Tag Archives: john wagner

Garth Ennis and Brian K Vaughan bring back Battle Action this August!

Get ready for action! Garth Ennis, Brian K Vaughan, John Wagner, Torunn Gronbekk and more head up the powerhouse creative team for the new Battle Action series – coming this summer!

Launching in August, the new ten-issue series will bring readers death-defying heroics and incredible action, delivered by a crack team of top comics creators, including a brand new revival of the controversial series ‘Kids Rule OK’ from Brian K Vaughan and Chris Burnham, and the final story of WWII aerial ace ‘Johnny Red’ by Garth Ennis and Keith Burns!

Combining stories and characters from 1970s classic comics Battle and Action, Ennis said Battle Action will deliver all the thrills that earned the original comics their hard-bitten, action-packed reputations…

Ennis and Burns will be joined on Battle Action by an all-star lineup of creators including John Wagner, Torunn Grønbekk, Dan Abnett, Rob Williams, John Higgins, Henry Flint, John McCrea, Steve White, and Tom Foster.

‘Kids Rule OK’ was the controversial and violent story that led to an issue of Action being pulled from shelves in 1976, now Vaughan and Burnham revisit this landmark series with a story set in a hostile future London where a young American boy runs for his life from a mob of xenophobic British Punks – but he has a secret weapon they aren’t expecting…

One of the most beloved characters in British comics history, Johnny Red is a fighter pilot in World War II who fights for peace and liberation. But this new story will cover a moment in his history which has never been seen before: the final days of World War II.

Alongside Johnny and returning heroes ‘Nina Petrova’, ‘Major Eazy’, ‘HMS Nightshade’, ‘Dredger’ and ‘Hellman of Hammer Force’, the series will expand to welcome in new takes on several other classic comics characters and stories – including killer shark ‘Hookjaw’, former-enslaved-man-turned-outlaw ‘El Mestizo’, and violent future sports series ‘Death Game’ – making Battle Action the most furiously action-packed comic on the stands!

The ten-issue series in magazine format kicks off in August with Battle Action #1, which will be available through all good comic book stores through Diamond Distribution.

Preview: Best of 2000 AD Vol. 5

Best of 2000 AD Vol. 5

(W) Rob Williams, Peter Milligan, Al Ewing, John Wagner, Alan Grant, John Smith, Gordon Rennie, Jamie Delano, Alan Davis (A) Chris Weston, Tony Wright, Henry Flint, Cam Kennedy, Sean Phillips, Frank Quitely, Alan Davis, Mark Farmer (CA) Annie Wu
In Shops: Feb 14, 2024
SRP: $22.99

Best of 2000 AD is a landmark series from the cult comic, bursting with our greatest stories for a new generation of readers. In this volume: Judge Dredd raises not only the law when Mega City One’s super-rich consider themselves above it all in Elevator Pitch; crash-land on a Death Planet as Al Ewing and Henry Flint introduce the monstrous, weaponized (but dead polite) Zombo; go Swimming in Blood with occult detective Devlin Waugh as he investigates a vampire outbreak in an underwater prison by John Smith and Sean Phillips; ride out into the Godless wasteland of the Cursed Earth and witness Gordon Rennie and Frank Quitely preach faith through firepower in Missionary Man. Boasting brand new covers from an all-star line-up of artists including Annie Wu and with designer Tom Muller, Best of 2000 AD is the essential gateway into the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic.

Best of 2000 AD Vol. 5

Preview: The Best of 2000 AD Vol. 4

The Best of 2000 AD Vol. 4

(W) John Wagner, Alan Grant, Peter Milligan, Jamie Delano, Tiffany Babb, Kek-W (A) Jamie Hewlett, Steve Dillon, Colin MacNeil, John Burns, Alan Davis (CA) Marguerite Sauvage
In Shops: Sep 13, 2023
SRP: $22.99

Best of 2000 AD is a landmark series from the cult comic, bursting with our greatest stories for a new generation of readers. In this volume: When Judge Dredd investigates a potential whistleblower, it’s hard to avoid paranoia when information is this Mega-City Confidential; from medieval Prague to the streets of Elizabethan London, Kek-W and John Burns sound the call to battle extra-dimensional Wurms and join The Order; a rolling stone gathers no mousse as Pete Milligan and Jamie Hewlett tangle you in Hewligan’s Haircut, a shear reality-warping victory roll that’s just the tonic; quake to the Cry of the Werewolf with an all-time Dredd classic by Alan Grant and Steve Dillon. Boasting brand new cover from Marguerite Sauvage (Archie) and \with designer Tom Muller (X-Men), Best of 2000 AD is the essential gateway into the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic.

The Best of 2000 AD Vol. 4

Battle Action #1 is a nice throwback to classic war comics!

Battle Action returns with an all-new mini-series of war stories. This first issue sees the return of Johnny Red and his Falcon Squadron hunting down German raiders, written by Garth Ennis with art by Keith Burns. Also included is a newly-penned HMS Nightshade story by John Wagner, a tale focusing on the bonds of friendship forged during naval battles, drawn by Dan Cornwell.

Story: Garth Ennis, John Wagner
Art: Keith Burns, Dan Cornwell
Color: Jason Wordie, Len O’Grady
Letterer: Rob Steen

Get your copy now! To find a comic shop near you, visit http://www.comicshoplocator.com or call 1-888-comicbook or digitally and online with the links below.

Zeus Comics


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Preview: Xena, Warrior Princess: The Classic Years Omnibus Vol. 1 TPB

Xena, Warrior Princess: The Classic Years Omnibus Vol. 1 TPB

writers: John Wagner, Ian Edginton
artists: Joyce Chin, Clint Hilinski, Mike Deodato Jr., Ivan Reis, Fabiano Neves,
Davide Fabbri
cover: Arthur Adams
FC • 360 pages • $29.99 • Teen+

COLLECTS ISSUES 1-14 (1999), DARK HORSE?PRESENTS 1999 AND 2000 ANNUALS

Dynamite Entertainment is proud to revisit the early years of Xena: Warrior Princess with this complete collection of the beloved heroine’s 1999-2000 comic book adventures, originally published by Dark Horse Comics. With comic book storylines overlapping Seasons 5 and 6 of the hit television phenomenon, the fourteen issues herein present three complete arcs: “The Warrior Way of Death”, “Slave”, and “Blood and Shadows”. Journey with Xena and Gabrielle through the high-kicking, sword-swinging escapades of yesteryear!

Preview: Judge Dredd: Cry of the Werewolf

Judge Dredd: Cry of the Werewolf

John Wagner & Alan Grant (w) • Steve Dillon (a & c)

Re-presenting the classic tale that inspired this month’s Judge Dredd: Deviations! In the full-blooded horror of “Cry of the Werewolf,” Judge Dredd must descend into the Undercity to investigate how a flesh-eating werewolf ended up in Mega-City One and make sure no others make their way to the surface.

B&W • 48 pages • $5.99

Preview: Clive Barker’s Nightbreed Archive Vol. 1 HC

Clive Barker’s Nightbreed Archive Vol. 1 HC

Publisher: BOOM! Studios
Writers: Clive Barker, D.G. Chichester, Alan Grant, John Wagner
Artists: Jim Baikie, Paul Johnson, Martin Emond, Jackson Guice, Alfred Ramirez, Bret Blevins, Mike Manley, Ricardo Villagrán
Cover Artist: Mike Mignola
Price: $44.99

Explore horror master Clive Barker’s ’90s cult-classic Nightbreed series like never before in this comprehensive hardcover archive collection.

Features the adaptation of Clive Barker’s original screenplay; year 1 of the original ’90s Nightbreed Epic comic run; and theHellraiser/Nightbreed crossover, all remastered and collected for the first time.

First appearing in the cult classic 1990 film, the Nightbreed is a tribe of monsters and outcasts who hide out from society in an underground community called Midian.

Features a Foreword written by D.G. Chichester.

nightbreed_archive_001_cover

Review: Rok of the Reds #1

rok1Football (or soccer, depending on where you’re from. I’m English, and I’m writing this review, so it’s football). The Beautiful Game. The game that bores the ever loving shit out of my wife,  and probably some of you, I’d wager.

Rok of the Reds #1 won’t do that. No sir.

It has been more than a decade and a half since I paid any real attention to football, especially at the club level of the sport. The only reason this is relevant to this review is so that you, dearest reader, understand that while I have a tiny bit of familiarity with the sport, the comic itself doesn’t require any familiarity with the game in order to enjoy this comic. And if you are a footie fan?

Well that’s probably a bonus, but it isn’t a requirement to your enjoyment of the issue, especially if the thought of an intergalactic outlaw and an arrogant shit of a person interest you.

rok-scan-1

Planetary destruction has rarely looked so good.

And it has interested me for months; ever since I read a feature about  Rok of the Reds in the British magazine Comic Heroes months ago – long before the comic actually launched – and so when the review copy came through, my reaction was “Oh %^@# yes. I’ve been trying to work out how to get my hands on this for a month of Sundays.” I probably would have done a back flip if I was physically capable of doing so. Growing up reading the Scorer newspaper strip, while I did eventually stop reading them (more on that here) football comics have always held a soft spot in my heart. Needless to say I was pretty excited for this issue.

So was it as good as I hoped it’d be?

Yeah, yeah it really was.

Being the first of a six part series, this issue is more about setting up the action to come than giving you and crazy twists right off the bat, and it does that incredibly well. Rok, the alien fugitive, has a sense of desperation about him; whatever he’s running from seems to be tenacious enough to follow him through some pretty vast distances. What he’s fleeing from, and whether he’s one of the more heroic types of outlaw or not isn’t immediately stated in the opening of the comic (you’ll have to read the comic to find out whether that’s revealed in the first issue or not).

When it comes to the football bits there’s a fluidity to the movements that you’d hope to see from the artwork, with some of the on-pitch action losing a little detail – which I think is more intentional than not as it lends a sense of speed to the action. By having the spectators comments visible to the reader, Wagner & Grant are able to tell you quite a bit about Kyle Dixon in the first few panels of his introduction.

rok-scan-2The lack of announcer also serves  to bring the reader into the action; by not having the typically TV-only voice overs one gets the feeling that we’re a part of the crowd, and not watching the game in a pub or at home. It’s subtle, but I think it helps bring the reader into the comic that little bit more.

Rok of the Reds #1 isn’t your typical sports – or sci-fi – comic, but a joyfull blending of the two. Dan Cornwell‘s art is fantastic, with most of the people within the comic having a distinct enough look that you can’t tell them apart. His facial expressions are simple, just a couple of well placed lines in some cases, but very effective. Just take a look at the smirk on Kyle‘s face above to get an idea of what to expect from the line work. The colourist, Abby  Bulmer also deserves recognition for her work in the comic; just looking at the two scans above you can see the vibrant energy from the exploding planet, and the drab colours in the more mundane football game. It’s another subtle touch, but one that really pays off later in the comic.

Published by BHP Comics (short for Black Hearted Press), the folks also behind Glasgow Comic Con, this is an unashamedly British comic, and I bloody love it. It’s an unexpected, but wholly welcome, blending of two genre’s that works very well (so far at least). With only the first issue released so far, the question of whether it’s done enough to leave me wanting the next issue is answered with a pretty loud “yes.” After months of waiting for this comic, it actually turned out better than I had expected.

If you’d like to pick the issue up, you can do so digitally here.

Story: John Wagner & Alan Grant
Art: Dan Cornwell Colours: Abby Bulmer Letters: Jim Campbell
Story: 8.75 Art: 9 Overall: 9 Recommendation: Buy

BHP Comics provided Graphic Policy a FREE copy for review.

Review: Will Eisner’s The Spirit: The New Adventures HC (Second Edition)

WILL EISNER'S THE SPIRIT THE NEW ADVENTURES HC (SECOND EDITION)The Spirit is one of those enduring characters that not only have outlasted its creator which is a feat in and of itself but inspired tens of thousands of characters made from the same ilk. The fact that Will Eisner’s name carries so much love and respect throughout the industry, is truly unprecedented. I have heard other writers compare him to Jack Kirby and Bob Kane, but no one was quite like Mr. Eisner, as his feel for story and character are very much different than those icons. In all honesty, it truly is a travesty that The Spirit has not been translated into other mediums like the lesser characters it inspired.

After its initial publication, in 1939, it had a long and storied history, some involving controversy with the introduction of the character of Ebony White and some very depressing lows, with the publication, of The Spirit’s adventures involving John Law. The fact that he has appeared in print in just about every decade of the 20th century, speaks to infamy of the character, and how well written it as by Eisner. I really got into the character not from the original archived comic that DC Comics collected back in 2007, but from Jeph Loeb’s and Darwyn Cooke’s highly entertaining one shot involving his encounter with the Dark Knight. Then Dynamite enlisted Matt Wagner for a whole new series which definitely stayed true to Eisner’s original vision.

In this collection, a who’s who of the comic world showed up to tell their interpretations of the character to include Paul Chadwick, Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons, Neil Gaiman, Mike Allred, Jay Stephens and many more. Every story is each creator at their peak talents, especially Gaiman’s “The Return of Mink Stole”, which he is particularly adept at, and I wish he wrote more of. Another standout is Chadwick’s” Cursed Beauty”, which definitely reminds of Brubaker’s recently concluded Fade Out and some elements of his Fatale. Moore has contributed various stories to this collection, but the one that stands as my favorite is “Last Night I Dreamed of Dr.Cobra”, which now reading it again has definite influences over his ongoing Providence.

Overall, a strong collection, as it seemed as though every creator stepped knowing who each other was, and how important Eisner’s legacy is. The stories are iconic Spirit at their best, definitely some twists and turns , but always staying true. The art by the varius artists , is a nice contrast in various hues and styles that makes this a must buy. Altogether, if you love crime noir , if you love your heroes dark and brooding, then you will love The Spirit, as well as these creators.

Story: Paul Chadwick, Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman , Mike Allred, Jay Stephens, Denis Kitchen, John Wagner, Mark Kneece, Kurt Busiek, Matt Brundage, Michael Avon Oeming, John Ostrander, Scott Hampton, Dennis Eichorn, Eddie Campbell, Jay Stephens, Joe Lansdale, James Vance, Gary Chaloner
Art: Dave Gibbons, Dan Burr, Daniel Torres, Bo Hampton, Brent Anderson, Laura Allred, David Lloyd, Tom Mandrake, Scott Hampton, Gene Fama, Eddie Campbell, Paul Pope, John Lucas, Gary Chaloner
Story: 10 Art:10 Overall: 10 Recommendation: Buy

Dark Horse provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review

Review: Judge Dredd Classics: Dark Judges HC

JudgeDredd_CLASSICS_DarkJudges-e1441736448370-659x863I remember growing up in New York City, that when it came to comics, you could buy it at your local bodega, as they had a stand just for comics, and often stocked a good variety, so there really was no need to go to your comic book store unless they did not have something you were looking for . One of the first comics I remember picking up was Judge Dredd, which instantly grabbed me with its wild visuals, futuristic setting and procedural storylines. Soon after picking up my first issue, I wanted to know where it had been all my life . Eventually, I had to go to Jim Hanley’s Universe in Staten Island, to pick up back issues and then I found out there were other series which had Judge Dredd in it including 2000AD.

Eventually my interest in Judge Dredd waned due to the emergence of Image Comics, which offered even more interesting characters than I had been accustomed to in Dredd’s storylines. My interest was not helped by the lackluster movie starring Sylvester Stallone and Rob Schneider, which only reduced the character in mainstream media’s eyes as cartoonish mediocrity and a ripoff of Demolition Man (which I really do not see the connection?) It would not be until the superior Dredd starring Karl Urban, that my interest in the character and the comic was piqued again. It had been an almost 22 year time gap, since I picked up my last issue of Dredd, and picking up the Judge Dredd Classics single issues were the way to go, as they captured the essence of who the character was.

No storyline showed who Judge Dredd was more, than The Dark Judges. Within this volume, Judge Death, his brothers, Fear, Fire and Mortis, have judged that every life within Mega City One is sentenced to death and serves as the origin story of Judge Death in three separate stories. Within these stories collected for the first time in color versus the standard black and white in which it was originally published, you will not find better protagonists than Judge Death and his brothers. The most intriguing part of this collection is the way John Wagner and Alan Grant, writes Anderson, in this series, as I feel this is the first time she actually finds her voice. The collection ends with the Judges marooning Judge Death in limbo, and Anderson evading an enquiry.

Overall, this is definitely one of the better storylines written by Judge Dredd’s creators and definitely fits the title of “classic”. These stories by John Wagner and Alan Grant, shows us why everyone who reads these stories, are utterly engulfed in them. The art by Brian Bolland, Brett Ewins and Cliff Robinson, is gritty yet beautiful. Overall, an intriguing collection of stories which introduces newcomers to one of the better protagonists to come out of comics.

Story: John Wagner and Alan Grant Art: Brian Bolland, Brett Ewins and Cliff Robinson
Story: 10 Art: 9 Overall: 9 Recommendation: Buy

IDW Publishing provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review

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