The Arrival by Shaun Tan is a strange and fantastic story told only through pictures with no text. It is very successful in telling a cohesive and well-detailed story despite the lack speech or story text. When I first started, I was skeptical that it was possible to tell a completely understandable story with no text. I had seen plenty of stories told only through pictures, but this story was a whole new experience.
The reason The Arrival is so
successful in its storytelling is the visual language and close attention to
the main character’s emotions and facial expressions. One of the first things
that became apparent, which differed from the modern comic or graphic novel,
which I am used to, is the way time is represented in each panel. When words
are used to tell the story, the panel’s story can progress with no visual
explanation of what happened the way that The Arrival does. On the second page
of the story, when the main character wraps his family photo, every step of his
action is shown throughout the nine separate panels to show the exact
progression of the action. The same technique is used when he is on the boat in
a slightly different way. The length of his journey to the new land is
illustrated by the changing sky; progressing multiple time from dusk onto
night, into the dawn and day, all the way back to the night again. The visual
storytelling here is very similar to the way that films represent the same sort
of idea. The reader understands exactly what is going on without having to read
text.
Another way that The Arrival is
able to tell the reader the story is by showing the main character’s reactions,
actions and gestures as a way of explaining what would normally be a text
bubble. His facial expressions are much
more visible than a standard comic and we are able to read his feelings and
troubles. Although the story is monochromatic, the color still changes for
multiple reasons: sometimes to show the time of day or illumination of the scenery,
The most prominent and powerful use of the color change, is when the old man is
telling his story of being young and traveling as a soldier. His story starts
out warm and saturated, and becomes cold and desaturated as his friends die and
the story becomes grimmer.
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