Steph, I read that, and it's amaaaazing. There needs to be more DCU crossover fic in the world.
Giles ,'Same Time, Same Place'
Other Media
Discussion of Buffy and Angel comics, books, and more. Please don't get into spoilery details in the first week of release.
R.I.P. Will Eisner.
Oh no...
He was heard to be doing so well afterwards! I attended several talks he has given, and was always entertained by his stories of the early days of comics, and challenged by his hopes of what comics/sequential art could achieve.
Damn. That's a legend and an era gone.
This week's projected haul:
- Firestorm #9
- Ultimate X-Men #54
I may flip through JLE in the store. I skimmed the first six -- didn't like them enough to buy, but kinda interesting. The lead chick with the fake arms is very compelling, and of course, there's my girl. I'll definitely flip through XMen FF -- my urge to completeness doesn't compel me to buy any more. Especially after seeing Joss write a much better bristly encounter between the two teams. And I'll be sure to skim Endsong before plunking down the cash.
Does anyone read The Authority? I read the Yuletide challenge fic that shrift wrote, and it was her fandom. I googled a bit, and found it has a supertextual same sex couple. Is it any good?
Where have all the comics gone? My habit seems almost manageable.
R.I.P. Will Eisner.
Awww, fuck. Not only one of the giants of the art form, but a good man too. A major innovator as an artist, designer, writer and businessman. Also, he drew the hottest women ever.
man, Eisner's passing was SO not the way I wanted this year to start off. The man was a comic book god.
Does anyone read The Authority? I read the Yuletide challenge fic that shrift wrote, and it was her fandom. I googled a bit, and found it has a supertextual same sex couple. Is it any good?
Not anymore. The first twelve issues were golden, but the stories and art began a swift downward spiral after Ellis and Hitch left.
Does anyone read The Authority? I read the Yuletide challenge fic that shrift wrote, and it was her fandom. I googled a bit, and found it has a supertextual same sex couple. Is it any good?
It may have been a supertextual relationship in the Stormwatch issues, but Ellis establishes them as in a relationship fairly early on his The Authority run. And then Apollo and The Midnighter get married. It's a thing.
The Ellis issues are worth reading. The stuff after, not so much. I'm liking Ed Brubaker's work thus far on The Authority: Revolutions.
By supertextual I was grasping for a word to mean the opposite of subtext and could think of nothing other than "explicit" which certainly conjures up the wrong image. I think.
I realise now, the word CANONICAL would have done just fine.
::smacks self lightly on brain::
Sheesh, Neil Gaiman's tribute to Will Eisner got me choked up.
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Tuesday, January 04, 2005
Will Eisner, 1917-2005
posted by Neil Gaiman 1/4/2005 10:12:11 AM
I interviewed my friend Will Eisner a few year ago, at the Chicago Humanities Festival. At one point I asked him why he kept going, why he kept making comics when his contemporaries (and his contemporaries were people like Bob Kane -- before he did Batman -- remember) had long ago retired and stopped making art and telling stories, and gone.
He told me about a film he had seen once, in which a jazz musician kept playing because he was still in search of The Note. That it was out there somewhere, and he kept going to reach it. And that was why Will kept going: in the hopes that he'd one day do something that satisfied him. He was still looking for The Note...
Will Eisner was better than any of us, and he kept working in the hope that one day he'd get it right.
I was woken up this morning, with the news that Will had died last night, aged 87, and I've let a few friends know, and already had to speak to one journalist about who Will was and what he did ("It's as if Orson Welles had made Citizen Kane and redefined what you could do in film, and then carried on making movies until now," I said, wishing I could come up with a better analogy, and knowing that that didn't explain it. And I didn't mention how proud he was of any of us who did good comics -- how much he cared about the medium -- or how glad I am that I got to tell him that I wouldn't have written comics if it wasn't for him. There's a reason that the Oscars of comics are the Eisner Awards.)
I'm suddenly very grateful for the time I've had with Will over the years, in England and Germany and Spain and the US, for the times that I went over to see him and Ann when I was in the Fort Lauderdale area. I'm glad I was there in Erlangen, when they gave Will an award and the place erupted into a standing ovation that went on and on until I thought that the walls would collapse and the Millenium come and we'd still be in that theatre cheering and clapping, with Will beaming down at us from the stage.
I'm going to miss him enormously, more than I can say. I made a speech last year, where I said how strange it was to discover that the gods of comics, the people who made the medium, were, when I met them, cranky old Jews. Will Eisner wasn't cranky, and he was never old. He was, in all ways, a mensch.
And I keep weighing it in my head, the sorrow at losing Will with the knowledge of how fortunate I was to have known him ("you're always sorry, you're always grateful," as Sondheim said about something quite different).
I'm more grateful than sorry.
In the characters' first appearance they were naked together in their warehouse lair. And used, shall we say, an unconventional posture for the flighted member of the duo to carry the non-flighted one. I suppose some people saw it as subtextual, but I didn't think much doubt was left for that kiss in the second Authority story arc to dispel.