Showing posts with label D.C. Thomson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label D.C. Thomson. Show all posts
Sunday, June 3, 2012
British Girls' Comics: Diana Annual 1976 - Fabulous Four by Enrique Badia Romero
Sunday, May 27, 2012
British Girls' Comics: Diana Annual 1977 - Fabulous Four by Enrique Badia Romero
Last year Out Of This World featured examples of stories and sequential art to be found in the excellent but now extinct British girls' comic, Diana. One of the stories featured in that post was "For Love of Leni", drawn by Enrique Badia Romero, better known for his work on the Modesty Blaise newspaper strip:
That Romero's celebrated style turns up in Diana is interesting in and of itself. I only have a few Diana annuals, none of the weekly comics, but in those annuals there is a regular feature called 'The Fabulous Four', a girls' sci-fi futuristic adventure story. Artistically it is probably the best piece in a book that is generally full of high quality art. Below is the Fabulous Four story from the 1977 Diana Annual - enjoy!
I think we lost a lot when romance comics and these girls' comics went by the wayside. What is interesting also, to me, is that there were comics (and such high quality comics at that), produced for girls in the UK. We'd still have them today if there was a market, but they're gone, presumably because girls stopped buying comics. We've talked about this before, but perhaps somehow the publishers lost their audience by being unable to go with them wherever it was that they went, in terms of what they were looking for in entertainment.
That Romero's celebrated style turns up in Diana is interesting in and of itself. I only have a few Diana annuals, none of the weekly comics, but in those annuals there is a regular feature called 'The Fabulous Four', a girls' sci-fi futuristic adventure story. Artistically it is probably the best piece in a book that is generally full of high quality art. Below is the Fabulous Four story from the 1977 Diana Annual - enjoy!
I think we lost a lot when romance comics and these girls' comics went by the wayside. What is interesting also, to me, is that there were comics (and such high quality comics at that), produced for girls in the UK. We'd still have them today if there was a market, but they're gone, presumably because girls stopped buying comics. We've talked about this before, but perhaps somehow the publishers lost their audience by being unable to go with them wherever it was that they went, in terms of what they were looking for in entertainment.
Thursday, January 13, 2011
British Girls' Comics: Diana Annual 1979
I've selected three stories from the Diana Annual of 1979, that again illustrate the quality of British girls' comics of the 1950s through the 80s. This first story illustrates the hassle girls of (just???) the 1970s had to endure from being continuously hit on by guys. The story also made me think again of how just like animals people can be if they don't consciously transcend the biological urges of their bodies. The boys in this story are, typically, driven by their hormones and instincts to reproduce. They're trying to best each other at impressing the female on heat, although she's not fully receptive to their advances. Maybe there's a cool subject here for a David Attenborough documentary - the reproductive behavior of the human mammal, from the perspective of visiting alien scientists. Probably already been done. Anyway, some nice art that looks like it's by one of the Spanish artists.
This next story does a makeover on a popular topic in 1960s girls' comics - the beauty pageant and modeling. The artwork is a little different, and quite good in places. Interesting story line - the protagonist has been raised in a single parent household, but what happened to her father? Why wasn't he in the picture? Well the answer lies in one of those favorite soap opera devices, but you're gonna have to read it to find out which!
Finally, "For Love of Leni" is a girls' romantic sci-fi set in the future, with a kind of X-Men swipe in that it has some of the population having mutated to possess special powers. This art is nice, and is by an artist who drew a girls' sci-fi feature in Diana called The Fabulous Four, again a bit of a Marvel rip-off in terms of the title, but story-wise is more like a female version of the Flash Gordon sort of space adventure. I'll post a little collection of those soon. This love story here involves that age-old problem of cross-cultural or inter-racial (or in this case, inter sub-species) relationships.
If only we hadn't, as a society, been corrupted by media corporations and misguided concepts of so-called freedom such that stories like these wouldn't appear beneath the sexually over-exposed interest of today's youth! For me, the story of romance comics, including these girls' comics, illustrates the moral decline that in the end made society as a whole, as well as the younger generation's taste in entertainment, more degraded than the standards mainstream comic publishers were willing or able to sink to.
Saturday, November 27, 2010
Diana: The Fine Line Between Adventure & Romance
This schoolgirl ghost story is drawn in very fine-line art by an artist I can't identify. "Sadly the Olives Grow" is from the Diana annual of 1977. This little adventure takes place on a residential school trip to Spain for this English girl and her class. If this had been an early 60s girls' comic they probably would have gone skiing in Switzerland or the Austrian Alps, but by the 1970s Spain was the popular overseas destination for British vacationers. I have to say the supervision is a little slack, enough for the protagonist to wander off up the hill, using the freedom gained by feigning illness and being left alone in the hotel all day!
This second story, "The Friday Rocking Horse", is a charming tale of two lost souls who finally find their way, by finding each other. It's by the same artist, this time from the 1976 Diana annual. I really like the splash panel on this one. That's the kind of country cottage with a dry stone wall around a beautiful garden that I've always wanted to live in with my wife. Very unlikely to happen, so I'll have to be content with the occasional daydream prompted by pictures like this!
This second story, "The Friday Rocking Horse", is a charming tale of two lost souls who finally find their way, by finding each other. It's by the same artist, this time from the 1976 Diana annual. I really like the splash panel on this one. That's the kind of country cottage with a dry stone wall around a beautiful garden that I've always wanted to live in with my wife. Very unlikely to happen, so I'll have to be content with the occasional daydream prompted by pictures like this!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)