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    Frank Miller's Sin City: That Yellow Bastard

    Frank Miller's Sin City: That Yellow Bastard

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    Autres présentations:
    Créateur: Frank Miller
    Éditeur: Dark Horse Comics

    Prix de liste: EUR 13,58
    Acheter Neuf: EUR 7,67
    Vous épargnez: EUR 5,91 (44%)

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    Neuf (25) D'occasion (3) de EUR 7,67

    Évaluation moyenne des clients: 5.0 sur 5 étoiles 1 commentaires
    Classement parmi les ventes: 12072

    Média: Broche
    Édition: New Ed
    Pages: 240
    Poids (kg): 0.9
    Dimension (cm): 8.9 x 6 x 0.9

    ISBN: 1593072961
    Code Décimal Dewey: 741.5973
    EAN: 9781593072964
    ASIN: 1593072961

    Date de publication: Février 9, 2005
    Disponibilité: Expedition sous 1 a 2 jours ouvres
    Expédition: Livraison internationale disponible
    Condition: Expedie des Etats-Unis! Durees de livraison sont 10 to 14 jours ouvrables. Produits neufs! A ce moment, nous offrons le service clientele en anglais. Nous vendons en ligne depuis 1995 et avons servis plus de 4 millions de clients. Assure-vous de votre achat! Code: D20080903111811D

    Découvrez des articles similaires:

      • Frank Miller's Sin City: The Big Fat Kill
      • Frank Miller's Sin City: Family Values
      • Frank Miller's Sin City: Booze, Broads, & Bullets
      • Frank Miller's Sin City: A Dame To Kill For
      • Sin City

    Revues éditoriales:

    Amazon.com
    In a Sin City short story, "The Babe Wore Red," Frank Miller deviated from his stark black-and-white artwork by adding tiny bits of color throughout the story. The girl's dress was red, her lips were red--you get the picture. In That Yellow Bastard, the fourth Sin City graphic novel, Miller's experiment with yellow ink is also a tremendous success. The setup is simple. On the last day before he retires, Hartigan, an old cop, gets a call about an 11-year-old girl who has been kidnapped by a lunatic. Hartigan has got just one more thing to do before he retires: save the girl. Saving her is the easy part, because Hartigan has uncovered something really bad that is not going to stop until it catches up with him. That Yellow Bastard is nerve-racking to the very end.


    Commentaires des clients:

    5 sur 5 étoiles Hartigan saves little Nancy Callahan in Miller's comic noir   Juin 7, 2005
    Lawrance M. Bernabo (The Zenith City, Duluth, Minnesota)
    4 sur 4 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile

    Although I still have a preference for Marv and narrative of "The Hard Goodbye," the first of Frank Miller's "Sin City" graphic novels, I think that artistically he hits full stride in the fourth, "That Yellow Bastard." It is just mildly ironic that this becomes the first volume in the series to add any color to Miller's black and white world. But whereas "The Hard Goodbye" had an almost kitchen sink approach with Miller pretty much trying everything he could come up with for black & white (or white & black) illustrations, I find there is much more of a coherent artistic vision and a rhythm to way in which Miller goes from predominantly black to predominantly white pages, and back again.

    "That Yellow Bastard" begins with tough cop John Hartigan, whose good heart is going bad on him, trying to stay alive long enough to do one last case before he dies. Somebody has been raping and murdering little girls for some time and now they have taken 11-year-old Nancy Callahan. Hartigan is able to save Nancy from Roark Junior, the son of Senator Roark, but takes four bullets in the process. Junior is in worse shape, having an ear and both of his "weapons" removed by Hartigan's bullets. If an old man dies and a little girl survives, then Hartigan considers that a fair deal. But this bloody encounter is but the first act in this particular comic noir.

    The first episode sets the rules for Hartigan's world, where protecting women is hard-wired into the psyches of tough guys like him. Even when Hartigan finds out that Nancy grew up and filled out, that does not change his mission (just complicates it a bit). Granted, the age difference would make more sense if he was her grandfather, but then there is a consistency to what Hartigan means when he says that he loves Nancy, even if she is inclined to read it a different way. There is a leap in the narrative at one point that you might find a bit hard to accept (i.e., confession leads to immediate release), but you have to admit it is a lot easier to be a pariah out in the world than stuck in prison (and I think Junior would have wanted it that way).

    Again, the art work here is Miller at what I consider to be his best, but attention must also be paid to the sense of pacing that he shows in several scenes (most notably when Hartigan pulls himself together for the final confrontation with Junior). There are easily a dozen great looks at Hartigan's grizzled face, and a 15-page sequence, spanning two chapters, of Nancy dancing at the club, consisting of not only full-page shots but also two-page spreads, as she mesmerizes her audience. With "That Yellow Bastard" readers who were introduced to the graphic novels by the film that incorporated three of the first four volumes will be heading into new territory with "Family Values." It will interesting to see when and how Miller tops artistically what he came up with for this one.

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