MURPHY'S FUBAR
STRIKE HOLD STUDIO
[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]
STORY: Damon Pellican
PENCILS: Damon Pellican
INKS: Damon Pellican and Tone Rodriguez
LETTERS: Angela Pellican
EDITOR: Angela Pellican with Tone Rodriguez and Kody Chamberlain
COVER ARTIST: Damon Pellican and Tone Rodriguez
8pp, B&W2-tone/Color, $4.99 U.S. (2019)
Murphy's Fubar created by Damon Pellican
“Incoming Fire Has The Right of Way”
Murphy's Fubar is a short comic book that contains the comics short story, “Incoming Fire Has The Right of Way.” This comic is the work of Damon Pellican, a U.S. Army veteran and fledgling comic book creator. “Incoming Fire Has The Right of Way” is written and drawn (pencils-inks) by Pellican and Tone Rodriguez (inks), and lettered by Angela Pellican, Damon's wife.
“Incoming Fire Has The Right of Way” comes to life at “Murphy's Fubar,” a bar that acts as an oasis for wayward souls, especially the souls of military veterans who have seen the darkest and bloodiest sides of war and of military combat. “Murphy's Fubar” seems to be the last stop for lost souls, a place where they can find a way to resolve their physical and/or emotional wounds or die because of them. The barkeep is Master Sgt. Murphy, whom Pellican describes as “a grizzly, battle-hardened vet.” Mysterious and perhaps supernatural, Murphy may be connected to all of humanity's wars, from the first and oldest to the most recent conflicts.
“Incoming Fire Has The Right of Way” opens in 1998. We meet a lost man living as low as a man could when a doorway appears before him. His life literally leaking from him, he enters a bar where an equally grizzled bartender offers him a story. Transported back thirty years to Vietnam, 1968, this desperate man will have to choose between the “hard road” or the “easy way out.”
I like the raw, unrefined nature of Damon Pellican's illustrations. He is at the place where many young comic book artists find themselves, even the great ones, and that is how to grow by leaps and bounds. A few years of intensive comic book drawing, and 1981 Matt Wagner becomes 1986 Matt Wagner (Mage) – almost two different artists. Or Jim Lee: from the end of his run on Alpha Flight (1987-88), through The Punisher War Journal (1989), he emerged on Uncanny X-Men (1990-91) and seemed like a totally different artist.
I see potential in Pellican as an artist, and that shows in this story through the inking of Tone Rodriguez, a longtime comic book artist. I think the combination of the two makes the art for “Incoming Fire Has The Right of Way” look like Michael Golden's art on Marvel Comics' war comic book series, The 'Nam (issues #1-11, 13). The cover art also is pretty dynamic.
Drawing skills aside, Pellican does some good graphical storytelling in “Incoming Fire Has The Right of Way.” This is a powerful, brief, little tale that seems longer in terms of page length and bigger in terms of scope. Pellican gets more out of eight pages than some of Marvel and DC Comics titles get out of 20 or 30 pages.
So I'm shocked. I bought this first installment of Murphy's Fubar only to support a local comic book creator. Frankly, I didn't expect much; instead, I found something I really liked. With the best creators of American war comics mostly long gone, I look forward to another visit to Murphy's Fubar.
Website: https://www.strikeholdstudio.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/strikeholdstudio/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/damonpellican/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/DamonPellican
ArtStation: https://www.artstation.com/supern_a_ds
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"
The text is copyright © 2020 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for syndication rights and fees.
-------------------
[“We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.”]
Showing posts with label LA-Lafayette. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LA-Lafayette. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 4, 2020
Sunday, December 27, 2015
Review: DUSK Chapter 1
DUSK CHAPTER 1
[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]
CREATORS: Brandon Gary and Jason Bienvenu
STORY: Brandon Gary
LAYOUTS: Brandon Gary
ART: Jason Bienvenu
COLORS: Jason Bienvenu
LETTERS: Brandon Gary
LOGO: Jason Bienvenu
32pp, Color, $5.00 U.S. (June 2015)
Dusk is a comic book series created by writer Brandon Gary and artist Jason Bienvenu. A science fiction series, Dusk is set in the distant future and finds humanity engaged in interstellar space travel and colonization. The narrative takes place on the newly colonized world of Lunaris Seven, an unusual planet that does not rotate or orbit the sun, thus having one side that is permanently dark and the other permanently light.
Dusk Chapter 1 opens as a teenage girl, Kaitlyn, arrives in Dusk, a city that is built on the edge of Lunaris Seven's light and dark. She has arrived to live with her older sister, Christina, and the reunion goes well in light of a recent family tragedy.
Meanwhile, Detective Eddie Hizaki and Detective Neil Weathers of the Lunaris Seven Police Department (L7PD) are investigating a series of a child disappearances. Hizaki and Weathers' partnership is an uneasy one, as each detective disagrees with the other about the fate of the children. Circumstances bring these four people together, as they discover the reach of the criminal element living in the shadows of Dusk.
I am a little familiar with the work of Jason Bienvenu, who wrote and drew the six-issue comic book miniseries, The Kingdom, which was published by Comix Tribe. [I reviewed the first issue for the website @ComicBookBin.] During the recent Louisiana Comic Con in Lafayette, Louisiana (October 17-18, 2015), I discovered that Bienvenu and writer Brandon Gray had a table in the vendor's gallery, where they were promoting their comic book projects. Wanting to support local comics creators, I decided to sample Dusk because it was a collaborative project by the two. Plus, I was attracted to striking image and vivid coloring on the cover of Dusk Chapter 1.
First, I want to say that Bienvenu has improved as an artist since The Kingdom. His compositions are stronger, and his figure drawing expresses emotion and mood, which is good for the story. Working from Gray's layouts, Bienvenu uses graphic design and color to create an eye-catching storytelling package that makes me want to read this comic book.
I like the manner in which Gray uses science fiction as a basic template by which he plays out the dramas of characters seemingly from different genres: Kaitlyn and Christina (family melodrama) and Hizaki and Weathers (cop drama). This keeps the story from being trapped in the tropes of one particular genre or sub-genre, but that method especially emphasizes the sense of the unknown in this narrative. Discovering and unraveling secrets is what makes the reader at least consider coming back for the second chapter or next installment. And I am quite interested returning to the intriguing Dusk.
https://duskthecomic.wordpress.com/
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]
CREATORS: Brandon Gary and Jason Bienvenu
STORY: Brandon Gary
LAYOUTS: Brandon Gary
ART: Jason Bienvenu
COLORS: Jason Bienvenu
LETTERS: Brandon Gary
LOGO: Jason Bienvenu
32pp, Color, $5.00 U.S. (June 2015)
Dusk is a comic book series created by writer Brandon Gary and artist Jason Bienvenu. A science fiction series, Dusk is set in the distant future and finds humanity engaged in interstellar space travel and colonization. The narrative takes place on the newly colonized world of Lunaris Seven, an unusual planet that does not rotate or orbit the sun, thus having one side that is permanently dark and the other permanently light.
Dusk Chapter 1 opens as a teenage girl, Kaitlyn, arrives in Dusk, a city that is built on the edge of Lunaris Seven's light and dark. She has arrived to live with her older sister, Christina, and the reunion goes well in light of a recent family tragedy.
Meanwhile, Detective Eddie Hizaki and Detective Neil Weathers of the Lunaris Seven Police Department (L7PD) are investigating a series of a child disappearances. Hizaki and Weathers' partnership is an uneasy one, as each detective disagrees with the other about the fate of the children. Circumstances bring these four people together, as they discover the reach of the criminal element living in the shadows of Dusk.
I am a little familiar with the work of Jason Bienvenu, who wrote and drew the six-issue comic book miniseries, The Kingdom, which was published by Comix Tribe. [I reviewed the first issue for the website @ComicBookBin.] During the recent Louisiana Comic Con in Lafayette, Louisiana (October 17-18, 2015), I discovered that Bienvenu and writer Brandon Gray had a table in the vendor's gallery, where they were promoting their comic book projects. Wanting to support local comics creators, I decided to sample Dusk because it was a collaborative project by the two. Plus, I was attracted to striking image and vivid coloring on the cover of Dusk Chapter 1.
First, I want to say that Bienvenu has improved as an artist since The Kingdom. His compositions are stronger, and his figure drawing expresses emotion and mood, which is good for the story. Working from Gray's layouts, Bienvenu uses graphic design and color to create an eye-catching storytelling package that makes me want to read this comic book.
I like the manner in which Gray uses science fiction as a basic template by which he plays out the dramas of characters seemingly from different genres: Kaitlyn and Christina (family melodrama) and Hizaki and Weathers (cop drama). This keeps the story from being trapped in the tropes of one particular genre or sub-genre, but that method especially emphasizes the sense of the unknown in this narrative. Discovering and unraveling secrets is what makes the reader at least consider coming back for the second chapter or next installment. And I am quite interested returning to the intriguing Dusk.
https://duskthecomic.wordpress.com/
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
Labels:
Brandon Gary,
Jason Bienvenu,
LA-Lafayette,
Review,
self-published,
small press
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)