Brazilian OUTLAW comics! Hard AF

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 18 окт 2024
  • Beat the Kayfabe Effect at our Patreon: / cartoonistkayfabe
    Ed's Links (Order RED ROOM!, Patreon, etc): linktr.ee/edpi...
    Jim's Links (Patreon, Store, social media): linktr.ee/jimrugg
    -------------------------
    E-NEWSLETTER: Keep up with all things Cartoonist Kayfabe through our newsletter! News, appearances, special offers, and more - signup here for free: cartoonistkayf...
    ---------------------
    SNAIL MAIL! Cartoonist Kayfabe, PO Box 3071, Munhall, Pa 15120
    ---------------------
    T-SHIRTS and MERCH: shop.spreadshi...
    ---------------------
    Connect with us:
    Instagram: / cartoonist.kayfabe
    Twitter: / cartoonkayfabe
    Facebook: / cartoonist.kayfabe
    Ed's Contact info:
    / edpiskor
    / ed_piskor
    / edpiskor
    www.amazon.com...
    Jim's contact info:
    / jimrugg
    www.jimrugg.co...
    / jimruggart
    / jimruggart
    www.amazon.com...

Комментарии • 36

  • @brunofranco4416
    @brunofranco4416 Год назад +27

    I wish brazilian comics, wich we call "Gibis"(pronounced jee-bees), where more well known. There's a lot of cool stuff the rest of the world hasnt seen, like Laerte or Angeli, wich i think you guys whould really enjoy(even if you cant find them in english) since you like that "outlaw" vibe. They published the brazilian equivalent of MAD Magazine, wich was Chiclete Com Banana(lit. Bubblegum with Banana) before beign discontinued. They both were the most successful underground comic creators in our industry, pretty much every quadrinista knows them.
    In Brazil, the highest grossing properties belong to Maurício de Souza, creator of Monica's Gang(Turma da Mônica, basically think Archie but with little kids). Recently he also founded Graphic MSP, where vaious artists/writers can use his characters to create graphic novels disconected from the main brand.
    There was a great surge in popularity of comics back in the late 60's/70's during the dicatatorship era, but most of them went under and dont exist anymore, most of them were popular because of their horror and erotic titles. Others made kid-friendly fare including the genre of Celebrity comics(basically famous people turned into cartoony characters) and superhero stuff. Big names like Flávio Colin(our Jack Kirby), Paulo Seto, Paulo Hamasaki, Eugenio Colonesse, Julio Shimamoto, etc.
    In the 80's/90's, you had the popularity of D&D and Vampire: The Masquerade wich prompted interest in RPG's, wich was when Marcelo Cassaro rose to proeminence. He created the Tormenta setting, wich he publicized through anime-style comicbooks such as Holy Avenger, Victory, Defensores de Tóquio among others.
    These comics were where a lot of major names got started like my favorite artist Eduardo Francisco, Roger Cruz, Érica Awano, Rogério Hanata, etc(google them, they're worth your time). You might recognize these names from all those bootleg Megaman, Street Fighter and Mortal Kombat 4 comics that became a meme on the internet for how unnecessarily violent and sexual they were. And bad. VERY bad.
    The big publishers nowadays, to me, are Draco, Mino, Nemo, Pipoca & Nanquin and JBC. Most of award-winning authors today are publishing social comentary stuff, but there's a lot of japanese-style work that are catching on in the korean webcomic websites. I believe comcistrips were and probably always will be more mainstream than serialized comics.

  • @raikou16
    @raikou16 Год назад +21

    I'm amazed at how it looks incredible but I never heard about this. I think it was never re-published here in Brazil. Sadly we weren't good at preserving our classics lol. We have a lot of great cartoonists from the 70's-90's that got lost to time in the shuffle of newstands.
    In terms of Brazilian cartoonist today we have the Angoulême contenders: Marcelo Quintanilha, Marcelo D'Salete. The underground comics: Fabio Vermelho, Diego Gerlach, Lourenço Mutarelli (imo the best we have). And finally the old-school adventure/horror cartoonists that are being rediscovered and reprinted: Flávio Colin (his art mastery of BnW is jaw-dropping), Julio Shimamoto, Jayme Cortez.

    • @kirtburdick
      @kirtburdick Год назад +4

      Thanks for listing all those great Brazilian Cartoonists.

    • @raikou16
      @raikou16 Год назад +3

      @@kirtburdick Yeah, I really wish we were better at exporting our cartoonists. Our neighbors in Argentine have been published a few times in Europe and North America. But among those I mentioned only a few have been published abroad. I hope we can soon show our comics to new audiences!

    • @augustofonseca4773
      @augustofonseca4773 Год назад +2

      Excellent. The best ones are there but you just forgot to mention one of the greatest , Ziraldo

    • @feliperisseto9113
      @feliperisseto9113 Год назад

      There is also that guy who wrote and drawed The Phantom. Walmir Amaral think was his name.

  • @kirtburdick
    @kirtburdick Год назад +5

    Brazilian All Ages needs to be an official bookstore section/genre. Those layouts were amazing!

  • @Sevans1973
    @Sevans1973 Год назад +3

    Ramthar has sooo many Arnold photos used for reference. But man that is some beautiful layouts and ink work.

  • @augustofonseca4773
    @augustofonseca4773 Год назад +5

    Hey guys. Very good. About Brazilian comics, you need to know the work of Flávio Colin and Ziraldo, our greatest artists of all time. From the contemporary scene, I highlight the work of Marcelo D'Salete, Lélis, Marcelo Quintanilha, Wagner William, Rafael Coutinho and Shiko.

    • @augustofonseca4773
      @augustofonseca4773 Год назад +1

      Oh, and I was forgetting about Lourenço Mutarelli (our Robert Crumb). Hey @pipocaenanquim e @canalcomixzone please, send some copies of Colin, Cortez and Mutarelli to our friends at Cartoon Kayfabe

  • @alvarorodriguez-kq8tw
    @alvarorodriguez-kq8tw Год назад +4

    it reminds me of the Selecciones Ilustradas tradition, wich artist use to work in the Warren publications in the 70's. Pepe González, Esteban Maroto, Luis Garcia and things like that

  • @davigreati291
    @davigreati291 Год назад +10

    Hey Kayfabe Guys! Here in Brazil there was this publishers, Press, Grafipar and others, which published unofficial erotic adaptations of some famous films. I don't know how many there are, but I know there's one of the Ninja Turtles and another one from the Stalone's Cobra. The artist of these two stories is the legendary Watson Portela, who signed with the pseudonym Barroso. Go check it out, i thik you'll like it.

    • @brunofranco4416
      @brunofranco4416 Год назад +1

      Watson Portela is so great, he is the definitive Heavy Metal comics guy to me.

  • @jamesrascal001
    @jamesrascal001 Год назад +1

    The Fallout 3000 really reminds me of the VCs from 2000Ad. Thanks for showing these comics. Another great show.

  • @gabrieljardim346
    @gabrieljardim346 Год назад

    Finally you guys taking a look at Deodato's stuff! Would be great to see more in the future

  • @pjbrown4736
    @pjbrown4736 Год назад +4

    Mike Deodato evolved nicely over the years he's been active.

  • @lucasperalta4738
    @lucasperalta4738 Год назад +1

    Hello cartoonist! looking at the work I clearly see an influence from lucho olivera, an argentine cartoonist known for nippur de lagash, anyway it is a great work by that first mike

  • @gg.gama666
    @gg.gama666 Год назад +5

    If you wanna see REAL brazilian outlaw comics look up ESCÓRIA COMIX!!

  • @wandersonoliveira263
    @wandersonoliveira263 Год назад

    For more outlaw comics in Brazil, seek out for a Brazilian artist called Bräo (really not safe for RUclips). Beyond that, you guys should really check out some modern Brazilian cartoonists. You have Lourenço Mutarelli, a poet of madness; Marcello Quintanilha, a photographic cronist/magical realist of the mundane life in Brazil; Marcelo D'Salete, a true comic historian in afro-brazillian history; and many more, like Bianca Pinheiro, Jefferson Costa, Luciano Salles, Pedro Mauro and Camilo Solano.

  • @jbnj11
    @jbnj11 Год назад +1

    Any chance of an episode on GRATEFUL DEAD COMIX? Lots of amazing artists contributed like Tim Truman.

  • @gabrielgolsman1003
    @gabrielgolsman1003 Год назад

    So, you need to know Lourenço Mutarelli's work. Perhaps the greatest artist on the Brazilian scene of all time.

  • @JoeHoddinott
    @JoeHoddinott Год назад

    Whoa - Those interiors are fantastic. (Covers not so much)

  • @Therealmrmeow
    @Therealmrmeow Год назад

    Snap! I just finished watchin' the Wizard #51 video. A great follow up. Something to cleanse the "palette", not palate.

  • @Downsee01
    @Downsee01 Год назад +2

    Sorry guys but you really need to up your 80’s action film game; that page you’re on at 9.40 is clearly Arnie in COMMANDO and Ronny Cox, not Chris Walken.
    Sort it out 😂❤

  • @theartofSkinner
    @theartofSkinner Год назад

    This rules so hard!!!!

  • @enorb_art8211
    @enorb_art8211 Год назад

    The mustache guy kinda looks like Charles Bronson

  • @warnerg80
    @warnerg80 Год назад

    Just picked up 3 of the 4. Can’t find Razor Nights 🤷‍♂️

  • @BrunoidGames
    @BrunoidGames 7 месяцев назад

    Great video, man! Check "Cidade de Sangue" from Julio Shimamoto.
    This guy is a legend, more than 50 years of comics.

  • @spiderphil
    @spiderphil Год назад

    🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @paulopatrocinio6538
    @paulopatrocinio6538 Год назад

    Look for Loureço Mutarelli and his work if you want to see the best alternative brazilian comics.

  • @oldguy9051
    @oldguy9051 Год назад

    10:03 Not Chris Walken but rather Ronny Cox (Robocop)!

  • @anluzdom6086
    @anluzdom6086 Год назад

    Pls review more brazilian comics in the futire!

  • @cyberpunkholiday
    @cyberpunkholiday Год назад

    Reminds me of Brian Bolland in some aspects.

  • @cafezal
    @cafezal Год назад +1

    I'm Brazilian and also a comic writer.
    Here we have comics following every style. Many times we see comics mixing different sources for great results, also comics showing great and innovative ideas.
    We don't have a Brazilian style since it usually derives from strong comic markets and the kind of production each of these markets impose on the artists involved.
    We don't have any strong publisher publishing Brazilian comics in a comparable quantity to what is seen in France, USA or Japan.
    But we do have some publishers that put out a few original Brazilian comics each year, most of them very small. Just a few 100% dedicated to Brazilian comics (actually I can only remember two presently publishing).
    The exception goes to Mauricio de Sousa Produções (MSP) that produces the Turma da Mônica comics, a huge children comics published here since the 60s. We all grew up reading his comics. Maurício is our "Walt Disney", with a studio hiring artists to produce many titles on a monthly basis with numbers comparable to Marvel, DC or Disney comics in Brazil. But that is miles away from the usual.
    Most of our comics, nowadays, are produced independently through crowdfunding or government funding for arts.
    Either that, or we go online publishing for free.
    Usually publishers prefer international titles from more famous artists. It is easier to sell.
    I'm still independent even though I work for publishers here and there.
    I could say that, in general, our comics follow a French style in the way we present comics. Usually, complete stories of more or less 50 pages (sometimes more) is the output of most artists in print format.
    But the narrative varies a lot. It can seem French, American, Japanese or a mix.
    Some titles are published in the short series format that can take 3 or 4 years to finish a 5 issue story because of money problems and balancing work and comics.
    Horror has a huge following and tradition here in Brazil, but we also have a great tradition in humor comics and also children comics in general.
    We can talk more about Brazilian comics. I can direct you to some publications that tell the history of our comics.
    We even have a dispute with the US on where the first comic (as we know today) was published. Spoiler: it was here. :)
    Check out my comics: carlosfelipe.net/
    Some of them you'll be able to read online and in English: tapas.io/Cafezal
    See you!

  • @cafezal
    @cafezal Год назад +2

    By the way, these covers don't do justice to what we see inside.
    Mike Deodato was much better before working for DC and Marvel.