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The metaphrog interview in The Comics Journal Some reviews: Can someone please make a Louis movie sometime soon? Sandra and John have crafted their best Louis book yet, an utterly gorgeous, colourful, touching fantasy for all ages, with fabulous artwork and colouring and an engaging emotional hook... it’s one of those books that makes you happy just to hold it in your hand ... in fact it’s going right into my Best of the Year list. A sweet, sad fable, beautifully rendered by the Glasgow-based duo of John Chalmers and Sandra Marrs...the story they tell, a gentle fantasy, has an easy tone and a deceptive depth that will appeal to both adults and children. metaphrog have produced three books about the most adorable character... metaphrog's deep story will have readers contemplating its images and events long after they've reached the final page. An indispensable bedside book, to plunge into as in a dream. These days we're bombarded with animations or graphic novels that claim to amuse kids while offering a metanarrative to please adults. But few actually fulfil these promises as effectively as this Scottish duo's hand-painted book. Franco-Scottish duo metaphrog use simple designs and storytelling techniques to make the reader think about the role imagination has for the "average Joe" making his way through the daily grind. Metaphrog give their work the feel of a great children's book. Louis himself is cut from the same cloth as Charlie Brown and Jimmy Corrigan... That Louis’s concerns are universal and his adventures a reflection of modern world make his tales like contemporary fables. Metaphrog manage to bridge the gap between innocence and experience with real insight, making Night Salad something that can stand alongside Kafka’s short stories — deceptively simple tales that manage to pierce directly to the heart of the human condition. Louis - Dreams Never Die is their most satisfying, poetic work to date. A delightful all-ages tale of Louis' quest for adventure, Louis - Red Letter Day is the sort of comic book that draws you into its world. It's a distinctive work, fully envisioned and not in the least imitative,and has the potential of becoming a children's classic. The emotions are powerful, the issues fundamental and the imaginative power spellbinding. Louis - Night Salad is a visual and narrative journey unlike any other - and yet emotionally and philosophically utterly recognizable. A dream-quest theme persists throughout this colorful book [Louis - Night Salad], which brings to mind many classic, if somewhat less unsettling, adventures: Harold and the Purple Crayon and Where the Wild Things Are. Established fans will delight in this volume; like Louis, new readers will enter the story perplexed but exit with joy. Imagine an alternate universe - let's call it Metaphrogland - where there is no distinction betweenstories for children and those for adults... Metaphrog has crafted something unique, uncompromising, and greater than the sum of its parts.If only more comics were so genuinely transporting. Maybe it's the palette that makes the Louis series look as though it's meant for kids. Louis is an unassuming worker with a head like a potato who lives with his pet bird. But Metaphrog, the Glasgow-based duo behind the books, have weighted Louis's world with a few dystopian twists. His bird's name is Formulaic Companion; his post is monitored; and in one episode he's questioned about his knowledge of 'the underground'. Poor Louis is also saddled with existential woes. 'Why do I feel so hollow?' he asks the Comforter, a machine in his house that dispenses answers for cash. ('Because you haven't been watching your entertainment centre enough' is the reply.) Louis dreams of escape, but his plans are constantly foiled by the forces at work around him... An insinuating, multi-levelled fable for our disconnected age. Strange, disturbing, allegorical... Louis, and his caged bird FC, take you into a world that is at once utterly strange and alarmingly familiar. In a quirky, highly imaginative and quite surreal way, themes of surveillance, social control, exploitation, consumerism and punishment are explored. Ostensibly a children'scartoon book, its subtlehumour and sinister quality will appeal to all ages, while unassuming, slightly melancholic hero, Louis, is just totally heartwarming. Beware: this stuff isprobably addictive. With squibs for eyes and delicately inked circles for nose and mouth, Louis' reduced features magically express a life spent daydreaming, writing letters to possibly fictional aunts and reading signs that say 'you look like a potato'. Infused with shadowless light and written in precisely elusive balloons, Louis - Red Letter Day is a seriously spaced enigma from Metaphrog aka Glaswegian cult artists John Chalmers and Sandra Marrs. Like nothing else around. Louis - Red Letter Day is disturbingly wonderful; you don't want to miss out on this book. Trust me when I say this is the book that people are going to be talking about for a long, long time. Luminescent and haunting illustrations add to the surreal feel of a magical modernist mystery with implicit 1984-style warning which repays repeated readings... A truly wonderful piece of storytelling. Go on, treat yourself! Louis, we love you. I'm sure you remember Curious George, that cute little monkey who's curiosity would always get him in and out of trouble as he turned the simplest of tasks into the most wonderful of adventures. Alright. Now take that little guy and place him inside The Village, the Orwellian setting of Patrick McGoohan's cult classic, The Prisoner, and you've got LOUIS, one of the most intriguing children's worlds in literature today. Louis is a rotund little fellow with a round head and a button nose that lives in a strange hamlet where mysterious parties monitor everyone. He toils all day on weird machines, and plays with a clockwork bird. He dreams of adventure and a life beyond the daily tedium of the village, if only he could escape its borders. One day, Louis decides to express his ambitions to his Aunt Alison in the form of a letter. A supposed children's story, this blackly humorous adventure comments on social structure and routine in a devilishly cute/sinister manner, amusing both juveniles and dodderers alike... Franco-Scottish husband-and-wife team Metaphrog are working wonders with material that hovers in the borderland between children's and adult fiction, that shadowy neutral zone where the young can see dim reflections of their own maturity and the old can regain briefglimpses of the insights of vanished youth. Which is a high falutin' way of rewriting the cliché "for kids of all ages". Louis - Lying To Clive is a dark treat for kids of all ages. Read it. Louis - Red Letter Day, the weirdest thing to come out of Glasgow for a long, long time, has "cult" written all over it [...] Metaphrog paint a world of pastel coloured protagonists with dull lives, living in the despair of 1984 or Brazil. Lonely Soul will empathise. Others will sympathise. Children - ostensibly the main audience of this work - will be baffled but, hopefully, charmed. This self published comic strip is something of a phenomenon; the Glasgow based Metaphrog received two Eisner Award nominations for the first instalment of Louis' adventures, (Louis Red Letter Day) those of Best New Graphic Album and Best Title for a Younger Audience. This latter seems a little odd to me, in that Louis's adventures are dark to the point of being unsettling, and so cryptic and downright weird at times that I suspect any child picking up this book will go away with fractured minds …Coming on like a children's Absurdist primer, this charming but uncomfortable little book will amuse and disturb you. Oblique, sinister and cute in equal measure. The cult of Franco-Scottish artists that make up Metaphrog have been producing comics since 1996...Their latest effort, Louis - Lying to Clive charts the continuing troubles of life for Louis and his friend as they set out, along with saucer-eyed accomplice Clive, to discover the secret of the Bee-Hive...Louis - Lying to Clive is a darkly humorous tale of a search for excitement beyond the mundane boundaries of every day life. Masquerading as a magical children's story Louis - Lying to Clive amuses and bemuses in equal measures. L'apparente naïveté de cette pochette/bande dessinée mettant en scène un personnage imaginaire naïf et sincère (Louis) n'a en fait rien d'apparente et n'a d'autre objet que de réfléchir, tel un miroir la belle candeur et innocence de cette musique. ... Frais. Et c'est peut-être là que s'opère réellement une fusion touchante: Beginning a new story from the surreal yet unnervingly real world of Martin Nitram." So states the fine print on Strange Weather Lately's back cover. Surreal/real; Martin/Nitram. Mirrored images. This tale, or act, rather, deals with shifting weather patterns in the human condition. Suspicion. Depression. Frustration. Confusion.Loss of identity and self-worth. The simple conversation that can inexplicably bring forth suppressed memory. Fear. Loss of control. Mystery. It's all here, flowing effortlessly back and forth between the dozen characters that inhabit this moving, brooding twenty-one page black and white chapter. I don't know where this story is heading, but I'm glad I'm along for the ride [...] It's a play within a play, real emotions at conflict with acting sensibility, high drama on the outskirts of affairs of the heart. Strange weather, indeed, but I feel it's only the calm before the storm [...] this comic lingers with you long after you set it down, and bears several rereadings. |
Some press clippings: | |
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