Showing posts with label Beast. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beast. Show all posts

Friday, October 19, 2012

MONSTER MONTH: A COUNTDOWN TO HALLOWEEN (Day 19)

(Frankenstein's Monster is a Foodie?)

Well it’s much later than I usually post these Monster-Month blogs, but I had a snag last night and could not complete the task.  And so, let us look instead to the future.  More specifically to the children who will carry the torch (pardon the pun) for Frankenstein’s creation for the forseeable future.  





Adam Rex created a couple of really neat books featuring our fair Frankenstein Monster and they are for kids, though I’m of the opinion that they’re good for all ages.  The focus isn’t completely on the creature, but on many of the monsters who are out there making meals every day trying to feed themselves and their families.





FRANKENSTEIN MAKES A SANDWICH and FRANKENSTEIN TAKES THE CAKE are the two titles in question and I wish I had my copies of these two books available, but I can’t seem to find them at the moment.  But as you can see from the art and bit of poetry in the images around, it’s fun stuff.

(Click to Frankensize)
from the KIRKUS REVIEW:
FRANKENSTEIN MAKES A SANDWICH (reviewed on August 1, 2006)
Readers will relish every gross and hilarious entry in this monstrous menu of misadventures, from the towering appetizer concocted by Frankenstein—a green-skinned Fred Gwynne in Rex’s detail-rich, superbly over-the-top illustrations—to the Japanese-inflected closer, “Godzilla Pooped on my Honda.” Interlaced with repeated appearances from an increasingly frantic Phantom of the Opera (who can’t get a succession of pop tunes out of his head), the verses and accompanying art go from suggesting unfortunate results when “The Invisible Man Gets A Haircut,” to making lurid allusions to the contents of “The Lunchsack of Notre Dame.” They range from why “The Yeti Doesn’t Appreciate Being Called Bigfoot,” to tracking the Mummy’s reluctance to bed down: “Here’s his new excuse: / He wants cookies with his juice. / But he won’t get far— / that’s his stomach in that jar.” Making Judy Sierra’s Monster Goose (2001), illustrated by Jack E. Davis, look like an exercise in restraint, here’s a read-aloud candidate sure to elicit loud screams—but not of fright.  (Poetry. Ages 6-10)





(Click to Frankensize)
(Click to Frankensize)

SITES CITED:







BTW, here's some other art by Adam Rex of note to you, my readers:




And don't forget that TCM serves up these goodies
TOMORROW MORNING:
Saturday, October 20, 2012

9am - ISLE OF THE DEAD (1945)


10:15am - THE REVENGE OF FRANKENSTEIN (1958)


12pm - FRANKENSTEIN CREATED WOMAN (1966)


1:45pm - DIARY OF A MADMAN (1963)



FINIS.


Sunday, November 6, 2011

DIGITAL DOODLING & TRADITIONAL TRACING


Henry "Hank" McCoy, AKA The Bouncing Beast!


The character Thorgal from the comic book of the same name out of Europe. The comic is beautiful, but I've only read a few issues.


Bigby Wolf (The Big Bad Wolf) of FABLES by Bill Willingham. He's just beginning his transformation there.


I'd nearly forgotten this nightmare--the Corinthian from THE SANDMAN comics by Neil Gaiman. He's all smiles.


This is my inks and shading over the blue line pencils by "FuriousNick" over at DA/Outcast. We altered it somewhat for the challenge we were given, but I'm pretty happy with the inks here.