The Clockwork Girl | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Arcana Studios |
Schedule | Irregular |
Format | Limited series |
Genre | see below |
Publication date | August 2007 – August 2008 |
Creative team | |
Written by | |
Artist(s) |
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Collected editions | |
The Clockwork Girl | ISBN 978-0-9809204-1-3 |
The Clockwork Girl is an all-ages/science fiction/fantasy comic series created by Sean O'Reilly and Kevin Hanna and inspired by Hanna's earlier zine "Clockwork Girls hate Electronic Boys", that ran for five issues and was published in a collected edition for the first time in 2008.
The Clockwork Girl tells the tale of a nameless robot girl who has recently been given the gift of life from her creator. While she explores the wonders of an ordinary world she meets an amazing mutant boy and they share a friendship that must overcome their warring families.
In 2008, Telefilm Canada announced that they had funded the property for a possible future film adaptation.[1] The film, The Clockwork Girl, has been released.
Characters
Main characters
- Tesla, the Clockwork Girl: (protagonist) is a young robot girl learning how to live in a world of adults. She looks at strangers like a kid in a candy store and wants to know everything about this new world around her. The character's name was inspired by inventor Nikola Tesla, and Kevin Hanna's earlier zine "Clockwork Girls hate Electronic Boys".[2]
- Huxley, the Monster Boy: the unruly creation of Doctor Dendrus, is brash and adventurous. This often gets him into predicaments that only his foolhardy adolescent fearlessness can get him out of. In his own mind he has always been cool and in control, which is to say until Tesla the Clockwork Girl turned his life upside-down. The character was named after author Aldous Huxley, and not "Darwin's bulldog" Thomas Huxley as many have assumed.
- Maddox: Huxley's best friend, who got almost killed by T-Bolt ((Scroll down for info)) and caused Wilhelm and Dendrus to trust each other.
- Wilhelm The Tinkerer: a wild eyed eccentric egomaniac and the world's most brilliant machine scientist. He blames the natural sciences for holding back the machine age with a zealous fervor and believes the Clockwork Girl is his key to Dendrus's undoing. He views the Clockwork Girl as his greatest accomplishment. It's not until she is threatened that he realizes that she is so much more.
- Doctor Dendrus: an offbeat father trying to keep up with his unconventional and untamed son, Huxley. He cares for his son a great deal but is overly protective and shelters him as much as he can. Dendrus is the Tinkerer's former friend, his chief rival and the world's greatest biologist.
Supporting characters
- T-Bolt: The Tinkerer's first machine man and biggest failure. Named after Tybalt of Romeo and Juliet.
- The Marmokeets: Vicious mutations that infest the city like rats. They are pygmy marmoset/parakeet hybrids.
Locations
All of the events of the books take place (for the most part), in the city of Harfang. Each Scientist's castle are at opposite ends of the city.
- The Mechanized Castle: The Tinkerer's mechanized fortress
- The Living Castle: Dendrus' living castle
- The Great Cypress: A giant tree that Huxley shows Tesla on their first day out together, which she later hides in for shelter.
Collected editions
The series has been collected into a hardcover volume:
- The Clockwork Girl (Arcana Comics, 2008)
- The Clockwork Girl – [3] (HarperCollins, 2011)
Awards
- The Moonbeam Award
- Silver in the Graphic Novels & Comics category for the 2008 Book of the Year Awards,[4] announced at BookExpo America by ForeWord magazine.[5]
Film adaptation
The film The Clockwork Girl was released in early 2014.[6]
Notes
- ^ "'The Clockwork Girl' Film Gets Financing From Telefilm Canada". ICV2. Retrieved July 2, 2008.
- ^ ""'"The Clockwork Girl" – Arcana's High-Tech "Romeo & Juliet"". CBR. 30 May 2007. Retrieved May 30, 2007.
- ^ The Clockwork Girl profile, samples and interview, Comic Book Resources, May 30, 2007
- ^ "2008 Foreword INDIES Winners in Graphic Novels & Comics (Adult Nonfiction)". Foreword Reviews. Retrieved 30 October 2018.
- ^ "2008 Foreword INDIES Winners Press Release". Foreword Reviews. Retrieved 30 October 2018.
- ^ IMDB The Clockwork Girl
References
- The Clockwork Girl at the Grand Comics Database
- The Clockwork Girl at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
External links
- Arcana Studio titles
- Comic book limited series
- 2007 comics debuts
- Comics characters introduced in 2007
- 2008 comics endings
- Canadian comics
- Canadian comics characters
- Science fiction comics
- Fantasy comics
- Fictional robots
- Comics about women
- Canadian comics adapted into films
- Comics adapted into animated films
- Robot comics
- Mutants in fiction
- Cultural depictions of Nikola Tesla