The Dreamland Chronicles
The Dreamland Chronicles | |
---|---|
Author(s) | Scott Christian Sava |
Website | http://thedreamlandchronicles.com/ |
Current status / schedule | Updates Monday through Friday |
Launch date | January 5, 2006 |
Publisher(s) | Blue Dream Studios |
Genre(s) | Fantasy |
The Dreamland Chronicles is an all-ages fantasy webcomic and comic book series created by Scott Christian Sava with 3D computer graphics.[1]
Plot summary
The Dreamland Chronicles is about a college student, Alex, who returns to a realm of dreams after eight years. There he discovers his childhood friends such as Nastajia the elf princess, Paddington the rock giant, Kiwi the fairy and Felicity the catgirl. Together they battle against the evil dragon King Nicodemus;[1] in the real world, Alex must work with fellow university students Nicole (a psychology major) and Dan (his fraternal twin brother) in finding a means to influence and access events in Dreamland. Along the way, the characters in both realms become entangled in the politics of Dreamland. It is inspired by Winsor McCay's early twentieth century newspaper comic Little Nemo.[2]
Critical reaction
Publishers Weekly has described The Dreamland Chronicles as "deftly paced, sprinkled with just the right amount of action, clever suspense and innocuous romance" and described the computer generated artwork as "creat[ing] a world of beautifully detailed environments and colorful characters ... Readers raised on video games should have no trouble enjoying this superior adventure."[1]
School Library Journal gave a more mixed review, writing that "the characters have a lively sense of 'acting'" and "the settings are composed with a significant eye for detail." However, they found that "some of the characters ... look more like plastic toys than CGI characters, and that the dialogue veers between functional and hokey, and is marred by a series of elementary typographical errors. Readers initially taken in by the glossy visuals will quickly lose interest as the wooden exposition combines with the limits of the staid, mechanical layouts."[3]
The comic was nominated for four awards in the 2006 Web Cartoonist's Choice Awards. The Dreamland Chronicles also won Best Graphic Novel of 2006 in the Comics Buyer's Guide 25th Annual Fan Awards.
Books
Sava has self-published six volumes of The Dreamland Chronicles. The first, released in 2006, collects the first four chapters.[4] The second, released in 2007, collects chapters 5-8.[5] The third, released in 2009, collects chapters 9-12.[6]
About the author
Sava studied illustration at the Academy of Art University in San Francisco. In 2001 he created 3D computer art for the comic book The Lab from Astonish Comics.[7] He has also worked on video games, the Casper animated movie sequels, and computer-generated artwork for the Spider-Man: Quality of Life comic book miniseries for Marvel Comics with writer Greg Rucka.[2] In 2007 Sava and Diego Jourdan released Ed's Terrestrials, an all-ages comic about three runaway aliens and a boy, named Ed, who helps them.[8] The two also released Pet Robots, a comic book about four military robots who bond with four kids on a field trip to a toy factory.[9] Disney has picked up the rights for a Pet Robots film.[10]
References
- 1 2 3 Publishers Weekly Staff (March 10, 2008). "The Dreamland Chronicles Book Two". Publishers Weekly Reviews. p. 65.
- 1 2 Goldstone, Jeremy (August 14, 2002). "'Spidey' illustrator has stuck with it: Spider-Man comic book artwork creator a fan since childhood". Ventura County Star. p. B01.
- ↑ Russell, Benjamin (May 1, 2008). "The Dreamland Chronicles". School Library Journal: 158.
- ↑ Sava, Scott Christian (November 1, 2006). The Dreamland Chronicles Book One. Blue Dream Studios. ISBN 0-9789168-0-8. OCLC 123915817.
- ↑ Sava, Scott Christian (October 21, 2007). The Dreamland Chronicles Book Two. Blue Dream Studios. ISBN 0-9789168-3-2. OCLC 226394400.
- ↑ Sava, Scott Christian (March 11, 2009). The Dreamland Chronicles Book Three. Blue Dream Studios. ISBN 978-1-60010-309-4. OCLC 237877964.
- ↑ Szadkowski, Joseph (November 10, 2001). "'Dark Knight's bringing brighter day to evil world". The Washington Times. p. B2.
- ↑ Sampsoni, Kahari J (May 19, 2007). "WORDS AND PICTURES: Your guide to new manga, graphic novels and comics". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. p. 2FE.
- ↑ Henrickson, Eric (October 13, 2007). "All-ages comic books provide plenty of good reads for all to enjoy". The Detroit News. p. 5D.
- ↑ McNary, Dave (July 31, 2007). "Mouse traps 'Pet Robots'". Daily Variety. p. 3. Retrieved January 2, 2012.