Lady Nilstria: I haven’t done one of

Lady Nilstria submitted:

I haven’t done one of these in awhile! :D

Let’s charge right in then. The thing that immediately struck me, other than the ridiculous jaw, is her hip. It’s like the person thinks the ball and socket joint of the pelvis is located on the bottom, instead of the side. Hips don’t work that way. Learn the human skeleton before you try to pose it!

Obviously, her spine is broken, because not only is her torso rotated, it’s also tilted upwards. I’m also not sure what fantastical tendons are attaching her left arm to her rib cage either, but hey, that’s just me. The clavicle isn’t that enormously flexible.

This artist must not know how the hinge joint of the jaw works, and that just because it’s the bottom jaw, doesn’t mean it’s actually any longer than the top one. She has a serious overbite. Both jaws are the same length. The top jaw never moves, while the bottom jaw operates on a hinge. The curve of the bottom jaw works the same as a door. It never gets any farther or closer to the hinge.

All in all, a travesty of anatomy wrought by the desire for a B&B pose and to be scary. I guess the human skeleton isn’t capable of being scary on its own.

You will notice I put her feet on a different plane of perspective. (That is honestly because I’m not that good at it. I’m still learning this whole grid thing.)

This looks similar to positions I’ve seen Venom and Carnage in in the past and I really like it. :)  I think Marvel symbiote logic does allow impossible jaws like that, though I know people who think it shouldn’t because it makes no sense that the mouth can be larger than where the host’s head should be.