curlyfriski
Banned
The use of colour has also come in in amazing strides in the past decade, something that I think manga would hugely benefit from.
Eh grayscale has its own aesthetic appeal.
The use of colour has also come in in amazing strides in the past decade, something that I think manga would hugely benefit from.
Calm down guys, let's all be civil here.
American artists can do a lot of great things with panels as well, as with the recent Daredevil run or Sandman: Overture, but I do get the impression those are fringe cases.
For your US example, one in a while isn't so bad the problem is that there's no goto place to start there as there's always a huge backlog you have to put up with (that they try to alleviate with reboots). So yeah :/From the US, I hate the endlessly rebooted rehashed regurgitated spandex fetishist superhero sewage that seems to exist for no other reason than to prove Pavlov right.
From Japan, I hate the endless fighty-fight-fightentstein shonen enemy of the week who later becomes an ally and hay there's this tournament... oh, and FUCKING HIGH SCHOOLERS IN EVERYTHING
From Europe, I hate the disjointed style over substance artgasms that go nowhere and make about as much sense as drawing random word balloons on an artbook of technofetishism and bare tits.
Beyond that, there's an incredible amount of amazingly good stuff from everywhere.
I prefer manga over American comics simply due to sheer variety. Never would've expected reading about cooking, farming, or sports to be engaging, but here I am. As far as action goes, I think manga also has better panel composition and sense of speed. Most cape comics I've read have very stiff looking fights in comparison.
Superheroes: I don't really want to dig for "good storylines", nor do I want to have to ignore certain other works because "it's not part of the main canon" or "it's a different timeline" or so on and so forth. I like my stories to be holistic works, and rarely do I make an exception only in cases of multiple disparate adaptations of an existing work, such as the Maoyuu Maou Yuusha series. From an outside perspective looking in, it feels like there's only one true "canon", the original series, and everything else up to now is more or less officially sanctioned fan fiction.
Others: I read stuff on occasion, The Sandman, Watchmen, The League of Extraordinary Gentleman, Scott Pilgrim. I have others series I have on the back back log, like Hellblazer and Lucifer, because as interesting as they are, comics simply aren't a priority in my life. Part of this is due to art style differences, I never liked the West's fascination with photorealism, whether in comics or in games. I'm a big character design/art style kind of guy, and I'll read something simply if the art looks interesting, no matter the actual quality of the series. An example that immediately comes to mind is O'Malley's Young Avenger's cover:
I was really disappointed to find out he wasn't doing an entire comic, because I would've definitely read that. What I like most about this cover is how you can see the personalities of all the team members reflected in the art. It's cartoony, yes, but visually, it conveys far more information about the story than something like:
(Which is still a good cover, don't get me wrong, but it doesn't have the same narrative impact as O'Malley's.)
Communicating story through art is drastically more difficult to do with photorealistic art, because our brains have different standards for abstracted faces and realistic ones. It's why cartoons characters can behave in ways LA actors can't, without breaking immersion or just becoming cringeworthy.
I take it Katsura has only read gritty grimdark stuffs
What is this from? Is it any good?Meanwhile, in Japan:
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(Obviously, not every manga artist can be Murata Yuusuke, but I feel that, in general, Japanese artists just have a better grasp of motion than their Western counterparts.)
(Obviously, not every manga artist can be Murata Yuusuke, but I feel that, in general, Japanese artists just have a better grasp of motion than their Western counterparts.)
You are actually comparing a harem light hearted silly story like Love Hina to visual novels like The Sandman?I think there's something to be said about the digestibility of certain comics. Japanese comics could be comparable to a cheap wine-- you guzzle it to get drunk. You can go through a lot of them in one sitting and they are much easier to take in than most american comics. American comics are more like a fine wine. Much slower paced, but often much deeper.
I used to read manga's quite a bit. At some point I just got tired of japanese culture and dropped it all- anime, manga, etc. Then I dated a girl who took a graphic novel analysis class and lent me some really great books, like V for Vendetta, Black Hole, The Sandman, Fun Home, Maus, etc. I find them often more rewarding and deeper than stuff like Love Hina, Full Metal Alchemist, and Death Note.
I still don't really care for super hero comics though. I've read a few old ones and they're often pretty campy. The dialogue disinterests me.
If anyone has any good recommendations for great graphic novels, let me know.
One punchman it's as good as it looks.What is this from? Is it any good?
The big difference is Yuusuke gets many pages to do that one sequence on. The entire chapter is basically that one sequence right there.
In many American mainstream comics, you got 20-22 pages a month, and you can't spend them all on a fight sequence. You have to make every panel count for maximum efficiency. You have to pick your moments, and you can tell exactly the moments that happen between this panel:
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and this panel:
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I think there's something to be said about the digestibility of certain comics. Japanese comics could be comparable to a cheap wine-- you guzzle it to get drunk. You can go through a lot of them in one sitting and they are much easier to take in than most american comics. American comics are more like a fine wine. Much slower paced, but often much deeper.
I used to read manga's quite a bit. At some point I just got tired of japanese culture and dropped it all- anime, manga, etc. Then I dated a girl who took a graphic novel analysis class and lent me some really great books, like V for Vendetta, Black Hole, The Sandman, Fun Home, Maus, etc. I find them often more rewarding and deeper than stuff like Love Hina, Full Metal Alchemist, and Death Note.
I still don't really care for super hero comics though. I've read a few old ones and they're often pretty campy. The dialogue disinterests me.
If anyone has any good recommendations for great graphic novels, let me know.
Meanwhile, in Japan:
Good. Then it takes 10 minutes.
You should start reading X-Men, when a new Writer joins the serie. Seems pretty easy to me.
But, but there are Dragonball Z and GT! Its so strange an confusing!
(Can I start reading Dragonball Z without Knowledge of Dragonball?
I think not, I think its way to hard to get the information, why Son Goku is dead and all this stuff and why are there people with Ape-Tails and why are there so many Aliens so suddenly?)
I still dont understand the difficulty in using Google to search for a summary.
Then buy a paperback with all collected series for the event. They are pretty common.
I would say this a disadvantage.
So people who pick up issue 527 of Detective Conan arent confused, why this little boy acts like a teenage dude? Or people who want to pick up Ranma 1/2 issue 787 why this girl can change into a boy?
You are actually comparing a harem light hearted silly story like Love Hina to visual novels like The Sandman?
There's more to mangas than just what's popular in jump (and they occasionally do some really good stuffs there too).
One Punch Man. It's actually a kind of parody/satire of superheroes. And yes, it's pretty good.What is this from? Is it any good?
Right, this is a problem with the format. At least in the world of manga, a monthly work still gets something like 50-60 pages to work with.The big difference is Yuusuke gets many pages to do that one sequence on. The entire chapter is basically that one sequence right there.
In many American mainstream comics, you got 20-22 pages a month, and you can't spend them all on a fight sequence. You have to make every panel count for maximum efficiency.
To be fair, it's no different than many people in this thread who are only talking about superhero comics
Meanwhile, in Japan:
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I think there's something to be said about the digestibility of certain comics. Japanese comics could be comparable to a cheap wine-- you guzzle it to get drunk. You can go through a lot of them in one sitting and they are much easier to take in than most american comics. American comics are more like a fine wine. Much slower paced, but often much deeper.
I used to read manga's quite a bit. At some point I just got tired of japanese culture and dropped it all- anime, manga, etc. Then I dated a girl who took a graphic novel analysis class and lent me some really great books, like V for Vendetta, Black Hole, The Sandman, Fun Home, Maus, etc. I find them often more rewarding and deeper than stuff like Love Hina, Full Metal Alchemist, and Death Note.
I still don't really care for super hero comics though. I've read a few old ones and they're often pretty campy. The dialogue disinterests me.
If anyone has any good recommendations for great graphic novels, let me know.
Meanwhile, in Japan:
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EDIT: With individual frames to make it more clear what I'm talking about:
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(Obviously, not every manga artist can be Murata Yuusuke, but I feel that, in general, Japanese artists just have a better grasp of motion than their Western counterparts.)
I think there's something to be said about the digestibility of certain comics. Japanese comics could be comparable to a cheap wine-- you guzzle it to get drunk. You can go through a lot of them in one sitting and they are much easier to take in than most american comics. American comics are more like a fine wine. Much slower paced, but often much deeper.
I used to read manga's quite a bit. At some point I just got tired of japanese culture and dropped it all- anime, manga, etc. Then I dated a girl who took a graphic novel analysis class and lent me some really great books, like V for Vendetta, Black Hole, The Sandman, Fun Home, Maus, etc. I find them often more rewarding and deeper than stuff like Love Hina, Full Metal Alchemist, and Death Note.
I still don't really care for super hero comics though. I've read a few old ones and they're often pretty campy. The dialogue disinterests me.
If anyone has any good recommendations for great graphic novels, let me know.
It is an odd comparison. I just threw some names out there, but in general I find manga's all lacking depth.You are actually comparing a harem light hearted silly story like Love Hina to visual novels like The Sandman?
There's more to mangas than just what's popular in jump (and they occasionally do some really good stuffs there too).
There's also a huuuuuuuuge difference between monthly comics (Berserk, FMA...) and weekly comics (One Piece, Naruto, Bleach, Toriko) without talking about yearly stuffs (HxH) and other who delves in visual novels proper like the Taniguchis of the world.
You've just compared some of the best western comics ever made to pop shonen manga, better comparisons would be to stuff like Monster, 20th Century boys, Akira etc
For recommendations definitely try out Saga and Y: The Last man, same author, both incredible, though Saga is ongoing
It is an odd comparison. I just threw some names out there, but in general I find manga's all lacking depth.
The big difference is Yuusuke gets many pages to do that one sequence on. The entire chapter is basically that one sequence right there.
In many American mainstream comics, you got 20-22 pages a month, and you can't spend them all on a fight sequence. You have to make every panel count for maximum efficiency. You have to pick your moments, and you can tell exactly the moments that happen between this panel:
http://images.sequart.org/images/Picture-seven.png[IMG]
and this panel:
[IMG]http://images.sequart.org/images/picture-eight.png[IMG][/QUOTE]
Well, manga can render spectacular motion in single frames too (one of my favorites is in Trigun, where you can see in a single frame the character kicking a rocket away... I wish I could find it online) It is one of the commonly developed aspects of the genre, with heavy use of speed lines and different effects.
Maybe part of it is made possible by the black&white publication, and also the practice of having multiple assistants for those. But action mangas usually give a better sense of motion than action comics.
In comics, a way of rendering complex motions that I like is when the artist draws different positions of the same character in a single frame, with a transparency effect. I remember seeing it in Spider-Man or Daredevil issues. It gives a good undestanding of the complexity of the moves, but doesn't have speed lines to convey motion.
Latest fight from All Rounder Meguru:
Yeah read it
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I think about the fight sequence more than anything. To be frank, most fight sequences in superhero books, even in otherwise very good ones, aren't particularly interesting. The pacing is off, or the storytelling aint there, or the choreography is wonky, or various other quirks.
The ideal fight sequences shouldn't be show-stoppers, but natural extensions of the characters and their stories and motivations. They should have goals for the people involved(and the audience knows those goals so they can be involved and not just passive viewers), they're built up and paced well, its clear where all the people and places they're fighting at are in relation to one another, from panel to panel there's a clear "flow", you can see how they got in that position and how one panel translates to the next. The panels should be stories into themselves, snapshots of important moments that build up into one longer narrative.
Here's an easy example from The King. Light on background, wisely free of dialog, has a bit of Kirby's exaggeration for maximum effect, but it tells its story quite well.
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There's a clear beginning, middle, and an end. You can tell how the figures ended up where they are between panels. Kirby puts emphasis on certain limbs for you to follow, like Batroc's leg winding up in panel one and he misses wildly in the second. Batroc's sweeping foot and Cap's hand draws your attention in the fourth panel, right where he brings it down in the fifth one, then starts to get out from underneath him in the sixth one. Wham, bam, thank you, ma'am.
But you don't have to be so conventional, and you can use your form to say something about the content. I hate to go back to the Morrison/Quitely well again, but those two guys knew what they're doing.
To set up, this is the new Batman and Robin's first night out fighting a Circus of Crime, including these martial artist triplets. Damian, proudly proclaiming his ninja/Batman heritage to anybody in ear shot, doesn't respect Grayson and thinks he can handle anything the world throws at him. Naturally, he's the first to leap to a fight.
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Quietly goes for a "realistic" approach to his day-glo superheroes fighting wacky characters. This is part of Morrison's intention that Batman and Robin be "Adam West Batman directed by David Lynch", to make the silly and weird just a bit dark and twisted. He doesn't use comic booky sound effects or action lines but playfully uses his environments and characters to tell the story, like how Damian's leg arcs through the smoke or the cute SMASH with the wall cracks. I've never seen kung fu triplets, but the great attention to detail Quitely shows them with makes them more plausible, their actions more believable, and hit with more impact. When they go from ready to catch Damian to finishing pose, you buy into it entirely. He's always aware of the size and shape of the room they're fighting in and where they are in relationship to it and each other(notice the cop hat in front of them in the second panel and the cop hat behind them in the third is a good way to mark how close they've gotten in the space between panels). He shifts the panel sizes and angles to emphasize chaotic movement, but he also draws tighter and tighter on Damian's face, his options dwindling down, overwhelmed by what's happening, until that last calm but kinda sad close-up where the arrogant son of Batman and ninja masters realizes he might actually be out of his league. and then BAM an explosive forward kick in a big panel to end the introspection as Robin flees.
But for one reason or another, be it laziness, incompetence or otherwise, most fights in comics today are kinda whatever. You see them and don't really think about them and then they are forgotten about. There's a craft to the fight scene.
I still remember that issue, a lengthy color chapter just because
This guy is insane!
That's your problem again, which is that you automatically assume anyone reading primarily manga over comics is a weaboo, being "all about Japanese culture". Which a lot of people who consume manga probably aren't. The second largest market for manga in the world is France, but it's not like they're "all about Japanese culture" considering how fierce they are about French culture.
What I said is that someone who reads manga isn't necessarily a Japan enthusiast. You're making the assumption that someone who primarily reads manga is by default really into Japanese stuff, when it could be that they enjoy the stories and don't look much further in Japanese culture. There are some Japanese people who like American football but that doesn't mean they are 'America enthusiasts'. They could be 'football enthusiasts'. Labeling someone a fan of a whole country because they like one particular thing from that country is too broad.
I read whatever I like when I find it. Manga, western comics, doesn't really matter to me if I find it interesting.
So far though, the best comic I have found and read is a western one.
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I usually don't care that much about the quality of the art that much (my fav is HxH anyway and I liked his scribbles!)The world doesn't deserve all he does for us plebians ;_;
Murata :bow
Not to derail this thread too much but I'm not sure why you're fighting this idea so much. Look at you - on the side of manga in this conversation, manga themed avatar (ie choosing to represent yourself to the community as being into manga), posting history mainly in manga or FF threads. If someone were to ask me what you were into, I'd say "Japanese things".
I would also tend to think Japanese Football fans would be America enthusiasts, yes. They would need to go outside of the mainstream in their culture to engage in the sport, it's a work of effort to track the things down and learn about them.
It's my experience that the things you're into inform your reactions to other things. I'm not seeing how this is controversial. You are into Japanese manga and are therefore critical of western comics because they do not fit into the cultural norms you've adopted. This is what everyone in this thread is doing from all sides of the argument.
Here's the thing, Murata doesn't really use assistants on OPM. At least, not that i know of. Maybe some background scenes or effects, but for the most part, everything you see is all done by him, which explains why it takes to long for chapters to come out.Maybe part of it is made possible by the black&white publication, and also the practice of having multiple assistants for those. But action mangas usually give a better sense of motion than action comics.
Not to derail this thread too much but I'm not sure why you're fighting this idea so much. Look at you - on the side of manga in this conversation, manga themed avatar (ie choosing to represent yourself to the community as being into manga), posting history mainly in manga or FF threads. If someone were to ask me what you were into, I'd say "Japanese things".
I would also tend to think Japanese Football fans would be America enthusiasts, yes. They would need to go outside of the mainstream in their culture to engage in the sport, it's a work of effort to track the things down and learn about them.
It's my experience that the things you're into inform your reactions to other things. I'm not seeing how this is controversial. You are into Japanese manga and are therefore critical of western comics because they do not fit into the cultural norms you've adopted. This is what everyone in this thread is doing from all sides of the argument.
Bitches don't know about my Blacksad.
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Plot progression.
And one true timeline, not 10 different ones for each group that are all different.
I'm pretty sure even a half decent mangaka and his team could create a superior story, plot and character development then the best Western comic from DC or Marvel period.
Plot progression.
And one true timeline, not 10 different ones for each group that are all different.
I'm pretty sure even a half decent mangaka and his team could create a superior story, plot and character development then the best Western comic from DC or Marvel period.
I would probably enjoy manga more if I knew what was there and how to get at the stuff that sounded interesting to me, but all the manga boards I see tend to recommend books that I have no interest in, and since I have no idea of what to choose I tend to get stuck on the most popular stuff which tends to be either shonen/moe or awfully translated.