Comic Watchers E021: Hulkverines #1, Aquaman #45, and Turok #2!
Comic Watchers E021: Hulkverines #1, Aquaman #45, and Turok #2! Plus movie News and so much comic talk.
DetailsComic Watchers E021: Hulkverines #1, Aquaman #45, and Turok #2! Plus movie News and so much comic talk.
DetailsWith the help of artist, Anzu, let’s examine an X-Men comic aimed at teenaged girls, Misfits, tackled expectations of violence, gender roles, romance, and being the new student at Xavier’s school for mutants who might one day be superheroes.
DetailsThe Rise and Fall of Empires, a short comic by Rian Hughes and Grant Morrison recently published in Heavy Metal, is an exercise in trusting the audience. No definitive characters, figure work, plot or causality. Letting the audience work as they will. As they can.
DetailsA recap of the third annual Crunchyroll Anime Awards that was presented on 2.16.19, with many of our favorite anime taking home their awards that night. Did your favorite anime win?
DetailsJoin us for EP 20 as we talk sexism and Captain Marvel, Avengers, Magic Order, The Batman Who Laughs plus so Much
DetailsYu Watase’s Fushigi Yugi is a fantasy adventure romance in which everyone is smiling through their pain to make life easier for all of us.
DetailsWhen everyone else was telling us the only way you could judge the feats of a hero was by the polarising opposition and overall plotting of the villain, Marvel looked at it from a different angle.
DetailsFast Food Chain Wendy’s picks favorite comic book publisher, but did DC win with the best tweet?
DetailsThe Comic Watchers are back with deep conversation about COMIC BOOKS! Movies and all things nerd.
DetailsWritten by Warren Ellis, drawn by Martin Chaplin, Sugarvirus is an early 1990s comic about addict behavior, survival drives, and the scariness of being alive.
DetailsWe welcome full time Matt to the show, We see if Buffy is a hit or not, GOTG plus so much more. Also celebrating that we are officially on Itunes Podcast, Spotify and Soundcloud.
DetailsRiyoko Okeda’s Claudine is evergreen in the way few trans comics remain after decades. Its author’s genuineness and that its primary goal is not to laud, to warm, to laugh, or to amuse, but to make you angry.
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