Posted in: Comics | Tagged: Comics, dynamite, entertainment, green hornet, The Spirit, vampirella
Exclusive Extended Previews For Vampirella, The Spirit: The Corpsemaker And Green Hornet: Reign Of The Demon
This week's batch of exclusive extended previews from Dynamite include the new Vampirella #0 from Paul Cornell and Jimmy Broxton, the third issue of Green Hornet: Reign of the Demon by David Liss and Kewber Baal and the first issue of Will Eisner's The Spirit: The Corpsemaker by Francesco Francavilla.
Vampirella #0
writer: Paul Cornell artist: Jimmy Broxton cover: Philip Tan (a) incentive cover: Joseph Michael LInsner sneak peek cover (b), J. Scott Campbell sneak peek cover (c)
Beginning a new and VERY different direction! Vampirella was last spotted in 2016 doing what she does best—defending the world from threats both mystic and evil. She hasn't been seen since. Now, over a thousand years later, she's poised to make her fateful return, but the world that awaits her is unlike anything she might expect—or want to defend! Written by acclaimed comics, novel and television writer Paul Cornell (This Damned Band, Doctor Who) and illustrated by the underrated Jimmy Broxton (Goldtiger, Knight & Squire), it's the start of an adventure for Vampirella unlike any she's had in her long and storied history. Don't miss the train before it leaves the station!
Green Hornet: Reign Of The Demon #3
writer: David Liss artist: Kewber Baal covers: Moritat (a), Anthony Marques (b)
There's a new hero in town – and it isn't Britt Reid! The Swashbuckler's showing up the Green Hornet at his own game—but the cavalier vigilante has made Britt suspicious of his motives. Is the Swashbuckler a real hero? Or is one of the Hornet's foes playing a far more subtle game? Meanwhile, the demonic kingpin of crime—Demone—has his own nefarious plans…and they spell doom for our distracted heroes!
Will Eisner's The Spirit: Corpsemaker #1
writer | artist | cover: Francesco Francavilla
A series of unexpected disappearances and deaths hit Central City. Initially these cases seem purely unrelated: no apparent connection between the victims makes it easy for the police to just file them as runaways or natural deaths. But when someone close to Ebony White disappears, The Spirit is on the case!