Tag Archives: mayday

Alex de Campi and Tony Parker’s The Brandenburg School for Boys launches on Panel Syndicate

Yes, Alex de Campi, Tony Parker, and Blond are back with the surprise sequel to their Mayday original miniseries from five years ago! Hey, good things take time… Take a trip to The Brandenburg School for Boys now via Panel Syndicate.

It’s May 1972 and CIA officer Jack Hudson is sent to West Berlin as an “illegal,” undercover, to infiltrate a left-wing gang responsible for a wave of bombings and robberies across the Federal Republic of Germany. Walking the tightrope of the gang’s violent paranoia is bad enough… but then, things can always get worse.

Yep, that level of worse. This series has all the explosive action you’ve come to expect from our frenzied trio of creators and you can download and own it for whatever price you want to pay. That’s right, you get to keep the comic and store it in your own private hardware whether you decide to pay for it or not just like all our other series. And it’s all just a click of the mouse away at panelsyndicate.com!

The Brandenburg School for Boys

Mayday Comes to Panel Syndicate

Yep, MAYDAY indeed. The world seems to be reverting back to the (definitely not) happy Cold War days, so what better way to celebrate than with this spy action thriller set in the 70s by the high octane team of Alex de Campi, Tony Parker, and Blond! April 1971. The CIA is handed the espionage coup of the decade when a KGB general defects with a list of all Soviet intelligence assets in Asia. All Jack Hudson has to do is get the general and his microfilm from Hong Kong to California… and keep Palm Springs’ overzealous FBI office from turning everything into a freakshow. All Codename: Felix has to do is kill the defector and get the microfilm back to the USSR, by any means possible. Easy, right? Now throw in a beautiful woman, a fast car, and a whole lot of drugs.

Originally published under Image Comics as a 5 issue miniseries Panel Syndicate presents Mayday in one single 152 page digital collection!

Available now at panelsyndicate.com for whatever price you want to pay, including zero!

Wednesday Comic Rally: Mayday #3

mayday-3It feels like all too often we’re lamenting how our favorite comic series got canceled due to lack of sales and interest. That’s where Wednesday Comic Rally comes in. The point is to spotlight comics that we as a community should be rallying around and most importantly purchasing to make sure they’re here for quite some time.


Three issues in, it’s not too late to check out Mayday by writer Alex De Campi and artist Tony Parker.

A Cold War action-thriller like no other. It’s 1971, and two young Soviet operatives are sent to California to kill a defector and recover top-secret information. As the mission falls apart into a mess of good sex, bad drugs, and ugly violence, the young Russians are faced with a dilemma: they need to rely on each other to escape America, but they must betray each other to survive Russia.

Mayday isn’t just a slick Cold War comics, it’s also a period piece in a time that you just don’t see too many modern comics set. That creates a unique experience that’s currently like no other monthly comic on the market. Parker’s art is fantastic as well giving us at times trippy visuals that nail the vibe and feel of the time period.

It’s a combination that comes together for a fun time and entertaining read that you won’t find anywhere else.


This is where you come in. You can buy Mayday #3 now! It’s available at local comic shops and you can find yours. For those without a local shop you can buy it digitally through comiXology, Kindle, or physical copy at Things From Another World.

Have a comic you think we should be rallying around? Send us a message and maybe it’ll be featured in an upcoming post.

 

 

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.

Review: Mayday #1 and #2

mayday_01-1Blistering action grounded in a historical setting that’s under explored in comics and suddenly feels more timely than ever: the Cold War geopolitics of 1971.

The new Mayday series from writer/letterer/DJ Alex de Campi and artist/visual drug dealer Tony Parker is an exciting and original comic set in the Cold War conflict centered between the US and USSR. Its themes are on the tip of everyone’s tongue once again.

De Campi has described the series as being her “anti-James Bond”, a comic that asks readers how we feel about our spy protagonist when he’s Soviet, not British, when he wears a dingey T-shirt and isn’t a Ken-doll movie star. This is a question that goes largely unanswered in popular espionage stories. How often do we even see Russian protagonists?

De Campi is a serious researcher, a student of the era’s history, the Eastern Bloc and a world traveler herself. This is the experience she brings to this series along with her trademarked levels of earned, intelligent brutality and dark humor.

Between her sharp writing and Tony Parker’s art, Mayday’s pacing is meticulous and riveting no matter how many or how few words are in the frame. You can hear the phone off the hook when they want you to and smell the gasoline.

Parker knows his way around an action sequence. His work is detailed, with realistic anatomy and naturalistic compositions. His style reminds me of the British artists on the legendary 2000AD comics, like Judge Dredd era Brian Bolland. His characters’ faces are individualized, realistically lined and creased and always in motion.

And when the story doesn’t call for realism at all because someone is having an acid-fuelled freak-out?

Well, I’m a lifelong connoisseur of psychedelic art (Yellow Submarine is a perfectly appropriate movie for all ages, I’ll have you know) and I’m a pretty tough critic to please when it comes to contemporary comics artists trying their hand at psychedelia. So many attempts these days go for computer derived effects over aesthetics. I.e. lots of new psychedelic art just isn’t very attractive– compare the new Dr. Strange black light posters to the classic 70s ones with art by Gene Colan, Steve Ditko and Tom Palmer? Realism and computers aren’t necessarily your friends.mayday-2

But Parker’s detailed and highly animated style looks fantastic when he sets it wild while drawing the comic’s key psychedelic sequences. It’s a skill he also used to great effect when drawing his recent This Damned Band series with writer Paul Cornell. Bodies are distorted, polarities reversed, color and lines swirl into a vortex and Blond’s colors really get a chance to pulse with psychedelic energy.

Parker has also clearly been looking at the right concert posters and album art as reference points. Organic forms derived from Art Nouveau (beloved by hippie era artists) smack up against Soviet Constructivist geometric motifs in a major splash page for the ages.

Mayday uses visual representations of music as a form of heightened reality, not just in the acid freakout but in multiple scenes. Careful letters work the song names into the page. The result is hearing and seeing the song on the page in everything from the far-out lettering to the backgrounds.

The series also uses music as a play-along soundtrack (get it on Spotify!) that cements the story in time. This is not an idealized look back at the music that was popular in 1971 filtered through the eyes of a modern critic who knows what’s “good,” only playing classics that stand the test of time. Where’s the realism in that?! De Campi’s playlists feature the popular music of the period that’s aged poorly too. Because they can’t all be Alice Cooper classics, can they?…. To quote issue 1’s back matter “Kieron Gillen includes music because he loves you, I include music because fuck you”.

mayday

Often when art is set in a specific historic era the artist will depend on visual signifiers of the times that call attention to themselves like they were just placed there to tell you the year, yet the clothes and settings will be all wrong– they just haven’t done their homework. You can’t draw a lava lamp and call it a day. The historical setting here feels lived in and researched. This creative team has done that research right down to the clothes the architecture and especially the Kremlin.

There are other details of importance on the pages, like the acknowledgment of brutality directed at bystanders. These often overlooked moments are important to the humanity of the story– like a child standing off-center in the middle of a road after a trucking accident. His or her parent’s dismissed by the CIA agents as “Mexicans” and not worth mentioning. The child is just left there alone on the road as the action passes by.

Overall: 9 Recommendation: Buy

Image Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review

Around the Tubes

mayday01_coveraIt’s election day here in the US! Go, stop reading this, and go vote if you haven’t already. While you figure out where your polling place is, here’s some comic news and reviews from around the web in our morning roundup.

Around the Tubes

Albany Times Union – Presidential candidates in comic books – Some fun history here.

 

Around the Tubes Reviews

Talking Comics – Foolkiller #1

Talking Comics – Mayday #1

The Beat – Revenger

Review: Mayday #1

mayday01_coveraThe mere existence of spies has always captured the public’s imagination. As these people who hide in the shadows do the things, that they believe are for “the greater good”. From shows like Mission Impossible to Man from UNCLE, the spy has always been glamorized as a smooth operator, who always wear a sharp suit and always a lady’s man. I would be remiss, without mentioning what the British brings to the genre, with the iconic James Bond and the long forgotten Carpetbaggers.

With the public’s growing skepticism of movie magic, both TV shows and movies started to scale back on what kept the genre both unbelievable and magical. As the standard of realism started to pervade everything that is entertainment, what would be considered entertainment in the spy genre, became a cross between hardboiled detective and analytical spies. This brought on thinking man heroes like Jack Ryan and Piper Perabo ’s character in Covert Affairs. Then FX, brought some nostalgia and good ole spy craft to the game, with The Americans, combining what everyone loves about the spy genre with some realism sprinkled as they dealt with day to day family issues and the general stress from living dual lives.

This world is recaptured in Alex De Campi’s latest effort at Image, Mayday, it is 1971, and the Cold War, has America and Russia, on edge, wondering what will be the next move of their adversaries, which may very well include sending sleeper agents. We are introduced to Felix and Rose, a deadly duo who have more than assimilated to American life, much like the main characters in The Americans. Their mission is to kill a defector, who was cooperating with the CIA, but a pair of CIA agents are hot on their trail. This is where their youthful indiscretions intrude, they find a group of hippies which get them off track and it seems it will be a matter of time before they are caught.

Overall, a strong effort by the creative team, and I can reveal that a key scene has some influences from both Gaiman and Morrison. The story from De Campi, packs a punch and makes you laugh at the same time, which shows how talented a writer Alex is. The art by Tony Parker and Blond, is striking and lucid, which definitely serves a story that takes place in the 70s. Altogether, a fresh take on a spy caper that will keep the reader yearning for more.

Story: Alex De Campi Art: Tony Parker and Blond
Story: 10 Art: 10 Overall: 10 Recommendation: Buy

Image Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review

Mayday Flies Into Action this November

Writer Alex de Campi teams up with artist Tony Parker and colorist Blond for the Cold War thriller Mayday, an all-new series launching this November from Image Comics.

It’s 1971, and two young Soviet operatives are sent to California to kill a defector and recover top-secret information. As the mission dissolves into a mess of good sex, bad drugs, and ugly violence, the young Russians face a new problem: they’ll need to rely on each other to escape America, but to survive Russia they’ll have to betray each other.

Mayday is a Cold-War action-thriller unlike any other. Get ready.

Mayday #1 Cover A by Tony Parker (Diamond code: SEP160631), as well as Cover B, also by Tony Parker (Diamond code: SEP160632), will hit comic book stores Wednesday, November 2nd.

mayday-1-1

Preview: Mayday #4

MAYDAY #4

Artist: Alex Diotto & Chris Peterson
Writer: Curt Pires
Colors: Dee Cunniffe
Out 7/22/15

A washed-up, drug-addicted screenwriter and a transgender bartender stumble onto a Satanic cult’s plan to sacrifice people all across LA (geomapped in the form of a pentagram, of course) and bring on Armageddon. As our intrepid, damaged heroes embark on a suicide mission to stop the crazy cultists, even they wonder if this is all really happening or if they’re just plain crazy. Probably both. The latest project from Curt Pires sees him teaming with art sensation Chris Peterson for a story that cuts to the very center of Hollywood mythology and depravity itself.

Route 66. The end of the line. Welcome to Black Hole Sun.

MAYDAY #4 1

Preview: Mayday #3

Mayday #3

Artist: Alex Diotto & Chris Peterson
Writer: Curt Pires
Colors: Dee Cunniffe

Rising star writer Curt Pires (Upcoming THE TOMORROWS from Dark Horse & THE FICTION from Boom!) teams up with rising star artist Chris Peterson (GRINDHOUSE from Dark Horse & upcoming BROKEN WORLD from Boom!) to make something truly unique. MAYDAY is a chance to go into the utterly bizarre world that lives in the shadows of Los Angeles.

When issue #1 came out it sold out at Diamond  Black Mask scrambled to get a 2nd printing going for stores. Then the announcement that Tim Kring’s Imperative Entertainment is developing MAYDAY for television has propelled this crazy little book into something even bigger. Issue 2 came out and upped the insanity on every level. This Wednesday issue #3 arrives.

MAYDAY #3 1

Sell-Outs and New Printing Roundup

Check out this week’s announced sell-outs and new printings for comics.

Black Mask Studios

Before it even hit shelves Mayday #1, the crazy little drug fueled cult book, was sold out at Diamond and the buzz was building. With the announcement that Tim Kring’s Imperative Entertainment has plans to develop Mayday for TV the books became even harder to get your hands on.

The Mayday #1 reprint features an all new cover by artist Amancay Nahuelpan. It will be on shelves 6/3, the same day as issue #2.

Mayday #1 Second Printing

Marvel

Marvel Comics’ highly anticipated Secret Wars #1 has sold out. Seven weeks prior to its release date, Marvel had announced that the reality-shaking first issue, one that redefines the classic Marvel characters forever, had sold out — an unprecedented two months before the scheduled in-store date.

secretwars001

Valiant Entertainment

Valiant has announced that Dead Drop #1 (of 4) – the FIRST ISSUE of the new four-issue superhero conspiracy thriller from acclaimed writer Ales Kot and rising star Adam Gorham – has sold out at the distributor level and will soon return with a brand new printing! Look for the second printing June 10th – one week after the next chapter arrives in Dead Drop #2.

DEAD-DROP_001_COVER_SECOND-PRINTINGA psychic dictator, an inhuman robot, a mad scientist, a murderous alien, and a super-powered terrorist are about to try and take over the world…and you’re going to be rooting for them every step of the way in the the Imperium #2 SECOND PRINTING and the Imperium #3 SECOND PRINTING! Arriving in stores on June 3rd alongside the all-new arc beginning in Imperium #5, join New York Times best-selling writer Joshua Dysart and blockbuster artist Doug Braithwaite here as Toyo Harada recruits a new legion of monsters and malcontents to change the world…by any means necessary.

IMPERIUM_002_COVER_SECOND-PRINTING IMPERIUM_003_COVER_SECOND-PRINTING

Go back to the beginning with the Ninjak #1 THIRD PRINTING – the sold-out FIRST ISSUE of new smash-hit series from New York Times best-selling writer Matt Kindt and superstar artists Clay Mann and Butch Guice – and don’t miss Ninjak #2 SECOND PRINTING, both in stores June 3rd!

NINJAK_001_COVER_THIRD-PRINTING NINJAK_002_COVER_SECOND-PRINTING

« Older Entries