DTWolf
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 12, 2005
- Messages
- 199
- Reaction score
- 4
I picked up issue #3 this morning and read it when I got home.
There are lots of funny moments and some good skits and I think Kermit's head is actually being drawn better now.
If you usually skip over the promotional text page at the back of comics (you know, where they talk about their staff and tell you what's coming soon), you might want to look at the one in this issue--there's a brief Q&A with the writer of Muppet Robin Hood and also a reminiscince about discovering the Muppets by way of Star Wars.
Now [[SPOLIER! SPOILER!]] the thing that bothers me: the plot of this issue revolves around finding out what species Gonzo is. Now I know some people didn't like Muppets From Space and would prefer to forget about it. But starting with exactly the same question and ignoring the movie completely is bad form (to quote Captain Hook). If the comic doesn't want to acknowledge a Muppet movie, OK, but to boldly plant your flag in the same territory as if no one had been there before is, in my opinion, rather rude. If you're doing a Gonzo issue of the comic, why do one about this? Was this the ONLY idea for a Gonzo story in the world? Surely not.
I still enjoyed the comic, I just would've enjoyed it more if it hadn't been flying in the face of a previous Muppet effort.
There are lots of funny moments and some good skits and I think Kermit's head is actually being drawn better now.
If you usually skip over the promotional text page at the back of comics (you know, where they talk about their staff and tell you what's coming soon), you might want to look at the one in this issue--there's a brief Q&A with the writer of Muppet Robin Hood and also a reminiscince about discovering the Muppets by way of Star Wars.
Now [[SPOLIER! SPOILER!]] the thing that bothers me: the plot of this issue revolves around finding out what species Gonzo is. Now I know some people didn't like Muppets From Space and would prefer to forget about it. But starting with exactly the same question and ignoring the movie completely is bad form (to quote Captain Hook). If the comic doesn't want to acknowledge a Muppet movie, OK, but to boldly plant your flag in the same territory as if no one had been there before is, in my opinion, rather rude. If you're doing a Gonzo issue of the comic, why do one about this? Was this the ONLY idea for a Gonzo story in the world? Surely not.
I still enjoyed the comic, I just would've enjoyed it more if it hadn't been flying in the face of a previous Muppet effort.