Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Complete Crepax #2

Coleção Crepax: A Astronave Pirata e Outras Histórias

Rate this book
Em meio a batalhas espaciais, androides e sonhos molhados, conheça as mais loucas incursões do mestre Guido Crepax pela ficção científica!

Principal criação do artista italiano que reinventou as HQs no velho continente, a fogosa fotógrafa de moda manteve seus leitores apaixonados por décadas com suas estranhas aventuras, nas quais transita entre consciente e inconsciente, realidade e fantasia, medo e desejo. Agora, Valentina está de volta em mais um encadernado da coleção definitiva de seu autor! Desta vez, ela terá que lidar com uma sonda cósmica capaz de replicar qualquer criatura terrestre, com um silencioso astronauta que apareceu no jardim, com as implacáveis guerreiras vindas de Mercúrio e, é claro, com seus próprios delírios libidinosos.

Reunindo alguns dos mais escandalosos affairs de Crepax com a engenhosa ficção científica das décadas de 1960 e 1970, Coleção Crepax: A Astronave Pirata e Outras Histórias traz pela primeira vez ao Brasil o álbum A Astronave Pirata, uma space opera nada convencional, estrelada por um bando de bucaneiros intergalácticos em luta contra o sistema, descendentes de personalidades como Louis Armstrong, Leon Trótski e Francis Drake.

Na chamada “saga das fábulas robóticas”, composta por A Força da Gravidade, Valentina de Botas e Marianna Vai ao Campo, encontramos Valentina internada em um hospital psiquiátrico, onde uma das pacientes jura estar sendo ameaçada de assassinato. Já em Belinda Contra os Rouba-Discos, conhecemos uma nova heroína, a gata radical Belinda, que, em sua moto envenenada, não vai dar sossego à infame gangue de criminosos que vem assaltando todas as danceterias e lojas de discos da cidade.

São nove histórias nas quais o autor abusa da metalinguagem e explora todos os limites da narrativa visual, discutindo temas como existencialismo, arte contemporânea e música pop se utilizando de alienígenas, robôs e monstros da imaginação. Uma viagem pela mente inquieta de um dos mais ousados criadores que os quadrinhos mundiais já presenciaram!

O segundo lançamento da Coleção Crepax chega em capa dura, com verniz localizado, mais de 400 páginas no papel couché de alta gramatura, prefácio do editor italiano Franco Cavallone, diversos paratextos explorando a obra de Crepax e até mesmo uma entrevista exclusiva com a própria Valentina.

412 pages, Hardcover

First published January 24, 2017

Loading...
Loading...

About the author

Guido Crepax

418 books87 followers
Guido Crepax (born Crepas, 1933-2003) was an Italian illustrator and comics author, considered one of the most influential cartoonists of the second half of the 20th century. He is notably remembered for his sophisticated black and white art, as well as his dreamlike storylines, often involving a significative dose of erotism.
Crepax was born and raised in Milan, the son of famed cellist Gilberto Crepas. He graduated in Architecture in 1958, then started a successful career in illustration, mostly for advertisement and record covers.
Crepax began making comics in the middle of the 60's, particularly for the Italian magazine 'Linus'. He is best known for the Valentina series of stories. Originally introduced as a side character in the sci-fi story The Curve of Lesmo (1965), Valentina is a fictional photographer from Milan. She is a cultured strong woman, with sophisticated art and fashion tastes, left-wing political ideals and a marked sexual curiosity. Valentina quickly became a staple of European counterculture of the late 60s and early 70s. The series run for thirty years, until 1995, with the titular character aging in real time.
Over the decades Crepax created other female characters, such as Belinda, Anita, Bianca, Giulietta, usually used as protagonists of erotic comics. His other works include a number of comic book adaptations of erotic novels, like Emmanuelle, Justine, Venus in Furs, Story of O, as well as horror classics Dracula, Frankenstein, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
15 (27%)
4 stars
25 (46%)
3 stars
9 (16%)
2 stars
4 (7%)
1 star
1 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Tom Ewing.
710 reviews83 followers
December 28, 2017
Nobody draws bodies - albeit often the same body - quite like Guido Crepax: elongated, curving, twisting, in cat-like, languid motion. This humungous collection of his 60s and 70s sci-fi work is a visual treat, at its best in the many bizarre, baroque dream sequences where Crepax gets to invent strange creatures and even stranger bondage gear. Story-wise... well, it's a collection of its acid-soaked time, full of elliptic tales of slippery identity: protagonist Valentina is as much a new wave SF icon as Jerry Cornelius, and just as dated to actually read now. Still, Crepax' work comes to life when she shows up - the exhausting stretch of space pirate adventure with her absent is testament to that.
Profile Image for Bill Wallace.
1,398 reviews63 followers
April 6, 2017
Sometimes when I consider the advantages of moving entirely to electronic books, I remember the sheer visceral kick of reading a volume like this and realize there simply is no comparison. The size, the print quality, even the physical weight add a dimension to the experience of reading that no e-book will ever approach. Reading (or re-reading) these masterpieces of sexy comic surrealism in this format is a vivid experience that goes beyond the simple interaction of eye and object. At their best, Crepax's dream fables approach the ineffable quality of great art, the expression of the subconscious in concrete, playful lines. Even when they fall short, they're enormous fun. I think my favorite piece here is Valentina and the Space Pirates, where Crepax's earlier, crazy space opera becomes a children's book and a child's dream, albeit one too erotic to be comfortable.

The additional material at the back of the book has a couple of little slips that really are inexcusable in a book of this quality, but they do not detract from the original material one iota. I wish Fantagraphics would publish two or even three of these a year.
Profile Image for Lily.
1,164 reviews42 followers
October 3, 2020
I'm a sucker for black and white illustration and these Italian 60s dream-world sci-fi elaborate fantasies are shockingly beautiful. Elaborate animal and BDSM sexuality abounds, and while there isn't much to the plot, they are strange and interesting
Profile Image for nouhaila Elkhat.
42 reviews2 followers
January 1, 2023
And here I am again screaming about how beautiful this book is illustrated like my God I'm so thankful that Crepax existed he was a master.
Again the plot and the writing are not the best thing you might not get intrigued by them but I ignored that because the art is off the charts
Profile Image for Andy.
Author 2 books8 followers
May 20, 2019
The Billy Ireland Library and Museum at The OSU has volumes 3 & 4 of the complete works of Crepax. There's a lot to go through.
Profile Image for Kaya.
309 reviews70 followers
Did Not Finish
August 21, 2021
Absolutely mesmerizing but not in the mood for sci-fi/fairytale comics right now
Profile Image for Rick Ray.
3,548 reviews43 followers
August 13, 2023
The second handsome collection of Crepax comics by Fantagraphics features mostly "Valentina" stories such as "The Force of Gravity", "Valentina in Boots", "Marianna in the Country", "The Time Eater", "Reflection", "The Pirate Spaceship" and "Valentina the Pirate". While the first volume was mostly a sample of many of Crepax's horror comics, Volume 2 collects an array of dream-world surrealist sci-fi stories.

"The Force of Gravity" follows Valentina's ensuing post-traumatic psychosis following the "The Subterraneans" adventure collected in the previous volume. Valentina has been committed for psychiatric evaluation following her captivity at the hands of the subterranean panther men, and "The Force of Gravity" depicts Valentina's various deliriums including her floating through immaculately designed buildings and serving as a footstool for a king. The story notes describes "The Force of Gravity" as "Little Nemo in S&M Land" which is incredibly apt. While visually stunning, this is also the most disjointed of the various stories collected in here and requires an awkwardly constructed epilogue to piece things together.

"Valentina in Boots", "Marianna in the Country" and "Reflection" follow a more recovered Valentina who capably navigates the world of fine art and fashion, but continues to experience episodes of blended realities tinged with psychoerotica and classic sci-fi imagery. Crepax is clearly influenced by filmmakers like Kubrick and Tarkovsky, but also by classic sci-fi comics like "Barbarella" by Jean-Claude Forest. Indeed, "The Time Eater" mostly seems to be a story set up to pay an homage to a classic "Barbarella" panel as the punchline. The use of erotic comic heroines throughout Crepax's large body of work does appear to tribute the other works that feature women in peril in circumstances of surrealist nightmares and sci-fi fantasies. The male gaze is very apparent in these comics, but it's not necessarily a bad thing - it's just that much of genre fiction has largely been male centered and thus Crepax's homages end up being consistent to what came before.

The one-two punch of "The Pirate Spaceship" and "Valentina the Pirate" follows a swashbuckling space opera being read by Valentina to her son. Here, Crepax is able to explore a more stereotypical piece of speculative fiction with some bits of pop culture tributes to things like "Flash Gordon". Following "The Pirate Spaceship", Valentina becomes a self-insert into the pirate adventure, but it also ends up being a meta story where Valentina herself speaks about her own thoughts on her creator, Guido Crepax. The blending of the genre fiction story with a meta narrative about Valentina as a character allows the readers a small peek into Crepax's psychology regarding the use of women in peril and the excess of sexualized imagery.

The final story collected in this volume is "Belinda vs. the Vinylvores" which is yet another tribute to Jean-Claude Forest's "Barbarella" comics along with homages to classic chase/road films. The only story that doesn't feature "Valentina" also has the most experimental feel to it here, with much heavier lines being used and denser panels overall.

This is yet another incredible foray into the minds of one of the great European comics masters - one who is perfectly comfortable soaking in influences from other artistic masters, but ultimately creates something wholly unique in aesthetic and tone. There aren't many comics like Crepax's, so any fan of the medium owes it to themselves to try at least one of his stories.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews