Antimony Carver
Antimony Carver | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
First appearance | Gunnerkrigg Court |
Created by | Tom Siddell |
In-story information | |
Notable aliases | Annie |
Antimony "Annie" Carver is the protagonist of Tom Siddell's 2005 webcomic Gunnerkrigg Court. She was the first character created for Gunnerkrigg Court and her design has evolved alongside the webcomic's artstyle. Characterized as a quiet, shy and precocious, as well as lonely and subtly rebellious, Antimony has been praised for her complexity.
Creation
Gunnerkrigg Court was conceptualized from a doodle Tom Siddle was sketching one day.
"I drew a very stylized girl with a bored look that was quite different to the usual stuff I was drawing at the time. I did another sketch right after that of the same girl and, wanting to color it but only having a very limited selection of marker pens, put her in an ugly school uniform with some crazy makeup. At that point, I decided that I liked her enough to make a comic about her. I thought up some ideas and drew the first couple of chapters before putting it online, and it went from there."
After designing the character, Siddell decided a "strange school" would fit her personality. He named the house Antimony is in at Gunnerkrigg Court "Queslett North", after his own former house.[2] Delos Woodruff of Comic Fencing suggested that Antimony may be named after the metal of the same name, pointing out that the alchemical symbol for antimony is commonly shown in the webcomic.[3]
El Santo of The Webcomic Overlook noted that, as the artstyle of Gunnerkrigg Court evolved, so did Antimony's design. The character was initially drawn as a short girl with a "football-shaped head", but slowly evolved to be taller and more "elegant". Santo felt that these changes complements Antimony's emotional growth and maturity in the webcomic.[4]
Character
The story of Gunnerkrigg Court starts with young girl Antimony Carver entering Gunnerkrigg Court, a boarding school with "strange" properties. Antimony's mother died while she was at a young age, and her father remains distant of her. Antimony is described by Michael May of Comic Book Resources as a "quiet, pleasant girl[;] lonely, but not angsty about it." At the start of the story, she is considered an outsider by rest of the students, save for her close friend Katerina "Kat" Donlan.[5] Greg Burgas, also writing for Comic Book Resources, described Antimony's "reserved and thoughtful" nature as a contrast with Kat's more "vivacious and rebellious" character, but noted that Antimony also has some subtle rebellious facets.[6] Delos Woodruff of Comic Fencing noticed that Antimony seems to act older than she really is, as she knows how to pick locks, speaks several languages and knows some martial arts.[3]
Over the course of the story, Antimony becomes more involved with the mystical woods outside of the school. She owns a stuffed animal with the demon Reynardine inside, who helps her deal with the various situations she finds herself in.[7] Furthermore, she inherited the ability to escort the spirits of the dead to the afterlife from her mother.[6]
Reception
Though Katie Schenkel of Comics Alliance noted that "all the characters have their charms and appeal," she stated that the manner in which Siddell had written Antimony is particularly interesting. Schenkel pointed out that Antimony is "flawed" despite having extraordinary talent, being somewhat secretive, selfish and self-loathing, making big mistakes throughout the story. Schenkel praised the character by saying that it is "nice to see a protagonist handled with this much care and complexity."[8]
Burgas noted that Siddell did a good job of making Antimony and Kat seem very precocious while reminding the reader every once in a while that the characters are indeed still children.[6] Tris McCall of Inside Jersey praised Antimony's character strongly, stating that "to call her anything less than magnetic would be a gross understatement."[9] Siddell himself has said that Antimony is his favorite character in Gunnerkrigg Court.[2]
References
- 1 2 Tramountanas, George A. (2008-08-07). ""Gunnerkrigg Court" - The "Harriet Potter" of Webcomics". Comic Book Resources.
- 1 2 Shroeder, Al (December 2006). "An Interview with Tom Siddell, Creator of Gunnerkrigg Court". Comixtalk. Archived from the original on 2008-08-08.
- 1 2 Woodruff, Delos (2008). "Gunnerkrigg Court". Comic Fencing. Archived from the original on 2008-08-18.
- ↑ Santo, El (2008-01-10). "The Webcomic Overlook #25: Gunnerkrigg Court". The Webcomic Overlook.
- ↑ May, Michael (2010-05-19). "Gorillas Riding Dinosaurs — Gunnerkrigg Court, Vol. 1". Comic Book Resources.
- 1 2 3 Burgas, Greg (2010-03-21). "A review a day: Gunnerkrigg Court volume 2: Research". Comic book Resources.
- ↑ Griffith, Eric (2015-02-14). "The Best Webcomics 2015". PCMag.
- ↑ Schenkel, Katie (2015-10-01). "Strange Days & School Days: Should You Be Reading 'Gunnerkrigg Court'?". Comics Alliance.
- ↑ McCall, Tris (2013-12-15). "The best webcomics of 2013". NJ.com. Inside Jersey.