zoughi requests: > I am looking for any academic papers on the topic of the comic book > aesthetic. I am interested on seeing how the comic book medium has > influenced the content and form of film. If you know of any movies that > were originally comic books (besides the superhero movies) I would really > appreciate it. You probably know this one already, but Scott McCloud's UNDERSTANDING COMICS is a must--and his REINVENTING COMICS ought to be looked at. Not "academic" as such, but indispensible. The books actually go a long way toward showing how the two media are really quite different. There has been quite a bit of commentary from academic and pop reviewers on the recent surge of influence by Japanese manga and anime on contemporary American film, especially in animation but not necessarily confined to that. Check the Film Literature Index and online search engines for more. As to films adapted from comic books, you'll probably want to categorize genres further. Aside from superheroes, there is a lot of more-or-less commercial dreck derived from non-super-hero comics, eg. RICHIE RICH, DENNIS THE MENACE, etc. And, of course, there are numerous Disney take-offs from the comics which were adapted from the movies which were . . . There have also been quite a few adaptations, with wildly varying degrees of success, from non-mainstream comic books and graphic novels: FRITZ THE CAT may be the most notorious, but the list includes things that range from THE CROW to TANK GIRL to THE MASK to the recent FROM HELL. One of the better and most recent such films is GHOST WORLD. Harvey Pekar's AMERICAN SLENDOR, originally illustrated by R. Crumb, is supposed to be aired on TV sometime this year. A film version of Gilbert Shelton's Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers has been rumored for some time, but there is no sign of it yet. Ditto the "Elfquest" movie, which was supposed to come out last year. Given that the movies pre-date "comic books" by a good three decades, the influences between film and comics are less likely to move from the latter to the former than vice-versa. Recent developments suggest that the movements go both ways! There's a nice discussion of "post-modern" graphic novels at: http://www.psu.edu/dept/inart10_110/inart10/cmbk9pmgn.html Also see the Pantheon website at: http://www.randomhouse.com/pantheon/graphicnovels/home.html Don Larsson ----------------------------------------------------------- Donald F. Larsson, English Department, AH 230 Minnesota State University Mankato, MN 56001 ---- To sign off Screen-L, e-mail [log in to unmask] and put SIGNOFF Screen-L in the message. Problems? Contact [log in to unmask]