Foto dell'autore

Nelson Daniel

Autore di Road Rage

7+ opere 235 membri 10 recensioni

Serie

Opere di Nelson Daniel

Road Rage (2009) — Illustratore — 122 copie
Clue (2017) — Illustratore — 58 copie
The Cape: 1969 (2013) — Illustratore — 38 copie
Stephen King and Joe Hill's Road Rage #1 (2012) — Illustratore — 9 copie
Stephen King and Joe Hill's Road Rage #2 (2012) — Illustratore — 5 copie
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Universe #25 — Illustratore — 2 copie

Opere correlate

The Wraith (2014) — Cover colorist, alcune edizioni193 copie
The Cape (2005) — Colors, alcune edizioni170 copie
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The IDW Collection, Vol. 13 (2021) — Illustratore — 21 copie
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The IDW Collection, Vol. 12 (2021) — Illustratore — 20 copie
The Cape Deluxe Edition (2013) — Colorist, alcune edizioni10 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Nome canonico
Daniel, Nelson
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
Chile
Luogo di residenza
Santiago, Chile
Attività lavorative
Comic Book Illustrator
comic book colorist

Utenti

Recensioni

Stephen King has been an author who means a lot to me over the years. He writes a lot. Not all of it is good. Quite often his work is laced with varying levels of implicit and explicit bigotry and prejudice. This seems to be something he has shared with his son.

This is a comic adaptation of the novella, Throttle, by Hill and King, and, the story that inspired it, Duel by Richard Matheson. Both stories centre on conflict with a malevolent truck on the highway.

I haven't read either of the original stories, but in the excepts and adaptations, Matheson's Duel seems a much stronger and more original, in multiple ways, of the two.

Throttle follows a motorcycle club, The Tribe, complete with grinning skull wearing a war bonnet patch, following a bloody altercation and moving from the frying pan of that into the fire of being made roadkill by a big, mean truck. If you know Stephen King's work, you know he loves big, malevolent trucks and casual racism. I cannot understand why they chose to name the MC and describe their patch in this manner, beyond exoticism. I may be wrong, but does not appear to be a Native American MC naming themselves within the story in this manner, as with the Hispanic MC, The Mayans, originally from Sons of Anarchy. With his history of 'Indian burial ground' origins for a number of his horror stories and propensity for the 'Magical [Black person]' trope, I find it hard to see anything else.

It's an excuse for some carnage, which is fun enough, but the forced moral turn at the end and the framing story give this an oddly preachy vibe, so unbelievably out of step with the roadkill porn this honestly is. Maybe, it works better in the book, but the tonal dissonance is wild.

Duel is a more interesting narrative following the eponymous duel between a guy on his way to an interview on California and truck that takes exception to being overtaken. That's the while premise, but the focus on the protagonist's descent into despair and madness at their ordeal and the maintained anonymity of the truck driver add a level of horror and intrigue that is sorely lacking in Throttle.

Both stories have an interesting perspective on class, with who they focus on and their portrayal, especially considering the author's situations when these stories were written. By interesting, I really mean a kind of sneering, dehumanising, and othering of those of the lower classes and outside the law, again nothing new for King, while weight and respect is placed upon dedicated fathers and veterans.

Throttle is, quite frankly, some Boomer-arse shit, and Duel seeks like it would be interesting to read.

The art and direction for Throttle is very standard affair and not particularly interesting. Duel has a much more distinct design and layout, reflecting the degrading of sanity of the protagonist, which I appreciate.

This wasn't from me, but it was something to randomly pull from the library.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
RatGrrrl | 5 altre recensioni | Dec 20, 2023 |
I think I actually enjoyed this graphic novel adaptation of Hill & King's Throttle more than the original story. The pacing and art are well done and add a lot to the story.

But, it's the followup story, Richard Matheson's Duel that is the absolute winner here. I was barely nine years old when the Steven Spielberg (who was an absolute unknown back then) directed television movie, Duel premiered on national television, Nov 13, 1971, a Saturday night. I had to get permission to watch it from my mother before my cousin came over to babysit me.

And even then, at nine years old, I knew I'd seen something special. I remember my cousin being quite upset that there had been no key moment where you found out exactly what the trucker's problem was with Mann, and you never ever found out who he was. Me, hell, I thought that was one of the coolest parts of the movie.

And that, I think, is the defining difference between the Hill/King story and the Matheson one. Hill & King give you that this is why he did it scene. Matheson doesn't. And his story is all the stronger for it.

For this edition, I wasn't as crazy about the art for the Duel story, but it still worked well enough.

Overall, definitely worth picking up.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
TobinElliott | 5 altre recensioni | Sep 3, 2021 |
This graphic novel, based on the classic board game is too modern for me. I wasn't a fan of the person illustration either which seemed "blocky" to me. There are a few extra characters--detectives, butler, and a doctor. I would prefer a historical graphic mystery to this.
 
Segnalato
thornton37814 | 3 altre recensioni | Jan 24, 2020 |
Father and son writing duo Stephen King and Joe Hill team up to introduce this book as well as contribute the first of two stories. Overall I liked the theme of the Killer on the Road.
 
Segnalato
p_r_a_x_i_s | 5 altre recensioni | Jun 11, 2019 |

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Statistiche

Opere
7
Opere correlate
6
Utenti
235
Popolarità
#96,241
Voto
½ 3.6
Recensioni
10
ISBN
13
Lingue
3

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