If I had to imagine the meeting where everyone discussed The Curse of the Crimson Corsair — which is technically the full title of Before Watchmen: Crimson Corsair, the prefix unused for reasons we’ll get…
To look at the collected editions — or the creative teams for that matter — Before Watchmen: Ozymandias and Before Watchmen: Moloch don’t naturally belong together. The former is written by Len Wein and illustrated…
To call Before Watchmen: Dollar Bill superfluous is, in itself, somewhat superfluous. The one-shot, by Len Wein and Steve Rude, wasn’t one of the originally announced titles, and only appeared when things changed behind the…
http://theworkingdraft.com/media/podcasts/BaxterBuildingEp21.mp3 Previously on Baxter Building: Which was the more important event that happened in the previous episode: The arrival of George Perez as artist, or Reed Richards losing his super powers? Both cases can be…
Black Friday, Blue Sunday: Jeff on *Everything* He’s Read in November
- November 29, 2015
- Tagged as: Aaron Cockle, Al Ewing, Asumiko Nakamura, Blue Sunday, Bob Fingerman, Boichi, Chris Claremont, Cocotte, Dan Adkins, David Lapham, Don Newton, Ed Brubaker, Eric Jones, Erica Henderson, Frank Miller, Frazer Irving, Fuuka, Giant-Size Defenders, Gil Kane, Iron Fist, Jeff, Jim Mooney, Jim Starlin, John Byrne, Landry Q. Walker, Len Wein, Manhattan Guardian, Minimum Wage, Monstress, Mystic Comics 70th Anniversary Special, Paper Girls, Paul Cornell, Platinum End, reviews, Ryan Kelly, Ryan North, Sean Phillips, Seven Soldiers, Steve Gerber, Sun-Ken Rock, supergirl: cosmic adventures in the eighth grade, Survivors' Club, Takeshi Obata, The Dark Knight Strikes Again!, The Fade-Out, The Humans, The Shining Knight, The Ultimates, This Damned Band, Tom King, Tony Parker, Tsugumi Ohba, Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, Unfollow, Utsubora: The Story of a Novelist, Vision, Zatanna
Okay, so you survived the American Thanksgiving, Black Friday (apparently also known as “Brown Friday” because of the propensity for people in line to shit in odd places so as not to lose their places…
I have, in the last few months, become oddly obsessed with the ways in which DC’s comics are featuring obvious Marvel analogs, particularly when Scott Lobdell is involved in some way. His current Doomed series…
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