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Formigueiro

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Alguns anos após começar a série de revistas LOSE, Michael Deforge se firmou como uma das vozes mais importante dos quadrinhos alternativos canadenses. Seu estilo sinuoso, confiante e impetuoso causou um verdadeiro choque no mundo dos quadrinhos por sua estética única e madura. Desde suas páginas iniciais, Formigueiro emerge o leitor num mundo de existencialismo sombrio, com falsos profetas, guerras injustas e oficiais corruptos, conforme segue a vida dos habitantes de uma colônia de formigas sob o ataque de suas vizinhas, as formigas vermelhas.

72 pages, Hardcover

First published January 28, 2014

13 people are currently reading
1592 people want to read

About the author

Michael DeForge

70 books424 followers
Michael DeForge lives in Toronto, Ontario. His comics and illustrations have been featured in Jacobin, The New York Times, Bloomberg, The Believer, The Walrus and Maisonneuve Magazine. He worked as a designer on Adventure Time for six seasons. His published books include Very Casual, A Body Beneath, Ant Colony, First Year Healthy, Dressing, Big Kids, Sticks Angelica, Folk Hero and A Western World.

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5 stars
951 (40%)
4 stars
818 (35%)
3 stars
404 (17%)
2 stars
117 (5%)
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35 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 231 reviews
Profile Image for karen.
4,012 reviews172k followers
May 13, 2021
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i don't know why i didn't love this book. i should have - it's about ants and war and the despair of the overlooked:

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and conquest:

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and the big questions; the things that divide us, the impossibility of communication

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but also gruesome horrible death

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and these kind of richard scarry-gone-bad overview shots like rarrrrrrrrr

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and pretty endpapers:

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which are all good things!

but then there are these other things that just kind of grossed me out. yes, i KNOW i read monsterporn and i should be totally immune to this kind of shit, but i still think this is gross:

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gross.

and i didn't really respond to the artwork the way i thought i would. still - i enjoyed many of the individual story-threads that make up this book as a whole, and even though i think it ended a little abruptly, what do i know?? NOTHING!! I KNOW NOTHING!!!

if you like ant-on-ant action, whether it be humping or warfare, maybe this is the book for you!

and enjoy the giant ant-vagina, you freak!!!

come to my blog!
Profile Image for Jan Philipzig.
Author 1 book312 followers
July 26, 2016
Goodness gracious! What was that?? And why do I feel so weird?!? If David Lynch ever directed a movie for Disney, I guess the result would be the movie equivalent of this comic book: cute, candy-colored, beautiful, mysterious, surreal, enigmatic, fearless, subversive, dark, obsessive, merciless, disturbing, brutal, deranged, and more than a little painful. An artfully delivered punch in the gut - what more could you ask for?
Profile Image for Sam Quixote.
4,809 reviews13.4k followers
August 31, 2015
Ant Colony is a subversive look at Western society through the prism of anthropomorphised ants. A couple of gay ants have relationship troubles; everyone’s bothered by the repetitive drudgery of their work and the seeming pointlessness of keeping their Queen happy; a father gives bad advice to his son regarding an earthworm leading to his son becoming a prophet(!); there’s an ant-hunt to catch a serial-killing spider; and war with the red ants, a neighbouring colony, begins.

This was my first Michael DeForge comic and, having now finished it, I’m not encouraged to rush back for more. Ant Colony has an interesting look to the art - it’s very colourful, the creatures are designed weirdly, with a dog face for a spider, and a cheerful limo-look to the centipede, and the ants all look like anything but ants - but DeForge’s various rambling plotlines don’t really go anywhere.

The kid with the earthworm story is a lot like the Itchy & Scratchy parody of Disney’s The Sorcerer’s Apprentice where Scratchy chops up Itchy so many times Itchy becomes a vapour which Scratchy inhales and dies. A similar thing happens when the kid blends the earthworm and inhales it because earthworms in this world can’t die. Then the kid becomes a prophet or something to the bees and… that’s it. Wha…?

The ants fight the red ants because… that’s what they do. And that’s what humans do, fight each other, and that’s the point, isn’t what we do all so silly, etc. The gay couple fight and break up and so what. DeForge’s point seems to be life is stupid and pointless and the ants are the humans, etc. We’ve all read books with a similar nihilistic outlook so I’m not sure what makes DeForge’s one any better especially as he doesn’t provide any original insight. I didn’t crack a smile but maybe some people found this hilarious because they’re... ants?

I tried reading this 6 months ago and gave up because I was so bored. I forced myself through the whole thing this time around and, yup, boring again. DeForge is a very poor storyteller whose book feels as pointless to read as the ants’ lives. The unique character designs are imaginative but the writing is immensely tedious.
Profile Image for Tony Vacation.
423 reviews343 followers
June 25, 2014
With Ant Colony, Michael DeForge has served me exactly the kind of graphic novel that I love to chomp, chew, swallow and smack over. A veritable feast for the sequential art gourmet with a palate for the bizarre and existential à la Werner Herzog’s Aguirre, the Wrath of God and Heart of Glass. Starting off as an offbeat, slice-of-life story about a black ant colony that could have been conceived by the painter Francis Bacon, events then take a ruinous turn during the second course, as war is waged with a psychotropic-crazed colony of red ants. The third and final dish takes the form of a surreal quest narrative, giving our rag-tag party of insectile players a chance to reevaluate their purpose in life outside the context of being a complacent member of myrmic society. Madness, same-sex relationships, gender inequality, bug banging, theology, violence, debauchery, parenting and fate are all tackled in a charmingly disturbed philosophical fashion. Plus, where else are you going to find spiders that look like they came out of a PCP-fueled nightmare of Walt Disney’s?
Profile Image for S̶e̶a̶n̶.
982 reviews588 followers
August 20, 2019
This included everything I appreciate in a graphic novel: humor, pathos, absurdity, subversion, social deconstruction, bizarre mythology, and anthropomorphized insects.
134 reviews34 followers
March 6, 2016
It's possible people thought I was a crazy person as I cracked up reading this on the Metro. The drawings are mostly simple panels of stick-like ant and bug figures, but the characters are creatively designed and well composed and you'll find yourself caring about their doomed attempts to find community as their colony falls apart around them. And every so often the artist throws in a huge one or two page panel that is just gorgeous to look at. I especially loved the gross and psychedelic design of the earth goddessy queen of the colony and the horrific large-scale battle panels. The writing offers a hilariously bleak examination of relationships, war, and existence. In the bug world (as in our own) no one is safe from random, horrible violence and a stray odor can change how you view a loved one forever.
Profile Image for Lee Klein .
913 reviews1,061 followers
May 9, 2015
LOLs early on and full-page Boschian panels of battles with red ants. The story broke apart but not the art. I met the author a few years ago at a book release party for one of his friends who played in a band with a friend of mine. Of all the books in the store devoted to comics and graphic novels etc, I was most attracted to one that turned out to be his. Been meaning to look at his stuff ever since. His drawing is unmistakably his own at a glance.
Profile Image for Dave Schaafsma.
Author 6 books32.2k followers
September 22, 2015
Ants, or ant-like creatures and other bug like creatures. DeForge obsessively creates this pretty detailed ant world with sex and politics and war and death, a world… which is also bizarre and gross and surreal at times.
Profile Image for Luca Suede.
69 reviews64 followers
May 20, 2021
Weird & hilarious, gay ants navigating the end of the world. Made fun of cops too! What’s not to love?
Profile Image for Erica.
1,474 reviews498 followers
May 16, 2016
This is like a really dark, adult episode of Adventure Time only with black ants, red ants, bees, spiders, and limousine centipedes.

The illustrations are somewhat creepy, the black ants are not cute like real black ants but look more like mutated little NoFaces from "Spirited Away." The red ants look a little more like ants in that they have big ol' mandibles and giant eyes on their bulbous heads but the similarities end there. The spiders are freaky with their huge, open-mothed '30's-cartoonish dog heads and their legs-into-bodies-to-mate ways. It all borders on fever-dreamish and it was weirdly compelling; I couldn't stop reading/looking.

In a way, it's comforting to think that even an orderly, peaceful black ant colony has all the same problems as a disorderly, disgruntled human society, down to the disturbing and unpleasant yet highly-resilient sociopath and hopeless ever afters.

Profile Image for Laura.
1,031 reviews33 followers
March 3, 2017
This book is SO WEIRD. I think I loved it? But if someone told me they hated it, I'd be like "yeah."

Also, I knew it would be super dark and existential and gross, but I was surprised to find myself laughing out loud a lot. What does that say about me?
Profile Image for Troy.
300 reviews191 followers
September 9, 2016
I think the art world and the literary world are both destitute and decrepit, locked between the frivolous gambling idiocy of the market, and the hidebound conservative immovability of the academy. MFAs, best seller lists, and global art fairs have left us with pallid ghouls instead of vibrant art and books.

Thankfully, the comic world isn't like that. I go to a comic book fair (albeit a fair that focuses on the so-called "literary" and/or "artistic") and I am continually blown away. Every few years a whole horde of new talent springs up with new ways of approaching and making comics.

DeForge, right now, is one of those "new talents." Over and over again he surprises me with both his experimentation and his skill at weaving readable comics. He's restless in trying out new things, and smart enough to keep it fun. He knows the history of the medium and is constantly mining it for surprising viewpoints. Once again, he comes up with a new book, a fantastic new story, and new formal experiments that move the story and push the medium.

Literature and the art world might be in a stage of suspended animation, but comics, thankfully, are alive and kicking ass. Maybe it's because there's neither money to be made nor institutional positions to be had.
Profile Image for Peacegal.
11.7k reviews102 followers
February 22, 2017
4.5 stars -- This is your ant farm on drugs. Any questions?

Like many of the best aspects of art and life, ANT COLONY is difficult to describe. Human nature, war, and pettiness are examined through the use of fever-dream imagery of ants and other insects. I love all things weird, and I found ANT COLONY absolutely compelling. Those not attracted to the surreal aren't likely to be quite so amused, however.

I did dock this one-half a star because I thought that a small number of scenes--most notably the "breeding the queen" panels, seemed to exist mainly to be gross and shocking, as other reviewers have noted. However, when DeForge strikes the right balance, ANT COLONY is absolutely on.
Profile Image for Ash Ponders.
124 reviews13 followers
February 7, 2014
Instantly enthralling. I too want to fuck a living thing as it lies trapped in a spiderweb.
Profile Image for Elizabeth A.
2,155 reviews119 followers
February 26, 2015
I found this graphic novel surreal, dark, and gross in parts, and yet I could not look away. It's the story of a civilization writ small: war, corruption, sex, angst, ennui, the search for meaning, them versus us, gender politics, murder, etc. all set in an ant colony. The art is creepily good - I especially loved the spiders, and was more than a little disturbed by the queen illustrations. My fave parts include an ode to the Lion King, the 300 style battle scenes, and the final bucket list. There are multiple narrators in this story, and I found it rather male-centric, but it is an interesting and colorful read nonetheless.
Profile Image for Raina.
1,718 reviews162 followers
February 27, 2015
Vibrant illustrations, but I ultimately didn't connect.
I think I was expecting something a little more accessible and anthropomorphic.
I mean, I'm looking at a page with images of a blender and a baseball bat. And it's getting all kinds of acclaim.
I'm coming out nonplussed.
Profile Image for Mel.
465 reviews98 followers
August 22, 2016
To put it simply, this is one of the best comics I have read in a while. I enjoyed it immensely; and read the whole thing in one sitting. Great artwork that is very unique, and an excellent, surreal story. 5 stars and best reads pile.
Profile Image for Sam.
217 reviews25 followers
September 2, 2016
Meh, between one and two stars. Not really funny, not really graphically beautiful, not really interesting, but it is weird and original.
Profile Image for Doug.
2,568 reviews928 followers
December 16, 2022
3.5, rounded up.

I prefer DeForge's collections, like this one, that are all of a piece, rather than individual cartoons or compilations of short pieces. This is still bizarro, however.
Profile Image for Chris Browning.
1,498 reviews17 followers
December 21, 2025
A masterpiece, wayward and strange and occasionally surprisingly haunting and melancholy. It’s beautifully drawn and somehow the text and narrative mirror the oddness of the images. It’s quite something
Profile Image for federico garcía LOCA.
286 reviews37 followers
July 2, 2022
Inspirational, sensational, gay gay gay, dreamy, deeply jarring and confrontational, loved it all!
Once I saw the centipede I was like strap in lil Kob you’re gonna love this shit!!
I have so many whirling thoughts about the last few haunting scenes.
Profile Image for Kurt.
324 reviews36 followers
August 28, 2016
I loved ANT COLONY because it defied me. I assumed as it began that anthropomorphized ants would stand in for the foibles of the human condition and I would be left with a brightly colored sit-com that I’d likely grow weary of before the end. Despite reading a great review, rarely am I enthralled by animals acting human so at best I was kinda hoping for a brightly colored Seinfeld episode. Instead I stumbled into a dazzling mixture of many things I love: Yellow Submarine meets Animal Farm with the dark touches of David Lynch and the light touches of early Woody Allen with Joan Miro attempting pop art and Albert Camus trying to act silly. Took a few pages before I let go and trusted the author—I may have actually been half way through before I let myself realize just how much fun I was having—alternately laughing and being grossed out. Certainly not for everyone, would be less surprised if someone hated it than if they had no opinion at all. The story is less about ants acting human than it is revealing how much of being human is still baseline animalistic. Like the characters of ANT COLONY we are searching for something we can rarely define with legs hopelessly shortened by our lack of empathy, self-awareness and imagination. These bigger themes are couched in art work that seems at first childish (or at least for children) but soon veers into the grotesque and surreal often reminding me of 60’s psychedelic poster art—something very much in my wheelhouse. While ANT COLONY reminded me of many things, it felt like a wholly unique creation.
Profile Image for Titus.
429 reviews56 followers
July 7, 2019
A few weeks before reading Ant Colony, I watched Antz for the first time since I was a kid. I quickly understood that Antz was in fact a film for adults, masquerading as a kids’ movie. In this respect, Ant Colony is kind of like Antz dialled up to 100. On the one hand, it’s a lot more explicitly adult: it addresses darker, heavier existential themes and deals a lot more directly with sexuality, often in a bizarrely grotesque manner. On the other hand, its vibrant, simplistic visual style brings to mind Adventure Time, or even a pre-school picture book: all bold lines and bright, block colours. In comparison, Antz looks gritty and realistic.

Of course, there are limits to the comparison with Antz. Ant Colony starts out as series of two-page vignettes, which feel only loosely linked to one another through shared setting and characters. As such, the beginning of the book feels like a collection of comic strips more than the start of a cohesive graphic novel: a series of snapshots illustrating life in and around the titular colony. By the mid-point an overarching narrative does emerge – and events tend to flow into one another more directly than at the start – but the story remains meandering and whimsical. There is no grand quest, spectacular climax or satisfying resolution. In that sense, despite all its surrealism, Ant Colony is a fundamentally realistic work: its characters wander through life, reacting to events and searching for meaning, but there is none to be found.
Profile Image for DeAnna Knippling.
Author 174 books282 followers
August 21, 2018
A colony of ants that is both disturbingly antlike and horrifyingly human tries to maintain its peaceful existence in the face of various challenges, managing to feel like a parable for modern life and a warning about taking middle-class suburbia for granted.

What a weird book. The author works for Adventure Time as an illustrator, I believe (not one of the main ones), and says it's the ideal day job. This book is much stranger than Adventure Time, but you can probably see the resemblance. The plot is semi-episodic, a kind of ant apocalypse. Some of it makes sense, as in, "Oh, ants do that!" Other parts, you're not sure if that's an ant thing, a human thing, or just plain surreal. It's strangely effective.

I recommend this for people who love All Things Weird. Like, try it if you like Jeff VanderMeer or Blood & Guts in High School. Weird weird.
Profile Image for Joey Alison Sayers.
Author 12 books29 followers
February 21, 2015
This book falls into a special subset of graphic novels that I refer to with the highly-technical term of "weird". I used to avoid weird comics due to some unconscious bias. Happily, though, I've started to give them a shot. Not surprisingly, there are some winners and some losers. Ant Colony is an overwhelming "win". Once I got over my initial knee-jerk complaints ("ants are female!", "they have six legs!") and remembered that I'm not looking for sources for an academic paper on arthropods, I realized what a jewel this comic is. Michael DeForge knows how to tell a good, funny, compelling story filled with engaging characters. Bring on the weird comics!
Profile Image for André Habet.
436 reviews18 followers
December 6, 2019
oph. this was cutting edge when i first read it, but now so much of it feels like my early 20's—shock and morbidity with little else to it. I love De Forge's illustration styles, but here there was no feeling to engage in other than some worn out sophomoric exploration of nihilism. Big Kids, which I also recently read, holds up quite a bit more. I just don't like snark much anymore is maybe what it is.
Profile Image for Sonic.
2,379 reviews66 followers
July 20, 2015
Anthropomorphisized (is that a word?) insects (and arachnids) in weird whimsical scenarios that kind of culminate collectively (kinda like an ant colony) ...

but what I really liked was how WEIRD this is!

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