Showing posts with label Comic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Comic. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Sneak Peek of Northanger Abbey Comic

The first edition of the Northanger Abbey comic was released today! I'm personally going to wait for the hard cover book with all the parts in it, but I found some sneak preview pictures. Click the pictures for a bigger picture.




 The artwork doesn't look bad. Though I wish they made Catherine look like the Catherine on the cover. Oh well! At least it doesn't look extremely dark like the first cover art would have implied, though some pictures looked darker than they should.

 God Bless,
 God Bless, Miss Elizabeth Bennet

Monday, October 24, 2011

More Artwork for Northanger Abbey the Comic

Remember how at the beginning of the month, I mentioned how they've started to make Northanger Abbey the comic book? Well, I happened to look it up and there are some more cover art pictures.


Part 2 Cover
Part 3 Cover
The artwork looks promising (the artwork for the Sense and Sensibility comic could have been improved, and the artwork for the Emma comic wasn't what it could have been), but I'm still a little concerned that it'll be too dark for the tone of the story. I guess I'll find out when they preview a page or two from the comic. The first comic will come out on November 9th. I have a feeling it will be in four parts (but it's just a feeling going off reading the synopsis for the parts), and each part looks like it is released once a month. It may take a while before it comes in a hardcover book, but still I'm looking forward to it.

 God Bless,
 God Bless, Miss Elizabeth Bennet

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Northanger Abbey Comic Book In Production!

First, Pride and Prejudice was adapted to a comic, then Sense and Sensibility, then Emma (though I haven't read the Emma one yet). Now, Marvel Comics is adding Northanger Abbey to the list of Jane Austen novels adapted to a comic book!

Visit Comic Book Page

My concern is that they're not going to put enough of the satire that was in Jane Austen's novel in there. That was one of the issues with the 2007 movie: it looked like it was a movie adapted from a Gothic novel and not a movie adapted from a parody of Gothic novels (Don't get me wrong, I still liked the 2007 movie: it just had more issues than it should have).

It's kind of funny: Marvel is making Jane Austen Comics in the order that I have read them: Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility, Emma, and now Northanger Abbey. If they go onto Persuasion next, they would have kept it in the exact same order that I have read Jane Austen books (though currently reading Mansfield Park, slowly but surely!)

God Bless,
 God Bless, Miss Elizabeth Bennet

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Emma the Comic Book Coming Soon

I just happened upon this article:
Source

Emma Woodhouse, a young privileged woman living in nineteenth century England, has delved into the world of match making! Join New York Times best-selling writer Nancy Butler (SENSE & SENSIBILITY) and artist Janet K. Lee (Return of the Dapper Men) this March as they bring to life one of Jane Austen’s most regarded stories like you’ve never seen before with EMMA #1! Despite her best intentions, Emma may think too much of her own matchmaking abilities but it won’t stop her from sticking her nose where it doesn’t belong.

Source


I'm getting this when it comes out! The way that the drew Emma looks like the recent adaptation with Romola Garai. Can't Wait! :-D

Monday, December 20, 2010

Review: Sense and Sensibility (Comic Book)

Hey everyone! I'm back and doing reviews again! Finals are finally over and I turned in everything that needed to be turned in. So, it's back to weekly reviews! I apologize for the week that I missed.

Also, for this review, I took pictures with my camera of some parts of the pages in this comic book. The pictures may look a little dark since flash whited out the area where the flash was directed. Also, since the pictures are very big, there are small thumbnails throughout the review. You may want to click on the pictures to get a better look at some of the artwork/dialogue. Now, on with the dialogue.

After getting Pride and Prejudice the comic book for Christmas one year, I was wondering if there was going to be another Jane Austen comic book, and one day I found out that Sense and Sensibility was going to be made into a comic book. I was very excited. One day after it came out, I was at Borders looking among the shelves of books and it occurred to me: would Borders have Sense and Sensbility the comic book on the shelves? So, off I went to the graphic novel section and within a minute I saw it displayed on the shelf; needless to say, I bought it that night and began reading it.

Synopsis
Cover Art
Taken from an earlier review I did of Sense and Sensibility (1995)
Sense and Sensibility follows the story of two sisters: sensible Elinor Dashwood and passionate Marianne Dashwood . When their father Mr. Henry Dashwood dies, his property, Norland, is passed to his son from his first marriage, John Dashwood . Before he died, Henry Dashwood made John promise to take care of his current wife and three daughters (Elinor, Marianne, and Margaret). John promises to take care of them and wants to give them some money, but he is persuaded by his wife, Fanny, not to. Meanwhile, the Dashwood women prepare to receive John and Fanny, and when they arrive, Fanny announces that her brother Edward Ferrars will be joining them. Edward arrives and him and Elinor form an attachment, which is broken off by Fanny.

This Marvel comic was written by Nancy Butler, and the illustrations were done by Sonny Liew.

The Dashwoods move into Barton
Cottage; notice Elinor's thought
bubble.

Characters
The characters are well expressed. You get a real sense of Marianne's sensibility through some of her scenes (for example. when she leaves Norland, she goes on in a lament over leaving it); although, it seemed that when she was supposed to be weeping, it would only last for a few frames and then you would just get a sad look on her face.

Elinor's thoughts were well presented in the comic. In the movie, you don't get to hear what she is thinking because obviously thoughts are never spoken out loud. Thanks to the thought bubbles, you get to know what Elinor is thinking, like in the novel where there are a couple of pages worth of Elinor thinking things through. This was quite well done.

Artwork
Lucy Steele and Elinor walking:
notice Elinor's bonnet.
The artwork isn't the best, but it's not the worst that I've seen. There is more of a cartoon feel to the artwork: there aren't as many colors to make images appear more 3D: shadow lines are sharper instead of gradual, so there is a big difference between lightly colored areas and darker colored areas.

What bothered me was whenever Elinor wore a bonnet, she looked practically bald! She is drawn with a far-back hairline, but it would have helped if there was more of a hint of her hair underneath the bonnet. Sometimes, there would be a slight bit of hair poking out through the side, but most of the time, it appears that she is bald. This could have been easily fixed.


The Dashwoods ask
Edward Ferrars how Mrs. Ferrars
is doing; here is an example of the
"cutesy style"

Something else was also a little unusual at certain frames of the comic book: Mrs. Jennings's double-head. I suppose it was to illustrate her personality as a busybody, but meanwhile there were a couple of frames where she has this double-head which looked a little odd. So, this double-head only appears a couple of times, but it does look a little odd.

The artwork goes back and forth between more cutesy drawings and more realistic drawings. For example, in one frame, everyone could look more cartoon with small bodies and big heads; then in the frames below that one, everyone will go back to their realistic proportions. I personally preferred the more realistic drawings to the cartoon ones, but overall, the artwork is okay.

Dialogue
The dialogue was not modernized: I like that. Most of the time, I don't really like it when people remake a classic work of literature, they feel that they have to modernize the language even if the language is not that hard to understand: sometimes it doesn't bother me if it is done well enough and doesn't take away the meaning of what was being said, but a lot of the time there is something lost in modernization. In Sense and Sensibility the comic book, I didn't find that problem. The language seemed close to what Austen had wrote for her characters. Of course, there would have to be parts of the dialogue paraphrased, but I think the dialogue was well done.

Comparisons
Warning: Spoilers Below
Marianne taking a walk
in damp grass: a scene
left out of recent adaptations.
I would have to say that this comic book is very close to the book. As much as I liked the 1995 movie of Sense and Sensibility with Emma Thompson, there were a couple of things that were left out: characters like Lady Middleton, the Middleton children, Anne Steele, and Mrs. Ferrars were entirely left out of the movie, along with scenes such as the dinner party with Mrs. Ferrars and Willoughby's confession scene. In this comic, those characters and scenes have been included.

Also, the movie (and from what I've heard, the 2008 miniseries), also added a scene of Marianne walking in the rain in her distress over Willoughby, which was not in the book. In the comic, you get a closer picture of what happened in the book: Marianne was walking in wet grass and caught a chill that lead to her fever. This comic does a good job staying faithful to the original story.

Overall: 5/5
I would highly recommend this comic. Of course, you should read the original novel, but this comic does the novel justice. It stays pretty close to the original work. You also get certain aspects of the novel in this comic that you might not get in recent adaptations.

Sense and Sensibility is available in the stores (I got mine at Borders) or online. It is 128 pages long. The rating on it is A (which, I believe, means "All Ages").

Here are some extra pictures.

Elinor invites Edward Ferrars to come visit them.

Mrs. Jennings, Lady Middleton, and the Dashwood girls
sitting in the parlor.
Colonel Brandon asks Elinor about Marianne


Marianne comes to her realization.
Lucy Steele tells Elinor a secret.
Colonel Brandon visits in London; notice
Mrs. Jenning's double-head.


Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Sense and Sensibility Comic Book

Today, I went to Borders with my grandmother and father to browse the books. Suddenly a thought popped into my head and I walked over to the graphic novel section, and to my delight my thought was justified.

Source
This was what I bought this evening. I remembered reading about Sense and Sensibility the comic book a couple of months ago. For Christmas last year, my brother gave me Pride and Prejudice the comic book which I enjoyed, so when I heard they were going to make a comic book for Sense and Sensibility, I was very excited. I've only started, but I will say that it is very good; as much as I loved the 1995 movie, they left out some scenes that I would have liked to see. Those scenes seem to be included in here so far, so I am pretty happy! :-D

I might possibly review this at a later time.