The upcoming issue of Alan Moore's Dodgem Logic is a Christmas special, nay a Christmas Annual, with Beano-style lettering to boot And Kevin O'Neill gives us a Santa with the letters slightly rearranged for the cover Ho ho ho.
The magazine will also begin Harry Hill writer David Quantick and underground cartoonist Edwin Pouncey, a.k.a[...]
Alan Moore Archives
I am weeping.
MooreWatch: The documentary The Mindscape Of Alan Moore hits iTunes Here's a preview.
This is The Bleeding Cool ComicChron Robot speaking I come for your women But for now I merely collate comic-related bits and pieces online One day I will rule Until that day, read on.
Irrational Interviews Episode 5: Zack Snyder
a discussion of[...]
Well he does have the beard for it.
According to the Northampton Chronicle, Alan Moore is using the profits from his Dodgem Logic magazine to donate three hundred Christmas hampers to Northampton residents living in sheltered housing located in Spring Boroughs, the area he grew up in, and to the Northampton homeless drop-in centre through[...]
The Comic Book Alliance, basically the UK equivalent of the CBLDF and HERO with a proactive role improving the lot of the comics, has got a huge amount of very desirable material up for auction.
First on the block is a role, both name and likeness, in an upcoming issue of Batman, Inc, courtesy of Grant[...]
From an anonymous internet bidder, the first page of Watchmen has sold for $33,640. 21 bidders and no reserve. This is the highest a Watchmen page has
With Neonomicon in the shops and Fashion Beast on the way, it's probably quite a good time to be Alan Moore right now…
Anyway, here's a birthday tribute from Brian Bolland from the book The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore, published for his fiftieth birthday and recently republished.
Mr Moore isn't one for the internet[...]
A few eBay listings that might be worth bringing to your attention. First up is an original piece of art by Dave Sim featuring Lady Gaga and Cerebus
He co-created The Ballad Halo Jones with Alan Moore He's worked on comics from Judge Dredd to Mister Miracle.
And now he has a new project Lifeboat The first issue is complete, he's working on the second, and he's looking for a publisher.
Here are some teaser panels to give you an idea of flavour and tone…[...]
I have touched this page. Up for sale, right now is Watchmen Page One, Issue One, with Rorschach's monologue and the move from smily face button up, up,
On BBC 2 this Thursday (England and Wales only, Scotland can go swivel), Alan Moore will be bringing The Culture Show cameras to explore the "biggest public art exhibition of Austin Osman Spare for over 50 years".
Spare was an Edwardian artist and practicing magician Moore seeks to show why he has been ignored by[...]
Alan Moore volunteered to take over as writer, but I stupidly stuck with the writer Dick gave me I saw it as a matter of loyalty Having been a freelancer for about 10 years (moonlighting as a copy editor when I worked in book publishing), I couldn't warm up to the idea of firing a[...]
Next year sees the second volume of Century, the three volume League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen series by Alan Moore and Kevin O'Neill And in this chapter, published by Top Shelf and Knockabout, our Victorian pulp heroes hit the sixties The solicitation reads;
CHAPTER TWO takes place almost sixty years later in the psychedelic daze of Swinging[...]
Casey Lau writes for Bleeding Cool.
I've been reading Alan Moore's work since I worked at a comic shop in Vancouver and reading Watchmen monthly as it came out totally destroyed my love for The Uncanny X-Men even though I probably only understood half of it.
Rich Johnston, proprietor of one of my favorite comic book blogs[...]
Number Crunching wishes to reward the generous.
Issue number: 5
Cost: £3.50 ($4.80)
Pages: 78
Cost per page: 4 pence (6 cents)
Alan Moore's pages: 11, but his nicotine stained fingerprints are everywhere.
Pages by Tom Pickard from his upcoming autobiography: 12
Pages by Melibnda Gebbie on her time working on Where The Wind Blows: 4
Panels per page on Farmer and Healey's[...]
Many people seem to believe that Alan Moore hates films He just doesn't like a lot of them these days And he's not keen on people taking what he once wrote as a comic and turning it into a film without his permission And especially then stating that they have his permission.
Anyway, the new issue[...]