I was not surprised by the 18 apocalyptic religious horror road stories of the strange girl, Eric Nuguen and Rick Mender. But I’m glad you read it. We’re getting a complete hardcover collection for the 20th anniversary. It contains some solid back matter – the best of them is the remender of a thoughtful essay written in 2011, looking back at the strange girl, and it’s with a Mormon extended family Book 6 years after the original run, how he was inspired by his experience growing up as an atheist child, and how he relates to it. And it’s a great opportunity to see Nguyen, Remender and their creative teammates develop as comic makers, as it’s a complete collection of runs. Although it’s a neat artifact from talented creators, I would recommend hardcore fans of their work and cartoon history/craft lovers to enjoy tracing creative evolution.
On an abandoned, sparkling earth where the legions of Hell have turned into their playgrounds, a young woman named Bethany learns that the final portal to heaven may still be active. As a rebellious child, Bethany challenges the harshness of her fiercely religious parents, and questioning Dogma’s obsessive observance. Now, with ten years of conclusive evidence that hell is real, Bethany wants to look for God, and, among other things, ask why. It’s a long way from California to Italy, the home of the suspects in the portal, and Bethany is more important to hell, heaven and the world than she knows. Her journey is bothering me. Luckily she is not walking alone. In the process of the strange girl, Bethany is joined by a small, sometimes spinning crew of human and demon survivors, attracting necessities, duties, and ultimately care.
Credit: Image Comic
In his introduction essay, Remender, 1: The strange girl character means a lot to him, and it is a cathartic book to write about, and he thanked his creative collaborators, and completed work And 2: Strange Girl Getse started very roughly. He and his creative collaborators should be proud. The strange girl is an ambitious story, and is willing to tackle the thorny questions surrounding religious faith and everything that comes with it. When Bethany and her final party click as characters, they are a likable crew whose bond is read as authentic. The demons of Nguyen and his fellow artists (Jerome Opeña, Harper Jaten, Nick Stakal, Micah Ferritor, Peter Bergting) have been working on Bethany’s adorable/gross gremlin vest, polishing holes and tails, polishing tails, polishing tails, and tails. polish and polish the tail. Broart, a friend to the traditional Big Red Devil Belial, enters the Mignola-esque horror that is unleashed later in the story. Likewise, it blends the frayed relics of his life. In particular, the portrayal of Nick Stacal’s hell as a constant variable place where prey can and can attack from any angle is unsettling. It closes the elaborate problem of suffering with a simple, harsh image of Bethany being thrown into a pit of endless blanks.
Remender is similarly very flawed in the opening of the Strange Girl, and those flaws stick to the entire series, but as they understand how the creative team wants to tell their story, they’re going to give a lesson. I will. Narration and dialogue are overwritten to the point where they sometimes get in the way of art. Pacing becomes unstable as everything comes out. It rushes between sudden, quick story development and a long-term plot that is drawn too long. The strange girl is in her best condition when it takes time to explore the cast and contextualize the adventure, but there can also be a struggle.
Credit: Image Comic
Bethany and Broart, the comic’s most consistent cast members, should not click as characters until the party expands. More castmates are given to them to play more different experiences, and the two grow beyond “powerful snarks and goofy wise attackers”, and years of friendship showcases depth Create space for getting started. This is welcome for both, but especially the broth. To dull it, he’s really excruciating – the uncomfortably horny quip machine has a terrible, low volume and an impact to impact joke ratio. Early broths are the symbol of that worst strange girl. When it’s not edgy, shocking or shocking, it clings to the edge and shocks the shock. The preachers of Steve Dillon and Garth Ennis were enveloped for five years when the strange girl was launched, but the two comics have different priorities, but they become cousins to each other They have sufficient narrative, structural and thematic commonality. It’s not a flattering comparison of strange girls.
Also, in fact, exploring some of the same themes and developing some similar narrative structures after Remender doesn’t work either. Outside those who loved it during the original run, readers who get the most out of the strange girls, love fear agents and black science, how they developed as writers and creative collaborators in the course I think he’s the person who wants to know. of his career. Here is the real spark, especially later in the series, when Bethany and her crew have both a clear mission and a multifaceted dynamic. The subsequent cartoons of Remender take those sparks and light them with them.
Credit: Image Comic
So for those who have been longtime fans of strange girls and have never had the chance to pick them up, and for those who are Eric Nuguen, Rick Remender, and fellow fans who want to track the progression of their careers, they’re the strange girls. It’s worth checking out the 20th anniversary edition. Otherwise, there are better cartoons that explore religion (especially American Christianity and its cousins). For example, Gary Frank and J. Michael Strakinski’s Midnight Country, or a better job by the preachers, and these comic makers.
At the age of 20, “Stranger Girl” creates interesting artifacts
Strange Girl Deluxe Edition
For those longtime fans of the strange girl who have never had the chance to pick it up, and for fellow fans who want to track the progress of their careers: Eric Nuguen, Rick Remender, and their fellow fans Outside of Worth Checking.
The core cast has grown into a likable crew, and their endings are dramatically satisfied and earning plenty.
Both the art and the script are brilliantly ambitious, with impressive designs and interesting themes that shake up a lot. When they land, they land in truth.
Remender’s essay, reflecting on the work, is thoughtful and provides a welcoming context for where Strange Girl fits into his career.
Putting all 18 issues together in one place is a great way to track the evolution of your creative team as a manga maker.
The strange girl has a very rough start and improves dramatically as it continues, but relies on early issues: edges and shocking humor, overwrite scripts, and confused pacing The problems don’t completely dissipate.
One of the two most consistent leads in the comic, Bloat starts out as a horny, naughty, wise attacker. His story watches him grow into a dimensional and persuasive character. This is a good thing. Because early on, broth is tired. His jokes don’t land, and his constant horny skin is unpleasant.
This isn’t a strange girl, but both the comics after Remender (particularly the horror agent) and comics by others who are interested in these themes (Midnight Nation) and modes (preachers) are Better than doing anything you want to do or do. The history of the creators and how they have developed since they finished it is the most interesting place.
