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Berlin by jason lutes
Berlin by jason lutes












berlin by jason lutes

The jazz band add to the cast with their different personalities and needs, and their solo is ultimately played in the final chapter, where a recurring dream sequence is ingeniously decoded.Ĭity of Smoke is both drier and livelier than City of Stones, drier due to the increased political discussions, and livelier due to the greater diversity of the cast and Marthe’s increasing exploration of who she is.

berlin by jason lutes

Also notable is the neat cinematic way of switching scenes by having two characters in the same panel concluding one spotlight and beginning another. He’s not the strongest at facial expressions, but the staging is excellent, posing people to good effect in busy scenes. It’s a rare page only featuring six panels, with ten far more common, yet despite Lutes packing those panels with detail, his composition ensures clarity and the eye flowing from one to the next. Brilliantly, we see what he is before learning who he is, the truth and the legend very different, and Lutes uses Josef Goebbels’ chilling, myth-building eulogy word for word.Īs before, Lutes matches the structural density with his art. Previously absent was discussion among the right, and Lutes gathers that around Horst Wessel, who provided them with their own martyr. The young teenage Silvia in particular tugs at the heart, her circumstances so deteriorated from when she was first seen with a happy family life, and Lutes contrasts her current hand to mouth existence with the idealistic debates of the well-meaning political left. We’ve followed some people over pivotal events that now come to shape their political allegiances, and others who’re hapless victims washed away in the wake of circumstance.

berlin by jason lutes

The broad cast covers all bases, with Lutes ensuring opinions and feelings don’t just represent the politically committed and the persecuted, although with the increasing polarisation of views these come into sharper focus.

berlin by jason lutes

It’s as if their roles have been reversed, he now uncertain and slightly fearful of the future, she now completely acclimatised. Marthe Müller has now spent a year in Berlin and enjoys what it can offer, while journalist Kurt Severing is increasingly concerned about the German state’s repression of individual voices. It might be expected that Lutes would begin City of Smoke by addressing the tragic ending to City of Stones, but Berlin is a graphic novel playing a long game and instead we see an American jazz band arriving in the city. Berlin is Jason Lutes’ monumental exploration of the German capital in the decade before World War II, a social consideration as 1929 becomes 1930.














Berlin by jason lutes