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TechnoTV - The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: The Black Dossier

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List Price: $19.99
Our Price: $8.00
Your Save: $ 11.99 ( 60% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: WildStorm
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 741 EAN: 9781401203078 ISBN: 1401203078 Label: WildStorm Manufacturer: WildStorm Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 200 Publication Date: 2008-11-04 Publisher: WildStorm Release Date: 2008-11-04 Studio: WildStorm
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Fun, but a little wordy Comment: I love Alan Moore, but he does need to learn that sometimes less is more when it comes to writing prose. He does go on. And on. The more classic graphic novel parts of this collection come as a huge relief after some of the small print endlessly verbose essays, but no matter what, I got hours of enjoyment out of this and would buy it again.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Horrible Comment: Apparently, the authors decided they wanted to make a bad and tasteless comic, and they succeeded. Lots of gratuitous, bad and tasteless sex. Only half of the book is a readable comic, the rest is either incomprehensible, bad, or pages of unreadable text.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Not the Author's Best Work Comment: This did not live up to the high standard set by the previous 2 volumes in the series. In fact, it doesn't seem like Alan Moore even tried very hard. This is not so much a story as it is a bunch of loosely connected ephemera that was probably a lot of fun to create.
Don't get me wrong - there are some real gems in here. Short stories that are more or less self-contained which will delight anyone familiar with literature of the 1920's and '30's (the crossover of P.G. Wodehouse and H.P. Lovecraft was brilliant). It's not a worthless volume, just not much of a plot overall and it is in no way a satisfying sequel to the second volume.
Customer Rating:      Summary: worst of the LOEG graphic novels... Comment: I usually don't write these reviews much, but I had to have my say. I felt bamboozled after reading this graphic novel. The first two had a sense of adventure, imagination and took the reader on a unusual journey that was just plain fun along the way, at least for myself. After reading the Black Dossier I felt that the writers and artists threw this together in a couple of days to receive a hefty paycheck. No imagination or fun, it was like watching a "made for tv" movie. This will probably be my last Alan Moore graphic novel; if the rest of his career he throws up this "dreck" I will wait for more of his stories to be made into movies, at least then I may have only wasted 4 dollars at the video store instead of almost [...] bucks.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Rabbit is good, rabbit is wise. Comment: I'm not going to go into the detail that some of the other reviewers have. I will merely say, the 2 star reviews are spot on. This book has some serious issues and isn't worth the price. If you buy it in the bookstore, it even comes wrapped in plastic, so you can't open it up and see what a piece of meat you're getting.
Bad show, move on Alan.
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Editorial Reviews:
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England in the mid 1950s is not the same as it was. The powers that be have instituted...some changes. The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen have been disbanded and disavowed, and the country is under the control of an iron-fisted regime. Now, after many years, the still youthful Mina Murray and a rejuvenated Allan Quatermain return and are in search of some answers. Answers that can only be found in a book buried deep in the vaults of their old headquarters, a book that holds the key to the hidden history of the League throughout the ages: The Black Dossier. As Allan and Mina delve into the details of their precursors, some dating back centuries, they must elude their dangerous pursuers who are Hell-bent on retrieving the lost manuscript... and ending the League once and for all.
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