Tag Archives: city boy

Preview: City Boy #3 (of 6)

City Boy #3 (of 6)

(W) Greg Pak (A) Minkyu Jung
In Shops: Aug 01, 2023
SRP: $3.99

After barely fighting off Intergang with the help of Metropolis, the city itself in the form of a dragon avatar, City Boy realizes the more he taps into his powers, the louder it is inside his head…hearing and feeling everything about the city and its history all at once, nonstop. So, he goes to ask for help from someone else who hears all of Metropolis all the time: Superman!

City Boy #3 (of 6)

Preview: City Boy #2 (of 6)

City Boy #2 (of 6)

(W) Greg Pak (A) Minkyu Jung
In Shops: Jun 27, 2023
SRP: $3.99

Cameron Sun embraces a new power that he’s been running away from and travels through the shadows of the city…literally. But every power comes with a consequence. This upsets the city, and it doesn’t like City Boy very much. Does he have a choice to stay here any longer, or will he be forced leave to a safer place…like Lexcorp?

City Boy #2 (of 6)

Mini Reviews: City Boy, Green Arrow, and Fury!

Fury #1

Sometimes, the staff at Graphic Policy read more comics than we’re able to get reviewed. When that happens you’ll see a weekly feature compiling reviews of the comics, or graphic novels, we just didn’t get a chance to write a full one for.

These are Graphic Policy’s Mini Reviews and Recommendations.

Alfie

City Boy #1 (DC Comics) – We anthropomorphize cities and treat them like living things with thoughts and feelings, but what if that were true? City Boy #1 by Greg Pak and Minkyu Jung takes that concept and literalizes it. City Boy #1 stars Cameron Kim, who has the ability to communicate with cities. His power is left a little vague by this first issue. We see a lot of what he can do but we aren’t given a clear explanation of his powers. Cameron was abandoned by his mother at a young age, leaving him to become a natural loner traversing the streets of Metropolis and using his powers to find valuables in the nooks of the city where no one looks. Much like another we are legends title Spirit World, City Boy had a prelude in Lazarus Planet tie-in comic. Reading Spirit World without that tie-in confused me more than a little. Luckily here in City Boy, the story feels completely independent and doesn’t require you to have read the tie-in. The art by Jung is clear and communicative, the real highlight is when we get a glimpse of the true power at Cameron’s disposal. Overall City Boy #1 is a good first issue, it’s intriguing and sets up an interesting narrative. But there is a feeling that this will all read better once collected in trade. Overall: 7.5 Recommendation: Read

Logan

Green Arrow #2 (DC Comics) Joshua Williamson, Sean Izaakse, and Romulo Fajardo‘s Green Arrow continues to be a lot of fun with flashy fight sequences and an emphasis on the found family dynamic. This issue in particular has an action comedy vibe with Oliver Queen and Lian Harper fighting injustice and inequality on a farflung planet against literal fat cats, the return of the boxing glove arrow, and Queen having a portable tree house because he’s always getting stranded places. Izaakse breaks up the page into varied panel shapes to keep the battles moving before using traditional square and rectangle panels for interactions between this separated Arrow-family. He and Williamson pay homage to Green Arrow stories of the past while keeping things fresh with Oliver and Lian ending up in a new planet/reality each issue. It seems a bit random at times, but is a nice change of pace for the street level hero. Overall: 8.0 Verdict: Buy

Fury #1 (Marvel)Al Ewing, Scot Eaton, Tom Reilly, Adam Kubert, and Ramon Rosanas craft a love letter to Nick Fury Sr. while creating a new beginnings for Nick Fury Jr. in the Fury one-shot. The most appealing thing about this comic is a different artist drawing a different time period in the lives of Nick Fury Sr. and Jr. Eaton leads things off with a Nick Fury Jr. infiltration that is part Steranko, part Secret Avengers setting up the old/new stakes of Scorpio, the Zodiac key, and of course, The Watcher for the folks that remember Original Sin. Next, Reilly goes groovy/space age perfectly complementing Ewing’s Stan Lee-esque writing style and channeling the collage/psychedelic style of the aforementioned Steranko. After that, we’re off to the Sgt. Fury days with Kubert channeling his father and doing a gritty war comic style to go along with his usual dynamic layouts while he and Al Ewing further the family ties aspect of everything. Finally, Ewing and Rosanas tie everything off with a bow in the present with clean, easy to follow to art that’s really the cream of the crop of current Marvel storytelling. Fury #1 does an excellent job wrapping up the Man on the Wall’s 60 year saga while setting up a bunch of future stories down the line for Nick Fury Jr. We’ll see if they stick, and it’s delightful to see Al Ewing and this varied team of artists weave together old Marvel lore in such an entertaining package. Overall: 8.4 Verdict: Buy


Well, there you have it, folks. The reviews we didn’t quite get a chance to write. See you next week!

Please note that with some of the above comics, Graphic Policy was provided FREE copies for review. Where we purchased the comics, you’ll see an asterisk (*). If you don’t see that, you can infer the comic was a review copy. In cases where we were provided a review copy and we also purchased the comic you’ll see two asterisks (**).

Around the Tubes

Fury #1

It was new comic book day yesterday! What’d you all read? What’d you like? Sound off in the comments below! While you think about that, here’s some comic news and reviews from around the web to start the day.

New York Times – The High-Risk Feat of Bringing ‘American Born Chinese’ to TV – Can’t wait to watch this and figure out how they adapted it.

Reviews

Comicbook – City Boy #1
Comicbook – Fury #1
CBR – Storm #1
Comicbook – Supermassive

City Boy #1 kicks off an interesting concept

City Boy #1

There’s a new Korean hero named…City Boy! Or at least, that’s the best translation of what the cities call him. City Boy, a.k.a. Cameron Kim, is just trying to make a living by using his powers of being able to speak to cities to find lost and hidden goods to pawn, and it’s only just enough to get by. City Boy #1 takes a rather odd power and delivers a debut that makes it intriguing with a lot of potential.

New heroes are always interesting to me, especially in an established world. It feels like you either get characters who are shoehorned into the existing world or ones that feel rather cut off, starting off relatively on their own. Written by Grek Pak, City Boy #1 feels a bit like the latter.

City Boy #1 is an interesting debut. It’s not overall exciting but by the end we get a good sense of who this character is. While the powers feel rather nebulous and not explained too well, Cameron’s origin is explained and fleshed out in multiple ways. We get to know him before his powers, how he got them, and where things stand now. It all comes together for a start that’s intriguing with a lot of potential but not all that exciting.

The art by Minkyu Jung is interesting. With color by Sonny Gho and lettering by Wes Abott, the issue weaves together three points in Cameron’s life. We get to see his early years, when he gets his powers, and the present. It’s done in a way that the panels steer in and out of those time period without issues, color often creating the clue as to when things take place. Visually, it works really well and works to establish the character in multiple ways while also setting up what’s to come.

City Boy #1 isn’t a bad debut but it also doesn’t quite completely excite. It has a tone that feels like it straddles audiences and in that way it feels like it holds back a little. But, mostly this feels like the opening chapter of a longer story, exactly what it is. For me, it falls on the line between a “buy” and “read” but knowing Pak’s record in quality, I lean towards the former hoping that this is just a piece of a much more entertaining puzzle.

Story: Greg Pak Art: Minkyu Jung
Color: Sonny Gho Letterer: Wes Abbott
Story: 8.0 Art: 8.1 Overall: 8.0 Recommendation: Buy

DC Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: Zeus ComicsKindle

Around the Tubes

City Boy #1

It’s new comic book day. What are you excited for? What do you plan on getting? Sound off in the comments below. While you decide on that, here’s some comic news and reviews from around the web.

Kotaku – Fortnite Gets Spider-Man’s Miles Morales Ahead Of Spider-Verse Movie – Shocker.

CBR – Florida Lawsuit Seeks to Overturn The State’s Wide-Sweeping Book Bans – Good. Hopefully it works.

Book Riot – 9 Amazing Graphic Novels from AAPI Artists and Writers – What else would you include?

The Beat – Fantagraphics and Thomas Woodruff respond to the FRANCIS ROTHBART! Eisner controversy – Really bad responses.

Chicago Mag – Supers, Human – Get to this Alex Ross exhibit if you can.

Reviews

CBR – City Boy #1
CBR – Grand Slam Romance
CBR – Poison Ivy Vol. 1 The Virtuous Cycle

Preview: City Boy #1

City Boy #1

(W) Greg Pak (A) Minkyu Jung
In Shops: May 23, 2023
SRP: $3.99

First seen in Wildstorm 30th Anniversary Special and Lazarus Planet: Legends Reborn, there’s a new Korean hero named…City Boy! Or at least, that’s the best translation of what the cities call him. City Boy, a.k.a. Cameron Kim, is just trying to make a living by using his powers of being able to speak to cities to find lost and hidden goods to pawn, and it’s only just enough to get by. And those abilities mean he hears everything everywhere all the time, including each city’s histories and the truths behind them. (It’s very loud in his head and something he has to live with.) As his powers get stronger, the cities start forming animal avatars from scraps in order to physically travel alongside him on his adventures. Of course, Gotham is a rat avatar made of city scraps, but what about Metropolis, Blüdhaven, Amnesty Bay, or even Themyscira? And not all cities are so kind…

City Boy #1

Graphic Policy’s Top Comic Picks this Week!

WE ARE SCARLET TWILIGHT #1

Wednesdays (and Tuesdays) are new comic book day! Each week hundreds of comics are released, and that can be pretty daunting to go over and choose what to buy. That’s where we come in

Each week our contributors choose what they can’t wait to read this week or just sounds interesting. In other words, this is what we’re looking forward to and think you should be taking a look at!

Find out what folks think below, and what comics you should be looking out for this week.

007: For King and Country #2 (Dynamite Entertainment) – Dynamite’s recent Bond series has been great. 007 is on the run here, an enemy of the state.

Bulls of Beacon Hill #5 (AfterShock) – The series has been grizzled mob action and we love it.

City Boy #1 (DC Comics) – We’re fans of checking out new characters and we’ve loved what DC has released so far with its new group of heroes.

Constellations (Holiday House) – A hell of a debut graphic novel about addiction. Watch our review.

Darkwing Duck #5 (Dynamite Entertainment) – For those that loved the animated series, the new comic series is a welcome return.

Fury #1 (Marvel) – Fury action, no matter if its Sr. or Jr., is always entertaining. We’re hoping for some cool spy action here.

Harrower #4 (BOOM! Studios) – We’ve been loving this horror series and we’re excited to learn all of its secrets in this issue.

Oshi No Ko Vol. 2 (Yen Press) – The series has been interesting so far as it examines fame with a murder mystery. Check out or review.

Storm #1 (Marvel) – A character that has been getting more and more of the deserved spotlight, we’re excited for this series.

Supermassive 2023 (Image Comics) – This new superhero universe has been interesting to watch and this is a one-shot to not be missed.

Tegan and Sara Vol. 1 Junior High (First Second) – Tegan and Sara alone has us interested in this.

We Are Scarlet Twilight #1 (Red 5 Comics) – The series looks like classic pulp adventures and we love that type of story.

Preview: City Boy #1

City Boy #1

(W) Greg Pak (A) Minkyu Jung
In Shops: May 23, 2023
SRP: $3.99

First seen in Wildstorm 30th Anniversary Special and Lazarus Planet: Legends Reborn, there’s a new Korean hero named…City Boy! Or at least, that’s the best translation of what the cities call him. City Boy, a.k.a. Cameron Kim, is just trying to make a living by using his powers of being able to speak to cities to find lost and hidden goods to pawn, and it’s only just enough to get by. And those abilities mean he hears everything everywhere all the time, including each city’s histories and the truths behind them. (It’s very loud in his head and something he has to live with.) As his powers get stronger, the cities start forming animal avatars from scraps in order to physically travel alongside him on his adventures. Of course, Gotham is a rat avatar made of city scraps, but what about Metropolis, Blüdhaven, Amnesty Bay, or even Themyscira? And not all cities are so kind…

City Boy #1

Dawn of DC delivers three new superhero series, City Boy, The Vigil, and Spirit World, in May

Dawn of DC” is this year’s initiative from DC Comics featuring new series, new creative teams, and new characters all-together! In May, the comic publisher will release three new six-issue limited series each featuring Asian superheroes. Check out the solicits below!

Spirit World #1 (of 6)

Story: Alyssa Wong
Art: Haining
Cover: Haining
Variant Covers: Dustin Nguyen, Trung Le Nguyen, Zu Orzu

On Sale May 9, 2023

First seen in Lazarus Planet: Dark Fate #1, Spirit World features Xanthe, a non-binary Chinese hero with the ability to travel in and out of the Spirit World – the realm of the dead, and that of the living. Xanthe possesses the ability to burn items folded from ceremonial joss paper and turn them into real objects that can be used in the physical world. Their super power is based on the East Asian custom of burning joss paper at gravesites to send resources to ancestors in the spirit world. In this debut issue, written by Alyssa Wong with art by Haining, Xanthe forms a reluctant alliance with DC’s bad boy of the mystic arts, John Constantine, to rescue Batgirl Cassandra Cain from a horde of jiangshi (Chinese hopping vampires). Haining provides both the main and 1 in 50 ratio variant covers, additional variant covers by Dustin Nguyen and Trung Le Nguyen, plus a special AAPI Heritage Month variant cover by Zu Orzu.

The Vigil #1 (of 6)

Story: Ram V.
Art: Lalit Kumar Sharma
Cover: Sumit Kumar
Variant Covers: Mukesh Singh, Lalit Kumar Sharma, Anand RK, Pop Mhan

On Sale May 16, 2023

This mysterious team of South Asian metahumans made their first appearance in Lazarus Planet: Next Evolution #1 and can be seen again in issues #1070 and #1071 of Detective Comics. Written by Ram V, with art by Lalit Kumar Sharma, The Vigil is Arclight, Saya, Dodge, and Castle, a group of individuals given powers they didn’t want, determined to stop metahuman research and tech created for military applications at any cost. Along the way, they’ll encounter super heroes that could be allies or enemies, not a surprise for a group that exists to shut down state-sponsored superhumans…and clean up the mess before any hero or villain arrives, as if both the crime and The Vigil were never there. Artist Sumit Kumar provides the main cover, with variant covers by Mukesh Singh and series artist Lalit Kumar Sharma and Anand RK, with Pop Mhan providing a special AAPI Heritage Month variant.

City Boy #1 (of 6)

Story: Greg Pak
Art: Minkyu Jung, Sunny Gho
Cover: Minkyu Jung
Variant Covers: Minkyu Jung, InHyuk Lee, Michael Cho, Alexandre Tefenkgi

On Sale May 23, 2023

Both DC and WildStorm fans have already been introduced to Korean super hero Cameron Kim, a.k.a. City Boy, in the WildStorm 30th Anniversary Special #1 and Lazarus Planet: Legends Reborn #1. Cameron is just a kid trying to make a living, using his powers of speaking to cities to find lost and hidden goods to pawn, just trying to get by. But having these powers also means that he hears everything about these cities, everywhere and all at once, including their histories and the truths behind them. In his two current appearances he’s already made “friends” with Gotham City (including a rat avatar made from the city’s scraps), but only time will tell if City Boy is received as openly by Metropolis, Amnesty Bay, Themyscira, or other cities in the DC Universe. This six-issue series reunites writer Greg Pak with artists Minkyu Jung and Sunny Gho, and the debut issue features a main cover and 1 in 50 ratio variant cover by Minkyu Jung, and additional variant covers by InHyuk Lee and Michael Choi, with an AAPI Heritage Month variant cover by Alexandre Tefenkgi.