angouleme

In this podcast episode Lou talks about two friends getting wild on a roof but also today’s comics.

Primary topic this episode: the books we read this week! Other topics include Camille for the first time on the show(!), the most important job in comic books-literally, Angouleme memories, trade-waiting, Slim sounding like an idiot with his American accent, Franco-Belgian GNs, XIII the comic book, Unworthy abs, eating faces, Lou on comics journalism look out, and Camille’s all-time fave book!

(Source: SoundCloud / comiXology)

In this episode Karrie returns and curses about comics.

Topics include Karrie joining the show once more to talk about her experiences at Angoulême, adjectives that start with L for a new nickname, 4 LOCO, making Karrie walk in the rain to record this podcast, comparing Paris ComicCon to this one, many different nationalities represented, quality of creator-owned content, un océan d’amour, extreme lack of trash cans, getting a sketch with your book purchase, the bread, sophistication, and acceptance of erotic content. If this episode had a title it would be “Cheesy Hot Dog.”

(Source: SoundCloud / comiXology)

n this episode Kara makes an expensive phone call.

Topics include Kara collect calling Matt in France to talk about his trip, thoughts on the convention and him being a dopey American experiencing new comics, poor work on flight planning, taxi strikes and uber fights, asking strangers where to take a bath, drooling all over your face, French cereal, traveling alone, Instagram stalking, the real Angoulême, walking into a pop-up comic shop, American comics being more than superhero comics, the hot dog, night-time graveyard, and. If this episode had a title it would be “Butter Energy.”

(Source: SoundCloud / comiXology)

Check out these sélections  from Angouléme 2016, and congratulations to their creators!

Ajin: Demi-Human (Sélection officielle)

Arsene Schrauwen (Sélection officielle)

Barnaby (Sélection patrimoine)

Doctors (Sélection officielle)

Letter 44 (Sélection officielle)

Ms. Marvel (Sélection officielle)

Outcast (Sélection officielle)

Saga (Sélection officielle)

A Silent Voice (Sélection jeunesse)

Southern Bastards (Sélection polar)

Angoulême: Redux

The Festival de la Bande Dessinée d'Angoulême has come and gone and it was like nothing I could have ever imagined. 

While I came into it with little to no expectations, nothing could have truly prepared me for what I was about to experience. 

I love domestic comic conventions, and look forward to each and every one I go to. It is always a pleasure to see a massive gathering of fans and creators expressing their passion for comics. They are something special.

But Angoulême is a whole different world. This is what it’s like when a whole town embraces an art form; not relegated to a convention center far removed from the workaday happenings of the rest of society, but melded into the very infrastructure of a city. Angoulême practically radiates with a love for BD and comics and the people who make them. 

I walked along side of the Marche Des Auteurs, which ambled its way along Rue Herge up to the city hall. After the tragedies surrounding Charlie Hebdo, the indominable spirit of the the culture of BD in France was a sight to behold. At the zenith of the march I broke off to observe, and stood utterly surrounded by a sea of people, the happiness of the town was palpable. It was impossible to stand there and not feel like I was someplace truly special. 

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I can only dream of a time when an American comics festival will feel so integrated into the identity of a town, where the two would be inseparable and you couldn’t call upon one without mentioning the other. Until that day I will always have Angoulême. 

Au revoir.  

Les Recontres

Some quick recap of the two panels we were involved with at comiXology. 

First, our French friends will be pleased to know that our friend Ivan Brandon was in attendance to join Glenat Comics in announcing that the publisher will be putting out French versions of some of America’s most popular comics like Sex Criminals, Pretty Deadly, Drifter, and Letter 44. 

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In our second panel, comiXology VP of communications Chip Mosher was joined by Delcourt’s Thierry Mornet and The Walking Dead’s Charlie Adlard to discuss the success Delcourt has had bringing The Walking Dead to France as well as giving the audience an inside look into Adlard’s process. 

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Charlie is a great guy (we will have an interview we did with him up soon) who strives to wake up every day a better artist than he was the day before. During the panel he recounted a time when Robert Kirkman wrote “draw the best page ever” into a script. He took it as a challenge and the result was the favorite page he’s ever drawn. 

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We took shelter from the constant downpour of rain at Angoulême by spending some time in the Delcourt booth inside Le Monde Des Bulles - Hall 1. There we got a chance to sit down and have a conversation with The Walking Dead’s Charlie Adlard and hear about his experience at Angoulême and his insights into the world of comics and his work and future plans for bandes dessinées.

You can listen to the audio recording here or read the transcript below. 

Keep reading

The Bill Watterson Exhibit

Each year the Grand Prix de la ville d'Angoulême is awarded to a living creator honoring his/her lifetime achievement, and the Grand Prix winner becomes president of the next year’s festival. Last year the winner was the legendary Bill Watterson, creator of Calvin & Hobbes. 

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That’s Ivan on the right, Master of PR & Events at comiXology. 

A walk around the room gives an overview of Watterson’s influences, before breaking down Calvin & Hobbes into its basic elements, focusing on things like the importance of various seasons to the characters in the strip and the emphasis on C&H’s naive yet poignant philosophical discussions. 

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There was a glass case displaying some of Watterson’s tools, which at first glance looked kind of boring to someone who is not a creator themselves, but upon closer inspection each object had a description matching the wit that made Calvin & Hobbes so famous. 

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With so much of Angoulême being unfamiliar to me, it was comforting to see such a nice display of admiration for a work very close to my heart.

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Angoulême: Come for the comics/BD, stay for the ridiculously pretty views.

comixology:

A comiXologist Recommends:
Mike Isenberg recommends Wayward #1

As frequent anime convention attendees in the late 1990s, my friends and I had a theory that the primary export of Japan was Crazy.  With a mix of its own ancient folklore and a hodgepodge of external cultural and religious influences, the collective Japanese imagination seems to constantly produce work that could never have existed anywhere else, and that often seems wild and bizarre to foreign eyes.

Wayward #1’s protagonist, Rori Lane, has one such pair of foreign eyes.  Half-Japanese by birth, she begins the story traveling to Japan for the first time, moving there as a young adult to live with her mother and get a fresh start after her parents’ rough divorce.  What she experiences on her first night, however, goes well beyond culture shock and jet lag, and deep into the territory of the truly bizarre and supernatural.

Written by Jim Zub (jimzub) and drawn by Steve Cummings, Wayward is a supernatural action/adventure story steeped in Japanese folklore.  Just beneath the shadows of Zub & Cummings’ Tokyo is a world of mythical yōkai, mysterious and mischievous monsters of Japanese legend.

The book’s art is a pleasure to view.  Cummings’ line art is crisp and dynamic, and the colors (supplied by Zub and John Rauch) make each page really pop.  The action sequences are fluid and exciting, and Cummings’ deft hand with facial expressions gives the characters a significant level of depth and relatability.

Wayward #1 also features some great back-matter from Japanese folklore scholar Zack Davisson, including an overview of yōkai mythology throughout Japanese history and a short essay profiling the legendary roots of one of the monsters featured in this issue.  It certainly isn’t required reading if you’d rather just focus on the gorgeous action/adventure comic preceding it, but I found all of it really fascinating and informative.

Definitely recommended for fans of supernatural action/adventure stories like Buffy The Vampire Slayer, or just anyone who wants to see feral, cat-like Japanese girls tearing into legendary turtle demons.  And really, who doesn’t?  If the chief export of Japan really is Crazy, then lock me in the nut house because I love this stuff.

[Read Wayward #1 Here!]

Mike Isenberg is an Associate Production Coordinator at comiXology, and the co-writer of FIRST LAW OF MAD SCIENCE.  He lives in Harlem with his cats, TESLA AND EDISON

The first four issues of Wayward are on sale for 99¢ each during our Angouleme Sale!

Festival Off aka F OFF

If you walk down what essentially amounts to a service road behind Galarie Champ de Mars (the slightly unseemly mall in the middle of Angoulême, you may notice an unassuming set of doors off to the side. Outside of those doors French 20-somethings that look like they’d be at home walking the streets of Brooklyn are milling about drinking wine from disposable plastic cups and smoking hand rolled cigarettes.  

Welcome to F OFF, Angoulême’s unaffiliated DIY & Indie Arts expo. The show is split between two adjacent buildings arranged over two floors. If you go through Door #1 you head straight up stairs to what feels like someones apartment. Each room containing either a handful of people tabling their work or, as was in some of the rooms, a surprisingly high-quality art exhibit that could easily fit in at any modern art museum. In one room zines were wired from the walls like a flock of birds struggling to get free. Honestly, I felt like I was getting the evil eye when I went to take pictures, so unfortunately none of the bird-book-room. 

Head back downstairs and outside to go through Door #2. This setup was a bit larger and felt more like artist alley at the hippest con you’ve ever seen. Artists from all over Europe (although mostly France) were showing off their books and prints, while another group of people serve up 2€ beer and homemade, organic, meat-free chili from a tupperware (I decided to pass on that, tyvm). 

This was the first place I decided to spend some cash and pick up a couple comics. Some were in English and others were comics without any words - the universal language! 

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Highlight of the event was when for no apparent reason the power went out and everyone just sat very still for a moment. After walking all day (7 miles just this afternoon!) it was nice to be motionless, surrounded by passionate people and the art they made. 

comixology:

Werewolves of Montpellier by Jason

Named to NPR, Las Vegas Weekly, Graphic Novel Reporter, The Casual Optimist, Comic Book Resources, Attentiondeficitdisorderly, Hypergeek, and Robot 6’s Best of 2010 lists. Sven, a semi-aimless Scandinavian artist who has ended up in Montpellier, France on a futile romantic pursuit, enjoys nocturnal raids into other people’s homes, disguised as a werewolf. The way he figures it, the disguise will give him an extra few moments’ advantage vis-à-vis any startled home owner if things get ugly… but he hasn’t taken into account the existence of a society of real Montpellier-based werewolves who do not take kindly to this new pretender. So while Sven spends his days playing chess and poker with his friends, sketching his way through his picturesque chosen hometown, and coping with romantic dilemmas — both his and those of his best friend, the Breakfast-at-Tiffany’s-obsessed Audrey, who has girl troubles of her own — little does he realize that a genuine threat to his life, and for that matter his humanity, is closing in on him. Werewolves of Montpellier is a lycanthropic thriller, a romantic comedy, and an existential drama — beware the full moon! 

The Werewolves of Montpelier and five other Jason graphic novels from fantagraphics are discounted as part of our Angouleme Sale!

Le Nouveau Monde

Take a walk up Rue Herge, named after the legendary creator of Tintin (a lot of the streets here are named after famous cartoonists) past the fortress like Circuit des Remparts, and you will come upon a tent dubbed Le Nouveau Monde or The New World. 

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Go through your thousandth security check of the day and step inside. Let the softly backlit pink walls of the tent calm you, weary traveler. You’re in a good place now. You’re in Le Nouveau Monde, where the future lies. 

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If I had to compare Le Nouveau Monde to anything in America, it would be The Small Press Expo in Bethesda, MD. This is were niche and alternative comics thrive. Walking down the hall I was able to spy a number of comics in french that we have available in the US through places like Fantagraphics and Abrams. Angoulême is like US conventions in reverse, where the superhero stuff seemed to get only a passing interest, the booths here were mobbed by fans of all demographics. 

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A few familiar faces were to be seen in this pink tent of awesomeness, like author of My Friend Dahmer, Derf Backderf, and the delightfully charming Ulli Lust. Both were busy signing and sketching. 

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That is another thing that is almost unbelievably cool about Angoulême: Signings here are much more casual, and it is not out of the ordinary for creators to draw fully colored or inked sketches when they sign your book for no extra cost. 

I swear that the engineers who put these tents together for this festival must be Gallifreyan, because while it felt like I could walk around the exterior in just a minute, I was in awe of the the labyrinthian sprawl that was on the inside. It seemed that Le Nouveau Monde consisted of three magical halls, each a subtly different shade of reddish pink. It’s a must see for any one visiting the festival, but a vital necessity if you are a fan of indie comics, which if the name of this hall rings true is the future of comics to come. 

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I spent so much time in this hall it was dark when I came out, which was kind of nice. It’s really an incredible little town. 

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