Most have heard the story of the Carthaginian general Hannibal leading elephants across the Alps to face the Romans. Writer Brendan McGinley wants you to see it.
"There’s already plenty of good prose about Hannibal, (but) no good visual medium for a story that crackles with so many unforgettable images, like elephants on the Alps or Mago Barca spilling dead Romans’ rings on the Senate floor,” he said. "Maybe Vin Diesel’s long-stalled film will change that; Victor Mature’s sure didn’t.”
McGinley and artist Mauro Vargas, along with colorist Andres Carranza, bring the Hannibal story to life — with some humorous asides — re-enacting the second Punic War on the Shadowline Web comics page, www.shadowlinecomics.com/webcomics.
Vargas "really defines and expresses his characters; you need that where history meets comedy,” McGinley said.
McGinley said the trickiest part of creating "Hannibal Goes to Rome” is sorting which Carthaginian did what.
McGinley meshes historical accounts to create the tale, which he then passes on to Vargas to draw. "The historians and artist make it easy for me; all I have to do is throw a little observational humor into the mouths of the poor schlubs caught up in events,” he said.
"Hannibal Goes to Rome” was first a candidate on DC Comics’ Zuda site (www.zudacomics.com). Zuda is a site created to seek fresh talent. After competing on Zuda, McGinley hooked up with Shadowline’s Jim Valentino, who was looking to launch some Web comics.
McGinley said the trickiest part of creating "Hannibal Goes to Rome” is sorting which Carthaginian did what. "There are so many Hannos, Hannibals, Hasdrubals and Giscos!”