Some of you might remember
Victor Drujiniu's incredible sample pages for BtVS S9 that were sadly removed from Deviantart due to some misunderstanding along with his character sheets for Buffy, Angel, and Spike. However, there is good news! He has reuploaded the sample pages (and hopefully the character sheets will follow). I love his artwork, and
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Gabrielle
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if they were just randomness handed out for the potential artists to draw
And yet they still managed to be more compelling than the finished product. I was actually a little excited when those first came out.
Instead we got Jeanty, zompires, pregnant robots and evil nipples.
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I'm still trying to figure out how a story with zombie vampires and potential robot pregnancies could possibly be so boring. I mean, I can hardly get mad at what I hear about the plot; it just sounds dull instead of hilariously MST3K-able.
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These sample pages have an authentic atmosphere about them too which the real comic never had for me. :(
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With just two pages, I am already invested in what's going on with Angel, Spike, and Buffy in the first sample. What's going on? Is Buffy in hiding? How is Angel coping? Is Spike acting as a buffer between the two of them after what they've endured? I think someone could write a pretty good fic based on these pages.
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It's not just Buffy. Richards just can't do emotion that isn't over the top. Everything else just looks like a stone-face or melting ice cream.
As for that arc, I thought the idea of Buffy and Angel, pissed off about whatever they hell S8 was supposed to be, going on a worldwide head-busting mission with Spike.
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I think one of the major art shortfalls with these comics is a lack of style. I mean to say that they really needed an artist who could capture the spirit of the characters without relying on photo-likenesses. Obviously, there are artists like Victor Drujiniu who can do both, but it's impossible to know if that style could hold up over a long period of time with looming deadlines (judging by his work on The Occult, he definitely can and does this, but many artists cannot). I think that a stylized approach to character design from the beginning would have helped dramatically in terms of a wider array of emotions being conveyed. Also, a stylized approach might have helped with the pre-production process (model sheets, Pantone sheets), so that artists and audience could keep up with which character is which.
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