as affordable/reliable(???) as it is today. Back to a time
when we had to rely on various reading materials to get informed, aroused
and ultimately entertained.
Most of the comics from those EXTREME era were dark, gritty
and violent. It was presented in a variety of ways and we
loved every bit of it.
Speaking of unconventional comics, Drey by Mr. Toni M. Bernal
discontinued Disney Time under Manila Bulletin.
Yes, Manila Bulletin used to have their very own Sunday Page
dedicated entirely for kids. I bet they still do but under a different name perhaps.
As a very passive lad during those decades, this was sort of a big deal.
It had very relevant news,
(This cloud editorial art was my all time favorite.)
fun activities,
(This was actually drawn in by my dad, one of the rarer occasions
I'd get to see him draw something.)
and of course, COMICS.
A whole bunch of them to be exact!
Both locally and internationally.
But for the sake of this blog entry, let's stick with the local titles.
Titles like D'WENDE by *NICA.
Which I'm speculating was drawn by Mr. Roni Santiago under a female sounding
pen name. Notice how their eyes are slightly droopy aka "lazy eyes".
That's a trademark Sir Roni trope right there!
Alex W. Matias' Puto Maya.
And of course, Mr. Toni M. Bernal's Drey.
In addition to Drey, Mr. Bernal would also draw strips like:
Tobie.
Hard-Head Spike.
Rant.
And the very promising but discontinued Axid.
Mr. Bernal had been with the company from 1995-1998 (or even longer).
He had handled some if not all of the graphics, layout and any added illustrations
that the Sunday fun page might have needed.
From editorial cartoons to those that appeared on the trivia sections of the
newspaper.
His art style is easily recognizable by his usage of dark shadows and sort of digitally airbrushed renderings.
He would also later revealed to be Mr Game Guru himself.
Drey started out as half a page on the comics section.
But due to its popularity and overall appeal, it was given the full page treatment later on.
It has also come to our attention that Drey
does look a bit like WCW's Sting.
The parted hair style and the somewhat similar trench coat, you'd definitely see
some intentional and coincidental resemblance seeing as to how big wrestling was during the 90's.
Drey was a crimefighter. And in every sense of the word, a darn good one!
Accompanied by his trusty ally, Stryke.
They'd fight crime with their very own brand of justice.
Receiving both the attention and ire of the criminals and various other thugs along the way.
with irrelevant results. Most of which were either that of
TONI gonzaga, kris BERNAL or joyce BERNAL. None of which are
the artist I'm currently looking for hence the need for this blog entry.
His collaborator, Totel De Jesus now currently works
for Philippine Daily Inquirer and there weren't a single mention of this awesome comics
anywhere else ever again.
featured nothing but reprints of a previous strip. Making collecting it
rather difficult. But it made for some very exciting Sundays for all of us.
It left us in a cliffhanger and made us anticipate the next
Sunday all the more.
Looking back at it today, I shouldn't have folded my collections in the middle. But the again, a very
naive and 90's version of ourselves wouldn't really know any better.
And no, it wasn't silly of me to have kept these newspapers from 23 years ago.
If I didn't, then we wouldn't have had this topic here now ,wouldn't we?
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