Skip to main content

Looking at EC Comics, Carl Barks, and The Adventures of TinTin

The various categories of stories from EC Comics is without a doubt wordy, but not so much that it is confusing. It clearly sends the message to readers on how each scene is supposed to play out which is very interesting because the art applied to each page is enough to be adapted into an old movie or television show that I would definitely watch more than once. Though the layout is not as a unique as other comics I have seen, it definitely catches my eye through the actions that take place in every panel.

Whatever inspired Carl Barks to create these pieces, I would love to know them. His work is visually pleasing to both my eyes and my mind. All of his pieces drive my creative thinking of storytelling which is what I continually thrive for and his color schemes and compositions are also interesting.

I can gladly admit that as a child I had taken an interest in TinTin, though I never bought any of the books I did enjoy reading them whenever I found myself in bookstores. Though I love the style of art used in these books, the entirety of the comic from the vibrant colors to the composition of the panels make reading the story much more interesting and worth reading in the long run.



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Thinking About the Future of Comics

Jumping in my the first comic to catch my eye were the ones on Dr.Who. The basic premise of the stories is a ship of timelords just trying to survive. The only the reason I read this first is because I wanted to know the difference between the comics and television. It came as a surprise that the comics came out a year exactly after the show started to air. The style might have not been my cup of tea, but I definitely enjoyed the premise of the storyline, where it had started with the timelords, definitely would read more so I could have a better understanding of where they came from and why it all ended up with one left. Hellboy is a hell of a comic, the story of Hellboy or his birthname "Anung Un Rama" is an intriguing story about a demon that fights against evil forces such as witches, nazis, and many other enemies. There is a slice of regret in not reading these comics until now. I don't know about you but I certainly love the art direction they are going with in th...

A Perspective I Never Expected - Maus Book 1 & 2

As people have mentioned, "Maus" brought the graphic novel back into the literary marketplace, I finally understand the cause. Artie who is the son of Vladek comes home to find his father has a story of how he lived in Czestochowa. This of course turns into how he met his mother who back then had problems with depression which he ended up taking her to get treated. Upon this whole travel, he discovers that rise of nazism around Europe. His own factory is destroyed, he fights as a soldier but gets kidnapped, and through certain events everyone in the family from him to Anja's family are sent to concentration camps. A lot happens that I can't even imagine people had to go through back then, lives are lost but Vladek and Anja manage to make it through everything. Leading to the future, it turns out Artie is somehow mad at his father for her mothers death, including that he burned all his mother's journals from the war. All in all, it was an interesting read and wor...

My Interests in Krazy Kat & Little Nemo

There is a lot of old comic strips out there that I have read over the years, so it came to my surprise that something such as "Little Nemo" was created had exceeded my expectations of people's creativity and mindset in creating stories. Winsor McCay's ideas of fantasy for this comic strip is without a doubt extraordinary in its own way. This to me a is a rare find and it was made in the early 1900s? I cannot believe I neglected to see that people's imagination were beyond even my understanding back then. Little Nemo’s constant world of dreams varies every night, the phrase the calm before the storm definitely applies to each and every one of his stories which I think was a clever way of creating it. His construct of the comic itself is unique in every way from the colors, panels, to the pace and timing, making me kind of wish this comic was still going. “Krazy Kat” created by George Herriman, introduces the opposite of what many of us interpret the relations...