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San Diego Comic Con: SP-N7
Dates: Jul 22 - 26
Location: San Diego Convention Center, 111 Harbor Dr, San Diego, CA 92101, USA ( MAP)Details:Clint & Dawn Wolf will be at San Diego Comic Con, as Lab Reject Studios. We will be at booth N7 in Small Press.








3 thoughts on “555 – Concepts Of A Plan”
Dr. Norman (not a real doctor)
Oh for crissake …
Crazyman
I hope she’s got more than 12% of a plan… 😅
Mattexian
Hopefully she’s not pulling a “Leroy Jenkins!”
Latest Comics
#197. 189 – Bad Mojo
24 Nov 27, 2013
#196. 188 – Calm After The Storm
21 Nov 20, 2013
#195. 187 – Drama Surgery
23 Nov 13, 2013
#194. 186 – Technicalities
23 Nov 06, 2013
#193. 185 – The Sixth Stage Of Grief
23 Oct 30, 2013
#192. 184 – La Siesta
24 Oct 23, 2013
#191. 183 – Communication Breakdown
29 Oct 09, 2013
#190. 182 – Isolated Incident
28 Oct 02, 2013
#189. 181 – What Happened Last Night
42 Sep 25, 2013
#188. 180 – Nothing Up His Sleeve
44 Sep 18, 2013
#187. 179 – The Most Dangerous Game
44 Sep 11, 2013
#186. 178 – Revision History
36 Sep 04, 2013
#185. 177 – An Uplifting Presentation
67 Aug 28, 2013
#184. 176 – War And Remembrance
61 Aug 21, 2013
#183. EPISODE EIGHT
50 Aug 19, 2013
#182. 175 – The Big Picture (END OF EPISODE 7)
63 Jul 10, 2013
#181. 174 – Call Waiting
57 Jul 03, 2013
#180. 173 – A Bang And A Whimper
25 Jun 26, 2013
#179. 172 – Rising Hatred
20 Jun 19, 2013
#178. 171 – Guilty As Charged
16 Jun 12, 2013
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555 – Concepts Of A Plan
Flash and substance – dissecting a comics layout
- Finally, we have the choice of how to display the lone line of dialogue: in… between… moments. There is a real sense of velocity here because there’s no time to say anything lengthy. There’s not even time to say a short sentence in the space of a single panel, it takes three of them to utter what at most would be two seconds of words. This neatly follows the idea of a page where the protagonist descends from top to bottom at a rate of hundreds of feet per second, and is most likely also why the sound effect of the breaking window is isolated and unfinished–Flash hits the street before the glass has stopped tinkling.
By setting all this up, Manapul and Buccellato were able to split what could’ve been left as a lazy splash page (last panel sound effects notwithstanding) into 11 segments that tell the story far more effectively, even if five of the panels are there mainly for completeness and contrast. It’s a carefully crafted piece that draws your attentions exactly where they need to go and makes you feel exactly what you’re meant to feel, and does it so well we don’t need a lick of duo-specific narration from our hero explaining what’s happening or what he’s doing–and that’s important considering this is a situation happening so fast he should be running on instinct. That old silver age silliness of “Only a fraction of a second to react!” plays out exactly where it should for a piece needing that frame of immediacy–unspoken, unthought, except as a given to the actions occurring; a feature especially important to a superhero like The Flash where speed should be a major theme of the physicality. There were several impressive moments like this in the comic, and I highly recommend picking it up if you want to experience some enthusiastic pros at work with great visual instincts on how to guide a reader’s eye. I didn’t need to be a fan of The Flash to know that these guys are, and that they’re having some great fun with the opportunity they’ve been granted to not only reboot a classic hero, but show the storytelling core of that hero in a way only comics can do. In any case, I hope this article explained a bit more about my views on how all the aspects of a comic’s presentation can contribute to the tale being told. These are lofty heights we probably only rarely achieve with Zombie Ranch (if ever) but they’re something I feel important to keep in mind and strive for as a creator. When it’s done right, it’s the kind of work that really inspires, and makes the medium shine.Calendar
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