Showing posts with label artist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artist. Show all posts

Friday, 19 October 2012

Check Out Quesada's Marvel NOW! Variants

Marvel's Chief Creative Officer and superstar artist Joe Quesada is delivering the goods on some Marvel NOW! variant covers for All-New X-Men, Thor: God of Thunder, Fantastic Four, and Iron Man. Each variant has got a regular version and a sketch version, and all are pretty boss.

Check out which Marvel NOW! books we're most excited for!

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Joey is IGN's Comics Editor and a comic book creator himself. Follow Joey on Twitter @JoeyEsposito, or find him on IGN at Joey-IGN. He loves superhero pets so hard.


Source : ign[dot]com

Wednesday, 12 September 2012

Meet the New Thunderbolts

Last week, Marvel showed off this teaser:

Now, they've revealed over at Newsarama that writer Daniel Way and artist Steve Dillon will be relaunching Thunderbolts for Marvel NOW! with quite an impressive new line-up. The team will be led by Red Hulk ("Thunderbolt" Ross!) and have membership by Elektra, Venom, Deadpool, and Frank Castle himself, the Punisher. I've never considered Frank much of a team player, but perhaps the outcome of Punisher: War Zone will be leaving him in a different place.

In any case, the book's editor, Jordan White, told Newsarama, "T-Bolts has gone through quite a few shifts over the years, some more radical than others. This one is going to be a pretty big change in that none of the characters or plotlines from the previous series are carrying over. It's a new take, but one that is grounded in that original idea that has always been woven into the fabric of the series, the hero/villain dichotomy, and characters bridging the gap between them. If you look at our roster, every one of our characters is a character who started out as a villain in their first appearances but who has, over the years, made the shift to hero... or at least antihero."

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Now that one of the books behind the latest teasers has been revealed, I would expect to hear about the rest very soon. I should note that it's unclear whether or not this will have any effect on Jeff Parker's Dark Avengers series, which was renamed from Thunderbolts earlier this year.

Joey is IGN's Comics Editor and a comic book creator himself. Follow Joey on Twitter, or find him on IGN. He loves superhero pets so hard.


Source : ign[dot]com

Wednesday, 8 August 2012

Scarlet Spider #8 Review

Scarlet Spider suffered a significant blow recently with the departure of artist Ryan Stegman. Luckily, the series is weathering the creative team shift as well as can be expected. The book is no longer the looker it once was, but it still offers a fun and enjoyable look at the newest member of the Spider-Man club.

Having set up shop in Houston, it was probably inevitable that Kaine would bump into the Texas Twisters sooner or later. Christopher Yost offers up a fun battle between Scarlet Spider and this obscure little team. While this issue offers a textbook case of heroes battling each other before agreeing to unite against a common foe, Kaine's tendency to duck and run and subverts the usual outcome. His aversion to all other superheroes is a continued source of amusement.

On a deeper level, the involvement of Roxxon offers Kaine a much bigger and more looming threat to deal with. His quirky, slightly dark relationship with new fling Zoe Walsh isn't as much a focus of this issue as I would have liked, but it does come into play again towards the end. Any attempt to force Kaine to deal with human ties and personal drama is a good one, at the moment.

Khoi Pham is doing a serviceable job replacing Stegman. Certainly, his work lacks the fluidity and energy of Stegman's pencils, but the storytelling is generally clear and presentable. Tom Palmer's inks help smooth the normally jagged edges of Pham's work, and the overall stylistic shift isn't as dramatic as it might have been. As long as Yost keeps steering his hero in interesting directions like this and dragging him into uncomfortable situations, the series can withstand a few visual snafus.

Jesse is a writer for IGN Comics and various other IGN channels. Follow Jesse on Twitter, or find him on IGN.


Source : ign[dot]com

Wednesday, 25 July 2012

Assassin’s Creed: The Chain Review




The writer/artist duo of Cameron Stewart and Karl Kerschl caught lightning in a bottle with the first Assassin’s Creed comic series, The Fall. It’s exceptionally rare to find a comic based off a video game that’s not only tolerable, but great. Yet, somehow Stewart and Kerschl were able to perform that miracle, offering up a comic series that catered to both the hardcore Assassin’s Creed crowd and newcomers alike with a set of engaging characters occupying a fantastical world that’s worth diving into headfirst like it’s a pile of hay.


Now, Stewart and Kerschl have returned for a follow-up book called The Chain, which is a direct sequel to The Fall and continues the adventures of assassin Nikolai Orelov in early 1900s Russia and Templar Daniel Cross in modern times. The most interesting aspect of The Chain is that it inverts the dynamics between our lead characters and the people who surround them. Whereas in The Fall, Orelov was shown as a man surrounded by people who loved him and Cross was cast as the loner with no one to turn to, The Chain displays Orelov as the man now on his own and on the run while Cross is treated as sort of a messiah figure for the rest of the Templar order to aspire to. It’s an engaging dynamic shift that puts into perspective how important the people around you are in shaping what kind of person you turn out to be.


But while Daniel Cross might be showered with praise at every turn, The Chain is very much a tragedy on all accounts. This is a story that covers the severing of a family and a man who is truly lost and struggling to find his identity. For Assassin’s Creed fans, these themes are nothing new, but Stewart and Kerschl wrap them in a package that feels fresh while still adding to the overall mythology of the Assassin’s Creed franchise. Newcomers to the book should also be able to step away satisfied with the story at hand, even if they aren’t diehard Assassin’s Creed fans. The themes, morals, and delicate character work on display from Stewart and Kerschl are what make this story worth experiencing, not just that it’s tied to the lore of Assassin’s Creed.


Assassin's Creed Returns to Comics


From a visual point of view, The Chain looks just as gorgeous as The Fall before it. Both Stewart and Kerschl share art duties here, and the final results are quite breathtaking. It’s clear both artists gave everything they had to this project and therefore every page is a beauty to ogle over. The art of The Chain is dynamic, expressive, and a great complement to the story at hand, capturing the energetic highs of the book’s actions sequences and the depressing lows of a family being torn apart.


The one area of The Chain that might irk some is the very subdued finale. The book doesn’t conclude on an explosive high note, but instead chooses to end on a quiet moment to drive home its point. I’ll be honest, I read the book’s final few panels and flipped the page fully expecting more story. Denied. The Chain just kind of stops, leaving the reader to his thoughts about the true intention of the book’s final scene. If you like experiencing fiction that leaves you with a carrot on a stick to chew on far after you’ve finished it, then The Chain’s ending should satisfy. But if you want a definitive stamp on these characters, you’re not going to get it here.


The Chain is absolutely a worthy follow-up to The Fall. Cameron Stewart and Karl Kerschl have done a fantastic job grooming these characters in the vast Assassin’s Creed universe. Better yet, like The Fall before it, both Assassin’s Creed fanatics and newcomers can enjoy The Chain. Whether you fall into the former or the latter camp, The Chain offers a great narrative, engaging characters and beautiful art worth buying into.


You can order a copy of Assassin’s Creed: The Chain through Ubisoft’s Ubi Workshop online store.







Erik is a writer for IGN's Comics channel and co-host of the IGN Assemble! podcast. You can follow Erik on Twitter, or find him here at IGN. Fair warning: prepare for suspect shenanigans.



Source : ign[dot]com

Monday, 23 July 2012

Godzilla #3 Preview




Writer Duane Swierczynski and artist Simon Gane are doing their best to put Boxer and his Monster Kill Crew through some punishment, and issue #3 finds them continuing their fight against Anguirus in Scotland. Judging from these preview pages, things aren't looking so hot.


Godzilla #3 goes on sale Wednesday.


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Joey is IGN's Comics Editor and a comic book creator himself. Follow Joey on Twitter, or find him on IGN. He will love Star Wars until the end of his days.



Source : ign[dot]com