Tag Archives: ethan parker

Godzilla: Escape the Dead Zone #1 shows there’s rooms for a variety of genres in the Kai-Sei era

Godzilla: Escape the Dead Zone #1

Godzilla: Escape the Dead Zone is the dirty, grungy little sibling of the shining Kai-sei era flagship book, Godzilla. In the book, writers Ethan Parker and Griffin Sheridan and artist Pablo Tunica show every day life in the kaiju and radiation-infested Dead Zone, an area that used to be Seattle and has been left for dead by the United States government. The story centers around a mysterious half-kaiju, half-human figure that is treated like an urban legend by the locals until he appears in glorious Tunica Technicolor. For the most part, Godzilla: Escape the Dead Zone #1 sets up this particular corner of the United States as well as its protagonist’s role in it before kicking into the real meat of the series’ ongoing plot towards the end of the issue.

As a comic, Godzilla: Escape the Dead Zone is built on vibes, namely, anarchic one. Pablo Tunica’s graphomania is self-evident, especially when the desert winds swirl, and monsters come out of hiding. There’s a lived-in feel to his line art with the characters definitely looking like they survived some kind of monstrous disaster. I love that Tunica colors himself, and blasts of punk rock colors offset the post-apocalyptic gloom and add tension to the fight sequences. He also plays with anatomy with limbs swaying and rocking in this irradiated world. That’s all to say that this book has a bit of edge to it compared to other licensed books: it’s more street art than IP. The main character, in particular, looks really cool.

Godzilla: Escape the Dead Zone focuses on the folks that have been left behind in a world centered around giant monsters and the energy they emit. The monsters that appear in the book are relatively small-ish fries compared to Godzilla and the other Toho big guns, but with no military or sci-fi technology, they pose a dire threat to the denizens of the Dead Zone. There aren’t any heroes or villains in this world: just survival. From the first page, Parker, Sheridan, and Tunica strip away contemporary comforts and hurl you into the deep end of this dangerous world where finding a beer or a smoke could cost your life, but a human/monster hybrid with a giant tail could be your salvation.

Featuring bright colors, an end of the world aesthetic, and gnarly, feral monsters, Godzilla: Escape the Dead Zone #1 shows there’s rooms for a variety of genres in the Kai-Sei era.

Story: Ethan Parker and Griffin Sheridan
Art: Pablo Tunica Letters: Nathan Widick
Story: 7.7 Art: 8.8 Overall: 8.2 Recommendation: Buy

IDW Publishing provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: Zeus ComicsKindle

Early Review: Godzilla: Escape the Dead Zone #1 shows there’s rooms for a variety of genres in the Kai-Sei era

Godzilla: Escape the Dead Zone #1

Godzilla: Escape the Dead Zone is the dirty, grungy little sibling of the shining Kai-sei era flagship book, Godzilla. In the book, writers Ethan Parker and Griffin Sheridan and artist Pablo Tunica show every day life in the kaiju and radiation-infested Dead Zone, an area that used to be Seattle and has been left for dead by the United States government. The story centers around a mysterious half-kaiju, half-human figure that is treated like an urban legend by the locals until he appears in glorious Tunica Technicolor. For the most part, Godzilla: Escape the Dead Zone #1 sets up this particular corner of the United States as well as its protagonist’s role in it before kicking into the real meat of the series’ ongoing plot towards the end of the issue.

As a comic, Godzilla: Escape the Dead Zone is built on vibes, namely, anarchic one. Pablo Tunica’s graphomania is self-evident, especially when the desert winds swirl, and monsters come out of hiding. There’s a lived-in feel to his line art with the characters definitely looking like they survived some kind of monstrous disaster. I love that Tunica colors himself, and blasts of punk rock colors offset the post-apocalyptic gloom and add tension to the fight sequences. He also plays with anatomy with limbs swaying and rocking in this irradiated world. That’s all to say that this book has a bit of edge to it compared to other licensed books: it’s more street art than IP. The main character, in particular, looks really cool.

Godzilla: Escape the Dead Zone focuses on the folks that have been left behind in a world centered around giant monsters and the energy they emit. The monsters that appear in the book are relatively small-ish fries compared to Godzilla and the other Toho big guns, but with no military or sci-fi technology, they pose a dire threat to the denizens of the Dead Zone. There aren’t any heroes or villains in this world: just survival. From the first page, Parker, Sheridan, and Tunica strip away contemporary comforts and hurl you into the deep end of this dangerous world where finding a beer or a smoke could cost your life, but a human/monster hybrid with a giant tail could be your salvation.

Featuring bright colors, an end of the world aesthetic, and gnarly, feral monsters, Godzilla: Escape the Dead Zone #1 shows there’s rooms for a variety of genres in the Kai-Sei era.

Story: Ethan Parker and Griffin Sheridan
Art: Pablo Tunica Letters: Nathan Widick
Story: 7.7 Art: 8.8 Overall: 8.2 Recommendation: Buy

IDW Publishing provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Pre-Order: Third Eye

IDW extends its partnership with Toho and unleashes Giant Plans for Godzilla

IDW Publishing has proudly worked with Toho International, Inc. for more than a decade to publish a vast array of acclaimed comic books featuring Godzilla and the kaiju’s stunning cast of characters. Now, the two companies have extended their partnership through 2029, and this year will see the King of the Monsters rising to even greater heights in the comic book industry. 

Welcome to the Kai-Sei era, an all-new Godzilla​ connected universe launching with three jaw-dropping titles, each one expertly designed to unleash completely different genres and tones for all kinds of fans. 

Kicking off the new connected universe in July is the first Godzilla ongoing series in a decade from New York Times bestselling writer Tim Seeley and amazing artist Nikola Čižmešija. In 1954, an experiment with a mysterious energy source called Kai-Sei awakened Godzilla and other terrifying kaiju. For decades, humanity has endured an onslaught of monster attacks. While Japan views these unstoppable rampages like natural disasters, the United States’ G-Force is attempting to fight these seemingly immortal titans. Now, they’ve found a boy who wields the power of Godzilla. Will he save the world… or bring about its doom?

Featuring a wild new take on Godzilla’s universe, this upcoming ongoing series will surprise readers with a fearsome new Godzilla design, new characters with powers, and plenty of kaiju twists and turns along the way.

Stomping into comic shops in August will be Godzilla: Escape the Deadzone from Eisner-nominated writers Ethan Parker and Griffin Sheridan and incredible artist Pablo Tunica. Introducing the first-ever half-human, half-kaiju hybrid in Toho history, Godzilla Escape the Deadzone will explore the biggest mystery of the new connected universe… What is the truth behind the post-apocalyptic Deadzone? The search for answers will forever change how fans view this new universe as they experience this thrilling and shocking ride.

Launching in October is the cosmic adventure Starship Godzilla from award-winning writer Chris Gooch and inventive artist Oliver Ono. For the first time in Toho canon, this trip through the stars will bridge the gap between the various alien races. They’ve come to Earth in past tales, but now it’s time to visit their worlds as a crew of misfits embark on high-risk high-reward kaiju-based missions with a secret that could impact the whole universe.

In addition to the upcoming connected universe, IDW Publishing will continue to release limited series that are outside of the connected universe, like the recently announced Godzilla: Here There Be Aliens in May. Plus, Godzilla: Heist, Godzilla vs America, and Mothra: Queen of the Monsters.

Preview: Hello Darkness #7

Hello Darkness #7

(W) David Hazan, Maria Llovet, Anirudh J, (A) Maria Llovet, Stefano Nesi (CA) Miguel Mercado
In Shops: Jan 29, 2025
SRP: $5.99

Ahh, the sweet scent of love!

Does your beloved prefer the putrid stench of corpse flowers or the warm, metallic aroma of flowers made of corpses? Either way, Hello Darkness is the perfect compliment to a bouquet and a heart-shaped box full of still-beating hearts with special stories of romance!

It all starts with “L-O-V-E” by Griffin Sheridan, Ethan Parker, and Edison Neo, a heart-wrenching-out-of-chests twist of a slasher tale! Plus more-sickly-than-sweet tales of loves lost, changed, and downright strange in “Words in the Smoke” by Maria Llovet, “Evermore” by David Hazan and Stefano Nesi, “The Booth” by Anirudh J, and “Excision” by Chris Gooch and Eli Powell! All this and more romantic rejection and rollicks in another of Robert Hack’s “I Can’t Take You Anywhere” and more!

Hello Darkness #7

Show your Valentine this first look at Hello Darkness #7

BOOM! Studios has revealed a lovely first look at Hello Darkness #7, the horrifying continuation to the new ongoing anthology series featuring the darkest stories yet from a murderer’s row of world class creators! Everything from primal fears to modern political horrors will be explored, in the classic style of Creepy and Eerie and the contemporary chills of Black Mirror.

Does your beloved prefer the putrid stench of corpse flowers or the warm, metallic aroma of flowers made of corpses? Either way, Hello Darkness is the perfect compliment to a bouquet and a heart-shaped box full of still-beating hearts with special stories of romance! It all starts with “L-O-V-E” by Griffin Sheridan, Ethan Parker, and Edison Neo, a heart-wrenching-out-of-chests twist of a slasher tale! Plus more-sickly-than-sweet tales of loves lost, changed, and downright strange in “Words in the Smoke” by Maria Llovet, “Evermore” by David Hazan and Stefano Nesi, “The Booth” by Anirudh J, and “Excision” by Chris Gooch and Eli Powell! All this and more romantic rejection and rollicks in another of Robert Hack’s “I Can’t Take You Anywhere” and more!

Hello Darkness #7 features a main cover by Miguel Mercado, and variant covers by Gabriel Rodríguez, an explicit polybagged variant cover by Jenny Frison, and a special BOOM! Studios 20th Anniversary variant by InHyuk Lee. It comes to shops January 29, 2025.

HELLO DARKNESS #7