Showing posts with label Rare Flavours. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rare Flavours. Show all posts

Friday, October 27, 2023

Rare Flavours #1 Review

 


Writer: Ram V

Artist: Filipe Andrade

Colorists: Filipe Andrade & Inês Amaro

Letterer: Andworld Design

Cover Artists: Filipe Andrade; Rafael Albuquerque; Frany

Publisher: Boom! Studios

Price: $4.99

Release Date: October 25, 2023

 

Rubin and Mohan venture into the desert. Dilshan and Dilkush shadow the rakshasa and the filmmaker. How will this adventure shape Mo's documentary? Let’s dive into Rare Flavours #2 and find out!

 

Story

While their driver repairs his ramshackle lorry, Rubin takes out his notebook and continues his story. Less a letter than a book, he chronicles their journey. Into it, Rubin pours his longing for the café in Somarah and his concerns about Mo.

 

Rubin worries the filmmaker has lost his passion and wonders if the young man can reclaim it. Mo once made a powerful film that prompted Rubin to leave his place of safety and brave civilization. Since then, the old hunger has overwhelmed him. In taking others’ lives, Rubin put himself at risk. And for what? To find a young man who's dead to the world?

 

In Rare Flavours #2, Ram V further explores Rubin's passion for cuisine. The ageless demon adores the ingredients of traditional dishes. Their preparation becomes art, and consumption brings growth. While someone will pay for their desert excursion, Mo finally shares what soured him on life. The rakshasa seems unlikely to reform, but might Mo finds renewal?

 

Art

Filipe Andrade's wavy lines conjure a desert. Rubin and Mo share the cab with Manish. Despite his John Lennon looks, Mo's expression, posture, and movements suggest weariness. By contrast, Rubin's zeal shines through his eyes and unshakable smile. But even that palls beside their driver's glowing face. Panels provide glimpses into Manish’s experiences and ancestry. As they travel, their pursuers wear grim guises. Dilshan and Dilkush focus on the road ahead as they discuss the danger Rubin poses.

 

Bright colors give Filipe Andrade’s flowing shapes in Rare Flavours #2 a modern art appeal. Assisted by Inês Amaro, he shows their metal truck glowing with the sun’s radiance, Manish’s acclaimed ancestor, and a desert swathed in the Mathania Chilli. After their afternoon in the painted desert, a purple sky hangs over the travelers as they pause for an evening meal in a grassy field.

 

Bakasura’s commentary for Mansi fills scraps of light-beige parchment and yellow narrative boxes with black, italicized uppercase letters. Andworld Design’s attractive font also graces white dialogue balloons in Rare Flavours #2. Lowercase italics flow across panels showcasing ingredients and recipes. Vibrant lettering helps readers hear tassels blown by the wind, an engine coughing to life, and Rubin enjoying his meal while giant orange laughter explodes from a dialogue balloon.

 

Final Thoughts

Exploring the relationship between pain and purification, Rare Flavours #2 ponders what we lose when we exist solely for today.

 

Rating 8.8/10

 

For more cover art see my review at Comic Book Dispatch.

Thursday, September 28, 2023

Rare Flavours #1 Review

 


Writer: Ram V

Artist & Colorist: Filipe Andrade

Letterer: Andworld Design

Cover Artists: Filipe Andrade; Fábio Moon; Anand R.K.; & David Mack

Publisher: Boom! Studios

Price: $4.99

Release Date: September 20, 2023

 

An enormous man wearing a white suit visits an art gallery in Bandra, Mumbai. Yet the painting he gazed upon dwarfs him. Standing before the immense canvas on the waxed tile floor, he composes a letter in his head to his friend Mansi. Who is this well-dressed man, and why did he abandon his café in Somarah without telling his friend goodbye? Let’s dive into Rare Flavours #1 and find out!

 

Story

The painting shows the legendary Hindu hero Bheema attacking the rakshasa Bakasura. Determined that the rakshasa should eat no more villagers, Bheema clubs Bakasura to death. The enormous man is sad that people today remember him as an uncouth barbarian. Yet he smiles, revealing the fangs shown in the historic painting.

 

As Bakasura leaves the gallery, two men are on his trail. Dilshan kneels in an alley, sniffing the rakshasa's scent. His partner Dilkush stands behind him, his feline friend Manimeow resting on his shoulders. Both men—and perhaps also the cat—are determined to find Bakasura before he kills and devours another victim.

 

Without background knowledge of India or the Hindu epic of Bheema and Bakasura, Rare Flavours #1 is a lot to take in. Yet it’s easy to understand how Bakasura could hunger for what he once agreed to give up. Watching the centuries pass, he found comfort in TV shows celebrating food. Anthony Bourdain's death compelled him to return to the world he left behind. Yet, surrounded by temptation, his old hunger returns. It is a monstrous, overwhelming hunger: one he cannot refuse.

 

Anthony Bourdain DVD set available at Amazon.com

 

 

The rakshasa meets with a young filmmaker named Mohan in one of Bandra’s beautiful cafés. He introduces himself as Rubin Baksh and asks Mohan to take a journey with him. They could make a powerful documentary about Indian cuisine and those who weave such savory magic. That is if Mohan—who goes by Mo--agrees.

 

Art

Filipe Andrade brews Ram V's rich story with magic all his own. His loose, flowing art evokes children's book illustrations in Rare Flavours #1. He sketches buildings and crowds while rendering Mo, Bakasura, and the hunters with compelling detail. Despite his youth, the filmmaker is already tired of life. By contrast, charming, sophisticated Bakasura—or Rubin, as he now calls himself—charms with elegant attire and impeccable manners. His hunters—hardened killers--wear frowns as they weave through the bustling city. Beware the long, sharp knives they wield!

 

Filipe Andrade loads his palette with soft colors. The eye-pleasing pastels convey India's vibrant diversity. He shades without relying on gray and scatters colorful reflections on polished surfaces such as tables and floors. Dilkush and Dilshan, cast in purple and mauve, sweep like shadows through the vibrant seaside city. Yet the crowning glory of Rare Flavours #1 is the mural in the opening scene. Brushstrokes flow across Bakasura as Bheema attacks the people-eater beneath a purple, orange, yellow, and turquoise sky.

 

An Anthony Bourdain action figure? Check it out at trampt.com

 

 

Andworld Design writes Bakasura’s mental note to Mansi with black, italicized uppercase letters on scraps of light-beige parchment. This attractive font graces white dialogue balloons and mauve narrative boxes that show Dilkush’s conversation. Lowercase italics convey offscreen commentary from Bakasura--or Rubin--suffused with eloquence and reverence for how food and spices can wield magic upon the tongue.

 

Final Thoughts

Taking inspiration from a Hindu legend—and the longest epic poem ever written—Rare Flavours #1 tantalizes with its reverence for artistry as it tackles addiction and the allure of forbidden fruit.

 

Rating 8.8/10

 

For more covers see my review at Comic Book Dispatch.