#jerome k. jerome bloche
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"He models himself on Humphry Bogart, but he’s more like Monsieur Hulot."
Jerome K. Jerome Bloche #2: The Paper People
by Pierre Makyo/Serge Le Tendre and Alain Dodier
IDW Publishing
#europe comics#jerome k. jerome bloche#Pierre Makyo#Serge Le Tendre#Alain Dodier#comic book#bande dessinée#private eye#IDW Publishing
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Jérôme K. Jérôme Bloche 29: Perpétuité by Alain Dodier begins in Spirou 4511, September 25, 2024
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Folks, I love this series so much. It's been fascinating to see its evolution over the course of four decades, from parody to something more contemplative and focused on real human relationships.
Jerome K Jerome Bloche
This is the issue with posting about these graphic novels and artists here, it’s too limited! There is SO much I would want to say about THIS particular series and so many images to share. BUT, this is a series that started about 40 years ago in the pages of Spirou magazine. It started out with Dodier and Makio as creators and along the way, it became just Dodier doing both the stories and the art. What hooked me into this series is the storytelling. EVERYTHING is normal, real. Nothing is exaggerated, except maybe for the clumsiness and appetite of the main character. A Parisian Private Eye, fan of old US noire movies and books. His fiancee, Babette is the other strong(er?) part of the book for me. The look is seemingly simple.There are no artifact, no pushed anatomy, no flying vehicles, no caricature of people or actions. Everything feels like it could be shot with a camera. And in many cases, it was. I’ve read interviews with Dodier where he talks about going from place to place, taking pictures as references for his shot. He seems to pay particular attention to how the shots flow from one to another, creating moody intense sequences. The earlier books had a greasier line, versus a sleeker, more precise line today. Both are good. The earlier one was a little less refined but offered a lot of spontaneity which suited the series then, when Dodier’s storytelling wasn’t as thought out as it is today. In the later books, the line is cleaner, the intent of the shots and sequences are stronger. As the series evolves, it becomes less of a comedy and more of a social commentary ( in my opinion) but never loses it’s sense of fun either. It’s just a great series. Each book is a full standalone episode, but if you read the series from the beginning, you get introduced to recurring characters and you see the protagonists evolve, grow, mature. A special note about the colors as well. They are done by a studio called “Cerise”, operated by a wife and husband duo. Cynthia Englebert and Gianluca Carboni. I find their approach to enhance the story rather than simply be” there”. Overall, Jerome K Jerome Bloche is a series that I particularly loved growing up and that I read and re read every so often. I know they’ve been translated and published in English. #Dodier #Makyo #JeromeKJeromeBloche
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Curious about this since the original poll by @wasted-my-time was only 24 hours and I want to include only comics I've personally been recommended by my USAmerican friends.
Honorable mention since it didn't fit on the poll list: Jérôme K. Jérôme Bloche, which I chose to exclude since there are literally only 5 albums in English and I had to cut one of them
Small edit for a common question!
What’s BD? - BD = Bande Dessinée = comics (in the French language). Generally (in English anyway) comics are referred to by their language of origin (ie “manga” for Japanese comics). This is because of shared tropes, references, cultural material, art styles, etc. This does NOT mean that they’re all from France! Just that they’re all written in French!
Asterix and Blueberry are from France; Lucky Luke, Tintin, Spirou & Fantasio, Gaston, the Smurfs, and JKJ Bloche are all Belgian; Yakari is Swiss; and Blacksad is made by Spanish creators but written in French for a French audience and published in France
#asterix#tintin#smurfs#spirou#lucky luke#gaston lagaffe#blacksad#blueberry#yakari#jerome k jerome bloche
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Jerome K. Bloch by Alain Dodier
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For reference the ones in the other poll are:
Asterix and Obelix
Tintin
Lucky Luke
Blake and Mortimer
Iznogoud
Yoko Tsuno
Smurfs
Gaston Lagaffe
Spirou and Fantasio
vote on the other poll here
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i never read the jerome k. bloche comics as a kid but he and babette seem like a blueprint for bisexual-coded m/f pairings and i support it
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Jerome K Jerome Bloche in the style of @GR_comics, done as an imitate-your-favorite-artist-challenge at Penciljack
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Been a while since the last watercolor marker drawing
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i collect red-haired Franco-Belgian comics protags like Pokemon. I have 5 so far so I’ll have to extend my backyard to make a playpen for the colony to socialize
#if ur wonderg#tintin#spirou#jerome k jerome bloche#cornelius chesterfield#phillip mortimer#are there more pls tell me
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dorime
#im livetweeting my first reading of jerome k jerome bloche#which means i read the third album and now im reading the fifteenth album#im at the library they dont have them all#jerome k jerome bloche#my posts
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Alain Dodier: Jerome K Jerome Bloche
#alain dodier#Jérorome K Jérome Bloche#Illustration pour un calendrier scouts#comics#art#bande dessinée#private eye
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Jérôme K. Jérôme Bloche by Alain Dodier
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Jerome K Jerome Bloche
This is the issue with posting about these graphic novels and artists here, it’s too limited! There is SO much I would want to say about THIS particular series and so many images to share. BUT, this is a series that started about 40 years ago in the pages of Spirou magazine. It started out with Dodier and Makio as creators and along the way, it became just Dodier doing both the stories and the art. What hooked me into this series is the storytelling. EVERYTHING is normal, real. Nothing is exaggerated, except maybe for the clumsiness and appetite of the main character. A Parisian Private Eye, fan of old US noire movies and books. His fiancee, Babette is the other strong(er?) part of the book for me. The look is seemingly simple.There are no artifact, no pushed anatomy, no flying vehicles, no caricature of people or actions. Everything feels like it could be shot with a camera. And in many cases, it was. I’ve read interviews with Dodier where he talks about going from place to place, taking pictures as references for his shot. He seems to pay particular attention to how the shots flow from one to another, creating moody intense sequences. The earlier books had a greasier line, versus a sleeker, more precise line today. Both are good. The earlier one was a little less refined but offered a lot of spontaneity which suited the series then, when Dodier’s storytelling wasn’t as thought out as it is today. In the later books, the line is cleaner, the intent of the shots and sequences are stronger. As the series evolves, it becomes less of a comedy and more of a social commentary ( in my opinion) but never loses it’s sense of fun either. It’s just a great series. Each book is a full standalone episode, but if you read the series from the beginning, you get introduced to recurring characters and you see the protagonists evolve, grow, mature. A special note about the colors as well. They are done by a studio called “Cerise”, operated by a wife and husband duo. Cynthia Englebert and Gianluca Carboni. I find their approach to enhance the story rather than simply be” there”. Overall, Jerome K Jerome Bloche is a series that I particularly loved growing up and that I read and re read every so often. I know they’ve been translated and published in English. #Dodier #Makyo #JeromeKJeromeBloche
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Lovely illustration and a great series.
Jerome K. Bloch by Alain Dodier
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