hiltinsider.blogg.se

Angry rhinoceros drawing
Angry rhinoceros drawing









angry rhinoceros drawing
  1. ANGRY RHINOCEROS DRAWING SKIN
  2. ANGRY RHINOCEROS DRAWING SERIES
angry rhinoceros drawing

It’s very much like Atlas/Marvel’s then-plentiful Westerns, making Lorna The Jungle Queen #1 an example of a comic that actually bridges two separate comic book trends, with very attractive art throughout and a better-than-average story for the era, earning 3.5 out of 5 stars overall.

ANGRY RHINOCEROS DRAWING SERIES

Lorna’s adventures continued for 26 issues (though the series became Lorna The Jungle Girl with issue six), with M’Tuba revealing that he trained her because of a prophecy that she would face an evil being, and Lorna roving the countryside. The issue contains three Lorna stories by Rico and Roth, but something that stands out to me is a tale of M’Tuba’s youth, drawn by a 23-year-old John Romita, Sr. It’s really hard to get away from the White Savior trope in stories of this type, but this one stays pretty neutral about it, especially for 1953.

angry rhinoceros drawing

Having defeated the magician, Lorna declares herself their new leader, but selects M’Tuba to stand in her place, to keep them out of trouble, then sets off for parts unknown. It’s hard to avoid these kinds of cliché moments in any “jungle person” story, but once again, Roth’s deft hand keeps in check the usual stereotypes, allowing the battle between the angry chieftain and the Jungle Queen to play out deftly and quickly. Some undetermined amount of time later, she has learned all she can, adventuring through the jungle with her guide pal, when they are captured by an angry local tribe. After her father’s death, Lorna learns as much as she can from M’Tuba about the knife, the spear, and other tools of jungle survival, since a jammed gun nearly killed her. M’Tuba is actually quite handsome, and his capuchin companion Mikki actually looks like a real monkey. The foreshortening in the spear-throwing panel above is remarkable, and most importantly, Roth’s drawing of Lorna’s friends in Africa aren’t horrifying caricatures. The art here is by Werner Roth, probably best known for his extended run on X-Men, and I’m honestly really impressed. A chance encounter with a rhinoceros nearly costs her life, but things get even worse when M’Tuba arrives with the news that her father has died from his injuries. Papa Queen-Of-The-Jungle (their last name is never revealed, so I presume it’s right there in the title) loses his leg, but survives, forcing his daughter to become a hunter to keep them both fed. With her father severely wounded, Lorna called upon M’Tuba, a local guide, to help them, as the nearest doctor was hours away. Our story begins with young Lorna and her father discussing why he has made his life in the jungles of the Congo, unaware that a dangerous wild animal is lurking nearby.

ANGRY RHINOCEROS DRAWING SKIN

By 1953, Sheena’s Xeroxes were an army, wearing enough animal skin to cause multiple extinctions, and as we’ve learned in previous Retro Reviews, where there’s a successful concept, Atlas Comics would arrive to capitalize on it. Created by comics legends Will Eisner and Jerry Iger, Sheena’s leopard-skin clothing and lack of footwear were the template for an army of girl Tarzans, with names like Lola, Laura, Lula, Judy, Rulah, Nyoka, Geesha, and more. Previously in Lorna The Jungle Queen: Though several notable examples pre-date her, Sheena, Queen of the Jungle is a prototype of the stock character known as the jungle girl. Inker: Werner Roth/John Buscema/Carl Burgos Penciler: Werner Roth/John Buscema/Carl Burgos You can purchase this issue via our Amazon affiliate link LORNA THE JUNGLE QUEEN #1 Your Major Spoilers Retro Review of Lorna The Jungle Queen #1 awaits! Rider Haggard’s Ayesha, but when superheroes started to wane, animal-print bikinis popped up on every corner newsstand. The jungle girl archetype dates back to H.











Angry rhinoceros drawing