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ToonsWare
Aug 12
By Cherise Fong

HONG KONG, China (CNN) — Are comics made to be read on cell phones, Kindles and iPods the new pulp of pop culture?

Argentinean artist Sergio Carrera's "The Eternal City" has gained fans around the world.

Argentinean artist Sergio Carrera’s “The Eternal City” has gained fans around the world.

While mobile manga has become increasingly popular and lucrative in Japan, in recent months start-ups have been mushrooming around the world to bring comics and graphic novels to both loyal fans and new audiences — all in the palm of your hand.

“I wanted to break all the barriers between comics and their potential readers,” said Hermes Pique, director of Robot Comics, a company that produces and publishes comics for mobile devices.

“In a world where 60.6 percent of the population has a mobile, and where mobiles have evolved from phones to all-purpose gadgets, mobile comics seemed the best way to start.”

Apple’s App Store, a hotbed for mobile innovation, has seen an increase in applications dedicated to reading comics, many of which are also available for other mobile platforms.

Among these, several offer digitized titles from top U.S. comics publishers such as DC Comics and IDW, while Dark Horse has even launched its own series of iPhone comics.

Comic series, like their print counterparts, are usually divided into parts, which in the App Store sell from $0.99 to a few dollars or more for graphic novels. The first installment is sometimes offered as a free preview.

The mobile Kindle reader can display e-versions of graphic novels (albeit optimized for the larger-screen Kindle DX), as can other mass-market e-readers such as Barnes & Noble and Stanza.

Independent developers have also been finding ways to get comics on to handheld devices, from applications that display comics through RSS feeds to others that convert online comics for mobile reading.

If getting the comics onto these devices is one challenge, another is to improve the on-screen experience, evolving from straightforward zoom-and-scroll browsing to more sophisticated navigation.

Some readers offer panel-to-panel transitions that appear to simulate the visual movement of reading a comic book, while other companies work with the artist to optimize each panel of the story specifically for the mobile screen.

And in France, where comics and graphic novels are known as the 9th art form, 2006 Angouleme Grand Prize winner Lewis Trondheim’s “Bludzee,” produced by Ave!Comics, will launch its daily made-for-mobile “strip” on September 1, 2009 — simultaneously in 19 languages and available for iPhone, Android, Blackberry and Nokia.

So it seems that for this generation of comic artists, interface designers and content creators of all kinds, when it comes to telling stories on mobile screens, they’re spoiled for choice.

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Jul 09

by Steve Smith , Thursday, July 9, 2009

There are a handful of media types that seem to be struggling mightily to find their proper mobile form. Intuitively, we know that formats like radio, podcasting, short-form video, and even books and magazines should map well against the portability of mobile and the enlarging, lush palette of the smart phone screen. Watching each of these media experiment with different modes of delivery and presentation is one of the unique joys of being involved in the early stages of a new technology.

In the early years of film, this sort of experimentation went on at Thomas Edison’s makeshift Black Maria movie studio in New Jersey. A decade before television became the defining post-WWII medium, CBS maintained an experimental TV broadcast schedule and lab in New York, where veteran entertainers tried to understand what kinds of information and entertainment really worked best here.

The Internet was among the first technologies that made the experimental stage very public. Watching companies and their new media ideas rise and fall was itself part of the drama of the new medium. In mobile, where the mobile Web and applications lower the barriers to entry, we are seeing a similar process work out. Sure, companies are throwing some serious money at mobile now, but in 20 years we will look back at these efforts as antediluvian. Just as no one imagined Google in 1995, the true forms of mobile media likely have not revealed themselves yet.

It is true that every new medium requires its own discrete forms of content. Throwing the Web, or TV or gaming as we know it, at phones, and expecting users to respond, is a necessary but doomed approach. When you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail. But it is just as true that emerging platforms also tend to reach back historically to retrieve even older formats to try on the new technology. Interestingly, when TV did blossom in the late 40s and early 50’s, one of its most popular formats, comedy variety, revived the conceits of vaudeville.

For entirely selfish reasons, I am rooting for the comics to enjoy a renaissance on mobile. The static but sequential art of the classic comic strip or the more modern graphic novel seems to be naturally suited to a smart phone, and companies like UClick and Genus are playing with the format across apps and Web. In many cases a single frame of comic art on an iPhone or G1 is as large or larger than it appears in its original printed format.

As we have already seen with high recall and click-through rates on mobile ads, the mobile screen focuses attention in a way that a larger, more cluttered screen does not. When I look at Will Eisner’s “A Contract with God” on Genus’s Kamikaze mobile player, I am zeroing in on the line work in a new way. Jeff Smith’s “Bone” series of graphic novels are being sold an issue at a time in the App Store, and they demonstrate how entertaining a frame-by-frame flip-through can be. Smith often has his characters talk at each other across the frame. Flipping frame to frame heightens the sequencing effect of a strip and even the surprise of the punch line more effectively than its usual presentation in a newspaper or even online. The comics exercise an economy of storytelling that seems perfect for the needs of the mobile medium.

On the mobile Web, UClick has a repository of its many licenses at GoComincs.com, from “Doonesbury” to classic “Krazy Kat.” This comics portal demonstrates unwittingly why the application format may work best for mobile comics. Every strip in the library is a bit different, and getting the frames to fill the screen is a frustrating exercise in zooming, pinching and swiping. Too often the zoomed art is poorly resolved, which ruins the real impact of the line art filling the screen. Wisely, UClick is launching a ton of comics apps where the experience is much better, but we still wait for a flexible reader that can pull in diverse kinds of art. I want my Chester Gould “Dick Tracy” and Windsor McKay “Dreams of a Rarebit Fiend” available in a single pipeline of great comics I can enjoy and share anywhere.

Arguably, the most artfully designed graphic novels do not shoehorn well into the phone format, because the artists use the entire page rather than traditional frames to communicate. Genus is trying to split the difference in a reader that can present the full page and then zoom into key sections. Other developers are using the Ken Burns pan-and-zoom effect to bring us through a graphic novel. DC Comics translated the entire 12-issue “Watchmen” comics into “motion comics” that rejiggered the frames for mobile animation and added voice narration. I found them captivating, if not a real replacement for the original experience.

Ultimately, we want to see whether the audience and the medium can support comics made expressly for mobile. The frame-by-frame presentation, the multimedia layers, and the timing a mobile platform allows arguably could inspire a different kind of strip. A mobile comic might not be a strip at all. It could be a continuous linear flow that the artist adds to each day or week. Obviously, the one-panel comic is perfect for mobile, but why not add sound and a touch of animation? One company, Ringtales, has been doing this for The New Yorker cartoon for a while.

As I started by saying, my interest in promoting mobile comics is entirely selfish. I am a shameless devotee of the art (note my email address) because I think marrying art and language is uniquely powerful. That is precisely why I think mobile marketers miss a tremendous opportunity to learn from the format. If mobile ad creatives want to understand what is possible on handsets in terms of leveraging art, the frame, timing, story arc, etc., they could do worse than to study the comic strip as it evolves here.

Why is a “landing page” a “landing page?” Shouldn’t it be a launch pad to a story arc that makes best use of the display, the screen resolution, the user focus of the mobile experience? Why would you want to have your audience lean back to watch a clip, when they could lean in to interact with a visual story? Are photographs really the best way to convey information or involve the user in all cases?

There may well be an art of mobile storytelling available to marketers, and the odds are that experiments like mobile comics will scout that territory more effectively than simply waiting for the mobile banner ad to evolve.

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