Posts Tagged ‘Peter and Bobby Timony’

Owl Pellets

Posted on October 4th, 2008 by Anthony Cardno in Anthony, Talekyn, comics, four stars

I started off last week’s review by saying that I was glad that comic had a short archive because reading it felt endless. This week, I feel the opposite. I would gladly have pushed through an archive four times as long as “Night Owls” currently sports; even with a weak wireless signal slowing down the loading of the flash pages, reading this comic went way too fast.

This is the kind of story I love. I’ve been a fan of the old pulp novels for as long as I can remember – toss me a Doc Savage or Shadow story, I’m usually sucked right in. Night Owls is firmly entrenched in that genre, and also has tongue lodged firmly in cheek.

It would be easy for the Timony brothers to let their lead character be the classic pulp type: someone like Clark Savage or Lamont Cranston, or even DC Comics’ venerable but virtually unknown Doctor Occult (created, like Superman, by Siegel and Shuster). Someone strong, stalwart, silent. A real macho man. Instead, they make Ernest Baxter the opposite: he is scrawny, bookish, talkative to a fault. A sensitive man. He’d rather analyze a situation than fight, but he will fight if he has to (as evidenced by his quickly lost throw-down with a gang of vampires). He’s likable, and has an interesting flaw: he’s allergic to sunlight. Take that piece of information and assume what you will; I won’t spoil anything here.

They do populate the rest of the cast with classic types, but often with a slight twist that keeps “classic” from being “complete stereotype.” Baxter’s Gal Friday, Mindy Markus, could go toe-to-toe with her contemporaries Lois Lane, Margo Lane, Rose Psychic and Patricia Savage and hold her own just fine – it’s a fine tradition of scrappy women but Mindy deviates from the stereotype by being more physically involved in the cases than Baxter and pretty much never playing the damsel in distress. Roscoe is a play on the classic street-bruiser type, and I can imagine him playing poker with Savage’s Monk Mayfair, The Shadow’s cab-driver Shreevy, and Green Lantern’s cabbie “Doiby” Dickles … the nice twist being Roscoe is a gargoyle, not just an excitable New Yorker (some readers will say there’s no difference between the two). There is of course the close police contact reminiscent of Jim Gordon and Joe Cardona, although in Night Owls he is also the strong, somewhat silent type that Baxter is not. Since Night Owls has only been around for about 61 pages, there hasn’t been the time to develop a real rogues gallery, but Doctor You, who steals other people’s faces in order to commit his crimes, has the potential to be Baxter’s John Sunlight, Shiwan Khan or Joker … or perhaps an interesting mix of all three. There are other potentially-recurring bad-guys as well: Big Eagle Eye (a mythical creature) and that aforementioned gang of vampires.

The art is smooth, stylish, definitely what would have been on the pages of the Sunday comics in the 20s or in the pages of More Fun or Detective Comics in the late 30s. The characters don’t all blend together, the backgrounds are detailed, the panels are distinct and varied enough to keep each page interesting. The story looks good in black and white, as befits the era. They refer to each section of the series as a season, but I think it’s more fair to equate it to the Saturday morning serials: it doesn’t dwell on any particular story for long, keeping the action moving and tossing off one-liners regularly as page-enders.

I give Night Owls four stars. Definitely adding it to my list of regular reads, even though the Zuda site often gives my laptop fits of apoplexy. Rating: ★★★★☆

Peter and Robert Timony’s “Night Owls

http://zudacomics.com/the_night_owls

reviewed by Anthony R. Cardno
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (3 votes, average: 4.67 out of 5)

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The Night Owls

Posted on October 3rd, 2008 by Delos Woodruff in Delos, comics, five stars

The Night Owls is a Zuda instant winner and has published sixty two screens (pages) so far. As is normal, I sometimes had to stop and pick up reading the next day and I liked how the Zuda site automatically remembered where I left off in my reading. There is a concise comic summary on the site but since you have to take the time to find, open and read it, I’ll provide it here:

“‘The Night Owls‘ is a Detective Agency set in New York City in the 1920s and specializing in cases that involve the supernatural. Professor Ernest Baxter is the brains of the operation, utilizing his vast knowledge of all things weird to right the wrongs that leave ordinary police baffled! He’s a bit of a bookworm, and allergic to sunlight, but his inquisitive nature has led to the downfall of many of New York’s deadliest demons! Of course, he couldn’t have done it without Mindy Markus. She’s a feisty flapper that’s put the hurt on a lot of nocturnal nasties! Don’t try to tell her she can’t fight the forces of evil because she’s just a girl, unless you’re looking for a face full of feminine fist, that is! Then there’s Roscoe, the Gargoyle. He’s a tough little bruiser from the Bronx, more at home at the dinner table than on a church roof. Together, they solve the crimes that no one else can solve! When you suspect your wife is a werewolf, when you’re haunted by a petulant poltergeist, or caught in the trap of a vicious vampire, your best chance of survival is the Night Owls!”

This is a very good description of the Night Owls and I doubt I could do better. It even lets you in on the Professor’s allergic condition which helps you to make immediate sense of the comic’s name. And that line about “face full of feminine fist” always makes chuckle - it is absolutely true. Don’t mess with Mindy. Night Owls should probably come with a warning: Roscoe will eat any small or pet animal you might have, so don’t leave yours alone when he’s around.

Night Owls is made up of pulpish mini story arcs all woven into a larger, evolving story. While each comic stands on its own, earlier storyline details come back into the spotlight and it creates a “I know what’s going on with that” feeling as you read the comic. For example, when people start losing their faces, you know exactly who is involved and what needs to be done about it.

This mini arc blending accomplishes three things. The first is that it constantly rewards the fans of the comic with easter egg reminders of inside information. The second is that it builds an entire world a little bit at a time. In turn, that makes Night Owls a comic that’s easy to digest and catch up on. Thirdly, the smaller arcs contribute to a larger storyline and you begin to focus more on the three main characters rather than the monsters and set pieces; they become story color.

Speaking of color, there was an interview at Amalgamated Artists where [the artists were asked about color. There they stated that Night Owls is not a black and white comic. I had to go back and double check this for myself - it is colored in dark hued browns. Another bit of color they talk about is anachronisms. The artists try their hardest not to include anything that is not from the 1920’s time period. The example given is car keys, which didn’t exist at the time. That attention to detail always pays off.

Overall, The Night Owls is well done and a great example of a pulp comic. The concept is interesting, the dialog is handled well and the stories are satisfying. Rating: ★★★★★

(If you enjoy this comic, be sure to check out the animated version.)

The Night Owls

http://zudacomics.com/the_night_owls
by Peter and Robert Timony
Review by Delos
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (4 votes, average: 4.25 out of 5)

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The Importance of Being Ernest or Mindy or even Roscoe?

Posted on October 3rd, 2008 by MPD57 in MPD57, Uncategorized, five stars

Thankfully this is like a week off work for me. I really don’t have to struggle to find the words to describe the talented twins Peter and Bobby Timony and their breakout Zuda smash The Night Owls. I say smash because, well, not only is it a great strip in it’s own right with an ever growing fan base, the twins seem to be building on that success and making themselves somewhat irreplaceable over at Zuda HQ. If ever Zuda needed a flagship strip then it need look no further than this one. It just seems like a great fit for both the format and the delivery schedule which was twice a week as season one came to close. Don’t worry about waiting, season two has just begun. Here though we can look back at the sixty screens of season one and despite some early concerns I might have had that the plots were a bit hit and miss with single screen gags that weren’t terribly sophisticated by middle of those sixty screens the boys were fairly cranking out the good stuff. Short arcs with humorous characterisation replacing the obvious sight gags becomes the norm and now all the gags seem to naturally appear out of the characters themselves without any recourse to puns, pratfalls or belches.

The comedy revolves around a small cast investigating bizarre supernatural crimes in and around New York City during the roaring Twenties. Ernest Baxter is the bespectacled and emotionally reticent professor who explains what’s going on. Mindy Markus is the scrappy flapper who gets ahead of the plot and makes what’s going on interesting. Roscoe the … whatever he is … acts as the comedy relief making sure we all know we are permanently in the territory of the weird. The three of them constitute The Night Owls Detective Agency and are joined by several supporting characters, normal and bizarre, good guys and villains, who are carefully woven into the fictional fabric of the story. Even though it’s only sixty screens old those characters have become pretty essential to our understanding of the whole history on offer. Nothing and no-one is thrown in or out for no good reason. Each short arc tends to build on what has gone before – slowly but surely.

Although each of the main characters could be described as an archetype but all of them are sufficiently well written to transcend those archetypes. There is a subtlety at work here demonstrated by the fact that when even the obvious happens as a reader I easily accept it’s naturalness and inevitability with good humour. It’s that fuzzy warm feeling of a safe yet entertaining environment that is not that easy to create. What supports these characters further is an understanding and an appreciation of the silent era of comedy which the Timony twins are well versed in. They not only know about the slapstick comedy of Harold Lloyd and Buster Keaton, but they know how to use that knowledge to colour their character’s adventures, without resorting to the obvious homage. That understanding of that history never gets in the way of the plot or the humour. It’s left as a layer behind the story that you can investigate, appreciate or ignore without breaking the magic of what is going on in the foreground.

If you are not convinced by the strip itself then take a look here at The Night Owls in action! Seeing is believing my friends.

This is my favourite comic of the instant winners on Zuda so far. I wasn’t completely sure about this or any of the others for that matter, but picking this up for an instant win was one of the best decisions ever made at Zuda HQ and both Peter and Bobby have brought all their energy and creativity to bear on this – and it shows.

I showed this picture to Zuda regulars before and I think it warrants a second look here - Clara Bow in her boxing gloves – inspiration or synchronicity?

I have a rating system on my own site which does not describe how much I like a comic so much as it shows how ‘good’ I think a comic is across a broad range of specific elements. At the top of that pile rests this strip and for good reason. The simple story that you understand straight away, the Sunday Paper format that looks like black and white, but isn’t, the gentle layered humour and subtle characterisations, the sympathetic artwork that always services the story or the gag, the regular update schedule that compliments rather than hampers the flow of the story - all go to make this a compelling and winning formula.

Zuda is a peculiar beast since it lives or dies at the moment on the interest generated by the monthly competition. Slowly there is being added a selection of instant winners who bypass the competition and go straight to generating the sixty screens of the contract without the rigours of trying to market and win by themselves. The Timony Twins and The Night Owls are definitely one of the finds of the year and important enough for Zuda to keep it and them close to it’s ample cash-stuffed bosom. Other notable Zuda successes High Moon, Bayou and Supertron lend themselves perhaps to a more print minded audience, but The Night Owls is just a great webcomic.

Rating: ★★★★★

The Night Owls
http://www.zudacomics.com/node/152
by Peter and Bobby Timony
review by Mike Perridge
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (5 votes, average: 5 out of 5)

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Da Night Owls

Posted on October 3rd, 2008 by The Doctor in The Doctor, Uncategorized, five stars

All right, youse mugs! Lissen up ’cause I don’t wanna haveta repeat myself! If you point yer peepers at any one woik dis year, make it The Night Owls. I’m not kiddin’ ya, ya joik - read it! ‘Dis comic hasta be onea th’ funniest I’ve laughed myself sick over in one night. I gotta tellya, though, my hopes fer dis comic bein’ good was about as low as the Titanic when I saw we hadta review it, but man, what a kick inna teeth I was in for! It was so good it hit me like a stiff belt’a Old Brown Wrapper, ya know whuddImean?

What’s dat? Whaddaya mean yer surprised I can read, ya lug? Why, I oughta….you keep dat stuff up an’ you’ll be meetin’ th’ business end of my meathooks, ya get me?

Da story is set back in th’ 1920’s - nah, I wasn’t there but my granny useta tell me stories about dem times. Reminds me of dat other woik I read once…what was it called? Somethin’ about bootleggin’ cats … oh yeah, Lackadaisy. Now DAT was anudder good woik, lemme tellya. Aww now I got ramblin’ again..where was I? Oh yeah - Night Owls. Da story is about some egghead an’ his crew, goin’ out and huntin’ down all dem nasty things what go bump in th’ night. Him and his crew end up chasin’ vampires, huntin’ ghosts an’ all dat, but widdout dem fancy things on their back an’ th’ traps an’ all dat that other ghost huntin’ group had. I gotta tell ya, da guy what writes dis stuff - he’s got one wild imagination! Story was great an’ kept me on the edgea my seat da whole time. No nasty stuff in it, no cussin’ or nothin’ that would make me tell da kiddies ta hustle off ta bed before I sat down ta read it, neither. My ma, God rest ‘er an’ good church goin’ lady dat she was, why even she’d read it an’ like it - an’ dat’s sayin’ somethin’! So nonea you mugs out dere wid kids haveta worry. You can let ‘em read it an’ it won’t be no woise dan readin’ somethin’ like The Shadow.

Da art was good, too. Now I considers meself ta be a right good educated joe, comin’ outta da thoid grade like I did an’ all, but I ain’t no art critic, see? I gotta tellya, though, da guy dat draws this does a real good job. I wouldn’ta minded seein’ some color, but ya know, bein’ in black an’ white like it is, it adds somethin’ ta th’ time it’s supposed ta be in. It was good widdout bein’ too complicated, but it wasn’t sloppy neither! Spartan, I think dem eggheads up at da univoisity would call it - just enough ta get da job done. Had good detail, though, and it was like readin’ one a’ them old time comics my granddad useta lemme see in th’ papers. I tellya, my hat’s off ta dis guy.

Ya know, though, ain’t no art inna woild gonna pull yer bacon outta da fire if yer characters ain’t woith a plugged nickel. Too many comics out dere dat look like the people is just cutouts - nothin’ to ‘em, and nothin’ dat would make ya believe dat they’d actually stay around each udder, let alone woik wid’ one another. Not so here, though, lemme tellya! Da characters in dis comic are top shelf, an’ I liked ‘em. Da egghead of da group, Baxter, is a good joe. (Reminds me ‘a myself, but I don’ liketa brag or nuttin…)Doesn’t go around beatin’ people in da head wid his smarts, an’ he ain’t too shabby when it comes to mixin’ it up wid da fists, too, ya know whuddImean? He’s got some guts to him, which is more den I can say for mosta th’ eggheads ya see in dese stories. Da frail what helps him, Mindy, has got one serious jab, and ain’t afraid a’ layin’ her mitts on some lug what needs it, neither. Whew! I wouldn’t wanta get on HER bad side, lemme tellya. Even though she’s tough, she’s still a lady, an’ dat makes a lotta difference, ya know? She’s nice ta be around, insteada bein’ one of them bitter types what goes around tryin’ ta knock every man down ta prove how tough she is. She’s one tough dame, and she knows it, so she doesn’t haveta keep provin’ it. She’s got brains, too! Right off da bat she gives a Mickey Finn ta dis vampire in strip #2! Dats a frail what’s got it on da bean! Da last guy in da group, Roscoe, is da local wiseguy and probably one’a them comic relief types. (He sounds kinda familiar, too, like he’s from da old neighborhood or sumthin’….) He adds a lotta comedy to da strip widdout bein’ hokey or onea them wiseguys dat you’d wanna drop a lug on ’cause he keeps flappin’ his yap and makin’ ya look like Mickey the Dunce in fronta yer friends. Da group woiks well, too. Dere a team, an’ no one’s tryin’ ta make da udder ones look like joiks. Dey watch each udder’s backs, too, which is always a good thing. Da author made sure ta give ya some backstory ta letcha know why they’re all together, which is a good move on his part, I say. Ties up all them loose ends.

Well, I ain’t got all day ta sit here, chewin’ th’ rag wid you mugs - take my woid for it an’ check it out. I tellya, if I could give dis woik 6 or 7 stars, I’d do it! I can’t though, so dey’ll haveta be glad wid’ 5. If ya check it out, you’ll be glad ya did, and if ya DON’T like it, well, ya better not let me catch wind of it, or I’ll come give ya da woiks, ya know what I’m sayin’? (gives you a soft chuck on the chin) Now gedoudda here. I got woik ta do!

Th’ Sawbones

Rating: ★★★★★

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (6 votes, average: 5 out of 5)

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The Night Owls

by:BTimony, ptimony