Comic Books

Go follow Comics Should Be Good on Twitter (if you have Twitter, that is – if you don’t, you can go sign up). Here is our Twitter page… http://twitter.com/csbg. And here are the Comics Should Be Good writers who are on ...
Go follow Comics Should Be Good on Twitter (if you have Twitter, that is – if you don’t, you can go sign up). Here is our Twitter page… http://twitter.com/csbg. And here are the Comics Should Be Good writers who are on Twitter (the links go to the person’s Twitter account) – myself, Greg Hatcher, Chad [...]
6 minutes ago
Patrick Dane writes for Bleeding Cool. I have been a massive fan of Halo for a long time, regardless of the “dude bro” status that admission might brand upon me. I think the game takes place genuinely interesting universe, on...
Patrick Dane writes for Bleeding Cool. I have been a massive fan of Halo for a long time, regardless of the “dude bro” status that admission might brand upon me. I think the game takes place genuinely interesting universe, one that is cleverly designed and has lots of storytelling potential So obviously I am just as excited about Destiny, the next game from Bungie, original creators of Halo. I spend much of my day following news feeds about games and I have to say, Destiny has held my interest for months. This trailer, directed by Jon Favreau and starring Giancarlo Esposito, has done nothing to curb my excitement for this online, sort-of MMORPG epic. Click here to view the embedded video. Destiny is going to be huge. I don’t think there are any two ways about it. I’m personally very interested in crafting a character to my specifications and taking them through an entire trilogy. Mass Effect did this to great success and I’m excited to see the idea woven into a console-based MMO game. Jon Favreau Directed Trailer For Destiny Features Gustavo Fring
22 minutes ago
Publisher: Horizon Line ComicsSomeone is murdering alchemists in E. City, but who? Node must battle two new foes in order to find a the culprit in this special one shot issue. Price: $0.99
Publisher: Horizon Line ComicsSomeone is murdering alchemists in E. City, but who? Node must battle two new foes in order to find a the culprit in this special one shot issue. Price: $0.99
about 1 hour ago
TweetJuan Santapau’s The Secret Knots is a launchpad for a variety of different comics – sometimes a long-form work, sometimes a single story in a page, and sometimes an extended work of fiction within a long, single frame. I...
TweetJuan Santapau’s The Secret Knots is a launchpad for a variety of different comics – sometimes a long-form work, sometimes a single story in a page, and sometimes an extended work of fiction within a long, single frame. It’s an absolutely lovely piece of work, punctuated by superb, charming writing and utterly gorgeous artwork. His work reminds me a little of Fiona Staples, but with a more washed-out use of watercolours on each page — which gives things a wonderful sense of life as the flatter-colouring on the characters pops out at the reader. It’s only recently that Santapau has made a consistently-updated story, in the form of The Strange World of Martin Kardec. I’d tell you more about it – but really, I’m just utterly charmed and spellbound by the words, art, story and creation. It’s a story of the occult, and of childhood – like much of the work on the site – but told through the eyes of the children. And in their eyes, the ideas seem magical and tangible. It’s a stunning thing, and I really hope you go take a look. Find more at http://www.thesecretknots.com #call_to_action h4{padding:0px 5px;} #social-essentials {margin: 0 0 10px 0;}
about 1 hour ago
Left click to enlarge Aside from this awesome final edition of these Wizard Magazine Calendars postings I want to make sure I leave you all with some cool stuff to enjoy for your Memorial Day weekends. First up we have a Podcast re-enact...
Left click to enlarge Aside from this awesome final edition of these Wizard Magazine Calendars postings I want to make sure I leave you all with some cool stuff to enjoy for your Memorial Day weekends. First up we have a Podcast re-enactment of Incredible HULK #318 (Bruce Banner & Betty Ross wedding issue) by Rick "Smash" Hansen: https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/16360597/Smash%20Tales%20August%202011.mp3And if you're also in the mood for some good laughs with "F" bomb comic books reviews of cool shit from the 80s there's a new Youtube video by the one and only Kingofthessaly: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FxWk60jcf2c
about 2 hours ago
So close personal friend Chris Sims has created a new comic with some pals of his, in that digital format that’s all the rage with the young people these days. It’s Subatomic Party Girls, costing you only a mere 99 cents. If ...
So close personal friend Chris Sims has created a new comic with some pals of his, in that digital format that’s all the rage with the young people these days. It’s Subatomic Party Girls, costing you only a mere 99 cents. If you don’t want to make such a large investment sight unseen, then check out the promo Tumblr. Pal Andrew’s latest Nobody’s Favorites entry is about a character that first encountered as a young Mikester, and hadn’t quite yet grasped the whole multiverse thing that was the required backstory for this characters’s raison d’être. Pal Dave talks about magically appearing bras, and offers an intriguing alternative. May be slightly not safe for work, unless you work at Bras A’Plenty at the mall. Bully, the Little Scientific Bull, brings you SCIENCE!
about 2 hours ago
I give Black Terror some credit for having an unusual secret identity for a costumed hero. He was Bob Benton, a pharmacist. We don’t think of those guys as crime fighters as such. But I knew a pharmacist who wasn't afraid of crooks. He w...
I give Black Terror some credit for having an unusual secret identity for a costumed hero. He was Bob Benton, a pharmacist. We don’t think of those guys as crime fighters as such. But I knew a pharmacist who wasn't afraid of crooks. He was my former pharmacist, Mark, who was 5'3" and slight of build, and who took off across a parking lot after a man who had just stuck him up for Oxycontin. Mark didn't need a mask or cape; he had a golf club, a flapping white pharmacist's jacket, and righteous anger. He was able to subdue the robber, whose drug habit had apparently left him unable to get far by running. The story made the local news and when I asked Mark about it he said, “When he gave up he asked me, ‘do you think you could give me a half dozen Oxys before I go to jail?’” I’m not sure even Black Terror could have handled the situation better than Mark.Black Terror, and his young buddy, Tim, get on the bad side of ex-con, drug inventor Sinistro, who has created a drug to bring out the animal in man. My feeling about people with such talents using them for crime has been mentioned in the past. Anyone who could come up with such a drug could make a fortune peddling it to a drug company. It’s better than stealing. It just doesn’t make for good comic books.From America’s Best Comics #2 (1942):
about 2 hours ago
TweetIt’s only hour 4 of 24 hours of Webcomics and already I’m cheating a bit by spotlighting the work of a single cartoonist more than a single webcomic. But heck, it’s all about reading comic on the web. Sam Alden is...
TweetIt’s only hour 4 of 24 hours of Webcomics and already I’m cheating a bit by spotlighting the work of a single cartoonist more than a single webcomic. But heck, it’s all about reading comic on the web. Sam Alden is a young Portland cartoonist who is rapidly developing with comics on his own website and Study Group, and even a few in print. Like many young, prolific cartoonists, it’s hard to find a well organized archive of his stuff—he has several tumblrs and blogs and twitters and so on. The main outlet seems to be his site Gingerland. Fortunately he just posted a guide to everything he has online. HIs work covers a lot of territory—his art starts out in the Craig Thompson school, but he’s getting more and more experimental as he goes on. His work has everything from heavy duty autobiography to weird fantasy. I think what interested me the most about his work is that he’s very young and very talented and taking full advantage of the freedom to tell all kinds of stories that today’s younger cartoonists have at their disposal. It isn’t about drawing one thing or for one style any more. To start out I’ll recommend Farmer’s Dilemma—it’s short and if you don’t like it don’t go on. But I think you will like it. The less I say about it, the better, but it’s an anthropomorphic story of family, belonging, and survival starring a young fox who was adopted by chickens. There is a single panel in here that is perhaps the most horrific thing I have seen in a comic this year. It’s a beautiful, haunting piece of work. If you like that try Hawaii 1997. Like a lot of Alden’s work it’s autobiographical, but it’s also mostly a wordless storyboard about a magic moment on a nighttime beach: a miserable young boy meets a girl on the beach and they run around together. Yeah it’s a little Manic Pixie Dream Girl, but I think it transcends the cliche. If we’re lucky, we’ve all had one of these moments, when life becomes magical and full of possibilities…but the last panel reveals the price for such a moment. Alden draws it in pencil on yellow paper and still manages to captures the sparkling sky and water of the enchanted moment. It’s a technically very accomplished piece of work. Haunter is a full color story of adventure and dread being serialized on the excellent Study Group webcomic portal. It’s another wordless fantasy, this one about a treasure seeking hunter who runs into an ancient spirit that is also a hunter. You shouldn’t try to steal stuff from ancient spirits. Told in almost animatic format, it’s a tense, exciting chase that’s still going on. Finally, Alden’s longest piece to date is the still ongoing “Eighth Grade” which is about the most terrifying thing in life: middle school. Simon and Tom are smart kids about brutal survival mechanisms and about making witty but cruel jokes about other kids, but completely ignorant about everything real in life, and smart enough to know they’re ignorant. Emma is a classmate they torment, and torment is another word for craving the approval of. Throw in parents who have pretty much the same problems except they also are caretakers and you have everyone’s eighth grade. Well not mine, since I was home schooled…whenever I read a painfully accurate depiction of what I missed out on, like this, I think I’m kind of lucky. “Eighth Grade” starts out a little rocky art-wise, but Alden’s use of black and white and lettering improve dramatically as the six chapters go along. It’s a soap opera, but one that rings true. Alden has several comics mentioned in Buzzfeed’s big webcomics roundup and work in several magazines and comic anthologies coming up. He’s only 24, and I suspect we’ll hear his name a lot more in the next few years. #call_to_action h4{padd
about 2 hours ago
Here’s another plug for Matthew Sweet’s new free “Acoustic and Live Sampler.” It’s awesome. Get it here. Run, Forever’s new album is called “Settling.” Kinda punkish indie rock and roll. He...
Here’s another plug for Matthew Sweet’s new free “Acoustic and Live Sampler.” It’s awesome. Get it here. Run, Forever’s new album is called “Settling.” Kinda punkish indie rock and roll. Here’s an mpFREE: Basement And a second plug for the third STS “Gold Rush” mixtape.  Sugar Tongue Slim is easily one of the most deft rappers in the game today, and this is my favorite rap album so far this year.  Get it free here. And while we’re on the subject of great new hip hop, E-Dubble!!!! Internet sensation and classy ukelele player Julia Nunes is on tour with Great Big World, and they’re offering a Justin Timberlake song as a free cover to tempt you. I would totally go to this show but it’s on a damn Monday night when they blow through my area, and my job is more important than music. Sighs heavily.
about 2 hours ago
pivitor: actioncomics: varian-nash84: Justice League - The Flashpoint Paradox (Trailer) well Attention Tumblr User Gorogues, The Top is in this trailer for about two seconds.  Shall I get us a bottle of champagne? FUCK YES (I can’t...
pivitor: actioncomics: varian-nash84: Justice League - The Flashpoint Paradox (Trailer) well Attention Tumblr User Gorogues, The Top is in this trailer for about two seconds.  Shall I get us a bottle of champagne? FUCK YES (I can’t view this video for some reason, but as of the moment this one works) *more unintelligible noises and screaming*
about 3 hours ago