Lots of breathtaking panels in that graphic novel.
This was the golden age - Sienkiewicz was basically reinventing the american comic to look more like what the europeans had been dishing out for years - and an unsuspecting public made up of youths and geeks was terminally contaminated by ART.
Of course, Miller did his own thing in the end, and that wasn't too pretty. But back then, the fascist in him still seemed under control, cranky yet lovable...
Lots of breathtaking panels in that graphic novel.
ReplyDeleteThis was the golden age - Sienkiewicz was basically reinventing the american comic to look more like what the europeans had been dishing out for years - and an unsuspecting public made up of youths and geeks was terminally contaminated by ART.
Of course, Miller did his own thing in the end, and that wasn't too pretty. But back then, the fascist in him still seemed under control, cranky yet lovable...