The creator of seminal graphic novel Black Hole spins a claustrophobic story of obsession and the blurred lines between reality and fantasy in this dark masterpiece about unreciprocated ardour during the filming of a horror movie.
An arresting story of an artist's obsessions, from the beloved and award-winning author of Black Hole.
As a child, Brian and his friend Jimmy would make home movies in their yards, coaxing their friends into starring as victims of grisly murders and smearing lipstick on them to simulate blood. Now an aspiring filmmaker, he, Jimmy and new girl in town Laurie – his reluctant muse – set off to a remote cabin in the woods.
Armed with an old camera, they film a true sci-fi horror movie where humans are born of disembodied alien wombs, in homage to The Invasion of the Body Snatchers. But as Brian's affections for Laurie go seemingly unreciprocated, Brian writes and draws himself into a fantasy where she is the girl of his dreams – both his damsel in distress and his saviour.
Final Cut blurs the line between dreams and reality, imagination and perception in this astonishing look at what it truly means to express oneself through art.
Publisher: Vintage Publishing
ISBN: 9781787335219
Number of pages: 224
Weight: 1240 g
Dimensions: 290 x 220 x 26 mm
MEDIA REVIEWS
I love everything about this book: the story, the drawings, its way with all things extraterrestrial… It’s wraparound wonderful, as close to immersive as any comic could be… a book to be read and reread - Observer
Black Hole is best graphic novel of the year... One of the most stunning graphic novels yet published - TIME
Charles Burns' comics are fluid, smooth and as solidly built as a vintage TV set, but they shudder with the chill of the uncanny - New York Times
The confidence with which Burns positions himself within the larger map of other writing and art is entirely earned - New Statesman
Sugar Skull is one of the most vividly drawn and painfully and honest expositions of male guilt I’ve ever read - Observer
A striking celebration of cinema's power and a chilling acknowledgement of its limitations. - Kirkus Reviews
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