#3: Sir Edward Grey, Witchfinder: In the Service of Angels
Storytellers: Mike Mignola & Ben Stenbeck
Publisher: Dark Horse
Year Of Publication: 2010
Page Count (can be approximate or in # of issues format): 152 pages
Storytellers: Mike Mignola & Ben Stenbeck
Publisher: Dark Horse
Year Of Publication: 2010
Page Count (can be approximate or in # of issues format): 152 pages
WHAT I LEARNED ABOUT WRITING / STORYTELLING:
In other media,
creating a proper sense of unease is essential to a good horror story, which is
something that can be difficult to achieve in comics. But with this book, Mignola and Stenbeck
manage to set that mood in the first issue through some non-sequitur transitions
between the main narrative and panels showing close-ups of ancient
carvings. It’s something I’ve seen done
in Mignola’s Hellboy stories and it works well here. The transitions are disjointed, as they just
“pop up” in the middle of a page without any captions or reason. This not only jars the reading flow for a
second but also takes your mind away from the story at hand and has you
wondering what it means. It’s not
dramatic, but it is effective for this type of story.
WHAT I LEARNED ABOUT ART / STORYTELLING:
Listening to a
podcast about movies this past week, the co-hosts discussed the fact that a
simple way to help convey horror in film is to shoot daytime scenes in very
bright, well-lit areas, and to film night scenes (the more horror-oriented) in
deep darkness. And though it may seem
obvious, it’s a good lesson to keep in mind when writing horror, and one that
Mignola does well with his spotting of blacks.
In this story, Stenbeck really works to utilize that Mignola sensibility
while keeping to his own style, utilizing heavy blacks and deep shadows for the
night scenes that are meant to be more horror-oriented while opening it up in
the day scenes. And it works really
well. Sometimes the best lessons are the
simplest ones.
RECOMMENDATION: C
NOTES / REVIEW / SYNOPSIS:
This was a
fairly typical “Mignola-verse” comic. Nothing stood out, for me, story-wise or
art-wise. That said, the fact that it
was “typical” means it was well done and entertaining. It won’t blow your mind but it will
entertain, especially if you’re in the mood for a Mignola book.
-chris
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