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Shapermc Hot Sake!
Joined: 14 Oct 2004 Posts: 6279
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Posted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 2:27 pm Post subject: |
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Harveyjames wrote: | I stopped reading every day. |
I only read achewood in really large chunks. Like I'll read 3 months worth in one sitting. That way I usually chuckle or laugh at least once and I don't forget little details that carry over as much. It also builds a better relationship between me and the characters so I tend to find things funny that I probably wouldn't just reading it by itself. It works pretty well this way. But yeah, it's not the greatest thing ever written, just something that's good for killing an afternoon once in a while. _________________ “The average man has a secret desire to be a swaggering, drunken, fighting, raping swashbuckler.”
-Robert E. Howard in a letter to a friend circa Decmber 1932
"There is no place in this enterprise for a rogue physicist!" |
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kirkjerk .
Joined: 12 Apr 2006 Posts: 1227
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Posted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 2:34 pm Post subject: |
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By coincidence, just yesterday I started reading the Schulz biography that's making the rounds.
Its interspersed with strips. One things striking about them is: a lot really don't have a gag, sometimes barely even a point. I think THAT'S something very few cartoonists could get away with now, at least on such a big stage.
Re: Waterson. My favorite quote:
Quote: | Q: What led you to resist merchandising Calvin and Hobbes?
A: For starters, I clearly miscalculated how popular it would be to show Calvin urinating on a Ford logo. . . . |
For me the finest C+H, and in some ways most representative, is that one where Calvin enters a bizarre, Picasso-esque non-Euclidean wacky-perspective world after an argument with his father where he starts to see his dad's PoV. I can't think of any other strips that could really pull that off; I'd say xkcd lacks the "known personality" needed for the closer. _________________ =/ \(<D)_/
==/\/ >_ kirkjerk.com |
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Harveyjames the meteor kid
Joined: 06 Jul 2006 Posts: 3636
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Posted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 4:26 pm Post subject: |
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parkbench wrote: |
Quote: | they're a pop band who just happens to know Yamataka Eye |
UH. Are you serious? Pop? I can agree they're not "super experimental rofls" but they're certainly not pop. If anything they uncannily sound like krautrock ("be sure to loop," i'm looking in your direction) or just ambient sometimes. And sometimes, they do sound like noise pop. I wouldn't say straight "pop" by any means. |
Yeah I guess my definition of pop is broader than yours. I don't use it disparagingly, I like pop music.
Shapermc wrote: | Harveyjames wrote: | I stopped reading every day. |
I only read achewood in really large chunks. Like I'll read 3 months worth in one sitting. That way I usually chuckle or laugh at least once and I don't forget little details that carry over as much. It also builds a better relationship between me and the characters so I tend to find things funny that I probably wouldn't just reading it by itself. It works pretty well this way. But yeah, it's not the greatest thing ever written, just something that's good for killing an afternoon once in a while. |
I did go though a phase of loving it, though! Achewood is pretty amazing when it wants to be. I guess I just found it unsatisfactory to read in drips and drabs. It's steak and chips rather than m+ms. |
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aderack .
Joined: 15 Jun 2005 Posts: 1105 Location: San Francisco
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Posted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 4:45 pm Post subject: |
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Is there something I should read to understand what the deal is with Peanuts? All I ever saw was the Sunday strip in the '80s and '90s, and... there was nothing there. _________________
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daphaknee just enemies now
Joined: 26 Jul 2007 Posts: 892 Location: YAY AREA
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Posted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 7:15 pm Post subject: |
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yeah im with aderack thats all ive seen and it was terrible
are you people saying theres MORE to peanuts? |
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Harveyjames the meteor kid
Joined: 06 Jul 2006 Posts: 3636
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Posted: Tue Dec 18, 2007 7:53 pm Post subject: |
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Yes
I'm trying to find the essay Umberto Eco wrote on Peanuts which prefaced the Italian edition, but all I can find is a load of quotes, like 'These children are the monstrous, infantile reductions of all the neuroses of a modern citizen of the industrial civilisation.' He's not reviewing it as the by-product of a sick society, either, it's a genuine appraisal of the strip. He compares it to long-form epic poetry like the Iliad amongst other things. ''If poetry means producing from everyday events, which we are accustomed to identify with the surface of things, a revelation that causes us to touch the depth of things, then, every so often, Charles Schulz is a poet.”
Look, just read a whole lot in one go, you'll start to get a feel for the tone and pace that's unique to the strip. Don't worry if you don't always laugh, or don't laugh at all, it's kind of unimportant.
Oh yeah, and there's this, too. I don't know if there's any Chris Ware fans here, but here's his tribute to Peanuts:
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Cycle Mac daddy
Joined: 08 Sep 2006 Posts: 2767
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Posted: Sat Jan 19, 2008 4:10 am Post subject: |
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lol nerd.
In all seriousness, I bought a bunch of Snoopy books, and one contains lots of early stuff.
Yeah, his early stuff wasn't too great... it was pretty much KIDS SAY THE DARNDEST THINGS in comic book form, and snoopy wasn't much different. Pretty much just making fun of the wacky things dogs do and what they probably think. _________________
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Dracko .
Joined: 10 Oct 2005 Posts: 2613
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Posted: Sat Jan 19, 2008 10:38 am Post subject: |
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_________________ "This is the most fun I've ever had without being drenched in the blood of my enemies!" |
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Harveyjames the meteor kid
Joined: 06 Jul 2006 Posts: 3636
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Posted: Sat Jan 19, 2008 1:30 pm Post subject: |
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That's great, but what else is great is:
also
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