amphibian, on 25 January 2011 - 08:43 PM, said:
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I do share your concerns about this, as what makes Harmonica and MWNN so awesome is their slouches, non-reactions and cool physical movements, which can't quite be portrayed all that well in comic format. Most of the people who do Wolverine in comics screw this up. Although, Stover is probably talented enough to figure it out within a few issues.
Maybe i misunderstood but i don't think Stover is writing it. It's just his source material and active support.
QuickTidal, on 25 January 2011 - 09:23 PM, said:
amphibian, on 25 January 2011 - 08:43 PM, said:
Most of the people who do Wolverine in comics screw this up.
Agreed. Millar and Romita Jr. were the only ones I ever saw did a decent job of it in the Marvel Knights series they did with him, but for the most part you are right, they don't get it right.
Way back when, there was a Wolverine and Spiderman one shot that everyone ever should read if they can. It involved Berlin, KGB sleeper agents, spies and all kinds of good stuff. At one point, in an absolutely brilliant bit of comics narrative, Ann Nocenti has Wolverine explain his smile. It's the 'i can kill you any time i want' smile and a bit later Wolvie uses it to make some killers back off.
It's a very Caine'esque bit of narrative and one way in which that sort of psychological element can be used in comics to great effect.
But too many comics people just go with the popping claws and snarling, and that (equivalent) won't work with Caine, who isn't even all that visually intimidating until he starts killing people. A lot.