Random Comic Related Things

Home » Forums » Comics talk » Random Comic Related Things

Author
Topic
#639

BBC Radio 6, 19:00 tonight (Friday 4th):

The legendary comic book writer shares two hours of his favourite music and chats to producer and writer Richard Norris about the important part it’s played in his life and work.

Expect tracks from Captain Beefheart, Joni Mitchell, X-Ray Spex, The Residents, Patti Smith and Sleaford Mods. Plus some of the music he’s made himself over the years.

See if you can guess who it is before you click the link:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0008yp0

Then Sunday at 13:00, is this one easier to guess?

The author of **** amongst much else, picks some of the music that’s shaped him. With tracks from Bowie, Dusty Springfield and Tori Amos.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m00093q6

  • This topic was modified 5 years, 2 months ago by DavidM.
Viewing 100 replies - 101 through 200 (of 993 total)
Author
Replies
  • #12281

    Maybe it’s time for Stephenson to step down and for Image to bring in a fresh set of eyes. I am not for anyone losing their job, but he’s been Publisher since 2008. Maybe bringing in someone with a different perspective might make a difference.

    I am not big on the fantasy genre but when I look at those published by Image, there is a bit of sameness to them. Monstress stands apart because it actively works to be different. (And it succeeds!)

    Image’s other big problem that we’ve discussed is maintaining a regular schedule on their books. Planned breaks are one thing. That’s understandable. But when there’s huge gaps between arcs or even issues, that really impacts the book. I think because of that, many readers may be reluctant to try their books.

    I used to buy a lot more Image books than I do now. Reading the descriptions in Previews each month, there is very, very little there that interests me. Hell, there are months I don’t add anything to my pull list from any publisher. There doesn’t seem to be the spark that was once there.

  • #12301

    I used to buy a lot more Image books than I do now. Reading the descriptions in Previews each month, there is very, very little there that interests me. Hell, there are months I don’t add anything to my pull list from any publisher. There doesn’t seem to be the spark that was once there.

    I’m still finding things that interest me at Image. In addition to long-running books that I’m still following (Savage Dragon, Outcast, Gideon Falls, Criminal, Lazarus, Trees), I recently began picking up Killadelphia, Undiscovered Country, American Jesus, Old Guard, and The Clock.

  • #12309

    There’s a new comics related Humble Bundle our now, for Spawn. Bizarre contents though, starting at approx #120 through to date. Why it hasn’t included the first 100+ issues beats me. Unfortunately those are the ones I would want, with art by MacFarlane and Capullo.

  • #12311

    Ah, okay. I see there was an earlier Spawn bundle containing those issues about a year ago. Missed that one. Rats!

  • #12325

    (Just don’t mention Spawn!)

    Speaking of books that Image should consider cutting…

  • #12326

    Marvel Unlimited have uploaded a lot of Captain Britain comics from the 1970s. I had a glance through and at the end of issue 1 Stan Lee writes a typical hype laden editorial. At the end of it he thanks the Marvel UK staff in London, including Neil Tennant, who happened to later become the singer in the Pet Shop Boys.

    That means in the ‘degrees of separation’ game you only have to go 2 steps from Herb Trimpe to Lady Gaga.

  • #12593

    From the Image article:

    According to the Diamond Comics Distributor (the comic book store market’s primary distributor), 5,395 comic books were released in 2019<u></u>

    From this site:

    How Many New Novels are Published Each Year?

    there were 407,000 books published in 2007 (the last year for which final numbers are available)<u></u>

    So basically comics aren’t really trying :unsure:

     

     

     

  • #12708

    There was a guy who installed cable and phone wire and went into peoples basements to do it. In a few basements, there were unwanted boxes kept with sports cards and old comics. He asked if he could take them off the hands of the families and they said yes.

    You can guess the rest…

    Never happens to me.

  • #12713

    You can guess the rest…

    He took a box that he wasn’t allowed to and was arrested for theft and then fired from his job?

  • #12733

    You can guess the rest…

    He found Gwyneth Paltrow’s head in it?

  • #12753

    ‘Heavy Metal’: New CEO Matthew Medney Looks To The Future On “The Bleeding Edge Of Sci-Fi”

  • #12767

    We will take the climate of the times and push to the bleeding edge of it, being a forward-thinking thought leader in his space is what we are most excited to execute on.

    While we will for sure be on the cutting edge of Rated-R live-action & animations, breaking through the status quo into new horizons is a major goal of ours. Again as I said earlier, Heavy Metal will be the thought leader in this space. However, we don’t foresee all of our properties fitting within that category but as we examine the marketplace, and when the climate dictates it, we will be the first to act on it. 

  • #12783

    being a forward-thinking thought leader in his space is what we are most excited to execute on.

    Ha ha, that really is Olympic levels of corporate bullshit speak.

  • #12854





    A lot more in the thread.

  • #12999

     

  • #13755

  • #13786

    View this post on Instagram

    We formed @imagecomics 28 years ago today, Feb. 1, 1992. There was 7 of us who had felt that we could create something lasting, something bigger than each of us could achieve on our own. 3 of us had produced sales records that still stand to this day, we own the top 3 best selling comic books of all time. After creating #Deadpool, #Cable, #XForce and so much more @marvel, and doing so with deals that gave me equity for life, I felt that my next endeavors should be completely under my control. Fortunately, my peers in this group felt the same. We stepped out to create artistic freedom, a model of ownership that remains the very best in the business 28 years later. You create it, you own it. This move changed my future, economically, artistically, forever. Image was always intended to be more than a company to me, it was a movement, a kinship, and at this time, it was a brotherhood. It was complete freedom. Bottom right is a gentleman we hired as our marketing manager, the rest of us were called the Image 7 by the press. We’re like comic books greatest band, when we were jamming together, there was nothing better. I love these guys and the cool stuff we made together. Image Comics has been the #2 comics company in its history, it’s been the #3 company as long as I can remember. I was 23 years old and these are my favorite memories of my young career. I’ll share more in a bit but for right now, THANK YOU to every fan that has supported any Image comic book. @toddmcfarlane @jimlee @marc_silvestri @erikjonlarsen @whilceportacio #valentino #robliefeld #youngblood #spawn #savagedragon #shadowhawk #cyberforce #wildcats #imagecomics

    A post shared by Rob Liefeld (@robliefeld) on

    View this post on Instagram

    Image Comics at #28th 🥂• • • Posted #withregram • @robliefeld • Hours after this shot we gathered and formed @imagecomics Yes, @therealstanlee factors into our official formation of Image! Four of us, myself, @whilceportacio @jimlee @toddmcfarlane had gathered in L.A. to film the “Comic Book Greats” Video series that Stan was hosting and this was our last shot of the schedule and hours after this we gathered with the others @marc_silvestri house in Malibu. Todd had come from Vancouver, Jim & Whilce from San Diego and Erik flew in from Washington, Valentino was a local in SoCal. The filming of these videos was the perfect opportunity for us to formally gather and finalize our #ImageComics pact. It was on a Saturday as well, really lining it all up with this 28th Anniversary. So, thanks Stan, you even facilitated the formation of Image on top of everything else you accomplished! So next time you watch those videos of us on YouTube, remember that’s the weekend it all came together! #robliefeld #toddmcfarlane #jimlee #whilceportacio #marcsilvestri #jimvalentino @erikjonlarsen #eriklarsen

    A post shared by Whilce Portacio (@whilceportacio) on

    Image Comics’s 28th anniversary.

  • #13819

    https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-dexter-vines-beat-blood-cancer

  • #13825

  • #13830

    https://www.gofundme.com/f/urgent-help-needed-to-save-our-home

    I feel like this needs to create a new thread for supporting the others.

  • #13961

    Bat cave have wi fi?
    Iron man have WiFi?

  • #14059

    Yes Matt, yes!

    I barely catching up with Marvel because of those mega events, it still bothers me that they heavily changed Star-Lord from a tragic hero (Abnett & Lanning’s version) to a lazy dickhead who’s obsessed with the eighties music and his toy guns looked like he stole a plasma rifles from the Halo franchise.

    And what’s wrong with Rocket and having an cockney accent? I don’t find it funny, i find it badass (if you can’t imagine him what he sounds like, youtube Marvel vs. Capcom 3 Raccoon quotes clips)

  • #14062

    And what’s wrong with Rocket and having an cockney accent? I don’t find it funny, i find it badass (if you can’t imagine him what he sounds like, youtube Marvel vs. Capcom 3 Raccoon quotes clips)

    Was Rocky supposed to have a cockney accent in the DnA run? I never read it as that, so the voice he had for MvC 3 and in the Avengers: EMH cartoon was rather odd. I’ll take Bradley Cooper over that any day. But I totally agree about Star Lord.

  • #14067

    Eh, that Cooper’s Rocket role sounds pretty 90s cartoons cliché. But hey, we had different tastes, agree to disagree.

  • #15286

    I recommend following Michel Fiffe on Twitter – his art’s great and he posts pinups and whatnot, but he’ll also occasionally post threads on process/history stuff around comic art – most recently one on the crosshatch explosion of the 90s, and speculating on what inspired it – he points to Miller’s Ronin and BWS’s X-Men/Wolvie work.

  • #15301

  • #15499

    A Locke and Key Sandman crossover has just been announced.

    Sounds like a random dream.

  • #15506

    Sounds like a sweet dream.

    IDW’s Locke & Key and DC’s The Sandman crossover arrives in October 2020 by Joe Hill and Gabriel Rodriguez.

  • #15941

    Could Coronavirus Impact Comic-Con? TV Studios Keeping Eye on Outbreak

    San Diego Comic-Con organizers and the studios that showcase their TV series and stars at the annual fan event are monitoring the evolving coronavirus outbreak, before possibly altering any plans for this summer’s gathering.

    TVLine has spoken to executives at several major Hollywood studios who confirmed they are monitoring the situation closely and are not ruling out the possibility of pulling out of the fan convention, although a final decision likely won’t come down until spring. This year’s San Diego Comic-Con is scheduled to be held five months from now, from Thursday, July 23 to Sunday, July 26.

    “There’s obviously concern,” said one unnamed exec at a major studio. “For now we’re taking a wait-and-see approach.”

    A second studio exec who also requested anonymity noted that Comic-Con is still five months away and the coronavirus’ Stateside impact remains largely unknown. As a result, it’s “too soon” to speculate about any potential SDCC strategy shift. Yet another exec echoed that POV, saying: “It’d be irresponsible for us to not be thinking about it. But it’s too soon to press the panic button.”
    In a statement to TVLine, a spokesperson for Comic-Con said that the organization “is working with local officials as it pertains to the COVID-19 situation and continues to monitor developments closely.”

    The coronavirus as of Feb. 25 has spread throughout China and to 31 other countries/territories, resulting in more than 80,000 total cases and nearly 3,000 deaths from COVID-19 (the disease caused by said virus). And now, the number of new reported cases outside of China are outpacing those within. In the U.S., more than 50 cases — many of which are patients repatriated from high-risk locations — have been diagnosed. “It’s not so much of a question of if this will [spread in the U.S.] anymore but rather more of a question of exactly when,” Dr. Nancy Messonnier, director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said in a Tuesday briefing.

    President Donald Trump, who has asked the U.S. Congress for $1.25 billion in new funds to manage the outbreak, is holding a press conference on Wednesday evening to address the nation’s coronavirus concerns.

    The NCIRD’s Messonnier has suggested that cities and towns prepare to employ “social distancing measures,” including the cancellation of large conferences. San Diego Comic-Con holds the Guinness World Record for being the largest annual pop culture festival in the world, with last year’s event drawing an estimated 135,000 attendees from over 80 countries (plus more than 2,500 media personnel from over 30 countries).

    SDCC is also big business for San Diego, last year generating an estimated $149 million in regional impact to the city. A spokesperson for the San Diego Tourism Authority tells TVLine that at this early stage, “there are still too many unknown factors with coronavirus to determine how/if it will affect visitation.” (Hotels do not begin accepting reservations for the famously busy weekend until April.)

    Earlier this month, the Mobile World Congress phone show, which was to be held this week and typically draws 100,000-plus to Barcelona, Spain, was cancelled due to “the global concern regarding the coronavirus outbreak. Similarly, Sony pulled out of Pax East, a popular gaming convention in Boston that draws more than 50,000 people and runs Feb. 27 through March 1.

    Convening inside the San Diego Convention Center and nearby satellite locations, San Diego Comic-Con attendees spend much of their time shoulder to shoulder in queue for panels, packed into ballrooms that fit as many as 6,500 people, or barely squeezing past one another inside the Exhibit Hall. As such, it is not at all uncommon (almost expected, really) for someone to come away from the well-attended event with some version of what has been dubbed “con crud” (aka any cold/flu-like illness).

    Factor in TV, film, comic book and other stars’ in-person contact — via assembly line-like photo ops, handshakes and hugs — with hundreds of fans, and you have a veritable 600,000-sq. ft. Petri dish that no amount of Purel can keep in check.

    Or as longtime Comic-Con attendee/participant Bryan Fuller puts it, with a shrug, “Honestly, I always assume there are health risks in attending SDCC.”

  • #16091

    Al Campbell is ‘Barry Shitpeas’ off of Charlie Brooker’s Newswipe. :good:

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #16103

    Saw this on Twitter. Thought it was epic. Sadly doesn’t herald a crossover, but pretty cool nonetheless.

    639F7F69-DA0B-4A73-92E5-9B226E26452A

    4 users thanked author for this post.
  • #16106

    Is this McFarlane guy new? With that talent, he could go places!

    • This reply was modified 4 years, 9 months ago by njerry.
    3 users thanked author for this post.
  • #16116

    Stuff like that reminds me why I love McFarlane’s work.

  • #16467

    REGARDING COMIC COLLECTING APS / PROGRAMS

     

    Does anyone use any apps to record / log their current comic collection.

    Having some spare time off after surgery I could probably use the time to catalog my collection properly. Just for personal peace of mind not to sell/auction off.

     

    Any recommendations would be appreciated

  • #16471

    No app recommendations, Mark, but I hope your surgery went well.

  • #16472

    A few at work know I am into comics and they told me they had some stashed away somewhere in their houses… I offered to take them off their hands but they all gave me the FY look and response knowing that I would hoodwink them.

    Can’t blame a guy for trying.😂

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #16506

    Yeah but the joke’s on them when they find out their longbox of X-Men #1 from 1991 is worth about $2 in total :-)

    3 users thanked author for this post.
  • #16526

    Yeah but the joke’s on them when they find out their longbox of X-Men #1 from 1991 is worth about $2 in total :-)

    I think you are overstating their value immensely.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #16543

    Yeah but the joke’s on them when they find out their longbox of X-Men #1 from 1991 is worth about $2 in total

    I think you are overstating their value immensely.

    Wait until Coronavirus panic causes a shortage of toilet paper in Texas, Todd; then you’ll see the true value of that longbox.  :-)

    5 users thanked author for this post.
  • #16553

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #16578

    DC pulls out of Emerald City Comic Con (and all March Cons)

    Seattle’s ECCC offers refunds, but the event will go on

    Emerald City Comic-Conan updated message from ECCC about Covid-19

    March 12th – 15th (Thurs. to Sun.)
    I’m heading down with my brother (from Vancouver) for the Friday and Saturday.
    It’ll be interesting.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #16786

    Seattle’s Emerald City Comic Con is cancelled
    Rescheduled dates coming soon “Summer 2020”

    Disappointing, but probably for the best.

    • This reply was modified 4 years, 9 months ago by Sean Robinson.
  • #16905

    Valiant fans, for those of us new to the universe, is this bundle worth getting for £12? Will it standalone well? Creative teams look pretty impressive here, so I’m tempted.

    https://www.humblebundle.com/books/bloodshot-2020-valiant-books?linkID=&mcID=102:5e618bbeabd7ac6e9a2fba2d:ot:5801fbf744c8ddeb34e46007:1&utm_source=Humble+Bundle+Newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2020_03_07_200307_humble_highlights&linkID=&utm_content=hero_image

    • This reply was modified 4 years, 9 months ago by Vikram.
    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #16967

    Yes go for it. Valiant in its latest iteration has very good quality in story and art. Having never read any of their books in the 90s I have had no problem at all in following the stories.

    2 users thanked author for this post.
  • #17098

    Archer and Armstrong is in that bundle. That book is ridiculously funny.

  • #18091

    Based on a topic I found while lurking on the Byrne Robotics forums.

    Who do you consider to be the quintessential love interest for certain characters.

    Those characters are:

    1. Spider-Man
    2. Iron Man
    3. Batman
    4. Captain America

    And 5. is an open one for anyone who genuinely has a view that is different on any of the following couples: Superman/Lois Lane; Thor/Jane Foster; Scott Summer/Jean Grey.

  • #18096

    1. Spider-Man – Gwen Stacy
    2. Iron Man – Pepper Potts
    3. Batman – Justice
    4. Captain America – his love for the american dream remains unrequited :wacko:  

    • This reply was modified 4 years, 8 months ago by DavidM.
  • #18101

    Spider-Man – MJ

    Batman – Vicki Vale

    Captain America – The Flag

    Iron Man – Iron Man

  • #18118

    Spider-Man – Mary Jane
    Batman – Talia al Ghul
    Captain America – Sharon Carter
    Iron Man – No one. I really don’t think he has had anyone that I would define as “quintessential”. Pepper Potts was with Happy Hogan for so long that I would say they were a couple.
    Thor – No one. While Jane Foster was a love interest in the beginning, I think they have grown in such different directions over the decades that they are more good friends than anything else.

  • #18121

    Spider-Man: Swinging

    Batman: His toys

    Captain America: Bernadette the Glass-blower

    Iron-Man: Iron-Man

    2 users thanked author for this post.
  • #18160

    1. Spider-Man – Daredevil

    2. Iron Man – Captain America

    3. Batman – Superman

    4. Captain American – See above

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #18206

    Spider-Man – Deborah Whitman
    Iron Man – Whitney Frost
    Batman – Silver St Cloud
    Captain America – Diamondback

  • #18281

    Captain America: Bernadette the Glass-blower

    I bet there’s a really good story behind this.

    I hope there’s a really good story behind this.

    Um…what’s the story behind this?

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #18285

    Well, now I’m tempted just to leave it there.

    Ah, I only know of her because of her name. But I’ve been reading up on her since.

    Here be spoilers…

    She was an artist based in the Glass Menagerie who later went on to study law and successfully represented Bucky for his Winter Soldier escapades. She took Cap to see Raiders of the Lost Ark (he did not approve) and at one point stepped in dog poo and another time got cross with Cap because he was away trying to buy a puppy. They were once engaged. I’m assuming her love of wrestling got in the way of that – also a photo of Sharon Carter – although Captain America seems to spend a lot of time taking her for granted. Her encounter with the Red Skull did not end well, but she liked Spidey and Black Widow, and, also, The Grateful Dead.

    2 users thanked author for this post.
  • #18289

    Captain America: Bernadette the Glass-blower

    2 users thanked author for this post.
  • #18291

    Spidey – MJ

    Batman – Selina

    Captain America – Sharon

    Iron Man – no idea; how big of a deal was his relationship with Natasha?

    Cyclops – Emma

  • #18304

    1. Spider-Man – his [ir]responsibility.

    2. Iron Man – his uncontrollable sentient armor.

    3. Batman – Batman.

    4. Captain America – BUCCCCCCCKKKKKKYYY.

    5. Superman – Zod’s snapped neck

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #18372

    1. Spider-Man-MJ, married and has a kid
    2. Iron Man-based on movies, Pepper, he marries her and has a kid.
    3. Batman-Selina Kyle, he does have a kid with Talia but that was all talia and the kid is a tool
    4. Captain America-based on Movies, Peggy

  • #18461

    I have a mail subscription to The Beano for my son and I received this email today, which I found touching.

    Comics might seem like they don’t really matter at the moment, and in the grand scheme of things they don’t, but this will be a little something to look forward to each week while we’re holed up at home.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #18484

    That’s class (as my Irish cousins would say). I have very fond memories of reading weekly issues of Beano and The Dandy during my summers in West Cork.

    3 users thanked author for this post.
  • #18498

    Class!

    Jerry is my cousin. Who knew!

    Cow pies all round

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #18585

    Jerry is my cousin.

    Jerry is everyone’s cousin, that his mutant power.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #18590

    You’re all like family to me.

    Hang on, Tim is my cousin now?

  • #18608

    It’s okay; he’s your third cousin once-removed.

  • #18644

    You’re all like family to me.

    Hang on, Tim is my cousin now?

    If y’all live in Arkansas, there are no problems or issues.

    The downside is you have to live in Arkansas.

  • #18848

    Diamond Comic Distributors ceases receiving products for distribution Due to Coronavirus (x)

    Diamond’s founder Steve Geppi has issued an official statement confirming and explaining the decision to cease receiving new product from printers for distribution starting in April, and outlining the current timeframe for its change in operation.

    Here’s Geppi’s full statement:

    CORONAVIRUS EFFECTS ON DISTRIBUTION

    As everyone knows, the world faces ever-increasing challenges related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Its effects on the comics & collectibles and tabletop gaming industries have been felt far and wide. We are hearing from thousands of retailers that they can no longer service their customers as they have in the past, many of them forced to close by government action or resort to in-person or curbside delivery. Even those still open are seeing reduced foot traffic in most cases, a situation that seems likely to worsen with time.

    Our publishing partners are also faced with numerous issues in their supply chain, working with creators, printers, and increasing uncertainty when it comes to the production and delivery of products for us to distribute. Our freight networks are feeling the strain and are already experiencing delays, while our distribution centers in New York, California, and Pennsylvania were all closed late last week. Our own home office in Maryland instituted a work from home policy, and experts say that we can expect further closures. Therefore, my only logical conclusion is to cease the distribution of new weekly product until there is greater clarity on the progress made toward stemming the spread of this disease.

    EFFECTS ON DIAMOND COMIC DISTRIBUTORS

    Product distributed by Diamond and slated for an on-sale date of April 1st or later will not be shipped to retailers until further notice. For the time being, however, we have been able to develop procedures with our teams at the distribution center in Olive Branch, MS to safely continue fulfillment of direct ship reorders for the retailers who are able to receive new product and need it to service their customers. It’s unlikely that orders will be filled on the same day they are placed, and these plans are subject to change if at any point we no longer feel that we can safeguard our teams while fulfilling orders.

    Product distributed by Diamond UK and slated for an on-sale date of March 25th or later will not be shipped to retailers until further notice. Further updates with regard to reorders and other Diamond UK-specific information will be communicated directly to their customers as information becomes available.

    EFFECTS ON ALLIANCE GAME DISTRIBUTORS

    Product distributed by Alliance has been shipping from our Fort Wayne, IN and Austin, TX warehouses. Both are closing at the end of the day on Tuesday, March 24th, in the interest of employee safety and to comply with direction from local governments. Any orders not shipped by that time will not be processed until further notice. Your dedicated sales team will still be working remotely and will help you with any orders you’d like to place today or questions you may have.

    OUR SHARED PATH FORWARD

    With these changes in our distribution strategy, we will work with our publishing partners to develop programs that will address product already in the pipeline and what will happen when we resume distribution. We know that during this time you will face many challenges, and we will direct our energies toward addressing them, rather than fighting on increasingly numerous fronts to get product out.

    For those retailers who remain open in various forms, I encourage you let loose your own creativity. For the time being, you will be able to replenish your perennials from Diamond and/or Alliance, but you should also remember the stock you already have in your stores. If your doors remain open, it’s likely you will have customers who will continue to seek diversion from events of the world. Special sales, promotions, and even eBay can help you bring in cash during this trying time. Product for which you’ve already paid may well hold some of your answers. There have been many solid suggestions offered about how to help our retailers, and we will bring many of them together in future communications.

    Besides the industry’s most immediate needs, we have been and will continue looking toward the future, when we see stores reopening, bringing staff back onboard, and getting customers in the door. We are looking at issues like debt accrued due to this crisis, what reduced ordering means for your discount tiers, and the availability of credit to help stores through and after this difficult time. We don’t have all those answers today, but we understand the many issues you are facing and look forward to addressing them as partners who all have an interest in the long-term health of the industry we love so much.

    As I mentioned in my last update, this industry has been one of the greatest joys of my life, from my days as a collector to a retailer to today. I and my Leadership Team have made these decisions knowing full-well the effect they will have on all of you, as well as our publishing partners and our own team members around the world. At the end of the day, the safety and security of our teams and yours, along with the many customers we all serve, is paramount. I again thank you for your ongoing patience and support.

    Thank You,

    Steve Geppi
    Chairman & CEO, Geppi Family Enterprises

    ======

    I’m already post on other topic, but all of these indie comics are so screwed.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #18864

    Well, shit, there was a sequel to The Boys coming next week.

  • #18888

    Albert Uderzo, French Illustrator, Co-Creator of ‘Asterix’ Comic-Books, Dies at 92

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #18897

    3 users thanked author for this post.
  • #18911

    The end of an era; a bit of my childhood that has just been pushed further back into the past.

    He has definitely achieved a lasting legacy. The comics were never the same after Goscinny died, but there was always something special about Uderzo’s art.

     

    3 users thanked author for this post.
  • #18920

    True, but I still lapped up the Uderzo books as a kid. His art just got better and better during that era.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #19017

    Interesting look at art and colour restoration. This guy does it for a living, and often shares examples of his work. Here’s a 1970s’ Swamp Thing, not an actual project he’s working on, just something he was practicing with:

     

    There have been some interesting posts recently by José Villarrubia and Stephen Bissette discussing the problems…

    Posted by Allan Harvey on Rabu, 25 Mac 2020

     

     

    2 users thanked author for this post.
  • #19410

    5 users thanked author for this post.
  • #19446

    Mike Mignola is awesome!

    3 users thanked author for this post.
  • #19469

    Interesting look at art and colour restoration. This guy does it for a living, and often shares examples of his work. Here’s a 1970s’ Swamp Thing, not an actual project he’s working on, just something he was practicing with:

     

    There have been some interesting posts recently by José Villarrubia and Stephen Bissette discussing the problems…

    Posted by Allan Harvey on Rabu, 25 Mac 2020

     

     

    I suspect that one of the problems with trying replicate the colors from old comics is that these things were crapped out as cheaply and quickly as possible on newsprint.

    A lot of the old newsprint comics I’ve read have inconsistent color. Often times, the colors will appear dull or overly garish; red, in particular, rarely looks red — it can be anywhere from magenta to a weird shade of orange. And even then, the colorists themselves frequently made goofs that didn’t get caught by editorial.

    I am generally okay with comics being recolored as long as they look good on whatever paper they’re being reprinted on and at least come close to what the originals looked like.

     

  • #19475

    I am generally okay with comics being recolored as long as they look good on whatever paper they’re being reprinted on and at least come close to what the originals looked like.

    This is my feeling too. A lot of comics colouring was deliberately designed to account for the dulling effect of newsprint, which is why older comics can look so bold and garish today when the original colours are reproduced on good quality white paper.

    I think there needs to be some accounting for that in recolouring jobs, and it’s a reason why I’m not opposed to recolouring in principle, as I think it’s often necessary to properly recapture the spirit of the original.

    But too many recolours seem to use the process as an opportunity to rethink the original colouring choices entirely, which not only makes for a different reading experience but also seems a little disrespectful to the original creators – sort of an “I think I can do better” approach.

  • #19519

    So Tom King (Batman, Strange Adventures) and Tom Taylor (creator of The Deep cartoon, Injustice, DCeased) keep getting mistaken for each other on social media. Every couple of days someone tags the wrong one in on a new release.

    So to make it easier for everyone Taylor made a new profile picture.

    7 users thanked author for this post.
  • #21019

    4 users thanked author for this post.
  • #21076

    I want to be Alan Moore when I grow up.

  • #21172

    Does anyone else remember when Garth Ennis was supposed to take over from Alan Moore on WildC.A.T.s? I can’t imagine what that would have been like, but I’d like to believe it would have been pretty interesting to see the contrast in storytelling styles between Ennis’ writing and the hyper 90’s superhero artwork.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #21189

    I don’t actually remember the Ennis plan, but that would have been very exciting to read. I know that The Authority eclipsed the prior WildStorm books, but the WildCATs book had some pretty solid writers and storylines over its history, including James Robinson, Alan Moore, Joe Casey and (very briefly) Grant Morrison. Ennis would have been a fantastic addition.

    2 users thanked author for this post.
  • #21238

    3 users thanked author for this post.
  • #21264

    The latest Humble Bundle is a bunch of Hickman Image comics, including all of East of West, for €14:

    https://www.humblebundle.com/books/creator-spotlight-on-jonathan-hickman-image-comics-books

  • #21268

    Some awesome comics in that bundle! East of West is one of the greatest comics of all time, IMO. No hyperbole.

    • This reply was modified 4 years, 8 months ago by Vikram.
    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #21395

    Mort Drucker Dies: Famous Fans Post Favorites From Mad Magazine TV & Movie Caricaturist

  • #21456

    If y’all live in Arkansas, there are no problems or issues

    Fun (?) fact: cousin-cousin marriage is legal in every state of Australia.

  • #21457

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #21542

    If anyone is interested, Mignola has been auctioning off these sketches on eBay with proceeds benefiting a local charity.

    https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_from=R40&_trksid=p2380057.m570.l1311.R3.TR11.TRC1.A0.H0.Xmike+mignola.TRS0&_nkw=mike+mignola+original&_sacat=0

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #21629

    Love this Deadman pic from Jim Lee (it’s done for auction for charity).

    6 users thanked author for this post.
  • #22335

    A lot of comics creators are on Twitter today to auction various items for a charity that protects independent book shops in the US. Under the hashtag #Creators4Comics

    A lot of cool items there like sketches, original scripts, signed trade paperbacks, Kieran Gillen is selling a copy of his latest book that didn’t get released because of the lockdown so it’s the only copy etc.

    Chip Zdarsky, in his unique fashion, is auctioning off the chance to have him video call you to recite an erotic short story he’s written. 😂

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #22337

    Very cool that Matthew Modine just joined in because I guess he really likes comics.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #22406

    Love this from Robert Kirkman too. 😂

    <blockquote class=”twitter-tweet”><p lang=”en” dir=”ltr”>Damon Lindelof just agreed to match the winning bid for this Sweet Tooth drawing and you get to keep the art. <a href=”https://twitter.com/hashtag/creators4comics?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>#creators4comics</a&gt; Winning bid donated directly to <a href=”https://twitter.com/BINC?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>@BINC</a&gt; and proceeds go to comic book retailers and indie book stores. Bid here. The Bidding ends Monday <a href=”https://twitter.com/12?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>@12</a&gt; ET <a href=”https://t.co/y90MfCXvtY”>pic.twitter.com/y90MfCXvtY</a></p>&mdash; Jeff Lemire (@JeffLemire) <a href=”https://twitter.com/JeffLemire/status/1250454466748395521?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>April 15, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src=”https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js&#8221; charset=”utf-8″></script>

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #22754

    San Diego Comic-Con Cancelled for First Time in 50-Year History

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #23141

    This sounds like a spoof but there’s a link to a court document that contains the ruling.

    A 2003 US court case on whether or not the X-men and various other beings are human beings (because apparently it matters for customs purposes when you’re exporting action figures):

    An actual judge has written things like:

    “First, most of the figures at issue exhibit at least one non-human characteristic. The court does
    not agree with Customs that the few non-human characteristics the figures possess, such as claws
    or robotic eyes, “fall far short of transforming [these figures] into something other than the human beings which they represent”

    “Second, these characters are known as “mutants.” That fact further informs their classification. They are more than (or different than) humans. These fabulous characters use their extraordinary and unnatural physical and psychic powers on the side of either good or evil.”

    3 users thanked author for this post.
  • #23177

  • #23863

    This 90s relic was uploaded today:

  • #23866

    I learnt today that the guy who is the voice of Solid Snake (David Hayter) also wrote the first two X-Men movies and the Watchmen movie.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #23901

    I learnt today that the guy who is the voice of Solid Snake (David Hayter) also wrote the first two X-Men movies and the Watchmen movie.

    He also wrote a Black Widow screenplay.

    • This reply was modified 4 years, 7 months ago by JRCarter.
  • #23908

    I don’t think I’ve ever heard Bolland being interviewed before. Maybe the lockdown situation is getting people out of their usual shyness to get any chance to interact. Podcasts are coming thick and fast and nobody’s commuting to listen to them. :yahoo:

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #24044

    I noticed that Comixology has just had a price drop on a load of Millar titles that have been full-price for a while now (I had them on my wishlist and was waiting for a sale).

    So if you’ve been waiting to check out the second Chrononauts mini, Sharkey and Kick-Ass they’re now 99p an issue, along with quite a few other Image books.

Viewing 100 replies - 101 through 200 (of 993 total)

This topic is temporarily locked.

Skip to toolbar