JohnnyEnzyme

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] [email protected] 10 points 6 hours ago

So, a bag of complete goose-stepping morons, as directed by a couple of servient, underling-fascists, are RIGHT on their way...!

Well then-- HURRAY!, is it not..?

[–] [email protected] 3 points 7 hours ago

Ah, these endless parrots of olde WB "coy-toons."

"So-uh-- whadya want me to DO with'em, boss..?"

"Go easy for now, but check their Disney credentials!"

[–] [email protected] 2 points 7 hours ago

Shorpy.com is an absolute gem of a treasure, of some of the best old photos you'll ever see.

Haha, you're welcome! ^^

11
submitted 8 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

She was a bull mastiff, kept by her owner, a guy who arranged hits on other people, who was also terrified of any and all retribution, hence Lizzie's official purpose.

In any case, I hearken to her sad, expressive face.

So, she and her 'human' appear in one of the stories of the utterly superb Streets of Paris, Streets of Murder collection by Jacques Tardi and the late, great, Jean-Patrick Manchette, one of the great crime-novelist writers.

Part of the reason I'm posting this is because Tardi often drew human faces with little more than 'slanting lines' to indicate mouth and eye regions. For example, here's one his most famous characters:


https://i.imgur.com/cZdK12d.jpeg

(they even made it in to a film, daggit!)

And another from the 'murder' series:

https://i.imgur.com/9mHdzK7.jpeg

See what I mean about the facial expressions? So there's the irony, if you follow me, hmm.

By gosh, though! Tardi was no chump. He could change it up however he liked to suit the current work, as with Les Tontons flingueurs, which apparently involved an angry Rowan Atkinson as lead thug:


https://i.imgur.com/BrrGwQy.jpeg

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago

Sounds good to me, and anything we can do to help, please!

Oh, geeze, no apologies necessary on anyone's end, particularly towards our wonderful host's end. We're going to help make the Fediverse work, right? Alrighty then! ^^

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Thank you!
huge sigh of relief

Okay, my host, Sunaurus-- In future, would you say there are any specific do's and don'ts about trying to include image content in posts & comments? Like, should I be doing something more smartly..?

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Ah... "Naked Mole," you made my day posting this!! <3

Such a wonderful series, full of.. what? Perfect insights in to our own characters, is it not..?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago (4 children)

Certainly.
So then, in WinX' latest Chrome, latest behavior is as described above.

I.e., that the auto-added "image redirect" command that it seems you recently implemented, unfortunately so far seems to break viewing of an image in comment/post as described/exampled above.

Right so-- I had the idea that in case of any more problems going forth, I should then point to an image both in standard Lemmy protocol, but also just as pure web link, just to be sure.

Example post: https://lemm.ee/post/35734760

For example, yesterday I saw pictures and related links below, and today I see blank spaces and just the links themselves, no pics. I.e. same issue I was whining about originally.

https://i.imgur.com/Bo6rw3Q.jpeg

Here's more of the same markup-code, from same post:
https://i.imgur.com/gagmsNw.jpeg

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago (6 children)

Oops.
Worked yesterday, but broken again today. Dang.

 

Whoa...!
I just read the first two ~150pp tomes, and was thoroughly blown away by how much better this series was than I was expecting.

For the record, the artist "Crom" is an Englishman, and the writer, I must admit... evidently American. Still, I think the sidebar addresses this kind of situation fairly well!

Right then, our main characters begin as "Bianca," and her forge-master "Thonir," who unknown to her happens to be her own uncle. He's of a parallel race to man, who have a special ability for forging, creating artifacts out of gems & special ores, and even harnessing magic to some extent. But he's decided to shield young Bianca from almost all of that, plus much of their family history, thinking it temporarily for the best.

Here's a sketch-sheet of these two:
https://i.imgur.com/8TauJOV.jpeg

(true confessions: she vaguely reminds me of the wonderful "Nimona" character)

Now, one of Bianca's favorite getaways from laborious forge-work is in visiting the ruins of Feather Hill, which was completely decimated by the regional wizard-lich for refusing to ally with him, formerly.

Here's the moment Bianca discovers the "Birdking's" decrepit remains:
https://i.imgur.com/N503TMh.jpeg

I don't want to give too much way here, but the Birdking is not nearly as 'finished' as he looks right there, which might remind some American fans of Walt Simonson's cool "Undead Thor" series.

But actually, these tomes mostly remind me on the whole of two other classics: Jeff's Smith's Bone and the absolutely ingenious (but tragically shortened) Ogre Gods.

Oh, and here's one last little sketch I liked, vaguely Mayan-style or something?
https://i.imgur.com/uZTM7fo.jpeg

Anyway, here's 16 more pages from the first book to look at:
https://www.bedetheque.com/serie-87921-BD-Birdking.html

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 days ago

Oh man, I did find my obnoxious comment, seemingly blaming you for my utter frustration at the moment.

That's not right, and I sincerely apologise for that.

I've now edited my comment to reflect my pure idiocy at that moment. Thank you for any and all understanding on your part!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 days ago

Tested and confirmed, thank you so much! <3

110
submitted 2 days ago* (last edited 1 day ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

I understand he did this piece as sort of a love-letter to videogames from his youth.

Another closeup:

https://i.imgur.com/IDXW9Lb.jpeg

And the overall piece, The Journey Begins:

https://i.imgur.com/wl8aljO.jpeg

More explained here about this project:
https://www.geek-art.net/p/art-print-geek-art-x-editions-caurette

EDIT: Oh hey, it looks like our 'displaying images' issues have now been solved, thanks to our Lemm.ee host / admin. ^^

EDIT2: Oops, looks like our image problems are back. :S

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

EDIT: Non-polite, frustrated words.
Old man ranting at clouds, basically.

Sorry folks, sorry.

 

Loved that famous Seurat painting, what was it again..?
(I'm getting old, memory bumbling itself away)

Anyway, this is by new-to-me-artist / storyteller Rebecca Dautremer.

Now, this next one's a bit scarier, The Chickens Must Have their Say:
https://i.imgur.com/sEJrjSI.jpeg

And of course, who could forget: Oh, and here's Anty!:
https://i.imgur.com/dalbGlB.jpeg

And... interesting interview with her HERE. It's in Castellano, so please hit the translate button.

Btw sorry, but I made up the three titles myself. I couldn't figure out what the official titles were from any source I looked at, so... yeah. There's that.

Dans tous les cas, regarde:
https://www.bedetheque.com/auteur-6280-BD-Dautremer-Rebecca.html

 

Yes, I'm the very same ~~moron~~ person who accidentally deleted his community, then had it restored by our excellent admin / site-runner a month or two ago. Yup!

Now for today's stupid-idiot complaint:

Around June 9th I found that I could no longer display images in comments & posts. The specific problem seemed to stem from some broken code that was being auto-added, namely:

"https://lemm.ee/api/v3/image_proxy?url="

IIRC my co-mod opened a thread on this stuff around a week ago." And... in the words of the kids? "Shizzle's still broke." I.e., the code still doesn't work, and still breaks every attempt to share images.

But sadly, there's more. Namely, it seems that lemm.ee communities are no longer showing up in one of the significant FV search engines, i.e. "lemmyverse.net."

For example, one of our biggest communities here on lemm.ee, i.e. "movies" is now totally missing from the results. So, (currently) every time people look for stuff on search engines like that, lemm.ee communities will be invisible to them.

https://lemmyverse.net/communities?query=movies

 

One of the things I always loved about Treasure Island was how Stevenson here & there included little bits pertaining to 'The Pirate Code.' For example, what the "black spot" meant exactly, and what the actual differences were between ranks, such as crewman, 'boson,' quartermaster, navigator, and full captain.

I feel that the two books comprising Republic of the Skull (200+ pages in all) do a fascinating job exploring in much greater depth how that all worked in terms of the early 1700's Caribbean and African Coast "golden age of piracy." Whilst meanwhile telling a damn good story, that is!

https://i.imgur.com/fxq9K6n.jpeg

Another fascinating thing I found in this work is that one of our protagonists was based on a real-life African Queen who really did command pirate fleets and conducted counter-wars against the Euros, i.e. Nzinga. In the story, after the pirates met her with some skepticism initially, she proved to pretty much be a genius at language, tactics, and whatever else.

Which was in fact true to the person!
Seriously, it seems she was a sort of perfectly-audacious, 'Albert Einstein' of the day.

Right so, moving on-- it seems there was a special ceremony when it came to threats against 'our brothers and sisters' (i.e. the currently-serving pirates), in which real trials or mock-trials could occur. Here we have the start of one, for example:

https://i.imgur.com/JxRzdUR.jpeg

Primarily, it was a means of helping ones' mates deal with their looming, inevitable, early mortality.

Republic of the Skull covers literally 4x significant content as I'm attempting to bumble around via these haphazard words. In short, it's the very best pirate-themed work I've ever read.

12
submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

I really enjoyed this mashup of Medi / Ren styles, courtesy of "ColinArcArtPerson."

Unfortunately, until the problems are fixed here in terms of including images in posts & comments, I'm gonna just leave you with one more pic in this case:

https://i.imgur.com/mhm9M6k.jpeg

The artist "Colin" is on Tumblr, for starters:
https://www.tumblr.com/colinarcartperson

20
Well, here we are! (i.imgur.com)
submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

(from Les Schtroumpfs T4, L’œuf et les Schtroumpfs)

TAGS: Schtroumpf, Smurf, Peyo

 

Full title: Ballad against the enemies of France.

One of 18 illustrations he did for Ballades, a book of poems by François Villon. This immediately stood out to me because I've seen so little of Moebius' watercolor & marker work like this.

In fact the pieces as a whole distinctly remind me of major arcana tarot cards. (hmm, I wonder if anyone's had the chutzpah to try arranging such a deck out of his art?)

You can see more of these at the bottom:
https://www.vagabond-des-etoiles.com/arts/ballades-de-francois-villon-moebius/

18
submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

This comes from the Conquistador series. As a huuuge Jean Dufaux fan, I'm embarrassed to say that so far I haven't gotten to it yet. :S

Still, tho:

Since their landing in America, Hernán Cortés and his army have been considered deities by the Aztec emperor Moctezuma. Unfortunately, Cortés has been working more for himself than for the distant crown of Spain for some time.

While he mounts a punitive expedition designed to remind others of their allegiance to him, Cortés also sends a motley group, mixing soldiers and mercenaries, to steal Moctezuma's priceless treasures.

That group of adventurers will soon be decimated by a mysterious entity which relentlessly pursues them in the jungle.

Are the enemy creatures mythical in nature, or simply human killers bent on vengeance? Perhaps one should not attack the ancestral and powerful Aztec legends with impunity… --BDT and Johnny

There are 4 tomes in all, listed & summarized here:
https://www.bedetheque.com/serie-32722-BD-Conquistador-Dufaux-Xavier.html

 

This comes from a fun, rollicking, 8-tome adventure series scripted by Alejandro Jodorowsky. The premise involves a boy born without arms & legs but with a fierce willpower, who finds ways to reverse some of his infirmities by going on various quests, which also tend to involve the fate of his very world. It's not as dark as some of Jodo's other stuff, reminding me more of the Arzach series.

Tragically, the artist (Arnaud Dombre) lost his life around the time the last book was being finished up, which was turned in to a rather fascinating memorial to him in the final pages, the likes of which I've never seen before. Some 'Blackadder & co. making their final push' type of energy, if that rings any bells.

A bit more on Arno here:
https://www.lambiek.net/artists/a/arno.htm

And on the complete series: (translate alert)
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Les_Aventures_d%27Alef-Thau

 

So my French is still very much a WIP, but regardless, I really enjoyed this tome. I found it light-hearted in style, but with a good amount of emotional punch, possessing an interesting slice-of-life storytelling style.

Yeah, there were lots of obvious similarities with Lewis Trondheim's classic McConey / Lapine series, but Durbiano has her own way of telling these tales, not so much alongside Trondheim's humorous-nihilist approach. (hah)

In terms of the story, we start with a minor "rock oldies" band that's been engaged to play nightly on a cruise ship.

https://i.imgur.com/GNf3RO2.jpeg

Fun little tableau-style scene there. And now an entire page, by golly:

https://i.imgur.com/qFJtaRn.jpeg

Pretty funny. The group's manager is arguing with "Mick," the singer / lead guitarist about the band's one and only groupie. One who was tacitly invited to come along on the cruise, and naturally, she has an enormous crush on the laddie. Poor, poor inconvenienced Mick. XD

https://i.imgur.com/U9K5c71.jpeg

WHAT were you saying just now? Huh, what, huh?

SIDE NOTE: One of the things which routinely blows my mind as someone who usually can't stand anthropomorphised animal comics is when I barely even notice that such was the case.

Eh, actually I found it completely charming here, serving well alongside such masterpieces as District 14 et Grandeville. TBF, if I can offer up any particular critique here, it's that the book can be ever-so-slightly "soap-operish" in nature. Still tho, it never seemed to wallow in such, as they commonly do.

Oh, and here's some more on this laudable comics gal:
https://www.lambiek.net/artists/d/durbiano_lucie.htm

EDIT: For anyone curious, we're still having a "suspicious glitch" when trying to post images in text. Still working on it...

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