Showing posts with label chris verhoeven. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chris verhoeven. Show all posts

Saturday, February 3, 2018

Cerebus #288

From the random stack of unread comics.

Title: Cerebus
Issue: 288
Date: March, 2003
Publisher: Aardvark-Vanaheim
Writer: Dave Sim
Artist: Dave Sim, Gerhard
Letterer: Dave Sim
Cover: Chris Verhoeven, Ken Sim

Reading a random individual issue of an epic like Cerebus can be a bit of a challenge. There was not a lot of plot here, and I definitely had the impression that my experience with this issue would have been different in the context of the story that came before and after it.

That being said, what we have here is a scene of the ending credits to a movie (with a few amusing references thrown into the credits), followed by a scene played out almost entirely with dialogue. The characters are actually only shown on one page. For most of the issue, the art wanders over detailed images of the scenery around the speakers, as the discussion turns from an examination of inconsistencies in religious scripture to something more intimate.

Sim's artwork is brilliant, and the storytelling approach here is interesting. In spite of me not really knowing what was going on, the combination of art, words, and storytelling did a nice job of hooking me in.

Surrounding the actual story was a bit of a hodgepodge of things: A cover referencing menopause, which didn't seem related to what was going on in the dialogue (although there might have been something subtle that I missed), an opening page excerpt from an article in The Comics Journal about the comic Donjon, which felt like a bit of a passive-aggressive swipe. And to finish up the issue, a collection of excerpts from accounts of the Canadian military operations in the Balkans conflict of the 1990s. Some of these were pretty interesting historical accounts, while others felt like standard political rants on the foreign policy roles of Canada and the US, and the role of the UN.

Definitely not the best spot to jump aboard this series, but Cerebus still always has enough depth to it to keep things interesting.

Rating: 6/10