Showing posts with label Fritz Lang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fritz Lang. Show all posts

Friday, November 23, 2012

SUPERMAN GRAPHIC NOVEL FRITZ LANG METROPOLIS MARIA GERMAN EXPRESSIONISM DC COMIC

SUPERMAN GRAPHIC NOVEL! METROPOLIS Elseworlds. The boyhood dreams of Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster combine with the vision of renowned filmmaker Fritz Lang in Superman's Metropolis, a remarkable Elseworlds graphic novel setting the Man of Tomorrow in the City of Tomorrow. Ted McKeever's beautiful painted art superbly evokes the powerful imagery of Lang's film and the classic heroism of the Superman comics in the story adapted by frequent Moebius collaborators Jean-Marc and Randy Lofficier, and comics legend Roy Thomas. Starring Clark Kent, Lois Lane, Lex Luthor, Jimmy Olsen, Perry White and others, this science fiction parable celebrates the triumph of the human spirit against an oppressive ruling class, in which only the promise of a superman yet-to-come gives hope to the workers slaving in the bowels of the city. RARE and OUT OF PRINT. HARD TO FIND COLLECTORS ITEM FOR FANS OF SPAWN AND BATMAN. fantastic high quality full color graphic novel printed on bright glossy paper stock. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

FRITZ LANG'S M GRAPHIC NOVEL JON J MUTH PAINTED ART OOP


FRITZ LANG'S M GRAPHIC NOVEL. Illustrated by JON J MUTH. V3
GRAPHIC NOVEL/ILLUSTRATED BOOK (1990)

THIS VERSION IS LONG OUT OF PRINT.

Published by Eclipse Comics.

This is the hard to find first printing of the original M volume with lavishly painted illustrations by artist JON J MUTH.

This is the RARE original 1990 published version of the Graphic Novel, and was never sold in any mass market retail outlets. It was only available to purchase through comic book specialty shops.

Product Description
Behind every great suspense thriller lurks the shadow of M. In Fritz Lang's first sound film from 1931, Peter Lorre delivers a haunting performance as a serial killer--a whistling pedophile hunted by the police and brought to trial by the forces of the Berlin underworld.

In 1990, a young painter, Jon J Muth, continued his rise in the comic book industry by adapting the story of M into a four-issue comic book miniseries. Muth's photorealistic illustrations paved the way for the acceptance of painted comics, influencing a generation of artists who followed him. He hewed closely to Lang's original German script, employing a painterly, photorealistic style that evoked the grainy, tinted footage of early talkies. The result, more influential than popular in an era of rampant speculation and chromium covers, was undeniably gorgeous.

Lang's story—an unidentified serial killer stalks children in a small German city—is simple but compelling, allowing Muth's masterful technique to shine through. The watercolors are primarily sepia-toned, with occasional splashes of color for emphasis, giving the project a surreal, dreamlike quality that serves to heighten suspense. Muth's layouts are excellent, creating mise-en-scènes that evoke Lang without copying him, and his figures' acting (body language and facial expressions) also serves both story and mood.


Young children are being killed by a brutal murderer. The police can’t figure out who it is. Mobsters are perplexed. Unions are in a panic. A chain reaction has begun with desperation and suspicion making an entire city suspicious of every shadow, every person.

Jon Muth has put together a murder mystery of mood and suspense that captures the feel of Fritz Lang’s classic 1931 German motion picture.