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dr_hermes ([info]dr_hermes) wrote in [info]scans_daily,
@ 2009-08-29 21:31:00

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Entry tags:char: prince valiant, creator: hal foster, era: golden age, title: prince valiant

A visit with Merlin
Some of these classic strips can't be over-praised. Hal Foster's PRINCE VALIANT is a good example, a perfect blend of great art and great storytelling. Imagine waking up Sunday morning to see this page in your newspaper. Here's an example from 1938.




At this point in the saga, Prince Valiant is still a youth, maybe in his late teens, trying to prove himself to Arthur by deeds of valor (while also tumbling headlong in love as youths do). Val has managed to escape from Dolorous Garde, where Morgan Le Fey (HER again!) is holding Sir Gawain. Merlin promises to free Gawain if he can obtain a personal possession prized by Morgan, and Val returns with her falcon. (I've seen hunting falcons up close and to be honest, stealing one in flight agaiinst its will would not occur to me. I'd bring Merlin one of Morgan's slippers or something..)



The art here really deserves taking a minute to study. Look at the way the drawbridge operates with a counterweight, or Morgan's snuggly lap robe (those castles were drafty). Details like that weren't strictly speaking necessary to the tale, but they help give PRINCE VALIANT a feeling of solidity. (Sorry the bottom tier is a big larger, but these pages are too big for my scanner to do in one go and I'm not sure how to align the two sections in size.)


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[info]icon_uk
2009-08-30 12:12 pm UTC (link)
The linework is exquisite, and the colouring is lovely.

Val still looks unbearably camp in a few images, somehow reminiscent of silent movies, but I can forgive them that.

I don't think a drawbridge could actually work that way though, since it doesn't operate like a door, there would be no point at which something could be wheeled through, or actually come through without being spun through 90 degrees.

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[info]dr_hermes
2009-08-31 01:10 am UTC (link)
That drawbridge does not indeed seem very practical. I wonder where Foster got the idea. Usually you see them being drawn up by chains, as men inside turn the cranks,.

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[info]psychop_rex
2009-08-31 09:21 am UTC (link)
Well, it IS supposed to be the entrance/exit to an inescapable prison - it makes sense that it would be designed to give whoever was going in or out a rough time of things. There are probably more conventional doors elsewhere. Anyway, a sorceress is running things - they are notably eccentric when it comes to such details (as is only appropriate, since they're some of the few people who could actually pull them off). .

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[info]icon_uk
2009-08-31 11:55 am UTC (link)
Well no, the whirlibridge is at Merlin's gate, not Morgan's. So whilst eccentricity might be expected, this seems approaching the perverse.

I suppose I can see a vague usefulness in it for letting people in through the front door without letting anyone else though... unless of course, they were standing on the gate when it flipped up too, which with close range fighting like that would be something of a risk.

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[info]psychop_rex
2009-08-31 08:10 pm UTC (link)
I would imagine that it's usually turned slowly, so that whoever wants in can adjust to the changing surface, shift his weight to what will shortly become the floor, and therefore get in with a minimum of fuss. When it's a hostile presence or emergency, though, the gates are simply spun around so that anyone standing on the lower gates tumbles inside head over heels, in no state to present a threat to anyone.

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