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Providence, Act 1 por Alan Moore
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Providence, Act 1 (edición 2016)

por Alan Moore (Autor), William Christensen (Editor), Jacen Burrows (Artist)

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2599102,783 (3.72)8
Alan Moore's quintessential horror series has set the standard for a terrifying examination of the works of H.P. Lovecraft. It is being universally hailed as one of Moore's most realized works in which the master scribe has controlled every iota of the story, art, and presentation. The result has been a masterpiece like no other, unparalleled in tone and content, and a true must have addition to his essential works in the field.… (más)
Miembro:artturnerjr
Título:Providence, Act 1
Autores:Alan Moore (Autor)
Otros autores:William Christensen (Editor), Jacen Burrows (Artist)
Información:Avatar Press (2016), Edition: Limited, 160 pages
Colecciones:Tu biblioteca, Actualmente leyendo
Valoración:
Etiquetas:comics, non-superhero, lovecraftian

Información de la obra

Providence: El horror cósmico de Alan Moore por Alan Moore (Author)

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» Ver también 8 menciones

This one is a mixed bag for me. I liked it, don't get me wrong but in general there are elements that are so common for artistic-oriented graphic novels that just .... annoy me personally.

So, to start with what I liked.

Main character, journalist Robert Black, starts investigation (because his newspaper needs fresh stories) into mysterious book "Sous le Monde" that drives everyone who reads it into madness and suicide.

While researching the subject Black (who is very strange character himself willing to accept all the weird things as "oh, right, it must be breakfast this morning that causes these sights of headless corpses") comes into contact with rather mysterious doctor who tells him of an even more mysterious book that might hold secret to eternal life.

Considering it ridiculous that such a book could ever exist, Black gets introduced into the world of strange small esoteric cults based on the very similar lore that migrated to America from Europe. This intrigues Black so much he decides to devote his talent and time to finding more about this awkward groups and write stories about them.

And so it starts. He finds himself traveling to many sites in pursuit of the book. Events that transpire would scare anyone but our good mister Black. To be honest, just witnessing some of the things would make me jump 8 feet high with high pitched shriek but our mister Black is very good at handling it - he just says to himself that people here are completely different and others are looking at them from high and that is the cause of all of the misunderstandings. I mean what the ... He enters the bus where he is basically only one looking remotely human and speaking in normal voice.... Just weird.

Scare here is always at subliminal level - what we as readers see might not be what Black sees from his perspective (which I guess would explain some of his behavior) - in the background you see some conversations in very small letters and weird things going on (shapes, visions, things people are moving from one point to other, their comments, ominous titles and behavior). It all builds the atmosphere very well and stage for act 2 gets set beautifully by the end.

Art is beautiful, very to the point and very cinematic.

In between issues there are excerpts from Black's journal where we can see both Black's view of things. Sometimes it matches what reader saw on panels, sometimes not. Very often journal pages contain a lot of Black's denial of what he did see bulked with Black scolding himself how he can so misinterpret things around him. Sometimes journal part is a little bit of radical-slow to the story pace but it has its value.

It feels like Black is walking through a dream - bloody scary dream though - and just like in a dream whatever he sees he takes as normal and does not get agitated much with rather scary element of the environment.

Now what I did not like.

Whenever I take artistic graphic novels like this I hope they wont do the things artistic graphic novels usually do. For some reason in artistic view ultimate fear is always shown as seeing people nude and horrific scenes including forced or kinky sex. Here same thing happens - everything comes down to some weird sex thing between humans and it (horror from beyond). I mean, imagine that you are millennia old creature wandering the starts and ruining civilizations and you come to Earth and your only idea is to make them crazy (so they worship you and eventually kill themselves out) and then have sex with them in every perverse way. I mean, come on. Lovecraft's stories were about what goes inside people's heads, question what is real and what is not and shere pressure of something unspeakable and explainable driving people mad - it was never about hedonistic space creatures going down on human populations like set of sex toys.

This could be limitations of the medium ... maybe. Written word relies on you to imagine situations while graphic novels need to show you the scene. But again why do the graphic novel authors decide to go this way when portraying horrendous things is beyond me. Just take Metabaron series - it is all about incest, in-breeding, cutting ones genitals and doing pervert things with it - in one of the stories Metabaron even controls his spacecraft with appendage coming from his loins after losing his genitals to treachery. I will never understand why authors of these types of novels decide to move in this way.

All in all Providence act #1 is slow, suspense building story.
Recommended to fans of horror and Lovecraft lore. ( )
  Zare | Jan 23, 2024 |
Do you like H.P. Lovecraft? Do you like Alan Moore? Than this book is for you!

I enjoyed this first volume more than I thought I would to be honest. I wasn't really sure Alan Moore still had it in him, but I was proven wrong. This book is really well done and a fun read for fans of Lovecraft's more mature readers. This isn't a quick read though. Be prepared to read Robert Black's dairy and other material similar to Alan Moore's style of books with-in comic books. You can skip them maybe, but they provide helpful information to the story.

I would say out of anything Moore I've read in the past, this is on par with From Hell the most. Not only is it historical fiction, but it's also all about the occult and location. If you read Lovecraft and you're form New England one thing you'll pick up is that location is a huge importance to his stories. Moore use that same story telling, but adds his classic occult lore and adult story telling. It's fun seeing places you've been in comic book form.

I really like the art work too. I'm not familiar with Jacen Burrow's of works, but I liked this one. I like how detailed he is with landscape. Most of his people are rather grim looking, but this is a horror comic book. You're not going to get the "everyone is good looking" routine. Some of his people are rather grotesque looking. Again, this works for a horror comic book. However, the main character Robert Black is handsome, but done on purpose.

I'll be reading the second volume soon, but very excited to finish this book. Finally, a good Lovecraft comic book, I think. I always though Moore got Lovecraft. This isn't for people who easily get nightmares.

NOTE: I think this is part of a series that Moore/Burrows worked on before, maybe a prequel or something like that, but me haven't not read those, you can read this without understanding anything about those comics. Might be helpful t know this is connected with an earlier comic book though. ( )
  Ghost_Boy | Aug 25, 2022 |
Sinceramente avevo aspettative altissime su questo titolo ma sono rimasto davvero deluso. Non è una trasposizione fumetti dei racconti di Lovecraft ma una serie di storie ispirate ai racconti del solitario di Providence che vengono accennate a disegni per poi essere concluse in forma scritta attraverso una raccolta di lettere in forma testuale. Infine, sicuramente per limite mio, non ho per niente apprezzato il disegno e lo stile. ( )
  louchobi | May 12, 2022 |
This was, like Neonomicon before it, just okay.

Once again, Moore is phenomenal at stitching together various Lovecraft stories, then weaving them into the characters he presents, or into the history, or sometimes even just walk-on cameos. So, it's fun to pick out all the easter eggs, even if some of them, once again, are just tossed in for the sake of one more easter egg.

But we're also still treated to awkward info-dump conversations. Strangers meet and become best friends in moments, and bend over backward to help each other. Maybe it was a much more polite generation that constantly opened their homes to complete strangers and then trusted them to be in the home by themselves. Maybe.

And there is a remarkably constant undercurrent of sex running throughout the story that often feels thrown in just so Moore can put a checkmark beside things like, straight sex? Check. Homosexuals? Check. Tits? Check. Dicks? Check.

Seems a little gratuitous at this point.

But what of the story? Well, the premise is solid: a young, ambitious, idealistic man—possibly gay, possibly bisexual—sets out to discover the alternative America and write about it.

But after some of his experiences, I don't understand how there can be an additional eight issues of this. Why doesn't he simply run screaming back to New York, thumb tucked firmly in mouth (okay, okay, I know. It's hard to scream with your thumb in your gob, but you catch my meaning).

So, it's an interesting, if hyper-sexualized reimagining of Lovecraft's mythos, but for now, I remain a touch underwhelmed. ( )
  TobinElliott | Sep 3, 2021 |
They's a hindrance, thuh both of 'um. On'y reason they's heeyuh is cuz it's haow the story's gotta be. In the 'deemer story, s'gotta be thuh crazy granpappy, un' thuh whaht-faced wummum, un' thuh bad-lookin' bwoy. Thet's whah ah ain't wamin' tuh yu. Yur aht uv a diff'run' story awlduhgethuh.

In the end, I have to agree with Willard Wheatley . That is, Wilbur Whateley from [b:The Dunwich Horror|20877339|The Dunwich Horror|H.P. Lovecraft|https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/book/50x75-a91bf249278a81aabab721ef782c4a74.png|49451783]. I can't decide if the slight tweaking of names and places from Lovecraft's arsenal throughout this book is pleasantly persuasive or really, really annoying. I'm leaning toward the latter. Robert Black goes traipsing through the conglomerate world of Lovecraft's stories, pursuing a story that is arguably interesting in its own right, making observations of Lovecraft's world that would arguably be interesting in their own right, but Mr. Black unfortunately opens his mouth diary commonplace book, and it spoils the interesting parts entirely. (I was going to subject you to excerpts of the excerpts of pamphlets that Black also crams into his diary which spoil the interesting parts even more, but I've decided I don't have the energy.) That said, there's enough promise here that I'm going to try the next collection in the series and see if it gets any better. ( )
  amyotheramy | May 11, 2021 |
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Nombre del autorRolTipo de autor¿Obra?Estado
Moore, AlanAutorautor principaltodas las edicionesconfirmado
Burrows, JacenIlustradorautor principaltodas las edicionesconfirmado
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Alan Moore's quintessential horror series has set the standard for a terrifying examination of the works of H.P. Lovecraft. It is being universally hailed as one of Moore's most realized works in which the master scribe has controlled every iota of the story, art, and presentation. The result has been a masterpiece like no other, unparalleled in tone and content, and a true must have addition to his essential works in the field.

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