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23+ Works 910 Membros 53 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Dan Mora

Séries

Obras de Dan Mora

Once & Future: The King Is Undead (2019) — Ilustrador — 227 cópias
Buffy the Vampire Slayer Vol. 1: High School Is Hell (2019) — Ilustrador — 159 cópias
Klaus (2016) — Ilustrador — 118 cópias
Once & Future: Old English (2020) — Ilustrador — 115 cópias
Once & Future: The Parliament of Magpies (2021) — Ilustrador — 86 cópias
Once & Future: Monarchies in the U.K. (2022) — Ilustrador — 55 cópias
Once & Future Book One Deluxe Edition (2021) — Ilustrador — 36 cópias
Once & Future: The Wasteland (2023) — Ilustrador — 36 cópias
Batman/Superman: World's Finest, Vol. 1: The Devil Nezha (2023) — Ilustrador — 28 cópias
Klaus #1 (2015) — Prefácio — 10 cópias
Klaus #7 (2016) — Ilustrador — 4 cópias
Klaus #4 (2016) — Ilustrador — 4 cópias
Klaus #3 (2016) — Ilustrador — 4 cópias
Klaus #6 (2016) — Ilustrador — 3 cópias
Klaus #5 (2016) — Ilustrador — 3 cópias
Klaus #2 (2015) — Ilustrador — 3 cópias
Hexed #1 3 cópias
Saban's Go Go Power Rangers #1 (2017) 1 exemplar(es)
Hexed #2 1 exemplar(es)

Associated Works

Something is Killing the Children Vol. 7 (2024) — Ilustrador, algumas edições35 cópias
Mighty Morphin Power Rangers/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2020) — Artista da capa — 19 cópias
Batman - One Bad Day: Penguin (2022) — Ilustrador, algumas edições15 cópias
Teen Titans (2016-) #14 (2017) — Artista da capa, algumas edições4 cópias
The Flash/Speed Buggy Special #1 — Artista da capa, algumas edições3 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

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Membros

Resenhas

Seems like a fine concept for a modern adventure but the myth of King Arthur as recreated here doesn’t interest me. The characters are barely anything, though the grandma has her quips. I’ve had enough of quips for a while.
½
 
Marcado
bobbybslax | outras 14 resenhas | Apr 22, 2024 |
Once & Future is a recently concluded thirty-issue comic series from Boom!, written by Kieron Gillen and illustrated by Dan Mora (with Tamra Bonvillain on colors). It concerns an attempt by a sort of undead King Arthur and Merlin to reinscribe themselves on Britain; the main character is a modernist academic who discovers that the grandmother who raised him is Britain's chief monster hunter—and that he's inherited her story.

Like a lot of Kieron Gillen comics, it's pretty good but it reads as though it could have been better, like it could have done more with its premise and its characters than it ended up doing. Once & Future has two big strengths; one is the way it uses its very concept to interrogate the idea of British identity. In the first volume, King Arthur is brought back by Anglo-Saxon supremacists... but what they've forgotten is that Arthur wasn't Anglo-Saxon, he was a Briton who fought off Saxons! So he turns on them and begins expunging what he sees as invaders from Britain. Bits like this recur throughout the series, deft moments of pointing out the way the stories we glom onto culturally often don't actually say what we imagine they do. A lot of the time the story is about the conflicts between different versions of the Arthur mythos, the early medieval version clashing with the later one; there's some fun stuff with Beowulf in volume two. The particular highlight in this regard is Boris Johnson's hilarious cameo.

The other highlight is the character of Bridgette McGuire, the retired monster hunter, a grandmother who gives no shits about your feelings and will do anything to anyone—including her beloved grandson—to keep Britain safe. As Gillen points out in the series afterword, she's the kind of character who can be a vehicle for adventures forever, but that doesn't stop her from developing and changing in ways both small and big over the course of the series. I always enjoyed her shenanigans and dialogue.

I reviewed the series as a whole under its final volume.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
Stevil2001 | 1 outra resenha | Jan 19, 2024 |
This review is for the series as a whole. See my review of the beginning here.

The series ultimately doesn't do enough with its interesting premise. There's a lot of big action sequences, and certainly Dan Mora does a great job illustrating them, but it felt to me like Kieron Gillen spent more time asking "how could this mythological idea be used to make a comic book action set piece?" than he spent asking "what does the Arthurian mythos tell us about modern Britain?" I loved those moments, like I said above... but honestly, there just weren't enough of them across the series's thirty issues. At time the overlapping mythologies get confusing, and not in a good way; I don't think the series adequately delineates the difference between the multiple Arthurs, for example, and some of it gets wacky. Why would Tennyson's Arthur be steampunk!? The last volume feels like Gillen thought the series was going to run another thirty issues but was suddenly given only six to wrap it all up... I was surprised to learn from the afterword that he actually had twenty-four more issues than he originally thought he was getting!

I also felt that Duncan and Rose, the ostensible leads, deserved more of a character throughline than they ended up getting. They often end up feeling along for the ride, and I wanted a stronger sense of their development and choices in the face of all the weird things they go through.

Other than some of the jumpy issues near the end, it is (as Gillen-penned comics usually are) a pretty smooth read. There's a number of clever ideas in here. Mora's art gets a bit too grotesque at times but is usually excellent; Tamra Bonvillain is a revelation on colors. But I can't help feeling there's another version of this story that consistently treats its mythology as something to be interrogated rather than as a basis for clever set pieces.

Plus to name your final volume "The Wasteland" but then claim the poem was written by "T. S. Elliot" is a pretty unforgivable mistake!
… (mais)
 
Marcado
Stevil2001 | outras 2 resenhas | Jan 19, 2024 |
was enthralled by volume 1, and somewhat meh about Volume 2.

Volume three brought back the complete batshittery of volume one, and actually gave Rose some interesting roles to play. Originally Bridgette was my favourite character, but I've definitely shifted to Rose, who has a complex role to play across all of the story (not Anglo Saxon; will they be driven out of England as well?)

I'm going for 4.5 stars (instead of five), because of the number of times I went 'oh, FFS' about something in the story was Too Many. The world building continues to be baffling but fascinating, the plot mostly good (although I'm mostly not even attempting to work out what the plot is doing at any given time), the characters are at least interesting even if I'm not invested in any of them, and the story has its hooks in to me and drags me merrily along page to page.… (mais)
½
 
Marcado
fred_mouse | outras 2 resenhas | Nov 25, 2023 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
23
Also by
10
Membros
910
Popularidade
#28,190
Avaliação
3.9
Resenhas
53
ISBNs
48
Idiomas
4

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