Webcomic Stories: Dear David
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- Опубліковано 15 вер 2024
- The webcomic creator Adam Ellis finds himself being haunted by the ghost of a child, and documents the spooky ongoings with the ghost.
I've found that I love making documentary stuff, so I figured I'd try out a new series. Let me know what you guys think AND let me know if there are any other webcomic centered stories, you want me to cover!
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This video is made for critiquing and educational purposes. All material is used and protected under the rights of Fair Use.
#webcomics #documentary
Sucks he couldn’t give it a real ending because buzz feed took ownership of the story
Great video! more short dives into webcomic intrigue like this would be so cool. When you told me that I could o horror with my cartoony art style, I had no idea how I would do that. But this seems to be a great pattern for cartoon artists to do horror. I may try something like this some day.
One hell of a story. Of course they'd insist it's real with how much attention it got. Doing so ensures the story lives on comfortably in memory instead of becoming cold and forgotten
Oh wow! This is one heck of a horror story! I wish this became a real movie! So interesting and with actually good and memorable monster design! I don't care if it's real or not. That author sure is a good storyteller and designer and I want to see more from him!
Thank you so much for sharing this awesome story with us! Without you I wouldn't find it by myself! (I don't have twitter)
This one is gonna be a good one!
12:09 I know you don't know that because you are a danish Content Creator who speaks english (So, you are dealing with already two language barriers), but there is an interesting story about UA-camrs talking of Dear David.
In the hispanic side of UA-cam, a veteran hispanic UA-camr called "Dross Rotzank" started to upload a series of videos talking about Dear David when it all started. And it was so succesfull that even Adam Ellis thanked Dross for spread the story on the hispanic side of the world.
Time-skip to a few years in the future. Dross Rotzank is a guest to a hispanic podcast called "The Wild Project" and a topic talked is about the kiss scene on Lightyear (Back when Lightyear was released and the kiss became a trending topic) because Dross made public knowledge he didn't like the scene but not for the kiss itself, but because the meaning was empty (I agree with him, the kiss is literally made for the western market, but designed in a way that it can be easily cut for Arabian/Chinese market, so there never was an intention of break a glass ceiling).
Adam Ellis heard about that, insulted Dross on Twitter and deleted the tweets.
What did Dross do? If you go to watch the 1st video, which was originally called just "Dear David", now the title is "Dear David | (Adam Ellis is a plagiarist)" because, yeah, it is actually known that he has plagiarised, even making the lamest excuse photoshoping a screenshot of his personal blog, just to forget that *EVERYONE* can see his blog.
I remember looking forward to the movie when it was announced. Glad I forgot to look into it now I guess.
It looks like he did a good job with a lot of it, but a good amount is easily explained away or just looks fake. David himself just looked like a doll, so that's a pretty simple one there. And that video of taking the Polaroids has at least two points where he could have switched out the one he was holding with a different one that would come out black. Yes, it does mean the black picture might need to have been taken at near the same time as the hall one, but it still stands. Or, another explanation could easily be that at one point before taking a photo of the hall, when the camera was out of frame, he could have covertly put on the lens cap. The comparison with the one with his hand over the lens was a nice redirect, but I didn't see anything about how his hand was put over the lens, and could have been purposeful enough to let in some light (especially since human skin is not fully opaque).
But yeah, I'm often unnerved by the horror stuff, especially late at night like it is now, but I saw nothing that made me buy into this one. It just feels too fake for me to let it get to me.
This was not a good idea to watch before night time
Staged, he probably did it just for fun. Not sure how he pulled off the polaroid trick, though
Hello