Showing posts with label don rosa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label don rosa. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 27, 2025

And The Infinite Sadness

 In which Disney Weirdness takes a look at a recent-ish comic book


I have been eagerly purchasing all of the Marvel Disney books as they are released, and then stacking them up in a pile and not reading them.  After consulting with the learned members of the esteemed Feathery Society, I decided to jump in with what is considered by experts to be the best of the lot, Uncle Scrooge and the Infinity Dime.

Let's start with the positives:  The book looks fantastic. Marvel wisely decided to treat this book as an Italy showcase, with art from Paolo Mottura, Francesco D'ippolito, Lucio De Giuseppe, Alessandro Pastrovicchio, Vitale Mangiatordi, and Giada Perissinotto.  If the intent behind this book was to showcase what the Disney Italia artists are capable of, then mission accomplished.  If this book causes some teenage kid to check out PKNA or Double Duck or the Disney Originals series, it counts as a success.

The first appearance of Uncle Scrooge, "Christmas on Bear Mountain," which you already have in your collection, is included as a bonus story, for historical context and also (one assumes) to entice readers to check out Fantagraphics' Carl Barks Library series, and also to pad out the page count.

So it's a good-looking comic, what's the problem?  The problem is Jason Aaron.

Aaron is a superhero writer, and a great one.  But he isn't quite as comfortable in Duckburg as he is on Earth-616 or Bizzaro World or whatever.  In the introduction piece, Aaron writes that his introduction into Duck comics was through Don Rosa's "Son of the Sun" and "Guardians of the Lost Library."  Don Rosa, as much as we love him, is an atypical Duck scribe, in that his stories are continuity-heavy, meticulously researched, and reference deep cut comic book lore in a way that puts Roy Thomas to shame. That stuff is catnip to superhero fans.  

Aaron's imagined audience for this comic is a Marvel Comics reader who is dipping his webbed toes into Disney Comics for the first time.  Fittingly, it's a slam-bang action fest that pulls Uncle Scrooges from all over the (ugh) Multiverse to battle the Lord of Dimes (Scrooge, but evil).


It's an Infinity Gauntlet, a Secret Wars, a Crisis on Infinite Earths.

Which is fine, if that's your thing.

If you have a teenage nephew or someone else in your life who is super into superheroes, they ought to like this.  Hardcore Duck fans like us might bristle at Donald the berserker


but if you are only familiar with the animated cartoons you won't care.

SO overall, this ins't a bad comic. The story is fun for what it is, and the art looks great.  Here's hoping the next one will strike a better balance between action and humor.

Wednesday, February 15, 2023

 


Two Don Rosa $crooge Stories Permabanned


This is going to make your copies of The Life and Times of $crooge McDuck pretty valuable in the future, I'd wager.



Saturday, December 14, 2019

Ole!


We watched Saludos Amigos and The Three Caballeros yesterday, because the kids got super into The Legend of the Three Caballeros series on the D+.   I hadn't seen either movie since I was a little kid, but I always liked the Three from the Mexico ride in Epcot and the greatest Don Rosa comic of all time.

Anyway they were very dated (as are all Disney live action from the 40s and 50s), but the cartoons were great.  Here is some Mary Blair concept art for the pair of features:


Image result for mary blair three caballeros
Image result for mary blair three caballeros

Sunday, September 1, 2019

Unboxing Day


In his exhaustive history of Disney Comics Dan Cunningham mentioned a box set of the first six issues, available at the Disney Store with a retail price of 75 dollars.  Naturally I hit up Ebay to see if I could score one cheap, and I did-- five bucks plus shipping.

Let's do an unboxing, shall we?



Mine was still in the shrink wrap, with the Certificate of Authenticity proudly displayed on the back.  I tore that sucker open immediately.



I opened right to a Don Rosa Donald Duck cover, a fortuitous sign.


As I flipped over the cellophane package to see the Goofy issue, I noticed something--- these books were warped!



Can you believe these greedy bastards charged SEVENTY FIVE DOLLARS for a bunch of comics with a cover price of a dollar fifty each, and didn't even spring for backing boards?

What's inside the bundle, you ask?


The first six issues from the Disney Comics imprint, all cover dated June 1990.


The inaugural Between the Lines column indicates that Uncle Scrooge #243 and Walt Disney's Comics and Stories #548 also shipped this month, but it's 1990 so this box is only concerned with the number ones.

Box sets like these were briefly very popular in the great boom times of the early nineties.  For comparison's sake, look at this DC Comics box from 1991 collecting all the variant covers for the second Robin miniseries.


I got this whole mess, including the HOLOGRAM COLLECTOR CARDS for the princely sum of 5 dollars even at a comic convention in 2006.  

Back to the Disney box, there's good stuff in here!  A lot of fans rag on the Disney Comics experiment but these were high-quality comics.  The colors are bright, the only ads are for other Disney Comics titles, the covers slick.  The material is pretty good too-


I don't care about the first story in Goofy Adventures, but the second feature is part one of Goofy Frankenstein ( I have only ever seen the second half and was somewhat obsessed with this story in the early days of this blog. My Tumblr avatar is still Goofy Frankenstein ten years strong)!

Next up is The Phantom Gondolier.   I've always liked this story; Michael T. Gilbert and Stephen DeStefano are old pros who know how to make entertaining comics whatever the genre. I'm a fan of both of those guys.  There's some Paul Murry bullshit for the backup feature.

Eddie Valiant isn't in this so who cares.

Rescue Rangers never did much for me personally, but it was my sister's favorite part of the Disney Afternoon so I'll give it a read eventually.

The Ducktales story is part one of the Scrooge's Quest serial.  I know I have read at least a couple chapters before--Gemstone put out a trade paperback collection that I need to check out.  Marv Wolfman is in my top five favorite superhero writers based on Tomb of Dracula and The New Teen Titans so it will be interesting to see him scripting funny animals for a change.

Last but definitely not least, a Don Rosa story!  This one has been reprinted a ton of times over the years, but it's still nice to have the original in my collection.

Getting this joke in a shrink-wrapped "Collector's Set" is just *chef kiss*

Image result for carl chef kiss


So that's the Disney Comics Collector's Edition First Issues box set!  Definitely not worth 75 dollars, but at 5 bucks plus shipping I don't think I got ripped off.  If you can scoop this up at a con or online go for it, if only as a historic curiosity.


Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Captain Courageous


In case you're on the fence about supporting the Captain Kentucky/ Pertwillaby Papers preorder campaign, here's a brief sample of what's in store.

From The Comic Reader #204, here are four Captain Kentucky strips by Keno Don Rosa, 1982.  Enjoy!










Thursday, June 28, 2012

We interrupt this blog for a special announcement.


Hey, remember like three years ago when I did this post on Don Rosa's The Pertwillaby Papers?  Of course you do.  Well I am pleased to announce that someone finally listened to reason and is attempting to put these great comics out in a nice, fancy-pants edition.

For information about the fundraising/ preorder campaign for Don Rosa's The Pertwillaby Papers and Captain Kentucky, click here.



Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Un-convention-al art


Art prints and convention sketches by Don Rosa:





















Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Poptopia








Thursday, May 19, 2011

Aaaaand Boom goes the dynamite


Boom! Studios releases unseen Don Rosa Donald Duck roughs, entire story available online here.