Last week Linkara's Atop the Fourth Wall reviewed "Marville #1" a comic series from the early 2000s. It's sort of a parody on comic book tropes, real world politics both in government and in the comic book world and, well, other stuff.
So, inspired by Lewis' review I managed to get all of the issues of Marville to give it a read and.... Oy!
The books are just plain stupid. The first two books mostly deal with the "origin story" of the character (a mixture of Superman's, Batman's, Spider-man's and other comic book origins) and then in the third issue the main character and his two female companions travel back in time to the creation of Creation, meet with "God" and he takes them on a billions-year long journey through time to show how evolution and God... work... together?
Along the way they meet a proto-human who is... Wolverine.
The books are the epitome of dumb. But I hate myself so I must subject myself to dumb sometimes.
Anyone else seen/read the Marville books?
(And one of the issues doesn't have word balloons, rather the dialogue is printed over the artwork in regular text. As if the script for the comic was simply overlaid onto the art. In another issue, there's a similar thing where text is written in large boxes under regular comic panels.)
So, inspired by Lewis' review I managed to get all of the issues of Marville to give it a read and.... Oy!
The books are just plain stupid. The first two books mostly deal with the "origin story" of the character (a mixture of Superman's, Batman's, Spider-man's and other comic book origins) and then in the third issue the main character and his two female companions travel back in time to the creation of Creation, meet with "God" and he takes them on a billions-year long journey through time to show how evolution and God... work... together?
Along the way they meet a proto-human who is... Wolverine.
The books are the epitome of dumb. But I hate myself so I must subject myself to dumb sometimes.
Anyone else seen/read the Marville books?
(And one of the issues doesn't have word balloons, rather the dialogue is printed over the artwork in regular text. As if the script for the comic was simply overlaid onto the art. In another issue, there's a similar thing where text is written in large boxes under regular comic panels.)