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Bram Stoker's Dracula by Fernando Fernández
Bram Stoker's Dracula by Fernando Fernández










I'd say he created the greatest adaptation of both Dracula from the novel and as comic book material in history, which is a monumental feat, considering the sheer volume of Dracula adaptations published over the decades.ĭepends on which ones you are talking about. While it was originally created for the very non-obscure Spanish version of Creepy in 1982, Fernandez is not a household name among those more interested in capes and cowls where comic books are concerned, so I wanted to provide a sample of his fantastic work here. One would tend to believe film has every advantage over the comic book in terms of making the written word come alive, yet there's not a film adaptation of Dracula that has brought out the engaging, sweeping and quite eerie majesty of Stoker's writing in this way.ġ7:24:22 GMT -5 tarkintino said:The late Spanish artist/writer Fernando Fernandez had a long career of breathtaking work in comics, but its arguable none stood out like his adaptation of Bram Stoker's Dracula. He had a great eye for realistic and appropriately skewed composition when needed, easily mastering scenes as simple as characters discussing the issue, to the more dramatic, horrific conflicts throughout the story. I'd say he created the greatest adaptation of both Dracula from the novel and as comic book material in history, which is a monumental feat, considering the sheer volume of Dracula adaptations published over the decades. The late Spanish artist/writer Fernando Fernandez had a long career of breathtaking work in comics, but its arguable none stood out like his adaptation of Bram Stoker's Dracula.












Bram Stoker's Dracula by Fernando Fernández