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jlroberson ([info]jlroberson) wrote in [info]scans_daily,
@ 2009-07-28 04:44:00

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Current location:Seattle
Current mood:duh
Current music:Do Make Say Think
Entry tags:char: floronic man/jason woodrue, char: swamp thing/alec holland, creator: alan moore, creator: john totleben, creator: steve bissette, creator: tatjana wood, genre: horror

Moore/Bissette/Totleben At Their Best: "Another Green World," Two Sequences
Today is a little exhibit of how to draw mainstream horror comics.

So here's two of my very favorite sequences from probably one of the five or so most pivotally influential comics on me, even though my style bears no resemblance. SWAMP THING #23, by Alan Moore, Steve Bissette, and John Totleben.
A quick personal note: I first heard of what Moore was doing in a review by Don Thompson in the Comics Buyers Guide when I was 15, and soon went out and bought it. Not the one he promoted because my store didn't have it, but this one. (though the next one, with the JLA, was pretty heavy as well at the time)
From that moment Moore had me and that was that, forever. (Interestingly, it was discovering Moore that weaned me away from exactly the kind of comic CBG usually promoted, and it was soon after that I discovered the Comics Journal.)
So, here are two sequences I've always loved, with Woodrue doing his eco-terrorist thang.(mods: this is exactly 1/3 of the comic) It's not just the mood of the drawing, but the dynamic layouts that Bissette created and few have equaled in intensity. The first, here, is in fact Bissette's(so he once said) favorite sequence.



Next, a very sinister sequence with writing by Moore that, in a good way, reminded me, and still does, of King; I'm thinking 'Salem's Lot for some reason.

Finally, a sequence with probably one of the very best shots of Woodrue ever. And lovely color work within the limits of old printing by Tatjana Wood.




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[info]danielolsen
2009-07-28 12:15 pm UTC (link)
I don't know about horror. These feel more like a psychopats notebook to me since its scary but everything is perfectly clear. It's well done and written but for me horror is more about atmosphere and saying just enough to get the uncomfortability across.

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[info]jlroberson
2009-07-28 01:05 pm UTC (link)
A "psychopath's notebook"?...

Well, these are just two highlights; you really have to read the whole thing. But I would suggest that what you're describing is only one kind of horror and, just as in the films of Cronenberg, the graphic moments are justified by the fact that there are some things that just can't be implied. And I'd also suggest that atmosphere is exactly what the first sequence is about.

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[info]danielolsen
2009-07-28 01:47 pm UTC (link)
True.
Maybe I just tend to like that kind of horror better since it has staying power. For me it really has nothing to do with grapic moments (especially if they are woven into the thing, like in these and not the average slasher). After the thing (that you are supposed to fear or what causes the discomfort) has been shown I start to analyze it instead of speculating about it.

I'm really not used to horror comics in color though.

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[info]jlroberson
2009-07-29 02:04 am UTC (link)
Consider as well: this was still under the Code.

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