Tag Archivio per: Walter Booth

Classics Disney’s Christmas comic strips

Classics Disney’s Christmas comic strips

In all those years in the United States, I loved to leaf through the daily papers especially during the four weeks before Christmas, and enjoyed the Christmas Disney special edition that ended on 24 December. The strips were a mix of the various Disney characters, Dumbo with Merlin, the fairies of the Sleeping Beauty with the seven dwarfs, and many more. Moreover, on Christmas day the strips were full of Christmas greetings (often interrupting the story) or at least – still today – dealt with Christmas themes that culminated on the 25th. Also the comic books in the month of December recounted adventures – with suitable covers – of Christmas themes or about Santa Claus. In the UK, this habit is the same, while it is rarer for the French productions, with the excuse of less periodic publication deadlines. In Italy however, mostly  due to the scheduled releases, there have always been very few with the Christmas theme. There were some exceptions though; only Max Bunker paid attention to them. And yet it wouldn’t have been difficult at all to plan it, especially now that the long adventures in serials are becoming increasingly rare.

 

Xtina… You Are Very Special Person

Xtina… You Are Very Special Person

Adam‘s Rome Open City episode 17

Adam‘s Rome Open City episode 17

Enciclopedia Fumetto Cinema Aggiornamento 2023

Enciclopedia Fumetto Cinema Aggiornamento 2023

Adam‘s adventure Rome Open City episode 16

Adam‘s adventure Rome Open City episode 16

Rome, Open City (Italian: Roma città aperta, also released as Open City) is a 1945 Italian neorealist war drama film directed by Roberto Rossellini and co-written by Sergio Amidei and Federico Fellini. Set in Rome in 1944, the film follows a diverse group of characters coping under the Nazi occupation, and centers on a Resistance fighter trying to escape the city with the help of a Catholic priest. The title refers to Rome being declared an open city after 14 August 1943. It forms the first third of Rosselini’s “Neorealist Trilogy”, followed by Paisan (1946) and Germany, Year Zero (1948).

Open City is considered one of the most important and representative works of Italian neorealism, and an important stepping stone for Italian filmmaking as a whole. It was one of the first post-war Italian pictures to gain major acclaim and accolades internationally, winning the prestigious Palme d’Or at the 1946 Cannes Film Festival and being nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay Oscar at the 19th Academy Awards. It launched director Rosselini, screenwriter Fellini, and actress Anna Magnani into the international spotlight.

pages  123 456789101112131415

7 Dicembre Teatro alla Scala fumetto

7 Dicembre Teatro alla Scala un nostro fumetto, vintage, sulla lirica. Qui però eravamo all’Arena di Verona.

Collection of short western stories. Almost completed.

collection of short western stories. Almost completed.

Volume 1

Pages 48

Color and B&W

Xtina Advertising

Xtina Advertising

Adam‘s Rome Open City episode 15

Adam‘s Rome Open City episode 15

Rome, Open City (Italian: Roma città aperta, also released as Open City) is a 1945 Italian neorealist war drama film directed by Roberto Rossellini and co-written by Sergio Amidei and Federico Fellini. Set in Rome in 1944, the film follows a diverse group of characters coping under the Nazi occupation, and centers on a Resistance fighter trying to escape the city with the help of a Catholic priest. The title refers to Rome being declared an open city after 14 August 1943. It forms the first third of Rosselini’s “Neorealist Trilogy”, followed by Paisan (1946) and Germany, Year Zero (1948).

Open City is considered one of the most important and representative works of Italian neorealism, and an important stepping stone for Italian filmmaking as a whole. It was one of the first post-war Italian pictures to gain major acclaim and accolades internationally, winning the prestigious Palme d’Or at the 1946 Cannes Film Festival and being nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay Oscar at the 19th Academy Awards. It launched director Rosselini, screenwriter Fellini, and actress Anna Magnani into the international spotlight.

pages  123 4567891011121314

December with Xtina

December with Xtina