Retrato do autor

Mateus Santolouco

Autor(a) de American Vampire Vol. 2

15+ Works 765 Membros 33 Críticas

Séries

Obras por Mateus Santolouco

Associated Works

Anthony Bourdain's Hungry Ghosts (2018) — Ilustrador — 186 exemplares
Zero Volume 1: An Emergency (2014) — Ilustrador — 107 exemplares
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The IDW Collection, Vol. 01 (2015) — Ilustrador — 89 exemplares
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The IDW Collection, Vol. 02 (2016) — Autor; Ilustrador — 52 exemplares
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The IDW Collection, Vol. 03 (2016) — Ilustrador — 49 exemplares
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The IDW Collection, Vol. 04 (2017) — Ilustrador — 38 exemplares
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The IDW Collection, Vol. 05 (2017) — Ilustrador — 37 exemplares
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The IDW Collection, Vol. 06 (2018) — Ilustrador — 34 exemplares
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The IDW Collection, Vol. 07 (2018) — Ilustrador — 30 exemplares
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The IDW Collection, Vol. 09 (2019) — Ilustrador — 30 exemplares
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The IDW Collection, Vol. 10 (2020) — Ilustrador — 30 exemplares
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The IDW Collection, Vol. 08 (2019) — Ilustrador — 27 exemplares
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The IDW Collection, Vol. 13 (2021) — Autor; Ilustrador — 20 exemplares
Cthulhu Tales Omnibus: Madness (2011) — Contribuidor — 19 exemplares
TMNT: Bebop & Rocksteady Destroy Everything #1 (2016) — Artista da capa, algumas edições2 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Data de nascimento
1979
Sexo
male

Membros

Críticas

I don't read many graphic novels, but, hey, China Mieville. Nelson Jent is down on his luck, unemployed, overweight, and just had a heart attack before his 30th birthday. He accidentally discovers that dialing H-E-R-O in a certain disused public phone booth (remember phone booths?) will turn him into a superhero. But the transformation is only temporary, the dial won't always work - and Nelson becomes a different superhero each time. Captain Lachrymose, for example, paralyzes criminals with grief by bringing their saddest memories back irresistably. Mieville's fabulous imagination supplies numerous weird, funny, and sometimes disgusting, superpowers. Nelson must confront criminals, a rival dial-driven superhero, and entities from other dimensions as he seeks to understand what's going on.

Th artist team here provides suitably vivid renderings of Mieville's ideas. Lots of pages with story panels interspersed on top of a full-page image, so that the reader must figure out the reading sequence. Dramatic and active, but sometimes a bit of a chore to read.

Note that DC Comics cancelled this series, unfinished, after one more volume.
… (mais)
½
 
Assinalado
dukedom_enough | 16 outras críticas | Mar 29, 2024 |
China Mieville is one of my favorite authors. I've read almost all his books, and even though I didn't love all of them, a couple of them are probably in my top 10 books ever. So I was pretty excited to find out he was writing comics.

This had some of his trademark strangeness and some of his incomprehensible-ness to go along with it via alien intelligences speaking almost gibberish. Some of the hero ideas were absolutely ridiculous and really strange, but they were a ton of fun and we get some of the background behind "Dial H" (which I had never read before).

Looking forward to Vol 2.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
ragwaine | 16 outras críticas | Jan 22, 2023 |
Volume 7 expanded the world, adding new baddies and lots more plot to play with. Glad I can rely on this series to deliver the goods.
 
Assinalado
Harks | 1 outra crítica | Dec 17, 2022 |
Continuing with the theme of not-comic-writers writing comics after the Coates/Stelfreeze Black Panther, I picked up the first collection of China Miéville's take on Dial H for Hero. It's a great take on the idea, with a total schlub being the guy that finds the magic(?) phone dial that turns you into a bizarre superhero (e.g. Captain Lachrymose, who forces his enemies to remember their saddest memories) each time you use it. I'm not as wild about Miéville's choice to pit him against two villains trying to summon a being from the depths of nothingness or....something. The entire arc in general feels like something that probably made perfect sense in the script but doesn't translate well to the final page. The last story, looking back in time at a past user of the dial, just makes the entire thing feel like even more of a missed opportunity, as it starts to open up some great questions - what do you do when you have superpowers based on a racist caricature? Do you retain the memories of being this other person? What happens when you end up as someone of a different gender? Unfortunately, none of these ever get looked at in any depth, when each of those could be a whole issue unto itself. There's a lot of promise here (and sadly, this only ran to one more collection), but it's kind of buried under a lot of mucking around.

… (mais)
 
Assinalado
skolastic | 16 outras críticas | Feb 2, 2021 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
15
Also by
15
Membros
765
Popularidade
#33,261
Avaliação
½ 3.7
Críticas
33
ISBN
26
Línguas
5

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