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Cartoonist

(7,557 posts)
Mon Aug 24, 2015, 01:08 PM Aug 2015

Religion In The Comics - 038



This short bio comes from the pages of It Really Happened #6, cover dated December 1946. I don't know the writer, but the art is signed A.M. Froehlich.







What a great splash panel. I know this is not an accurate depiction, but is anyone surprised to see an old man in a robe holding a crucifix so that Jesus can get a good close-up to see her face burn.

I like the use of the word deluded on page 2. They even made it bold.

I am disappointed though in the lack of trial coverage. One panel and a pronouncement by another man in a robe hardly tells the tale.
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Religion In The Comics - 038 (Original Post) Cartoonist Aug 2015 OP
Fantastic artwork edhopper Aug 2015 #1
Thanks, beautiful art. As for trial coverage... onager Aug 2015 #2
Thanks edhopper Aug 2015 #3

edhopper

(35,010 posts)
1. Fantastic artwork
Mon Aug 24, 2015, 01:38 PM
Aug 2015

especially compared to much of the comic work of that period. looks more like newspaper comic strip work. I'll have to check out more of his work.

As for Joan, I was never sure if she was delusional or just made the vision stuff up?

onager

(9,356 posts)
2. Thanks, beautiful art. As for trial coverage...
Tue Aug 25, 2015, 08:17 AM
Aug 2015

Check out the movie The Messenger. (Link below) Starring that Milla Yoyo woman, directed by Luc Besson.

Some trial scenes in the movie were taken directly from the original trial transcripts.

Unfortunately that level of realism isn't consistent. The movie opens with Joan's sister being murdered and raped - in that order - which never happened.

There are a couple of good skeptical/rational themes in the flick:

(1) The French rulers know an ancient myth exists among the common people, about a peasant girl liberating France. They callously promote Joan into the part. Their attitude is: "If she accomplishes something, great. If she doesn't, all we've lost is a crazy peasant girl and a few troops." Faye Dunaway and John Malkovich are at their slimiest in these roles, and they are great.

(2) Dustin Hoffman pops up as "the Conscience" to give Joan a lesson in Skepticism 101. She thinks God gave her a sword she found in a field. The Conscience tells her somebody probably dropped it or it fell off a horse.

In just a few lines of dialogue, this scene sums up one of the big problems with religious belief - the insistence on believing in miracles, when a hundred ordinary rational explanations fit the evidence better.

Overall, IIRC, the movie goes along with the "delusional" theory of her actions. I haven't seen it in a long time and will have to fix that.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0151137/

edhopper

(35,010 posts)
3. Thanks
Tue Aug 25, 2015, 09:24 AM
Aug 2015

I know of this movie, but haven't seen it.

BTW Milla Jovovich was Besson's wife at the time.

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