Tag Archives: Comics

Preview: Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #5

Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #5

(W) Andrew Joustra (A) Louie Joyce

New tales of the TMNT based on the newest Ninja Turtles animated series!

Fugitoid and the Turtles get a surprise visitor when Agent Lonae shows up on their doorstep. The E.P.F., Agent Blanque, Bishop, and Zog are closing in on our heroes. Will the boys hunker down to defend their home and their new robot friend or take the fight to the enemy? Find out in this issue featuring new original takes and designs on classic legacy Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles characters.

By debut comics writer Andrew Joustra (Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Chrome Alone 2 – Lost in New Jersey) and neon-punk comics artist Louie Joyce (Godzilla: Skate or Die, Haphaven, Past the Last Mountain).

Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #5

Preview: Smile: For the Camera #2

Smile: For the Camera #2

(W) Hannah Rose May (A) Miriana Puglia

The runway calls… but so does something darker.

After the shocking tragedy that rocked SurFace Agency, Freja and her fellow models are whisked off to London Fashion Week, where the pressure to perform is as deadly as the secrets they’re keeping. As Freja’s nightmares begin bleeding into reality, Ivy lands her first big shoot with notorious photographer Perry Rickens—and discovers why his sets are feared as much as they’re coveted.

Under the blinding lights of fame, every smile hides something monstrous.

The horror behind the glamour deepens in Smile: For the Camera #2 in this terrifying new chapter by Hannah Rose May (Exorcism at 1600 Penn, Rogues’ Gallery) as the Entity continues its gory crusade.

Smile: For the Camera #2

Preview: Star Trek: Starfleet Academy – Lost Contact #1

Star Trek: Starfleet Academy – Lost Contact #1

(W) Layne Morgan (A) Coralí Espuna

Caleb, Genesis, Jay-Den, Kyle, and Tarima are all students of Starfleet Academy, the illustrious school responsible for the Federation’s best. One day, they dream to serve as great leaders on board ships of their own, to study the cultural intricacies of sentient life amongst the Galaxy, or to go where no person has explored before. But today, their mission is simply to execute a survey simulation on a lifeless, low-oxygen planet. Or at least, it seems simple… until a huge storm cuts off their contact with their teachers aboard the Athena… and something impossible appears: an alien. Now, they’ll have to work together and use everything they’ve learned in class about first contact to make it off the planet alive!

Star Trek: Starfleet Academy – Lost Contact #1

Godzilla’s Monsterpiece Theatre Presents: Romeo & Juliet and Godzilla #1 deepens the tragedy of the love story while also throwing in slapstick humor on a colossal scale

Godzilla's Monsterpiece Theatre Presents Romeo And Juliet And Godzilla #1

In Godzilla’s Monsterpiece Theatre Presents: Romeo & Juliet and Godzilla #1, Adam Tierney and Sean Peacock intensify the classic tragic melodrama of William Shakespeare’s doomed lovers with an old-fashioned kaiju attack on Renaissance Verona. With the exception of a gorgeous fantasy sequence and some fun genre riffs, Tierney’s plot (and language) doesn’t stray from the classic story. However, Godzilla stomping, Mothra flying, and Capulet’s medieval take on Mechagodzilla add an extra level of mayhem and dark, slapstick humor.

Adding Godzilla to the mix really shows how self-absorbed and infatuated Romeo and Juliet were with each other. While the monster destroys their town killing family and friends, they only have eyes for each other. (And by extension, so do Godzilla and Mothra.) Shakespeare’s beautiful speeches and soliloquies take the foreground while carnage reigns in the background. I cackled when Godzilla took out Juliet’s famous balcony with a blast of nuclear breath, even though it sets up Romeo as the romantic hero sweeping her up in his arms before their kiss. Also, the Capulet/Montague feud doesn’t go away while the town is being attacked, but it only gets (literally) hotter. Tybalt and Mercutio (Especially Harold Perrineau’s performance as him in Romeo + Juliet) are two of the best characters in the play, and Adam Tierney and Peacock give them time to be witty and combative. However, their deaths result from being caught in the crossfire between Mechagodzilla and Godzilla. The combination of Gothic visuals from Sean Peacock and ominous lettering from Brian Kolek, with the classic line “A plague on both your houses,” captures the comic’s overall tone very well: highbrow, yet not afraid to laugh at itself.

Yes, the themes of the irrationality of love and family feuds shine true in Romeo & Juliet and Godzilla. There’s even a gorgeously colored dream sequence where Romeo and Juliet find a happy ending under a stained glass window of Toho monsters that illustrates that this isn’t Verona’s first Kaiju rodeo, as well as the cyclical nature of war and conflict. It’s just also a plain cool piece of art from Peacock, and he adds depth and humor to Tierney and Shakespeare’s text. He has a Tom Scioli meets Classics Illustrated style that works for the tone of the book, even if some of the panel transitions can be muddled and confusing, like when Juliet takes this story’s take on the “poison”. But, overall, Sean Peacock brings a dynamic approach to layouts that draws parallels between Romeo/Juliet and Godzilla/Mothra. The way the action is staged feels like a stage play, too.

Even better than the lead story is the first chapter of Tom Scioli’s Robin Hood and Godzilla serial that will run as backups in all of the Godzilla’s Monsterpiece Theatre Presents titles. The King of Monsters plays a background role in this story, with Scioli gleefully throwing himself into an all-swashbuckling, all-the-time adventure yarn with violence and hijinks that would make Errol Flynn smile. He uses page layouts to spring the trap that Robin Hood pulls off on the Sheriff of Nottingham and his goons, and honestly, this comic works out as a straight-up Robin Hood comic without the Godzilla bit. However, with his face poking out of the water, Godzilla represents menace and the escalation of stakes to come. Tom Scioli uses Godzilla’s presence in the book to put Robin Hood in the tradition of the chivalric romances because this hero finally has a kind of dragon to slay.

If you enjoyed Godzilla’s Monsterpiece Theatre, Romeo and Juliet & Godzilla is much in the same vein, adapting the key moments and themes from the William Shakespeare play while adding some explosive giant monster action. Tierney and Peacock use the presence of Godzilla, Mothra, and Medieval Mechagodzilla to deepen the tragedy of the love story while also throwing in slapstick humor on a colossal scale and showing how self-involved Romeo and Juliet were, as well as the futility of their families’ feud.

Story: Adam Tierney, Tom Scioli
Art: Sean Peacock, Tom Scioli Letters: Brian Kolek
Story: 8.8 Art: 8.6 Overall: 8.7 Recommendation: Buy

IDW provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: Zeus ComicsKindle

Preview: TMNT: Journeys #8

TMNT: Journeys #8

(w) Peter Laird (a) Peter Laird, Jim Lawson

While Donatello helps Robyn explore her and April O’Neil’s true heritage, a training session between Leonardo and the vicious Cha Ocho of the Foot Clan gets intense as old rivalries and intense anger come back to the present! How does this shake Karai’s clan leadership as tensions grow between the Foot Clan and the Ninja Turtles?

TMNT: Journeys #8

Preview: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #17

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #17

(w) Gene Luen Yang (a) Freddie E. Williams II, Fero Peniche

High atop New York City, a battle rages for Splinter’s soul! As Shinigami exploits Splinter’s fear to open a portal to the great beyond, the Turtles take on a mystical battle that tests their very limits. Mikey discovers the key to saving their father from a shocking source, but can he make it back to his family before it’s too late?!

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #17

Preview: The Twilight Zone #6

The Twilight Zone #6

(w) Nicole Goux (a) Nicole Goux

Piper can’t take care of herself. She barely eats, and her apartment is a mess. In a last desperate attempt to quick-fix her life, she decides to order a food delivery service. But her first delivery includes an unexpected arrival: an unsettlingly baby-shaped vegetable. Its pudgy plant hands and feet may be too cute to eat, but Piper is about to learn that caring for another is far more complicated than caring for yourself. Especially if you love the other more than yourself…

The Twilight Zone #6

Preview: Star Trek: Lower Decks #18

Star Trek: Lower Decks #18

(w) Tim Sheridan (a) Vernon Smith

The thrilling conclusion to the mystery of the vanished Laapeerians!

The Enterprise has joined the tumultuous space battle between Captain Freeman and her crew against their dangerous alien assailants. Starfleet might not know who these invaders are, but they’re certain they have something to do with the missing population of Laapeeria…

It’s up to the Lower Deckers to not only defeat the superpowered ship but recover a whole planet’s worth of people and reunite with Boimler and his away crew while doing it.

And then they’ll all hug and stuff, $&#@!*.

Star Trek: Lower Decks #18

Preview: Godzilla’s Monsterpiece Theatre Presents: Romeo & Juliet and Godzilla #1

Godzilla’s Monsterpiece Theatre Presents: Romeo & Juliet and Godzilla #1

(w) Adam Tierney (a) Sean Peacock

The explosive literary mashup series returns! But this time, Godzilla is taking on the classics one story at a time. O Godzilla, Godzilla, wherefore art thou Godzilla? First, it’s invading the Bard’s most revered play, Romeo & Juliet. Families at war! Forbidden love blossoming! Godzilla on its path of destruction! Fair Verona won’t be so fair for long!

And that’s not all: Tom Scioli is returning to the series to write and illustrate a backup story starring the legendary thief entitled “Robin Hood and the Monster of Nottingham!”

Godzilla's Monsterpiece Theatre Presents: Romeo & Juliet and Godzilla #1
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