Disney-comics digest #603.
9475609@arran.sms.edinburgh.ac.uk
9475609 at arran.sms.edinburgh.ac.uk
Wed Mar 8 11:01:13 CET 1995
DAVE:
Sorry I overlooked the Da Vinci title. I have this nasty habit of
looking through PREVIEWS for anything cartoon-related or by Sergio
Aragones, then avoiding everything else... >sigh<
JORGEN:
>And the Norwegian runs one Taliaferro strip each issue.
So does the Danish one -- and it's the same strip each week. I
think what happens is that Egmont prepares and colors a Taliaferro strip
each week and makes it available to every publisher, and some use them
all the time.
Why the British mags prefer Bob Foster's strips -- apparently so
much that they're willing to color them themselves -- is beyond me. But
to be honest, I enjoy Foster's writing more than post-1945 Bob Karp...
At the end of the (school) year, I'll index the year's British
comics. Boy, what a lot of lemons. I've finally realized that they
purposely do not print the more complex stories, unless they're MM
(because the Brits want a MM every week).
>- The Beagle Boys (D93304, 6 pages). Art by Xavi.
Doesn't look like Xavi to me. It doesn't have that same
pseudo-Branca style that Xavi likes -- the Beagle Boys are so darn ugly
here, and Branca makes them into very impudent, lovable rascals. I'm
going from memory -- but maybe this is the same artist of that MM "Art
Attack" story?
>In Kalle Anka #9 there is a contest where people are supposed to call
>a number and tell what story they liked best. Is this the first time
>this is done? >snip<
It's an old tradition in Germany. They call it the "Wunschcomic"
competition ("wish-comic"). But they do it BEFORE the stories are
published! What I mean is, they show a few panels from each of three
stories, and you call and give your opinion of recent stories and as a
reward, you get to cast a vote as to which one of the three gets
published first! And the two that DON'T get chosen aren't printed until
about six months later. Issue 43/1991 (or so) included Don Rosa's
"Incident at McDuck Tower" among the three choices. It won.
David Gerstein
<9475609 at arran.sms.ed.ac.uk>
"If it weren't for the help o' Hard-Haid Moe/I woulda married a
long time ago!/Where did you come from -- where did you grow?/
Where did you come from, Hard-Haid Moe?"
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