Here#s Ty's Beanie Boos display at the Licensing Expo last week... and take a little look at lovely T-Bone... Does he look a little familiar? A junior
Rich Johnston Archives
The former might be helped by the fact that it's being turned into a TV show. The latter may be helped by the fact that it was already turned into a TV
By Nikolai Fomich Locust Moon Comics proudly announced their Little Nemo: Dream Another Dream Kickstarter campaign earlier this week. I sat down with two
From the upcoming Amazing Spider-Man #4... the secret, the original sin of Spider-Man... that he was not alone. Before this could happen... Someone else
I went to a few of these. However I didn't have the chutzpah to hold my phone up filming it all. Ramon Vitral did. And thanks to him and his blog, we now
Decomixado of Mexico City, the country's second largest comic shop, is planning a rather special event in July. On the 5th, alongside the release of
Take it away, Alan. He's not alone. Rock stars Dani Filth and Jyrki 69 have joined him to talk about Dead Souls: Resurrection, a redrawn and remastered
So this is how X-Force #5 ended. Cable goes explodo. In days gone by this might have been of note, but the comic book reading public is blasé these days.
This is how they began. This is their more familiar Grant Morrison/Richard Case look. This was a more recent pre-52 version of the team. And
Thank you YouTube (now taken down, sadly). But the Flash TV pilot roars around the internet it seems. 1. Days Of Future Yet To Come. The red and the
Greetings from the coal face of the direct comics market. Where retailers try to increase their orders of certain comics ahead of sale. Where supply and
A while ago, we ran this story... quoting Jim Starlin saying, after I brought Adam Warlock back from the dead in the Infinity Revelation, someone at
The last we saw of Jerome Opeña in comic books was at the end of the Infinity series. Snce then he's done a few covers, but has been remarkably quiet on
First came Fairy Quest from Paul Jenkins and Humberto Ramos. Funded on Kickstarter, published by Boom, it spawned a sequel. And was much liked. You get
Is it just me or was the AT-AT driver one of the least desirable figures when you were buying Star Wars figures as a kid? His head looked just too... big