In heroines2d 's collection
Michel Constant, Denis Lapière, Mauro Caldi – Tome #2 – CineCittà - Comic Strip
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Mauro Caldi – Tome #2 – CineCittà

Comic Strip
1988
Ink
36 x 48 cm (14.17 x 18.9 in.)
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Case 1 zoom
Cases 2 & 3 zoom
Cases 4 & 5 zoom
Case 6 zoom
Cases 7 & 8 zoom

Inscriptions

Signée (en bas à droite) au crayon : Constant

Comment

Engagé dans les studios de CineCittà pour servir de doublure à la star masculine du moment, Mauro Caldi, jeune mécanicien italien des années 50 et pilote automobile fait la rencontre de la belle Cindy, une jeune actrice qui rêve d'Hollywood. Mais elle est aussi la fille d'un parrain, El Dottore, qui la recherche activement.

Un tête-à-tête entre Mauro et Cindy tandis qu'un autre tête-à-tête entre mafieux se déroule simultanément d'une manière plus violente. Mise en page avec Mauro Caldi en case centrale autour de laquelle se déroulent les 2 actions.

l'Italie des années 50 parfaitement rendue et un dessin de grande qualité inspiré (et digne) de Tilleux.

Publication

  • Cine Citta
  • Alpen Publishers
  • 05/1990
  • Interior page

Thematics


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About Michel Constant

Michel Constant took courses in comics at the École Supérieure des Arts Saint-Luc in Liège. He then teamed up with scenarist Denis Lapière with whom he created the series about car mechanic 'Mauro Caldi' for Éditions du Miroir. The series was later continued at Alpen publishers, and eventually revived after twenty years at Paquet in 2014. In addition, Constant and Lapière created two short stories for Tintin Reporter. From 1995, Constant drew 'Bitume', a collection of independent stories written by Michel Vandam. Early in his career, Michel Constant was inspired by the "School of Marcinelle" (Jijé, Tillieux), but along the way, he took on a caricatural realism, which reminds of the work of Charles Burns. Since 2002, Constant has worked on a regular base with writer Jean-Luc Cornette, resulting in the detective comic 'Red River Hôtel' (Glénat, 2002-2005), the humor series 'Au Centre du Nowhere' (Le Lombard, 2005-2008), the historical comedy 'Le Pygargue' (Quadrants, 2011) and the social science fiction book 'Le Sourire de Mao' (Futuropolis, 2013). He did both script and art on his 2010 one-shot 'Rue des Chiens Marins' in the collection Signé of Le Lombard. Text (c) Lambiek