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Panel from the Channel 52 back-up story in DC Comics shipped June 12, 2013, creators unknown
Panel from the Channel 52 back-up story in DC Comics shipped June 12, 2013, creators unknown
22 minutes ago
Filed under: Dark Horse, Previews, Opinion A nominee for this year's Eisner Award for Best Anthology (and last year's winner), Dark Horse Presents has been one of ComicsAlliance's favorite titles since it was relaunched in 2011 to contin...
Filed under: Dark Horse, Previews, Opinion A nominee for this year's Eisner Award for Best Anthology (and last year's winner), Dark Horse Presents has been one of ComicsAlliance's favorite titles since it was relaunched in 2011 to continue the classic and influential series' tradition of ... Read more Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments
27 minutes ago
Filed under: Toys, Animation This year's San Diego Comic-Con International is almost upon us, and that means it's time once again for that harrowing social experiment where retailers put a limited number of items in a gigantic room wi...
Filed under: Toys, Animation This year's San Diego Comic-Con International is almost upon us, and that means it's time once again for that harrowing social experiment where retailers put a limited number of items in a gigantic room with 150,000 fans and sit back to watch the ... Read more Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments
27 minutes ago
Filed under: Movies, Indie, Culture Graphic Novelist Hope Larson, who was recently nominated for an Eisner for her 2012 adaptation of Madeleine L'Engle's A Wrinkle in Time, has made the leap to moving pictures. Her new eight-and-a-half...
Filed under: Movies, Indie, Culture Graphic Novelist Hope Larson, who was recently nominated for an Eisner for her 2012 adaptation of Madeleine L'Engle's A Wrinkle in Time, has made the leap to moving pictures. Her new eight-and-a-half-minute short film Bitter Orange, starring Scott ... Read more Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments
27 minutes ago
Highly anticipated by everyone who ever played a LEGO game, the LEGO Movie trailer has been released by Warner Brothers... No related posts.
Highly anticipated by everyone who ever played a LEGO game, the LEGO Movie trailer has been released by Warner Brothers... No related posts.
30 minutes ago
Posted On Today at 07:40:43 pm EDT by Iron Man Unit 007 [Reply] [Quote] [New] Flash was a soldier in battle where he lost his legs, before that I doubt his bullets all magically missed the targets. Flash as Venom was a covert operativ...
Posted On Today at 07:40:43 pm EDT by Iron Man Unit 007 [Reply] [Quote] [New] Flash was a soldier in battle where he lost his legs, before that I doubt his bullets all magically missed the targets. Flash as Venom was a covert operative for the military before the Avengers took custody of the symbiote and Flash's control over the symbiote is less then perfect at times. So yes, Flash has killed.
41 minutes ago
Click here to view the embedded video. A Comic Show – Sagas For Everyone!
Click here to view the embedded video. A Comic Show – Sagas For Everyone!
about 1 hour ago
Writer Tim Seeley hopes to use the Batman rogue's VILLAINS MONTH issue to tie together KILLER CROCS New 52 portrayals.
Writer Tim Seeley hopes to use the Batman rogue's VILLAINS MONTH issue to tie together KILLER CROCS New 52 portrayals.
about 1 hour ago
The Lego Movie comes from Phil Lord and Chris Miller, the directors of 21 Jump Street and Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs, not to mention the late, great TV toon, Clone High. They’re funny guys. And it looks like they’re ma...
The Lego Movie comes from Phil Lord and Chris Miller, the directors of 21 Jump Street and Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs, not to mention the late, great TV toon, Clone High. They’re funny guys. And it looks like they’re making another funny film. This time, I should note, they’re also working with Chris McKay. Some kind of Lego specialist, I assume. And presumably another funny guy. Click here to view the embedded video. That was Chris Pratt as Emmet, the star minifig; the various cameo players were probably more recognisable. The Lego Movie is due out in both the US and UK in February of 2014. First Incredible Trailer For The Lego Movie
about 1 hour ago
Alasdair Stuart writes; Black Mask made quite a splash with the first issue of Occupy Comics. Louis reviewed it over here (Morning, Louis!) and I had stuff to say about it over here (Morning, Nabil!). The gist of it is the book is really...
Alasdair Stuart writes; Black Mask made quite a splash with the first issue of Occupy Comics. Louis reviewed it over here (Morning, Louis!) and I had stuff to say about it over here (Morning, Nabil!). The gist of it is the book is really good and good in a way which nothing has quite been before. There’s a combination of intellect, informed debate and anger at the heart of Occupy Comics that makes it truly unique and I was interested to see if the second Black Mask release, Liberator, could build on that. Created and written by Matt Miner, who’s an active dog rescuer himself, with pencils and inks by Javier Sanchez Aranda, colours by Joaquin Pereyra, lettering and editing by Vito Delsante and extras art by Yasmin Liang, the book follows Damon Guerrerro, an animal liberator who surveils, tracks and sabotages groups responsible for animal cruelty. Superficially he’s a street-level Batman, and he certainly believes he is, but as the first issue goes on, we find out more about Damon than he may want people to know. It’s a great book, angry, assured and cleverly structured and here are five things I liked about it. 1.By night, a tireless liberator of threatened animals The book opens with Damon finishing up an operation. He rescues dogs being kept by a dogfighting ring and then, once they’re clear, burns the ring and the barn it’s in to the ground. This is possibly a very dumb move on Damon‘s part but definitely a very good one on Miner‘s. We get an idea of how methodical Damon is, how he works and what his concerns are as well as his relative lack of concern for his own safety. We also get confirmation that this work doesn’t finish with the direct action; Damon has to find homes for the dogs before he can free them. That sort of extra detail, and refusal to cop out with simple answers, is one of the things that really makes Liberator work. 2.By day, a tired baristaDamon isn’t a superhero and Miner makes that point again and again through the book. His day job is just that, somewhere he has to go and stand for eight hours. and we learn a lot about Damon through this sequence. He’s not confrontational by nature (at least not at work), he’s smart enough to keep personal details to himself and he’s also just a little arrogant. Damon‘s too good for the job, as far as he’s concerned anyway, and that’s the first hint of a crack in his store-bought armor. 3.Side on side by side Miner and Aranda‘s character work is really impressive; these people look real and flawed in a way most comic characters don’t. Part of that’s down to their ability to capture little character beats such as Damon yawning above, and part of it’s down to the script. Miner gives Aranda room to breathe, constantly playing with this wide letterbox-style horizontal panel and keeping the focus jammed in tight on the characters. It’s a smart move, emphasizing the personal nature of the book and bringing the relationships that drive it to the fore. This particular moment also elegantly keys us in to both the attraction between Jeanette and Damon, and the fact they’re ideologically very similar. 4.Citizen Protestor Which isn’t to say they think the same. Jeanette‘s status as a semi-celebrity on the protest circuit is an interesting idea that I suspect the book isn’t done with. In the first issue alone it accomplishes three things; telling us that Damon doesn’t favor the direct, media-facing form of protest, that Jeanette not only does but revels in it and that she’s becoming well known.  That last, especially paired with the chilling image of the cop with the video camera, suggests that things will start going south for Jeanette long before they will for Damon.  The imagery here also provides a neat, different perspective on the sort of event at the heart of Ales Kot‘s excellent ‘Citizen Journalist&
about 1 hour ago