CBR's Comics Should Be Good scribe Brian Cronin featured the Snowbird tale: Snowblind as Day 360's cool comic. Brian also gives Byrne the kudos he deserves for some of the inventive (experimental & risky) storytelling he did.
CBR's Comics Should Be Good scribe Brian Cronin featured the Snowbird tale: Snowblind as Day 360's cool comic. Brian also gives Byrne the kudos he deserves for some of the inventive (experimental & risky) storytelling he did.
Excellent! I've been reading Comic Book Legends Revealed for a while, and haven't seen much about what he thinks of AF. So it's good for them to get kudos from somebody relatively high-profile.
- Le Messor
"I do feel that spiritual progress does demand at some stage that we should cease to kill our fellow creatures for the satisfaction of our bodily wants."
~ Mahatma Gandhi
C'mon guys, lets face it! That 5 blank pages were all a cheap trick. He was in a hurry and late.
You know it happened during Assistant Editors' Month, right, when every comic was doing silly things and cheap tricks?
What's wrong with Cheap Trick? Dream Police, If You Want My Love...
Personally, I like it as a one-off; it was fun, off-beat, kinda new and different.
As a one-off.
- Le Messor
"I don’t know what you mean by YOUR way, all the ways about here belong to ME"
How else are you going to draw a character in a predominantly white costume in the middle of a full blown blizzard? I mean her eyes are even white.
DIGGER
This.
I think I only have three comics from Assistant Editors' Month. The X-Men one was kinda lame - they just put a bit in the end where an editor comes in to measure the Blackbird for OHTMU. I honestly can't remember what happened in FF that month.
I have more Rush than Cheap Trick in my collection.
- Le Messor
"I don’t meet competition, I crush it."
~ Charles Revson
How funny since this very issue was just mentioned on another thread on here.
Alpha Flight# 6 is one of the oddest in the series, an experiment that is only partially successful and a back-up story which is stronger than the lead-in. FULL DISCLOSURE: the Shaman back-up is one of my favorite stories.
How is it then that, on a whole, AF vol. 1 #6 isn't one of my favorite all-around AF books? It's because the lead-in, while innovative and gave the letterer a chance to shine, actually demands more of the artwork that is seen. And that's where it fails to deliver. It might have saved time and kept the book on schedule, but there is nothing really special about the Snowbird section, not even one panel of an iconic illustration (which, IMO, could have been when she restored herself after the fight). It isn't until the Sasquatch back-up that Snowbird gets an iconic illustration with the stylized bird-motif.
But it was too late.
Once upon a time, they exploded from the pages of The X-Men. For a moment, they were "Canada's answer to The Avengers."
They were ALPHA FLIGHT....
...once upon a time.
I think issue six is just begging to be reprinted in braille...
seriously, I liked it. Never once have I read it and felt cheated by the lack of artwork.
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