REVIEW: Chu #4 from John Layman & Dan Boultwood establishes this Chew prequel comic as a series that is every bit as good as the original.
Comics Publishers Archives
Today sees the delayed and long-awaited publication of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Last Ronin #1, by Kevin Eastman, Peter Laird, Tom Waltz, Esau
There is but one X Of Swords title published this week from Marvel Comics, but it's a big one. X Of Swords: Stasis #1 by Jonathan Hickman, Tini Howard,
Started in 2004, Hack/Slash is Tim Seeley's love letter to the horror/slasher genre and is now on Kickstarter with the "Big Hack Energy-Sized" Omnibus.
In the tease for upcoming Future State two-month band-aid replacement for 5G from DC Comics, it has been repeatedly stated that Future State will be set
All the Local Comic Shop Day variants so far. Marco Davanzo, Executive Director of ComicsPRO – the organization that runs Local Comic Shop Day – says the
Stumptown has been a great comic, and a great television show, but the first look fans got was back at SDCC 2008, with a very small obscure comic.
REVIEW: Chu #3 continues John Layman and Dan Boultwood's excellent Chew spinoff, which every comics reader should be following.
Catwoman #26 posits the idea that after all of Gotham almost burned down from the latest toss-up between the Joker and the Bat, the titular Selina Kyle
In Guardians Of The Galaxy #7, it’s a new day in the farthest reaches of the universe as all the great spaceborne empires come together in their own Paris
In Firefly #21, the crew of the Serenity looks like they found the end of the tunnel as they have spent what feels like forever on the run. A corporation
Brandon Graham has been working on his next comic book series, Rain Like Hammers, for quite some time. In 2010, he stated that "I've got a detective thing
Big Girls #3 is a gigantic update to the story and pulse-pounding action; this wildly inventive science fiction adventure series gives readers a deeper
Todd McFarlane and Spawn - the comic book has been doing remarkably well in recent months – after sales had dropped into the low five figures for much of
So I found myself calling up an Arizonan rib restaurant, the owner of whom told me they had a Tony on staff but not a Todd, there was no Todd McFarlane
In Cable #5, the titular Nathan Summers explores a space station with his parents in a creepy mashup of Alien and Leave it to Beaver.
In New Mutants #13, all signs are pointing to Cypher's participation in the X of Swords tournament being a really bad idea.
In Hellions #5, Mister Sinister leads the Hellions on a wacky adventure filled with witty banter and self-referential humor.
Is technology on its way toward merging with organic material? Zac Thompson speaks on his vision of the future in Lonely Receiver.
REVIEW: The Immortal Hulk: The Threshing Place #1 sees an all-star creative team tell the story of a massacre at the hands of the Hulk.
Comic book tie-ins to movies are not uncommon, but some are obscure and just very odd, such as Hydrobot & The Transformers #1 from IDW.
This week, it’s two-issue number twos from my favorite tie-in comics, Cyberpunk 2077: Trauma Team and Vampire: The Masquerade: Winter’s Teeth. Both are
Cavan Scott has a Writer’s Commentary on Shadow Service #2, published by Vault Comics. Have you got your copy to hand? Then we are away. And we’re back
REVIEW: An Unkindness of Ravens #1 puts a centuries-old conflict in a New England high school in one of 2020's best comic debuts.
If this were a story unto itself, it might have done well but Hellions #5 will likely be much more enjoyable in the inevitable omnibus.
REVIEW: Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Willow #4 is easily BOOM! Studios' best Joss Whedon title due to Tamaki's script and Bustos' artwork.
Commanders In Crisis #1 is a bold, jam-packed debut issue wears its politics on its sleeve as that arm punches a bad guy in the face. Carefully balancing
REVIEW: Getting it Together #1 draws inspiration from sitcoms like Friends, adding a modern vibe to the concept of an ensemble dramedy.
It was said that studying to become a Jedi master was a hard life with danger and uncertainty. In Star Wars: Darth Vader #6, we see that the instructional
Seven Secrets #3 is better than the issue before it, which was better than the debut, this series is on an impossibly fantastic arc that you’ve gotta see.