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Around the Tubes

Scarlett #1

It was new comic book day yesterday! What’d you all get? What’d you like? Dislike? 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.

Smash Pages – Nominees announced for this year’s Reuben Award – Congrats to all!

The Beat – Dystopian future car comic PETROL HEAD optioned for film adaptation – So many comics optioned.

Reviews

Comicbook – Cult of the Lamb #1
Atomic Junk Shop – In Utero
Comicbook – My Adventures with Superman #1
Comicbook – Scarlett #1

Mini Reviews: Petrol Head, Sinister Sons, one of the best debuts of the year, and more!

Sinister Sons #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.

Logan

If You Find This, I’m Already Dead #1 (Dark Horse) – Despite its wordy title, If You Find This I’m Already Dead (IYFTIAD) #1 is a thrilling take on parallel worlds from Matt Kindt, Dan McDaid, and Bill Crabtree. Robin is a reporter joining a US military detachment in another reality called Terminus. Things go FUBAR pretty early, and Robin and soldier Gil instantly go into survival mode. Kindt’s captions feel journalistic, but disappear during confusing and frightening moments like when Robin and Gil get the aid of one of the Terminus natives to try to escape via the sewer. As the story unfolds, it turns into a narrative of oppressor and oppressed just like our own world. There are no clear answers or heroes, and the comic ends on one hell of a cliffhanger. McDaid and Crabtree’s art brings gritty documentary realism to a fantastic environment, and they go for authentic emotions instead of being lost in the trippiness. IYFTIAD is easily one of the strongest first issues I’ve read in 2024. Overall: 9.1 Verdict: Buy

Petrol Head #4 (Image) – Before getting into the continuing adventures of the motley crew Lupa, Sid the Sat Nav (I need him as a GPS voice), Dave, and Petrol Head, Rob Williams and Pye Parr begin Petrol Head #4 with a big picture look at the dystopian world of the comic. Basically, they tested the ozone bubbles on prisoners giving them a chance at freedom before letting them die in isolation. This scene adds a layer of darkness and a sense urgency to Petrol Head #4 as our protagonists scramble around looking for an opening to sprinkle nanobots and cleanse the environment. The tone might be dark, but Parr’s vehicle designs continue to be unique, and Williams’ gallows humor keep the story moving. For example, there’s the racer Hybrid whose only good stat is breaking. Petrol Head #4 definitely has a bleak tone, but it’s counterbalanced by a colorful cast of characters that find the laughs in an apocalyptic surveillance state that seems like a heightened version of our own. Overall: 8.1 Verdict: Buy

Sinister Sons #1 (DC Comics) Peter Tomasi, David Lafuente, and Tamra Bonvillain‘s new series starring the sons of Sinestro and General Zod is a nice little amuse bouche. The basic premise is that Sinson and Lor-Zod want to step out of their father’s shadows and making something for themselves. So far, that something is a lot of posturing and brattiness, but it makes for amusing reading especially with Lafuente’s cartoon-y visuals. Because I’ve been reading Kneel before Zod and not the current Green Lantern series, I have a better handle on Lor-Zod’s character versus Sinson, but Tomasi’s humorous script covers a multitude of sins. I do miss when a #1 on a comic didn’t come with added homework though. Overall: 7.4 Verdict: Read (I purchased a copy on Amazon.)

Brett

Fall of the House of X #2 (Marvel) – Overall, I haven’t been a fan of the Krakoan age of the X-Men. The concept, I think, went against the basics of the X-Men, though there was potential. So, I’m reading the “Fall” of that era mostly to see what comes next, hoping it all gets back to the X-Men I enjoyed in the past (and it’s ok if it doesn’t). Fall of the House of X #2 is one half of the closing chapter of this era, delivering the over the top event the X-Men is known for. Good or bad, Fall of the House of X #2 feels a lot like the classic events of the 90s, with a slightly choppy narrative where it feels like key moments are missed in its storytelling and instead the focus is on the spectacle. The issue is full of it, with Polaris front and center kicking ass. The issue overall is entertaining and as a slice of the overall story, it works, but on its own, it feels like an empty summer blockbuster. Overall: 7.0 Verdict: Read

Graphic Policy’s Top Comic Picks this Week!

Rise of the Powers of X #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.

Disney Villains: Cruella De Vil #1 (Dynamite Entertainment) – Cruella feels like she’s been maligned due to that whole dog thing… and that alone has us excited to check out this new series. Dynamite’s Disney Villains line has been excellent so far.

Jennifer Blood: Battle Diary #2 (Dynamite Entertainment) – Nazi punching. Nuff said.

Lunar New Year Love Story (First Second) – A new graphic novel where Gene Luen Yang is involved? Yeah, that’s an auto read and suggestion.

Masterpiece #2 (Dark Horse) – The first issue was fantastic, focusing on the daughter of two thieves and the person who wants revenge that they stole from.

Petrol Head #3 (Image Comics) – Great art. Interesting world. Just solid sci-fi.

Rebel Moon: House of the Bloodaxe #1 (Titan Comics) – A tie-in to the Zack Snyder film. We’re told it’s a must read if you’re interested in the film.

Rise of the Powers of X #1 (Marvel) – It’s the fall of Krakoa and the X-Men fighting back in this second main series that will lead into what’s next for the Marvel line. Here’s hoping this series kicks off a bit better than Fall of the House of X which left us… wanting.

Transformers #4 (Skybound) – The series has been planting its flag in how it wants to stand out from what has come before while at the same time honoring what has come before.

Ultimate Spider-Man #1 (Marvel) – The first ongoing series to launch out of the new Ultimate Universe. We’re excited to see how it stands out and differs from what has come before and what’s currently going on in the 616.

Wolverine #41 (Marvel) – We’ve been promised a brutal fight between Wolverine and Sabretooth!

Zorro: Man of the Dead #1 (Massive) – New Zorro from Sean Gordon Murphy? Yeah, we’re intrigued by this.

Mini Reviews: Petrol Head and Thunderbolts!

Thunderbolts #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.

Logan

Petrol Head #2 (Image)Rob Williams and Pye Parr‘s Petrol Head continues to be a damn good dystopian driving/racing comic in its second installment. The book runs the gamut tonally from heart-rending emotion (Protagonist Lupa saying farewell to her mom in an opening flashback) to silly fun with Sid the Cockney Sat Nav generally being a comedic gem. Hey, the world is fucked, and your dad is badly injured, but at least you’ve got hologram Michael Caine giving you directions, guvna. Petrol Head #2 has adrenaline-filled action with cool vehicle designs from Parr and a great sense of humor, and I look forward to what this dystopian comic has to offer in 2024. Overall: 8.1 Verdict: Buy

Thunderbolts #1 (Marvel) – With a lineup tying into the 2025 film Thunderbolts, Collin Kelly, Jackson Lanzing, and Geraldo Borges revive one of Marvel’s best concepts of the 90s and connect it to their recent Captain America run. Unfortunately, I haven’t read the run and had no idea what OXE is (Sounds like a Secret Empire ripoff) and why Sharon Carter was wearing a skull mask. The comic is mostly a done-in-one of the Thunderbolts taking out a Nazi podcaster Red Skull out, and Borges makes the fight scenes electric, but I feel like this story was done a lot better by Ed Brubaker and Steve Epting back in the day (And probably by Steve Englehart and company better even earlier in the day) I do like the self-awareness that like fascism, the Red Skull will come back in some kind of incarnation, and the overall kicking of Nazi ass is enjoyable. However, Thunderbolts #1 is a little impenetrable for folks who haven’t been following this side of the Marvel Universe for the past couple years. Overall: 5.9 Verdict: Pass

Graphic Policy’s Top Comic Picks this Week!

Homicide: The Graphic Novel Part Two

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.

Batman/Santa Claus: Silent Knight #1 (DC Comics) – Batman and Santa teaming up. Nuff said.

Bloodrik #1 (Image Comics) – The art for this one caught our eye in what seems like a fantasy series taken to 11.

Faceless and the Family #2 (Oni Press) – The art of this series is amazing and that reason alone demands you get it!

Homicide: The Graphic Novel Vol. 2 (First Second) – The first volume of the adaptation of the book was amazing and we expect no less from the second. Crime buffs, this is a must.

Invasive #1 (Oni Press) – Cullen Bunn and Jesus Hervas team for what ounds like a disturbing new horror series about medicine and surgery. We’re already having nightmares about this.

Petrol Head #2 (Image Comics) – Cool world and design had us hooked after the debut. Now we’re hoping the series continues with the cool. Petrol Head and Lupa gun it for the SmogZone border with half the O-Zone’s security drones and robo cops on their trail.

Sentry #1 (Marvel) – With the character rumored to be making his Marvel debut, this new series feels a bit “Return of Superman” but it’ll clearly set up whatever is coming down to road for the MCU.

Thunderbolts #1 (Marvel) – Bucky Barnes leading a team to take on Marvel’s heavy hitters? Yes please!

Transformers #3 (Skybound) – The series has been solid so far with this new take on the classic property. It’s familiar but does things slightly different than the Gen-1 we remember.

Mini Reviews: Zawa, Petrol Head, and G.O.D.S.!

Petrol Head #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.

Logan

Zawa + the Belly of the Beast #1 (BOOM! Studios) – In Zawa #1, writer/artist Michael Dialynas puts a colorful and unique spin on the dystopian genre. He crafts a world centered around processed food and a feast honoring a corrupt mayor that screams factory town, but has a little bit of a Nintendo aesthetic. For example, the mayor looks like a Kirby baddie. The protagonists of Zawa run a bakery and try to scrounge together fresh food and remember a time when food was art and not just convenience. It all leads to some good trouble involving the aforementioned beast of the comic who is this series’ wild card. Dialynas handles coloring and lettering duties using colored font any time a character mentions a “rare” ingredient as well as bursts of brightness any time they have a breakthrough. The whole thing ends up being a visually charming version of a well-trodden genre. Overall: 8.2 Verdict: Buy

Petrol Head #1 (Image Comics)Petrol Head is the other new dystopia series that was launched this week, but it’s very different from Zawa. Rob Williams and Pye Parr channel classic 2000 AD comics with a day-glo sheen in this tale of domed cities, retired, gas (Or petrol for the Brits) powered racing robots, and sassy robot birds. I really enjoyed the flashback scene of Petrol Head in his prime, and the excitement of the racing scenes pair nicely with Williams’ satirical script of how the world is basically rigged. Parr’s designs for the different robots have both form and function, and it’s a sheer thrill ride to see Petrol head run over the robot cops from the O-Zone. (Yes, there are lots of great puns in this comic too.) Petrol Head #1 sets the table for this brave new world with action, hijinks, and a pitch black sense of humor instead of gloms of exposition, and I’m interested to see how this rag tag bang takes down the authoritarian corporations that run their world. Overall: 8.4 Verdict: Buy

G.O.D.S. #2 (Marvel) Jonathan Hickman and Valerio Schiti continue to cut off G.O.D.S. from the main Marvel Universe (Bye bye cameos) while having the bent of the series completely transcend and undergird it. And the final result is fantasy in a very sci-fi way as Aiko takes her soon-to-be sorcerer’s apprentice Mia to the Library of Worlds and offers this struggling, underprivileged college student a way to achieve. Even though G.O.D.S. is full of high concepts and powerful beings, Schiti’s skill with facial expression grounds the story and really let me connect with Mia. Of course, when you’re failing at life, the crazy white haired magic lady and library with supernatural beings might actually be appealing. Some other highlights of G.O.D.S. #2 are the flatness of the dialogue that Jonathan Hickman writes for Mia’s friends and the boringness of her life compared with the world of the Centivars. What sets apart G.O.D.S. from other Chosen One narratives other than the class consciousness is that Mia isn’t set up as some kind of messiah figure, but just gets to live an interesting life as the series progresses. Overall: 8.0 Verdict: Buy

Petrol Head #1 hits the gas for a familiar but entertaining start

Petrol Head #1

In a climate crisis-ravaged future metropolis, an old, grumpy, obsolete, smoke-belching, cigar-chomping, Hotrod-Racing Robot is one 12-year-old girl’s only hope. Together, can they outrace the chasing Robo-Cops with an invention that might just save humanity? Petrol Head #1 kicks off a race that feels familiar but delivers it in a hell of a fun way.

Written by Rob Williams, Petrol Head #1 delivers an opening chapter that is general a story we’ve seen before, but one that’s just done so well. It’s a future whose environment has been destroyed. The masses are generally distracted from the dystopia that surrounds them. And, all hope lies in the hands of a scientist and his daughter. Something is up which forces them on the run, them being pursued, and a former racer to help them escape.

It’s a concept done again and again (scientist being pursued and needing help) but Petrol Head #1 just does it so well. The build up, the characters, the world, the pacing, it’s all done at a fantastic level. It’s entertainment that leans into its racing nature and builds such a wonderful, strange, world. It’s pop culture consumerism at so many levels.

Williams’ world is just solid, with such well thought out detail, it’s hard to not appreciate it all. The racing has such a great background to it, you get a sense of this world from it. It’s the modern gladiator games, built to suck in and distract the people from the world around it. It’s very much a reflection of our on media and consumerism, irony as it’s exactly that delivering the story. It lays its cards on the table building things up to the end where you just want to see some awesome driving.

All of this is helped by Pye Parr’s art which is top notch. The design of the characters is so unique and solid and world feels like something that’s been thought out. This isn’t just some simple characters with a background, every detail feels like it has purpose, and there’s a lot of detail, especially for the characters who pop on the page. The robots especially are full of personality and every one feels unique.

Petrol Head #1 is a hell of a start and one of the better of the year. The story is familiar but the execution of this debut is so good. This is one that stands out this week and has us excited to see what’s next.

Story: Rob Williams Art: Pye Parr
Color: Pye Parr Letterer: Pye Parr
Story: 8.75 Art: 8.75 Overall: 8.75 Recommendation: Buy

Image Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: Zeus ComicsTFAWKindle

Around the Tubes

It’s new comic book day! What are you all getting? What are you excited for? Sound off in the comments below. While you wait for shops to open, here’s some comic related news and reviews from around the web to start the day.

The Beat – Crunchyroll joins forces with Walmart for Fan Shops – It’s intriguing.

Reviews

CBR – Canary #1
How to Love Comics – Petrol Head #1
Comicbook – Superman ’78: The Metal Curtain #1

Superman '78: The Metal Curtain #1

Graphic Policy’s Top Comic Picks this Week!

Mech Cadets #4

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.

Batman #139 (DC Comics) – We’ve been a bit iffy about the current run of Batman but hopefully a new arc with the Joker will make things a bit more interesting.

Birds of Prey #3 (DC Comics) – The series has been so much fun so far and we’re expecting more of the same.

Count Dante #5 (Scout Comics) – The series has been great so far with its mix of camp, hyperbole, and fantastic art. What’s fact? What’s fiction? Who knows, it’s all entertaining.

Dark Ride #9 (Skybound) – Who is Halloween, and what is the real story behind the Princess of Devil Land? When given the choice to claim her throne, can Sam trust his sister in his time of need?

Mech Cadets #4 (BOOM! Studios) – The series has a been a lot of fun with giant robots and aliens, all for readers of all ages.

Petrol Head #1 (Image Comics) – In a climate crisis-ravaged future metropolis, an old, grumpy, obsolete, smoke-belching, cigar-chomping, HOTROD-RACING ROBOT is one 12-year-old girl’s only hope. Together, can they outrace the chasing Robo-Cops with an invention that might just save humanity?

Punisher #1 (Marvel) – A new Punisher is dispensing justice… really, it’s a tale of revenge with solid action.

Superman ’78: The Metal Curtain #1 (DC Comics) – The Soviet Union looks to crush Superman’s image with a creation of their own built by their own might and forged by their own power!

Thanos #1 (Marvel) – The Mad Titan descends upon Earth to retrieve something he has lost. And the Illuminati must band together to stop him, because they’re the ones who hid it from him!

Transformers #2 (Skybound) – The integration of G.I. Joe begins here!

Zawa + the Belly of the Beast #1 (BOOM! Studios) – The art has sucked us in on this one. It looks so fantastic.

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