Tag Archives: occupy comics

Around the Tubes

A long weekend is getting nearer. What’s everyone have planned?

Around the Tubes

CBR – UK Comic Store Aids Charity with Ed McGuinness “X-Men” #1 Variant Nice to see stuff like this.

 

Around the Tubes Reviews

Comic Vine – All-Star Western #20

Comic Vine – Aquaman #20

Comic Vine – Avengers #12

Bleeding Cool – The Bounce #1

Comic Vine – Daredevil #26

Comic Vine – The Deep Sea #1

CBR – Green Lantern #20

Comic Vine – Green Lantern #20

Comic Vine – Lobster Johnson: Satan Smells A Rat

Comic Vine – Occupy Comics #1

Comic Vine – Red Lanterns #20

Comic Vine – Superman #20

Picks of the Week: Occupy Comics #1 and 9 Other Solid Choices

OccupyComics-coverA_600pxStarted off in what seems forever ago, Occupy Comics initially started off as a Kickstarter project, it is now seeing print thanks to Black Mask Studios. An anthology, the comic was as political as they come and channeled the dissatisfaction with the status-quo represented by the Occupy Movement. The comics boast an impressive line-up of creators like Alan Moore, David Lloyd, Charlie Adlard, Art Spiegelman, Molly Crabapple, Matt Bors, Mike Allred, Ben Templesmith, J.M. DeMatteis, Tyler Crook, Joshua Hale Fialkov, Joe Infurnari, Ales Kot, Dean Haspiel, Joshua Dysart and Matt Pizzolo.

Each contribution is thought-provoking and entertaining and shockingly non-partisan. This is a perfect marriage of comics and politics. How could it not be this week’s pick? All revenue received by organizers/creators (past hard costs) will be donated to various Occupy-related initiatives.

Check out below for our other 9 choices in alphabetical order.

  • Occupy Comics #1 – see above
  • The Activity #13 – The beginning of the third volume! After the stunning events in Minneapolis, the team is on stand-down pending an investigation. A call from one of Switchfoot’s friends in the Israeli Defense Force, however, turns into an unsanctioned mission with dire consequences. Meanwhile, there is trouble at Fort Belvoir.
  • The Bounce #1 – Meet the ultimate slacker superhero for the 21st Century! Jasper Jenkins is a super-head AND a super-hero! He’s relatable AND reliable and he’s embarking on the adventure of a lifetime! The sensational debut of the new feel-good hero of the decade! You can’t afford to miss it!
  • Green Lantern #20 – This is the end of Geoff Johns’ epic run.
  • The Green Team #1 – The other half of DC’s politically tinged comics. We’ll see what this one holds.
  • Half Past Danger #1 – DAMES. DINOSAURS. DANGER. Summer, 1943, and in the midst of a war waged by monsters, Staff Sergeant Tommy ‘Irish’ Flynn never expected to encounter a real one. But on a remote island in the South Pacific, Flynn and his squad come face-to-fanged-face with creatures long thought dead.
  • The Massive #12 – The best comic on the market. Why aren’t you reading this!?
  • Mind MGMT #11 – Matt Kindt’s trippy spy comic whose visuals are as amazing as the writing.
  • Revival #10 – Forget that other comic featuring the walking dead, this is the one you want to read.
  • Superior Spider-Man #10 – Last issue was a big moment. We’ll see where Dan Slott takes us from there in the next step of his controversial Spider-Man run.

Occupy Comics Sets the Record Straight about them and Black Mask

Yesterday, numerous websites posted news about Occupy Comics and their movement into multimedia. First reported on the Hollywood’s Reporter’s Heat Vision comics blog, other sites picked up that story and spun it in their own way. Instead of referencing the initial Occupy Comics email, sites relied on shoddy reporting, which resulted in more shoddy reporting (seems to be a recent trend) and reenacted their own version of online telephone.

Here’s Occupy Comics setting the record straight, right from their mouths.

There was a little bit of confusion yesterday that I want to quickly address.

Most of you will recall that around this time last year I was trying to figure out how to get Occupy Comics into comic shops, but all the offers coming in from traditional comics publishers were really lousy and would eat up most of the funds that we’d be hoping to raise for Occupy protesters.

So, rather than sign Occupy Comics to a lousy deal, I partnered up with Steve Niles (writer of 30 Days Of Night and original-team Occupy Comics organizer) and Brett Gurewitz (guitarist Bad Religion, founder Epitaph Records, backer of Occupy Comics Kickstarter) to build a pipeline for bringing Occupy Comics to broader audiences at a lower cost than going through a traditional publisher so more money could be donated.

Since we were go ing through the effort of building the pipeline anyway, we figured it would be a good way to support other outsider/transgressive/radical/non-traditional art so we called it Black Mask Studios and offered it as a new distribution mechanism for creators.

Yesterday when we announced that Occupy Comics #1 would be in comic shops through Black Mask on May Day, we also announced other books we’re releasing through Black Mask in the Spring. Incidentally, every one of the books has at least one Occupy Comics contributor on the creative team: Darick Robertson on Ballistic, Matthew Rosenberg & Patrick Kindlon on 12 Reasons To Die, and Matt Miner on Liberator.

Hollywood Reporter’s Heat Vision comics blog covered the story, and most blogs picked up the way Heat Vision framed the story instead of picking it up from our official announcement. And, thus, confusion ensued.

Two main points of confusion:

1. Heat Vision is a Hollywood-centric comics blog, so they a sked me if Black Mask intends to be in the business of developing intellectual property for Hollywood movies. I said no, we’re not looking at comics as movie treatments, but we’ll be doing transmedia worldbuilding. Now, “transmedia” is kind’ve an annoying buzzword, but if you’re familiar with what I’ve done with my Godkiller series and what I’m working on with Hack/Slash you’ll know that I just mean telling stories across multiple media platforms… which is basically what I do when I’m not volunteering on radical fundraising comics.

Anyhow, my comment there led some people to theorize that Occupy Comics is becoming a “transmedia” project and being used to launch some sort of transmedia company.

Nothing could be further from the truth.

There are no plans for “Grand Theft Auto: Zuccotti Park,” and anyway I wasn’t even talking about Occupy Comics when I answered that question. Occupy Comics is not “going transmedia,” whatever that even means.

Also, the whole point behind forming Black Mask was to get Occupy Comics a better deal and raise more money to be donated, not to launch some new company. Believe me, volunteering for a year & a half on an anti-corporate-greed comic book is not a get rich quick scheme. I know it sounds like one, but it’s not.

2. Heat Vision said “a portion” of the money from Occupy Comics is going to be donated.

Concern about that wording is totally valid, but it’s still kind’ve weird that anyone would assume Heat Vision is revealing a secret plan of ours to siphon cash out of the project… especially when the official announcement and Black Mask homepage all make perfectly clear that nothing has changed, this is a volunteer effort, and the revenue past hard costs is being donated.

Heat Vision just didn’t know the details so they said “a portion.”

But just to be perfectly clear, the revenue past hard costs is, was, and always shall be donated.

And, for further clarit y, Black Mask will be *lessening* costs versus traditional publishers.

Cool?

I’m sure most of you don’t read Hollywood Reporter and have no idea what I’m talking about, but, in our ongoing effort to remain as transparent as possible, I thought it best to err on the side of TMI.

As always, thank you for supporting Occupy Comics. -Matt

NYCC 2012 Interview – David Lloyd on V, Symbolism, the Occupy Movement and Aces Weekly and more.

I had the extreme pleasure to sit down with comic book legend David Lloyd. The conversation really did go through the ages as well as topics as we talked about V for Vendetta, the Occupy movement, comic books, politics and his new venture Aces Weekly.

Aces Weekly is a new digital comic magazine featuring a long list of talent. The series is being released in volumes which range from 20 to 32 pages or more and the run of 7 issues is $9.99. A pretty great deal especially for material you won’t find anywhere else.

Check out the full 30 minute interview below.

Alan Moore Joins Occupy Comics

I received this from the Occupy Comics Kickstarter project last night:

With just 3 days left on our funding campaign, ALAN MOORE (Watchmen, V For Vendetta, Batman: The Killing Joke, From Hell, League of Extraordinary Gentlemen) has joined the Occupy Comics team. He’ll be contributing a longform prose piece with spot illustrations that touches on the principles of the Occupy movement.

So now both creators of V For Vendetta & its signature Guy Fawkes mask (writer Alan Moore and artist David Lloyd) are on Team Occupy Comics. Their work was an inspiration to many of the protesters out in the streets, and now they are both collaborating on a project inspired by those protesters. Pretty cool.

Do you need more of a reason to give?

Cyber Monday – Try Kickstarter

Many folks will be spending today trying to snatch up deals online.  While you’re thinking of some interesting gifts to give this holiday season, how about some fine comics being promoted through Kickstarter.  Kickstarter is a crowdfunding website that allows creators to promote their projects and receive pledges to help fund them.  For a pledge there’s usually neat incentives, like autographed comics or t-shirts, to even getting a character designed to look like you.

Well, this Cyber Monday, here’s three projects that are worth your support:

Ashes

This graphic novel by Alex de Campi & Jimmy Broxton is 19 days out from it’s funding attempt and $3,500 to go.  The description is what really sold me.

A disturbed 15-year-old boy reaches out through the internet to two former heroes… but he doesn’t want their help. He wants them dead.

Ashes is a bullet ride through the brain of a dystopian Britain into the dark heart of the American psyche. As soldier Rupert Cain and journalist Katie Shah are reunited five years after they brought down a government, punishment — from an unexpected source — looms for that good deed. Chased from London’s CCTV-bristling streets to the Home Counties, they are finally brought to ground by an acquaintance’s betrayal and dragged off to an army base in a high-sierra American wasteland. Their only way out is through the mind of a twisted teenager… providing they can also escape his father.

Recommended level – $30 – a limited edition hardback copy

 

Occupy Comics

With a whose who list of creators, this cool comic project does some social good too.  Any money raised will be donated to the Occupy Movement, helping purchase goods to get it through the winter.  The donations will occur right away, but the comic won’t see print until 2012.

The comic is over goal with 10 days to go.

Recommended level – $10 – you get a digital copy of every comic to be released through this project.

 

Tanked

The story just sounds cool….

Tanked takes place 45 days in the future when the world has abruptly run out of gasoline. The story follows three characters as they struggle to cope with a burgeoning apocalypse in small town USA.

Tanked is unique in that you see regular people cope with the apocalypse as it happens. You aren’t coming into the fictional world 20 or 30 years after the nukes have gone off or after the zombies have risen from their graves. I’ve made the characters as real as possible, to make them as much like you, the reader, to convey the most shock.

Um, yes please….  There’s also some preview pages on the project page that show off the art is as cool as the plot.

Recommended level – $10 – an autographed copy of the comic and your name listed in the thank you section.

Aroung the Tubes

For our readers in the US, HAPPY THANKSGIVING!  For those living abroad, HAPPY THURSDAY!  That is all….

Around the Blogs:

CBCNews – Graphic novel wins Quebec children’s book prizeCongrats!

The Beat – More Occupy Comics reports: Sarah Glidden in MiamiNice to see what’s going on in Miami.

Bleeding Cool – Marc Andreyko, on Manhunter and Being OutAn interesting read.

Bleeding Cool – Police Drop All Charges Against Phoenix JonesI know what someone is thankful for.

CBR – Millar Draws A Line On Digital DistributionCan’t everyone get along?

 

Around the Tubes Reviews:

IGN – Batman: The Black Mirror

IGN – Fantastic Four #600

Complex – Review: “Fantastic Four” Celebrates Its 600th Issue In Grand Fashion

Around the Tubes

The weekend is here, yay!  That is all.  And now, the time for the news.

Around the Blogs:

ICv2 – Power Man & Ms. Marvel on TVSmart.  Hopefully the Hulk tv show being outside movie continuity will be rethought.

Bleeding Cool – Batman Vs Paedophiles Videos Back OnlineWell, if the cops don’t solve the problem….I guess fighting pedophiles is only ok if you’re an NBC show and it’s for ratings.

The Beat – Exclusive: Robertson, Goldman, and Amanda Palmer join Occupy ComicsQuality people, tons of quality.

Kotaku – How to Activate Big-Head Mode in Batman: Arkham CityUm, k….

Koatku – See Barry Allen Become The Flash in DC Universe Online’s Next ExtensionMaybe this will get me to finally play..

Kotaku – Brink Devs Making a Marvel Game? – Chances it’s good?

 

Con Coverage:

CBR – Emerald City Comicon Debuts “Tales from the Con” Original Webcomic

 

Around the Tubes Reviews:

Primary Ignition – The Flash: The Road To Flashpoint

IGN – Comic Book Reviews for 11/16/11

Graphic Policy Radio – Episode 11 – The One Where We Talk Occupy

This Sunday was the latest episode of Graphic Policy Radio and the discussion was solid moving from the Occupy Movement to Frank Miller’s comments, the community’s reaction, Occupy Comics and reviews of X-Men Regenesis, Batgirl, Batwoman and PIGSYou can listen to the latest episode below and download it to listen later.

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Graphic Policy Radio, This Sunday at 8pm.

It’s a new week and up on tap is politics in comics (shocker!).  A group of individuals have gotten together to form Occupy Comics.

Through Kickstarter they’re funding their first issue and the proceeds will benefit the Occupy Movement.  You can learn more here.

So join Brett, Elana and Ken this Sunday.  Follow us on Twitter and call in to join the conversation.  Listen in at Blog Talk Radio this Sunday at 8pm.

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