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Wednesday, June 10, 2015

How Long Should You Wait Before Bringing Out the Trade?

Action Lab Entertainment is releasing two collected editions in comic shops today — Stray: Who Killed the Doberman? and Nutmeg: Early Fall: Taste Buddies.

What’s odd about this is the pacing.

Nutmeg Volume 1 cover

The Stray book collects the entire miniseries, four issues. But issue #4 was released just last week. The Nutmeg book collects the first three issues. But issue #3 was released the week before, at the end of May.

That’s a really quick turnaround for the collected editions. Typically, retailers don’t like that, because it makes the final issue a “dead product”, something of little interest to customers, more quickly. However, the makers of Nutmeg were tweeting that issue #3 was sold out, so in this case, at least, making the collection available quickly better satisfies potential readers.


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Monday, June 8, 2015

Gotham Home Video Date Announced

The hit Fox (non-)superhero show Gotham has been announced for release on Blu-ray and DVD on September 8.

Gotham was Fox’s highest rated fall drama debut in 14 years among the desirable adults aged 18-49 demographic. I have yet to watch an episode, but this package may remedy that for me, since I like behind-the-scenes info. The set includes 22 episodes plus these extras:

  • Gotham Invented: Building Our Gotham
  • Gotham Invented: Paving the Way for the Caped Crusader
  • Gotham Invented: Fractured Villains of Gotham
  • Designing the Fiction
  • The Game of Cobblepot
  • Gag Reel
  • Unaired Scenes
  • DC Comics Night at Comic-Con 2014 Presenting Gotham, The Flash, Constantine, and Arrow
  • GOTHAM: The Legend Reborn
  • Character Profiles:
    • Detective Harvey Bullock
    • Detective James Gordon
    • Oswald Cobblepot
    • Bruce Wayne and Alfred Pennyworth
    • Fish Mooney
    • Dr. Leslie Thompkins
    • Killer Character

Gotham on Blu-ray

Interestingly, the list price between the two sets is minimal. The DVD version lists at $59.98, while the Blu-ray package is $60.10. That leads me to assume that the special features are included on both versions. However, since the DVD version is discounted 33% at Amazon right now while the Blu-ray is only discounted 25%, there’s a $5 difference between the end prices. Here’s the official series description:

Before there was Batman, there was Gotham City. Everyone knows the name of Commissioner Gordon, but what of his rise from rookie detective to Police Commissioner? What did it take to navigate the layers of corruption in Gotham City, the spawning ground of the world’s most iconic villains? Gotham tells the story of the world’s most iconic DC Comics super-villains and vigilantes from the very beginning, revealing an entirely new chapter that has never been told…. Although the crime drama follows Gordon’s turbulent and singular career, it also focuses on his unlikely friendship with the young Bruce Wayne — with his mentorship a crucial element in developing the mythology of Gotham City.

Now that we’ve seen the entire season, those of you who’ve watched it throughout, how did it hold up for you?


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Luna Luna

I don’t read a lot of children’s books, although they have certain similarities with comics. I found Luna Luna, though, refreshing and relaxing.

Sam Ryan wrote and Hazel Mitchell illustrated this Zen-influenced fable about a little boy trying to capture the “misty summer moon, streaked with green and red and yellow and purple” he sees out his window.

Each page spread consists of an illustration, full color with a predominant use of blues and purples, faced with several sentences of text. I liked the way Roshi demonstrates determination but learns the virtues of patience and creative problem-solving.

The dreamy nature of the story makes it good for repeated reading, a real plus for a kids’ book. (The writer provided a digital review copy.)

Luna Luna cover


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Doctor Who: The Tenth Doctor #11

I know big, galaxy-risking, four-part stories are seen as more important, but it’s the one-off, quieter, more personal scenes that I really like in this series. I shouldn’t be too complacent, though, since those openings are often just the first part of another big adventure.

In this issue written by Nick Abadzis and illustrated by Elena Casagrande, Gabby and the Doctor are back in New York City, but Gabby’s friend Cindy is mad that she’s dropped out of touch. While she sets off to repair the relationship, the Doctor crashes an auction of alien technology. There’s a particular object he’s concerned about others getting their hands on.

Doctor Who: The Tenth Doctor #11 cover

Gabby’s talk with Cindy allows for a reminder of how others would likely see the idea of jaunting off through time and space with a crazy English guy. Meanwhile, the Doctor has teamed up with a bad-ass dreadlocked artifact retriever named Cleo who’s fond of the double-cross. I like her, even if she’s causing a lot of trouble.

The dialogue is a high point this issue, since much of the plot is setup for following installments, but the cliffhanger is an “only in comics” dynamite reveal (because doing it elsewhere would require too much cooperation from other actors). And the story does involve an intriguing use of time, making it a great choice for this particular hero.

Here are three preview pages from early in the issue:

Doctor Who: The Tenth Doctor #11 preview pageDoctor Who: The Tenth Doctor #11 preview pageDoctor Who: The Tenth Doctor #11 preview page


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Sunday, June 7, 2015

Gronk: A Monster’s Story Volume 3

Gronk: A Monster’s Story volume 3 has the same appeal as the first book by Katie Cook. Each page is a four-panel strip, often quite funny.

Dale’s still a beleaguered substitute parent, coping with the little monster Gronk. My favorite strips are those that either 1) comment on popular culture or 2) treat Gronk as the equivalent of a toddler, operating on her own logic and (usually) utterly destroying part of Dale’s world.

You can imagine, then, how tickled I was by this one, which combines My Little Pony references with an unexpected bit of heart-warming emotionalism. It’s a surprising touch for what’s usually a humor book. It also demonstrates how well Cook can show feelings in Gronk’s simple character design.

Gronk volume 3 sample page

Gronk (and thus, Cook) is also quite imaginative. A later strip where Gronk rampages among cereal boxes has Dale exasperatedly asking Gronk to use empty boxes, only for Gronk to reply, “I like to pretend the Cheerios are fleeing citizens.” Well, ok, yeah, that makes sense.

Gronk: A Monster's Story volume 3 cover

Another strip is amusing more for the setup than the punchline. Gronk is playing a card game with the giant dog Harli. The dog, of course, holds the cards in his mouth, resulting in copious amounts of drool all over the game.

A number of gags this volume relate to winter and snow, but as many deal with technical toys, like playing with an iPad while watching a movie. I was surprised but pleased to see several strips that avoid the usual punchline in favor of cogent observation. The book ends with the expected set of Gronk drawings by other artists.


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Old Wounds #1-3

Old Wounds is a four-issue miniseries from Pop! Goes the Icon. It’s also available digitally on ComiXology. The first two issues are out, with #3 coming later this month.

Writer Russell Lissau and artist John Bivens present a story that I should find too familiar, but the telling makes it unusual. As issue #1 opens, Michael Lane is told that his ex-wife has been killed when her home was blown up. Their secret, which Lane refuses to share with the investigating detectives, is that they used to be superheroes.

Old Wounds #1 cover

He gave it up after an accident, one that destroyed his leg. As the series continues, additional people connected to him are attacked, and we learn more about the circumstances behind the original accident and the relationships he had then and now.

A lot of this works for me for two reasons. One: Lissau does a terrific job building suspense. As the series continues, he knows just how much information to dish out to keep the reader involved. The flashback memories are inserted quickly to establish who characters are effectively. Sometimes, we’re also shown how survivors lie to themselves to avoid painful memories.

Old Wounds #2 cover

The second reason is the art. Bivens’ style is scratchy, noir-ish, and toned to indicate many shades of grey. The opening scene, where Lane is woken up by the detectives bringing him bad news, which he receives in his bathrobe, stooped in a chair and clutching his cane, carries the feelings of dismay and shock well.

I like Lissau’s dialogue, too. It advances the story realistically. I have a bit of a qualm about the lack of women in the story, particularly since one of the two is nothing but a plot device, a victim to motivate the action. On the other hand, there aren’t many characters in the first place, and it’s good to see Detective Alyssa Hess acting so proactively.

Old Wounds #3 cover

Obviously, this is a thriller, a mystery where we stay tuned to find out who’s attacking Lane’s friends. It’s also a meditation on how past trauma shapes survivors and a story about someone whose best days were behind them but who’s still hanging on. There aren’t many comics about what you do in the second or third phase of your life, once youth is past and you’re making decisions for different reasons.

Issue #3 does reveal the villain, after a substantial past revelation, but there’s plenty more to come, as we still need to find out why and how. In this superhero comic, the motivation matters more than the action.


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IDW Relaunches Comic Apps With Madefire

IDW has moved its branded iOS apps from ComiXology to Madefire, relaunching with an IDW app for the entire digital library (over 3500 comics and graphic novels, they say), plus specific apps for Transformers, Star Trek, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles comics.

The big difference? Their new apps allow in-app purchases, unlike ComiXology’s, which require a trip to a separate website so Apple doesn’t get a cut of the purchase. Forcing that action is customer-unfriendly and likely removes a lot of impulse purchases.

If you sign up for a new IDW comic account this month (before July 12), they’ll give you 15 free collected editions, plus dozens of motion books. The comic titles are:

  • Locke and Key Volume 1: Welcome to Lovecraft
  • G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero Volume 1
  • My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic Volume 1
  • My Little Pony: Friends Forever Volume 1
  • Skylanders Volume 1:The Kaos Trap
  • Star Trek Volume 1
  • Star Trek The Next Generation/Doctor Who: Assimilation Volume 1
  • Star Trek: Harlan Ellison’s City on the Edge of Forever
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Volume 1: Change is Constant
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Secret History of the Foot Clan
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Ultimate B&W Collection Volume 1
  • Transformers: Classics Volume 1
  • Transformers: More Than Meets the Eye Volume 1
  • Transformers: Robots In Disguise Volume 1
  • Transformers: Dark Cybertron Volume 1

IDW app free comics

They plan to launch Android and Windows 8 apps soon with “TV screens and console game devices” promised for later this year. If you’ve bought comics from IDW in previous apps, you’re able to sync your comics following their instructions. ComiXology has also published an article about how to keep access to your IDW comics in their app. IDW wants customers to access their comics in a variety of formats and stores, a strategy shared by other publishers. Along similar lines, while a lot of Top Shelf (now part of IDW) graphic novels are available in the Sequential app, they aren’t yet available in this IDW app, which so far focuses on mostly licensed publications.

IDW apps promo image


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Friday, June 5, 2015

Hawaiian Dick to Return: When and How

Hawaiian Dick was a fun and gorgeous retro private eye series set in 1950s Hawaii that I was reminded of when I saw the recent movie Aloha, which is similarly a love letter to the islands. Last decade, there were two collections of the comic released — Byrd of Paradise and The Last Resort — as well as a five-issue miniseries, Screaming Black Thunder, that hasn’t yet made it to book format.

But more will be coming! A quick conversation with writer B. Clay Moore revealed that his plans are for a Kickstarter later this year to be titled Great Big Hawaiian Dick. That 72-page one-shot will feature unpublished work and a couple of new stories with the characters.

Aloha, Hawaiian Dick #1 cover

That one-shot will be collected with Screaming Black Thunder into the third trade, likely next year. The most exciting news for fans was that, come January, Image will launch Aloha, Hawaiian Dick, a new five-issue miniseries drawn by Jacob Wyatt. (The cover, shown here, is by Sean Dove.)

Great Big Hawaiian Dick will also feature an Aloha preview, as well as story work by Ramon Perez, Jason Armstrong, Nelson Blake II, and Dev Madan and pieces from Darwyn Cooke, Jason Latour, and others.

To start the weekend, here’s an Aloha, Hawaiian Dick preview page by Jacob Wyatt.

Aloha, Hawaiian Dick preview page


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