Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Stop-motion Dark Knightfall pits Batman against Joker with Hot Toys

Stop-motion Dark Knightfall pits Batman against Joker with Hot Toys

While the story is confusing, you're unlikely to see a better fan-made stop-motion film than this trailer for Batman: Dark Knightfall, created by Derek Kwok and Henri Wong using those incredibly (and creepily) life-like Hot Toys figures. The filmmakers' attention to detail is impressive, from steam and lighting to flying debris and fluttering fabric, giving the short a realistic quality. Well, at least until The Joker arrives, and the action takes an inexplicably bizarre turn (also not easily explained: why Gordon just lies on the ground). A full version is promised soon, so maybe we'll get all the answers then.

(via Cartoon Brew)

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Nice!!!

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Comics A.M. | Top Cow reveals Cyber Force retailer incentives

Comics A.M. | Top Cow reveals Cyber Force retailer incentives

Cyber Force

Publishing | Top Cow Productions has announced details of its retailer program for the relaunch of Cyber Force, which is using Kickstarter to raise enough money to make the first five issues of the reimagined series available for free, both digitally and in print: Retailers will be charged 25 cents per copy for the first five issues, but will receive incentive variant covers ' with suggested prices of $10 and $20 ' to offset the cost of the comics. The Kickstarter campaign has raised more than $50,000 of its $75,000 goal with 17 days remaining. [ICv2]

Publishing | Former DC Comics editor Janelle Asselin, who now works for Disney, talks about her experiences at the editor's desk and offers one reason there are so few female superhero comics creators: Women aren't lining up for the job. 'In my time at DC, exactly one woman reached out to me via email, and I hired her,' she said. 'I didn't hire her BECAUSE she was a woman, I hired her because she was good, of course. But in that same amount of time, probably at least two or three men a week contacted me looking for work, some of them intensely pushy and many of them decidedly not good. I think more female creators should put themselves out there. The numbers are growing, we all can see that, especially in indie comics and comics published by traditional publishers, but if there are women who want to work on super hero books, they need to speak up.' [Women Write About Comics]

Valiant

Publishing | Valiant Entertainment Publisher Fred Pierce talks about the company's success so far ' more than 45,000 copies sold of X-O Manowar #1, 20,000 downloads of the talking variant cover ' as well as the company's philosophy on variant covers, digital comics and moving on to other media: 'But yes, we're dealing with Sony on a Bloodshot movie and these things, but the truth of the matter is the publishing division has to stand on its own and it's the publishing division that draws heat to the rest of the company. In two or three years when we have a movie it'll go the other way also, but right now we have to establish ourselves as a publishing company that's exceptional.' [ICv2]

Publishing | There's a new Peanuts book on the way, Charlie Brown! Brian Truitt talks to two of the folks behind It's Tokyo, Charlie Brown!, writer and artist Vicki Scott and Paige Braddock, creative director for Charles Schulz Creative Associates as well as an artist for the book. Braddock inked the pages using a nib given to her by Schulz, who died in 2000. 'In the beginning, I was very nervous to ink the characters, but giving me a box of his nibs, I think, was his way of offering quiet encouragement. Plus, some tips about how to draw Snoopy's paws,' she said. [USA Today]

Comics | Rich Shivener hit the small press area at Comic-Con International and came up with a list of 10 small press comics that are worth a look. [Topless Robot]

PUnk Rock Jesus #1

Creators | Sean Murphy talks about his new Vertigo series Punk Rock Jesus: 'You think about what would they do if they cloned Jesus? The answer quickly came to me: 'Oh, they'd turn it into a reality show. They'd make it more interesting for better ratings and basically this thing would turn into a giant Super Bowl every day and would just grab the world's attention.' It wrote itself, in a sense.' [USA Today]

Creators | With the third volume of his Dungeon Quest complete, Joe Daly discusses creating a fantastical world on the foundation of a more normal one, making the characters sound real, and why part of the graphic novel is done in something that resembles hieroglyphs. [The Comics Journal]

Creators | Writer Josh Tierney walks us through the second volume of Spera with a 'directors commentary' accompanied by some fully drawn pages to show off the art. [Forbidden Planet blog]

Digital comics | David Golbitz tries out comics on the Google Nexus tablet and comes away impressed. [Don't Hate the Geek]

History | Paul Gravett rounds up some recent history-of-comics books that look like pretty good reading, along with a bit of commentary on the nature of writing history. [Paul Gravett]

  • July 31, 2012 @ 06:55 AM by Brigid Alverson
  • Tagged: comic books, comic retailers, comics a.m., Cyber Force, DC Comics, digital comics, direct market, Google Nexus tablet, history of comics, Janelle Asselin, Joe Daly, Josh Tierney, kickstarter, Paige Braddock, Paul Gravett, Peanuts, Sean Murphy, small-press comics, Top Cow, Top Cow Productions, Valiant Entertainment, variant covers, Vertigo, Vicki Scott, women in comics

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Matt Fraction joins Aurora Rise event to benefit shooting victims

Matt Fraction joins Aurora Rise event to benefit shooting victims

Matt Fraction has announced he'll join Steve Niles and Tim Daniels at Aurora Rise, the Aug. 25-26 benefit organized by All C's Collectibles in Aurora, Colorado, to raise money for the victims of the July 20 theater shootings.

Dark Horse and Image Comics have donated items for the event, which will include creator appearances and signings, a silent auction, artist sketches and giveaways. All C's Collectibles is the only comics store in Aurora.

'The mission of Aurora Rise is simple ' we are going to do everything in our power to assist and aid the victims and victim's families,' store manager Jason Farnsworth wrote on the event's Facebook page. All proceeds will go directly to the victims, their families or designated charities.

Publishers, creators or others who want to help out can contact the store at allcs@comcast.net.

  • July 31, 2012 @ 08:00 AM by Kevin Melrose
  • Tagged: All C's Collectibles, auora rise, comic retailers, comics creators, comics industry, Dark Horse Comics, events, Image Comics, matt fraction, Steve Niles, Tim Daniels

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Monday, July 30, 2012

What Are You Reading? with Mark Sable

What Are You Reading? with Mark Sable

Hello and welcome to What Are You Reading? Today our guest is Mark Sable, the writer and co-creator of Image's Graveyard of Empires with Paul Azaceta and the upcoming Duplicate from Kickstart Comics with Andy MacDonald. You can find his work and thoughts at marksable.com and contact him @marksable on the Twitter.

To see what Mark and the Robot 6 crew have been reading, click below '

*****

Corey Blake

The Sandman: Doll's House

The Sandman: Doll's House [Recolored Edition]
Yes, I'm ashamed to say I've never read Sandman (or 'The Sandman' as it's actually called), so the recently recolored soft covers are giving me a great excuse to do some overdue catching up. I was sad to see Sam Keith leave so early on but reading this collection really affirms Dringenberg's and Malcolm Jones III's skills as storytellers that will adapt to the needs of the story to give the greatest experience instead of holding fast to a signature style. The final chapter has a textured quality to it that recalls techniques usually reserved for illustrated books, but the chapter before it tends more to angled and distorted characters. The first chapter takes on a charcoal effect toward the end. The two artists are adept at nailing some of the more abstract ideas and visuals in Neil's script, using tricks like tipping the orientation of the panels on their side to reinforce the off-balance nature of dreams. Despite the variety, it's always in service of the story, so instead of getting pulled out, I'm just pulled in deeper. These stories sing more clearly thanks to Lee Loughridge's new colors from Zylonol Studio. Todd Klein is really revealed as the master. Again, his lettering is in service to the story, magnifying character's unique voices or accentuating the chaos of nightmares, but never ever sacrificing legibility. The stand-out stories are the prologue 'Tales in the Sand' and 'Men of Good Fortune', which features guest art by Michael Zulli traveling through the past 100 years at a time, making for a fascinating environment study. The entire package builds Neil Gaiman's rich yet personal tapestry of what we create in our subconscious.

The Gutters
I always read this web series but it's kind of frustrating for me. I love that the silly comics industry is being satirized, but the teeth often aren't sharp enough. This week though had one of the funniest visuals the strip has had since the skipping multi-colored Hulks. Ryan Browne's Daredevil typing on a cat with both in absolute panic was a hoot. If they can't Doonesbury the comics industry, then I hope they embrace this kind of absurdity.

Comic Critics
As counter-point, Sean Whitmore and Brandon Hanvey continue to perfectly satirize comics fans and their respective superhero/indie camps, with Brandon's art growing in leaps and bounds. The current storyline of the two main characters trading comics reviewing duties has been fun and completely on the nose in depicting either fan type's style of elitism. The break they took recently has really served to re-inject some kick into this funny web-comic.

What Were You Raised By Wolves?
Vera Brosgol completely won me over when I first read Anya's Ghost, and I just noticed this short story on her website. It's a funny premise that gives us a fun but also surprisingly dark and sad story of a girl raised by wolves that tries to re-enter the world. Vera comes from animation and her style clearly brings that to her comics, but that doesn't mean she doesn't know how to communicate with comics. Her pacing and page layouts are fluid, efficient and clearly communicate without the use of any dialogue (and only a couple of signs and sound effects). Vera and this story are a reminder to never underestimate the crucial storytelling tools of keeping it simple and clear.

Mark Kardwell

I've been going through the archives at Cartoon Movement, after seeing Tom 'Solipsistic Pop' Humberstone's strip about the Olympics being RTed repeatedly in my Twitter feed.  Humberstone is becoming a fine cartoonist, something I hadn't noticed before, thinking of him primarily as a great editor/publisher. I went to the site this morning to fetch the link and noticed it was down. Bloody Illuminati, at it again.

I read Alfie Gallagher's self-published Charlatan's Tales, which I got through his Etsy store. Alfie is an illustrator by trade, but just like everyone* else in that profession, harbors a not-particularly-secret longing to work in comics. He's got a lovely line, and tells a good story. Often funny, often thoughtful stuff.

This week, Operation Bring The Boys Home meant I retrieved the massive Jaime Hernandez Locas volume and the Marvel Visionaries: Steranko collection from the attic of the old family homestead, in both instances due to the influence of recent pieces by my fellow Robot 6-ers. Back in the Eighties I too was often made to feel like I was superficial for preferring Jaime's work to Beto's, but I think history has proven we Jaime lovers backed the right horse. Seneca's pieces on Steranko always made me want to go back and pore over the material, and this time the opportunity arose, and I grabbed it, along with the amazing old hardcover UK edition of Jaunty Jim's run on Cap that I've held onto since childhood.

Brigid Alverson

Lover's Lane: The Hall-Mills Murders

First up this week is Rick Geary's Lover's Lane: The Hall-Mills Murders. I like mysteries and true-crime books, but Geary's last book, on the Sacco and Vanzetti case, struck me as very static. I appreciate his detached storytelling style'reading it was like watching a PBS documentary'but the heavy frames around the panels, the poses of the characters, and even his style of hatching made the story seem very dry. Maybe my memory is faulty, but this book seems more dynamic, with more expressive characters and more of a sense of motion to it. These books are a good example of what graphic storytelling can do that mere prose can't; Geary breaks down the timelines of the different witnesses into sets of small panels or uses an entire page to frame several different events that are occurring at the same time, or in the same context. This is an open-ended story because there was never a conviction in the case; Geary runs through all the theories at the end of the story, but the evidence does all seem to lead in one direction.

Paul Tobin and Colleen Coover's Bandette is the opposite of Geary's work'witty and whimsical and not at all true'but totally enjoyable in a completely different way. I love Coover's fluid line'simple, readable, yet perfectly suited to action stories like this one. Their story, about a Robin Hood-ish burglar who takes from the undeserving rich, is funny and satisfying, like a good caper movie. This is the first installment of the story, which is part of the Monkeybrain digital comics initiative, and I'm definitely looking forward to more.

Tim O'Shea

Ultimate Spider-Man #4/Superman Family Adventures #3
I have to give credit to Ron from my local comic shop for pointing out the major problem with the cover to Ultimate Spider-Man #4. You go with a fart joke on the cover? Really, Disney subsidiary'that's how you brand your all-ages book? (And I get that any kid who is old enough to know the word 'fart' loves a fart joke, so I am not saying it's age inappropriate. I just think it's lame to do on the cover'-and likely will turn off the more prudish parents from buying the comic for their kid). My continuing complaint with the covers is the generic nature of them: white cover with a standalone Spider-Man figure (that's how it is every issue, images that have nothing to do with the interior pages). Clearly a long way from the days of Gil Kane designing covers for them. And after the first issue with top all-ages storytellers Dan Slott and Ty Templeton, I am disappointed to see no sign of either creator since then (not to slight the current storytellers by name). The stories are serviceable, but it's unlikely I'll part with my $3 again on the series.

Superman Family Adventures #3

Superman Family Adventures #3, on the other hand, is the epitome of what great all ages storytelling should be. A cover featuring Jimmy Olson chased by a slew of Super-Pets'and it's a reference to one of the stories inside this issue. Part of why the team of Art Baltazar and Franco work so well is their consistent ability to write entertaining kid's stories that can also appeal to adults. There's a smidge of a silver age vibe to the tale, but not in a retro manner per se. Honestly, the comedic sketches format (which served them so well in Tiny Titans) is maintained in this series. DC would be smart to try to do at least one season of cartoons based on this stuff (if they are not already planning that).

Captain America/Iron Man #634
Writer Cullen Bunn stripped the two lead characters of their technology at the end of the last issue (Cap's new shield/Iron Man's armor) and it was interesting to see how Bunn allowed the two characters to improvise replacements in this issue. I really enjoyed Bunn's ability to inject humor into his script, at one point having a character mistakenly refer to Zaran as Zardoz (the Sean Connery 1970s sci-fi film). One small ding, after loving Barry Kitson's art in the last issue I was disappointed to see him only doing breakdowns in this issue with Jay Leisten on finishes. The quality of the art suffered as a result, including one scene where Cap is apparently stabbed, but the layout of the panel does not effectively portray that.

FF #20
A lot going on in this issue, but the part I really enjoyed was seeing Hickman exercise his comedy bone. Who would have known that future Franklin (giving present day Franklin a ride to school) would be a lousy driver (partially given in his era cars are likely a thing of the past). Also future and present Valeria have some quirky interaction in this issue as well. Kudos to Hickman for packing a lot into this issue. Meanwhile Nick Dragotta is fast becoming one of my favorite Marvel artists'there are one or two panels in this issue where he reminded me of a young Walt Simonson.

Mark Sable

I've been writing comics professionally for seven years now. I've been reading them since before I can remember. And I was spending an ungodly sum a week on (mostly) mainstream comics, until I cut back significantly this past year.

There's a number of reasons I curbed my habit. One was financial, having the economy in general and what I feel is the lack of bang for my buck I'm getting out of my comics. $2.99 on iTunes for an episode of, say, Breaking Bad vs. $3.99 for a sixth of a comic book arc?

Space is another reason. I've lost count how many longboxes worth of comics I have. When one publisher started giving me comps I literally couldn't them away. I thankfully found Operation Gratitude and sent many of my comics overseas to the troops (which I encourage you to do as well).

Time is another factor. Between the comics, books, movies and games I already own, I could probably get away without buying something for years and still have a lifetime of entertainment to consume. Seeing how the sausage is made has also taken away some of the magic. Whether it's hearing how a publisher treats an editor or being annoyed by a creator's humblebrag on Twitter, it's often hard for me to separate the comics from the people behind them (or, at least from their online personas).

But I think the breaking point for me was realizing that the stories I was reading were never going to resolve themselves, never going to end. I happen to like things with endings'especially well planned out endings'more than I do ongoing stories where no one really dies and the same themes are recycled over and over again.

It's not that I don't enjoy serialized storytelling'every TV show I watch is serialized rather than episodic. But what I watch is building toward something, and isn't rehashing a story I read when I was 12. There's something about (mainstream, superhero) comics that's inherently juvenile, beyond the adolescent power-fantasy. They are, quite literally, death-defying. They allow you to indulge in this fantasy world where no one of consequence ever ages or dies.

You see that reflected in the people who are drawn to those works, and in some of the creators (myself included). There are plenty of other reasons to be drawn to ongoing superhero sagas, and there's nothing inherently wrong with wanting to escape mortality in your fiction, but I'm just finding myself in a place where I don't particularly want that from what I'm reading.

The good news is there's plenty of that kind of work out there if you know where to look for it.

The Unwritten #17

The Unwritten may be the smartest comic out there. Written by Mike Carey and illustrated by Peter Gross, it's about Tom Taylor, a man who may or may not be the living incarnation of Tommy Taylor, a Harry Potter-esque fictional character created by Tom's father. It's very meta, and extremely literate'but without being overly didactic or pulling a Sorkin by rubbing your nose in the creators' knowledge. It's increasingly pushing the boundaries of the medium of comics, most notably with a 'Choose Your Own Adventure' style issue which could be read multiple times, in multiple ways.

Another book that's playing with the idea of what a comic can be is IDW's Smoke and Mirrors, a tale of a street magician trying to survive in a fantasy world where everything is powered by 'real' magic he can't use. It's written by Mike Costa, who's producing comics most underrated military fiction in his Cobra books (well, next to my work with Paul Azaceta on Graveyard of Empires). The art by Ryan Brown, the creator of God Hates Astronauts, my favorite webcomic. Jon Armstrong is also credited as a consulting illusionist.

Despite the high concept, the very idea of an 'illusionist' had me skeptical at first. When I think of magicians, I think of kids' birthday parties or tricks to pick up girls using 'The Game' after you've successfully mastered 'peacocking.' But here's the thing'the tricks the fictional magician performs in the book really work on the reader, breaking the fourth wall in a way I've never seen before. Each issue contains an essay about the connection between the mutually misunderstood arts of magic and comics, reinforcing the feeling that creators are really onto something, well'magical.

The masters of backmatter, though, may be Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips, whose comics are worth reading for the essays by Jess Nevins and the like alone. I wasn't sure the pair could top the last arc of Criminal, which transformed the archetypes of an Archie comic into a deadly, heartbreaking noir story. But Fatale does that with its own compelling incongruity, seamlessly melding hard-boiled crime with Lovecraftian horror. (I'd say they were the first to arrive at that alchemical formula, but am I the only one that remembers the HBO movie Cast A Deadly Spell?) Regardless, Fatale is everything you'd want from comics' best creative team.

Dracula World Order

Ian Brill is of lesser renown (so-far), but has nevertheless assembled a murderer's row of artists'Tonci Zonjic, Rahsan Ekedal, Declan Shavey and Garbriel Hardman'to bring his book Dracula World Order to life. Following the self-published route that Sam Humphries did with Our Love is Real and Sacrifice, DWO tells the story of a vampire-ruled world that's an allegory for the 1% vs. 99% debate the Occupy Movement ignited. (If you want your Dracula without politics, here's a peek at my own upcoming Dracula story with artist Salgood Sam). I've seen what Ian has in store for the future of the comic; now is the time to get in on the ground floor

If you want your politics without Dracula, Harvey Pekar's posthumously published Not The Israel My Parents Promised might be for you. Pekar definitely went out with a bang rather than a whimper, and his book that alternates between a history of the Jewish people and a memoir of his disappointment with the modern State of Israel as a dissatisfied Diaspora Jew had me at turns enthralled and infuriated. But the real star of the book is artist JT Waldman, who illustrates each epoch of Jewish suffering in the way it would have been rendered at the time, from illuminated medieval manuscripts to Nazi propaganda posters.

If comedy is more your thing, Rob Schrab's SCUD: The Disposable Assassin, now available in an omnibus The Whole Shebang is hysterical but still brilliant. I'm a latecomer to this classic '90s book, concerning a robot assassin who learns he's due to self-destruct when he kills his target, and must therefore keep him/her/it alive. I first became aware of Rob's work not through comics but through his work on the Sarah Silverman show and LA's Channel 101 video festival, and it's insane to think the guy can be this talented in so many different mediums. The omnibus allows you to see his talent evolve, with some able writing assists from Community's Dan Harmon. (If you're a fan of the latter, let me recommend his Harmontown podcast, which you can find me at most Monday's at Meltdown Comics). Whether it's the first issue or the last, SCUD explodes with energy and originality.

As I make my way through my huge to-read pile now that I've cut back on my continuity porn, I find there's a lot I'm leaving out, from James Robinson's Starman Omnibi (along with Sandman one of the seminal works of the 90s), Hickman and Pitarra's Manhattan Projects, Mignola's Hellboy (someone please find me a reading order that includes the BPRD trades), Fraction and Ba's Casanova or Waid and Krause's Insufferable (breaking boundaries on Thrillbent.com). So apologies to those creators and friends who I didn't get to (yet). Whether you're unhappy with comics status quo like I am, or looking to expand your horizons a bit more, I hope I've whet your appetite for something a little different.

  • July 29, 2012 @ 12:47 PM by JK Parkin
  • Tagged: Alfie Gallagher, Art Baltazar, Bandette, Barry Kitson, Brandon Hanvey, Captain America and Iron Man, Casanova, Colleen Coover, comic books, Comic Critics, Cullen Bunn, Declan Shalvey, Dracula World Order, Ed Brubaker, Fatale, FF, Franco, Gabriel Ba, Gabriel Hardman, Harvey Pekar, hellboy, Ian Brill, Insufferable, Jaime Hernandez, James Robinson, Jim Steranko, Jon Armstrong, Jonathan Hickman, Locas, Lover's Lane: The Hall-Mills Murders, Malcolm Jones III, mark sable, mark waid, matt fraction, Michael Zulli, Mike Carey, Mike Costa, Mike Dringenberg, Mike Mignola, neil gaiman, Nick Dragotta, Nick Pitarra, Paul Azaceta, Paul Tobin, Peter Gross, Rahsan Ekedal, rick geary, Rob Schrab, Ryan Browne, Salgood Sam, SCUD: The Disposable Assassin, Sean Phillips, Sean Whitmore, Smoke and Mirrors, starman, Superman Family Adventures, The Gutters, The Manhattan Projects, The Sandman, The Unwritten, Thrillbent, Todd Klein, Tom Humberstone, Tonci Zonjic, Ultimate Spider-Man, Vera Brosgol, webcomics, what are you reading

4 Comments

Tim O'Shea''And after the first issue with top all-ages storytellers Dan Slott and Ty Templeton, I am disappointed to see no sign of either creator since then'' You missed a Marvel solicitations: http://www.newsarama.com/comics/marvel-comics-october-2012-solicitations.html. cover for Marvel Ultimate Spider-Man Adventures by Ty Templeton. He did art for #3, and he has art scheduled in #5 and #6, and will be doing script/art duties for #7 (I believe). And his next cover for the book got sent into the office last week'

Great write-up by Mark Sable. He said a lot of what I'm going through as well.

Is anyone enjoying John Byrne's 'Trio'? I'm liking it for a homage to his Fantastic Four run.

KT'sorry, I should have recalled that (I read that issue). The hazard of reading so many comics in one month, I periodically get things wrong. I wish I could get a monthly fix of Templeton, but odds are he is too busy for a monthly grind.

Thanks for setting me straight (and for reading).

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The Preacher Project: Fan collects sketches for his father's birthday

The Preacher Project: Fan collects sketches for his father's birthday

Preacher cast by Steve Dillon

In May 2011, Ryan Ballard began a quest to create the perfect birthday gift for his father, a comics fan with whom he shares a love of Preacher, the acclaimed Vertigo series by Garth Ennis, Steve Dillon and Glenn Fabry. So Ryan bought a copper album embossed with Fabry's cover art for Issue #56 and set off to fill the book filled with sketches of Preacher characters from a range of artists. More than a year later, Ryan finally presented his father with the finished album, complete with art from the likes of Dillon, Fabry, Jim Mahfood, Rufus Dayglo, Ryan Kelly, Leigh Gallagher and Duncan Fegredo.

Ryan's appreciative father thanked all of the artists who contributed, passing along this message: 'This is a heads up to all the fantastic faces who invested their time, effort and skill in Ryan's quest. My sincere and deepest thank you, it would be true to say that I learned to read from comics but your visuals opened my eyes and imagination.'

For his part, Ryan merely reminds his father he has a herculean task ahead of him: My birthday is in August, no pressure Dad '' See some of the sketches below, and visit the Preacher Project to see many more.

(hat tip to Leigh Gallagher)

Steve Dillon

Glenn Fabry

Jim Mahfood

Leigh Gallagher

  • July 30, 2012 @ 08:00 AM by Kevin Melrose
  • Tagged: comic art, comics creators, Duncan Fegredo, fandom, Garth Ennis, Glenn Fabry, Jim Mahfood, Leigh Gallagher, Preacher, Rufus Dayglo, Ryan Kelly, Steve Dillon

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Comics A.M. | Vertical snags Gundam: The Origin, Wolfsmund

Comics A.M. | Vertical snags Gundam: The Origin, Wolfsmund

Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin

Publishing | Vertical Inc. announced Sunday at Otakon in Baltimore that it has licensed Yoshikazu Yasuhiko's 23-volume Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin and Mitsuhisa Kuji's Wolfsmund. [Anime News Network]

Publishing | A year after the launch of Kodansha Comics, general manager Kimi Shimizu and Dallas Middaugh of Random House Publisher Services discuss their re-release of Sailor Moon, Kodansha's fall line and the state of the manga market in the post-Borders landscape. 'Manga numbers have been in decline for the past couple years, but what we've discovered in the past year or so is that decline is dramatically slowing,' Middaugh said .'So the simple fact of the matter is that most manga readers 'usually when they're committed, they're committed'are reading a series. I actually believe that it takes more than the loss of a retail outlet to keep them from pursuing the manga that they want to read.' [ICv2]

Conventions | Susan Myrland solicits opinions of how to make San Diego more 'artist-friendly,' creating an environment that lasts beyond the annual Comic-Con International. Author Greg Bear, one of the founders of Comic-Con, suggests starting by establishing 'The San Diego Jack Kirby Museum of Comics Art and Culture' downtown. [U-T San Diego]

Conventions | Rich Shivener reports on the 'Bringing Comics to Life in the Library!' panel at Comic-Con International. [Publishers Weekly]

River City Comic Convention

Conventions | Attendance for the second annual River City Comic Convention, held Sunday in Marietta, Ohio, is expected to have surpassed that of the inaugural event, which drew 450 people. [The Marietta Times]

Creators | Susie Cagle briefly discusses the future of political cartooning and reactions to her own work: 'I've been surprised by how so many people still subscribe to the view that a 'journalist' comes from a place without an opinion, and, of course, that a journalist cannot be a cartoonist, or vice versa. I think that's changing and that we're growing more savvy in our consumption of media, recognizing all the frames and sources of our stories. But until then, a lot of people are uncomfortable with the fact that I have opinions and those opinions are sometimes in the story. For me, it's a more honest way of reporting. I like to let my readers know where I'm coming from, and I work to not let it affect my gathering of facts.' [Imprint]

Comics | Greg Rucka reflects on the first full year of his webcomic Lady Sabre and the Pirates of the Ineffable Aether, and he has not only some thoughts on what he has learned but some advice for his readers: Stop buying comics you don't like. 'This is about you realizing that the love of a character does not require you to be abused every time you pay for the privilege of spending time with said character,' he writes. 'This is about you realizing that, until you stand up for yourselves and walk away, nothing is ever going to change.' [Lady Sabre and the Pirates of the Ineffable Aether]

Comics | Anthony Glassman provides a snapshot of gay characters in mainstream comics. [Gay People's Chronicle]

  • July 30, 2012 @ 06:55 AM by Brigid Alverson
  • Tagged: cartoonists, comic books, comic conventions, Comic-Con International, comics a.m., comics creators, Dallas Middaugh, Dinesh Shamdasani, editorial cartoons, Fred Pierce, gays in comics, greg rucka, Kodansha Comics, Kumi Shimizu, manga, Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin, River City Comic Convention, San Diego, Susie Cagle, Valiant, Vertical Inc., Warren Simons, webcomics, Wolfsmund

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Sunday, July 29, 2012

Quote of the Day #2 | In defense of Kickstarter

Image of Quote of the Day #2 | In defense of Kickstarter

When I went to check out the TCJ link it looks like the website's down (?) Anyway, I find it strange that Dan would make such comments and I'd be alarmed if my stuff were published by Picturebox. I'm sure Dan's hocked their entire output at shows which for some odd reason, some comic shops frown on that too. (the ones who bother to order indie).
While there are a few comic shops who carry and support indie, it's not as many as you think. If you want to move the books at all, you have to entertain any means necessary to get them out into the public. Be it digital, sales at shows, brick & mortar, Amazon, and or through Kickstarter.



Shelf Porn Saturday | Statues, comics and pop culture from Michigan

Shelf Porn Saturday | Statues, comics and pop culture from Michigan

Welcome to another edition of Shelf Porn, where fans show off the comics, toys and other things on their shelves. Today's submission comes from Tim in Michigan, who works at a retirement community and is also a cartoonist. Tim shows us his man-cave/drawing room, which features statues, toys, graphic novels and more.

If you have some shelves of comics, action figures or other related collectibles you'd like to show off, send me a write-up and some jpgs at jkparkin@yahoo.com.

And now here's Tim '

*****

My name is Tim Walburg and I live in Michigan. I work in the maintenance department of a retirement community. I also moonlight drawing cartoons for religious periodicals and a nursing website. Examples of my work can be seen at www.toonfever.com and www.realityrn.com. The money I make drawing cartoons is pretty much what I used to finance this room. (My wife just sees it as many missed vacations we could have taken).

I started collecting at the age of 17 and stupidly purged my collection at the age of 22. But what you see now is what I've been collecting for the last 26 years.

This is the entrance to my drawing room/den/man-cave. The room is 12×14 feet and I built most of the book shelves and displays:

As you enter the room these shots are going from your right in a counter-clockwise direction.

That's an original Japanese poster from 'The Empire Strikes Back' one of the few items that didn't get purged.

The statues are not necessarily favorite characters, most are, but some are just beautiful sculpts and colors. Spiderwoman is a case in point'

The cabinets underneath hold my comic books, Mad magazines and various 70's/80's sci-fi magazines. All in short boxes of course!

As you can see I'm a pop-culture kinda guy. Star Wars, Star Trek, Alien'. Comics! I'm thrilled to have been able to get these Adam Hughes inspired Cover Girls of the DCU statues and the comic covers that were the basis for the statues signed by him at the last two C2E2 cons in Chicago:

I'm also a fan of Jeff Smith's 'Bone':

And here are my comic collections:

In alphabetical order by character or creator'

Being a cartoonist myself I really enjoy collections of magazine cartoons and classic comic strip collections. Here's my collection of 'Peanuts'. Partial as I have more of the regular rack size books elsewhere. I'm stopping at 1982 because after this, in my opinion, 'Peanuts' started going downhill' repetitive and just kind of sad.

This is my collection of 'Asterix' and various art books:

And my collection Of Manga and Mad collections apparently guarded by an alien' and R2D2!

And finally some closer shots of regular paperback size cartoon collections including 'BC', 'The Wizard Of Id' and the aforementioned 'Peanuts':

Those are Korean masks given to me as a Christmas gift from our wonderful exchange student!

Well, that's part of my collection, although I didn't include pictures of my library of Bluray/DVD's or prose novels. I love looking at pictures of other people's collections and I hope you enjoyed mine!

9 Comments

This is very neatly organized! How much were the bookshelves?

really cool collection. espically love the one statue of scarlet witch with the little bitty almost baby vision. plus also the mask.s and the posters of Nexus

Very nice indeed. I could happily spend a week or two reading some of those books'

Awesome collection and well, organization. It looks like how mine would look if I had the room.

A+

Very well organised collection. You are obviously very proud of your collection ' deservedly so. Makes me realise I need to kick myself in the pants to get my own organised so well.

Great collection and very clean. Thanks for sharing.

Love the organization. It's very nice.

Wow!! Amazing collection!!

Awesome collection and organization! Would love to have this room in my place!

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Aurora comic shop plans fundraiser for July 20 shooting victims

Aurora comic shop plans fundraiser for July 20 shooting victims

Aurora Rise

Aurora Rise

All C's Collectibles in Aurora, Colo. is putting together a fundraiser to benefit the victims of the July 20 shootings during the midnight premiere of The Dark Knight Rises. The event, called Aurora Rise, is tentatively scheduled for late August.

According to Jason Tabrys at Nerd Bastards, the event will include a silent auction and creator appearances. Both Dark Horse Comics and Image Comics have already donated items, while creators Steve Niles and Tim Daniel are attending.

'It's very important to note that All C's is the only comic book store in the city,' Dark Horse's Aub Driver told Tabrys. 'This tragedy has rocked their community at large, as well as the rest of the nation. Some of their customers were present at the theater when tragedy struck, even one of their own employees. Showing your full support for the comic book shop and the comic arts medium is incredibly crucial during this dark time.'

The shop has set up a Facebook page where they're providing updates on the event, as well as other information on how to help out. Companies, creators or others who want to help out can contact the shop through their email address, allcs@comcast.net.

8 Comments

I live in Denver/Aurora, and to be honest I am not at all surprised. It's a really good shop, run by folks who seem really legitimately into sharing the hobby with others. I will most definitely be heading out there to participate.

'Showing your full support for the comic book shop and the comic arts medium is incredibly crucial during this dark time.'

I'm sorry but that's disgusting. It is absolutely not appropriate to be using this tragedy to promote a comics shop. It's grotesque. There's been way too much exploitation of this tragedy as it is.

Further, I'm tired of seeing Batman PR taking place, with pictures of Batman intertwined with this tragedy. The movie and the character didn't cause this to happen, but neither are they the 'cure.' 'Dark Knight Rises' happened to be the movie playing when this incredibly sick person shot those poor people. But these things need to stop being intertwined.

The priority should be praying for the survivors. talking about mental illness and gun violence. Talking about a comic book character and the profits of a comic book store are completely inappropriate here. I understand that this is ostensibly a 'benefit', but it's also an opportunity for the store to get some national press, apparently. Sorry but that's not okay. People need to stop pimping out this tragedy.

And 'the comic arts medium' needs to step back. Kudos to the movie folks and Bale for prioritizing the victims/survivors. The 'comic arts medium' should do the same and not be promoting itself or worrying about its profits. It especially should not be using the tragedy for publicity.

Hey, The Truth?

1. The image of Batman is linked because it was gun violence that took place at a Batman movie. Gun violence and its destructive effects are linked to the mythos ' having a real world tragedy connected to it' look, it's not DC or WB putting this stuff out. People have made the connections in their heads, and are processing let 'em alone.

2. A Dark Horse rep made a statement about supporting the store and etc, not the store itself.

3. The store is putting together a fundraiser for the victims and their families, some of whom they knew very well. That's worthy of support. No one said they were using it to promote themselves; they're raising money to aid in medical/counseling/etc expenses. I don't see you lambasting Bale for using photos posted on Facebook to promote himself, so maybe give these guys the same benefit of the doubt.

First off, many thanks to Mr. Parkin for aiding in the publicity of this event. I've spoken to Jason Farnsworth who runs this shop and I've spoken via email with the employee who was in the theater. These people are doing this for the right reasons and they have been through a lot. Both have lost people they know, and the shop is looking to help the families of those people. Though it is a challenge, we should work to suspend cynicism at a time like this because there are good people trying to do good things for the victims and they will continue to do those things long after the rest of the world moves on.

Secondly and not unrelated to that point, Mr. Driver's full quote concluded with:

'This is about community. This is about bringing the community of both Aurora and Comics together. This is about standing as one in the face of evil and knowing that one common factor, our love for comics, can unite us.'

Clearly he has his priorities straight as well.

Truth:
You've completely missed the point that some of the employees of were there, and are victims of this.
As well you've missed the point that this event is a fundraiser.
Which by the way is quite a bit more pragmatic and useful than praying, even if you believe in that crap.

Thuth: Don't be an ass. I work in Aurora and know the people at All C's they are good people trying to do a good thing.

The Truth has this exactly backwards. This store is located less than a mile from the massacre and knows a lot of people who attended the theatre that night and, as I understand it, one of the people shot was a customer of theirs. There is a HUGE need right now for funds to support the victims, some of whom will have medical bills in excess of $1 million.

Worse, the store has been hounded all week by reporters, including some from national media, trying to find information demonstrating that the perpetrator of the muderers was a comic fan. He was not. Indeed, the even the story about the gunman saying he is the Joker has proven to be false. However, in addition to some of the people that were customers and emplyees of All Cs, it's safe to say that most of the people in the theatre that night were fans or either the comics or Batman movies or both. A fact that the press seems to be disinterested in.

This is an industry problem and All C's is stepping up to the plate to do what they can to help. My company has offered him our full support because we feel it is important that the entire industry get behind this effort to help our own. We are not seeking PR either.

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Saturday, July 28, 2012

The Fifth Color | Violence's answer in Uncanny X-Force

The Fifth Color | Violence's answer in Uncanny X-Force

Uncanny X-Force by Greg Land

Definitely not for kids

At my comic shop, Metro Entertainment (cheap plug!), we do our part every week to look through books for violent or sexual content, and then shelve them accordingly. It's important to do that because no one wants their young son or daughter to accidentally pick up an issue of Crossed, right? Things that get graphic are bagged and labeled to keep them out of the hands of curious kids and to give parents a little sense of safety, knowing that when we recommend a book for their kids, there's not going to be any HBO-style content inside.

Parents should be protective of their children's exposure to violence; it's a rough world out there, and not worth jumping into the big problems of society and strife too soon. At the same time, watch a Tom and Jerry cartoon and try and tell me what violence is appropriate (what's that mouse doing to the cat OH GOD NO). In the realm of superhero comics, it's not all that out of line to expect Spider-Man to swing at a supervillain or for the Avengers to fight toe to toe with the X-Men.

Marvel has its own rating system to handle what gets in the hands of who. It's a little imperfect ' the difference between ALL AGES and A is a little difficult to explain by just looking at the cover ' but it does give an idea of content and structure. An A-rated title is for ages 9 and up, while ALL AGES is self-explanatory. Between A and T+, the content will mature; more talk about romance and teen drama than in the A books. From T+ to Parental Advisory, I think the content matures again between the iCarly fans and the Law & Order set. MAX is ' pretty understandable by now. So if we take Wolverine and the X-Men #14 (rated T) and Uncanny X-Force #28 (Parental Advisory), there's a clear change in artwork and intensity between the stories.

How violence is handled is absolutely key in good storytelling. There's a big difference between The Amazing Spider-Man and Space: Punisher. Even as adults, sometimes a tasteless drawing of a guy with a grievous head wound is just a guy with a grievous head wound, while a slim shadow drawn over someone's face can imply a lot more violence than a few dozen swords. Comics can handle violence in an all-ages fashion without resorting to picking flowers and, even better, can use an act of violence as a backdrop to a much larger theme of justice, morality and heroism. And who doesn't want kids learning about justice, morality or heroism?

WARNING: Spoilers up ahead for Uncanny X-Force #28, so grab a copy and read along!

Uncanny X-Force #28 - panel by Julian Totino Todesco

Sums it up right here

Uncanny X-Force is kind of the poster child for extremely violent acts in the Marvel line, as the adventures of Wolverine's team of stabbing and shooting states on the very first page (it's kind of in the corner and dark pink on black font, so I'm not surprised if you missed it): 'Some evil won't stop. Some evil no prisons can hold, no force can contain, no plea can soften. Sometimes to truly save lives the only option is to take them. The burden of that truth falls on a covert team of mutants assigned to those jobs too dirty, too dangerous for the X-Men.' Yep, some people are gonna die. And when the leader of the team has giant metal claws, it's not going to be a clean or easy death.

The fantastic part is that the messiness comes up issue after issue; hard choices are made and then resonate throughout the book long after the last page. It's demonstrated in Fantomex's willingness to kill a child to stop an adult Apocalypse, and in the introduction of Deathlok (a walking anti-violence conundrum) and in this most recent issue. The team is taken to the future and shown that by being praised for killing a future Apocalypse, they are celebrated and given honors. This leads to the team sort of making a living at it, Minority Report-style. Betsy Braddock, who has had the worst of it since she joined the team, loving and losing to violence time and again, bearing great emotional scars for her own actions, leads this dystopia. By the end of the issue, Psylocke tries to stop the cycle of violence by stabbing herself with her own sword, so '  solving violence with more violence might not work out well next issue.

And that's the thing: When someone on X-Force murders another person, there's a somber air to it. A lot of deaths have been presented as the wrong answer,and can spark debate among readers as to what the right answer was all along. I've had this conversation with a customer or two and let me tell you, it's a beautiful thing to debate morality and peace using what some might consider a 'child's medium.' All in all, violence is never the end in Uncanny X-Force, nor is it an answer. In fact, some of the team's greatest moments have been saving a life or the rebirth of someone more pure. It's a dirty world, but you can be clean of it.

Now, would I give this to an elementary-school student? No, the artwork is pretty clear on their violent ends, and sometimes I got a little queasy during 'the Apocalypse Solution.'  How about a teenager? I think I know a few teens who would really dig this sort of book. While rating books and wrapping them in plastic is the only option to take in some cases, the best option remains to read them and make the decision there, in the story. Look through the ideas brought across by the writer and see if the content on a deeper level might be more important than the amount of blood in a stab wound.

Don't get me wrong, I like Space: Punisher as much as the next person who never wanted to see Frank Castle smile like that, and I am totally prepared for the vicious acts to come in that book. But sometimes, when you put the right rating on something, it's not the physical act of violence ' the gun, the knife or the blood ' but the effects of that action on the people who enact it, on how that effects the story, and what the reader takes away from the act than matter. Kids should be protected from violence for sure, but the morality is important for everyone to know.

3 Comments

You actually have a pretty good system going on with your content management. Why can't all comic shops do that?

Excellent piece.

I'm a teenager and I enjoy this book.

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Make Mine Mini: The Girl with the Donut Tattoo

Make Mine Mini: The Girl with the Donut Tattoo

I didn't get a lot of minicomics at Comic-Con International, but I was lucky enough to get my hands on a copy of The Girl with the Donut Tattoo, by Darlene and Paul Horn

Darlene is a food blogger, and her husband Paul draws the comic Cool Jerk. I'm lucky to even have a copy of this, as according to this article, they printed up 100 copies and they all went fast. (But the good news is they are taking orders for a second printing.)

It's a cute little booklet of gag comics about foodie life, from the necessity to stop and photograph one's food before eating to the horrible things we eat when we scrounge from the refrigerator. Notes in the back provide a helpful guide to what's fact and what's fiction, but all of Darlene's sharp humor rings true, and Paul's deft illustrations work perfectly with the subject matter. There are recipes, too, although one calls for spray butter and another for cake mix, which suggests the Horns are not insufferable when it comes to food'they are the kind of folks who are not afraid to admit that Log Cabin syrup is actually pretty tasty, especially if it's on a good waffle. At 24 pages for $5, The Girl with the Donut Tattoo is a slim volume but a nice addition to any dedicated eater's library.

Darlene also did a food-focused roundup of Comic-Con.

And credit where credit is due ' my fellow manga blogger Deb Aoki put me on to this, and as she happened to have two copies ' now I have one.

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Los Angeles Review of Books posts video of R. Crumb's Paris show

Image of Los Angeles Review of Books posts video of R. Crumb's Paris show