Tag Archives: grommets

Grommets #7 nails what made this series so relatable and engaging

Grommets #7

Grommets concludes in a bittersweet manner as Rick must sadly leave his punk skater buddies and potential interest Samra behind in Sacramento while his dad moves his family to Phoenix quicker than he anticipated. Writers Rick Remender and Brian Posehn and artists Brett Parson and Moreno Dinisio capture the happy/sad feeling of one last epic time with good friends before moving far away, and it’s cool to see the leaps and bounds that Rick and Brian have taken in improving their skating abilities although they are treated as town pariahs after the unfortunate events of the previous issue’s party. Grommets #7 nails what made this series so relatable and engaging with commentary on punk culture, a healthy sense of ACAB, and lots of messy teenage feelings.

Brett Parson’s art that is full of detail without sacrificing motion or storytelling is pure chef’s kiss in Grommets #7. Each panel is like a story in miniature. For example, I love seeing Rick’s friends’ reaction to him fumbling Samra, and there’s a real fluidity to the skating scenes in this issue compared to the unsteady bursts of pain and blood earlier in the series. The speed lines and letterer Russ Wooton’s sound effects add to the authenticity of the story, and you can almost smell the sweat coming down Rick and family’s faces when they move to the “dry heat” of Phoenix towards the end of the story. Also, as a comics/classic punk geek, Brett Parson gets all the band logos correct, and it’s interesting to see the correlation between the band’s image and sound and the characters’ personality. Of course, the Misfits fan pulls the jock’s still-beating heart out of his chest in an early fantasy sequence. To top things off, Dinisio keeps his color palette at a happy medium between photorealism and a Saturday morning cartoon while throwing in some fun flourishes like pink for Rick’s first kiss and a fade to black to finish things off.

In addition to the usual fun banter between Rick and Brian, Grommets #7 explores some interesting themes like police corruption and gatekeeping in subcultures. After the aforementioned fantasy sequence, the Sacramento County PD gaslight and blame the violent actions at the party on Rick, Brian, and their friends instead of the violent, rapey football players. Remender and Posehn’s dialogue for the cops is infuriating and all-too realistic even with Rick’s straight-laced father appearing with the boys and arguing their case, especially the bullet holes on his vehicle. The interaction shows the need for alternative spaces for folks to be and express themselves without fear of reprisal from authorities or the “majority”. However, in Grommets #7’s coda, they turn this dynamic on its head when the skaters in Phoenix don’t accept Rick and Brian (Oh yeah, he ends up moving to Phoenix too aka can you say possible sequel hook?) even though Rick is wearing a Black Flag T-shirt while Black Flag is playing. It wasn’t as big in the 1980s as it is today, but there are definitely folks in punk spaces who want to capitalize monetarily on the music and aesthetic for fame and fortune. However, these are just a couple of kids trying to fit in and looking for connections even if that involves a “skate or die” type of situation.

Grommets #7 is a beautifully rendered conclusion to Rick Remender, Brian Posehn, and Brett Parson’s scrappy coming of age story about being a skate punk in the 1980s. I could spend 70 more issues watching these crazy kids grow up, find new bands, learn new skate tricks, and getting into wild, retro-tinged shenanigans together. The letterhack who compared this book to Freaks and Geeks is absolutely true, and this is a comic whose collected edition I’ll definitely recommend to my fellow Jorts Fest attendees.

Story: Rick Remender and Brian Posehn Art: Brett Parson
Colors: Moreno Dinisio Letters: Rus Wooton
Story: 8.5 Art: 9.2 Overall: 8.9 Recommendation: Buy

Image Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: Zeus ComicsKindle

Grommets by Rick Remender, Brian Posehn, Brett Parson, and Moreno Dinisio gets collected in July

Grommets by Eisner Award nominated and The New York Times bestselling writer Rick Remender, Emmy award nominated comedian and writer Brian Posehn, artistic powerhouse Brett Parson, and colorist extraordinaire Moreno Dinisio will be collected in its entirety into trade paperback and available this July from Image Comics.

Since the series first launched in 2024, Grommets has gone on to sell out at the distributor level and gone back to print multiple times. Sales for the series have increased from issue-to-issue as the story has gained momentum.

In Grommets, two outcast best friends navigate the Sacramento suburbs of 1984, where they find a home in skateboard culture and punk rock. The perfect read for fans of John Hughes’ Brat Pack teen movies, Freaks & Geeks, and Dazed & Confused.

Grommets is both an authentic look at ’80s skate culture—a snapshot of the generation that turned skating into a worldwide phenomenon—as well as a heartfelt coming-of-age story following two friends from troubled homes navigating their damage in an era when no one cared.

The series’ title springs from skater slang, a “grommet” is a commonly used term for a young up-and-coming skater or surfer. Since the ’60s it’s been used to describe the next generation of kids who, with youthful exuberance, love the sport but want to put their spin on it.

Grommets trade paperback (ISBN: 9781534366480, Lunar Code 0125IM460) will collect Grommets issues #1-7, the complete series, and be available at local comic book shops on Wednesday, June 25 and independent bookstores, Bookshop, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Books-a-Million, Indigo, and Waterstones on Tuesday, July 8.

Grommets

Logan’s 10 Favorite Comics of 2024

After whatever the hell 2023 was, I got back into comics in 2024. The Absolute and Ultimate lines helped me get back into Marvel and DC’s output, and I also finally read some stone cold classics, both old and new, like Starman, Gender Queer, 20th Century Men, and Something is Killing the Children. I really love that I can get Silver Sprocket’s books from Comics Plus and Hoopla from my public library, and even though I’m not a New Year’s Resolution person, I definitely plan on reading more of their catalog in 2025 (Caroline Cash’s Peepee Poopoo calls my name!) as well as the back half of Starman, Planetary, finally finding out what actually happened to Krakoa in the X-Books, and keeping up with new titles. (Metamorpho and New Gods were two year end bangers!)

Without further ado, here are my favorite ten comics of 2024

10. Peepshow #15 (Fantagraphics)

One of the happiest surprises of 2024 was the release of one last issue of Joe Matt’s Peepshow a year after his untimely passing. This comic deals with Matt moving to Los Angeles to pitch a TV version of Peepshow to HBO and deals with similar subject matter as the previous decades of the book like his frugality, personal feelings of inadequacies, and yes, obsession with Asian women. However, occasional distasteful subject matter aside, Peepshow #15 shows a cartoonist’s cartoonist at the height of his craft with impeccably placed sweat beads and speed lines as Joe Matt has another existential crisis. It’s also a love letter to a comics medium with one of Matt’s friends entreating both him and the reader to pore over some of the comics taking up space in his apartment.

9. Absolute Batman (DC)

In the launch title for DC’s new Absolute line, Scott Snyder, Nick Dragotta, and Frank Martin rebuild and revise the Caped Crusader from the ground up. Absolute Batman takes elements from Frank Miller’s works, various Bat-films, and Snyder’s previous work with the character to create a beefy, working class Batman, who is currently bestie with what might later become his Rogue’s gallery. Scott Snyder and Dragotta take aim at school shootings, the prison industrial complex, and cryptocurrency while having entertaining action and chase sequences. They’re three issues into building a universe, and I’m excited to see where this book goes in 2025.

8. Grommets (Image)

Rick Remender, Brian Posehn, Brett Parson, and Moreno Dinisio’s Grommets is a semi-autobiographical love letter to 1980s skate and punk culture set in the Sacramento suburbs. Remender and Posehn draw on their own experiences as teenagers while Parson and Dinisio turn them up to eleven with detailed and period-accurate visuals that are something out of Mad Magazine. It’s fun to watch Rick and Brian’s misadventures and the ups and downs of their friendship, especially once a timer is put on it when Rick’s parents tell him they’re moving to Phoenix. The past few issues of the series have been literal bloodbaths as punks and jocks clash, and of course, the cops don’t take the jocks’ side. Grommets really captures how epic, hilarious, and occasionally sad growing up was.

7. “The Happy Art” (Self-Published)

I read Sami Alwani’s Ignatz-winning “The Happy Art” on his Instagram, but it’s also available in the Pulping “Comics on Comics” anthology. “The Happy Art” is a quite meta comic about how hard it is to appeal to different audiences in comics and also about collective thinking, cancel culture, and all that jazz. Alwani portrays himself as a dog, and the story reaches new heights of absurdity with each page. I love the juxtaposition of Gen Z lingo with a fanatical love for comics as a medium, and how it changes styles and POV with each panel. Saehmeh is indeed based, and so is this very accessible comic.

6. Godzilla Valentine’s Day Special (IDW)

Zoe Tunnell, Sebastian Piriz, and Rebecca Nalty tell a cute queer love story against the backdrop of kaiju attacks in Godzilla Valentine’s Day Special. Kaiju romcom is kind of the perfect subgenre, and Tunnell gives the full progression of the relationship between unemployed burnout-turned-monster chaser Piper and Earth Defense Force soldier Tam from loathing to sweet loving. On the art side, Piriz gets to dig deep into Toho’s library of critters, including a battle royale between Godzilla and MechaGodzilla that shows that building bigger bombs and weapons doesn’t lead to peace, but just more war. It’s also interesting to see the portrayal of the King of Monsters change as the book progresses from something jarring and life-changing to just a reality of life. This could also be a metaphor for the progression of a romantic relationship as well.

5. Belly Full of Heart (Silver Sprocket)

Madeline Mouse’s Belly Full of Heart is queer softness, love, and desire in fluid comic book short story format. Mouse uses pomegranates, starfish, cars, Adidas slides, and more as visual metaphors for love. Their vignettes flow from page to page and color palette to palette in a way that feels like a warm hug multiplied by eleven. Belly Full of Heart throws plot out of the window and focuses on feelings and vibes instead. It’s also full of silly humor with “Kissin’ at the beach/Pissin’ at the beach” getting inducted into the kind of rhyming couplet hall of fame. Belly Full of Heart captures the feeling of being 100% yourself around another person as Madeline Mouse rejects rigid panel boundaries and embraces hand lettering to craft one of the most beautiful and gender euphoric comics of 2024.

4. Midnight Radio (Oni Press)

I know that Midnight Radio technically came out in 2019, but it got a special edition remaster from writer/artist Iolanda Zanfardino so it’s eligible for my “Favorite Comics of 2024” list. Using a distinct color palette for each protagonist, Midnight Radio follows the lives of a diverse cast of characters brough together by a mysterious radio message urging them to be their own authentic selves. There’s a plotline with a healthcare company being responsible for the deaths of many people that was painfully relevant last year, and Zanfardino explores even more social issues like racism, xenophobia, social media addiction, and violence against queer people throughout her story. However, the main draw of Midnight Radio for me was the characters breaking off the shackles of corporate jobs, corrupt cops, unwelcoming families, and societal pressure and finding fulfillment through a variety of types of art, including indie games, music, and more!

3. The Ultimates (Marvel)

Deniz Camp, Juan Frigeri, and Phil Noto’s Ultimates is anti-imperialist team superhero comic published by the world’s largest entertainment corporation that is also an ode to the single issue. As a collective unit, Ultimates builds to the assembling of Earth-6160’s mightiest heroes and the return of the Maker. However, Camp does the opposite of writing for the trade and gives each single issue its own flair. For example, Ultimates #4 is about Dr. Doom trying to bring the Fantastic Four back and can be read in five distinct ways to tell his tragic story with Noto channeling his inner Dave Gibbons and creating gorgeous symmetry. Deniz Camp and Frigeri connect new takes on She-Hulk and Hawkeye to the violence done towards the indigenous people of the Pacific islands and North America and breathe new life into old school anti-fascists Captain America and Jim Hammond’s Human Torch. Ultimates feels a lot like if Angela Davis wrote the Avengers, and that is a high compliment.

2. Public Domain (Image)

Influenced by comic book history as well as his own experiences as a cartoonist, Chip Zdarsky’s Public Domain is part love/hate letter to the medium and dysfunctional family drama. Public Domain #6-10 shows how the sausage is made with Dallas Comics trying to beat the clock and their new take on iconic superhero, The Domain. Along the way, there are old men arguing at bars, thinly veiled analogues for “star” comic book creators, and a look back at a love affair. Public Domain shows the difficulty of being creative under corporate constraints and also having a personal life while being caught up in the wringer of the comic book industry. It comes across as a real passion project for Zdarsky who crams each issue with visual gags, parodies, and of course, heartfelt moments.

1. Ultimate Spider-Man (Marvel)

Jonathan Hickman, Marco Checchetto, and David Messina’s Ultimate Spider-Man was twelve issues of comic book comfort food as Peter Parker gets his powers as a thirty-something and must learn how to use them in a world undergirded by evil and corruption. In opposition to certain other writers and editors, Ultimate Spider-Man shows that a married with children Spider-Man comic can be compelling. There’s nothing like struggling fighting the Shocker while one kid knows your secret identity, and the other doesn’t and is kind of besties with J. Jonah Jameson. Speaking of Jameson, the story that showcased him and Uncle Ben digging into the Kingpin and Oscorp might have been the single issue of the year as the two old school newspapermen show their work and speak truth to power. On the art side, Checchetto brings a sleek high tech sheen to the suits and fights while not losing that classic Spider-Man charm, and Messina does a good job of holding down the fort in his fill-in issues. All in all, Ultimate Spider-Man (2024) is the Spider-Man comic I needed at 31 like Ultimate Spider-Man (2000) was the Spider-Man comic I needed at 13, and I love that it wrapped up its first year with a dark, Empire Strikes Back type ending.

Grommets gets a double sell-out and heads back to print

 Issue #1 and #4 of the breakout bestseller Grommets by The New York Times bestselling writer Rick Remender, fan-favorite comedian and writer Brian Posehn, artistic powerhouse Brett Parson, and colorist extraordinaire Moreno Dinisio are both being rushed back to print this week in order to keep up with demand.

Both reprints will feature new cover art by Parson—but hawk-eyed fans will spot that the art on Grommets #1, fifth printing will connect back to the Grommets #1, second printing artwork.

In Grommets #4, Rick’s dad bestows adolescent world-ending news that ignites a fight with Brian, leaving him feeling angry, alone, and unheard—just as their movie night with friends and girls begins, but party-crashing high school animals BYOB and blow their plans to bits.

Grommets takes readers on the ’80s-infused journey of a young Rick who starts a new school and tries desperately to find his place amongst the cliques of foul-mouthed high schoolers of the Sacramento suburbs. Skateboarding provides him with an opportunity to make some ‘cool’ new friends—but he soon finds out that they may not be as ‘cool’ as he (or they!) first thought.

Perfect for fans of Freaks & Geeks and Dazed and ConfusedGrommets is at once an authentic look at punk rock and skater culture and a snapshot of the generation that turned skating into a worldwide phenomenon. It’s a heartfelt story that follows two friends from troubled homes as they navigate their damage in an era when no one cared.

Grommets #1, fifth printing (Lunar Code 0524IM987) will be available in comic book shops on Wednesday, October 16.

Available at comic book shops on Wednesday, October 2:

  • Grommets #2, third printing – Lunar Code 0824IM907
  • Grommets #3, second printing – Lunar Code 0824IM908

Grommets #4, second printing (Lunar Code 0524IM988) will be available in comic book shops on Wednesday, October 16.

Grommets #5 will be available at comic book shops on Wednesday, October 23:

  • Cover A by Brett Parson – Lunar Code 0824IM385
  • Cover B 1:10 copy incentive by Brett Parson – Lunar Code 0824IM386

Grommets #6 will be available at comic book shops on Wednesday, November 27:

  • Cover A by Brett Parson – Lunar Code 0924IM357
  • Cover B 1:10 copy incentive by Kevin Cross – Lunar Code 0924IM358

Grommets #7 will be available at comic book shops on Wednesday, December 26:

  • Cover A by Brett Parson – Lunar Code 1024IM360
  • Cover B 1:10 copy incentive by Robert Quinn – Lunar Code 1024IM361
  • Cover C 1:20 copy incentive by James Callahan – Lunar Code 1024IM362

Grommets sees a triple sell-out and heads back to print

The first three issues of breakout hit series Grommets by The New York Times bestselling writer Rick Remender, fan-favorite comedian and writer Brian Posehn, artistic powerhouse Brett Parson, and colorist extraordinaire Moreno Dinisio have been wiped out completely at the distributor level. Image Comics has fast-tracked all three issues back to print this week in order to keep up with the flurry of reorder activity.

Grommets takes readers on the ’80s-infused journey of a young Rick who starts a new school and tries desperately to find his place amongst the cliques of foul-mouthed high schoolers of the Sacramento suburbs. Skateboarding provides him with an opportunity to make some ‘cool’ new friends—but he soon finds out that they may not be as ‘cool’ as he (or they!) first thought.

Perfect for fans of Freaks & Geeks and Dazed and ConfusedGrommets is at once an authentic look at punk rock and skater culture and a snapshot of the generation that turned skating into a worldwide phenomenon. It’s a heartfelt story that follows two friends from troubled homes as they navigate their damage in an era when no one cared.

Available at comic book shops on Wednesday, October 2:

  • Grommets #1, fourth printing – Lunar Code 0824IM906
  • Grommets #2, third printing – Lunar Code 0824IM907
  • Grommets #3, second printing – Lunar Code 0824IM908

Grommets #4 is available at comic book shops now:

  • Cover A by Brett Parson – Lunar Code 0624IM303
  • Cover B 1:10 copy incentive by Chuck BB – Lunar Code 0624IM304

Grommets #5 will be available at comic book shops on Wednesday, October 23:

  • Cover A by Brett Parson – Lunar Code 0824IM385
  • Cover B 1:10 copy incentive by Brett Parson – Lunar Code 0824IM386

Grommets #6 will be available at comic book shops on Wednesday, November 27:

  • Cover A by Brett Parson – Lunar Code 0924IM357
  • Cover B 1:10 copy incentive by Kevin Cross – Lunar Code 0924IM358

Grommets gets a double sell-out and heads back to print

Issues #1 and #2 of Grommets by The New York Times bestselling writer Rick Remender, fan-favorite comedian and writer Brian Posehn, artistic powerhouse Brett Parson, and colorist extraordinaire Moreno Dinisio have sold out yet again. Image Comics will rush both issues back to print this week in order to keep up with growing demand for the series.

The Grommets #2, second printing will feature brand new cover art by Parson.

Grommets takes readers on the ’80s-infused journey of a young Rick who starts a new school and tries desperately to find his place amongst the cliques of foul-mouthed high schoolers of the Sacramento suburbs. Skateboarding provides him with an opportunity to make some ‘cool’ new friends—but he soon finds out that they may not be as ‘cool’ as he (or they!) first thought.

Grommets #1, third printing (Lunar Code 0524IM931) and Grommets #2, second printing (Lunar Code 0424IM990) will be available at comic book shops on Wednesday, September 4.

Grommets #3 Cover A by Parson (Lunar Code 0524IM306) and Grommets #3 Cover B 1:10 copy incentive by Parson (Lunar Code 0524IM307) are available now at comic shops.

Grommets #4 Cover A by Brett Parson (Lunar Code 0624IM303) and Grommets #4 Cover B 1:10 copy incentive by Chuck BB (Lunar Code 0624IM304) will be available at comic book shops on Wednesday, August 28.

Mini Reviews: Ultimate Spider-Man, Firefly Verses, William of Newbury, and Grommets!

Ultimate Spider-Man #7

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.

Logan

Ultimate Spider-Man #7 (Marvel)Marco Checchetto is back on art, and the visuals in Ultimate Spider-Man #7 sing, especially when Spider-Man and the Green Goblin throw down. However, he and Jonathan Hickman just make this a training bout as Otto Octavius integrates some of the Stark-tech in their suits, including an onboard AI. Spider-Man chooses himself as the AI while the Green Goblin chooses his father, Norman Osborn. This high tech take on classic Spidey tropes like Spider-Man talking to himself during fights, Green Goblin hearing voices in his head, and Harry Osborn’s daddy issues is pure Hickman, who also starts to integrate Ultimate Spider-Man with the big picture of the Ultimate Universe. However, there’s still plenty of times for subplots and bonding like Uncle Ben and J. Jonah Jameson teaming up on their news enterprise thanks to a venture capital infusion from Gwen Stacy. Ultimate Spider-Man #7 has slick, yet emotionally engaging visuals from Checchetto and colorist Matthew Wilson that pair well with Jonathan Hickman’s script that puts character relationships and bonding at the forefront with the tech/world-building as window dressing. Overall: 8.7 Verdict: Buy

Firefly ‘Verses #1 (BOOM!)Firefly ‘Verses #1 has gorgeous art courtesy of Lalit Kumar Sharma, but Ryan Parrott‘s script is a little underdeveloped giving the Alliance and Independents the “both sides” treatment. For a “what if” type comic, Firefly ‘Verses #1 is quite faithful to the TV show’s pilot reenacting the Battle of Serenity Valley, but having the Browncoats defeat the Alliance. Much of the comic shows that life is just as bad, if not worse under the Independent Coalition of Planets with the inner planets struggling versus the outer ones in the show. Like the first season of Firefly, the main plot centers around a mysterious Tam sibling (Simon, in the comic’s case), there’s a heroic death, lots of Whedon-y dialogue, and there basically ends up being a similar status quo to the TV show. There’s a little shard of an anti-authoritarian bent in Firefly ‘Verses #1, but mostly it’s just an opportunity for Parrott to indulge in his nostalgia for the show. Sharma does do a good job of making the story slightly askew and offputting though. Overall: 6.1 Verdict: Pass

William of Newbury #3 (Dark Horse)Michael Avon Oeming‘s tale of an eccentric raccoon monk/exorcist continues in William of Newbury #3. The issue is bookended by William and his thief (But possibly becoming more pious.) companion Winnie dealing with an unquiet spirit in a churchyard in Scotland, but mainly digs into the backstory of William and his more serious brother Edward, who keeps trying to get him on trial from the church. Oeming uses a sickly green palette and light inking to show the half-remembered past and show that Edward thinks that he and William don’t have souls and were swapped out with the children of fairies. This sets up William’s motivation as he fights supernatural beings to be worthy of having a soul and going to heaven one day like Angel from Buffy the Vampire Slayer, but more animal and less vampire. Michael Oeming uses a different kind of art style in William of Newbury, more Mignola and less Toth, and combined with its sheer weirdness, it continues to be an enjoyable series. Overall: 7.8 Verdict: Buy

Grommets #3 (Image) – Rick and Brian get way too high, skip school, and strike out with their crushes in Grommets #3 from Rick Remender, Brian Posehn, and Brett Parson. This issue doubles down on the gross-out humor with Brian and Rick scoring some weed from a Spencer’s Gifts’ employee, but having nothing to smoke it with except a really suspicious soda can in the alley. Parson and colorist Moreno Dinisio really nail the overstimulation of mixing substances and arcades throughout the issue before mellowing out with a beautiful bonding moment between Brian and Rick. The shenanigans and pitfalls keep Grommets entertaining, but their friendship and the period accurate visuals is the heart of the series. Overall: 8.1 Verdict: Buy

Preview: The Grommets #3

The Grommets #3

(W) Rick Remender, Brian Posehn (A) Moreno Dinisio (A/CA) Brett Parson
In Shops: Jul 31, 2024
SRP: $3.99

A house party plan is hatched on a ditch day at the arcade when Rick and Brian take their shot at the girl of their dreams, but will Liberty Spike Mike’s defiance of Nancy Reagan make their dreams go up in smoke?

Grommets #3

Take a Ditch Day and Join the Party in Grommets #3

Image Comics has released a sneak peek of the shenanigans to come in Grommets #3 by writer Rick Remender, fan-comedian and writer Brian Posehn, art by Brett Parson, and colorist Moreno Dinisio.

In Grommets #3, a house party plan is hatched on a ditch day at the arcade when Rick and Brian take their shot at the girl of their dreams.

Grommets takes readers on the ’80s-infused journey of a young Rick who starts a new school and tries desperately to find his place amongst the cliques of foul-mouthed high schoolers of the Sacramento suburbs. Skateboarding provides him with an opportunity to make some ‘cool’ new friends—but he soon finds out that they may not be as ‘cool’ as he (or they!) first thought.

Perfect for fans of Freaks & Geeks and Dazed and ConfusedGrommets is at once an authentic look at punk rock and skater culture and a snapshot of the generation that turned skating into a worldwide phenomenon. It’s a heartfelt story that follows two friends from troubled homes as they navigate their damage in an era when no one cared.

Grommets #3 Cover A by Parson (Lunar Code 0524IM306) and Grommets #3 Cover B 1:10 copy incentive by Parson (Lunar Code 0524IM307) will hit shelves on Wednesday, July 31.

Grommets #3

Mini Reviews: Dungeons and Dimwits, Something is Killing the Children, and Grommets!

SOMETHING IS KILLING THE CHILDREN #38

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.

Logan

Dungeons and Dimwits #1 (Dren Productions) – This is a comic by James Mascia and Kodaris about a group of kids who get sucked into the world of Dungeons and Dragons. There are some silly jokes about the player characters fighting enemies way above their level, but the visuals are amateurish with kind of chibi style characters with one single, intense facial expression. Also, not all the jokes land in 2024, especially ones about a cast member always wanting to play a female character, ending up as one, and that being “Ew gross”. I love a good fantasy comedy series, but this doesn’t get the job done despite an insane cliffhanger. Overall: 5.0 Verdict: Pass

Something is Killing the Children #38 (BOOM! Studios) – This arc of Something is Killing the Children, “Road Stories”, has featured standalone stories from Erica Slaughter’s past, and issue 38 is no exception. Erica is passed out in a kid’s treehouse for most of the issue, and James Tynion and Werther Dell’Edera create suspense by keeping you in the dark if the monster is still around. SiKtC #38 provides an outsider’s view on Erica and her work with a few creepy moments from the plush she carries around. The last third of the issue start to show that she’s beginning to care about the people who she saves from monsters instead of getting the job done like when she helps even out the kids’ older sister’s hair after they made a mess of it with scissors. “Road Stories” has definitely been a “breather arc” after the intense New Mexico storyline, but SiKtC continues to be a solid, character driven horror book. Overall: 8.0 Verdict: Buy

Grommets #2 (Image) – From the first page of a bedroom plastered with punk rock and Marvel Comics posters, Rick Remender, Brian Posehn, and Brett Parson continue to bathe in (occasionally gory) nostalgia in Grommets #2. Rick and Brian skate or die throughout Sacramento, actually meet some girls, and savor some Imperial phase Taco Bell. (Pre-Chihuahua/Enchirito era.) in the latest installment of this slice of life series. The scripting and dialogue feels like two buddies hanging out and trying to bust each other’s chops with Rick and Brian not being at a stage in their friendship where they can bare their souls about the deeper things in life. (Plus they’re teenage boys living in Reagan’s America.) The Jens (Badass female skaters) are a great addition to the supporting cast, especially Jen 2, who is ACAB personified. Grommets #2 is funny, scary, and even triumphant once Rick gets more confident at skating and continues to nail how epic every day as a kid used to feel. Overall: 8.5 Verdict: Buy

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