Showing posts with label Comics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Comics. Show all posts

October 4, 2014

Mike Mignola's Frankenstein Underground

The big Countdown to Halloween celebrations are underway and I’m just catching up now. My contribution this year will be mostly art — and I have some eye-popping treats coming up for you! — so it’s very appropriate to kick off with this sumptuous illustration by the great Mike Mignola.

The news hit earlier this week and you can read all the details in the MTV interview with Mignola about the Frankenstein Underground miniseries coming next Spring wherein our favorite Monster becomes part of Mike Mignola’s superlative comics universe.

Mignola’s very personal version of The Monster was first introduced in The House of the Living Dead one-shot, illustrated by Richard Corben. Now we’ll be getting the backstory and continuation of The Monster’s highly unusual adventures written — and with covers — by Mignola, and interior art by Ben Stenbeck. This one is definitely something to cheer and to watch for.


The annual Countdown to Halloween Event, hosted by John Rozum and Shawn Robare, brings together some 200 (!) bloggers to celebrate Pumpkin Season. 

Just click the Creature from the Black Lagoon badge on the menu, top right, and access the complete list of participants. It’s a joyful embarrassment of chilling riches!



Related:

February 15, 2014

Comic Book Trivia: Frankenstein's Fingertips


A trifle of trivia and a cartoon done in a few quick pen strokes make for an unusual Frankenstein sighting.

Panel cartoons combining pen and ink portraits and trivia were a popular feature of newspapers in their heyday, mid-century, with the best-known, most influential and oft-copied series being Robert Ripley’s collection of bizarre facts, Believe It or Not. Panel series were also devoted to sports or movie star gossip, notably Feg Murray’s Seein’ Stars. Charles Bruno’s Star Flashes was another celebrity feature, distributed through the Bell Syndicate to newspapers across America. Considered “used up” after their initial run, the daily panels were sold cheaply — “dumped” — to comic book publishers as filler material, where they were done up with garish colors over the original black and white art.

The page seen here, combining four daily panels, with date, syndicate copyright and original logo removed, appeared in Heroic Comics number 2, October 1940, published by the Eastern Color Printing Company of New York. Eastern operated as a comic book company from 1933 to the mid-Fifties, producing such classic titles as Buck Rogers, Jingle Jangle, Movie Love and the legendary Famous Funnies. Heroic was your typical comic book of the times, 68 pages for a dime, crammed with a wild mix of adventure, humor, science fiction, airplane, fighting marines, superhero and baseball strips. Headliners were Gene Byrne’s Reg’lar Fellers, a popular “Our Gang” type strip featuring street kids with names like Puddinhead, Pinhead, and the requisite dog, called Bullseye, with a black ring around one eye. The Fellers pushed an athletic summer camp organization and crossed over to radio, books, merchandizing, animated shorts and a film with Carl “Alfalfa” Switzer, closing the circle on the “Our Gang” connection.

Heroic also featured a bizarre crime/horror strip, The Purple Zombie by Tarpé Mills, a pioneering woman comic book artist, just one year away from creating her most famous character, Miss Fury. The story includes a startling panel where the title character appears strapped to an electric chair with a hood and a metal skullcap over his head, and trousers slit up the side to accommodate electrodes. He’s a zombie, so the attempted execution merely turns his skin purple. Another strip, Don Dixon, is a slavish Flash Gordon knockoff, complete with a Ming clone called The Destroyer.

The book’s cover boy and resident superhero was Hydroman, a costumed crime fighter who can turn his body into a geyser of living water. Hydroman wears a leather flying helmet and goggles, a steel collar, red shorts and see-though pants and shirt made of “Translite”. Harry the sidekick scientist says, “It’s like cellophane, but tough. Nothing can penetrate it, not even bullets!  The Hydroman strip was created, written and illustrated by Bill Everett, who would go on to create The Sub-Mariner, the first iteration of Simon Garth/The Zombie, and co-create Daredevil.

On the Star Flashes filler page, the celebrities depicted were all big names in the late Thirties and early Forties. The elegant Constance Bennett, comedienne Martha Raye, actors Otto Kruger and George Bancroft, and comic genius W.C.Fields all enjoyed sterling careers. Kruger is remembered for his leading man role opposite DRACULA’S DAUGHTER in 1936. He was also in COLOSSUS OF NEW YORK (1958) and an episode of TV’s THRILLER, hosted by Boris Karloff. The other then-current celebrities seen here are forgotten today.

Juanita Quigley was a child star known as Baby Jane. She appeared, all of three years old, with Claude Raines in THE MAN WHO RECLAIMED HIS HEAD (1934). Ten years later, as a teen, she worked with Erich von Stroheim in THE LADY AND THE MONSTER (1944), the first screen adaptation of Curt Siodmak’s Donovan’s Brain. Quigley quit pictures shortly thereafter.

Gwen Kenyon was a young model who made it to Hollywood in 1937 as a supporting player, often uncredited, in dozens of B-movies. She had a small part in THE CORPSE VANISHES (1942) with Bela Lugosi. Her entire screen career lasted eight years.

Artist/writer Charles Bruno filled in his Star Flashes margins with one-liner trivia and small, dashed off drawings: Hollywood payrolls, electric clocks in films, tapestries on burlap, and — look at the upper left-hand panel — Boris Karloff’s fingernails painted black as part of his makeup.

The name of Frankenstein is not given and the illustration is so small that the artist didn’t have enough space to draw a face, but the flattop head, the neck bolt and the dark suit are unmistakable. It’s clearly Boris Karloff as the Frankenstein Monster. It might have been too grisly to specify — notwithstanding the electric chair scene elsewhere in the issue — that the blackened fingertips were meant to suggest a hanged man’s hand, with blood pooled in its extremities.

Related:

October 23, 2012

Frankenstein, by Sergio Sierra and Meritxell Ribas


We could have Frankenstein Book Month with graphic novels only, considering the number of comics adaptations published worldwide. At hand is a Spanish version (in its French-language edition) by Sergio Sierra and Meritxell Ribas.


While rigorously faithful to Mary Shelley’s original, writer Sierra infuses Frankenstein with an intensely romantic and perfectly gothic sensitivity amplified by artist Ribas’ highly stylized scratchboards. There’s a bit of a Tim Burton vibe to the doll-like characters with their large heads, big eyes and tiny hands. The giant Monster, rendered with angular features and dead white eyes, is a formidable presence throughout.


The Barcelona-based Sierra and Ribas are frequent collaborators. Their Frankenstein was originally published in 2009 by Parramon Ediciones of Badamon, Spain, and Éditions Petit à Petit of Darnétal, France. Earlier this year, Meritxell Ribas illuminated a collection of classic vampire stories published by Mondadori, adding a startling red to her signature black and white scratchboard illustrations. 


Readers seeking this or any other foreign graphic novels I’ve mentioned this month might try Amazon or Abebooks. 


Sample pages from Sierra and Ribas’ Frankenstein

October 15, 2012

Percy Shelley, by Casanave and Vandermeulen

Under a cover evoking William Powell Firth’s painting of their courtship at the Old Saint Pancras churchyard, here is the first of a two-volume French-language biography in graphic novel form of the Shelleys, Percy and Mary.

Book One, Percy Shelley, cuts to the chase, opening with Percy’s expulsion from Oxford in 1811 upon publication of his blasphemous pamphlet, The Necessity of Atheism.

Disinherited by his well-to-do father, Percy elopes with and marries Harriet Westbrook, embarking on a perilous life of perpetual flight, always racing to stay ahead of creditors.

When he grows unhappy with his marriage, Percy abandons his pregnant wife and elopes anew, this time with young Mary, daughter of Percy’s mentor, philosopher William Godwin. Percy and Mary had courted, meeting in secret at the grave of Mary’s mother, the famous and mutually admired Mary Wollstonecraft.

The book ends with Percy, Mary and Mary’s half-sister, Claire Clairmont, leaving the Godwin house hand in hand. “Come,” Percy says, “let us live our lives as if it were a novel!”


Writer David Vandermeulen crafts an honest portrait of Percy Shelley as a reckless idealist, arrogant and infinitely charming, strong in his opinions but frail in health. Vandermeulen’s works include a graphic novel biography of Fritz Haber, the father of chemical warfare.

Percy Shelley is beautifully rendered by Daniel Casanave’s nervous pen, with colors by Patrice Larcenet. Casanave has often mixed classic literature with the comics medium, illustrating stories by Apollinaire, Shakespeare and Kafka, Alfred Jarry’s Ubu Roi, and biographies of Baudelaire and Verlaine.

Percy Shelley, 76 pages, was published by Le Lombard of Brussels, February 2012. The followup book, Mary Shelley, was published in May. I’ll report on that one at a later date.


Read an 8-page sample of Percy Shelley (in French), and here are 11 pages from Mary Shelley


October 4, 2012

Frankenstein, graphic novel by Denis Deprez


Written and painted by Belgian artist Denis Deprez, this French-language graphic novel, published by Casterman in 2003, is as much a literate adaptation of Frankenstein as it is a pure objet d’art.

The Monster's appearance here is obviously derived from the classic boxhead film version, otherwise author Deprez is very faithful to the original, allowing for compression and judicious tweaks as necessary to fit the novel into 60 illustrated pages. Like Mary Shelley, Deprez doesn’t dwell on the mechanics of the creation scene: Lightning attests to a stormy night, and The Monster’s eyes open. It’s a fine show of restraint where many artists would have stopped the story cold with a flashy display of lab fireworks. Instead, Deprez delivers a surprisingly intimate version of the famous story, dwelling on the emotions and inner thoughts of Frankenstein and his Monster.

Every panel a canvas, Deprez’ atmospheric art ranges from the sun-drenched scenes with the boy William that evoke the French impressionists, to dark, horrific moments like the tragic episode of The Monster’s mate, or The Monster’s fatal encounter with Elisabeth, done in a raw style reminiscent of Francis Bacon.

Denis Deprez also adapted Shakespeare’s Othello to the graphic novel format, as well as Melville’s Moby Dick, with writer Jean Rouaud, and a life of Rembrandt with his brother, Olivier Deprez.




Copies of Deprez’ Frankenstein can still be found through Amazon.com dealers, as well as Amazon.ca and Amazon.fr.

September 18, 2012

Lobster Johnson Meets Frankenstein

Mike Mignola’s lanky, bolt-studded Frankenstein Monster appears on an alternate cover for Lobster Johnson: Caput Mortuum. The illustration is one of the artist's “Year of Monsters” series matching Hellboy universe characters with classic monsters. 

Lobster Johnson is Mignola’s take on 30’s pulp heroes, a goggled, leather-jacketed vigilante battling mobsters and monsters, and branding their foreheads with his claw emblem. Though the character died in 1939, his ghost continues his crusade against supernatural evil.

Caput Mortuum, a one-shot comic book, is written by Mignola and John Arcudi — a team that consistently turns out some of the best horror comics published today — with art by Tonci Zonjic. Note that the Mignola covers for this are somewhat rare, as an alternate offering to the regular covers by Zonjic. The issue hits comic book shops this week.


A 3-page preview of Caput Mortuum.
The regular cover by Tonci Zonjic

June 12, 2012

Death Interrupted


This is not a Frankenstein book but, hey, zombies are family. At their most basic expression, The Monster and the zombie share provenance as revenants and symbols of death defiled, cursed with life.

From the heady golden age of horror comics, these collected tales celebrate zombies — old school, please — the kind yanked from graveyards to serve their masters, or reanimated for their own purpose, some literally willing themselves back to life to exact vengeance for the treasonous wrongs that did them in. Witness the book’s cover, a lover’s clinch, passion mightier than death, with the decayed Romeo coming apart in the reluctant Juliette’s hands.  

Featuring a Who’s Who collection of artists and writers, Zombies is edited and designed by comics archeologist Craig Yoe — author of Dick Briefer’s Frankenstein — in collaboration with Steve Banes of the superlative The Horrors of It All blog, dementedly and delightfully devoted to classic horror comics. Zombies is out now!


May 10, 2012

Alive, Alive!


Heads up! Artist Bernie Wrightson returns to Frankenstein, with scripts by horror-writer Steve Niles (30 Days of Night), in the new ongoing series Frankenstein Alive, Alive! arriving in comic shops this week.

First published in 1983, Wrightson’s astounding illustrations for Mary Shelley’s novel are legendary. Now, 30 years on, Wrightson is creating a sequel to the classic tale, in comic book form. The long-cherished project finally crystallized when Steve Niles came aboard as writer. The combined talents make Frankenstein Alive, Alive! an important, must-see addition to the Frankenstein canon.

Steve Niles has posted a fascinating conversation with Bernie Wrightson.


February 24, 2012

Frankensteinian : Vandoom's Monster


Frankenstein permeates popular culture and its themes have proven a fertile field for exploitation in comic books. A compelling example is the story at hand, Vandoom, the Man Who Made a Creature, written by Stan Lee, illustrated by Jack Kirby and inked by Dick Ayers, published in Tales to Astonish by Atlas/Marvel Comics in 1961. With a young Lee as editor and head writer, and a stable of experienced artists, the company was in the process of transforming from a low-end publisher into a comic book powerhouse. Tales to Astonish was one of the science fiction and horror anthology titles where Marvel’s superheroes — new ones like Spider-Man and reboots like Submariner, Human Torch and Captain America — would soon be introduced.

In a story that namechecks Frankenstein repeatedly, the action opens with the image of a Universal-style flattop Monster, a House of Horrors mannequin. The apocalyptically named Ludwig Vandoom, son of Heinrich, runs his late dad’s castle-based wax museum but, alas, the monsters of old no longer attract visitors — Never mind that the museum is located in a remote Transylvanian town. Ludwig, in a bid to revive the tourist trade, builds a new, improved Monster, “Ugly and frightening-- More so than any other monster! And it must be large—the largest wax figure in the world!

Writer Lee’s science fiction tales borrowed freely and frequently from classic monster movies and contemporary atom-age b-movies. He would acknowledge his debt to Frankenstein, mashed with Jekyll&Hyde, as inspiration for The Hulk. Artist Jack Kirby was also a fan of Frankenstein and the classic monsters, using them as inspiration or props in countless stories.

The Twilight Zone-type stories of Tales to Astonish, Tales of Suspense and Amazing Fantasy, invariably written by Lee, mostly illustrated by Kirby, Steve Ditko and Don Heck, typically featured giant monsters — scaly invading aliens, hairy ancient creatures reborn and insect-like things whipped up by mad scientists or provoked to life by natural catastrophe or supernatural intervention. Their names were memorable, like Kraa, The Unhuman! or Zzutak, the Thing That Shouldn’t Exist! and some of the stories were played as first person narrative: I Found the Impossible World! and I Am the Menace from Outer Space! The monsters had attitude, taunting crowds scrambling at their feet as “Foolish mortals!” and “Puny humans!”. A stranded alien who manifested as a pile of mud called Taboo, the Thing from the Murky Swamp crashed through downtown streets, arrogantly proclaiming, “All shall feel the wrath of Taboo! No one can withstand my onslaught!

In an amusing quirk of the genre, the giant monsters often wore pants. It may have been a case of the Comics Code cops frowning on the concept of barebutt monsters, but many of Kirby’s giant terrors sported boxing shorts or Mickey Mouse trunks. An enduring fan favorite, Fin Fang Foom was a horse-faced Chinese dragon who wore bright red Speedos.

In the end, deus ex machina kicked in and the monsters were foiled, fooled or felled by fate, or wily average Joes. A tree monster called Groot was invincible until termites got him. A paint-based creature called The Glop was destroyed by a can of turpentine. No kidding.

Vandoom goes to work, sculpting his masterpiece, building it so tall that he has to cut a hole in the roof to accommodate his monster’s noggin. No sooner is he done that a thunderstorm rolls in, lightning hits The Monster in the head — “a one-in-a-billion accident!” — and, without further explanation, the thing comes alive! Though Vandoom’s Monster is described as a wax figure, Kirby chose to draw him as a shaggy ape with a sabretooth underbite.

The animated statue breaks out of the castle and descends on the local village. In another swipe straight from the movies, the villagers, a superstitious bunch decked in funny hats and handlebar mustaches, take up pitchforks and torches. Then the story takes a sudden 90-degree turn when a funky spaceship appears and horned Martians pile out! “The earthlings are weak and ignorant!” the invaders say, “It will be child’s play to conquer them!


Vandoom runs to his rampaging Monster, imploring, “They’re MARTIANS! They are Earth’s enemies! They’ve come to conquer us! You must stop them! You MUST!” Some sort of animal understanding dawns on “the wax hulk” and The Monster plows into the Martian hordes. “My blaster is useless against him!” one invader complains. Another says, “A full charge of ultra-gamma rays… And STILL he lives!

Mauled Martian survivors hightail back to their ship and zoom away, their invasion plans cancelled on account of unexpected resistance. Weakened and wounded, the giant Monster collapses and dies. Grateful villagers arrange a burial and a monument for their savior, and pitch in to help Vandoom rebuild his Monster attraction from scratch.

In the last panel, Vandoom stands on the castle roof in a driving rainstorm, lightning crisscrossing the sky. “What if another bolt of lightning brings life to this one…

All the action in Vandoom, the Man Who Made a Creature clocked in at just 11 pages, plus 2 splash pages, making it the lead feature in Tales to Astonish No. 17. In the endless recycling common to comic books, Vandoom’s Monster would return, as suspected by Vandoom himself, in various guest-monster appearances.


December 10, 2011

The Art of Frankenstein : Gray Morrow



I hope I’m wrong, but I always felt that Gray Morrow was underrated. Comics fans may have preferred flashier artists, but Morrow was fast, he was reliable and he was prolific, producing realistic art for all the comic book publishers and a collection of dazzling paperback covers in a career that spanned four decades. His science fiction illustrations earned him three Hugo Awards as “Best Professional Artist” and he drew the syndicated Tarzan Sunday strip from 1983 until his untimely death in 2001.

The illustration here was found on Shades of Gray, a wonderful showcase of Morrow’s work, run by blogger Booksteve. In a rough drawing that sizzles with action, Morrow pits the Frankenstein Monster against The Heap, the original comic book “muck monster”, a template for Swamp Thing and Man-Thing.

First appearing in Hillman Comics’ Air Fighters of 1946, The Heap was a WWI ace who had died in a swamp, his body macerated and transformed into a living mass of vegetation. The character would be reconfigured, updated and re-used by various publishers, eventually landing as a menace in Todd McFarlane’s Spawn. The version illustrated by Morrow is from its early 70’s Skywald incarnation where the once indistinct blob had developed a face and a sharp-fanged mouth.


Shades of Gray blog.


Related:
Gray Morrow’s superb SON OF FRANKENSTEIN cover for Monster World magazine.


July 11, 2011

Dick Briefer's Lost Frankenstein


A rare, unpublished page of Dick Briefer’s Frankenstein comics shows the Merry Monster making a blood bank delivery, unaware of a vampire stowaway. Note the pencils still showing and the squiggles in the margins where the artist brought a freshly ink-dipped brush to a fine point. Click the art to see it large.

Another page from this story appears in Craig Yoe’s book, Dick Briefer’s Frankenstein, showing “Duke Tracer”, Briefer’s take on Chester Gould’s the oft-lampooned straight arrow detective Dick Tracy.

According to Yoe, this story was one of three orphaned episodes, finished but never to appear, after the publisher pulled the plug on the Frankenstein comic book in 1949. When the title rebooted in 1952, it was as a horror comic, bringing Briefer’s Frankenstein series full circle.

Briefer had first introduced his version of Frankenstein as a horror strip in Prize Comics number 7, in 1940, creating the first ongoing horror series in comic book history. Briefer’s gruesome, angular Monster rained panic and mayhem on New York, fighting superheroes, and terrorizing Nazis during WW2. After the war, Briefer surprised his readers with a bold switcharoo, turning the nasty, snarling, split-faced monster into a lovable lunk with his nose up on his forehead.

The sublimely silly, surrealistic, so-called “Merry Monster” version ran concurrently in Prize Comics — until the title folded in February 1948 — and its own comic book, Frankenstein, through 17 issues, from 1945 to February 1949. There followed a three-year hiatus until Frankenstein started back up as a horror series, again, with No.18 in March 1952. It ran 16 issues until its final demise, with No.33 in October 1954, the year Frederic Wertham published Seduction of the Innocents, setting the stage for the notorious Congressional inquiry that would sweep horror comics from the nation’s newsstands.

In the mid-50’s, Briefer drew up some samples for a funny Frankenstein daily strip that prefigured The Munsters, but when syndicates passed on the project, Briefer quit comics and went into commercial illustration.


Dick Briefer always preferred the strip’s funny version, and he was obviously enjoying himself creating wildly inventive and genuinely funny storylines, drawn in a loose and elegant brush style evident in the examples shown here. This is Briefer at his peak, at once exuberant and confident.


Thanks go out to comics writer John Arcudi for generously sharing this wonderful original art with Frankensteinia readers, and Craig Yoe, author of Dick Briefer's Frankenstein, for expert information.


Related:
Previous posts about Dick Briefer.


June 22, 2011

Hellboy Meets Frankenstein



Hellboy turns wrestler and goes up against a battling Frankenstein Monster in House of the Living Dead, a graphic novel to coming in November.

If you only know the character from the films, fine as they are, you don’t know Hellboy. Mike Mignola’s comic books are much darker and more complex, evoking Lovecraft, Machen and Poe. Here, eerie Victorian ghost stories, ancient mythology and supernatural folk tales collide with Vernian technology, pulse-pounding pulp sensibilities and b-movie tropes.

The success of Hellboy has spawned a mini-universe of spinoff titles featuring imaginative characters such as the amphibian Abe Sapien and the Nazi-busting Lobster Johnson. Among these, B.P.R.D., about a team or paranormal investigators, is a singularly brilliant horror comic. I urge you to seek out the B.P.R.D. collections plotted by Mignola, with superlative scripts by John Arcudi and outstanding art by Guy Davis.

In recent years, Mignola has been concentrating on writing, reserving his elegant, much-copied but unequaled art for covers and leaving the insides to other artists. Such is the case with Hellboy: House of the Living Dead, with story and cover (above) by Mignola, and the rest entrusted to the great Richard Corben.

Mignola has stated that House of the Living Dead takes its thematic cue from the classic Universal Monster Rallies, House of Frankenstein and House of Dracula, where a parade of monsters take their turn in the spotlight. The story picks up from Hellboy in Mexico (or, A Drunken Blur), a one-shot comic from 2010 by Mignola and Corben in which Hellboy teamed up with a trio of monster-hunting luchadores. This time, Hellboy, in full Santo mode, goes head to head with a patchwork Frankenstein wrestler.

Hellboy: House of the Living Dead, published by Dark Horse, will hit stores on November 9.


An interview with Mike Mignola about House of the Living Dead, on Comic Book Resources.

Publisher’s page for Hellboy: House of the Living Dead.

Publisher’s page for Hellboy in Mexico, featuring sample pages.

Mike Mignola’s website.

Richard Corben’s website.


Related:
Mike Mignola's Bride of Frankenstein
The Frankenstein Dracula War covers by Mike Mignola


June 3, 2011

Frankenstein Reassembled



Published in the fall of 2010, Frankenstein Réassemblé is a Québécois comics anthology that picks up where Mary Shelley left off, following her characters beyond the novel’s arctic finale. A long time coming, the project was originally conceived by artist Éric Thériault some ten years ago and, as it evolved, it was placed with various publishers until it finally landed with Les 400 Coups under the Rotor banner, directed by Michel Viau.

The eight stories collected here are complete, stand-alone tales, unrelated to each other, allowing for individual and widely different interpretations of The Monster. Editor Thériault’s only directive was that there be no contradictions between the stories. Thériault peppers the book with fabricated documentation — letters, newspaper and magazine clippings — of The Monster’s progress across two centuries, bringing the stories together in a plausible timeline.

The Monster by Robert Rivard and François Caillé.

The scripts and art are excellent throughout. Standouts include writer Jean Lacombe and artist Robert Rivard’s Les enfants de Prométhée (Children of Prometheus), a bittersweet story of The Monster’s strained relationship with his “normal” child, and Un monstre à Londres (A Monster in London) by Shane Simmons, with robust art by Gabriel Morrissette, that proves a refreshingly original treatment of The Monster's encounter with Jack The Ripper. Éric Thériault’s Fluide Froid (Cold Fluid) is a rousing pop culture celebration, a pastiche of superhero comics that establishes the intimate link between Captain America — here called Major Valor — and a classic Universal Pictures Frankenstein’s Monster, both lab creations. Style-wise, Thériault combines an elegant ligne claire rendering with the vivid colors and tempo of American comic books.

The Monster, scratchboard-style, by Denis Rodier.
Gabriel Morrisette channels Dick Briefer,
and Éric Thériault's classic pop culture version.

Frankenstein Réassemblé is an immensely satisfying read and a truly original contribution to the ever growing collection of alternate histories of Frankenstein.


You can order Frankenstein réassembléthrough Amazon Canada.

Éric Thériault's bilingual blog.

Les 400 coups publisher's page.


March 3, 2011

Uncle Bob and the Frankenstein Monster


What a life Uncle Bob has led! Now a sprightly 150-year old, he loves to entertain his nieces with rousing tales from his extraordinary past. Why, it was he, all those years ago, who thwarted the Martians who invaded us with their terrible tripods. It was he who tracked down the notorious jewel thief known as The Phantom. Uncle Bob met Dracula, Tarzan and he even traveled to King Kong’s dinosaur infested Skull Island. In one particularly memorable episode, Uncle Bob encountered Frankenstein’s murderous (and artistically inclined) Monster, high in the frozen Swiss Alps.

Darryl Cunningham of Yorkshire, England, is a perfectly brilliant cartoonist whose pared-down tales and minimalist drawings get straight to the heart of the story, stripped strips if you will, free of extraneous details yet loaded with pulse-pounding action and strong doses of humor, irony and sometimes bittersweet emotions. Cunningham’s comics manage to be at once understated and powerful. Here, less is definitely more.

Cunningham is the author of Psychiatric Tales, the acclaimed graphic novel about mental health problems. Now he’s collecting his Uncle Bob stories, aimed at readers of all ages, into a book due for later this year. I, for one, can hardly wait! Until then, you can read the stories, appearing as they are hatched, on his very engaging blog.

Read Uncle Bob and the Frankenstein Monster.


An excellent interview with Darryl Cunningham on Tom Spurgeon’s The Comics Reporter.

Reviews of Psychiatric Tales on The Comics Journal and Forbidden Planet.


January 23, 2011

Thor Meets Frankenstein



The God of Thunder calls down lightning bolts, zapping a massively stitched Frankenstein Monster to life on this variant cover by Mike Del Mundo for Marvel Comics’ Uncanny X-Force #7.

The image is part of a special Thor Goes Hollywood series picturing the Asgardian superhero in classic film situations as promotion for the upcoming Thor movie. Another variant cover plunks Thor into the iconic poster for Jaws.

The issue with the Frankenstein cover — contents otherwise unrelated — will be in stores April 6, exactly one month ahead of the film’s release.


Mike Del Mundo’s website and deviantART site.
Marvel Comics
website.


October 27, 2010

Frankenstein: The Legend Retold
A Guest Post by Martin Powell


Above, the striking original cover art — sans overprinting — by artist Patrick Olliffe for Martin Powell’s adaptation of Frankenstein, first published in 1989.
I asked Martin to tell us how he came to Frankenstein, and how he came to write his celebrated graphic novel. Here’s what he had to say…

When I was a boy, visiting relatives in the country, I often sat in the dewy night grass and stared at the blackened woods, wondering what nameless monsters lurked and haunted behind the tangles of ivy and oak. My older brothers (and several imaginative cousins) were quick to impress such fanciful phantoms upon my youthful gullibility, and I was always eager to hear more, collecting each spooky story like other boys accumulated gum cards.

I suppose everyone has thrilled, at one time or another, to a ghost story, relishing a sense of ghoulish wonder at what really may be awaiting us in those darkened forests.
Mary Shelley certainly did.

Of all the classic authors, she’s certainly been the most influential to me, especially through Frankenstein, Or the Modern Prometheus. It has always seemed remarkable that Mary composed the greatest of horror stories while still in her teens. A very tough act, indeed, for any writer to follow.

The very first time I read the novel was a life-defining moment, changing me forever. I must have been about nine years old when I excitedly saw Frankenstein, as a paperback, on the top of my cousin Charlotte’s dresser. I’m sure I must have audibly gasped with astonishment. Charlotte kindly gave me that book, which I stared at during the entire long drive home, mesmerized by its enigmatic Karloffian cover. Already, I was hooked. I would read the book many times during the years to come, each time finding rich new layers that I had never dreamed of before, falling under its phantasmagoric spell again and again.

Ultimately, I was inspired to write my own graphic novel interpretation of Frankenstein. The powerful story had long haunted me, accumulating as a dream-project that was actually conceived when I was still in high school. My project proposal almost seemed to compose itself, and it’s more to Mary Shelley’s credit that my submission immediately found a publisher.

Next to Mary’s initial inspiration, it was the art of Patrick Olliffe, whom I was most fortunate in recruiting, which made the endeavor a success. It was perfect casting. Pat’s wonderfully moody and enigmatic black and white illustrations established a tangible atmosphere within a single panel. I remember having many lengthy, enjoyable phone conversations with him, in those days before the instant accessibility of the internet, as we planned our translation of Mary’s classic tale of terror. Early on I’d decided against stressing the popular “technology out of control” theme in favor of focusing on what I felt was the true soul of the story, that of an unwanted child.

In particular, I recall an in-depth discussion concerning what our Monster should look like. Pat and I obviously needed to avoid the famous design created by Jack Pierce, and owned by Universal Studios, and we relished the awesome possibilities that lay before us. This was a being, we reasoned, fashioned from the available raw materials of the late 18th century. Neck electrodes, square head, and over-sized boots suddenly seemed strangely out of place, even if they had been allowed.

Instead, Pat rendered a gnarled, towering, patch-work horror. His creature is wholly original, bringing Mary Shelley’s tantalizingly vague descriptions into the stark and terrible light. It is wondrous, pitiful, ghastly, and weirdly charismatic. For me, Patrick Olliffe’s visual depiction of the Frankenstein Monster is absolutely definitive.

Since its first publication in 1989, our Frankenstein graphic novel has never been out of print. Recently it was published again in a Spanish language version, and a brand new special edition looms in the near future.

That’s amazing and very gratifying.

Special thanks to Frankensteinia for inviting this warm remembrance, and to the gentle ghosts of Boris Karloff, Forrest J Ackerman, and Mary Shelley. I’d be nowhere without them.
— Martin Powell
October 24, 2010

Minnesota-based writer Martin Powell has hundreds of published credits for comic books and prose fiction. His Sherlock Holmes/Dracula graphic novel, Scarlet in Gaslight, was nominated for an Eisner Award. Earlier this month, his book, The Tall Tale of Paul Bunyan, illustrated by Aaron Blecha, won the Gold Medal in the graphic novel category of the Moonbeam Children’s Book Awards. Martin is currently scripting new adventures for such classic characters as The Phantom and the pulps’ The Spider for Moonstone Books.

Patrick Olliffe is an accomplished illustrator and comic book artist who has contributed to a who’s who of superhero characters, the likes of Spider-Man, Spider-Girl, The Atom, Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman, for Marvel and DC. He is now taking on The Mighty Samson for Dark Horse comics. Of his collaboration with Martin Powell on Frankenstein, he says, “Although early in my career, it remains one of the projects I love the most.


October 22, 2010

Celebrating Dick Briefer's Frankenstein

Yauuggghhh! It’s Frightful Frankenstein Friday! Join the mob as we pick up our torches and chase down Dick Briefer’s Frankenstein!

Today, I’m joining fifteen fellow bloggers in celebration of Craig Yoe’s new book about legendary artist Dick Briefer and his extraordinary Frankenstein comics, published between 1940 and 1954.

Click through the links for reviews, reflections and, best of all, a selection of classic Briefer Frankenstein episodes! But beware…. If you’ve never read a Briefer Frankenstein before, you are in for a real treat, whether its one of his gruesome horror version, or the surprising “Merry Monster” version. I’m guessing you’ll love them both, and you’ll be a fan forever more.


Here are the participating blogs:

And Everything Else Too

Blog of Frankenstein

Cartoon Snap!

Comicrazys

Four-Color Shadows

Magic Carpet Burn

Pappy’s Golden Age Comics Blogzine

Random Acts of Geekery

Sekvenskonst

Sequential Crush

Stephen Bissette’s Myrant

The Big Blog of Kids Comics

The Comic Book Bin

The Fabuleous Fifties

The Horrors of It All

The ITCH Blog


For my own contribution to Frightful Frankenstein Friday, in the spirit of Book Month on Frankensteinia, I asked Craig Yoe to speak about his book and his love for Briefer’s art.

The ridiculously talented Mr. Yoe is an artist and writer, art director, toy designer, and formerly a creative director and VP with The Muppets. As a writer, editor and comics historian, Yoe has published a number of important books such as Felix The Cat: The Great Comic Book Tails, George Herriman’s Krazy & Ignatz in Tiger Tea, The Art of Steve Ditko, and Secret Identity: The Fetish Art of Superman Co-Creator Joe Shuster, just to name a few. Dick Briefer’s Frankenstein, published by Yoe Books and IDW Publishing, is out NOW.

Here’s Craig…


When Dick Briefer died in 1980 I drew a picture of his Frankenstein with a tear in his eye running past his monster’s upturned and misplaced nose for the Comic Buyer's Guide newspaper. I said in the copy that accompanied my cartoon that I was not only sad about the artist’s passing, but also that so few people knew of Dick Briefer or his genius. It has taken me a long time, but at last I'm doing my part to help rectify that with a full color hardback book, Dick Briefer's Frankenstein (Yoe Books/IDW), about the monster and the man behind him. Though it does go into depth about the artist's colorful life, mostly the book proves Briefer’s genius by just reprinting a crypt full of comics as evidence.

Briefer was of two minds. The cartoonist drew a horrific version of Frankenstein during the horror comics craze of the 50s. The stories were dark, grim and foreboding. But, before that he drew a humorous Merry Monster version that was lighthearted, nutty, and wacky. Think The Munsters or The Addams Family--kooky and creepy, altogether ooky. This was the version Briefer himself preferred. Actually, when I was putting together the book I discovered that there was a THIRD version. The early 1940s original stories in Prize Comics, starting in issue #7 were almost a synthesis of the two known styles. At least art-wise. These seminal stories were gritty, but the art had a bit of that boffo, gusto, and bravado of the early Golden Age comics that had a simple cartoony flair, almost humorous, approach. Those comic books are trez expensive. I had to almost beg a collector to scan his valuable and fragile inaugural Frankenstein stories for me. So I am thrilled to present the fascinating rare first three Frankenstein stories in the book.

So there are three styles of Dick Briefer's to chose from and adopt as a fave. In early reviews of the book people are already stating which ones they grok the most. Me, I love them all, but I'm going with Briefer in that I dig his all-out funny take on Frankenstein the best. When I became the Creative Director/VPGM of the Muppets I was versed about the appeal that the Sesame Street lovable monsters like Bert and Ernie and the Cookie Monster have. Jim Henson himself explained to me that kids fear monsters, but that the Muppets, warm and friendly and silly and approachable, human-like, helped the young set deal with their childhood fear of monstersunder the bed. I think as adults we never outgrow our fear of the Monsters of Life. Maybe they are no longer the things-that-go-bump-in-the-night variety of monsters. But, as adults there are monsters like Politicians, Left Wing and Right Wing TV Commentators, Corporation CEOs, Bill Collectors, War Profiteers, Heads of Insurance Companies that keep us awake at night--they TRULY horrific and real threats! So a fun, approachable, lovable Monster like Briefer's Funny Franky with his peculiar proboscis can help give us some relief and help us face ghosts and ghouls whether we're snot-nosed kids or a full-grown relatively clean-nosed adult human beings.

Or the Frankenstein comics by Briefer can just be a great read. We do have to remember that, in the words of the great R. Crumb that “’It’s is only lines on paper, folks!” There doesn't have to be a Deep Reason to like Dick Briefer's Frankenstein. In fact, ultimately I'm going to avoid any really deep scholarly dissection of the Monster here as I did in the book, too. Briefer's Frankenstein, like Shelley's, was a man of many parts and I'm not going to take them apart in my La-BOORRR-a-TORY today and kill him in the process.

I'm only going to ask you to have a grand time reading all the great Dick Briefer comics on all the great blogs participating in Frightful Frankenstein Friday. I deeply thank Pierre, with his frightfully fantastic Frankensteinia blog, for giving me this little soapbox today. Now start reading the on-line comics, and order my book, Dick Briefer’s Frankenstein, if you like what you see. I think you'll scream with delight!


Thanks Craig!