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Chargement... The Invisibles Vol. 4: Bloody Hell in America (édition 1998)par Grant Morrison (Auteur)
Information sur l'oeuvreLes Invisibles, tome 1. Science occultée par Grant Morrison (Author)
Chargement...
Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. Lovely! Finally, we're getting more Ragged Robin. In this issue, we were introduced to the US portion of things. The AIDS virus being manufactured in a mysterious underground lab. We got LSD trips, the story of what crashed at Roswell, and hints of the future. The Archons were further explained, Quimper had a bigger part, and everything is moving faster than you'd expect. Can't wait for more Rags, dear lord am I attached to that character. The jacket copy on this fourth collection of Morrison's The Invisibles suggests that readers might profitably start reading the series here. Perhaps that's so: it lacks the narrative hand-holding offered by the naive Jack Frost in the early issues centered on his recruitment, but readers likely to get much out of this series never really needed that in the first place. This shortish volume collects a free-standing plot sequence and showcases the principal characters without surplus exposition. The four issues collected here are actually the beginning of the second Invisibles series as published in periodical comic book format. Although the trade paperback bears the title Bloody Hell in America, the individual parts are the commencement (and completion?) of the story arc "Black Science." The cinematic violence that is a mainstay of the series is on abundant display here, along with the themes of mind control and spiritual coercion. The conspiracy at stake is pretty humdrum for a post-X-Files readership, although Morrison raises the metaphysical stakes somewhat. To the extent that there is character development in this volume, it is focused on Ragged Robin, but by the final page her backstory is still pretty opaque. (It does appear that she gets to encounter her childhood self very briefly.) A couple of new accessory "good guys" are added, in the form of Jolly Roger (a dour dyke who was King Mob's colleague in martial arts) and Mason (a rich American on a po-mo grail quest). aucune critique | ajouter une critique
Appartient à la sérieThe Invisibles (TPB Vol 2 issues 01-04) The Invisibles Vol.2 (1-4) Appartient à la série éditoriale
In a world where paranoia is a survival skill, the only hope for humankind is a group of unconventional occultist freedom fighters called the Invisibles. In this collection, the team launches an assault on an underground New Mexico lab to free the cure for the AIDS virus from the alleged inventors of the disease- the U.S. government. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)741.5973The arts Graphic arts and decorative arts Drawing & drawings Cartoons, Caricatures, Comics Collections North American United States (General)Classification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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There's a story in here somewhere, but you have to hack at all the self-indulgent crap that Morrison throws in—pop psychology examination of movies, discussion about bleeding edge tech (he tries to out-Warren Ellis Warren Ellis and fails...no one talks tech like Ellis) and he populates the Invisibles with edgy characters (he tries to out-Garth Ennis Garth Ennis with out there characters and fails...no one writes edgy characters like Ennis).
Overall, for such a slim volume, despite the gorgeous art, I had far too many "get on with it" moments over the pages and pages of Morrison trying to show how clever he can be.
Decades ago, I read Morrison's Arkham Asylum and remember loving it at the time. This time around, not so much. ( )