JohnnyEnzyme

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee 3 points 1 month ago

I hear ya! But we don't seem to have many fans of old-timey comics on this sub. :S

[–] JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Didn’t he do Adele Blanc-Sac (I think it’s called).

Yeap!
Me, I find it good, while eccentric. Rather dated at this point, but still fun to read...

...you’ve given me some stuff to keep and eye out for.

District 14, if you can find it...

[–] JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee 2 points 1 month ago

I'm kind of skeptical about delays at this point, as we're talking days or even weeks with this stuff going on.

In any case, I opened a ticket:
https://lemm.ee/post/65259386

[–] JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Sorry, I was basically just saying that I'm a total noobie about using SearxNG, and was hoping that you could provide a sample search while meanwhile, I kept working on our site's content!

Yes yes, lame as hell. I know. XD

[–] JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee 1 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Hmm, could you possibly kick us off with one? (I'll be right behind you)

[–] JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee 1 points 1 month ago

My goodness...

Sorry if you felt I was rude, above, mate.
I'll try to take a closer look when I get a chance. :S

Good hunting, in any case!

[–] JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee 2 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Humph. I don't understand why these thumbnails aren't showing up. All relevant JS permissions are turned on.

--Windows X, FF browser

[–] JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee 3 points 1 month ago

Puts NSFW in tittle, do not mark post nsfw.

  1. I think you might have mispelled "tittie."

  2. NSFW guidelines are covered in the FAQ. Feel free to read.

[–] JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee 3 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

So if I'm understanding stuff like this correctly, it's R being on the side of big business and user exploitation, etc, but not being willing to actually admit that, and thus, all these bogus 'threatening violence' charges.

Maybe part of what their exec team learned from two summers ago is to just STFU publicly, meanwhile letting their AI grind down legitimate critique / dissent.

[–] JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee 3 points 1 month ago

Bonus pts for the magic trick of 'jalapeño slice traveling across jars,' a good little classic.

I’m not sure what to call that or if it already has a name lol

In Peru there's something kinda similar called leche de tigre, the spicy, key lime, red onion marinade used to prepare ceviche. One can drink it like a shot.

[–] JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (2 children)

You're not disagreeing with anything I said. You're talking about a completely different issue which I'm certainly sympathetic to.

Because I do get the sense that users are more easily banned these days at the admin level. Having slow or non-existent customer service doesn't seem to be helping either, based on the anecdotes you all are sharing.

Btw, feel free to list or PM me your Reddit account name. I can run it past some reputation checkers to check it out...

[–] JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee 2 points 1 month ago (5 children)

Somewhere at the evil empire, I think, altho there's also this:

https://lemm.ee/post/24374503?scrollToComments=true

Sounds like SearxNG is a real goodie, from the several mentions and descriptions I've come across...

 

As I see it, Bryan Talbot is one of the three biggest, living British talents in comics, along with Pat Mills and Alan Moore... oof, with Neil Gaiman pretty-much nuking his reputation, recently. :S

Talbot's The Tale of One Bad Rat moved me a lot, winning multiple awards as it were, and I'd say his five, hard-hitting Grandville books are just about the pinnacle of conventional anthropomorphic adventure-dramas in BD's, alongside the sensational Cité 14 / "District 14" series.

Now, I've had this panel queued up -forever- to post, but have been equally torn since forever whether I wanted to actually post it. For example, as someone fascinated by sea life, such as mollusks & crustaceans, the fact that we keep lobsters in tanks like this, with their pincers tied, only to meet a boiling end when they get 'lucky,' doesn't sit very well with me.

Bah. OTOH, in art there is truth, and one thing Talbot does a lot of in Grandville is demonstrate the vagaries of human cruelty.

In any case, it's a great BD art piece IMO.

https://www.lambiek.net/artists/t/talbot_bryan.htm

 

In which we shine a little spotlight on "A Stolen Lunch, Avenged" from this promising, enjoyable, nicely-executed webcomic.

On a distant planet, a prying scribe, an overly sentimental constable, and a mayor resurrect a sleepy town’s long-defunct priest-bot. But “Father Stanley” is not what he seems. Meanwhile, in a nearby region, a scheming wizard accidentally sends a war-god into the body of an angry rooster(!) Story by Simon Roy and Jess Pollard, Art by Simon Roy, Colors by Sergey Nazarov. --with Johnny edits

Okay, that's the overall webcomic's self-description, but what this little chapter is specifically about is our scribe (the young woman), her hulking friend, and his dad on a side-quest to rescue a beloved statue's head, which was sawed off by vandals some time in the past. (hmm, could that have been you, Bartholemew?)

Meh, enough balloon juice, here are the dang-ol' pages:

https://www.webtoons.com/en/canvas/griz-grobus-and-other-stories/a-stolen-lunch-avenged/viewer?title_no=741329&episode_no=22

Now, I'd say my one and only complaint about this series is that it shifts a bit wildly between different characters & different stories, altho even so, it remains remarkably easy to flow along with IMO. Meanwhile, what the webcomic gets RIGHT to me is the impressive world-building, skilled but homegrown-style art, overall imagination, and intercharacter-dialogue, to mention some mentionables.

Good dialogue is SUCH an underrated thing in comics... 😔

 

Haha yes, and it's kinda wild to submit this to "Euro comics," when the imp clearly sounds like an NYC taxi-driver. But hear me out, if you please:

I'm working on the upcoming master list of Euro & Euro-style webcomics, but wanted to first add a little context to one of the upcoming entries, i.e. Wormy, which appeared in TSR's Dragon magazine from 1977-'88. The magazine of course was directly founded to aid and inform serious Dungeons & Dragons players, a pioneering role-playing game which was heavily inspired by European fantasy, wargaming, and of course J.R.R. Tolkien's fictional worlds.

David Trampier was just about my favorite of all the talented TSR artists, whose work heavily featured in much of the original 'modules' and reference books. [samples] Wormy itself was hugely creative, frequently hilarious, and did excellent world-building IMO. It was quite unique for it's time, and remarkably, I'm not sure I've ever seen it's match, since. Jeff Smith's Bone might be the closest thing I'm aware of.

Sadly, Trampier split from TSR rather acrimoniously around 1988, and he passed away in 2014 before his Wormy stories could be fully collected, expanded upon, and published. (one's mind practically salivates over his final, unpublished pages, presumably being somewhere in storage when he died)

Here then are the opening pages to this classic, which a few years ago I did some color and contrast corrections on: [Wormy, the first seven]

EDIT: Ooh, ooh, and the helpful template of the music that trampier was riffing on: Misty Mountains Cold (it's a nice little song, don't you think?)

(can't believe the post is still alive on Imgur, haha)

 

The lead pic is a still from Alexander, Servant of the Water of Life, by Reimena Lee. I've only just started it, but as a history nut, I have hopes! Here's the about:

It's an online graphic novel retelling the life and legends of Alexander the Great, part of a 2000yr old literary tradition called the Alexander Romance.

In 323 BCE, Alexander the Great begins to fear. Fearing the destruction of his pothos — i.e., his longing for life, ambition, and eternal conquest — from old age, Alexander embarks on a quest for the elusive Water of Life while accompanied by his wisest, most trustworthy Servant.

As they experience a series of countless fabulous wonders, including glass submarines, naked philosophers, Amazonians, and talking prophetic trees, Alexander confronts his complex legacy and reflects on the life and deeds that will cement his transformation into one of the most unforgettable figures in world history.

alexanderromance.com


And here's one I finally finished, the other week. It's called Vattu:

It's set off-world, in a sort of middle-ages era, and reimagines what society, species, politics and even physical laws are like. It took 12yrs to produce and consists of 1200+ pages, so anyone who digs it is in for a long treat. My one complaint is that some of the main characters are a bit hard to tell apart, but then there's a helpful guide for that. 🙂

https://rice-boy.com/vattu/

  • TBH it's Southern-USA produced, and I can understand any appropriate backlash upon that, but this one truly does seem 'Euro' in spirit, from my POV.

Mille sabords!, I'd like to put together a nice summation of our favorite Euro-tinged webcomics, a bit like the "Movie Night" link post did.

So... got any favorites there, mateys?

 

Here's one more gorgeous, unique cover by LEO & colorist Marchal from Amazonia's final book.

The year is 1949, and all the pieces of the puzzle around a strange creature and his extraordinary powers begin to reveal themselves and come together. In the humidity of the Amazon, agent Austin and Captain Délio finally come across the stranded German submarine. This time, the treasure they're looking for is within reach! But they must act quickly, because gold fever spares no one, neither the Brazilian secret services, nor the fleeing Nazis, not to mention the cannibal tribes that roam the area... --BDT

Yes, I'm afraid this series dipped in to the age-old "lost Nazi gold" trope, but it still managed to avoid falling in to overt stereotypes for the most part. For example, it was nice to see an MI6 officer (in Kathy Austin) who wasn't stamped in the typical James Bond-type role & mindset. Also interesting in that she's primarily focused on finding a local humanoid with paranormal qualities, whilst everyone else is seemingly after the stashed gold, with both things occupying the same maze-like branches of the mighty Amazon.

There was also a pretty amusing nod to Hergé's Bianca Castafiore, whose counterpart diva -- you guessed it -- can't help bursting in to Faust's The Jewel Song at every opportunity. Still though, as usual with Rodolphe & LEO, there's a careful avoidance of going heavy on the humor, drama and overt eroticism in order to better focus on the core story. On the whole, I found this a good, solid adventure with satisfying art, which will appeal to fans of this specific genre / timeline, as well as fans of the artist-writer team, who already completed two series in this set.

More art samples:
https://www.google.com/search?q=LEO+Rodolphe+Amazonia&udm=2

 

Oh boy and oh dear, here's another wonderful artist I kinda stumbled backwards in to discovering the other day, when I googled-up the increasingly-relevant phrase "here, at the end of all things."

From his ABOUT:

I've been drawing since I was a young boy at the age of eight. My interest in Sci-Fi and Fantasy was sparked when I first read C.S. Lewis's "The Chronicles of Narnia" books. Later, I discovered J.R.R. Tolkien's "The Lord of the Rings." C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien put their Christian perspective to work that made for beautiful storytelling, as well as leaving me with some profound truths that I found in their work. Their writings inspire my love for the genre today.

My client list includes Weta Workshop, Sideshow Collectibles, Ace, Roc, Pocket, and Scholastic books, as well as the Franklin Mint, The Bradford Exchange, Vivendi/Universal Games, Capital One Bank, Hasbro toys, Acme Archives, Topps Trading Cards, and Lucasfilm Ltd.

I also work closely with Weta Workshop in the creation of licensed reproductions for my "The Lord of the Rings" and "The Hobbit" Fine Art program."

The images above may or may not last, of course, but in any case, here's where they're sourced from, i.e. Vanderstelt's own site:

https://vandersteltstudio.com/gallery/

 

This panel comes from the sixth book of the 'godfather of manga's' brilliant Buddha series.

Not only were Tezuka's lines incredibly clear in the ligne claire sense, they were also gorgeously detailed when it came to backgrounds, as seen above. What's more, he never seemed to 'take the easy way out,' i.e. every background had this same level of detail, an amazing feat across the ~2800 total pages of this series.

Now, there are approximately a million interesting things to say about Tezuka's life, his library of works, and his huge influence on the industry that go way beyond a little daily post like this, but if you're not familiar with him, you might hit up good ol' WP. Or for those who've already read a couple books, THIS is a nice reading companion.

As for this particular work? I'd already studied and practiced Buddhism a bit across the years, being influenced by my mom, but this series really brought Gautama Siddhartha to life for me, as well as gave me new perspectives on his teachings. So not only is this 8-book series a semi-fictional literary classic, but I'd say it's also a great way to meet the legend and explore some of his basic teachings.

Plus, it's really just fun, wild, and moving. ❤️

 

This is the cover from Amazonia #3, which itself represents the third 'season' of Rodolphe & LEO's cool Kenya series. Each season runs five tomes, and I believe that Cinebook has translated the first three of these, so far.*

More at BDT:
https://www.bedetheque.com/serie-53487-BD-Amazonie-Kenya-Saison-3.html

* Oh dear, all those "threes" remind me of the STTNG episode in which the ship gets caught in a "cause and effect" loop. [video]

 

Okay, there's a frustrating backstory that I won't bore y'all with, but in this case, my Lemmy-mates have suggested that I should share image-content more slowly, rather than do roundups like this.

To explain: I personally hate withholding content when I have a load of some resource to share. I feel like a fraud, an a-hole, a userer, and all that stuff...

Yet I've been told repeatedly that it's better to just (in my words, 'act like a drone') drip the content, and yes, it's not hard to see the logistical point, but... bah.

I guess, end of the day, I always like to include something interesting about my posts, and it would be harder to do that via the "drip" posting method, which... pretty much circles back to why I post the way I do, which is to aim for roundups.

Bah... Baa-Ram-Ewe!

 

Now Tintin, are you the dog or the Sun? You can't be both, so please decide! (and please stop laughing, everyone!)

So, the other day I went a-lookin' for more Tintin memes, and found a goodly lot! :D Here's the first group, and I'll getcha' back with the other group when the stars align again upon image uploading:


Beam me UP, professor?


Poster-swap


Lazy mofos


Rascar-crystal


Save yourself!


Ah, the Tintin bed!

 

The most significant one is Dad-bod Thoth, as I managed to track down the other eight images in that booklet, sourced to BDT. (check it out, Druillet fans!) The other reconstructed posts are my reviews of Alas and Esther Verkest, and I must admit, I enjoyed hosting the image content on Reddit itself. (thanks, spez 😊)

Enjoy.

Oh yeah, and as for my question to y'all, let me explain:

On my end, I'm not a huge fan of republishing fixed-up posts, as it 1) adds to the overall post bloat (Lemmy doesn't allow me to completely delete anything), but also 2) because it can break cross-links in some cases.

OTOH, the greater point is for this stuff to be seen and enjoyed, and with a relatively innocuous update like this, I would guess that many readers doing quick scroll-throughs would miss the good content, assuming they hadn't seen it before. Then again, maybe I'm wrong about that...

Any opinions?

 

To be honest, I'd wanted to just quickly upload one of Giancola's pieces matching a "Here at the End of All Things"* series I'd like to get started, more or less reflecting my current level of shock, deep sadness, and growing fear about what's currently happening in the States. Unfortunately, image uploads don't seem to be working here at the moment, so all that will have to wait for another day. :S

* the series is themed to Sam & Frodo resting 'pon the slopes of Mt. Doom, awaiting the lava flow, not realising that giant eagles are coming to rescue them [you know]

On the positive tip, I'm quite chuffed to have recently discovered Donato Giancola's art! If I understand correctly, he's first-gen Italian-American, here covering this ultra-famous British series by J.R.R. Tolkien.

Without further ado, here're the art pieces & interview:
https://donatoarts.com/interviews/tor2022

Now if you liked that, you might want to check out his other cool work, covering sci-fi, "empathetic robots," space, fantasy, historical realism, Game of Thrones, MTG, mythology and etc:

https://donatoarts.com/gallery

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