Tales To Demolish |
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Tales To Demolish #1
Tales To Demolish #1© Eric Haven |
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Tales To Demolish is a curious comic from Canada that basically resembles
an extended Tharg's 'Future Shock'
Altho' It's called Tales To Demolish (why Is everyone using sub EC
titles these days?), there's only one story: The Glacier, about a glaciologist
exploring a frozen waste. During an earthquake, a giant creature is released from
the ice...and that's about it.
The revelation as to what the creature is, isn't actually as mind-blowing as writer/artist
Eric Haven seems to think, and he takes a lot of pages to get to it.
Really this is a story that shouldn't take more than 4 or 5 pages.
Eric's a competent artist (tho' I suspect he has trouble with faces, as he takes
every opportunity not to draw them), with a dark, detailed cross-hatching style,
and a good use of space, but as a writer, this feels like a first attempt.
This comic is nicely produced, and looks good, but, really, the story is so ordinary,
it doesn't engage your interest.
If Eric's plan is a comic-length tale each issue, he's gonna have
to do better than this, and I'd suggest splitting the next book into 2 or
even 3 stories.
Average.
Pete Doreé |
Tales to Demolish #2
Tales To Demolish #2 © Eric Haven |
A puckish premise - the central character in the story carelessly
mows down a couple of other well know cartoonists in his car. I mean - who hasn't,
as a cartoonist, mused about dispatching many of our more famous brethren in idle
jealous fantasy? Really? It's only me?*
The thought did occur to me that the artist, Eric Haven was 'trading' on
the names of the better known cartoonists here - but I think that can be dismissed
- as far as I can tell Eric has amassed a small (published) body of his own work
& this bears little in the way of aspiration to the creators he dispatches.
As with much of his work there is a dream like quality to his storytelling approach,
& this seems apparent in this comic; twisted logic let free to have a play
with scenarios. When the whole amusing, if not tenuous affectation concludes,
it does so in a happily comics brained way.
The whole thing is rendered in an extraordinary obsessive fine line - like the
drawings of someone who has imbibed too much marijuana - there is too much claustrophobic
detail. On the whole this can be decorative, but it can also muddle and flatten
the artwork; the cross hatching is a good example - in places it deadens the page
with a reliance on a consistent fine line, rather than a flowing line. I suspect
an over reliance on fine line pens rather than anything that has inherent inflection.
This is yet another release from Sparkplug Comics, so as such, by a strict
definition - is not a self-published comic, but more of an indy comic. It gets
note in ZUM! because it passes through barriers blocking its way; there is a precedence
In reviewing Slab-O-Concrete comics (indy comics) & as I see this outfit
as having a similar ethos (I may be wrong) it manages the first hurdle. The second
hurdle it passes is much more difficult to get past - but it did so very easily
- it is reviewed here because I like.
mooncat
*I would point out this is a joke - for those of you with a lack of humour - you
may laugh now... ha... ha... ...sigh...
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Tales To Demolish:
both 28 23x15cm pages, 2 colour satin gloss stock cover. |
Price: $3 (+P+P?) each Sparkplug Comic
Books, PO Box 10952, Portland, OR 97296 - 0952, USA |
Received at ZUM! HQ:
#1: 28ii03
#2: 09ix03 Review Posted:
#1: 15x03
#2: 18ix03 |
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