Tag Archives: cris peter

Shiver me timbers! The Ghostbusters are back in Ghostbusters: Dead Man’s Chest

Dark Horse Comics presents Ghostbusters: Dead Man’s Chest, an all-new adventure with Phoebe, Trevor, Gary, Callie, and their friends! This four-issue series is a sequel to Ghostbusters: Back in Town and bridges the gap between the films Ghostbusters: Afterlife and Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire.

In Ghostbusters: Dead Man’s Chest, the Ghostbusters’ increasing notoriety is throwing them for a loop. While Trevor steadies himself by trying to plan a “friendiversary” celebration for him and Lucky, Phoebe meets someone who might be a real friend instead of just a social media follower. But friendships new and old have to take a back seat to more immediate concerns when a ghostly saber summons the ghost of Captain Kidd and threatens to transform NYC into a ghostly pirate town!

David M. Booher returns to pen more adventures for the new Ghostbusters crew with art by Aviv Or, colors by Cris Peter, and lettering by Jimmy Betancourt of Comicraft. Tyler Crook will illustrate the cover art for issue #1, with a variant cover by Max Sarin.

Ghostbusters: Dead Man’s Chest #1 (of 4) sails into comic shops on May 21, 2025. It is now available to pre-order for $4.99.

Ghostbusters: Dead Man’s Chest #1

FML #1 conjures some rock and roll magic

FML #1

FML #1 is about a group of metal kids who face a medley of bizarre foes and encounters in Portland, Oregon during a worldwide pandemic. Riley is a teen that sketches out his heavy metal future with a ballpoint pen between monster movies and band practice. But musical stardom needs to compete with high school, the temper of a former Riot Grrrl mother, the morbid obsessions of a goth sister, and the eccentricities of bandmates that threaten to drive him and everyone around him insane. The balance gets harder after a ritual during a party in Portland’s Forest Park causes him to wake up one day to discover that the creatures, witchcraft, and metal world he’s obsessed with may be a bit closer to home than he preferred.

Misfit kids pulled into an adventure is a story plot that has been around for decades. It’s one I’ve enjoyed over and over again and there’s so much quality when it comes to it. That basic plot idea has been mixed with every genre you can think of with some fantastic results. Writer Kelly Sue DeConnick dives into it with FML #1 that takes a group of kids and adds a little horror and magic to the mix.

FML #1 is an interesting debut. We’re introduced to four girls who are part of a band and a world not far off from our own. There’s fires raging around a city creating pour air quality. Threats of school shootings. True crime podcasts. But, at the same time something is a bit odd about it all and rather off.

That’s part of the charm of the series as this group of kids argue with each other and others in their school and spend the time at a creepy old building telling spooky stories. And that is all where the comic really takes off as one of their games turns all too real.

Part of the charm of it all is David López’s art. Combined with Cris Peter’s colors and Clayton Cowles’ lettering the comic has a look that’s rock and roll and indie with a mix of mainstream. The character designs all have a massive amount of personality but it’s small details on the pages where things stand out. Riley spends a lot of time on his art journal and that journal look is applied at different moments for the comic, even a panel, making things pop. It’s a hell of a choice that takes the art to another level and really drives home the characters, look, and especially the feel of it all. It delivers a bit of punk zine aesthetic to the finished product.

FML #1 is a fantastic start with a style that stands out. It goes in with a vision and a voice and executes it quite well. There’s tons of questions to ask about it all, and there’s some odd things about the kids, but overall, it’s a comic that takes a familiar concept and mixes it up for a unique delivery that we’re excited to see more of.

Story: Kelly Sue DeConnick Art: David López
Color: Cris Peter Letterer: Clayton Cowles
Story: 8.35 Art: 9.0 Overall: 8.45 Recommendation: Buy

Dark Horse provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: TFWZeus ComicsKindle

Kelly Sue DeConnick and David López return to creator-owned comics with FML

Dark Horse Comics presents FML, a surreal coming-of-age single-issue series from writer Kelly Sue DeConnick and illustrator David López. Colorist Cris Peter and letterer Clayton Cowles round out the creative team for the eight-issue series.

FML #1 arrives on November 6, 2024 with main cover art by David López and variant covers featuring artwork by Alvaro Martinez Bueno, David LaFuente, Nicola Scott (1:10 incentive variant), and Pepe Larraz (1:25 incentive variant). One additional variant cover will be revealed at a later date. Each issue will feature bonus material such as essays on music, true crime, interviews, and more that will be exclusive only to the single issues.  

Riley is a 16-year-old heavy metal kid who draws down his anxiety with a ballpoint pen. His mother is an aging punk cartoonist slam dancing with a true crime obsession. Bound by threads of magical realism, they navigate the absurdities and horrors of our modern lives.

Issue one introduces Riley’s daily life: terrorism diaries, school shooter drills, and social pressures under the constant shadow of encroaching wildfires that rain ash like a morbid snow. His refuge? The Forest Park Witch’s House, where tales of chaos magic and trickster gods promise some semblance of sense in a senseless world.

Preview: Ghostbusters: Back in Town #3

Ghostbusters: Back in Town #3

(W) David M. Booher (A) Blue Delliquanti (CA) Christopher Mitten
In Shops: May 29, 2024
SRP: $3.99

As tensions rise in the city and in the Spengler family, Phoebe discovers the entity targeting the Ghostbusters: the malevolent Madam Malvaeux! On her own and outmatched, Phoebe escapes through the sewers, and stumbles into… supernatural standup?

Ghostbusters: Back in Town #3

Dark Horse and Critical Role present Critical Role: The Tales of Exandria – Artagan collected in two formats

Get ready for a show from Archfey Artagan in Critical Role: The Tales of Exandria—Artagan, soon to be collected in both a paperback and a deluxe hardcover edition. Created in consultation with the cast of Critical Role, this spin-off series is written by Sam Maggs, illustrated by Aviv Or, colored by Cris Peter, and lettered by Ariana Maher.

The standard edition paperback volume collects issues #1-4 of Critical Role: The Tales of Exandria—Artagan and includes a sketchbook section and cover gallery. The deluxe edition includes everything in the standard edition presented in a beautifully designed hardcover format with a foil-stamped slipcase, an exclusive foil-stamped cover, and a lithograph print.

The powerful and mischievous Archfey Artagan, also known as the Traveler, finally gets his day in court–which is the LAST thing he wanted. But since he’s here, he’s happy to

tell the Seelie and Unseelie courts how he’s graced the material realms with his knowledge and mentorship. But there are witnesses who may have a different take, and the consequences could be dire.

Critical Role: The Tales of Exandria—Artagan paperback and Deluxe Editions will be available in bookstores on December 3, 2024 and in comic shops on December 4, 2024.

The paperback edition is now available to pre-order at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, tfaw.com, and your local comic shop and bookstore $19.99.

The Deluxe Edition is now available to pre-order at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, tfaw.com, and your local comic shop and bookstore for $69.99.

The Ghostbusters are Back in Town in a new series from Dark Horse

An all-new ghostbusting adventure arrives March 2024 in the form of a new series from Dark Horse Comics: Ghostbusters: Back in Town! This new four-issue series bridges the gap between Ghostbusters: Afterlife and its upcoming sequel Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire.

A year and a half after the events of Ghostbusters: Afterlife, the Ghostbusters are officially back in business and headed to where it all began: New York City! Callie, Gary, Trevor, and Phoebe are moving into the Firehouse and ready to take on the Spengler family business…or are they? Ghostbusting on top of changing family dynamics has a way of going awry––and that’s exactly what one paranormal force is counting on.

Featuring writing by David Booher, art by Blue Delliquanti, colors by Mildred Louis, and Cris Peter, and letters by Jimmy Betancourt of Comicraft, Ghostbusters: Back in Town continues the cultural phenomenon. The first issue’s cover will be illustrated by Kyle Lambert, with a variant cover by Steve Morris.

Ghostbusters: Back in Town #1 (of 4), scares its way into comic shops on March 27, 2024.

Bloodline: Daughter of Blade #2 is a great second issue

Bloodline: Daughter of Blade #2

Puberty is one of those things that most of us would like to forget. During that time, our bodies went through changes and we didn’t know how to handle it. We also started to develop crushes, emotions at times out of control. Even with education, we often didn’t necessarily understand why those things started to happen.

We realized years later it was our bodies growing into who we would be as adults. I always wondered how would it be for supernatural creatures? Would they deal with the changes as frantically as we did?  In Bloodline: Daughter Of Blade #2, Brielle starts to find out about her abilities and her father arrives at the worst possible time.

We find Brielle in the middle of fighting Whitney, as she suspects that she is a vampire, as things get heated, Brielle’s vampire side comes out, causing Whitney to flee. The next day art school Whitney realizes that Brielle may be a dhampyr, which propels her to ask if they could hunt monsters together. Everything is not what it seems as Whitney tricked her into  going into a vampire nest. By the issue’s end, her father shows up  as he easily scares most of them away but Brielle’s hunger arises just as the two meet.

Overall, Bloodline: Daughter Of Blade #2 is a great second issue which shows not everyone has good intentions. The story by Danny Lore is exhilarating. The art by Karen S. Darboe, Cris Peter, and Joe Sabino is stunning. Altogether, it’s an issue and a story that will make fans re-watch the original Blade trilogy.

Story: Danny Lore Art: Karen S. Darboe
Color: Cris Peter Letterer: Joe Sabino
Story: 9.0 Art: 9.0 Overall: 9.0 Recommendation: Buy

Marvel provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: Zeus ComicscomiXology/Kindle

Exclusive Preview: Bloodline: Daughter of Blade #2

Bloodline: Daughter of Blade #2

(W) Danny Lore (A) Karen Darboe
(C) Cris Peter (L) Joe Sabino
(CA) Karen Darboe (VCA) Betsy Cola, Ivan Tao
Rated T+
In Shops: Mar 08, 2023
SRP: $3.99

The new girl in school with new powers and new problems! Turns out that Whitney may not be the friend Brielle was hoping for…but that’s the least of Brielle’s concerns as she discovers her powers come with a dangerous hunger. And the Daywalker himself arrives on the scene at the worst possible time?

Bloodline: Daughter of Blade #2

Bloodline: Daughter Of Blade #1 introduces a potential fan favorite

Bloodline: Daughter Of Blade #1

Family is one of those things that we don’t have the luxury of forgetting. With friends, we can cut ties and have no reason to ever talk to them. Family is a little bit more complicated. As no matter the distance, you are bonded by blood.

This is where family history is almost as dramatic as a telenovela. Some family secrets can drive you over the edge. Then there are those secrets meant to keep someone safe. In the debut issue of Bloodline Daughter Of Blade, we find our protagonist who will soon realize that she is related to a famous superhero.

We meet Brielle Caulder, who goes from a kid who loves baseball  to someone who her teachers are intimidated by because of her intelligence, who are constantly in parent teacher meetings. Things suddenly change one day, when after going out with her mother, they are attacked by a vampire, and thankfully are able to vanquish them. She soon finds out vampires are everywhere and , including a new girl at school. By issue’s end, the man she knows of, as her father is on his way.

Overall, Bloodline: Daughter Of Blade #1 is an excellent debut issue which primes fans for what’s to come for the characters. The story by Lore is exciting. The art by the team is gorgeous. Altogether, a story that introduces what will be a fan favorite.

Story: Danny Lore Art: Karen S. Darboe
Color: Cris Peter Letterer: Joe Sabino
Story: 9.0 Art: 9.0 Overall: 9.0 Recommendation: Buy

Marvel provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: TFAW – Zeus Comics – comiXology/Kindle

Bloodline: Daughter of Blade #1 kicks off with a fun debut

Bloodline: Daughter of Blade #1

When reading Bloodline: Daughter of Blade #1, it’s hard to not think of a series like Buffy the Vampire Slayer. They’re both kids in high school fighting vampires while trying to balance a normal life. And like Buffy, there’s a bit of pop fun about the series and a bonus in that it adds a little more to the concept than we’ve seen before.

Written by Danny Lore, Bloodline: Daughter of Blade #1 is a fun start and its focus is what makes it really work. Brielle is your average girl… beyond that whole Blade being her dad. She’s grown up and now experiencing strange powers which is helpful because there’s vampires all around she needs to deal with. Then there’s Brielle’s mom… who also knows there’s vampires and is an ass-kicker herself!? Wait, what?

Lore switches up the formula we’ve seen so many times with Bloodline: Daughter of Blade #1 and it works really well. Instead of a teenage superhero gaining their powers and hiding them, the series folds in the parents early to create a different dynamic than we’re used to. It’s a surprising twist that makes the debut stand out from what could easily have been a standard concept. They mother/daughter relationship is what makes this debut so well in that it extends to school and an administration that’s a little hostile towards Brielle. It takes familiar concepts and ideas and twists them more than enough to make things really interesting.

The art by Karen S. Darboe with color by Cris Peter and lettering by Joe Sabino helps with the concept. The style is one that I’d expect more in a BOOM! comic than Marvel and it works so well for the story and focus. There’s a look to it that fits its youthful focus and it does an excellent job of going from 0 to 60 turning mother/daughter time into mother/daughter kicking ass time. There’s also a solid focus on the reactions of everyone from a look on their face to the body language to drive home what’s on their mind.

Bloodline: Daughter of Blade #1 is a fun debut with some youthful energy and story decisions that makes it stand out. Instead of going the familiar route, it changes things up keeping readers on their toes. Blade and the Vampire Nation have been getting more of a focus lately and here’s to hoping this series continues the solid storytelling they’ve been delivering so far.

Story: Danny Lore Art: Karen S. Darboe
Color: Cris Peter Letterer: Joe Sabino
Story: 8.25 Art: 8.25 Overall: 8.25 Recommendation: Buy

Marvel provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: TFAWZeus ComicscomiXology/Kindle

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