Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Posting-Version: version B 2.10.2 9/18/84; site watdaisy.UUCP Path: utzoo!watmath!watnot!watdaisy!datanguay From: datanguay@watdaisy.UUCP (David Tanguay) Newsgroups: net.comics Subject: About those Moose .. er .. Moriarty Reviews ... Message-ID: <7561@watdaisy.UUCP> Date: Wed, 15-Jan-86 22:51:18 EST Article-I.D.: watdaisy.7561 Posted: Wed Jan 15 22:51:18 1986 Date-Received: Thu, 16-Jan-86 05:16:53 EST Distribution: net Organization: U of Waterloo, Ontario Lines: 55 > WARP GRAPHICS ANNUAL #1 [~ D]: > I quit reading A Distant Soil an issue back or so, > as the plot had become too boring for it's convoluted structure; > however, here the dialogue is good, the art fine, and the coloring > excellent I thought the same about ADS, but I gave it one last chance and read the whole series at once. I was surprised at how simple the story was, and at how quick (relative to my first, issue-by-issue impression) the story moved. I think it's all those names. > As to the others, a very > inconsequential ElfQuest story, with below-standard art and awful > coloring. The art is not by Wendy Pini (I forget who, but I agree to quality). The story was told before (or related to enough times to be known) somewhere in the Elfquest library (the non-graphical novel, I think): I knew it before seeing it here, at any rate. > An epilogue to Blood of the Innocent which is > unnecessary and confuses the mini-series; I liked the mini-series! (I suspect a conflict of interest when Moriarty gives reviews about Victorian criminals getting clobbered.) I found this story a nice completion to the series, and not at all confusing (flashing lights don't confuse blind people either...) > Panda Khan, Unicorn Isle and Captain Obese, none of which held my > attention. How can you not like Captain Obese? I figure that in 5 or 10 years I'll be (re-)reading Captain Obese for inspiration... > AMERICAN FLAGG! #28 [C-]: > OK, a lot of appeal is gone with the absence of Chaykin's art -- but > Chaykin's writing seems a little loose, also. I had some problems > following what exactly was happening during the infiltration into > Headhunter territory -- first, Medea calls in Flagg so that a "cool > head is kept" -- and then, when the gung-ho Major Keister wants to > charge in after the person they're following, Medea follows him, > instead of waiting for Reuben's cue. Nothing but a young ranger with an adrenaline rush (it's easier to command 'go' than 'stop'). > Who called Medea a "bleeding > heart", anyway -- Reuben or Keister? Keister, of course. This is obvious from the structure of the group in the previous panels and where the word ballons point to in the panel in question (Flagg is immediately to Medea'a right, not way out in front of her). (Better not let Sherlock find out about this slip-up!) David Tanguay