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Loading The Canon
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Добавлен 9 янв 2023
I talk about comics.
Видео
The Top 100 Countdown - 40-31
Просмотров 157День назад
In 1999, The Comics Journal released a list of the Top 100 Best (English-Language) Comics of the 20th Century. This is the first in a series of videos examining that list. CANON Annual 2024 takes an even more in-depth look at the list and its creation. Order here: canonzine.bigcartel.com
The Top 100 Countdown - 50-41
Просмотров 146День назад
In 1999, The Comics Journal released a list of the Top 100 Best (English-Language) Comics of the 20th Century. This is the first in a series of videos examining that list. CANON Annual 2024 takes an even more in-depth look at the list and its creation. Order here: canonzine.bigcartel.com
The Top 100 Countdown - 60 - 51
Просмотров 212Месяц назад
In 1999, The Comics Journal released a list of the Top 100 Best (English-Language) Comics of the 20th Century. This is the first in a series of videos examining that list. CANON Annual 2024 takes an even more in-depth look at the list and its creation. Order here: canonzine.bigcartel.com
The Top 100 Countdown - 70 - 61
Просмотров 189Месяц назад
In 1999, The Comics Journal released a list of the Top 100 Best (English-Language) Comics of the 20th Century. This is the first in a series of videos examining that list. CANON Annual 2024 takes an even more in-depth look at the list and its creation. Order here: canonzine.bigcartel.com
The Top 100 Countdown - 80-71
Просмотров 165Месяц назад
In 1999, The Comics Journal released a list of the Top 100 Best (English-Language) Comics of the 20th Century. This is the first in a series of videos examining that list. CANON Annual 2024 takes an even more in-depth look at the list and its creation. Order here: canonzine.bigcartel.com
The Top 100 Countdown - 90-81
Просмотров 220Месяц назад
In 1999, The Comics Journal released a list of the Top 100 Best (English-Language) Comics of the 20th Century. This is the first in a series of videos examining that list. CANON Annual 2024 takes an even more in-depth look at the list and its creation. Order here: canonzine.bigcartel.com
The Top 100 Countdown - 100-91
Просмотров 398Месяц назад
In 1999, The Comics Journal released a list of the Top 100 Best (English-Language) Comics of the 20th Century. This is the first in a series of videos examining that list. CANON Annual 2024 takes an even more in-depth look at the list and its creation. Order here: canonzine.bigcartel.com
Conversation with Noah Van Sciver
Просмотров 3043 месяца назад
I talked with Noah Van Sciver at the great Philly comic shop Partners and Son on the occasion of an exhibit of his art at the store. We also discussed the creation and release of American Cartoonist: The Comic Art of Noah Van Sciver, a mid-career retrospective that features an essay about Van Sciver's work, an interview, and close to 100 pages of art, most of which was reproduced from Van Scive...
PREVIEWS Flip-through September 2024
Просмотров 975 месяцев назад
PREVIEWS Flip-through September 2024
RECENT READS: The Mysteries by Bill Watterson and John Kascht
Просмотров 35211 месяцев назад
RECENT READS: The Mysteries by Bill Watterson and John Kascht
Two Art Books: Hypnotic Midday Movie by Simon Hanselmann and The Book of Augurs by Ze Burnay
Просмотров 66Год назад
Two Art Books: Hypnotic Midday Movie by Simon Hanselmann and The Book of Augurs by Ze Burnay
Valuable insight as always. Toppi is up to Volume 11 plus other special volumes (art books). Pretty amazing. Excited about Cabbie, Dimwood, Precious Rubbish (which I special ordered when I met Kayla at Heroes last year), Existential Comics, Crumb biography, and Ultra Heaven. Lame that Precious Metal is not an oversized hardcover. I liked that format for Little Bird. I feel the way you do about the European work. I would love to be able to choose among all of it. I also feel the same about 2000 AD stuff. It’s overwhelming. Slaine Definitive Edition is also solicited. I’ve got the Bisley. This looks great too. Maybe you mentioned these, but a couple of others I thought might be interesting: Keller Roberts books and Portugal by Cyril Pedrosa
I've been immune to Pedrosa and Roberts' charms in the past. That might be a me problem. I read Precious Rubbish last night. An interesting book... it's quite an achievement.
Papercutz and Penthouse Comix side by side.🎉
Was going to mention this too! 😂😂😂
One of the great things about the Previews experience is that a bunch of stuff that has no business being together is jammed in between two flimsy covers!
Dino Battaglia- if you're buying Euro/South American reprints than buy this. I don't have a lot of his work but it has more comic panel to panel than Toppi.
Thanks for the comment! That's very intriguing....
What's going on with Previes, is Diamond going under?
They are circling the drain... hopefully, they'll get bought.
On Plastic Man, I believe a DC Finest edition is coming in March.
Good call. Honestly, I think that sort of collection is more than enough.
with their gnarly recolor? I'd rather do PsArtbooks' scans (which certainly are not perfect).
My issue with the list is comic strips vs comic books. I would like to see new lists breaking them up. Also, love the Ditko Spider-Man. They’ve had some other great artists but they could have stopped the book when Ditko left.
That's a common opinion, for sure. I like the weird mix, personally, but it does muddle things a bit. And, yeah, Ditko's Spider-Man is so great. I wish his Dr. Strange had made it, too.
Poison River was the second collection I read of L&R. Currently re-reading it in the First 50 box set. Still probably my favorite Gilbert story. I feel the same way you do about Calvin and Hobbes. Loved it in the newspaper as a kid. I had a few trades later too. It’s great cartooning but it doesn’t resonate with me too much any more. If I’m going to read some newspaper strips from that era, I would prefer the Far Side (okay, it’s not a strip, but you know what I mean…)
I agree 100%. I reread both when they were released as hardcover box sets, and I enjoyed The Far Side a lot more.
Nice video! I got that Bradleys TPB shortly after I got into Hate in the early 90s. I have vivid memories of laughing so hard that I was crying while reading it. I loved that City of Glass book and Mazzucchelli’s (and/or Karasik’s) formalistic approach and thinking “how can this be an adaptation of prose?” I should read the novels and reread the comics. I’m a big Mattotti fan too, so I’m looking forward to that new book. I really enjoyed Understanding Comics too. I no longer have the book, and it wouldn’t be on my top 100, but it is an impressive achievement and generated a lot of fun discussion. And Cages, From Hell, and Ghost World - 🤌
I might have to make an effort to find Cages. There was definitely a European element to that art that caught my eye.
I think it's worth the effort. It's a beautiful book.
"I don't have the original issue of the journal with me...I lost it in a drunken poker game with Gary Groth's retired drug dealer" That's what I heard anyway.
I can neither confirm nor deny...
This Canon book is large and is well worth it. I’ve enjoyed looking through it and being exposed to work I hadn’t encountered. Also, great cover.
Thanks! I appreciate you taking a chance on it! I love that cover, too.
“Even a phoned-in Alan Moore is better than the rest of this junk.” 😂😂😂 Tedward and Tongues are the standouts to me this month.
I decided not to double-dip on Tongues... but I may change my mind.
Ken Worthing, the guy who does the Alan Class videos, dropped once that Class was still alive. I think he mentioned it last year.
I’m going to miss these if Diamond folds.
Me, too...
Also: viewers really should get the Canon annual. Really solid, hard to put down.
I appreciate that, josh!
I mean, these comics are OKAY, but no This Is Wild Dog? Where's Lobo? C'mon!
This is quickly becoming my favorite Comics content on RUclips, a really wonderful companion to The Comics Journal's list.
Thank you!
I think as far as EC goes, small doses is my preferred way of reading them too.
I used to buy reprints off the spinner rack in the early 90s that were like double-sized comics. That was the perfect format for EC. I kind of wish I had tried to put a set of those together.
I need to track down that Alec. I’ve read some here and there and liked it. I still have a fair amount of his Bacchus. Woodring is up there for me. Love all of his work, and I agree that his latest is a masterpiece. And I still love A Contract with God! 😊
I love Bacchus, too. But I think you'd really like going all-in on Alec. Highly recommended.
Thanks for this! IMO, Pekar was a genius-innovator of the form. Pekar with wife Joyce Brabner and artist Frank Stack won the Harvey Award for best original graphic novel, 1995, for Our Cancer Year. It is a masterpiece and one of the crowning achievements in comics. Also there's a very good feature-length comedy-documentary film on Pekar from 2003 called American Splendor. It stars actor Paul Giamatti as well as Pekar himself.
I really like those early American Splendors. I didn’t start reading them until 1990 but I was aware of him from David Letterman. Nothing else like it at the time. And the way he (and his cartoonists) could make regular “day in the life of a file clerk” stories interesting was amazing.
This issue of TCJ is what introduced me to Steinberg, whose work became incredibly important to me.
Nice video! I was working at Bedrock City comics in Houston when Rubber Blanket 3 came out. We could still get copies of 1 and 2 (can’t remember now which distributor - might have been Last Gasp?) so we tried to keep all 3 in stock. But they were not quick sellers. They would sit a long time. I don’t remember anyone ever wanting it because they were a fan of his superhero work but that may have happened. I think it was mostly people who were into the alt comics scene, but it was still tough because the tone isn’t like Hate, Eightball, etc. Plus, these were the days that people wouldn’t buy something just because it wouldn’t fit in a standard longbox. Also, Lynda Barry is still an embarrassing blind spot for me. I really need to do a deep dive into her work.
I remember when you could find Rubber Blanket #3 pretty easily. I'd see it in shops regularly, and those copies had been sitting there for years. For #1 and #2 I needed the internet... I really like One!Hundred!Demons! by Lynda Barry. That's the first substantial chunk of her work that I read. I'm not as high on her as most, but I'd recommend her work for sure.
100 Demons is great, as is Cruddy, a prose book she wrote with her illustrations.
Just tag me when it gets to Kickers Inc.
That's in the top 10.
Nice video! I’m with you on Mr. Punch. It’s good, but Sandman is stronger for Gaiman and Cages is McKean’s best. I remember actually being disappointed with Mr. Punch when it came out because my expectations were so high. I really need to read Drechsler. One of those blind spots I’m embarrassed to admit.
I had the same reaction to Mr. Punch at the time. I like the two previous Gaiman/McKean collaborations more, tbh. Drechsler is good, but man, she's a tough read. After I made this video, I reread some of Daddy's Girl. Wonderful comics, but they're a gut-punch.
The sometimes absurd levels of pretension shown by Comics Journal by putting Watchmen at #91. Made me laugh out loud! Thanks for this great best of series.
YES!!! Great video! Man that Canon Annual looks fantastic! Can’t wait to get it!
It should arrive soon! Thanks for the support, Jeremy!
Here we go again! What a great surprise to see you reviving this video series. Even better to see CANON ANNUAL in print, congratulations to you and Alex.
This series and my live chats are what I was disappointed to lose with the old channel. At least I can kind of replace these!
Party time. I'm 99% sure I preordered this I should check 😂😂
You sure did! People further away than you are getting it, so you should have it soon. And thanks for the pre-order! I really appreciate it.
@loadingthecanon1919 i just pulled it out of the mailbox. It looks great, I'll probably be referencing it a lot over the next few years.
@@ChaosandComics Glad to hear it!
hell yeah Colin. Congratulations on this!
Thanks, Terence! Your copy will be in the mail this week.
Ordered. Very interesting idea plus a Noah Van Sciver cover. Looking forward to it.
Thanks!
“Keeping Two” was a lovely book.
Agreed.
Always informative! Fully Loaded looks like it could be a good Blade Runner / Hard Boiled type comic with good photo reference art. It's a fine line between stiff looking photo art and pleasant Al Williamson type good photo reference. There is a short interview in Tripwire with Broxton where he acknowledges the Darrow / Miller / Blade Runner influence. It was apparently a Zoop funded graphic novel first. Anyway, I'm a mark for Darrow and Blade Runner, so I will check it out. The big books for me here are Beat it Rufus, Give Me Liberty and Goes Like This. Also, Nemesis.
Love your monthly curation. First Comics putting out Badger again written by Steve Rude looks cool. Nemesis the Warlock Omni would be a fun read. I'm going to pull that Fully Loaded book too.
Thank you. I almost mentioned Badger. I have a soft spot for a lot of the 80's independents.
Colin, you are doing the Lord’s work here.
I ❤ this channel and these Previews reviews. I was unaware about the Comics Catalog book and I’m definitely going to get it. You pointed out some other great books too.
I appreciate it! I don't think you can go wrong with the Catalog, it's really a one-of-a-kind book.
Is your new job as the official Fantagraphics archivist and head librarian? If so, very jealous.
Nothing that fancy, I'm afraid! I'm the Inventory Manager for Fantagraphics now, so I'm about 40 feet, give or take, from the library. Once I know what I'm doing, I plan to take full advantage of that!
That's way more impressive! Congratulations.
I give a shit about these videos! 😂 You always point out a few things I missed like Revelations in the Wink of an Eye and Grand Electric Thought Power Master (long titles!). And Vagabond. I would like the Paul Smith AE but I’m out of room for those big books for titles that are not top of the list for me! Still getting the Neal Adams one, though! Also, Taschen is going to be putting out XXL EC books…😳 That Comics catalog is the first time that an English version has been made in hardcover I believe. I ordered an English version when I first heard about it, and mine is softcover. I think only the French version was originally available in hardcover. I’m tempted to get this hardcover because it’s such a great book and I like hardcovers much more than softcovers (and my copy arrived a little beat up). But I will probably resist the urge to double dip. That AI porn book is ridiculous. It’s ridiculous that they have those “photography” books in Previews. It goes to show who their audience is though.
Haha, thanks, Jeremy. I breathe a sigh of relief every time there's an AE book that I don't want.
Great channel
Thanks for watching, and for saying that!
Started a new job! Terence said you were independently wealthy, like me. 😂
I wish! And maybe I would be, if I didn't spend all of my money on comics, haha.
Wow! All of the art is great, but Crumb?!?! Mic drop. A holy grail for anyone who likes underground. Like me!
Thanks! It's tiny, but it's one of my favorites.
Wow! Killer collection! Jaxon! Trondheim! Sala! Deitch! Sim! Seth! Bagge! Cruse! Hernandez! And more! A veritable who's who of alt/art cartoonists!
You dug deep on this one! I forgot this video was on here.
Righteous! Thanks for posting this! Wish I could have been there.!
Me, too!
Great to see this interview. Interesting to hear the behind the scenes account of what goes into the stories.
Great chat. Ty NVS, Colin and Sean. BTW, here's a link to Wikipedia on Tintin, "The Shooting Star" by Hergé: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Shooting_Star Be sure and scroll down to the section on antisemitism. As ever, it is complicated but it appears that Hergé's estate may need to be further held to account.
Loved it as always! DC should use you for the cover blurbs on Longbow Hunters: “There’s worse shit you could spend your money on” “I can’t say it’s good, but I enjoyed it” 😂😂😂 Actually, I feel the same way. I loved the series when it came out. Over the years I have read a lot of negative criticism in TCJ and elsewhere. I’m currently about halfway through a reread and loving it! Not sure I would if I hadn’t read it when I was 16-ish. The Bess horror books are comics. They are caption-heavy but definitely told in a sequential comic style. I think Magnetic’s description is a little misleading. They are not artist’s editions as we know them (at least they don’t appear to be to me), but they don’t have they don’t have the gray tones and other effects added to the original French versions. Maybe they are scans of the original art, but you see very little, if any, process - it just looks like black and white. They are beautiful though. I’m really enjoying Paklis. I’m also really enjoying the new Den editions. Villarubia is not recoloring but attempting to color to Corben’s wishes using original art as the base. Arguably, some earlier editions still look better, but he’s not trying to change the colors. On the Bilal book (Exterminator published by Humanoids), he was asked to recolor. That’s my understanding anyway.
Hello Colin! Thanks for the video. I've been following Manara's works very closely. Dark Horse already released Caravaggio Vol. 1 before the pandemic. They were scheduled to release Vol. 2, but it never materialized, so I bought the edition integrale and the "oversized" artists edition of both volumes. If these are erotic, they are "R" with close attention to historical detail. The same can be said for Manara's adaptation of the Name of the Rose. There are numerous - the term risqué doesn't even really apply - adaptations of French and Italian classic literature from Manara that deserve an American audience. Fantagrsphics could reprint those, but will a non erotic Manara generate wide enough sales in the USA? Who can say? My bottom line here is that the moral climate has changed in Italy, and with it, Manara's penchant for beautiful and bizarre erotica. Yes, Manara has resigned himself to creating something akin to the Classics Illustrated of Europe! As for the Bess adaptations of Gothic Horror, Magnetic did a very nice job, and if they plan to present the artist's editions, more power to them. Are these essential? I don't think you'd enjoy them. They are text and illustrations. Beautiful illustrations, but we all know these stories back to front. The Bolland Artist's edition has been pushed back? The price isn't what scares me away from this work, I am more concerned by how well it function as an example of Bolland's process and not just new printings of very old pages. As always, the long delayed Dark Horse Corben books remain very much hit and miss affairs. The essence of Corben, for me, is what HE did with color in the original editions of his works. Recoloring them seems counterproductive. Villarubia is doing the same thing with the work of Enki Bilal, which seems like an even stranger proposition. 🎃
Thanks for your comments! Manara seems to have fallen out of favor in the US, but I'm intrigued to see what Fantagraphics does and how well it does for them. I really like Graphitti Designs' artist editions, but I wish there was way to look at the book before ordering it. That's a hefty price for a book that may not satisfy. I'm glad that Corben is getting a deluxe reprint, but I agree with you about the coloring. Who's doing the Bilal books that Villarubia is working on? I'll keep an eye out for that.
The cost of some of these does take your breath away. I love Brian Bolland but that price is steep.
I haven't read my Bess, Dracula and Frankenstein, they really are beautiful. Can't comment on how the read quite yet though.
Are they all comics? Not illustrated books?
Dogman here, I rule.