Tag Archives: wesley dodds: the sandman

Preview: Wesley Dodds: The Sandman #3 (of 6)

Wesley Dodds: The Sandman #3 (of 6)

(W) Robert Venditti (A) Riley Rossmo
In Shops: Dec 12, 2023
SRP: $3.99

Wesley’s search for answers brings him to the city morgue as he learns the man who broke into his home didn’t die from the fire. But the clues he finds land him face-to-face with the true villain, and he’s already begun using the Sandman gear. Enter: the Fog!

Wesley Dodds: The Sandman #3 (of 6)

Preview: Wesley Dodds: The Sandman #2 (of 6)

Wesley Dodds: The Sandman #2 (of 6)

(W) Robert Venditti (A) Riley Rossmo
In Shops: Nov 14, 2023
SRP: $3.99

Wesley’s journal of deadly gases is out there in the city, in the hands of a villain who knows he’s the Sandman! Can Wesley solve the mystery of who broke into his home before these noxious weapons are unleashed on the world, or is Sandman fated to fade away into the mists?

Wesley Dodds: The Sandman #2 (of 6)

Around the Tubes

Nights #1

It’s one of two new comic book days. What are you excited for? 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.

The Beat – DUCKS and THE NICE HOUSE ON THE LAKE make Fnac-France Inter Prix de BD Selection – Congrats!

The Comics Journal – Inside the Canada Comics Open Library with Rotem Anna Diamant & Jordan Reg. Aelick – Very cool.

Kotaku – Spider-Man 2 Is The Fastest-Selling PlayStation Studios Game Ever – Not too surprising.

Reviews

CBR – Nights #1
CBR – Wesley Dodds: The Sandman #1

Mini Reviews: Wesley Dodds, Superior Spider-Man, and American Psycho return

Wesley Dodds: The Sandman #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

American Psycho #1 (Sumerian) – The American Psycho comic from Mike Calero and Piotr Kowalski reads like a hybrid of the original American Psycho film and its not as memorable sequel American Psycho 2. One half of the story shows Patrick Bateman’s killing spree from the POV of private eye Donald Kimball (Played by Willem Dafoe in the film), and the other sets up a new killer in 2011 with young woman Charlene Carruthers as the protagonist. Calero nails the self-satisfied style of narration in the film while Kowalski lays out the kills (real and imagined) in a suitably graphic way. Calero digs into some of the homerotic elements of the source material with the way Kimball gazes at Bateman and appreciates his body, especially when he’s killing. There’s some fun voyeurism going on. However, my main issue with this comic is that beyond the violence, axes, and basic commentary on men being creepy along with copious drug use is that the dual plot lines don’t really intersect. Because of this, American Psycho might read better as a trade paperback. Overall: 7.4 Verdict: Read

Wesley Dodds: Sandman #1 (DC Comics)Robert Venditti, Riley Rossmo, and Ivan Plascencia breathe new life into the original Sandman in an action-packed, social-commentary filled first issue. Even though Sandman #1 takes place entirely in 1940, war, inequality, and fear are conflict that every era has to deal with as Wesley Dodds struggles to use his privilege and scientific know-how to make the world a better place, both at home and potentially abroad. Rossmo’s angular style fits the surreal nature of a comic starring a nightmare-plagued, gas mask wearing, and sleep gun wielding superhero. The cold open of the comic is especially memorable with a gas mask silhouette taking up the page and causing a crime lord to squeal. With his mix of competency and insecurities and hate for Nazis and the 1%, Dodds is a protagonist that’s easy to latch onto, and Sandman #1 is a solid introduction to the classic Golden Age crime fighter. Overall: 8.6 Verdict: Buy

Brett

Superior Spider-Man Returns #1 (Marvel) – I’m a fan of writer Dan Slott‘s original run of Superior Spider-Man. The concept of Doc Ock being in Peter’s body delivered something a bit different and added some more depth to the classic villain. It created a path that was interesting with things I felt like I never saw in a Spider-Man comic. Superior Spider-Man Returns #1 takes us back to that time as Doc Ock in modern times attempts to remember some details of something he did. With a new series coming, the issue really just comes off as a really bad “0” issue. With a story by Slott and script by Christos Gage, the issue feels like recent Marvel releases that fill in missing time. The art is packed with artists including Mark Bagley, Ryan Stegman, Humberto Ramos, Giuseppe Camuncoli, ink by John Dell, JP Mayer, and Victor Olazaba, and color by Edgar Delgado with lettering by Joe Caramagna. Despite a movie crawl of artists, the comic is pretty good in the visual department with just a few bumps along the way. I was excited for what’s to come but the issue pretty much killed that adding not all that interesting and instead just feeling like an addition to that run that wasn’t needed and whose end result could have been handled a different way. It’s an issue that didn’t need to exist and the story that’s to come could have just given us everything here easily. Overall: 6.0 Verdict: Pass

Graphic Policy’s Top Comic Picks this Week!

American Psycho #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.

A Haunted Girl #1 (Image Comics) – Cleo, an adopted 16-year-old Japanese-American whose depression drove her to near-suicide, is trying unsuccessfully to reintegrate back into her old life. But her struggles are just beginning as she encounters an increasingly terrifying succession of ghosts.

American Psycho #1 (Massive Publishing/Sumerian) – Witness the greatest hits of Patrick’s murderous rampage while exploring new revelations in the world of American Psycho. On that, we’re dubious, but it’s also the journey of an all-new psychopath as social media obsessed millennial. That, we’re more intrigued by.

Batman and Robin #2 (DC Comics) – The first issue did a great job of balancing superheroics and family drama and we’re expecting more!

Batman: City of Madness #1 (DC Comics) – Writer/artist Christian Ward takes on Batman, nuff said.

Capwolf and the Howling Commandos #1 (Marvel) – It’s such a silly concept but perfect for the season.

Destiny Gate #1 (Image Comics/Top Cow Production) – Life, for the most part, is the product of the decisions you make. For some, a “wrong” decision or two (or more) leads to a crossroads on the other side of the Destiny Gate.

Earthdivers #11 (IDW Publishing) – Mission isn’t accomplished so it’s on to 1776 and an attempt to cave out a better future in the Declaration of Independence.

Mech Cadets #3 (BOOM! Studios) – The series has been a fantastic reintroduction to the world that mixes up military/giant robot/alien genres with youthful energy.

Midlife Hero at Fifty #1 (Image Comics) – After 25 years in the LAFD, Ruben’s firmly in the middle of an unremarkable life…until his new wife gets pregnant and a random act of courage reveals that Ruben is FIREPROOF!

Nights #1 (Image Comics) – Supernatural creatures exist among the common folk, and America is comprised of just 31 states. Ok, that’s enough to get us to check this out.

Operation Sunshine #1 (Dark Horse) – A group of young, alienated vampires known as “bugs” plot to steal a magical object from ancient monstrous vampires to turn themselves back to human.

Scarlett Couture: The Munich File #3 (Titan Comics) – Sexy pop spy action!

Superior Spider-Man Returns #1 (Marvel) – We’re fans of the original run with the character and intrigued to see how this return happens.

Wesley Dodds: The Sandman #1 (DC Comics) – The classic Sandman is back and must get his journal with all of the other failed and more deadly gas formulas back.

Preview: Wesley Dodds: The Sandman #1 (of 6)

Wesley Dodds: The Sandman #1 (of 6)

(W) Robert Venditti (A) Riley Rossmo
In Shops: Oct 10, 2023
SRP: $3.99

THE GOLDEN AGE SANDMAN RETURNS IN A NEW NOIR MYSTERY! No one escapes the Sandman’s dark dreams, not even Wesley Dodds himself. After years of testing and experimentation, Wesley perfected his sleep gas as the optimal weapon to fight crime without causing undue harm. But when his journal detailing all his failed and far more deadly formulas is stolen, the Sandman must hunt down the thief and the people in the shadows pulling the strings before the contents of the journal are released!

Wesley Dodds: The Sandman #1 (of 6)

Alan Scott, Jay Garrick, and Wesley Dodds rturn to comics in three new series

DC has revealed three new titles under “The New Golden Age” banner spearheaded by writer Geoff Johns. Alan Scott, Jay Garrick, and Wesley Dodds will star in three six-issue mini-series. Alan Scott: The Green Lantern is by Tim Sheridan and Cian Tormey, Jay Garrick: The Flash by Jeremy Adams and Diego Olortegui, and Wesley Dodds: The Sandman by Rob Venditti and Riley Rossmo. All three will debut in October.

Alan Scott: The Green Lantern will be Alan Scott’s first solo title since 1949. Through a twist in the timeline the series revisits and recontextualizes the origins of the first Green Lantern through the lens of our modern understanding of the man. The story, which begins in the 1930s, is about an old flame – the kind that burns eternal – and the sometimes head-on, single-track collision of our personal and professional lives. This is Alan’s coming-of-age, in which he must embrace the man he is, to become the hero he’s meant to be. In the end, he’ll have gained a greater understanding of himself and his gifts – as he unlocks a new, previously unknown ability that could make him the most powerful Green Lantern in existence!

Alan Scott: The Green Lantern

It’s hard being a parent in Jay Garrick: The Flash, especially when your kid is a speedster! Jay Garrick has been reunited with his long lost daughter, Judy, but figuring out how to connect with her is proving to be difficult. They’ll need to work to find common ground when a mission that started in Jay’s early days as the Flash comes roaring to today. But will The Flash and The Boom be able to thwart a plan that’s been in the works for decades?!

Jay Garrick: The Flash

Wesley Dodds: The Sandman shows the character as a pacifist. He has given up on the hope of a peaceful world, but he hasn’t stopped believing that people can be better to each other, if they’re only given the right tools. Possessing a scientist’s optimism and romanticism, he is convinced that humanity can invent cures for its own ills. Having learned about the battlefield horrors of World War I from his father, he sought to create a sleep gas that would allow for “humane” warfare. During his research, he recorded all of his attempts in his science journal – even those with horribly deadly consequences – swearing to never show them to the world. Now his journal has been stolen, and he must find the culprit and stop them before his deadly mis-inventions fall into the arsenals of the belligerent nations threatening to pull the United States into the next world war.

Wesley Dodds: The Sandman