Category Archives: Reviews

Omega Kids #1 is one of the stronger debuts in the line of Age of Revelation comics

KID OMEGA’S ALL GROWN UP! X YEARS LATER, Quentin Quire protects the dream of mutant supremacy and independence as head of the Revelation Territories’ spy network. But when a conspiracy threatens the mutant utopia, Quire and his psychic students will have to distinguish friend from foe. Has Quentin got what it takes to carry the dream forward, or will the next generation replace the former revolutionary?

Story: Tony Fleecs
Art: Andres Genolet
Color: Fer Sifuentes-Sujo
Letterer: Travis Lanham

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
Kindle


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Outlaw Showdown #1 features macabre, subversive takes on horror and thrillers in a Western setting

Outlaw Showdown #1

Although probably most well known for crime and horror comics, EC also published some Westerns like Gunfighter, Saddle Justice, and some stories in the genre also appeared in the classic Two-Fisted Tales anthology. A proper all-star team of writers, artists, and colorists has convened to rekindle that tradition in Oni PressOutlaw Showdown #1, which features macabre, subversive takes on horror/thriller stories in that setting.

Outlaw Showdown kicks off with “Cool, Cool Water”, a straightforward, yet supernatural horror tale of revenge as a lawman and a young Paiute girl ride into the Chihuahua desert to avenge her family’s murders. John Arcudi has a great ear for Old West prose, and he filters his script through a progressive, anti-imperialist lens, while not being preachy while Sebastian Cabrol and colorist extraordinaire Lee Loughridge capture the effect of slowly dying of thirst as the story progresses from a typical Western to something hazy and finally dark and spooky. Loughridge’s palette is basically what I see every time the sun is blazing, I’m driving, and I’ve left my sunglasses somewhere. I love the eerie whites he uses for the more ghostly scenes as the murderers get their just desserts, and these atmospheric elements, plus Arcudi’s heartfelt script, elevate the story.

Kentucky colonel and The Walking Dead co-creator Tony Moore and colorist Rico Renzi turn things up a notch in their West Virginia coal country yarn “Fire in the Hole” about a man named Artie, who was the lone survivor of a mine cave-in. Moore’s art style is reminiscent of EC horror comics, and he adds some authentic details like “Barboursville, West Virginia” on some boxes while still telling his story suspensefully. The non-linear plotting is a little jarring initially, but it ends up mirroring Artie’s guilty conscience and makes his comeuppance that much more devilishly satisfying. Tony Moore’s facial expressions are vivid, and his layouts are a hellish maze as Artie tries to run from his terrible actions. But he’s in an EC comic, and there’s no escape from that. My one small quibble with this issue is that the transition from page one to two is a little jarrin,g especially with the inclusion of the title lettering and horror host, but placing the proverbial camera at mid-distance establishes Artie as innocent while the rest of the story reveals his miserable existence as a downright dirty scab. (He looks like one, too.)

One of my favorite concepts period, is snake oil, and I love pointing out advertisements for when I teach students how to use music primary sources from the late 19th century. I think that it says a lot about the continued American tradition of charlatanism and hypercapitalism, and that Ann Nocenti, David Lapham, and Nick Filardi would agree in their story “The Cure” about a racist cure-all (Aka poison) peddler named Doc Boot and his put-upon Native American employee, Little Bear. Nocenti and Lapham give the Native American and Chinese characters agency, and I love the character Shen Li’s rejoinders about the Chinese inventing gunpowder and making actual oil from the fat of snakes. Also, the majority of the story is Doc Boot’s sales pitch featuring some delightful, “laying it on thick” dialogue from Nocenti that matches David Lapham’s outrageous facial expressions and Filardi’s beet red palette, which makes the quack’s comeuppance even more cathartic.

Outlaw Showdown‘s final original story, “Pony Express,” isn’t cathartic or a triumph of the marginalized over the oppressors like its predecessors, but it’s just a plain, sad comic from Christopher Cantwell, Dan McDaid, and Michael Atiyeh. It starts as a rousing story of the trials and tribulations of a Pony Express rider trying to get across country, but then it uses the Western genre and the protagonist’s profession to dig into themes of mental health and depression. The Old West was really a shitty place to live, and “Pony Express” doesn’t sugarcoat this at all. However, McDaid’s visuals create empathy for the poor characters in this comic with the help of plenty of close-ups to go with the weather-stricken landscapes and encounters with Native Americans and highwaymen. I needed a hug or maybe a shot of bourbon after reading this final story.

Outlaw Showdown concludes with a reprint of a classic EC comic from Two-Fisted Tales by Harvey Kurtzman and Jack Davis that tells a story from the POV of a Colt revolver and its six bullets. In a country where gun crime continues to be a sad reality, it’s a sobering, well-told story about the corrupting power of firearms and their ammunition. It also showcases the power of the comics medium and its ability to tell stories in creative ways. Unfortunately, it features some cringeworthy stereotypes of Latino characters that remind you that the comic came out in 1950, but it’s a master class in the marriage of art and writing that makes sequential art so magical and makes me want to dig into the old EC books even more.

If you’re a fan of classic comic book storytelling, the Western genre, or just want to see Tony Moore draw ghostly coal miners afflicting a member of the management class, then Outlaw Showdown is a must-buy and fits neatly into anti-colonial and postmodern readings of the genre while still having plenty of entertainment value, blood, and gore.

Story: John Arcudi, Tony Moore, Ann Nocenti, Christopher Cantwell, Harvey Kurtzman
Art: Sebastian Cabrol, Tony Moore, David Lapham, Dan McDaid, Jack Davis 
Colors: Lee Loughridge, Rico Renzi, Nick Filardi, Michael Atiyeh, Inaki Azpiazu
Letters: Richard Starkings, Tyler Smith
Story: 8.5 Art: 8.6 Overall: 8.6 Recommendation: Buy

Oni Press provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


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Snikt! Old Man Logan gets a new edition as part of the Marvel Premier Collection

A future world savaged and sundered by super villains, the United States ain’t what it used to be. In California, now a wasteland controlled by the evil Hulk Gang, the former Wolverine seeks to live in peace. He’s retired, finally free from the violence of his former existence as an X-Man — and he wants to keep it that way. If only they’d let him.

Logan and an aged, blind Hawkeye are forced into a cross-country jaunt through villain-ruled lands, on a collision course with the worst of them all! Can Old Man Logan maintain his pacifist vow and make his last stand without doing what he does best? Mark Millar and Steve McNiven unite for a riotous romp through a future world of death, despair and dynamic action!

BONUS CONTENT
variant/unused covers, Old Man Logan concepts, preliminary/final pencils

COLLECTING: Wolverine (1988) 66-72, Wolverine: Old Man Logan Giant-Size (2009) 1

Story: Mark Millar
Art: Steve McNiven
Color: Morry Hollowell, Christina Strain, Justin Ponso, Jason Keith, Paul Mounts, Nathan Fairbairn
Ink: Dexter Vines, Mark Morales, Jay Leisten
Letterer: Cory Petit

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.

Bookshop
Amazon


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History Comics: The Great Depression – From Hard Times to the New Deal teaches what life was like

In October 1929, a stock market crash in the United States caused millions of people to suddenly lose their savings, their jobs, and everything they owned. Many had to survive by waiting in long breadlines for free food, building their own homes from trash, and making clothes from scraps. Some rode railroad cars in a desperate search for work, only to end up on farms battling huge dust storms. This was the Great Depression, a time of tragedy but also one where people showed immense grit.

Story: Tim Stout
Art: Joe Flood

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.

Bookshop
Amazon


First Second provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review
This post contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links and make a purchase, we’ll receive a percentage of the sale. Graphic Policy does purchase items from this site. Making purchases through these links helps support the site

Science Comics: Computers – How Digital Hardware Works entertains and educates about computers

The whole world now runs on computers. They’re everywhere, from your pocket phone to your microwave oven. But, what exactly is a computer? How could you possibly build machines that calculate things, play video games, and dim the lights on command? Professor Isabella Brunel, Victorian Era Computer Expert (and a Tyrannosaurus Rex), narrates a screwball comedy romp through the fundamentals of computer architecture. The madcap cast teaches you how these extraordinary devices really work, but the book’s real message is this: technology is not magic, it’s created by human beings, and what other people have figured out, you can understand too.

Story: Perry E. Metzger, Penelope Spector
Art: Jerel Dye

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.

Bookshop
Amazon


First Second provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review
This post contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links and make a purchase, we’ll receive a percentage of the sale. Graphic Policy does purchase items from this site. Making purchases through these links helps support the site

Facing Feelings: Inside the World of Raina Telgemeier is a fantastic look at the creator’s life

Spend an afternoon with Raina as she shares her artwork and tells stories about a range of topics spanning from her childhood to the creation of her graphic novels Smile, Sisters, Guts, Drama, and Ghosts!

Raina Telgemeier is the #1 New York Times bestselling, multiple Eisner Award-winning cartoonist who has been at the forefront of today’s middle-grade graphic novel boom and has published several beloved books that are widely regarded as modern classics. The idea to create FacingFeelings was born from an exhibition featuring Raina’s work that was shown at The Ohio State University’s Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum. This book explores how Raina developed into a legendary cartoonist, looks at the artists who influenced her work, and considers why her art resonates so strongly with readers of all ages. Rare artwork, an interview, special commentary from Raina, and more are included!

By: Raina Telgemeier

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.

Bookshop
Amazon


Graphix provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review
This post contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links and make a purchase, we’ll receive a percentage of the sale. Graphic Policy does purchase items from this site. Making purchases through these links helps support the site

A Loveable Loser becomes Earth’s Greatest Hero in War Wolf #1

War Wolf #1

After he fends off an alien invasion, Thomas Bruin goes from a nobody security guard to Earth’s greatest hero! He’s got a supercharged launchpad and no ceiling. Bruin rises from celebrity to congress, then to the head of the planet’s first orbital security force. He’s married into one of the country’s most powerful political families, he’s surfing a wave of endorsements, and he’s the very symbol of human resilience. So why is Bruin nervous? Because only he knows his great victory is a lie. When the aliens return to Earth, stronger than ever, Bruin has no choice but to be the hero he’s fooled the whole world into thinking he is…or die trying. War Wolf #1 delivers an entertaining start that mixes action and comedy with a dash of sci-fi.

Written by Steve Orlando, I couldn’t tell you why it’s called War Wolf, but, let’s roll with it. Orlando kicks off the series with a debut that lays it out there as to what to expect in its main character Thomas Bruin. He’s someone that generally stands up and does what’s right, but also gets the crap beat out of him for doing it. Thomas is the type of person that gets put on a group project and does all the work and others take the credit, and he gets none. War Wolf #1 delivers some wish fulfillment for those individuals, as Thomas gets to kick a little ass and kill some aliens while doing it.

Orlando does a great job in War Wolf #1 if setting up who the main character is but delivering a lot of humor along the way, then eventually wrapping it up with action. There’s a “fuck up” mentality to Thomas, an individual who just hasn’t had luck for whatever reasons, not finding his way. It’s not all bad, Orlando mixes in some wins in a way, but overall you get a sense that this is a character who can’t quite get ahead other than by accident. And that’s what’s delivered in War Wolf #1. Thomas does step up and fights some aliens, but it’s more he’s forced to, and of course his coworkers are right there to help take credit for it all. It’s a feeling so many of us have had.

The art by Marco Perugini delivers it all in a way where you can get a sense of all of that. It’s a comic whose opening is very much a “show,” to give readers a sense of what the main character is like. Perugini is joined by Pascal Tora on color and lettering by Lucas Gattoni and the trio deliver a comic whose look matches the comedic undertones Orlando is going for. The art plays a key role in setting up the feel of the comic and also informing readers what they can expect from Thomas going forward.

War Wolf #1 is a fun debut that sets things up well with a story that feels a little Mars Attacks. It’ll be interesting to see where it all goes from here and what Orlando focuses on as far as the narrative goes. But, it’s solid sci-fi comedy that shows a lot of promise and well worth checking out.

Story: Steve Orlando Art: Marco Perugini
Color: Pascal Tora Letterer: Lucas Gattoni
Story: 8.25 Art: 8.25 Overall: 8.25 Recommendation: Buy

Mad Cave Studios provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: Zeus ComicsKindle

Thanksgiving Gives Us an Off-the-Rails Family Celebration for the Ages

Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving—a day when American families come together, until the strain inevitably tears them apart. But for one family, the cruel and deadly secret of the Turkeyneck Killer binds them together in the saddest, most shameful way possible. If you think your turkey day is bad, Thanksgiving gives readers one for the ages.

Written by Mark Russell, Thanksgiving is a celebration of the yearly tradition. Celebration might be stretching it. Thanksgiving is a skewering… no, roasting…, no, the turducken of Thanksgiving stories with a family get-together that spirals in to complete insanity.

It’s rather difficult to really nail down the insanity that is Russell’s story without spoiling it but it involves a completely detached grandfather, a racist grandmother, a single mother, her daughter, her son who’s a stalker, and her gameshow host brother. There’s also that serial killer too. It’s a story that when it gets rolling, it picks up speed smashing all expectations like a plate of sides dropped to the floor. To say it’s entertaining is an understatement. It’s laugh out loud funny. It’s the exact sort of over-the-top storytelling that Mark Russell is known for but add in a health dose of satire to boot.

Mauricet‘s art is solid. There’s something to the style that really nails down the insanity of it all. Rob Steen‘s lettering, mixed with the art, delivers a slight calm to it all but that just makes each reveal all the more hilarious. The storytelling, the art, and the lettering, combine for an almost dry delivery that just enhances the comedy. Mauricet does a fantastic job of delivering the reactions by characters, for some, the shock of it all, and others a calm cool and collected brushing off.

As it’s an AHOY Comics release, there’s extras including some recipes for the holiday, as well as a story from Carol Lay. It’s always a nice icing on the cake with it, more entertainment that just adds to the overall reading experience.

Thanksgiving is the type of one-shot you’ll want to get and then read again and again. It’s so crazy and so crazy good, a treat to get you into the holiday mood.

Story: Mark Russell, Carol Lay Art: Mauricet, Carol Lay Letterer: Rob Steen
Story: 9.0 Art: 8.4 Overall: 9.0 Recommendation: Buy

AHOY Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: Zeus Comics

No Man’s Land #2 feels like a Cold War set episode of The X-Files

No Man's Land #2

FBI Agent Collins touches down on Little Diomede to investigate a chilling murder—facing savage weather, crushing isolation, and the ghosts of a failing marriage. But when he’s forced to team up with KGB Agent Sonia Fiodrow, the uneasy alliance leads to disturbing revelations: a religiously motivated killer and a community gripped by fear. No Man’s Land #2 is a slow, tense, burn that fans of whodunnit stories will appreciate.

Written by and with art by Szymon Kudrański, No Man’s Land #2 at its heart is a murder mystery. A body has been found right in the middle of the ice bridge that connects Russian and the United States during the early years of the Cold War. An American FBI agent and KGB agent must team up to solve the murder but it’s all with the backdrop that is the Cold War.

Kudrański does a hell of a job here setting up two agents who need to work together but also are trained to not trust each other. Mix in the fact that by working together, they could inflame political tensions and also hurt their own careers. The comic seeps in tension and paranoia as the two attempt to figure out what’s going on.

Where Kudrański takes it is far more interesting. Signs early on point that the killing is a religiously driven one with teases of Biblical scripture and the talk of a demonic being. What goes from a straight politically tinged thriller, morphs slightly into an intriguing episode of The X-Files. Replace these two agents with Mulder and Scully and the comic wouldn’t miss a beat.

The art nails the aesthetic of it all with a slightly dark, very white, slightly nightmarish style that reflects the story and its setting. Kudrański is a talent all around when it comes to art, that’s a known, and the comic shows off writing talent as well. DC Hopkins‘ lettering too stands out tackling multiple languages and impressively lettering readers get a sense of intent of words even when the readers don’t know the language.

No Man’s Land #2 is an impressive issue. It mixes mystery, tension, and strange scares all with some fantastic art. For those who are interested in the genre, this is a series and issue that can’t be missed.

Story: Szymon Kudrański Art: Szymon Kudrański
Translation Assistance: Atom Morwill Letterer: DC Hopkins
Story: 8.0 Art: 8.0 Overall: 8.0 Recommendation: Buy

Image Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: Zeus ComicsKindle

The Terminator: Metal #1 is a solid issue you can enjoy on its own

The Terminator: Metal #1

In the post-apocalyptic future that follows Judgment Day, the shattered remnants of humanity must make use of every tool they can in their existential battle against the machines — and that includes the deadliest weapons that Skynet sends to annihilate them. For one member of the Resistance, this means trusting his life to a reprogrammed Terminator. Trapped behind enemy lines, the soldier and his repurposed engine of destruction must find a way to both survive and complete their mission — an undertaking with such a low probability of success that it could reboot the Terminator back to its default settings! The Terminator: Metal #1 kicks off a new series and it’s a hell of a debut.

There’s a thing with 40 year old franchises, a point is crossed where the history, the continuity, all of the details, get overwhelming and smother it. It gets convoluted and daunting to dive into or overwhelming to tackle. Reboots, restarts, requels, are all attempts to tackle the problem, creating easy entry points. That’s why The Terminator: Metal #1 is rather impressive. Written by Declan Shalvey and Rory McConville, the issue drops you right into the war against the machines. There’s little explanation as to the history or what’s going on, just a mission. It just so happens that mission involves a reprogrammed Terminator and some of the human resistance.

Shalbey and McConville deliver an issue oozing the Terminator but new readers can dive in and enjoy it. That success comes from the fact the issue doesn’t focus on small details and continuity. Instead, it’s all about the mission. You don’t need to know about the war or who these characters are. The basics of these characters and what they’re trying to do is given to the readers and nothing else. And the issue is fantastic because of that. The mission and the comic is straightforward and focused.

The art by Lorenzo Re is solid. With color by Colin Craker and lettering by Jeff Eckleberry, the comic has a “gritty” and “dirty” feel to it that fits the setting. It’s a war comic set in the future and the characters and the setting all feel worn and broken down. There’s small details like those added to the Terminator nicknamed “Tex,” such as a splash of red and a poncho. The resistance too have small details that add to the overall story and help new readers to get a better idea of the world.

The Terminator: Metal #1 is a great start to the new series. It keeps things focused and easy for readers to dive into and just enjoy without worrying and being distracted by the greater story. It’s a great debut that has us looking forward to what comes next and gets us excited to see what’s to come for the franchise.

Story: Declan Shalvey, Rory McConville Art: Lorenzo Re
Color: Colin Craker Letterer: Jeff Eckleberry
Story: 8.5 Art: 8.25 Overall: 8.5 Recommendation: Buy

Dynamite provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: Zeus ComicsKindle

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