Thoughts, reviews, rants, laments, and general chatting about the wonderful world(s) of comic books.
Showing posts with label Robert Weinberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Weinberg. Show all posts
Oct 10, 2019
The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 1689: H.P. Lovecraft's The Dunwich Horror, October 2011
I'm back, I'm back.
We're buying a house. Did you know that takes of lot of time and work? Me neither.
Though now I do.
I finished off the first volume of Squirrel Girl, and, needless to say, just fucking read it.
Back to Lovecraft/Cthulhu now.
I have a thought. Is the secret of a good Lovecraftian story that there is an undertone of racism in it? Is that the horror that we're reacting to, on some instinctual level? Writers always seem to go back to New England, the earliest of colonial settlements, and to the horrors of the woods around them, as did the forebears of Lovecraft and his ilk. Is there something horrific there about the entrenched, decrepit whiteness of so many of Lovecraft's protagonists. Very likely he was trying to show us the dangers of miscegenation, but perhaps instead, through both his life and work, he was showing us the grim, unspeakable ending that virulent whiteness leads to.
Maybe.
I liked both of the adaptations in here. The title story is more a sequel, I think, or a reimagining, than it is a faithful adaptation, but the second story, "The Hound," uses Lovecraft's words to illustrate some creepy atmosphere pieces by menton3. I unfortunately do not have any more of this series, but I assume it all turns out terribly for the main characters. Not really a Cthulhian story if they get through okay.
"It's loose."
Nov 12, 2015
The 40 Years fo Comics Project - Day 261: Nightside #1, December 2001
I remember getting this comic in at my store. There was something in the solicitation about it being one of Marvel's first creator-owned titles. I think. To be honest, that cover is really all that ever sticks in my head about this comic. But it is indeed creator-owned, copyrighted by Robert Weinberg, a name I am not familiar with.
The story's a typical urban horror-fantasy. Human detective plys her trade amongst the vampires and werewolves that inhabit the "nightside" of the city. Maybe back in 2001, this was somehow innovative (remember, this was probably just as Fables was starting up), but it just feels dated now.
I don't have much else to say about this comic. It's not the worst thing I've read. It's not the best. It was a random selection (I cleaned up my storage room today, so my comics are a little more accessible. More random shenanigans tomorrow!).
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