Archive - Nov 22, 2005

BuzzComix offline again


Reports that the top list site, BuzzComix, is returning an account suspended page upon attempted access.

(Xerexes: Currently, I'm getting a mySQL error when trying to load the site.)

Tim Broderick Response to T Campbell's Feature


Tim Broderick posted an essay on his blog responding to part of T Campbell's feature this month, "Faith in Science: Detective Stories In A Confused World". Broderick, the creator of the mystery webcomic Odd Jobs, makes some interesting points in his post.

Joey Manley Column At Pulse on Webcomics Business


The second installment of Joey Manley's column at the Pulse (Webhead) is up and while it's nothing that would be new to a regular reader of Comixpedia, it's a great primer about the "webcomics business" for the rest of the comic medium's faithful.

I'm pretty excited about Manley's column at the Pulse (which otherwise tends to give webcomics awfully short shrift) and hope it helps to bring more comics fans to webcomics. Now all we need is Eric Burns in TCJ and we'll be set!

An Experiment: Parallel Reviews


We're going to try a little experiment here... We're running two reviews (independently submitted, as it happens) of the same comic, Will Eisner's John Law by Gary Chaloner.

One is by Xaviar Xerexes.

The other is by Andrew Leal.

Compare. Contrast. Discuss.

From Noir to Nightmares, Will Eisner's John Law by Gary Chaloner, Reviewed by Andrew Leal

By: Andrew Leal
Department: Reviews
Issue: November 2005 Issue

NOTE: This is a parallel review in which we have two reviewers looking at the same comic. The other review is by Xaviar Xerexes.

During the 1940s, when pulps were at their height, the concept of the hardboiled detective (usually a private eye but occasionally a police investigator) was ingrained in the public imagination. Since that time, the atmosphere, the language, and the characters have been evoked in pastiche and parody.

Will Eisner’s John Law by Gary Chaloner (whose current strips can be found here, and whose main site, with cast info and extras, is here) is one of the few modern detective comics to focus so heavily on that mode, at least in style, using the stark grays of the best film noirs. Though scripted and drawn by Gary Chaloner, the character himself was created by the late great Will Eisner.