tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5423579092779163824.post8184382623952405472..comments2024-03-28T03:15:52.497-04:00Comments on Duck Comics Revue: "They Call me MISTER Duck!"GeoX, one of the GeoX boys.http://www.blogger.com/profile/14658452994152399308noreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5423579092779163824.post-1768009694113918782020-03-18T23:29:27.689-04:002020-03-18T23:29:27.689-04:00
Если вы любитель онлайн казино 2020 года то, вер... <br />Если вы любитель онлайн казино 2020 года то, вероятно, заметили, что онлайн-казино приобрели популярность в последние годы. [url=https://bbl-company.ru/]бесплатные товары на пробу и[/url]. Онлайн-казино дает игроку возможность играть во все свои любимые игры дома и вдали от своего компьютера или даже смартфона. На этой странице вы найдете плюсы и минусы онлайн-казино, а также казино в России, которые лицензированы и позволяют вам наслаждаться магией и бонусами казино, не предлагаемыми реальными казино.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5423579092779163824.post-40009476019538276582019-11-05T18:13:31.137-05:002019-11-05T18:13:31.137-05:00This has finally been released in German - as the ...This has finally been released in German - as the only real buying incentive in a large-sized hardcover Donald Duck birthday book! (Well, there's some other interesting points about this book, one of which belongs in the discussion to another blog post, the other being that ANOTHER Bottaro story ended up in it...perhaps to show people he quickly evolved from this?)<br /><br />And, you may ask, what's my verdict on all of it now that I've *finally* had a chance to read it...?<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />It's fully in colour.<br /><br />That's all.Specialist Spectrushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07573706778596800678noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5423579092779163824.post-15678972056750770042014-04-06T08:54:51.115-04:002014-04-06T08:54:51.115-04:00I thank you profusely! That's the kind of inf...I thank you profusely! That's the kind of information I'm always grateful for.GeoX, one of the GeoX boys.https://www.blogger.com/profile/14658452994152399308noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5423579092779163824.post-30925695727257372182014-04-06T07:03:19.405-04:002014-04-06T07:03:19.405-04:00Hi
This story is acc. to Inducks the 13th Italian ...Hi<br />This story is acc. to Inducks the 13th Italian story featuring Donald (excluding gags). This is the listing using the advanced search page:<br /><br />http://coa.inducks.org/comp2.php?code=I&induckscodesonly=on&keyw=&keywt=i&exactpg=&pg1=&pg2=&bro2=&bro3=&kind=n&rowsperpage=0&columnsperpage=0&hero=&xapp=DD&univ=&xa2=&creat=&creat2=&plot=&plot2=&writ=&writ2=&art=&art2=&ink=&ink2=&pub1=&pub2=&ser=&xref=&mref=&xrefd=&repabb=&repabbc=al&imgmode=1&vdesc2=on&vdesc=en&vau=on&vgy=on&vnz=on&vus=on&vuk=on&sort1=s.firstpublicationdate<br /><br />The listing in teh link you provided sort stories by *storycode* not by first publication date. To have more control on what the search engine gives, one has to use the (more cumbersome) advanced search page.<br />It just happens that the story's storycode (starting I AO = Albi d'Oro) is one of the first in lexicographic order. But that's a coincidence.F Willothttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04427037184740420029noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5423579092779163824.post-2544587682599364202012-03-29T09:02:50.997-04:002012-03-29T09:02:50.997-04:00Actually, that's not Scrooge - it's his si...Actually, that's not Scrooge - it's his sister Matilda in drag. And that's Gladstone disguised as Grandma. I hope that clears everything up. <br /><br />Well, I could argue that "Scrooge" is actually Quagmire Mcduck, in his first comics appearance and the colorist made his coat the same color as Scrooge's, but then I would want credit for translating the story if Marvel prints it.Comicbookrehabhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09363501054869978524noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5423579092779163824.post-66038695857856407642012-03-27T13:40:50.989-04:002012-03-27T13:40:50.989-04:00IMHO "signore" should be translated as &...IMHO "signore" should be translated as "Lord". In fact "Signore" means: 1) "Mister" 2) "Lord", and Donald wants a nobiliar title. But anyway this story (that I don't own) seems to be an inconsistent mess.<br /><br />In the 1950s each story was credited to Walt Disney, so in every print or reprint the real authors (Testa and Bottaro) were never credited. Only at the end of 1980s italian issues began to credit the new or reprinted stories to their actual authors. Why Guido Martina should have used as pseudonym "Alberto Testa" if the story in its first reprint was credited to "Walt Disney", not to "Alberto Testa, Luciano Bottaro"? I suppose that the story was credited to "Alberto Testa" in the 1980s by some scholar (perhaps Fossati?) who found out, after long researches in the archives, that this story was written by "Alberto Testa". But perhaps this scholar could have make some error in his research, and the writer of the story is uncertain. Consider also the error "Al Levin/Floyd Gottfredson" made by an italian scholar in the 1970s. This is an excerpt from an interview to writer and scholar Castelli about this error:<br /><br />BSJ: You spoke of Disney influences. I have sources telling me you are an avid Disney fan - so much so that you once fooled Italian fans and critics - as well as a Disney editor - into believing there was a Mickey Mouse illustrator named Al Levin, when in fact, he was fictitious. Tell us about that debacle.<br /><br />AC: Mmm... Not a thing to be proud of... Back in 1965, I was the co-founder of the first comic fanzine in Italy, "Comics Club 104." One issue was devoted to Disney characters and their authors. Nobody, at the time, had the slightest idea of who the American artists who drew the Disney characters were! I succeeded in identifying Carl Barks (sad anecdote: Barks was so kind to send me an especially drawn and signed self-caricature, the widely reprinted one in which he has Uncle Scrooge's head, and Uncle Scrooge has his head --- Well, it was lost at the engravers' some year later!), Paul Murry, Tony Strobl, and many others. But I wasn't able to identify Floyd Gottfredson, so - God, forgive! - I INVENTED a name, Al Levin, and attributed to him Gottfredson's stories. I was then in contact with many early American fanzines (I wrote a long article about them in "Linus"): "Alter Ego," "Rocketblast Comicollector," "Vanguard," "Capa Alpha," the late Edwin April's reprint line, etc., so I sent the Disney Issue to Mike Barrier and Malcolm Willits of "Funnyworld". They corrected my errors and gave me the exact data, and I corrected my information as soon as possible.<br /><br /><br />Perhaps the scholar who credited the story to "Alberto Testa" could have made a similar error, and the actual writer of the story could be Guido Martina. But I'm not certain.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5423579092779163824.post-34759328972481978912012-03-27T08:20:41.713-04:002012-03-27T08:20:41.713-04:00WTF?
Sometimes it looks like Taliaferro (especi...WTF? <br /><br />Sometimes it looks like Taliaferro (especially the beaks) and sometimes it looks like Barks of the “Mad Chemist” and “The Dirty Little Ducks” era. <br /><br />But, ultimately, it becomes a big bunch of neither! <br /><br />And, even the “revered” (on your Blog, anyway – he notes with some sarcasm) Vic Lockman did the Donald wants desperately to “be somebody” thing far better than this mess.Joe Torciviahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00421096229407174474noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5423579092779163824.post-42050408268728750372012-03-25T09:30:36.647-04:002012-03-25T09:30:36.647-04:00Furthermore -- as far as I know, Testa has never b...Furthermore -- as far as I know, Testa has never been credited in Italian issues. Well it could be one of these (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alberto_Testa), but I don't think so.<br /><br />Anyway, these are the first Italian Donald-featuring stories:<br /><br />http://coa.inducks.org/comp2.php?creat0=FPe&special=creat0%2C&imgmode=1&spc2=it&spc3=&spa21=AND+sv.kind+%3D+_apo_n_apo_+AND+%28sv.appsummary+LIKE+_apo_%25%2CDD%2C%25_apo_%29&spa22=&spa23=&spa31=&spa32=&spa33=&so1=&so2=sv.storycode&so3=e.entrycodeSimhttp://dailywardrum.blogspot.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5423579092779163824.post-50017071956399165092012-03-25T06:18:56.182-04:002012-03-25T06:18:56.182-04:00Maybe to justify his drunkenness! Haha
In this co...Maybe to justify his drunkenness! Haha<br /><br />In this cover, anyway, referred to the story, Donald seems to me to be very close to the later Paperinik:<br /><br />http://coa.inducks.org/story.php?c=IC+AO+52322Simhttp://dailywardrum.blogspot.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5423579092779163824.post-7939967256216260212012-03-25T01:00:32.872-04:002012-03-25T01:00:32.872-04:00Sim: I really couldn't tell you re Martina, bu...Sim: I really couldn't tell you re Martina, but he had written at least one earlier story under his own name, so I'm not sure why he'd go for a pseudonym this time. As for the Duck Avenger business, I wouldn't absolutely rule it out, but I kind of doubt it--his disguise here is pretty generic.<br /><br />Chris: Ah, right, good call about the biological weaponry--shame on me for missing that!GeoX, one of the GeoX boys.https://www.blogger.com/profile/14658452994152399308noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5423579092779163824.post-82482705521225807582012-03-24T22:04:12.589-04:002012-03-24T22:04:12.589-04:00Geo,
I believe that "Un tas de bacil les ass...Geo,<br /><br />I believe that "Un tas de bacil les assorties" means SOMETHING like "a bunch of assorted bacillus". Given that canisters of poison gas are already present in the scene, the crooks are probably preparing biological warfare!<br /><br />One would like to think that the use of Gladstone and Scrooge indicates that the writer had some appreciation of (or at least some general knowledge of) Barks' stories. If so, then he obviously wasn't paying very close attention, as this seems very much like a 10-page plot (and not a very good one, at that) stretched out to an unconscionable length.<br /><br />ChrisChris Barathttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06845538037091279990noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5423579092779163824.post-1720222364249949922012-03-24T17:49:16.480-04:002012-03-24T17:49:16.480-04:00Hi,
it seems to me that you don't love this s...Hi,<br /><br />it seems to me that you don't love this story, eh eh!<br /><br />I think Bottaro will grow up in the later years and, what about Testa? I never found him in the web, so I think he could just be a nick. Maybe Guido Martina could be the writer of this. Some parts of the story reminds me of "Paperino al Giro d'Italia" and some expressions and words are usually used by Martina. I also think there is a prototype of the Duck Avenger here, when Don gets in Scrooge's building. What about you?<br /><br />Bye,<br />SimoneSimhttp://dailywardrum.blogspot.comnoreply@blogger.com