Buffy
Buffy The Vampire Slayer # 51
plot: Scott Lobdell; script: Fabian Nicieza; pencil: Cliff Richards; ink: Will Conrad.
Dark Horse Comics
monthly; 32 pages, color; $2.99 cover price
The WB television network's documentary series "Buffy", about a girl and her friends growing from teenagers into young adults, is, of course, the finest program on television. I am surprised it airs on a commercial network, rather than PBS, but programming decisions often baffle me.
For 5 years Dark Horse Comics has produced a comic book based on the series. Unfortunately, the comics have featured fictional stories about the characters. Some of these have been amusing stories, but they clearly were stories; and the fictional representations didn't have the same charm and sparkle the real-life characters do.
Fortunately, that has changed. "Viva Las Buffy", a 4-part series about incidents in Buffy Summers' life shortly before she moved to Sunnydale, begins in issue #51. The television documentary has not previously covered this period in Buffy's life, but it is clear these are genuine events from her life.
This allows new scripter Fabian Nicieza to record the actual dialogue of these people rather than attempt to make up stuff. The improvement is remarkable. Truth is not only stranger than fiction, but also more enjoyable.
There are many enjoyable scenes of Buffy's home life, as she and her family deal with her expulsion from high school. It's an interesting period in Buffy's life, and includes interesting details on what was going on in the lives of people who would become important in her life later after she moved to Sunnydale.
Buffy The Vampire Slayer # 51
plot: Scott Lobdell; script: Fabian Nicieza; pencil: Cliff Richards; ink: Will Conrad.
Dark Horse Comics
monthly; 32 pages, color; $2.99 cover price
The WB television network's documentary series "Buffy", about a girl and her friends growing from teenagers into young adults, is, of course, the finest program on television. I am surprised it airs on a commercial network, rather than PBS, but programming decisions often baffle me.
For 5 years Dark Horse Comics has produced a comic book based on the series. Unfortunately, the comics have featured fictional stories about the characters. Some of these have been amusing stories, but they clearly were stories; and the fictional representations didn't have the same charm and sparkle the real-life characters do.
Fortunately, that has changed. "Viva Las Buffy", a 4-part series about incidents in Buffy Summers' life shortly before she moved to Sunnydale, begins in issue #51. The television documentary has not previously covered this period in Buffy's life, but it is clear these are genuine events from her life.
This allows new scripter Fabian Nicieza to record the actual dialogue of these people rather than attempt to make up stuff. The improvement is remarkable. Truth is not only stranger than fiction, but also more enjoyable.
There are many enjoyable scenes of Buffy's home life, as she and her family deal with her expulsion from high school. It's an interesting period in Buffy's life, and includes interesting details on what was going on in the lives of people who would become important in her life later after she moved to Sunnydale.