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Dejiko
Joined: 18 Jun 2003
Posts: 276
Location: Holland (between Great Britain and Germany)
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Posted: Mon Jan 12, 2004 10:19 am
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Wasn't going to be done by one of the 'Rising Starts' runner-ups? Thought someone mentioned it earlier.
Edit: i thought so, Aaron White posted it before
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v1cious
Joined: 31 Dec 2002
Posts: 6232
Location: Houston, TX
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Posted: Tue Jan 13, 2004 2:37 am
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oh dear god. i love anime and mangas, but why do this classic american comics? this japanese invasion stuff is getting a tad out of hand
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Mohawk52
Joined: 16 Oct 2003
Posts: 8202
Location: England, UK
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Posted: Tue Jan 13, 2004 11:20 am
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I remember seeing some really rawnchy hentai Archie's back in me uni days. They were obviously doujinshi like but drawn as the original. Can't see the point really after seeing the originals in colour.
Last edited by Mohawk52 on Tue Jan 13, 2004 2:22 pm; edited 1 time in total
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littlegreenwolf
Joined: 10 Aug 2002
Posts: 4796
Location: Seattle, WA
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Posted: Tue Jan 13, 2004 2:09 pm
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ugh... just ugh...
It'll be intresting if they finally give Aunt Hilda and Zelda a makeover for it though. Never got how in the tv renditions there were all... not witchy warty looking.
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Tenchi
Joined: 03 Jan 2002
Posts: 4555
Location: Ottawa... now I'm an ex-Anglo Montrealer.
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Posted: Tue Jan 13, 2004 2:47 pm
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I don't know if anyone remembers this, but, back in the late 1970s/early 1980s, Archie Comics did a spin-off line of comics with younger versions of their characters, with the most famous being Li'l Archie. There was also a kiddy version of Sabrina the Teenage Witch, which, I guess, was called Li'l Sabrina. (I don't remember if that was the exact title; it's been two decades since I've read Archie, not counting the crappy Sunday newspaper strips.)
If I think about it now, the way Li'l Sabrina was drawn actually vaguely resembled the way your typical anime "magical girl" heroine is drawn, at least with the face (she didn't have an elaborate costume), though, considering they wouldn't export anything in the way of "magical girl" anime to North America for another decade-and-a-half or so, this would have been purely coincidental, due to American and Japanese artists independently using the same cartoon conventions as to how to draw stylized children's faces.
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