Friday, November 16, 2007

Why Does My Underwear Get Tight

"Sin City" graphic novel by Frank Miller in Batman Begins





Sin city, un po' come 300 ha ottenuto la sua massima notorietà per merito del film, un ottimo film for what I said in a previous post ... but it is unclear how it has gone from comics to film and how Miller had thought his work before it was adapted to the big screen.

Sin City is composed of 6 separate graphic novels, all set in the imaginary city of sin, almost all of which have different characters, but bound together by a thin line that links their destinies, their personalities and their characters.
The city of sin affects us a bit 'for all its crudeness and its strength, a force that has as objective to exaggerate any behavior, feeling, emotion.
in Sin City is all to 'nth power, as the emotions it arouses, and the feelings it transmits, you are much stronger than any other comic could ever do.
At such a high degree of sublimation graphic novels, each episode of this is meaningless and makes room for all the wonder and 'exaltation of the reader: the story itself, although very intriguing, is eclipsed by' chilling and macabre atmosphere that this city and port behind every story takes a back seat to make room for more pure excitement and empathy of the reader.
of us have never heard Marv Millerian, or even Jackie Boy and Dwight and Hartigan, who unlike the situations they find themselves to be victims or torturers, human and inhuman.

But Miller reached perfection with style and dialogues with the designs of this superb Sin City. In his style of writing each word has its purpose, as well as every sound, every syllable has meaning, all dialogue has been edited so as to achieve a perfection rarely sought in the comics.
The boards are even more fantastic and milleriana summarize the vision of the world: in fact they also are brought to 'far-fetched, either in color (that are strictly black and white with a few glaring exceptions) is in the style which is brought to' nth power leave a large space to 'reader's imagination. A big

masterpiece, a symbol of modern comics, broadly comparable to the milestones as "Watchman" or "V for Vendetta," must-read for any fan of comics in general, but also in literature, thanks to the perfection of the 'great work of Miller

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