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enurtsol
Joined: 01 May 2007
Posts: 14896
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Posted: Mon May 14, 2012 8:25 pm
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Wonder if there'll be a lot of doujins of Western works..........
Murder, She wrote: |
The festival itself is a free event, but participants must pay the Comitia entrance fee |
Dunno how that works............ I guess if you're not a "participant," whatever that means...........
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superdry
Joined: 07 Jan 2012
Posts: 1309
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Posted: Mon May 14, 2012 8:41 pm
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enurtsol wrote: |
Murder, She wrote: |
The festival itself is a free event, but participants must pay the Comitia entrance fee |
Dunno how that works............ I guess if you're not a "participant," whatever that means........... |
Sounds like one of those "free concert only if you buy a drink ticket that costs $15" type thing.
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reanimator
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Posted: Tue May 15, 2012 4:25 am
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I can't remember the source, but I remember reading about Comitia being different from Comiket. It's likely to be more centered on original stuffs than fan derivative works.
I don't think that western works are likely to get Dojinshi's because they lack serious fanbase to create deviant works and Japanese licensee are bound by contract to allow such thing.
Anyway, I think Comitia is very similar to creator-centered comic book conventions here. I want to see works of talented western artists to get notice in Japan for their narratives, not just their art.
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AFatHouseCat
Joined: 11 May 2012
Posts: 4
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Posted: Tue May 15, 2012 7:30 am
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reanimator wrote: | I can't remember the source, but I remember reading about Comitia being different from Comiket. It's likely to be more centered on original stuffs than fan derivative works.
I don't think that western works are likely to get Dojinshi's because they lack serious fanbase to create deviant works and Japanese licensee are bound by contract to allow such thing.
Anyway, I think Comitia is very similar to creator-centered comic book conventions here. I want to see works of talented western artists to get notice in Japan for their narratives, not just their art. |
Comitia is just for creator owned works so you wont see any fanworks there, unless the creator of a manga draws his/her own series, which a lot do.
Comiket, and other large doujin shows like it, usually have a large section for fandoms based on overseas works. Mainly American tv shows and movies but a lot of BBC shows get doujin too. The last doujin festa I went to here had a huge XMen:FC and Sherlock tv/Sherlock Holmes movies section. Supernatural and Boondocks Saints aren't new but they both have a pretty good fanbase and doujin showing as well.
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reanimator
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Posted: Thu May 17, 2012 9:47 pm
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AFatHouseCat wrote: |
reanimator wrote: | I can't remember the source, but I remember reading about Comitia being different from Comiket. It's likely to be more centered on original stuffs than fan derivative works.
I don't think that western works are likely to get Dojinshi's because they lack serious fanbase to create deviant works and Japanese licensee are bound by contract to allow such thing.
Anyway, I think Comitia is very similar to creator-centered comic book conventions here. I want to see works of talented western artists to get notice in Japan for their narratives, not just their art. |
Comitia is just for creator owned works so you wont see any fanworks there, unless the creator of a manga draws his/her own series, which a lot do.
Comiket, and other large doujin shows like it, usually have a large section for fandoms based on overseas works. Mainly American tv shows and movies but a lot of BBC shows get doujin too. The last doujin festa I went to here had a huge XMen:FC and Sherlock tv/Sherlock Holmes movies section. Supernatural and Boondocks Saints aren't new but they both have a pretty good fanbase and doujin showing as well. |
Oh okay. Thanks for the correction.
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