations to numerous New Zealand magazines and newspapers, including New Zealand Listener, New Zealand Herald and New Zealand Political Review.

Mr Horrocks has been involved in the New Zealand comics scene since the early 1980s, setting up magazines, organising exhibitions and writing about local cartoonists in books and journals both here and overseas.

His work has appeared in exhibitions in New Zealand, Europe and Canada, and he has taught classes on graphic novels, comics, writing and art at The University of Auckland, Auckland University of Technology, Unitec and Massey University.

While at The University of Auckland Mr Horrocks intends to work on two new graphic novels, Atlas and Venus: the Secret Comics of Arthur Holly, as well as a number of shorter comics that explore the politics of superhero comics and the meaning of America since 9/11. He will also be preparing a collection of his comics stories from the past 20 years for publishers overseas.

Dylan Horrocks will be speaking at the NZ International Arts Festival's Writers and Readers Week in March.

Tangy zizzle - February 1, 2006 06:42 AM (GMT)
Coo, I'll go to that.

Check out Miller's Dark Knight work, or get into Preacher.




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