Comic creator Frank Miller has struck a unique publishing deal with Abrams ComicArts.
The acclaimed graphic novel arm of art and illustration-centric Abrams will now be the book publisher of select titles from Miller’s independent and self-published book company, Frank Miller Presents. Miller, the creator behind The Dark Knight Returns, 300 and Sin City, becomes the latest big comic name to work with the company, which already works with comics author Brian Michael Bendis and comics painter Alex Ross, and is known for such titles as My Friend Dahmer and The Superhero’s Journey.
The first titles to be released under the partnership will hit in fall 2024 and include Ronin Rising, Miller’s sequel to his acclaimed and influential 1983 miniseries Ronin; and the young adult fantasy Pandora. Ronin Rising will be available in two formats, a collector’s edition and a manga edition, via Abrams’s new Kana imprint.
The acclaimed graphic novel arm of art and illustration-centric Abrams will now be the book publisher of select titles from Miller’s independent and self-published book company, Frank Miller Presents. Miller, the creator behind The Dark Knight Returns, 300 and Sin City, becomes the latest big comic name to work with the company, which already works with comics author Brian Michael Bendis and comics painter Alex Ross, and is known for such titles as My Friend Dahmer and The Superhero’s Journey.
The first titles to be released under the partnership will hit in fall 2024 and include Ronin Rising, Miller’s sequel to his acclaimed and influential 1983 miniseries Ronin; and the young adult fantasy Pandora. Ronin Rising will be available in two formats, a collector’s edition and a manga edition, via Abrams’s new Kana imprint.
- 4/24/2024
- by Borys Kit
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The face-bandaged “Unknown Soldier” created by Robert Kanigher and Joe Kubert for DC Comics, debuted in the title “Our Army At War” #168 (1966) , following ‘Eddie Ray’ a wounded soldier who undergoes intensive training to become an intelligence operative code-named "The Unknown Soldier’ in honour of 'The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier’ at Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia:
“…’Eddie Ray’ joins the United States Army together with his brother ‘Harry’ less than two months before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
“Assigned to the Philippines when the Pacific War breaks out, he and Harry are present when the Japanese sweep across the islands. In their foxhole, Harry tells his brother not to lose hope even though they are outnumbered, because ‘one guy can affect the outcome of a whole war! One guy in the right place... at the right time...’
“The two fight off wave after wave of invading Japanese soldiers when a...
“…’Eddie Ray’ joins the United States Army together with his brother ‘Harry’ less than two months before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
“Assigned to the Philippines when the Pacific War breaks out, he and Harry are present when the Japanese sweep across the islands. In their foxhole, Harry tells his brother not to lose hope even though they are outnumbered, because ‘one guy can affect the outcome of a whole war! One guy in the right place... at the right time...’
“The two fight off wave after wave of invading Japanese soldiers when a...
- 11/11/2023
- by Unknown
- SneakPeek
Welcome to the latest instalment of a brand-new feature here on Nerdly, where one of our comic gurus, Ian Wells, delves into comics history and dissects Comics Interview, the long-running journal of interviews and criticism from David Anthony Kraft.
A Yak With Dak
David presents us with more of the same in his Upfront editorial. Every issue reads the same, a rundown of what is in store. All information we can get from the cover. From the information we get on the cover, you would be forgiven for thinking this interview isn’t going to offer much. The two biggest interviews revolve around Dak’s friends in the industry. But as you unpack the contents page there is actually a lot to sink your teeth into. I would prefer if Dak used this space to give more real inside information on the industry. With the many hats he has worn in the industry,...
A Yak With Dak
David presents us with more of the same in his Upfront editorial. Every issue reads the same, a rundown of what is in store. All information we can get from the cover. From the information we get on the cover, you would be forgiven for thinking this interview isn’t going to offer much. The two biggest interviews revolve around Dak’s friends in the industry. But as you unpack the contents page there is actually a lot to sink your teeth into. I would prefer if Dak used this space to give more real inside information on the industry. With the many hats he has worn in the industry,...
- 8/31/2023
- by Ian Wells
- Nerdly
Sgt. Rock vs. The Army of the Dead: Bruce Campbell-scripted comic book series gets hardcover release
Last year, genre icon Bruce Campbell (The Evil Dead) wrote the six-issue comic book series DC Horror Presents: Sgt. Rock vs. The Army of the Dead, which started reaching store shelves in September of 2022. Now our friends at Bloody Disgusting have learned that the six issues of the series are being gathered together in a hardcover collection that’s appropriately being referred to as the DC Presents: Sgt. Rock vs. The Army of the Dead Hardcover Collection. This hardcover book is expected to be released sometime in October.
Featuring artwork by Eisner and Harvey Award-winning artist Eduardo Risso (100 Bullets), DC Horror Presents: Sgt. Rock vs. The Army of the Dead takes place in Berlin, 1944. The Nazis are flanked on all fronts by the combined Allied forces, and defeat seems inevitable. In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war, Hitler and his team of evil scientists create a...
Featuring artwork by Eisner and Harvey Award-winning artist Eduardo Risso (100 Bullets), DC Horror Presents: Sgt. Rock vs. The Army of the Dead takes place in Berlin, 1944. The Nazis are flanked on all fronts by the combined Allied forces, and defeat seems inevitable. In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war, Hitler and his team of evil scientists create a...
- 8/22/2023
- by Cody Hamman
- JoBlo.com
Bruce Campbell made his mark on the DC Universe with the DC Horror comic book series Sgt. Rock vs. The Army of the Dead last year, and a collected edition is on the way.
Written by Bruce Campbell, with art by comics legend Eduardo Risso, DC Presents: Sgt. Rock vs. The Army of the Dead Hardcover Collection will release in October 2023.
Created by writer Robert Kanigher and artist Joe Kubert, Sgt. Rock first appeared in June, 1959, in DC’s anthology comic Our Army at War Issue #83. His origin was set during World War II, where Sgt. Rock and his unit, the Easy Company, fought in the European Theatre.
The press release reminds, “The character became so popular that, in 1977, the Our Army at War series was renamed Sgt. Rock, and ran under the Sgt. Rock name until 1988.”
Sgt. Rock now returns in Bruce Campbell’s DC Horror Presents: Sgt. Rock vs.
Written by Bruce Campbell, with art by comics legend Eduardo Risso, DC Presents: Sgt. Rock vs. The Army of the Dead Hardcover Collection will release in October 2023.
Created by writer Robert Kanigher and artist Joe Kubert, Sgt. Rock first appeared in June, 1959, in DC’s anthology comic Our Army at War Issue #83. His origin was set during World War II, where Sgt. Rock and his unit, the Easy Company, fought in the European Theatre.
The press release reminds, “The character became so popular that, in 1977, the Our Army at War series was renamed Sgt. Rock, and ran under the Sgt. Rock name until 1988.”
Sgt. Rock now returns in Bruce Campbell’s DC Horror Presents: Sgt. Rock vs.
- 8/22/2023
- by John Squires
- bloody-disgusting.com
For years, Awesome Art We’ve Found Around The Net has been about two things only – awesome art and the artists that create it. With that in mind, we thought why not take the first week of the month to showcase these awesome artists even more? Welcome to “Awesome Artist We’ve Found Around The Net.” In this column, we are focusing on one artist and the awesome art that they create, whether they be amateur, up and coming, or well established. The goal is to uncover these artists so even more people become familiar with them. We ask these artists a few questions to see their origins, influences, and more. If you are an awesome artist or know someone that should be featured, feel free to contact me at any time at theodorebond@joblo.com.This month we are very pleased to bring you the awesome art of…
John Gallagher...
John Gallagher...
- 6/3/2023
- by Theodore Bond
- JoBlo.com
Actor Bruce Campbell is credited as writer of the upcoming "DC Horror Presents" title "Sgt. Rock Vs. The Army of the Dead", available September 27, 2022, with illustrations by Eduardo Risso and cover by Gary Frank, plus variant covers by Frank Quitely, Charlie Adlard, Francesco Francavilla, Chris Mooneyham, Pia Guerra and a whole lot more:
"...created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, 'Sgt. Rock' debuted June 1959, in DC Comics "Our Army at War" #83.
"Rock now returns to fight the most horrific enemy he’s ever encountered: resurrected dead 'Third Reich' soldiers.
" The story begins in Berlin, 1944.
"The Germans are flanked on all fronts...
"...by the combined 'Allied' forces and defeat seems inevitable.
"In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war...
"... a team of evil enemy scientists create a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers...
"...creating an army of the dead, stronger than they were in life..."
Click the images to enlarge.
"...created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, 'Sgt. Rock' debuted June 1959, in DC Comics "Our Army at War" #83.
"Rock now returns to fight the most horrific enemy he’s ever encountered: resurrected dead 'Third Reich' soldiers.
" The story begins in Berlin, 1944.
"The Germans are flanked on all fronts...
"...by the combined 'Allied' forces and defeat seems inevitable.
"In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war...
"... a team of evil enemy scientists create a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers...
"...creating an army of the dead, stronger than they were in life..."
Click the images to enlarge.
- 9/16/2022
- by Unknown
- SneakPeek
Actor Bruce Campbell is credited as writer of the new "DC Horror Presents" title "Sgt. Rock Vs. The Army of the Dead", available September 27, 2022, with illustrations by Eduardo Risso and cover by Gary Frank, plus variant covers by Frank Quitely, Charlie Adlard, Francesco Francavilla, Chris Mooneyham, Pia Guerra and a whole lot more:
"...created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, 'Sgt. Rock' debuted June 1959, in DC Comics "Our Army at War" #83.
"Rock now returns to fight the most horrific enemy he’s ever encountered: resurrected dead 'Third Reich' soldiers.
" The story begins in Berlin, 1944.
"The Germans are flanked on all fronts by the combined 'Allied' forces and defeat seems inevitable.
"In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war, a team of evil enemy scientists create a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers...
"...creating an army of the dead even stronger than they were in life.
"...created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, 'Sgt. Rock' debuted June 1959, in DC Comics "Our Army at War" #83.
"Rock now returns to fight the most horrific enemy he’s ever encountered: resurrected dead 'Third Reich' soldiers.
" The story begins in Berlin, 1944.
"The Germans are flanked on all fronts by the combined 'Allied' forces and defeat seems inevitable.
"In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war, a team of evil enemy scientists create a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers...
"...creating an army of the dead even stronger than they were in life.
- 8/29/2022
- by Unknown
- SneakPeek
Actor Bruce Campbell, a big fan of George Baker’s “Sad Sack”, is now credited as writer of the upcoming "DC Horror Presents" title "Sgt. Rock Vs. The Army of the Dead", available September 27, 2022, with illustrations by Eduardo Risso and cover by Gary Frank, plus variant covers by Frank Quitely, Charlie Adlard, Francesco Francavilla, Chris Mooneyham and Pia Guerra:
"...created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, 'Sgt. Rock' debuted June 1959, in DC Comics "Our Army at War" #83.
"Rock now returns to fight the most horrific enemy he’s ever encountered: resurrected dead 'Third Reich' soldiers.
" The story begins in Berlin, 1944.
"The Germans are flanked on all fronts by the combined 'Allied' forces, and defeat seems inevitable.
"In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war, a team of evil enemy scientists create a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers...
"...creating an army of the dead...
"...created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, 'Sgt. Rock' debuted June 1959, in DC Comics "Our Army at War" #83.
"Rock now returns to fight the most horrific enemy he’s ever encountered: resurrected dead 'Third Reich' soldiers.
" The story begins in Berlin, 1944.
"The Germans are flanked on all fronts by the combined 'Allied' forces, and defeat seems inevitable.
"In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war, a team of evil enemy scientists create a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers...
"...creating an army of the dead...
- 8/15/2022
- by Unknown
- SneakPeek
Actor Bruce Campbell, a big fan of George Baker’s “Sad Sack”, is now credited as writer of the upcoming "DC Horror Presents" title "Sgt. Rock Vs. The Army of the Dead", available September 27, 2022, with illustrations by Eduardo Risso and cover by Gary Frank, plus variant covers by Frank Quitely, Charlie Adlard, Francesco Francavilla, Chris Mooneyham and Pia Guerra:
"...created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, 'Sgt. Rock' debuted June 1959, in DC Comics "Our Army at War" #83.
"Rock now returns to fight the most horrific enemy he’s ever encountered: resurrected dead 'Third Reich' soldiers.
" The story begins in Berlin, 1944.
"The Germans are flanked on all fronts by the combined 'Allied' forces, and defeat seems inevitable.
"In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war, a team of evil enemy scientists create a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers...
"...creating an army of the dead...
"...created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, 'Sgt. Rock' debuted June 1959, in DC Comics "Our Army at War" #83.
"Rock now returns to fight the most horrific enemy he’s ever encountered: resurrected dead 'Third Reich' soldiers.
" The story begins in Berlin, 1944.
"The Germans are flanked on all fronts by the combined 'Allied' forces, and defeat seems inevitable.
"In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war, a team of evil enemy scientists create a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers...
"...creating an army of the dead...
- 7/26/2022
- by Unknown
- SneakPeek
Actor Bruce Campbell, a big fan of George Baker’s “Sad Sack”, is now credited as writer of the upcoming "DC Horror Presents" title "Sgt. Rock Vs. The Army of the Dead", available September 27, 2022, with illustrations by Eduardo Risso and cover by Gary Frank, plus variant covers by Frank Quitely, Charlie Adlard, Francesco Francavilla, Chris Mooneyham and Pia Guerra:
"...created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, 'Sgt. Rock' debuted June 1959, in DC Comics "Our Army at War" #83.
"Rock now returns to fight the most horrific enemy he’s ever encountered: resurrected dead 'Third Reich' soldiers. The story begins in Berlin, 1944. The Germans are flanked on all fronts by the combined 'Allied' forces, and defeat seems inevitable.
"In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war, a team of evil enemy scientists create a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers, creating an army of the dead...
"...created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, 'Sgt. Rock' debuted June 1959, in DC Comics "Our Army at War" #83.
"Rock now returns to fight the most horrific enemy he’s ever encountered: resurrected dead 'Third Reich' soldiers. The story begins in Berlin, 1944. The Germans are flanked on all fronts by the combined 'Allied' forces, and defeat seems inevitable.
"In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war, a team of evil enemy scientists create a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers, creating an army of the dead...
- 7/25/2022
- by Unknown
- SneakPeek
Actor Bruce Campbell, a big fan of George Baker’s “Sad Sack”, is now credited as the writer of the upcoming "DC Horror Presents" title "Sgt. Rock Vs. The Army of the Dead", available September 27, 2022, with illustrations by Eduardo Risso and cover by Gary Frank, plus variant covers by Frank Quitely, Charlie Adlard, Francesco Francavilla, Chris Mooneyham and Pia Guerra:
"...created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, 'Sgt. Rock' debuted June 1959, in DC Comics "Our Army at War" #83.
"Rock now returns to fight the most horrific enemy he’s ever encountered: resurrected dead 'Third Reich' soldiers. The story begins in Berlin, 1944. The Germans are flanked on all fronts by the combined 'Allied' forces, and defeat seems inevitable.
"In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war, a team of evil enemy scientists create a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers, creating an army of the...
"...created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, 'Sgt. Rock' debuted June 1959, in DC Comics "Our Army at War" #83.
"Rock now returns to fight the most horrific enemy he’s ever encountered: resurrected dead 'Third Reich' soldiers. The story begins in Berlin, 1944. The Germans are flanked on all fronts by the combined 'Allied' forces, and defeat seems inevitable.
"In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war, a team of evil enemy scientists create a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers, creating an army of the...
- 7/7/2022
- by Unknown
- SneakPeek
Actor Bruce Campbell, a big fan of George Baker’s army character “Sad Sack”, is now credited as the writer of the upcoming "DC Horror Presents" title "Sgt. Rock Vs. The Army of the Dead", available September 27, 2022, with illustrations by Eduardo Risso and cover by Gary Frank, plus variant covers by Frank Quitely, Charlie Adlard, Francesco Francavilla, Chris Mooneyham and Pia Guerra:
"...created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, 'Sgt. Rock' debuted June 1959, in DC Comics "Our Army at War" #83.
"Rock now returns to fight the most horrific enemy he’s ever encountered: resurrected dead 'Third Reich' soldiers. The story begins in Berlin, 1944. The Germans are flanked on all fronts by the combined 'Allied' forces, and defeat seems inevitable.
"In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war, a team of evil enemy scientists create a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers, creating an army...
"...created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, 'Sgt. Rock' debuted June 1959, in DC Comics "Our Army at War" #83.
"Rock now returns to fight the most horrific enemy he’s ever encountered: resurrected dead 'Third Reich' soldiers. The story begins in Berlin, 1944. The Germans are flanked on all fronts by the combined 'Allied' forces, and defeat seems inevitable.
"In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war, a team of evil enemy scientists create a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers, creating an army...
- 6/27/2022
- by Unknown
- SneakPeek
“I was down on my luck and I just started knocking on doors,” Bruce Campbell jokes about how he ended up writing Sgt. Rock vs. The Army of the Dead for DC Comics. “If you got any work at all, anything I can do, I’ll sell you sell your comics on the street corner.”
The beloved actor and cult legend isn’t being serious. The reality is that DC Horror editor Katie Kubert, coincidentally the granddaughter of Sgt. Rock’s legendary co-creator, reached out to him thinking he’d be a good fit to write a horror comic. But despite Campbell’s superhero-ready good looks, and all the ways he’s flirted with the genre on screen during his career, wasn’t a comics expert. After looking through a DC encyclopedia breaking down potential characters, he was immediately drawn to the badass World War II hero of Sgt. Rock.
The beloved actor and cult legend isn’t being serious. The reality is that DC Horror editor Katie Kubert, coincidentally the granddaughter of Sgt. Rock’s legendary co-creator, reached out to him thinking he’d be a good fit to write a horror comic. But despite Campbell’s superhero-ready good looks, and all the ways he’s flirted with the genre on screen during his career, wasn’t a comics expert. After looking through a DC encyclopedia breaking down potential characters, he was immediately drawn to the badass World War II hero of Sgt. Rock.
- 6/17/2022
- by Mike Cecchini
- Den of Geek
You may not be familiar with the lesser-known DC Comics character Sgt. Rock, but if you're a horror comic fan, you soon will be. The character of Sgt. Rock was created back in 1959 by Robert Kanigher and artist Joe Kubert. His last solo series was in 1988. Sgt. Rock is a WWII soldier who fought with his East Company, and while it's possible that you don't know him, he knows a friend of yours and mine: Superman.
/Film's Cass Clarke recently chatted with someone else you might know, Bruce Campbell. He was most recently seen doing...
The post Bruce Campbell Says Sgt. Rock Could Team Up With Other DC Characters in Future Issues of His New Comic [Exclusive] appeared first on /Film.
/Film's Cass Clarke recently chatted with someone else you might know, Bruce Campbell. He was most recently seen doing...
The post Bruce Campbell Says Sgt. Rock Could Team Up With Other DC Characters in Future Issues of His New Comic [Exclusive] appeared first on /Film.
- 6/13/2022
- by Jenna Busch
- Slash Film
Actor Bruce Campbell, although he is a big fan of George Baker’s “Sad Sack”, is now credited as the writer of the upcoming "DC Horror Presents" title "Sgt. Rock Vs. The Army of the Dead", available September 27, 2022, with illustrations by Eduardo Risso and cover by Gary Frank, plus variant covers by Frank Quitely, Charlie Adlard, Francesco Francavilla, Chris Mooneyham and Pia Guerra:
"...created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, 'Sgt. Rock' debuted June 1959, in DC Comics "Our Army at War" #83.
"Rock now returns to fight the most horrific enemy he’s ever encountered: resurrected dead 'Third Reich' soldiers. The story begins in Berlin, 1944. The Germans are flanked on all fronts by the combined 'Allied' forces, and defeat seems inevitable.
"In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war, a team of evil enemy scientists create a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers, creating an...
"...created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, 'Sgt. Rock' debuted June 1959, in DC Comics "Our Army at War" #83.
"Rock now returns to fight the most horrific enemy he’s ever encountered: resurrected dead 'Third Reich' soldiers. The story begins in Berlin, 1944. The Germans are flanked on all fronts by the combined 'Allied' forces, and defeat seems inevitable.
"In a last-ditch effort to turn the tide of the war, a team of evil enemy scientists create a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers, creating an...
- 6/10/2022
- by Unknown
- SneakPeek
Bruce Campbell will make his mark on the DC Universe with the upcoming DC Horror comic book series Sgt. Rock Vs. The Army of the Dead, which brings back a classic DC character. Created by writer Robert Kanigher and artist Joe Kubert, Sgt. Rock first appeared in June, 1959, in DC’s anthology comic Our Army at […]
The post Bruce Campbell Writing DC Horror Comic Book ‘Sgt. Rock Vs. The Army of the Dead’! appeared first on Bloody Disgusting!.
The post Bruce Campbell Writing DC Horror Comic Book ‘Sgt. Rock Vs. The Army of the Dead’! appeared first on Bloody Disgusting!.
- 6/9/2022
- by John Squires
- bloody-disgusting.com
The face-bandaged “Unknown Soldier” created by Robert Kanigher and Joe Kubert for DC Comics, debuted in the title “Our Army At War” #168 (1966) , following ‘Eddie Ray’ a wounded soldier who undergoes intensive training to become an intelligence operative code-named "The Unknown Soldier’ in honour of 'The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier’ at Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia:
“…’Eddie Ray’ joins the United States Army together with his brother ‘Harry’ less than two months before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
“Assigned to the Philippines when the Pacific War breaks out, he and Harry are present when the Japanese sweep across the islands. In their foxhole, Harry tells his brother not to lose hope even though they are outnumbered, because ‘one guy can affect the outcome of a whole war! One guy in the right place... at the right time...’
“The two fight off wave after wave of invading Japanese soldiers when a...
“…’Eddie Ray’ joins the United States Army together with his brother ‘Harry’ less than two months before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
“Assigned to the Philippines when the Pacific War breaks out, he and Harry are present when the Japanese sweep across the islands. In their foxhole, Harry tells his brother not to lose hope even though they are outnumbered, because ‘one guy can affect the outcome of a whole war! One guy in the right place... at the right time...’
“The two fight off wave after wave of invading Japanese soldiers when a...
- 5/30/2022
- by Unknown
- SneakPeek
This week I have a brilliant Q and A with Sumyra of Lucky Target Comics. I discovered Lucky Target Comics last summer after seeing a Tweet from the writer of Alex Automatic, Fraser Campbell. He had scored an excellent collection of Daredevil issues from the site, a number of which I myself had on my want list. The site is easy to navigate and find the issues you are looking for. They offer a good selection of newer and older back issues, as well as trade paperbacks and bundles of complete runs. More sellers should be doing this in my opinion. It is a great way to attract readers who are either completely new to comics or old fans looking for something new to read. I found everything I wanted at the time more than reasonably priced. I was able to check off some later 200 issues of Daredevil as well...
- 2/22/2022
- by Ian Wells
- Nerdly
“Leverage” star Aldis Hodge is in talks to play the role of Hawkman opposite Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson in “Black Adam,” DC and New Line’s highly anticipated superhero movie, according to an individual with knowledge of the project.
Hawkman is the name of several DC Comics heroes, but the best known versions are the original incarnation created by Gardner Fox and Dennis Neville in 1940, and a rebooted version created by Gardner Fox and Joe Kubert in 1961, and later revamped by Timothy Truman.
The 1940 character was the alter-ego of archaeologist Carter Hall, who discovers he’s the reincarnation of an ancient Egyptian prince cursed and murdered by an evil priest. The 1961 version reimagined him as Katar Hol, an alien from the planet Thanagar whose costume is the uniform worn by his world’s police force, the “Wingmen.” An individual with knowledge of the project tells TheWrap “Black Adam” will feature Carter Hall,...
Hawkman is the name of several DC Comics heroes, but the best known versions are the original incarnation created by Gardner Fox and Dennis Neville in 1940, and a rebooted version created by Gardner Fox and Joe Kubert in 1961, and later revamped by Timothy Truman.
The 1940 character was the alter-ego of archaeologist Carter Hall, who discovers he’s the reincarnation of an ancient Egyptian prince cursed and murdered by an evil priest. The 1961 version reimagined him as Katar Hol, an alien from the planet Thanagar whose costume is the uniform worn by his world’s police force, the “Wingmen.” An individual with knowledge of the project tells TheWrap “Black Adam” will feature Carter Hall,...
- 9/25/2020
- by Umberto Gonzalez
- The Wrap
Batman: Black and White is an almost 25-year-old anthology series that gave titans of the industry, brilliant artists and writers, a chance to go wild and show off what they could do with the Dark Knight and his world. While the series has been around since 1996, Batman: Black and White has been on hiatus since 2014, but that’s about to change in December.
The anthology returns with a new volume on Dec. 8, as announced by DC Comics. The oversized book will run for six issues and each 48-page issue will feature new short stories from an incredible collection of creators. The first issue features covers from long-time Batman artist and Dark Nights: Death Metalhead Greg Capullo; a Talia cover from Peach Momoko; and one from “The Black Glove”‘s Jh Williams.
The list of writers is impressive — Paul Dini, Tim Seeley, Tom King, G. Willow Wilson, Chip Zdarsky, and current...
The anthology returns with a new volume on Dec. 8, as announced by DC Comics. The oversized book will run for six issues and each 48-page issue will feature new short stories from an incredible collection of creators. The first issue features covers from long-time Batman artist and Dark Nights: Death Metalhead Greg Capullo; a Talia cover from Peach Momoko; and one from “The Black Glove”‘s Jh Williams.
The list of writers is impressive — Paul Dini, Tim Seeley, Tom King, G. Willow Wilson, Chip Zdarsky, and current...
- 9/9/2020
- by Jim Dandy
- Den of Geek
Renowned graphic novel artists Andy Kubert (“Batman”) and Whilce Portacio,(“X-Men”) were on hand to share their vast experience at the Singapore ComicCon on Saturday. The event is a new addition to the annual Singapore Media Festival.
Kubert and Portacio said that, despite the popularity of comic books, it is quite hard to break into the industry, and that practitioners have to excel. Kubert is the son of legendary artist Joe Kubert (“Sgt. Rock”) and is a graduate of and teaches at The Kubert School, founded by his father. “I help a lot of newcomers come in,” said Kubert. “They have to be very good and talented. You will get rejected and rejected, but don’t ever give up. If you love it, stick with it.”
Speaking about writing versus art, Kubert said, “Writing is a whole different ball game, it’s a whole different set of muscles and I...
Kubert and Portacio said that, despite the popularity of comic books, it is quite hard to break into the industry, and that practitioners have to excel. Kubert is the son of legendary artist Joe Kubert (“Sgt. Rock”) and is a graduate of and teaches at The Kubert School, founded by his father. “I help a lot of newcomers come in,” said Kubert. “They have to be very good and talented. You will get rejected and rejected, but don’t ever give up. If you love it, stick with it.”
Speaking about writing versus art, Kubert said, “Writing is a whole different ball game, it’s a whole different set of muscles and I...
- 12/7/2019
- by Naman Ramachandran
- Variety Film + TV
Marc Buxton Mike Cecchini Jim Dandy Gavin Jasper Nov 17, 2018
These are the best episodes of the Justice League animated series and Justice League Unlimited!
It's tough to pick favorites when discussing the Justice League animated series and its follow up, Justice League Unlimited. It's also tough to really make a distinction between the two, despite the different titles and increased roster. A few tweaks aside, they're the same show, and the level of quality is consistent throughout.
The most important thing to remember about Justice League and Justice League Unlimited is that this is probably the single best introduction to the wider DC Universe that you can hope for. Just as Batman: The Animated Series perfectly distilled all of the essential elements of the Batman mythology into one perfect package, that's what these shows do with the spirit of the Dcu.
In any case, we're bound to have left some...
These are the best episodes of the Justice League animated series and Justice League Unlimited!
It's tough to pick favorites when discussing the Justice League animated series and its follow up, Justice League Unlimited. It's also tough to really make a distinction between the two, despite the different titles and increased roster. A few tweaks aside, they're the same show, and the level of quality is consistent throughout.
The most important thing to remember about Justice League and Justice League Unlimited is that this is probably the single best introduction to the wider DC Universe that you can hope for. Just as Batman: The Animated Series perfectly distilled all of the essential elements of the Batman mythology into one perfect package, that's what these shows do with the spirit of the Dcu.
In any case, we're bound to have left some...
- 11/12/2017
- Den of Geek
I’m still reeling – in a good way – from Syracuse’s Salt City Comic-Con. It was a fantastic comic convention where I had way too much fun. And I’ve got some observations to share with you about it, but they’ll have to wait until next week.
This week I like to share some of the treasures I found at the show.
Let’s start with the “full disclosure” routine. I’m at the point where my comic collection is way too large, and I’ve been taking the steps to prune it back over the last few years. I’ve found this process difficult to adjust to, but my wife and I are in that downsizing mode. Surprisingly, I’m finding that maybe I am not that much of a hoarder after all. I actually feel better when I get rid of stuff.
But… I can’t help...
This week I like to share some of the treasures I found at the show.
Let’s start with the “full disclosure” routine. I’m at the point where my comic collection is way too large, and I’ve been taking the steps to prune it back over the last few years. I’ve found this process difficult to adjust to, but my wife and I are in that downsizing mode. Surprisingly, I’m finding that maybe I am not that much of a hoarder after all. I actually feel better when I get rid of stuff.
But… I can’t help...
- 7/3/2017
- by Ed Catto
- Comicmix.com
I can’t agree with fans that hate big crowds at big comic conventions. I tend to like big crowds. And I am always astonished by the way the San Diego Comic-Con takes over that town. I’m also in awe that the New York Comic Con is the biggest convention held in New York City’s Javits Center. The massive attendees at every big comic-con are both testaments to Geek Culture, and virtual victory laps for all fans everywhere.
To be honest, I also enjoy smaller comic conventions. There’s something special about being able to just wander up to a favorite creator and engage in a conversation with him or her. And at smaller shows, it’s empowering to be able to casually flip through a long box of comics to search for treasures, without elbowing your way through a crushing wall of other fans searching for their own treasures.
To be honest, I also enjoy smaller comic conventions. There’s something special about being able to just wander up to a favorite creator and engage in a conversation with him or her. And at smaller shows, it’s empowering to be able to casually flip through a long box of comics to search for treasures, without elbowing your way through a crushing wall of other fans searching for their own treasures.
- 2/27/2017
- by Ed Catto
- Comicmix.com
Ryan Lambie Feb 27, 2017
Ahead of Logan's UK release, James Mangold tells us why Wolverine's final bow is a different breed of superhero movie...
Time has begun to tell on the Wolverine. His face is careworn, he needs glasses to read, and even one of his adamantium claws doesn't quite extend as smoothly as it used to. This is, of course, Hugh Jackman's last hurrah as the sharp-clawed superhero, and an air of finality hangs heavily on Logan, directed by James Mangold.
See related David Fincher's unfinished projects Looking back at David Fincher's Alien 3 House Of Cards season 5: everything we know so far
It's a road-trip movie, it's western, it's neo-noir, it's science fiction. But overwhelmingly, it's a portrait of three outcasts and how they interact. There's Logan himself - trying in vain to lay low and work as a chauffeur on the Mexican border,...
Ahead of Logan's UK release, James Mangold tells us why Wolverine's final bow is a different breed of superhero movie...
Time has begun to tell on the Wolverine. His face is careworn, he needs glasses to read, and even one of his adamantium claws doesn't quite extend as smoothly as it used to. This is, of course, Hugh Jackman's last hurrah as the sharp-clawed superhero, and an air of finality hangs heavily on Logan, directed by James Mangold.
See related David Fincher's unfinished projects Looking back at David Fincher's Alien 3 House Of Cards season 5: everything we know so far
It's a road-trip movie, it's western, it's neo-noir, it's science fiction. But overwhelmingly, it's a portrait of three outcasts and how they interact. There's Logan himself - trying in vain to lay low and work as a chauffeur on the Mexican border,...
- 2/23/2017
- Den of Geek
I did a little bit of research for today’s column just to make sure I had my facts right, Googling “Jewish influence on comic books” in honor of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year. There were 509,000 hits, from Den of Geek’s Mensch of Steel: Superman’s Jewish Roots to the Daily Beast’s Superman is Jewish?: The Hebrew Roots of America’s Greatest Superhero to Stormfront’s How and Why the Jews Stole the Comic Book Industry.
Wait. What?
Stormfront is a white supremacist site whose “welcome” page reads:
“We are a community of racial realists and idealists. We are White Nationalists who support true diversity and a homeland for all peoples. Thousands of organizations promote the interests, values and heritage of non-White (sic) minorities. We promote ours.
“We are the voice of the new, embattled white minority!
“Tell the truth and fear no one!”
The article is a mixture of facts,...
Wait. What?
Stormfront is a white supremacist site whose “welcome” page reads:
“We are a community of racial realists and idealists. We are White Nationalists who support true diversity and a homeland for all peoples. Thousands of organizations promote the interests, values and heritage of non-White (sic) minorities. We promote ours.
“We are the voice of the new, embattled white minority!
“Tell the truth and fear no one!”
The article is a mixture of facts,...
- 10/3/2016
- by Mindy Newell
- Comicmix.com
It’s time for me to review this brand new book for the second time.
Before we get into that paradox, the bottom line is that Thomas Yeates’ recently published Tarzan The Beckoning is a gorgeous book. But there’s a little bit more to this column than that simple appraisal.
Back in the early 90s, a new publisher called Malibu Comics was creating innovative and fun comics. Malibu had just published Tarzan The Warrior by Mark Wheatley and Neil Vokes. As you probably know, Tarzan, perhaps more than any other character, has been rendered by some of the industry’s all time greatest artists – Hal Foster, Burne Hogarth, Russ Manning, Neal Adams, Joe Kubert, John Buscema, Joe Jusko…the list goes on and on.
So when Malibu was promoting this new Tarzan The Warrior comic mini-series in the 90s, they signaled that they were going to try something very different.
Before we get into that paradox, the bottom line is that Thomas Yeates’ recently published Tarzan The Beckoning is a gorgeous book. But there’s a little bit more to this column than that simple appraisal.
Back in the early 90s, a new publisher called Malibu Comics was creating innovative and fun comics. Malibu had just published Tarzan The Warrior by Mark Wheatley and Neil Vokes. As you probably know, Tarzan, perhaps more than any other character, has been rendered by some of the industry’s all time greatest artists – Hal Foster, Burne Hogarth, Russ Manning, Neal Adams, Joe Kubert, John Buscema, Joe Jusko…the list goes on and on.
So when Malibu was promoting this new Tarzan The Warrior comic mini-series in the 90s, they signaled that they were going to try something very different.
- 10/3/2016
- by Ed Catto
- Comicmix.com
Every few years I write a real world advice article for young creators. My Bad Boy Studio mentor program has produced some exceptional graduates working in comics, television, illustration and related media.
I’ve also taught and/or lectured at The Joe Kubert School, Pratt Institute, The School Of Visual Arts, Rhode Island School of Design, the High School Of Art & Design and yadda, yadda, whatever.
Quick note; Yogi Berra said it best: “It ain’t bragging if you can do it.”
So save your “Davis is bragging bullshit” comments for someone who hasn’t done what I’ve done.
You do that, and I’ll spare you how I wrote the curriculum for the Art School of the Museum of Modern Art and how my name is on a arts magnet school in East Orange New Jersey and, no, I didn’t write MOTU187 in spray-paint on the building.
I’ve also taught and/or lectured at The Joe Kubert School, Pratt Institute, The School Of Visual Arts, Rhode Island School of Design, the High School Of Art & Design and yadda, yadda, whatever.
Quick note; Yogi Berra said it best: “It ain’t bragging if you can do it.”
So save your “Davis is bragging bullshit” comments for someone who hasn’t done what I’ve done.
You do that, and I’ll spare you how I wrote the curriculum for the Art School of the Museum of Modern Art and how my name is on a arts magnet school in East Orange New Jersey and, no, I didn’t write MOTU187 in spray-paint on the building.
- 9/27/2016
- by Michael Davis
- Comicmix.com
A few years ago when I had the honor to moderate the Joe Kubert panel at New York Comic Con, I was pleasantly surprised by how many great stories one of the panelists shared.
These tales were spun by Thomas Yeates, one of the first graduates of the Kubert School. Yeates has enjoyed an extraordinary career, drawing iconic characters iconic from Tarzan to Swamp Thing, Conan to Captain Action and even Dracula. And there are so many more.
I still enjoy his brilliant work each weekend when I pick up the Sunday paper and read Hal Foster’s Prince Valiant.
Recently, I caught up with Thomas Yeates and chatted about his recent efforts.
Ed Catto: You’ve been illustrating the Prince Valiant weekly comic strip for some time now. How’s it all going?
Thomas Yeates: Basically it’s great; I’m very fortunate to have landed this job. Particularly working with writer Mark Schultz, who likes hearing my story ideas, which makes it a lot more fun.
EC: What are some the challenges you find as opposed to traditional comics or illustrations?
Ty: The main problem is the reproduction. I’ve had to limit the line work to accommodate a weird registration problem that we see today. Comic books have much better printing. The format differs from paper to paper, but I’ve been able to deal with that.
EC: The longevity of Prince Valiant is astounding. Why do you think it endures?
Ty: Well the main credit for that goes to Hal Foster who created, wrote and illustrated this Sunday only strip. And, of course, the hard work of those who followed Foster. He set the bar so incredibly high that all of us who’ve continued the strip have tried our best to maintain that level of quality. At least that’s what I think.
EC: Who’s your favorite character in the Prince Valiant cast?
Ty: Val himself. His wife Aleta is wonderful too. It’s much better when there are women in action adventure stories. And of course Gawain is always a kick.
EC: I’ve heard rumors that your mini-series, Tarzan: The Beckoning, first published by Malibu in the 90s, is going to be reprinted. Can you tell me more about that?
Ty: Yes. We just finished working on that for about nine months, Dark Horse, two assistants and myself. We fixed the coloring, I added a little new art and tweaked the story. There were production problems in the original version so the new collection will be much better, including pages put back in order that were out of order in the Malibu version. I think it will be out in the fall.
EC: One of the issues Tarzan: The Beckoning dealt with was the slaughter of elephants and the ivory trade. We see that countries and organizations are still struggling with this issue, as evidenced by the crushing and burning of ivory. Do you keep up with the issue and what insights might you have?
Ty: That’s a terrible situation. “When will we ever learn?” as the song says. Yes, it’s ironic that just when The Beckoning is being reprinted with its fight against the ivory trade theme we find elephants being slaughtered for their tusks again, just like when I originally created the story some 24 years ago. Yes, I follow the issue and had input from various experts back when I wrote it. One of them, from the Environment Investigation Agency, came back and contributed an update on the situation for the new Dark Horse edition.
EC: In The Beckoning, your version of Tarzan’s wife Jane was exceedingly lovely. Can you tell me a little bit about how you envision these characters?
Ty: Well I was quite taken by Maureen O’Sullivan who played Jane in the Weissmuller films of the 1930s so she was my inspiration there. Plus Burroughs descriptions of Jane, and Russ Manning always gave her such beauty and dignity and I wanted to maintain that.
EC: I also seem to recall that you snuck a few of your other characters into that mini-series. Is that correct?
Ty: Yes, I do that sometimes to keep myself amused. In the crowd scenes there are environmental activist friends I knew then and The Timespirits as well.
EC: Will you be at San Diego Comic-Con again this year?
Ty: Yes.
EC: What keeps you coming back every year?
Ty: Good question. Why the hell do I keep going? Recently because my daughter Olivia likes to go with me.
By the way I should mention there’s a new reprint of all the Zorro newspaper strips I did with Don McGregor and Tod Smith coming out from a German publisher <at that same time>, including an English language version.
EC: Yes, Uwe Weber filled me in. The German independent publisher “Classic Heroes” Is launching two exclusive Zorro-Dailies Editions in July 2016. The books will be available only thru direct orders at zorrodailies.com or classicheroes.de . He also explained that fans can find the complete information on these two beautiful books, and all the various projects on the ThomasYeates.com site.
EC: What keeps you going as an artist every day?
Ty: What keeps me going as an artist every day is another good question, Ed. I have to make a living and this is what I know how to do. A great script is always inspiring too. I’m still trying to figure out how the great artists I love, like Foster, did it. Sometimes that challenge keeps me going.
EC: Ha! I think there’s a lot of us who to try figure out how you do it, Thomas! Thanks so much for your time and insights.
(Editor’s Note: Prince Valiant by Mark Schultz and Thomas Yeates, is available online along with over 100 other current and vintage King Features comic strips – The Phantom, Mandrake the Magician, Popeye, Flash Gordon, Buz Sawyer, Johnny Hazard, Zippy The Pinhead and a slew of others at www.comicskingdom.com. Tell ‘em ComicMix sent you, and then ask yourself why you’re talking to your computer.)...
These tales were spun by Thomas Yeates, one of the first graduates of the Kubert School. Yeates has enjoyed an extraordinary career, drawing iconic characters iconic from Tarzan to Swamp Thing, Conan to Captain Action and even Dracula. And there are so many more.
I still enjoy his brilliant work each weekend when I pick up the Sunday paper and read Hal Foster’s Prince Valiant.
Recently, I caught up with Thomas Yeates and chatted about his recent efforts.
Ed Catto: You’ve been illustrating the Prince Valiant weekly comic strip for some time now. How’s it all going?
Thomas Yeates: Basically it’s great; I’m very fortunate to have landed this job. Particularly working with writer Mark Schultz, who likes hearing my story ideas, which makes it a lot more fun.
EC: What are some the challenges you find as opposed to traditional comics or illustrations?
Ty: The main problem is the reproduction. I’ve had to limit the line work to accommodate a weird registration problem that we see today. Comic books have much better printing. The format differs from paper to paper, but I’ve been able to deal with that.
EC: The longevity of Prince Valiant is astounding. Why do you think it endures?
Ty: Well the main credit for that goes to Hal Foster who created, wrote and illustrated this Sunday only strip. And, of course, the hard work of those who followed Foster. He set the bar so incredibly high that all of us who’ve continued the strip have tried our best to maintain that level of quality. At least that’s what I think.
EC: Who’s your favorite character in the Prince Valiant cast?
Ty: Val himself. His wife Aleta is wonderful too. It’s much better when there are women in action adventure stories. And of course Gawain is always a kick.
EC: I’ve heard rumors that your mini-series, Tarzan: The Beckoning, first published by Malibu in the 90s, is going to be reprinted. Can you tell me more about that?
Ty: Yes. We just finished working on that for about nine months, Dark Horse, two assistants and myself. We fixed the coloring, I added a little new art and tweaked the story. There were production problems in the original version so the new collection will be much better, including pages put back in order that were out of order in the Malibu version. I think it will be out in the fall.
EC: One of the issues Tarzan: The Beckoning dealt with was the slaughter of elephants and the ivory trade. We see that countries and organizations are still struggling with this issue, as evidenced by the crushing and burning of ivory. Do you keep up with the issue and what insights might you have?
Ty: That’s a terrible situation. “When will we ever learn?” as the song says. Yes, it’s ironic that just when The Beckoning is being reprinted with its fight against the ivory trade theme we find elephants being slaughtered for their tusks again, just like when I originally created the story some 24 years ago. Yes, I follow the issue and had input from various experts back when I wrote it. One of them, from the Environment Investigation Agency, came back and contributed an update on the situation for the new Dark Horse edition.
EC: In The Beckoning, your version of Tarzan’s wife Jane was exceedingly lovely. Can you tell me a little bit about how you envision these characters?
Ty: Well I was quite taken by Maureen O’Sullivan who played Jane in the Weissmuller films of the 1930s so she was my inspiration there. Plus Burroughs descriptions of Jane, and Russ Manning always gave her such beauty and dignity and I wanted to maintain that.
EC: I also seem to recall that you snuck a few of your other characters into that mini-series. Is that correct?
Ty: Yes, I do that sometimes to keep myself amused. In the crowd scenes there are environmental activist friends I knew then and The Timespirits as well.
EC: Will you be at San Diego Comic-Con again this year?
Ty: Yes.
EC: What keeps you coming back every year?
Ty: Good question. Why the hell do I keep going? Recently because my daughter Olivia likes to go with me.
By the way I should mention there’s a new reprint of all the Zorro newspaper strips I did with Don McGregor and Tod Smith coming out from a German publisher <at that same time>, including an English language version.
EC: Yes, Uwe Weber filled me in. The German independent publisher “Classic Heroes” Is launching two exclusive Zorro-Dailies Editions in July 2016. The books will be available only thru direct orders at zorrodailies.com or classicheroes.de . He also explained that fans can find the complete information on these two beautiful books, and all the various projects on the ThomasYeates.com site.
EC: What keeps you going as an artist every day?
Ty: What keeps me going as an artist every day is another good question, Ed. I have to make a living and this is what I know how to do. A great script is always inspiring too. I’m still trying to figure out how the great artists I love, like Foster, did it. Sometimes that challenge keeps me going.
EC: Ha! I think there’s a lot of us who to try figure out how you do it, Thomas! Thanks so much for your time and insights.
(Editor’s Note: Prince Valiant by Mark Schultz and Thomas Yeates, is available online along with over 100 other current and vintage King Features comic strips – The Phantom, Mandrake the Magician, Popeye, Flash Gordon, Buz Sawyer, Johnny Hazard, Zippy The Pinhead and a slew of others at www.comicskingdom.com. Tell ‘em ComicMix sent you, and then ask yourself why you’re talking to your computer.)...
- 6/13/2016
- by Ed Catto
- Comicmix.com
Kids these days… they’re all irreverent slackers, consumed in the little bubbles of social media and self-absorption, right? Not so fast! That’s not what I just experienced at all.
Each year, Bergen (County New Jersey) Community College is the site for the Bergen Teen Arts Festival. This impressive event invites outstanding high school students to participate in a daylong celebration of creativity, youth and the arts. It’s packed full of live performances – music, theater and more. An art exhibit showcases impressive drawing, painting and sculpting talent. The Festival offers more creative workshops than any student could ever attend in one day.
And the weather gods must support it, because it always seems to be held on a gorgeous, sunny day.
Evan Cooper, the Teen Arts Administrator is a focused and supportive guy with a great skill for setting the stage and then letting the students and teachers shine.
Each year, Bergen (County New Jersey) Community College is the site for the Bergen Teen Arts Festival. This impressive event invites outstanding high school students to participate in a daylong celebration of creativity, youth and the arts. It’s packed full of live performances – music, theater and more. An art exhibit showcases impressive drawing, painting and sculpting talent. The Festival offers more creative workshops than any student could ever attend in one day.
And the weather gods must support it, because it always seems to be held on a gorgeous, sunny day.
Evan Cooper, the Teen Arts Administrator is a focused and supportive guy with a great skill for setting the stage and then letting the students and teachers shine.
- 6/6/2016
- by Ed Catto
- Comicmix.com
The 1950s were a time of great experimentation for comic book publishers. Retail outlets were disappearing and post-war military scale-backs undermined Px sales. Superman was kept alive by its massive television exposure, but virtually all other superhero comics were either gone or in deep trouble.
Necessity being the mother of invention, comics publishers back then had no choice but to try new ideas and concepts. Western comics were hit-or-miss; those that featured top-line movie stars or characters were doing okay, the others were sort of meh. Romance comics, teevee tie-ins and some funny animal books were selling. The horror and crime comics that had been keeping publishers such as EC, Harvey and Gleason in the money were being condemned by the media, camera-hungry politicians and sanctimonious self-appointed “experts.”
So until DC and Marvel finally succeeded in rejuvenating the superhero genre, experimentation was the watchword of that decade. And that brings...
Necessity being the mother of invention, comics publishers back then had no choice but to try new ideas and concepts. Western comics were hit-or-miss; those that featured top-line movie stars or characters were doing okay, the others were sort of meh. Romance comics, teevee tie-ins and some funny animal books were selling. The horror and crime comics that had been keeping publishers such as EC, Harvey and Gleason in the money were being condemned by the media, camera-hungry politicians and sanctimonious self-appointed “experts.”
So until DC and Marvel finally succeeded in rejuvenating the superhero genre, experimentation was the watchword of that decade. And that brings...
- 4/6/2016
- by Mike Gold
- Comicmix.com
According to VancouverFilm.Net, the CW will continue to showcase DC Comics characters through their new time-travel series "DC's Legends of Tomorrow", with the network teasing key art of the bullet-riddled helmet of World War II comics hero 'Sgt. Rock' of 'Easy Company':
According the The CW, "...this 'G.I.' is the cornerstone of his unit. The men who follow him into battle know one thing for certain: nothin's easy in 'Easy Company'..."
The 'Sgt. Rock' character created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, debuted in DC's "Our Army at War" #83 (June 1959), as a dog-faced marksman...
...who served as an infantry non-commissioned officer during World War II...
...fighting in Europe, alongside a collection of disparate individuals who managed to participate in every major action in the war.
Click the images to enlarge...
According the The CW, "...this 'G.I.' is the cornerstone of his unit. The men who follow him into battle know one thing for certain: nothin's easy in 'Easy Company'..."
The 'Sgt. Rock' character created by writer Robert Kanigher and illustrator Joe Kubert, debuted in DC's "Our Army at War" #83 (June 1959), as a dog-faced marksman...
...who served as an infantry non-commissioned officer during World War II...
...fighting in Europe, alongside a collection of disparate individuals who managed to participate in every major action in the war.
Click the images to enlarge...
- 2/2/2016
- by Michael Stevens
- SneakPeek
Written by Garth Ennis | Art by Keith Burns | Published by Titan Comics | Format: Paperback, 32pp
Those comic book readers of a certain vintage , cough cough, probably remember well the mid-late 1970′s when sometimes the only comics you could find to keep you going until the next imported batch of Marvel and DC Comics arrived were the British war comics found then on a shelf in every newsagents. Although war comics were never my favourite, I did find them interesting, and the fact they were weekly was an added bonus. They were, it must be said, pretty simplistic; the British were heroic, the Nazis were swine, and each story pretty much played out that way.
The original Johnny Red strip actually appeared in perhaps the best of those comics, Battle, and Johnny himself had something of the Sgt Rock, or Sgt Nick Fury about him. An anti-hero, he was beset on all sides.
Those comic book readers of a certain vintage , cough cough, probably remember well the mid-late 1970′s when sometimes the only comics you could find to keep you going until the next imported batch of Marvel and DC Comics arrived were the British war comics found then on a shelf in every newsagents. Although war comics were never my favourite, I did find them interesting, and the fact they were weekly was an added bonus. They were, it must be said, pretty simplistic; the British were heroic, the Nazis were swine, and each story pretty much played out that way.
The original Johnny Red strip actually appeared in perhaps the best of those comics, Battle, and Johnny himself had something of the Sgt Rock, or Sgt Nick Fury about him. An anti-hero, he was beset on all sides.
- 11/6/2015
- by Dean Fuller
- Nerdly
We look at the films that slipped through Hollywood's net, from biblical epics to a time travelling Gladiator sequel...
This article contains a spoiler for Gladiator.
If you're one of those frustrated over the quality of many of the blockbusters that make it to the inside of a multiplex, then ponder the following. For each of these were supposed to be major projects, that for one reason or another, stalled on their way to the big screen. Some still may make it. But for many others, the journey is over. Here are the big blockbusters that never were...
1. Airframe
The late Michael Crichton scored another residential on the bestseller list with his impressive thriller, Airframe. It was published in 1996, just after films of Crichton works such as Jurassic Park, Rising Sun, Disclosure and the immortal Congo had proven to be hits of various sizes.
So: a hit book, another techno thriller,...
This article contains a spoiler for Gladiator.
If you're one of those frustrated over the quality of many of the blockbusters that make it to the inside of a multiplex, then ponder the following. For each of these were supposed to be major projects, that for one reason or another, stalled on their way to the big screen. Some still may make it. But for many others, the journey is over. Here are the big blockbusters that never were...
1. Airframe
The late Michael Crichton scored another residential on the bestseller list with his impressive thriller, Airframe. It was published in 1996, just after films of Crichton works such as Jurassic Park, Rising Sun, Disclosure and the immortal Congo had proven to be hits of various sizes.
So: a hit book, another techno thriller,...
- 6/11/2015
- by simonbrew
- Den of Geek
At its best, comics is like a family, where people in the field are known by their first names by fans and peers alike. Jerry, Joe (well, several Joes, actually, but context always makes it clear which one), Will, Bob, Bill, Stan, Jack, Steve, Marie, Carmine, Len, Marv, Flo.
Irwin.
Irwin Hasen was my friend, just as he was a lot of people’s friend. Of course, millions of people knew Irwin through his comics (Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, Wildcat, the Fox, and, of course, Dondi). But because he had no children and no local relatives, Irwin’s friends and companions were his cartooning contemporaries, the cartoonists he mentored, and a steady stream of admirers, thirty to fifty years his junior, who crossed his path in various ways. Some were fans, some fellow comics pros. Some were descendants of his contemporaries, seeking information about and connection with their parents or grandparents through Irwin,...
Irwin.
Irwin Hasen was my friend, just as he was a lot of people’s friend. Of course, millions of people knew Irwin through his comics (Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, Wildcat, the Fox, and, of course, Dondi). But because he had no children and no local relatives, Irwin’s friends and companions were his cartooning contemporaries, the cartoonists he mentored, and a steady stream of admirers, thirty to fifty years his junior, who crossed his path in various ways. Some were fans, some fellow comics pros. Some were descendants of his contemporaries, seeking information about and connection with their parents or grandparents through Irwin,...
- 3/20/2015
- by Danny Fingeroth
- Comicmix.com
There are times, o’ fiends, when yours cruelly sits back in his coffin and thinks “Damn, this gig is really n’ truly tha sh**’!”, and let me tell ya, this is ‘tha sh**tiest’ time I’ve had here yet! Wait… that doesn’t sound right… let me try again. Writin’ for ol’ Famous Monsters is a nightmare come true for the ol’ Ouija Board Kid, and what follows this ramblin’ non-sensory just proves that putrid point, as I get to chew tha fat with one of my favorite artists in the comics biz today: Tom Scioli! So why not join us as we wax all nostalgic-like and geek tha F out in the process!
Famous Monsters. So, you’re currently goin’ ape on the new Transformers Vs G.I. Joe series over at Idw, but how did you get started on the ol’ scintillatin’ sequentials biz?
Tom Scioli. Some of...
Famous Monsters. So, you’re currently goin’ ape on the new Transformers Vs G.I. Joe series over at Idw, but how did you get started on the ol’ scintillatin’ sequentials biz?
Tom Scioli. Some of...
- 1/26/2015
- by DanielXIII
- FamousMonsters of Filmland
This time around the honor of writing the last ComicMix column of 2014 falls to me, and I am grateful for the opportunity to taunt the gods and goddesses of irony once more before the Cherub of the New Year arrives, gets a good look around, and shits his diaper.
Many, if not all of my friends seem to be happy that this year is coming to an end. String theory tells us that such optimism is silly, but since I’m starting 2015 with a left arm different from the one I had last January – and the anesthesia almost killed me – well, sayonara old bastard and take your scythe with you.
Now that I’ve got off my chest, when it comes to the Wonderful World Of Comic Books it’s been a pretty good year. For the incurably wealthy, we have all these Artist’s Edition books, entire stories shot from original art.
Many, if not all of my friends seem to be happy that this year is coming to an end. String theory tells us that such optimism is silly, but since I’m starting 2015 with a left arm different from the one I had last January – and the anesthesia almost killed me – well, sayonara old bastard and take your scythe with you.
Now that I’ve got off my chest, when it comes to the Wonderful World Of Comic Books it’s been a pretty good year. For the incurably wealthy, we have all these Artist’s Edition books, entire stories shot from original art.
- 12/31/2014
- by Mike Gold
- Comicmix.com
The Gutters (Indefinite hiatus; 2010-2014)
Written by Ryan Sohmer
Art by various
Colored by Ed Ryzowski
First and foremost, The Gutters was a twice weekly webcomic that made fun of various aspects of the comics industry. It took the comics news of that week and spinned into something hilarious and self-contained with a rotating cast of artists, including ones you might know like Annie Wu (Hawkeye), Darick Robertson (Transmetropolitan), Joe Eisma (Morning Glories), Nick Bradshaw (Wolverine and the X-Men), and even comics legend Neal Adams, who pencilled a heartfelt tribute to the late Joe Kubert in 2012. The humor of The Gutters is highly topical. However, in the tradition of the best Mad Magazine strips or SNL sketches, it can act as a nice time capsule to 2010 when people were arguing whether Steve Rogers or Bucky Barnes (or Clint Barton) should be Captain America, or 2012 when the circle of snark around...
Written by Ryan Sohmer
Art by various
Colored by Ed Ryzowski
First and foremost, The Gutters was a twice weekly webcomic that made fun of various aspects of the comics industry. It took the comics news of that week and spinned into something hilarious and self-contained with a rotating cast of artists, including ones you might know like Annie Wu (Hawkeye), Darick Robertson (Transmetropolitan), Joe Eisma (Morning Glories), Nick Bradshaw (Wolverine and the X-Men), and even comics legend Neal Adams, who pencilled a heartfelt tribute to the late Joe Kubert in 2012. The humor of The Gutters is highly topical. However, in the tradition of the best Mad Magazine strips or SNL sketches, it can act as a nice time capsule to 2010 when people were arguing whether Steve Rogers or Bucky Barnes (or Clint Barton) should be Captain America, or 2012 when the circle of snark around...
- 12/29/2014
- by Logan Dalton
- SoundOnSight
Comic book writer, editor, and raconteur Clifford Meth took to Kickstarter to fund the publication of Comic Book Babylon, a collection of essays, stories, and interviews drawn from the almost ten years worth of columns he had written for various comic book news sites across the Internet, including ComicMix itself. Promising an introduction by Stan Lee and illustrations by noted comic artist/political crackpot Michael Netzer, Comic Book Babylon almost quintupled its original funding goal with $11,219 in pledges. Last week, Meth delivered with the release of Comic Book Babylon, published in print by Meth’s own Aardwolf Publishing or digitally through the Amazon Kindle store.
Unfortunately, the book itself isn’t quite as lofty as its funding might make it out to be: Where Sean Howe’s Marvel Comics: The Untold Story aimed for academic detachment and scholarly consideration for both sides of every story, Meth wears his personal...
Unfortunately, the book itself isn’t quite as lofty as its funding might make it out to be: Where Sean Howe’s Marvel Comics: The Untold Story aimed for academic detachment and scholarly consideration for both sides of every story, Meth wears his personal...
- 3/21/2014
- by Matthew Weinberger
- Comicmix.com
I may be behind the eight-ball here, but last month much blogging, Facebook and Tumblr posts and Twitter accounts were ablaze with comics artist Tess Fowler’s account of sexual harassment at the 2007 San Diego Comic Convention – a comics pro used the age-old pretense of being interested in her work to try and get her to come up to his room, and when Tess declined, he then went about insulting her work, her cosplay and talking bullshit about her to other male comics professionals and anybody else who would listen on the convention floor, i.e., in public.
Yeah, I know I’ve written about this subject before, and so has Heidi MacDonald over at The Beat, Colleen Doran on her own blog, former Dark Horse editor Rachel Edidin on her Tumblr site Postcards From Space, Jill Pantozzi at The Mary Sue, and Corrina Lawson on her site, Geek Mom.
Yeah, I know I’ve written about this subject before, and so has Heidi MacDonald over at The Beat, Colleen Doran on her own blog, former Dark Horse editor Rachel Edidin on her Tumblr site Postcards From Space, Jill Pantozzi at The Mary Sue, and Corrina Lawson on her site, Geek Mom.
- 12/9/2013
- by Mindy Newell
- Comicmix.com
The following is a list of all comic books, graphic novels and specialty items that will be available this week and shipped to comic book stores who have placed orders for them.
3D Total Publishing
Sketching From The Imagination An Insight Into Creative Drawing Sc, $29.99
Aam Markosia
Atomic Sheep Gn, $18.99
Abrams Comicarts
Art Of Rube Goldberg Hc, $60.00
AC Comics
Golden Age Glamour Volume 1 Tp, $34.95
Adhouse Books
Delusional Hc, $24.95
Amp! Comics For Kids
Snoopy Cowabunga Tp, 9.99
Andrews McMeel
Squared Away A Doonesbury Collection Hc, $25.00
Anomaly Productions
Shifter Volume 1 Hc, $19.99
Ape Entertainment
Genie The Genius #2 (Of 3), $2.99
Arcana Studio
Dead Reckoning Volume 1 Contagion Gn, $19.95
Gene Simmons’ Comics Anthology Volume 2 Sc, $19.95
Gloom Gn, $19.95
Archaia Entertainment
Old City Blues Volume 2 Gn, $12.95
Archie Comic Publications
Archie 1000-Page Comics Jamboree Tp, $14.99
Sonic The Hedgehog Mega Man Worlds Collide Volume 1 Tp, $11.99
Aspen Comics
All New Soulfire #1 (Cover A Kenneth V. Marion), $1.00
All New Soulfire #1 (Cover B Kenneth V.
3D Total Publishing
Sketching From The Imagination An Insight Into Creative Drawing Sc, $29.99
Aam Markosia
Atomic Sheep Gn, $18.99
Abrams Comicarts
Art Of Rube Goldberg Hc, $60.00
AC Comics
Golden Age Glamour Volume 1 Tp, $34.95
Adhouse Books
Delusional Hc, $24.95
Amp! Comics For Kids
Snoopy Cowabunga Tp, 9.99
Andrews McMeel
Squared Away A Doonesbury Collection Hc, $25.00
Anomaly Productions
Shifter Volume 1 Hc, $19.99
Ape Entertainment
Genie The Genius #2 (Of 3), $2.99
Arcana Studio
Dead Reckoning Volume 1 Contagion Gn, $19.95
Gene Simmons’ Comics Anthology Volume 2 Sc, $19.95
Gloom Gn, $19.95
Archaia Entertainment
Old City Blues Volume 2 Gn, $12.95
Archie Comic Publications
Archie 1000-Page Comics Jamboree Tp, $14.99
Sonic The Hedgehog Mega Man Worlds Collide Volume 1 Tp, $11.99
Aspen Comics
All New Soulfire #1 (Cover A Kenneth V. Marion), $1.00
All New Soulfire #1 (Cover B Kenneth V.
- 11/11/2013
- by Adam B.
- GeekRest
The following is a list of all comic books, graphic novels and specialty items that will be available this week and shipped to comic book stores who have placed orders for them.
Action Lab Entertainment
Skyward #1 (Of 6)(Jeremy Dale 2nd Printing Variant Cover), $2.99
Skyward #4 (Of 6)(Cover A Jeremy Dale), $2.99
Skyward #4 (Of 6)(Cover B Mike Norton), $2.99
Amigo Comics
Arcane Secrets #2 (Of 3), $3.99
Antarctic Press
Gold Digger #205, $3.99
Wild Work #1 (Of 5), $3.99
Archie Comic Publications
Archie #649 (Bill Galvan/Bob Smith/Rosario Tito Pena Regular Cover), $2.99
Archie #649 (Jeff Shultz & Rosario Tito Pena Nighthawks Variant Cover), $2.99
Archie Comics Spectacular It’s A Date Tp, $5.99
Fox #1 (Darwyn Cooke Running With The Foxes Variant Cover), $2.99
Fox #1 (Dean Haspiel Freak Magnet Variant Cover), $2.99
Fox #1 (Dean Haspiel Regular Cover), $2.99
Fox #1 (Fiona Staples High Flying Variant Cover), $2.99
Sonic The Hedgehog #254 (Ben Bates Regular Cover), $2.99
Sonic The Hedgehog #254 (Sega Variant Cover), $2.99
Aspen Comics
All New Fathom #3 (Of 8)(Cover A Alex Konat), $3.99
All New...
Action Lab Entertainment
Skyward #1 (Of 6)(Jeremy Dale 2nd Printing Variant Cover), $2.99
Skyward #4 (Of 6)(Cover A Jeremy Dale), $2.99
Skyward #4 (Of 6)(Cover B Mike Norton), $2.99
Amigo Comics
Arcane Secrets #2 (Of 3), $3.99
Antarctic Press
Gold Digger #205, $3.99
Wild Work #1 (Of 5), $3.99
Archie Comic Publications
Archie #649 (Bill Galvan/Bob Smith/Rosario Tito Pena Regular Cover), $2.99
Archie #649 (Jeff Shultz & Rosario Tito Pena Nighthawks Variant Cover), $2.99
Archie Comics Spectacular It’s A Date Tp, $5.99
Fox #1 (Darwyn Cooke Running With The Foxes Variant Cover), $2.99
Fox #1 (Dean Haspiel Freak Magnet Variant Cover), $2.99
Fox #1 (Dean Haspiel Regular Cover), $2.99
Fox #1 (Fiona Staples High Flying Variant Cover), $2.99
Sonic The Hedgehog #254 (Ben Bates Regular Cover), $2.99
Sonic The Hedgehog #254 (Sega Variant Cover), $2.99
Aspen Comics
All New Fathom #3 (Of 8)(Cover A Alex Konat), $3.99
All New...
- 10/28/2013
- by Adam B.
- GeekRest
Welcome to Inside the Indies, a new feature we’ve concocted to recognize the talents floating in the ether beyond the Big Two and the big “Indie” publishers (Dark Horse, Image, Idw, etc.). Think Spx (Small Press Expo) vs the New York Comic Con. We’ll pick an indie creator and review their books for you and end with an interview so you, the wonderful reader, can see what creating comics is like when you don’t have a publishing powerhouse supporting you. These folks make it happen on their own and you can’t help but respect the passion, time, energy, and skill required to make this happen. So let’s dig in to Sound On Sight’s very first Inside the Indies!
For the next many weeks, I’ll be reviewing Jason Pittman’s Leftovers. Jason went to the Joe Kubert School of Cartoon & Graphic Art in Dover,...
For the next many weeks, I’ll be reviewing Jason Pittman’s Leftovers. Jason went to the Joe Kubert School of Cartoon & Graphic Art in Dover,...
- 10/25/2013
- by Joey Blanco
- SoundOnSight
As a graphic designer I’ve always been a fan of the art book publisher Taschen. Founded in 1980 the company has, in it’s 20-odd year lifespan, built a reputation for publishing the widest variety of books, on an incredibly varied amount of subjects. In fact one of my all-time favourites art books, American Ads of the 1980s, was published by Taschen and has survived many a book “purge” in my household.
Besides being a graphic designer I’m also comics nerd (who isn’t these days?) so what happens when Taschen combine my two loves? You get the first two volumes in what is set to be a five volume collection on DC Comics which explores the origins of comics’ most enduring legends and the behind-the-scenes stories of the men and women who created them, era by era.
Taschen were kind enough to send me both The Golden Age...
Besides being a graphic designer I’m also comics nerd (who isn’t these days?) so what happens when Taschen combine my two loves? You get the first two volumes in what is set to be a five volume collection on DC Comics which explores the origins of comics’ most enduring legends and the behind-the-scenes stories of the men and women who created them, era by era.
Taschen were kind enough to send me both The Golden Age...
- 10/19/2013
- by Phil Wheat
- Nerdly
We told you last month about the PBS special presentation Superheroes: A Never-Ending Battle that would be premiering in October, and tonight’s the night! Tuesday nights are pretty jam-packed for Our Kind of Viewing, but this one looks like it should get some priority.
We have a TV spot and the clip from the first hour to get you primed, and the press release is included again below so you’ll get the full details, including the info on the accompanying book and Blu-ray.
Here’s a quick scheduling note: After the initial broadcast the three hours are broken into three one-hour parts and have slightly different titles, though at least in my area they will still be aired one right after the other. So if you’re thinking of DVR-ing it, check the titles and time carefully so you don’t miss out on any of the three hours.
We have a TV spot and the clip from the first hour to get you primed, and the press release is included again below so you’ll get the full details, including the info on the accompanying book and Blu-ray.
Here’s a quick scheduling note: After the initial broadcast the three hours are broken into three one-hour parts and have slightly different titles, though at least in my area they will still be aired one right after the other. So if you’re thinking of DVR-ing it, check the titles and time carefully so you don’t miss out on any of the three hours.
- 10/15/2013
- by Erin Willard
- ScifiMafia
Click the Above Title to read the Full Story.... PBS Announces “Superheroes Night” On October 15th – Superheroes: A Never-Ending Battle to be shown in one three-hour programming block, beginning at 8pm Et (check local listings) – Arlington, Va; September 5, 2013 – PBS announced today that Tuesday, October 15, 2013, is “Superheroes Night,” featuring a three-hour block dedicated to the groundbreaking program Superheroes: A Never-ending Battle. The newest film from Emmy Award-winning producer/director Michael Kantor (Broadway: The American Musical; Make ‘Em Laugh: The Funny Business Of America) will premiere at 8:00 p.m. Et and include insightful interviews from Stan Lee; actors Adam West (TV’s “Batman”) and Lynda Carter (“Wonder Woman”); Geoff Johns (chief creative officer, DC Comics), Jeph Loeb (head of television for Marvel Entertainment); Pulitzer Prize-winning author Michael Chabon (The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay) and cartoonist/author Jules Feiffer (the long-running strip “Feiffer”), as well as appearances by the late comic...
- 9/12/2013
- by Matt MacNabb
- Legions of Gotham
Having spent the past four days in Baltimore attending my favorite comics convention – the one that’s actually about comics – I had the opportunity to spend some serious conversation time with a lot of my friends. However, because the show is a four-hour-plus drive from La Casa Del Oro, the best conversation is with my daughter and ComicMix cohort Adriane Nash. Whereas much of her work is behind the scenes, Adriane is the one who kills here each year on April Fool’s Day and at least one of her hoaxes has graduated to the level of Urban Myth.
As her dad, this makes me very proud. But (sing along, folks), I digress.
After returning from Baltimore Monday night, while cuing TiVo for Ricky Gervais’ appearance on David Letterman, we had one of those “let’s tie-up everything we’ve been talking about” conversations. This one was about how, given time,...
As her dad, this makes me very proud. But (sing along, folks), I digress.
After returning from Baltimore Monday night, while cuing TiVo for Ricky Gervais’ appearance on David Letterman, we had one of those “let’s tie-up everything we’ve been talking about” conversations. This one was about how, given time,...
- 9/11/2013
- by Mike Gold
- Comicmix.com
The circus tent of geekdom encompasses an infinite number of interests, but when the brainy geeks are also the superhero fan geeks, what do you get? This bit of wonderfulness: a PBS miniseries on superheroes entitled Superheroes: A Never-Ending Battle. Three episodes, all in one night, narrated by the excellent Liev Schreiber (X-Men Origins: Wolverine, Salt). And just wait until you see the list of people involved.
There will also be a book and a Blu-ray/DVD released in conjunction with the all-in-one-night miniseries; here are the details, followed by links to pre-order the book and the Blu-ray:
PBS Announces “Superheroes Night” On October 15th – Superheroes: A Never-Ending Battle to be shown in one three-hour programming block, beginning at 8pm Et (check local listings) –
Arlington, Va; September 5, 2013 – PBS announced today that Tuesday, October 15, 2013, is “Superheroes Night,” featuring a three-hour block dedicated to the groundbreaking program Superheroes: A Never-ending Battle. The...
There will also be a book and a Blu-ray/DVD released in conjunction with the all-in-one-night miniseries; here are the details, followed by links to pre-order the book and the Blu-ray:
PBS Announces “Superheroes Night” On October 15th – Superheroes: A Never-Ending Battle to be shown in one three-hour programming block, beginning at 8pm Et (check local listings) –
Arlington, Va; September 5, 2013 – PBS announced today that Tuesday, October 15, 2013, is “Superheroes Night,” featuring a three-hour block dedicated to the groundbreaking program Superheroes: A Never-ending Battle. The...
- 9/5/2013
- by Erin Willard
- ScifiMafia
The following is a list of all comic books, graphic novels and specialty items that will be available this week and shipped to comic book stores who have placed orders for them.
Aazurn Publishing
Envy (One Shot)(not verified by Diamond), $2.49
Abrams
Nathan Hale’s Hazardous Tales Volume 3 Donner Dinner Party Gn, $12.95
Abstract Studios
Rachel Rising Volume 3 Cemetary Songs Tp, $16.99
Action Lab Entertainment
Princeless Tales Of Girls Who Rock (One Shot), $2.99
Skyward #2 (Of 6), $2.99
Arcana Studio
Headsmash Gn, $19.95
Steam Engines Of Oz #2, $3.99
Archaia Entertainment
Rubicon Hc, $24.95
Thrilling Adventure Hour Hc, $19.95
Archie Comic Publications
Jugheads Double Digest #195, $3.99
Kevin Keller #10 (Dan Parent Regular Cover), $2.99
Kevin Keller #10 (Ryan Jampole Variant Cover), $2.99
Mega Man #28 (Ryan Jampole Pencil Ink Color Variant Cover), $2.99
Mega Man #28 (Ryan Jampole Regular Cover), $2.99
Aspen Comics
Charismagic Volume 2 #4 (Of 6)(Cover A Siya Oum), $3.99
Charismagic Volume 2 #4 (Of 6)(Cover B Siya Oum), $3.99
Charismagic Volume 2 #4 (Of 6)(Cover C Siya Oum), $3.99
Charismagic Volume 2 #4 (Of 6)(Cover D...
Aazurn Publishing
Envy (One Shot)(not verified by Diamond), $2.49
Abrams
Nathan Hale’s Hazardous Tales Volume 3 Donner Dinner Party Gn, $12.95
Abstract Studios
Rachel Rising Volume 3 Cemetary Songs Tp, $16.99
Action Lab Entertainment
Princeless Tales Of Girls Who Rock (One Shot), $2.99
Skyward #2 (Of 6), $2.99
Arcana Studio
Headsmash Gn, $19.95
Steam Engines Of Oz #2, $3.99
Archaia Entertainment
Rubicon Hc, $24.95
Thrilling Adventure Hour Hc, $19.95
Archie Comic Publications
Jugheads Double Digest #195, $3.99
Kevin Keller #10 (Dan Parent Regular Cover), $2.99
Kevin Keller #10 (Ryan Jampole Variant Cover), $2.99
Mega Man #28 (Ryan Jampole Pencil Ink Color Variant Cover), $2.99
Mega Man #28 (Ryan Jampole Regular Cover), $2.99
Aspen Comics
Charismagic Volume 2 #4 (Of 6)(Cover A Siya Oum), $3.99
Charismagic Volume 2 #4 (Of 6)(Cover B Siya Oum), $3.99
Charismagic Volume 2 #4 (Of 6)(Cover C Siya Oum), $3.99
Charismagic Volume 2 #4 (Of 6)(Cover D...
- 8/5/2013
- by Adam B.
- GeekRest
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