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Messages - robprosser

#1
Announcements / Re: 2000 AD - The Ultimate Collection
27 January, 2024, 06:56:23 PM
Quote from: AdamStrange on 27 January, 2024, 09:17:50 AMI've got my sob story about those Nemesis collections. I sold a set of 3 in mint condition on eBay just before Christmas. I got £125 for the set and packaged them really well, but the courier seemingly played football with them. They were delivered damaged and eBay pretty much took all the money back off me 😡
Did you see a photo of the damaged books? There are as many unscrupulous buyers as there are sellers on Ebay. Buyers are very aware that EBay nearly always takes their side in disputes.
#3
Announcements / Re: 2000 AD - The Ultimate Collection
16 October, 2023, 04:46:22 PM
Is there enough "Fiends of the Eastern Front" to warrant a second collection?
#4
General / SMASH! Miniseries
21 September, 2023, 03:01:28 PM
Is this still happening? It's due out next month but I can't find it in the online shop.
#6
General / Re: Forthcoming Thrills - 2023
13 February, 2023, 08:44:34 AM
Quote from: Rogue Judge on 13 February, 2023, 01:05:06 AMWas Case Files 41 delayed? It's nowhere to be found online. I wait for these Case Files like a kid waits for Christmas! Hopefully it becomes available soon.
It's definitely out. I got my copy a couple of weeks ago from the store.
#7
General / Re: Kevin O'Neill 1953 - 2022
15 November, 2022, 12:23:20 PM
I read this extended tribute from Alan Moore, posted by Scott Dunbier that I thought was worth sharing.

"Scott Dunbier has shared the following:

Last week when Kevin O'Neill tragically died, George Gustines (writer for the New York Times) and I were speaking about Kev and the obituary he was writing. I offered to see if Alan Moore would be interested in doing a quote. I have not spoken to Alan in years but I emailed his daughter Leah to see if she would forward the request to her dad. A couple of days later the following arrived in my inbox from Leah. Alan wrote more than the paper could print, and he said to feel free to use excerpts from his text. The following is the full text that Alan wrote:

—————

Kevin was born into the poverty and rubble of post-war London, with its bomb-site playgrounds, and most of its teatime treats only available on ration. He grew up in those brick-dust latitudes, on streets with all imaginative fantasy blitzed out of them, and all the bright pulp culture then erupting from the city's scorched earth as his one escape-hatch; his sole nourishment.

There was an uproarious richness in his upbringing, south of the river – a paternal grandfather, a blacksmith, who'd once punched out a particularly annoying horse; a beloved elder sibling who'd resprayed a stolen car for the Kray-rivalling Richardson brothers to a Spode-like lustre and earned the enduring nickname 'Spoge' from the mal-appropriate gangsters – and it all soaked into his drawing-hand along with the silvery monochrome of the period's TV and cinema, the blazing primary colours of its paperback covers and its comics.

A committed autodidact who was done with education even earlier than myself, at sixteen Kevin flung himself into a comics field which he would come to greatly dignify with his astounding contributions. Working as an editorial assistant on the British juvenile weeklies that were then going through a golden age of innovative energy, he quickly learned both the industry's glories and its brutalities, studying the line-work and the shading effects of the masterly artists whose signatures he was being employed to remove from their work with white-out.

What made him unique amongst his generation of comic creators was the breadth of his influences and experience. While most of his contemporaries were modelling their styles solely upon the incoming wave of great American talent, Kevin was assimilating the angular transatlantic elegance of, say, Spiderman creator Steve Ditko, without abandoning his love for the manic cartoon grotesquery of England's Ken Reid. The result was an astonishingly flexible ability to shift from the bold designs of the Edwardian illustrators he had a passion for, to the deranged absurdities of the British children's fare that he'd been absorbed in since infancy.

Nobody drew like Kevin O'Neill. As a result of one of our more innocuous collaborations, Kevin received the supreme compliment of having his entire artistic style – whether he was drawing a table-leg or a baby carriage – ruled unacceptable by the American industry's then-extant Comics Code Authority. When I was putting together my formative ideas for The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen in the lead-out groove of the last century, I quickly realised that nobody save Kevin was qualified to present such a dizzying range of characters, periods, situations and styles with the vitality and ingenuity that the narrative – a ridiculous mash-up of all human fiction since classical antiquity – seemed to demand. Thus began what I think was perhaps the longest, happiest and most productive partnership of either of our careers.

Working with him was an honour, a pleasure, and an education. His knowledge of the culture we were mining was easily as extensive as my own, and in most instances was marvellously complementary. Some of the best ideas in the series originated in Kevin's idle mentions of, for example, the rather one-sided literary spat between George Orwell and Billy Bunter creator Frank Richardson, which provided much of the storyline for our elaborate sourcebook, The Black Dossier.

Not only a working relationship, the connection with Kevin was one of the most important friendships of my life. As well as being one of the medium's most individual and exciting draftsmen, he was also exceptional in being one of the very few working-class creators working in a trashy, gutter art-form that was originally intended only for the poor and supposedly illiterate, since become a gentrified middle-class district with graphic novels in the stead of studio loft-apartments. Of all my mainstream collaborators, Kevin was the only one who stood solidly beside me in our difficulties with the comic-book publishing industry, and whose commitment was always to the work, like my own, rather than to the financial inducements and bullying of the companies; the manufacturers.

He was also one of the warmest, funniest, most erudite and most courageous people that I've ever met. During what we both suspected was our final telephone conversation, we got to say goodbye properly, and take pride in what we'd accomplished with perhaps the only ongoing work in comics history to be deliberately brought to a satisfying ending by its creators, rather than being run into the ground or abruptly discontinued by its publishers. At one point in our heavily-weighted dialogue, I remarked that in over twenty years of working together we had never had a cross word or a disagreement. Kevin agreed, pointing out that we'd never had sex either, and that he was immensely grateful for both these things. I am going to miss him like I'd miss sunsets.

In the words of English music-hall legend Max Miller, 'Take a good look, missus. You'll never see another one.'

Alan Moore,

Northampton,

November 9th, 2022"
#8
Delivered yesterday.
#9
News / Re: Alan Moore interview
07 October, 2022, 04:08:57 PM
Do people who queue to see Barman movies the represent toxic element of fandom? He refers to readers of comics as infantile. Also regarding Promethea he's quoted "I've disowned it now".

I'm a big fan of Moore but this interview and others in recent years have annoyed me. I get he's disgruntled with the industry but there does seem to be a fair amount of ire aimed at readers. The other thing I've wondered over the years is how many times did he have to get bitten before getting proper representation when working for the big companies? At some point you surely look at yourself and think you're at least partly at fault.
#10
News / Re: Alan Moore interview
07 October, 2022, 01:04:35 PM
He's entertaining as ever but basically spends his time disparaging people who like comics. Weird as, on the whole, they're his core readership.

I hadn't realised he'd disowned Promethea as well. Apart from LOEG, From Hell and Lost Girls is there anything he hasn't disowned?
#11
I got an email yesterday confirming a delay of at least another month citing paper shortages as the reason, as suggested here.
#12
General / Re: Forthcoming Thrills - 2022
28 July, 2022, 05:45:09 PM
Quote from: nxylas on 28 July, 2022, 03:09:49 PM
Quote from: robprosser on 28 July, 2022, 12:24:52 PM
Giving him full ownership of all his 2000ad characters along with a grovelling apology, a million pound bonus and a statement etched on a solid gold plate stating the Pat was right about everything all along wouldn't make him happy
Probably true, but if he wasn't so angry all the time, could he have created something as great as Nemesis the Warlock or Marshal Law or Charley's War? That's a rhetorical question, I honestly don't know the answer.
That's probably true. I'm a big fan but I wish he wasn't so relentless. Also be comes over a more than a bit of a hypocrite these days.
#13
General / Re: Forthcoming Thrills - 2022
28 July, 2022, 12:24:52 PM
Quote from: IndigoPrime on 27 July, 2022, 11:26:23 AM
I would say 'Slaine mashed into Icke – Origins' getting HC treatment might finally make Mills stop complaining, but given that every single scrap of it hasn't yet been reprinted, it probably won't.
Giving him full ownership of all his 2000ad characters along with a grovelling apology, a million pound bonus and a statement etched on a solid gold plate stating the Pat was right about everything all along wouldn't make him happy
#14
News / Re: Legends of Luther Arkwright
12 July, 2022, 12:08:31 PM
Bought it at the exhibition a few weeks ago and finally got around to reading it yesterday. It's superb. Talbot is still absolutely at the top of his game and it's a worthy follow-up.
#15
It's not out yet. It slipped down the website's release schedule a few weeks ago.