In a blink of an eye we are already on issue number 3 of Justice League vs. Suicide Squad. The first two issues featured the battle between the two groups as well as their capture and this is where we pick up. Each member of the league has been placed in a specific holding cell where they cannot escape. While moving Batman and being told that he cannot escape… he escapes and confronts Amanda Waller who is already waiting for him. Soon he learns that Waller had kidnapped the league to ask for their help (as confusing as that sounds), that they should be grateful she didn’t inject a bomb in their necks. She then proceeds to let them go and show them and the Suicide Squad the predicament that she is in. Maxwell Lord has freed a group out of a hidden prison called “The Catacombs” and now they...
- 1/9/2017
- by Emmanuel Gomez
- LRMonline.com
As seen in the preview below, Batman's time as an inmate at Belle Reve doesn't appear to last more than 30 seconds... Hopefully Amanda Waller has a panic room or she's going to soon find herself face-to-face with the Caped Crusader. If anyone is going to spring the rest of the League, it's definitely the World's Greatest Detective. But while all of this is going on, what of the mysterious agenda for Max Lord and his band of escapees from Waller's secret prison? They're a third-party wildcard that could take down both teams while they're preoccupied with one another. Justice League Vs. Suicide Squad #3 Written by Joshua Williamson Art and cover by Jesus Merino and Andy Owens Variant covers by Amanda Conner & Joe Madureira Synopsis: Belle Reve Penitentiary. Headquarters of Task Force X, home to the worst super-criminal scum in the DC Universe and new residence of…the Justice League?! The...
- 12/31/2016
- ComicBookMovie.com
Robin War #2
Written by Tom King
Art by Khary Randolph, Alvaro Martinez and Raul Fernandez, Carmine Di Giandomenico, Steve Pugh, Scott McDaniel and Andy Owens
Colors by Chris Sotomayor, Emilio Lopez, Mat Lopes
Letters by Tom Napolitano
Published by DC Comics
Robin War #2 ends up being about a theme that has permeated the Batman family of books since the beginning of the New 52: family. As Dick Grayson plays the lone martyr battling Lincoln March at the Court of Owls’ HQ and pleading for Damian to leave, the rest of the original Robins, the We Are Robin kids, and even the Gotham Pd and Batman band together to score a resounding victory for the Talons. It’s a grand moment that gets cast in the shadow of Dick Grayson’s continual moral compromise as he tries to pull a Batman at the end of “Endgame” and sacrifice everything for Gotham,...
Written by Tom King
Art by Khary Randolph, Alvaro Martinez and Raul Fernandez, Carmine Di Giandomenico, Steve Pugh, Scott McDaniel and Andy Owens
Colors by Chris Sotomayor, Emilio Lopez, Mat Lopes
Letters by Tom Napolitano
Published by DC Comics
Robin War #2 ends up being about a theme that has permeated the Batman family of books since the beginning of the New 52: family. As Dick Grayson plays the lone martyr battling Lincoln March at the Court of Owls’ HQ and pleading for Damian to leave, the rest of the original Robins, the We Are Robin kids, and even the Gotham Pd and Batman band together to score a resounding victory for the Talons. It’s a grand moment that gets cast in the shadow of Dick Grayson’s continual moral compromise as he tries to pull a Batman at the end of “Endgame” and sacrifice everything for Gotham,...
- 1/14/2016
- by Logan Dalton
- SoundOnSight
Cyborg #5
Written by David Walker
Pencils by Felipe Watanabe and Daniel Hdr
Layouts by Ivan Reis
Inks by Albert Oclair, Júlio Ferreira, Andy Owens, and Juan Castro
Colors by Adriano Lucas and Pete Pantanzis
Lettered by Rob Leigh
Publisher: DC Comics
The Techno Apocalypse is well underway in the penultimate issue of Cyborg’s first arc. The S.T.A.R Lab Team and the Alternate Universe Tekbreakers retreat for a reprieve against the Technosapiens and the battlefield. They’ve turned Detroit into for a last ditch effort to end this war. In this dialogue heavy issue, there are doses of supporting characters gaining a voice and some spotlight while Cyborg and company take a backseat for the revelation heavy portion.
Cyborg has gotten more character development in these five issues in all of the Justice League issues, save for his Forever Evil tie-in Arc. David Walker really owns Victor...
Written by David Walker
Pencils by Felipe Watanabe and Daniel Hdr
Layouts by Ivan Reis
Inks by Albert Oclair, Júlio Ferreira, Andy Owens, and Juan Castro
Colors by Adriano Lucas and Pete Pantanzis
Lettered by Rob Leigh
Publisher: DC Comics
The Techno Apocalypse is well underway in the penultimate issue of Cyborg’s first arc. The S.T.A.R Lab Team and the Alternate Universe Tekbreakers retreat for a reprieve against the Technosapiens and the battlefield. They’ve turned Detroit into for a last ditch effort to end this war. In this dialogue heavy issue, there are doses of supporting characters gaining a voice and some spotlight while Cyborg and company take a backseat for the revelation heavy portion.
Cyborg has gotten more character development in these five issues in all of the Justice League issues, save for his Forever Evil tie-in Arc. David Walker really owns Victor...
- 12/5/2015
- by Terrence Sage
- SoundOnSight
Condemned director Eli Morgan Gesner spoke with Daily Dead about the film and the Q&A is featured after the jump. Also in this round-up: preview pages from Dark Horse's Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season 9 Vol. 3 hardcover comic and a cool monster creator website from the team behind 20th Century Fox's Victor Frankenstein.
Condemned: "Fed up with her parents’ bickering, poor-little-rich-girl Maya (Dylan Penn) moves in with her boyfriend, who is squatting in an old condemned building on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. With neighbors that are meth heads, junkies and degenerates, this depraved hell hole is even more toxic than it appears: After a virus born from their combined noxious waste and garbage infects the building’s residents, one by one, they succumb to a terrifying pathogen that turns them into bloodthirsty, rampaging killers and transforms their building into a savage slaughterhouse.
Rlj Entertainment will release Condemned...
Condemned: "Fed up with her parents’ bickering, poor-little-rich-girl Maya (Dylan Penn) moves in with her boyfriend, who is squatting in an old condemned building on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. With neighbors that are meth heads, junkies and degenerates, this depraved hell hole is even more toxic than it appears: After a virus born from their combined noxious waste and garbage infects the building’s residents, one by one, they succumb to a terrifying pathogen that turns them into bloodthirsty, rampaging killers and transforms their building into a savage slaughterhouse.
Rlj Entertainment will release Condemned...
- 11/12/2015
- by Tamika Jones
- DailyDead
Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Season 9 #1-25 (2011-2013)
Written by Joss Whedon (#1), Andrew Chambliss (#2-13, 16-25), Scott Allie (#8-10), Jane Espenson (#14), Drew Z. Greenberg (#15)
Pencils by Georges Jeanty (#1-4, 6-7, 11-13, 16-19, 20-25), Karl Moline (#5, 14-15, 20), Cliff Richards (#8-10), Ben Dewey (#15)
Coloured by Michelle Madsen (#1-25)
Inking by Dexter Vines (#1-4, 16-19, 21-24), Andy Owens (#5, 8-10, 14-15, 20), Karl Story (#6-7, 25), Nathan Massengill (#11-13)
Executive Produced by Joss Whedon
Published by Dark Horse Comics
The Buffyverse was in dire need of rescue in the aftermath of Season 8. The infamous Twilight story arc that made up the last one-fourth of the series stripped a struggling comic series of the respect it had slowly been earning. When you declare something “canon”, a whole lot of people start paying a lot of attention, and there was a lot of pressure on Buffy Season 8 to see if it could continue the series narrative in a...
Written by Joss Whedon (#1), Andrew Chambliss (#2-13, 16-25), Scott Allie (#8-10), Jane Espenson (#14), Drew Z. Greenberg (#15)
Pencils by Georges Jeanty (#1-4, 6-7, 11-13, 16-19, 20-25), Karl Moline (#5, 14-15, 20), Cliff Richards (#8-10), Ben Dewey (#15)
Coloured by Michelle Madsen (#1-25)
Inking by Dexter Vines (#1-4, 16-19, 21-24), Andy Owens (#5, 8-10, 14-15, 20), Karl Story (#6-7, 25), Nathan Massengill (#11-13)
Executive Produced by Joss Whedon
Published by Dark Horse Comics
The Buffyverse was in dire need of rescue in the aftermath of Season 8. The infamous Twilight story arc that made up the last one-fourth of the series stripped a struggling comic series of the respect it had slowly been earning. When you declare something “canon”, a whole lot of people start paying a lot of attention, and there was a lot of pressure on Buffy Season 8 to see if it could continue the series narrative in a...
- 3/22/2014
- by Trevor Dobbin
- SoundOnSight
This week saw the first really beautiful weather Saint Louis has had since November. You should assume that the delay in this week’s column is due to me being outside and savoring the sunshine.
Ghost #2
Writer: Kelly Sue DeConnick & Christopher Sebela
Artist: Ryan Sook, Drew Johnson and Andy Owens
Colors: Dave McCaig
Publisher: Dark Horse Comics
Price: $3 (Digital)
So it turns out Ghost is the latest in a series of Dark Horse relaunches all tying into what is apparently going to be a coherent pulp hero universe. Coined “Project Dark Sky,” there’s no real narrative for the event other than some half-assed Arg hinting at psychic powers and alien invasions. It apparently has seven core titles, some of which I’ve only just glimpsed passing over on the rack on new comics day. That’s ambitious. But the whole gig is kind of pointless to me, because they...
Ghost #2
Writer: Kelly Sue DeConnick & Christopher Sebela
Artist: Ryan Sook, Drew Johnson and Andy Owens
Colors: Dave McCaig
Publisher: Dark Horse Comics
Price: $3 (Digital)
So it turns out Ghost is the latest in a series of Dark Horse relaunches all tying into what is apparently going to be a coherent pulp hero universe. Coined “Project Dark Sky,” there’s no real narrative for the event other than some half-assed Arg hinting at psychic powers and alien invasions. It apparently has seven core titles, some of which I’ve only just glimpsed passing over on the rack on new comics day. That’s ambitious. But the whole gig is kind of pointless to me, because they...
- 3/17/2014
- by Chris Melkus
- Destroy the Brain
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