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Getting It Together #1: Gritty Drama Takes The Page!

9.4/10

ADVANCED REVIEW! Getting It Together @SinaGrace @OmarSpahi @jfineoriginal @Struble will arrive this October at @ImageComics bringing a distinct tone and style that drafts from sitcoms gritty humor to uniquely explore friendship, romance and sex.

Getting It Together #1

Artist(s): Jenny D. Fine

Colorist(s): Mx. Struble

Letterer: Sean Konot

Publisher: Image

Genre: Comedy, Drama, Romance, Slice of Life

Published Date: 10/07/2020

Recap

Sam and Jack are best friends, and Sam is dating Lauren, Jack’s indie rocker sister and roommate. Tensions skyrocket when Sam and Lauren decide to open up their long-term relationship, sending social shockwaves through their friend group and the entire Bay Area, leaving poor Jack caught in the middle! Life gets pretty messy when you’re in your 20s and your friends are your family.

Bestselling writer Sina Grace (Iceman, Self-Obsessed) and popular producer/host and writer Omar Spahi (Dreamer comics podcast, Xenoglyphs) team up with debut comics artist and lauded illustrator Jenny D. Fine, colorist Mx. Struble, and letterer Sean Konot to co-create Getting It Together, out this 7th October.

Review

In a medium filled with superheroes, supernatural, mystery and other grandiose stories, Getting It Together is telling a sitcom-styled dramedy of a group of friends in their 20s that hang out in daily life set-ups. What first comes to mind reading this comic is TV series like FriendsSex and the CityQueer As Folk, Insecure or especially Broad City. With the feel, precious cover style and sarcastic humor of a Netflix binge comedy into it, this comic brings to the table discussions around mental health, consent, queerness and race. It fits right there with romcoms, sitcoms and drama LGBT+ stories wrapped up in lots of cringy humor and some real-life anecdotes. But in Getting It Together, the medium matters, and the fact of telling a story like this in the page reveals something more, something different.
The art has a costumbrist and realist style often used for graphic novels that makes you connect with the characters. It’s also noticeable Jenny D. Fine is a designer as well as an artist, and she masters the transitions between different places, scenarios, people, moods, using composition and design for every scene. Combined with a comfy, familiar but also kind of smoke-y punk-ish coloring by Mx. Struble, the art constantly works towards telling you right of the bat that it’s showcasing real life-alike drama and comedy.
In this vein, D. Fine knows how to emotionally touch you and cleverly takes the licenses that comics medium offers in showcasing emotions, like exaggerating some reactions of the characters, cartoon-izing this realist style in some shots, or even putting extra-narrative elements, like punk lightning coming off electric guitars or violet clouds that represent doubts and anxiety. This all works towards feeling like polished sketches of real people done in the middle of bar conversations, with the emotional extra of pun(k)tual exaggerations. You can feel there’s a lot of concept work behind this style, and it flows with the words brilliantly.
It’s important to add that the work behind this book seems the work of heavy conceptualizing and drawing from broad personal and creative experiences for both Sina and Omar, and therefore it gets into some serious issues from the beginning, like the main break-up and open relationships, or consent related to racist stereotypes, while also making me want to see different takes on some of these heavy themes moving on in the story. Grace has a wide experience in Slice-Of-Life comics like Not My Bag, Nothing Lasts Forever or Self-Obsessed. For this last one, he created and wrote a webseries with guest stars like Amber Benson or Laura Silverman, where some themes that are in this comic were pretty central (like relationships, mental health or music). Getting It Together feels even moreso like an evolution of the work of all of these wonderful artists towards a fictional world that could easily look like a real one.

Final Thoughts

Getting it Together is the precious work of creating from experiences, collaboration, detailed design and coloring, with inspiration and alikeness to sitcoms and other forms of media, but ultimately bringing something unique to comics. This wrap up makes the story interesting and defying, and the story itself, while still unfolding, isn't afraid of getting into some gritty territories as it explores the riskiness of things like friendship, sex or romance.

Getting It Together #1: Gritty Drama Takes The Page!
  • Writing - 10/10
    10/10
  • Storyline - 8.5/10
    8.5/10
  • Art - 10/10
    10/10
  • Color - 9.5/10
    9.5/10
  • Cover Art - 9/10
    9/10
9.4/10
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