Egg wrote:Al Hubbard! How can I forget???
Robb_K wrote:I also can't stand Rosa's Duck drawings (although I like his scribbles. I'd rather see comic book stories printed with his unfinished scribbles. His inking stiffens his figures greatly. But, in addition, I don't like his layouts and perspectives and crowded panels and dark and heavy shading. Might as well have Robert Crumb drawing The Ducks. Also, his "sequel" stories seem very forced andunnatural to me. To me, his best stories are his short gag-run stories. But, I'm sure I'll make a lot of enemies on this forum because of my taste regarding Rosa.
But these opinions are only expressing my taste, not implying these artists aren't good artists (although I think most of the Disney artist were better at drawing than Rosa.
Doctor Witchie Britchie wrote:Rosa has often expressed his disdain of people who regard the Ducks as "fantasy" creatures, but it seems to me that this is the only way they can be regarded.
Doctor Witchie Britchie wrote:Rosa's treatment of them as living breathing humans who die, have sexual relationships, give birth (rather than laying eggs) strikes me as simply ridiculous.
Doctor Witchie Britchie wrote:My Ducks live in their own Duck world, not the real world, and don't need all those sweat beads and all those "mortal" problems.
Don Rosa wrote:Um... maybe they'd want to watch for when Gemstone gets a chance to use the last story I sent to Europe, being a very special new episode of "The Life and Times of $crooge McDuck" the series that's won awards around the world, including one of those Eisners.
Don Rosa wrote:An ad line for this episode might read "at last -- the whole story of what happened between $crooge and Glittering Goldie during that lost month in 1897 alone in a cabin on White Agony Creek". Be there. Aloha.
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