Archive for February, 2010

HEROESCON :: Scott Wegener, Bob Almond, Dan Johnson Join Guest List!

February 11, 2010 By: Dustin Harbin Category: Guest List, HeroesCon, NEWS

This week we welcome back three guests to HeroesCon, the Guest List of which is swelling on a twice to thrice-weekly basis–Lord knows where we’re going to seat everybody. Maybe double-decker chairs? We’ve already got our engineers working on it, never-you-mind.

While Atomic Robo‘s Scott Wegener only attended his first HeroesCon last year, he must have had a good time because here he is again, giggling like a schoolgirl. When he’s not working on the Eisner-nominated Atomic Robo, he finds time to squeeze credits like Killer of Demons and the Marvel 70th Anniversary: Human Torch special onto his resume. Clever Scott.

Also joining up this week is our old chum Bob Almond, who among being a longtime industry inker on books from the fan-favorite Black Panther up to more recently Star Trek: The Last Generation and Annihilation: Conquest, is also one of the founders of the Inkwell Awards, which spotlight some of comics best brush-wielders! The Inkwell Awards will also be set up at the convention, so you can find out more and how you can help out there!

Rounding out this update, like bananas and milk on your oatmeal, is writer Dan Johnson,  a North Carolinian who writes Herc and Thor from Antarctic Press. He’s also written comics adaptations of classics including Robinson Crusoe and Oliver Twist; plus scores of articles for magazines like Back Issue, Alter Ego, Scary Monsters, and more!

Welcome back to all three of these guys–more to come tomorrow!

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SPOTLIGHT ON NEW RELEASES :: FEBRUARY 10

February 10, 2010 By: Heroes Online Category: DISCUSS, Opinion, Reviews, Spotlight on New Releases

In which Shawn goes through the New Releases and lets you know which ones she is most excited about!

1) Ramayana Divine Loophole HC

Sanjay Patel illustrates one of the most well known Hindu myths in Ramayana Divine Loophole. It is an absolutely gorgeous book. The bright colors pop off the page and the layouts are fluid and dynamic. Beautifully executed!

2) Tails of the Pet Avengers #1

I really liked Lockjaw and the Pet Avengers. I thought it was fun and light-hearted and it had just the right amount of cheese. Tails of the Pet Avengers is a collection of 6 short stories featuring the animals from Lockjaw and the Pet Avengers: Throg, Zabu, Ms. Lion, Lockjaw, Lockheed and Red Wing. It looks like a highly entertaining read!

3) Batman and Robin #8

I admit to being slightly confused by the last issue, so hopefully Grant Morrison will explain what exactly is going on.

4) Sword #4 (Marvel)

I don’t care what anyone else says, I think Steven Sanders’s version of Beast looks cool.

5) Farscape Dargos Quest #3

I recently picked up several of the older Farscape comics and I really enjoyed them. They are fun space adventures. I never watched the show when it came on but I was able to jump into the comics and quickly figure out what was going on. Reading the comics has made me want watch the series. I think I never watched it because it came on Sci-Fi back when I didn’t have cable. I feel like I really missed out. There are Muppets! And by now you all know how much I love Muppets. Speaking of which, two Muppets books came out this week, Muppet Show #2 and Muppet King Arthur #1. Yay!

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SUNDAY!! Jim Rugg Discusses/Signs AFRODISIAC In Our Store!

February 05, 2010 By: Dustin Harbin Category: Discussion Group, EVENTS, Heroes Aren't Hard To Find, NEWS, Store Signings

SUNDAY SUNDAY SUNDAY!!!

Unless the whole world is wiped away in the Continuing Great Blizzard of 2010, we will be hosting Afrodisiac co-creator and artist Jim Rugg this Sunday! NOTE that we’ve moved the time up an hour from the 3-6pm listed in the image above. To give you guys more time to get home and safely ensconced in your many sofas and Barca-loungers for the Super Bowl, we’ve changed the time to 2-5pm.

WHICH MEANS that you can come join in the event, which will not only be a signing, but a discussion of the book, which is drawing praise from every direction. Publisher Chris Pitzer will be in attendance as well, and the two will answer questions about the book, its design, sandwiches, whatever you want to ask! The discussion will be led by our own Heroes Discussion Group leader Andy Mansell, so it’s sure to be a lively one!

Hope to see you on Sunday–come support us before you throw corn chips at the TV that night!

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HEROESCON :: Don Rosa, George Broderick Jr, Chris Dibari!

February 05, 2010 By: Dustin Harbin Category: Guest List, HeroesCon, HeroesCon News, NEWS

Man, GET A LOAD of this picture of Don Rosa. Is this not the coolest thing you ever did see? I love this guy, he’s like if Uncle Scrooge were really tall and not a duck. I’ve never seen him make this face, but look at all that stuff in the background! That is just nuts, NUTS!

Don joins us today on the HeroesCon 2010 Guest List, which is super great. He’s a sweet dude and a great guest, and an inspiration to a whole generation of cartoonists for his work on Uncle Scrooge since the 1980’s, most notably on his much-lauded The Life And Times of Scrooge McDuck–I have lost count of how many indie cartoonists I have introduced him to over the last few years at HeroesCon. “Oh man there he is, oh man I’m nervous now”.. he’s like Michael Jackson to them! Awesome, I love it!

Also new this week are fellow returning guests George Broderick Jr. (Popeye the Sailor, Simpsons Super Spectacular) and Chris DiBari (The Warriors, Warhammer 40K: Exterminatus). What a trio! I will let you guys know if either George or Chris send me photos of themselves of the same quality as Don’s. Gonna be tough though guys, tough.

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FAVE 5 OF 2009 :: #4 :: PLUTO

February 04, 2010 By: Dustin Harbin Category: DISCUSS, Opinion, Reviews

So there have been “Best of 2009″ lists and “Best of the Decade” lists flying around the internet, pretty much since Halloween or so, maybe even earlier. I don’t have time to do a longer list, or a more comprehensive one, but I thought it would be interesting to talk about my five favorite books of 2009. This list is less a “best of,” and more a “my faves;” or rather, the five books that were most important in my comics reading, whether for sheer quality or brain-busting thought-provokitude, or other content or format choices that were impressive or influential on me.

NUMBER FOUR: PLUTO by Naoki Urasawa

One thing that visual media excel at, especially comics, is playing with genre boundaries. I think it might have something to do with what Scott McCloud calls “closure”: the mind’s interpretation of what is happening between (and often, inside) comics panels, thus creating active engagement between the reader and the comic itself.

It’s almost like a built-in suspension of disbelief: once you are choosing to, again and again on each page, engage with the comic, you are much more likely to accept what’s going on in the story, maybe much more so than in a more “realistic” medium; film, for instance. I have half a theory that this is why superhero comics have endured so long and are accepted so widely by comics readers–after all many of them are about men and women dressing up in bodysuits and flying or shooting beams out of their eyes or dying and being reborn every few years. Being actively engaged in “interpreting” what’s happening in a story maybe gives you an expanded ability to “believe” that story.

Naoki Urasawa‘s Pluto is a reimagining of Osamu Tezuka‘s Astro Boy story, “The Greatest Robot On Earth.” On the surface it’s a sci-fi story, set in a future where robots exist not only as servants, but as citizens with their own inalienable rights (and occasionally as weapons). Within that sci-fi outer shell, the actual story itself is more a whodunit, as super-robot detective Gesicht tries to solve a string of murders of other super-robots and their creators.

But it’s within that whodunit framework that what really drives Pluto lives. The story is animated by its repeated examination of the various robot characters’ humanity. As Gesicht follows the trail of murders, he is also examining his own “programmed” humanity, which seems painted over a deeper, more fundamental psyche buried beneath. Each of the robots in Pluto seem to share a similar struggle: in the spread above, the super-robot North No. 2 is playing the piano as he recalls the slaughter of the previous war. The story’s superrobots were each–with one exception–involved in that war as weapons, and most of them have lived with horrifying memories of wartime atrocities ever since.

But the most interesting example of this “to be or not to be” theme is Astro Boy himself, called “Atom” in the story, as he was in the original Mighty Atom manga, called “Astro Boy” in Western countries. Urasawa underlines Atom’s “Pinocchio” nature by drawing him as a real boy, rather than Tezuka’s more cartoonish robot version. Not only does Atom look like a real little boy, he takes pains to act like one.

But as opposed to this being a part of his programming, it seems more like Atom is trying to approximate a little boy’s life in order to make some sort of sense out of his own, or more properly make sense out of feelings. The scene where Atom cries in the bathroom for Gesicht was really affecting the first time I read it–and throughout the subsequent story I kept coming back to it in my thoughts, as similar themes popped up for each of the robot characters; not to mention the titular Pluto itself.

I want to pause for a second in my aimless theoretical wandering to look at that page in detail, because the cartoonist in me is fascinated by it. I’ve been thinking ab0ut timing in comics a lot lately, due in large part to a passage in Yoshihiro Tatsumi‘s amazing memoir A Drifting Life, where he says:

“A panel with a large image and lots of details is read from corner to corner. The image thus stands still for the duration of the time it takes to be read.

“The time it takes to read a panel can be calculated according to the relative size of the image and the amount of dialogue in it.

“This is the ‘synchronization of panel and time.”

The above spread, where Atom excuses himself from his conversation with Gesicht to go cry in the bathroom, is a masterful example of this idea in action. Remembering that manga are read from right to left, start in the upper right hand corner and see how Urasawa paces this important scene. You have two small (quick) panels with just faces in them, then larger ones as we are meant to slow down and examine the expressions of the characters. Then a larger panel with a lot of detail as Atom gets up–it’s almost a new establishing shot, leading toward the next larger panel where Atom walks away. In a way the two panels, located diagonally on top of each other, are almost the only thing you need to see, with the smaller dialogue panels existing as little more than seasoning.

Then the left-hand page, completely silent, is broken up into six panels, with the largest for last, and maximum time/impact. While the panels leading up to it all seem to exist in the same moment–the “camera” is just moving around the scene–the successive panel breaks slow down the pace of reading leading up to the last panel. If we saw the scene as one single panel with Atom crying, we’d just say “huh” and flip the page. But with this layout we are forced to consider what is happening, and more than that, are shown by the amount of effort put into these moments that they are important.

And, at least to me, this two-page spread is one of the more important of the book, so it feels as if Urasawa has doubly underlined it for us, to ensure that there’s an impact in our minds, even if we do not perceive it until later.

Sorry, I’m digressing. But whoa.

I’m new to Urasawa’s work; Pluto was the first of his books I read, although since I’ve read the fun (but less nuanced) 20th Century Boys, and dipped my toe into his longer work Monster. But Pluto was a book that really opened my eyes up in 2009–not only in terms of story and art, but in a larger sense in terms of manga itself. While I’ve read plenty of manga, I usually stick to the more “grown-up” stuff like Lone Wolf & Cub or Buddha. It’s always been easy for me to sort of eschew a broad swath of manga, lumping it subconsciously into a “for kids” drawer in my head.

But as “sci-fi” or “murder mystery” are just starting points for Pluto, “manga” is just a kind of comics after all–it’s not a different genre, it’s a different form. It’s easy for American comics readers (like me), especially of a pre-manga explosion generation (also me) to discount a lot of manga as being simple or childish or “for kids.” Super dumb, and maybe even vaguely xenophobic in a lot of cases. Pluto is a book that opened my eyes a lot wider in 2009: what starts out on the surface as a retelling of a 50 year-old Astro Boy story is a nuanced work with multiple and successive layers of genre, artifice, and theme that reward deep reading. It’s changed the way I look at manga, not to mention softened me up for more stylized and challenging manga like Tatsumi’s.

And what’s best about Pluto is that (as of this writing), there are still two volumes left (of 8), which I am anticipating like two little Christmases. Delicious manga Christmases.

Other Top 5 of 2009 entries by me:
#5: Popeye Volume 4

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REVIEW :: Guardians of the Galaxy #22

February 04, 2010 By: Carlton Hargro Category: DISCUSS, Reviews

I keep coming back to the Guardians of the Galaxy.

In 2008, I named the comic — the science-fiction superhero series that focuses on the cosmic side of the Marvel Universe — one of my favorites of that year. And now, with the Guardians hitting issue No. 22, I stand by my choice; it’s still consistently one of the best books on the stands month-in and month-out.

What’s so good about the title? Well, I’ll be honest: I have a thing for B- and C-list characters, and the Guardians team is populated by a host of beloved nobodies like Rocket Raccoon, Bug from the Micronauts and Jack Flag, among others. But this comic is way more than a guilty pleasure. Each issue, writers Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning pit their ragtag group of heroes against universe-ending threats and life-or-death situations. Sure, humor is a big part of the stories (I mean, you can’t take a talking raccoon too seriously.), but this fast-paced, action-packed series is anything but a funny book.

The other cool thing about Guardians is, aside from Nova and your odd limited series here and there, it’s the best place to find Marvel’s rich catalog of space-faring heroes and villains. Crack open an issue and you’ll get to catch up with folks like Moondragon, Drax the Destroyer, Adam Warlock, the Inhumans, the Starjammers, the Imperial Guard, and — coming soon — Thanos (the Infinity Gems can’t be too far behind) … and many more.

Yeah, I still dig the Guardians of the Galaxy. Sue me … but first check out an issue and judge for yourself.

Carlton Hargro is Editor-in-Chief of Charlotte’s Creative Loafing free weekly newspaper. You can check out more of his reviews at the paper’s Comic Proportions blog.

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HEROESCON :: INDIE ISLAND :: Goodin, Kindt, Weing, & Weiser!

February 03, 2010 By: Dustin Harbin Category: Guest List, HeroesCon, HeroesCon News, Indie Island, NEWS

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Oh man it’s an all-star indie comics revue today, very exciting for Indie Island! Attending his first ever HeroesCon will be Mome contributor and Covered blogger-in-chief Robert Goodin. Many of you thrilled to his book The Man Who Loved Breasts last year from Top Shelf, and his religiously-tinged historical comics in Mome are some of my very favorites. Man, I sure do love Mome. Monsieur Goodin is coming all the way from sunny Pasadena for HeroesCon, so be sure and make him feel welcome!

Also traveling from the West, although in this case the Mid-West, is returning Indie Island champeen Matt Kindt, whose book Superspy was a huge hit for him a few years ago. Matt followed that up with 3 Story: The Secret History of the Giant Man, and this year will see the publication of Revolver and The Tooth. Whew! Matt always has a ton of little geegaws and gimcracks for sale at conventions, and does primo sketches, often in watercolor!

Hailing from much closer are Drew Weing and Joey Weiser, who will be driving up again this year from Athens, Georgia for HeroesCon. Drew is the cartoonist behind the GORGEOUS “Set To Sea“, which Fantagraphics will be publishing this summer. He’s also known for him minicomics and his many many strips in Nick Magazine and Disney Adventures.

Joey is the author of The Ride Home and Tales of Unusual Circumstance, and has been making waves lately in comics circles for his unique way of funding his next graphic novel, Cavemen In Space. Love to see the Southern cartoonists mixing it up on the world stage, it warms my heart it does.

Man, Indie Island is looking RIDIC for this year (short for ridiculous)!! RIDIC!

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SPOTLIGHT ON NEW RELEASES :: FEBRUARY 3

February 03, 2010 By: Heroes Online Category: DISCUSS, Opinion, Reviews, Spotlight on New Releases

crogans march

1) Crogan’s March HC

Crogan’s March is the second volume of Chris Schweizer’s Crogan Adventures in which Schweizer goes through the Crogan family tree and tells action-packed stories about the patriarchs. The first volume was Crogan’s Vengeance and it focused on “Catfoot” Crogan the pirate. This go round we learn about Peter Crogan who was in the French Foreign Legion. The attention to detail is remarkable. Schweizer heavily researches every aspect of the story to ensure that it is historically accurate even though it is a work of fiction. While the stories are mainly geared toward boys (like Tintin and other adventure stories) they appeal to a wide audience. Who doesn’t like a good action/adventure story? What I love most about Schweizer’s work is his dynamic art. It has so much energy and movement that you are swept up into the story. You may have noticed the picture on the right, I swiped it from Schweizer’s blog! I couldn’t resist using it!

5) GI Joe Origins #12

This issue is all about Baroness who has always been one of my favorite characters from GI Joe. It is written by Marc Andreyko and features art by the awesome Ben Templesmith! Sweet!

3) Marvel Heartbreakers #1

Marvel brings you a collection of love stories just in time for Valentine’s Day. Among them are stories about Peter Parker, Gwen Stacy and Mary Jane Watson (written by Kathryn Immonen with art by Elena Casagrande) and a story Tabitha Smith and Elsa Bloodstone from Nextwave (written by Rick Spears with art by James Callahan). Marvel has been doing some really interesting anthology-esque collaborative comics recently.

4) Tiny Titans TP vol 3

I love this book! It always makes me smile. So if life is getting you down, pick this book up and I am certain that you will feel better.

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2) Deadpool Team-Up #896

Did you know that it will take Marvel roughly 75 years to get to Deadpool Team-Up #1? That is if they continue to put one issue out every month. Shelley and I did the math on that yesterday. Oh the fun we have! In this issue Deadpool “teams up” with U.S. Ace against giant-sized killer raccoons. Shawn Crystal is on art duty for this issue. You may remember him from the pirate story arc back in Deadpool #13 and #14.

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HEROESCON :: Mark Bagley & More Join Guest List!

February 02, 2010 By: Dustin Harbin Category: EVENTS, Guest List, HeroesCon, HeroesCon News, NEWS

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Dudes! Brand new to the HeroesCon 2010 Guest List this week is none other than Mr Mark Bagley. It’s hard to imagine a more prolific creator working today than Mark, who followed up his 100 issue run on Ultimate Spider-Man with 52 issues of Trinity, then Batman, and now JLA–fortunately Mark was engineered by NASA scientists to not need sleep or food. Once a day he just gurgles down a bottle of 10-W-30 and a couple of D batteries and he’s good to go! We’re excited to have him back and have already stocked up on oil and Duracells!

Mark is joined in this here update by the FCHS team of Vito Delsante and Rachel Freire–the book’s preview was a big hit at last year’s HeroesCon, and Rachel’s amazing art was a surprise hit at the Art Auction. But after getting kicked in the stomach by Diamond’s order minimums last year, the book was cancelled. Never fear, Vito and Rachel are self-publishing it themselves, so you should be able to check out FCHS this June at HeroesCon!

Last up this week are two Missourans who are always big hits at cons for their sketches, which means they’ll be doubly–or even triply–welcome at HeroesCon, where doing sweet con sketches is like printing money. Oh wait I got so excited I almost forgot to mention their names–Brian Hurtt is the artist and co-creator of The Damned, and did the art on the upcoming Cowboys from the Vertigo Crime imprint, not to mention The Sixth Gun, coming this spring from Oni. And his buddy Chris Samnee is all over the place lately, on Siege: Embedded most recently, not to mention X-Men Vs Agents of Atlas and DC’s The Mighty.

More updates in store this week–stay tuned all y’alls!

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