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Kubert
Style Military Madness
by Mark Allen

When you carry a rifle that big
and heavy, you definitely grunt.
Grunts.
published by Arcana Studio, 32 pages, $3.95. They say war is hell.
You'd have to be crazy not to believe it. But, if you had to depend
on the depiction of war in a comic book to prove that statement,
you could look to the very first issue of Grunts from Arcana Studio
to do so.
In said issue, writers Shannon Eric Denton and Keith Giffen give
us a battle-hardened band of somewhat ethnically diverse U.S. Army
recruits (perhaps draftees; who knows?), as they blast their way
through German soldiers, get mistaken for the enemy and shot at
by their own fighter planes, and encounter a battalion of seemingly-unstoppable
German super-soldiers. In short, Grunts #1 is a war comic hopped
up on super-charged adrenaline.
Not only that, but in the midst of all the chaos, the reader is
actually treated to interesting characters. No small trick, considering
the wall-to-wall in-your-face action. All of that aside, I do find
myself hoping for a lot more background on the characters in future
issues.
Artists Matt Jacobs and Eric Spikes present readers with a stunning
display of talent, as they depict said military madness in a style
reminiscent of classic Joe Kubert war books. The flair for visual
characterization demonstrated in the renderings of Sarge, Tommy,
Demartino, Fatty, Tug and McCann is as astonishing as the individual
characters are distinctive. Additionally, the emotionally-evocative
tone they set, using a generous amount of black and red, is chilling,
and a perfect canvas on which to create the impressive work that
is Grunts. I don't know who these artists are, but I'd swear they
have many years of art gigs under their belts.
I should also point out that this team pulled off a great war book
without the language that some readers and creators believe is such
a must for the genre.
Grunts is highly recommended, but only for older readers, due to
graphic war-related violence.Find it at comics shops, online retailer
and auctions, and at www.arcanastudio.com.
Review by Mark Allen
For information on the exciting Oklahoma Cartoonists Collection
and Toy and Action Figure Museum go to fourcolorcommentary.blogspot.com/
So,
what do you think? Agree? Disagree? Give
us your feedback.
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