Thursday, March 10, 2011

Clipart Of Hypotension

The Mister No Mister Sclavi

Even though I had accused the blow to the closure of Mister No after thirty-four years of uninterrupted presence in newspapers, on occasion I came back willingly on old episodes of the pilot Amazon, thanks to reprint editions of If . Just last month, with the release of the 45th volume in the tail enrollment began a history of those very special. Not that those immediately preceding it were not, as they were signed by none other than Old Uncle Alfredo Castelli (particularly remarkable in the starting number 43 and sees Mister No retrace the path of memories until, years earlier, lived in New York a series of dramatic events between organized crime and bad, guerra tra bande e feroci rese dei conti) .

Ma quella che appunto comincia a qualche decina di pagine dalla fine del volume con il titolo Gli occhi del Mostro , porta invece la firma di Tiziano Sclavi . Non alla sua prima prova come sceneggiatore in Bonelli , naturalmente (arrivava da vari episodi di Zagor ), ma sicuramente la sua prima storia per Mister No . Tenendo conto che si parla di un albo pubblicato per la prima volta nel 1983 e che Dylan Dog era probabilmente solo un'abbozzo di idea nella testa del suo creatore, è interessante notare come l'approccio horror/intimista era già forte negli intenti di Sclavi . Una history of this Mister No, that would have been an ideal follow many years later, just a story of the nightmare the investigator (the 133 titled Ananga ).
also point out the drawings of a Fabio Civitelli great form in a few years before its final passage in the stable Texiana. In

newsstand find the number 46, with the end of the story of Sclavi . And after a brief spell with Ennio Missaglia texts on these pages for many, many numbers will alternate their Alfredo Castelli and Tiziano Sclavi for the run not to be missed. Then, on newsstands now part of the occasion to enjoy some of the stories of the character Nolitta between fantasy and horror, the most interesting ever.
not know about you, but I have always considered Jerry Drake a large cool.

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