Ratings2
Average rating3.5
Blacksad is constantly up to his ears in trouble. Sticking his nose into mystery after mystery, often getting involved with women almost as dangerous as the criminals he thwarts. Be it solving the murder of a famous actress or keeping nuclear weapons out of terrorist hands, Blacksad's grim work often provides a mirror for real world conflict and human issues, never turning a blind eye to racism, political tensions, or brutally sudden violence. Canales and Guarnido redefine the standards for graphic storytelling, carving striking characters that are both animalistic and intimately human. Guarnido's sumptuously painted pages and rich cinematic style bring the world of 1950s America to life, earning high praise from comics legends like Will Eisner, Stan Lee, Jim Steranko, and Tim Sale! Collects story pages from Blacksad, Blacksad- A Silent Hell, and Blacksad- Amarillo.
Reviews with the most likes.
Blacksad has always been a comic for which I had a strong curiosity since the first time I discovered it. We are talking about this kind of production in which the entire American history is rewritten using the animal anthropomorphic trope, and focused on some fantastic cold cases solved by John Blacksad himself, a black cat detective. I love noir genre, and Blacksad embodies his purest meaning, with all the classical characterizations and events typical of this kind of stories. We find broken loves, melancholic sunsets, obscure pubs and mysterious organizations. Obviously what hits mostly is how all these themes are treated using animals instead people, with great results in particular in style, always saturated and full of colours and perfect in character design and peculiar locations. Despite this expected premise, I noticed the production has a not so iconic cast of characters. Despite John and the journalist Weekly, you could find difficult to empathize with victims or secondary creatures. Maybe because lots of them are over-used in crime novels, maybe because the protagonists steals the scene, but I hoped for a better attention onto this aspect, which impacts the worldbuilding turing it into something intriguing but not memorable. Blacksad is a love letter to noir stories, and with all his limitations, represents a piece of finest Spanish comic production.
STYLE: 5
STORY: 4,5
WORLDBUILDING: 4
RHYTHM: 4,5
MAIN CHARACTERS: 4
ANTAGONISTS: 5
ARTISTIC FEATURE: 5
ATMOSPHERE 5
EMOTIONAL IMPACT: 4
FINAL VERDICT: ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Featured Series
7 primary booksBlacksad is a 7-book series with 7 primary works first released in 2000 with contributions by Juan Díaz Canales.