NICOLAS CAGE DRIVE ANGRY MOVIE POSTER SERIES
This consisted of a retrospective of posters he designed for Gastro Non Grata, a recurring series of events based around experiments in food and music that started at the Triple Rock Social Club. I picked up all this Vinnie Stall stuff on Saturday because he’s just had a show open at Pink Hobo.
![nicolas cage drive angry movie poster nicolas cage drive angry movie poster](https://d1w8cc2yygc27j.cloudfront.net/-7213467422305838581/-8199566553636545658_thumbnail.jpg)
In this comic, his illustrations are dense and seem to hide more than they reveal, and what they reveal is always a bit puzzling, like a section of the woods where the smallest limbs of the trees have been covered with glass bottles.
![nicolas cage drive angry movie poster nicolas cage drive angry movie poster](https://ae01.alicdn.com/kf/HTB1IghGm5CYBuNkHFCcq6AHtVXaD/Custom-Canvas-Wall-Decor-Drive-Angry-Poster-Amber-Heard-Wall-Sticker-Office-Mural-Nicolas-Cage-Wallpaper.jpg)
Stall has always been a bit obsessive with his designs - his earlier comics contained detailed cityscapes or puzzling machinery. This vague summary isn’t doing much justice to the comic, through. The clouds rain very briefly, and then part to reveal a mysterious figure in white, who wanders deeper into the woods to build his own cabin, which is ramshackle to the degree that, newly built, it appears to have fallen apart for years, and trees grow straight through it. On first blush, it wordlessly follows a series of clouds, or plumes of smoke, through a dense woods in which hulking creatures lurk behind trees, into a cabin, where it engulfs the inhabitants, who don’t always seem human. Ghost ham: A Vincent Stall Gastro Non Grata posterīound in a large cover of rough brown cardboard, the comic itself, which is much smaller than its cover and attached with a rubber band, might have a story lurking in it - it’s hard to tell. This past weekend, when I purchased the vile men (they’re from a series of plush dolls called Scumbags, and I intend to collect them all as well), I snapped up another comic I had not seen before, called “Everybody Takes a Turn.” He has put out a number of small, self-published comic books under his own imprimatur, King Mini, and I have quite a few of them - I often think I have all of them, and then find one I didn’t know about, and buy that. These are the creations of Vincent Stall, whose work I collect, now and then, and have for quite a few years. Also, both men are about 6 inches tall and are stuffed with something, perhaps cotton. Both wear ragged T-shirts with chest hair peeking up through the neck hole, and both T-shirts are printed with salacious novelty phrases. One has tattoos on both arms, and an enormous belt buckle. Their faces are heavily creased, and they have sunken eyes and tiny little teeth. Both have wispy mustaches and unkempt splotches of stubble on their doubling chins. Both have long, greasy hair despite it having thinned to near baldness on top.
![nicolas cage drive angry movie poster nicolas cage drive angry movie poster](https://www.filmofilia.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/drive_angry_pic.jpg)
There are two perfectly vile men sitting on either side of my sofa just now. Alien meal: A detail from one of Vincent Stall’s Gastro Non Grata posters