I for my part read mostly franco-belgian comics, of which I think that they have a extremly good quality. And I think of the strikingly realistic pictures as a true indicator of good art. I have put a picture of one of my favourite ones below.
![Image](http://home.arcor.de/thg2002/blake/blake07_big.jpg)
Moderator: Edi
bah, to hell with those two do-gooders in the cover that are always ruining my schemes to take over the world.Tribun wrote: I have put a picture of one of my favourite ones below.
]http://home.arcor.de/thg2002/blake/blake07_big.jpg
Calvin and Hobbs, and Dilbert.Tribun wrote:I wondered, which style of comics, if you like comics, did you like and read?
The lamented SCUD has died and gone to Hollywood production hell.zombie84 wrote:Does anyone read Scud: The Disposable Assassin? It was the last comic series i was seriously into before i stoped reading around the late 90's. It started out as a b&w indie mag but became fairly popular and had a really shitty video game based on it. The premise was that robotic assassins could be purchased from vending machines and the title character is one that goes renegade and takes freelance jobs; very adult, dark humor oriented, with overtones of Sergio Leone and a strong japanese influence. I have no idea what happened to the mag (they had a very cool mobster spin-off from it) but i can assure you that the first few years were at least very cool, and each year seemed to get better than the last.
damn, thats a real shame. The last issues i bought were when they were having guest authors write and draw their own stand-alone issues. I always thought it seemed destined for a movie (hell, the mags had a "suggested soundtrack" for each issue)--too bad all of this money bullshit has to screw everything around. What a sad end to a great series..Sriad wrote:The lamented SCUD has died and gone to Hollywood production hell.There were negotiations going to make some sorta movie out of it, but that all went to shit and now there's so much legal crap surrounding the whole thing that you can't even touch the thing without a six foot thick suit of lawyers. The graphic novels are still in production though, and they contain all the SCUD books produced; La Cosa Nostroid ended abruptly at about issue nine, I don't know if it was ever collected, and the Drywall & Oswald spinoff, AFAIK, only got to issue two. Sad really, VooDoo Ben was the bomb.