igenlode: The pirate sloop 'Horizon' from "Treasures of the Indies" (Default)
Igenlode Wordsmith ([personal profile] igenlode) wrote in [community profile] vicomte_de_chagny 2020-04-27 10:28 pm (UTC)

Unless the artist of the top cover is really talented and original, I'd guess that they probably are copied from some kind of photo, because they're just too realistic otherwise. Not one fan artist in a thousand can draw an individual face in a random pose without a 'reference' to work from, although quite a few can do very good reproductions from the same stock picture (and in the days of screencaps and DVDs, they're not limited to the same handful of recognisable publicity shots any more -- there were a couple of Blake/Avon headshot poses that turn up again and again...)

That Christine actually looks familiar to me, but I can't think from where. (I'm thinking Spanish/Italian for some reason -- Frida Kahlo style. And it would go with the rose behind the ear.)

Could it be... the Mystery Legends game?

https://ladycdaae.livejournal.com/10921.html

No, apparently not (although the Raoul is distinctly similar, save that this one definitely doesn't have long hair, and his beard is more substantial.) And anyway, that zine predates the game.



Looking like David Bowie (and it's more than 'somewhat') is *not* a good thing in that context; he's looking condescending and self-confident, and Christine is looking terrified and pleading -- not dreamy and lost in a sea of fairy-tale magic as the text claims, but then the narrator is clearly a paranoid lunatic whose conclusions appear to bear zero relationship to what he is actually observing :-p

(I mean, seriously, he is looking at Raoul and explicitly seeing purity and innocence and protectiveness, and jumping from that to the conclusion that he has the perfect face for seduction (which tells us more about Erik's thought processes than Raoul's), and jumping from *that* to the conclusion that he is a demon full of vile schemes who only lusts after Christine in order to despoil her body. Based on... nothing, so far as the reader can see. I don't think the author realises that her protagonist is coming across as obsessively delusional -- entirely in character for Erik, of course, but one has a sneaking suspicion that we are assuming to be accepting Erik's statements quite literally.)

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