Matter-Eater Lad doing his cracky thing
[personal profile] causticlad
Oh, right, like I was going to let this one pass. Assuming that Sam meets the technical specifications of "dude" and not "freakish animal/human hybrid"[1], let's look at him in distress, shall we?

Yes, we shall? )
Matter-Eater Lad doing his cracky thing
[personal profile] causticlad
Alan Moore's and Steve Parkhouse's The Bojeffries Saga was sporadically published during the 80s and early 90s. It was more or less The Addams Family meets Coronation Street. Set in Northampton, England, Grandpa was a Cthulhoovian horror, the baby was a lethally radioactive metahuman in the basement, and Uncle Raoul was a werewolf. As for Uncle Festus?

Well, you can probably guess... )
Matter-Eater Lad doing his cracky thing
[personal profile] causticlad
A fistful of Fantagraphics' Critters came out of the latest Box from the Closet thus reminding me of J.P. Morgan, who made me laugh quite a lot at the time with his Fission Chicken. I'd guess I wasn't the only one, as the character ended up getting his own series for a few issues before falling afoul (ha!) of one of Fantagraphics' periodic money crises some time around 1993.

Lo! and behold Google tells me that the Chicken of Wrath is still a going concern, running as a web comic after a hiatus that lasted until 2006. But let me introduce Morgan's creation to y'all via the very first comic to feature him (though published second, in Critters #22, February 1988). This is sort of Fission Archeopteryx, as he had a redesigned head starting from his second story (and first appearance), but on the other hand the script is more representative of the current run's humour -- the other Critters stories are, in retrospect, slowed down by some pretty heavy-handed satire.

Two pages of two:

Fission Chicken vs. The Creatures from Ineptune )
Matter-Eater Lad doing his cracky thing
[personal profile] causticlad


If I had to pick a single funniest person in comics, I'd go for the sadly unprolific Steve Purcell. So imagine my delight at coming across my long-filed stash of Sam and Max comics last night, as well as another treasure I'd forgotten about. Go on, imagine it. I'll wait.

All of Purcell's published creator-owned comics work is Sam and Max, with this one exception: Toybox. This setting has shown up only twice in print, both in 1993 (though he revisits it on his blog every now and then) and both uncollected since. This one is from Piranha Press' StoryTellers, an anthology series by DC's short-lived creator-owned alternative comics imprint.

Toybox chronicles the adventures of Ernie the Rat and Suda, who is a creepy doll. They live in the eponymous town with a variety of other toyland-like creatures vaguely reminiscent of The Nightmare Before Christmas (which it slightly predates) or Pleasure Island from the 1940 Pinocchio Disney movie. Sam and Max are noted for being funny with an admixture of creepiness, and Toybox, true to its fictional brethren, ups the mixture to about 50/50.

Five pages of thirteen.

Yes, those are coffins raining from the sky on the cover. )
pic#737773
[personal profile] strannik01
Ginger 06 - First Class Male - header
Hard as it is to believe now, there was a time when Archie Comics had many titles that starred teenage protagonists that had nothing to do with Archie Andrews and his supporting cast. One of them was a red-headed girl known as Ginger Snapp. She originally appeared in 1945 on the pages of Suzie Comics #49. She was originally depicted as a mousy, clumsy girl. But over the next few appearances, her personality evolved. She gained confidence and generally became more assertive. Ginger also discovered that she liked boys. A lot. She dated quite a few of them without ever quite committing to any one in particular, but she seemed especially fond of two boys - the pure-hearted, carefree Tommy Turner and inventive, the more intellectual Ichabod "Ickky" Jones. Unlike Betty and Veronica, the two never seemed to get at all jealous of each other, or any other guys Ginger dated.

After appearing on the back pages of Suzie Comics for a while, she gained her own title in 1951. Her title lasted for 10 issues. After that, Ginger Snapp was never seen again.

Or, at least, so I've been able to gather. I've hard time finding any sort of information about Ginger Snapp and her supporting cast. I found a rundown of her cast at Archie Universe website (scroll towards the bottom), but that's pretty much it.

Now, lots of online sources call Ginger a female Archie. Me, I don't think that's really the case (beyond a few surface similarities), but I'll let you be the judge of that.

The first story originally appeared in Ginger #10. The rest originally appeared in Ginger #6. I couldn't find any credits, so I have no idea who drew or wrote any of them.

Ginger is not at all desperate )

Though she is occasionally careless )

Ginger 'steals' a boy (2 pages under the cut) )

Ginger tries to pick a date. Hilarity ensues (6 pages under the cut) )

And, as a bonus, an Archie Comics house ad from Suzie Comics #56

Gee whiz, they are all so unique and different. How can I possibly choose? )

Tune in next time for a story from Spy and Counterspy - a Cold War anthology that billed itself as a mix of adventure and romance comics and delivered better than what you might expect.
Chaud thinking "No way!"
[personal profile] silverzeo
Just found this picture... and that all I can say... anything after that is just.... unspeakable... it is that awesomeJust look! )
SD
[personal profile] suzene
First on the table, some translated pages from an Alpha Flight dojinshi.

Yes, such a thing exists and it makes me happy. )

And another round of Alpha Flight comics from James Duncan of Pitabow Comics.

Oh, Scans Daily, how prophetic you are!* )

*OK, so it's been planned for a while, but anyway...

Also, I'm clearing out some comics and TPBs if anyone's interested. /plug
SD
[personal profile] suzene
James Duncan over at Pitabow Comics recently served up another round of Alpha Flight adventures. Let's do have a look!



They're Canadian, by the way. Very, very Canadian. )
lollerskates?
[personal profile] greenmask
Away for a month.. I wonder what I missed?? Many rumbles?

Anyway, I bring you bounty upon my return. You may or may not have heard of the amazing (liar) Baron Munchausen. He has a couple of illnesses named after him due to his tendancy to tell "tall tales" - four of which are related after the cut. And the art is pretty fantastic: perfectly suited to the tone. Enjoy!

Meet the Baron! )


Believe it or not, I found these amazing one-pagers in a Daily Mail children's annual. It was from maybe 1950, but the fact that the Daily Mail has ever published something that I can honestly say "that is entirely fantastic and in no way upsetting or offensive" about.. well, I find it hard to believe.

So I share them with you!
That's Twisted
[personal profile] angelophile
Beneath the cut, a page from The Gutters, a comic related webcomic by Ryan Sohmer working with various artists. This time it was the turn of Paul Southworth, creator of Ugly Hill.

I suspect this webcomic might strike a chord...

Quesada away! )
demigod
[personal profile] suzene
So...imagine the French Revolution peppered with the world's least competent vampires.


Free the masses! )

The whole story can be read here.


Suggested tags: medium: webcomic, genre: humor
pic#368449
[personal profile] silverzeo
Been browsing the previews for this weeks comics, and I came across this!
Not so unquely deisgned character behind cut. )
tags: group: Justice Society of America, title: Justice Society of America All -Stars, genre: humor.

Image of Hank Pym in The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes. He's in a lab coat, his costume under it, and he's writing
[personal profile] ficticons
Every two months or so, I try to pick up a free French-language magazine called Zoo le mag when I go to one of my comic shops. It has information about BD-related events, interviews, reviews, and some strips.

In the most recent edition, one of the strips was a page from the first album of a new series called Les Amours Compliquées de Roméo & Juliette. It's by Michel Rodrigue and Gilles "Erroc" Corre and published by Bamboo Édition.



The premise (taken and loosely translated from the Bamboo Éditions site linked to above) is the following:

In Verona in the 16th century, Roméo and Juliette love one another...but there are problems including 1) the fact that their balconies are separated by ten metres, 2) Juliette's father, 3) Juliette's nurse (as you will see), 4) two dogs, and 5) Roméo's recurring bad luck.

The objective? For Roméo to reach Juliette's balcony by whatever means possible!

When I saw the page reproduced below, I thought you folks might like it. The scanlation is by me (my first!), with the help of BabelFish, a dictionary, and my own non-native knowledge of French.

The things we do for love... )

Happy Valentine's Day, s_d. ♥

Suggested tags - medium: bande dessinée, genre: humor
Cynosure
[personal profile] suzene
Thanks to [personal profile] perletwo and [personal profile] icon_uk, I'm getting a bad case of commission itch that I cannot afford right now. So I'll settle for sharing the love.

Two bust-shots, both by David Yardin.

Teacher and student )

And the Age of Apocalypse Bored Game to go with.

No, not a typo. Yes, actual scans. )

Suggested tags:

genre: parody
genre: humor
genre: commission
CBR icon gallery, Grifter, Neutral, Wildstorm
[personal profile] strannik01
Hard as it is to believe now, there was actually time when Archie Comics used to have variety. Sure, Archie became a pretty popular title fairly early on, but it didn't stop Archie Comics from publishing other things. They published romance comics, horror comics, science fiction comics, funny animal comics and even (gasp!) comics about teenagers that had nothing do to do with Archie.

Suzie 60 - Supergal - Header

And then, there was Suzie Comics, a comic about a vivacious, but not terribly bright young woman who couldn't seem to hold down a job to save her life. In this adventure, our heroine winds up working for a comic book artist. Let's see what happens.

The following story was published in Suzie Comics#60. Writer and artist unknown.

A creepy artist guy wants me to pose for him. Gee, what could possibly go wrong? (8 pages under the cut) )

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