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Pasadena Comic Con
Dates: May 24
Location: Pasadena Convention Center, 300 E Green St, Pasadena, CA 91101, USA ( MAP)Details:We will be at the Pasadena Comic Con on January 26th. See some of you there for this one day event!
Purchase tickets online at here: https://www.tixr.com/groups/pcc/events/pasadenacomiccon-pasadena-comic-con-2025-115248
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San Diego Comic Con: SP-N7
Dates: Jul 23 - 27
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 “543 – Cradles And Graves”
Keith
Oh lordy, they really are a great couple…though, I suggest adopting.
Anonymous
Consequences be damned, because doing nothing might be worse.
Tommyguada
hi
Latest Comics
#425. 408 – Watching The Huachers
51 Mar 06, 2019
#424. 407 – Talk To The Ranch Hand
50 Feb 27, 2019
#423. 406 – We Interrupt This Broodcast
52 Feb 20, 2019
#422. 405 – Harsh Reality
51 Feb 13, 2019
#421. 404 – Greenscreen With Envy
53 Feb 06, 2019
#420. 403 – All The World’s A Soundstage
50 Jan 23, 2019
#419. 402 – Have Sword, Will Travelogue…
50 Jan 16, 2019
#418. 401 – Zoological Anxiety
48 Jan 09, 2019
#417. 400 – It’s Curtains For Ya!
45 Dec 19, 2018
#416. 399 – Cleather ™!
43 Dec 12, 2018
#415. 398 – Undead Or Alive
45 Dec 05, 2018
#414. 397 – Just Pronounce It “Win”
52 Nov 28, 2018
#413. 396 – Wild At Start
58 Nov 21, 2018
#412. EPISODE SEVENTEEN
64 Nov 19, 2018
#411. 395 – Pointing Fingers (END OF EPISODE 16)
46 Nov 07, 2018
#410. 394 – Hot Air
50 Oct 31, 2018
#409. 393 – Early Christmas
43 Oct 24, 2018
#408. 392 – Room And Hoard
40 Oct 17, 2018
#407. 391 – Myth Takes
39 Oct 10, 2018
#406. 390 – Cryptid Camera
36 Oct 03, 2018
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543 – Cradles And Graves
Chuck sez: "Never let a covert operation get in the way of a bad pun."
Stoicism and absurdity
“What explains the Westerns? World War II, I think,” Edlund says by way of comparison. “Where does the wounded fucking guy who can’t tell his pain to anybody — where does that come from? Where does emptiness, peace, and quiet as a fantasy come from? What is the story of all that shit?”
This put me in mind of a documentary called Five Came Back that Dawn and I watched not too long ago, which spent some time on famous Western filmmaker John Ford and how his military service in WWII informed his postwar work. You need only watch Stagecoach (1939) and The Searchers (1956) back-to-back to see a fairly gaping tonal difference even though the superficial elements are the same (including John Wayne being the star). Westerns of course predate the start of World War II, but it’s only after the war that you really start getting that genre feel of the lone man or small band of men on their own, often struggling to deal with a world that no longer seems to understand them or have a place for them. I’ve talked up George Stevens’ Shane (1953) before as the arguable ur-example of this, and wouldn’t you know it, Stevens was on the frontlines of WWII as well. What also struck me about Edlund’s quote was thinking back to how The Searchers unabashedly interrupts its dark existentialism towards the end for an absurdly staged, lengthy fistfight at a wedding party, complete with one of the guys involved all but calling a time out while he gets someone’s abandoned fiddle out of the way before the next punch. It goes on for so long and is so comically bizarre that the only comparison I have is the similar scene in They Live where two grown, burly men are fighting over one of them putting on a pair of sunglasses. And yet that’s the thing, isn’t it? Catch-22 and other works like it certainly prove that darkness and absurdity can walk hand in hand. Stoicism and absurdity are also aspects that can go together… The Tick isn’t really a stoic sort but if you’ve never seen the movie Airplane!, the performances of Leslie Nielsen, Peter Graves and Robert Stack in that movie are perfect specimens of how being oh-so-serious can be oh-so-funny. The idea of “deadpan humor” is entirely built around this phenomenon, and in the world of Zombie Ranch Frank is probably my best example. The Tick has similarly flirted with a dark side to its humor that doesn’t undercut it so much as throwing it into greater relief. It can be a fine line to walk to avoid figuratively breaking your audience’s neck with the mood whiplash, but if you can get it right a bit of contrast can really add up to more than the sum of its parts and (bizarre as it is to say this) actually give a sense of verisimilitude over a piece that is relentlessly on one side or another.Calendar
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