Scout Comics and Sheldon Allen to donate profits from CRUCIFIED tpb to NAACP
The second coming, maybe?
DetailsFor #CWPride , we had the pleasure of sitting with Steenz! (@oheysteenz ) to talk about her experience as a writer, artist and editor, and her vision on LGBT+ narratives and stories from these perspectives. This joyful extensive interview is what came out of talking, laughing and sharing with her.
DetailsStar Trek: Year Five #11
Star Trek Year Five #11 (Lanzing, Kelly, Thompson, Keane, Kirchoff, Uyetake) will instantly take you back in time to 1968, as this issue reads and feels like an issue that was published fifty years ago. Great book!
DetailsGreen Lantern Season Two #3
Green Lantern Season Two #3 (Morrison, Sharp, Orzechowski) continues the fun and adventurous one-and-done storytelling of the series so far, but Morrison’s script is brought down by so-so art by Liam Sharp, who handles art and colors this issue.
DetailsWarren Ellis and Tom Raney’s Change or Die gave us versions of the tropes who could change the world.
DetailsUnbreakable
Unbreakable follows down-on-his-luck David Dunn as he finds he has superpowers he can use to do good. Director M. Night Shyamalan’s career is an interesting one. His highs are high and his lows are low. One of his best movies is Unbreakable. Why? Let’s find out.
DetailsReady Player One
This story works on paper—a nostalgia fueled, quest driven coming-of-age story, complete with romance and social commentary—so maybe it should have stayed there.
DetailsUPGRADE, the 2018 sci-fi thriller feature, is getting a TV series followup from Blumhouse Television and UCP.
DetailsPromare
Because I knew that Promare was a Studio Trigger film, I was eagerly waiting for its theatrical release. I wasn’t sure how much of it I was going to understand, but I figured I’d, at least, get a kick out of it, but five minutes in, I realized I would get a lot more than I would have dared hope.
DetailsPlanetary #10
After the dramatic events in the last issue which saw the release of a fictional individual into our own reality thanks to the Four, Planetary #10 (Ellis, Cassady, Depuy, Baron, Cline) unsurprisingly takes the series in a new direction as the stakes and players become more clear with every issue.
DetailsFlash #754 (Williamson, Sandoval, Prianto, Terragona) may have a couple of blindingly obvious plot holes that exist due to an overuse of gimmickry, but that doesn’t stop it from being a flat-out FUN comic. Sometimes, pure escapism is all you need.
Details