Hellboy: The Fury #3 Preview

This week is a huge one for Hellboy. Creator Mike Mignola and publisher Dark Horse have been quietly spreading the word that this is going to be one of those, “things will never be the same” stories that we read so much about. However, this time, it actually means something.

He’s already lost his eye, and now he’ll lose a lot more. Below is a snazzy preview of this week’s finale, along with an official description.

The word is out that today’s release of The Fury #3 will rock the comics world to its very core! With word leaking out over the last week that big changes are in store for Dark Horse’s most recognizable character, this third issue has sold out before even arriving on shelves.

In response, Dark Horse has rushed through reprints of all three issues of this critically acclaimed story arc. These reprints are available for reorder now, with an on-sale date of August 17, just one week after Hellboy: The Fury #3 goes on sale.

Hellboy: The Fury marks the dramatic conclusion to the epic story line by Mike Mignola and Duncan Fegredo that began in Darkness Calls back in 2007. This final three-issue story pits Hellboy against the Queen of Blood one on one, leaving behind a war-torn battlefield strewn with the bodies of monsters and knights. In this dramatic conclusion, the fate of the world, and of Hellboy himself, lies with the Ogdru Jahad, his greatest foe, culminating in one final battle for the ages.

Cullen Bunn on Broken Frontier

Rising writer Cullen Bunn (The Sixth Gun, a growing number of Marvel series) is writing a regular column for BF called Writer of Wrongs. Check out the first one right here.

Ultimate Spider-Man Designs

New Spidey artist Sara Pichelli’s opened up her sketchbook to reveal her initial thoughts on the new man under the Ultimate Spider-Man mask, Miles Morales. Check them all out right here.

Stan Lee’s The Seekers Contest

Work with the legendary Stan Lee as a writer or artist and win $10, 000? Yes please!

What’s that? You must be a U.S resident. Oh.

Have you ever dreamed of writing or illustrating a comic under the tutelage of the legendary Stan Lee? Well, here’s your chance True Believer! MTV Comics and POW! Entertainment are offering you the chance to write or illustrate the digital graphic novel “The Seekers!”

Over the next 3 weeks we’ll be accepting submissions from artists and writers for an opportunity to earn approximately $10,000.00 to do just that. You read that right, that’s 10-Gs.

In order to enter you’ll need to read the complete set of official rules, but here are the highlights of the contest:

● Submissions will be open for three weeks, closing on August 26, 2011
● ARTISTS will submit five (5) black and white pages of sequential comic art based on a scene from “The Seekers”
● WRITERS will write ten (10) pages of comic script and a two (2) page treatment for the series based on Stan’s treatment
● Submissions will be narrowed down by the MTV Comics editorial staff to the top 20 semi-finalists in each category; that’s 20 writers, and 20 artists
● Semi-finalists will be voted on by the public beginning on September 5, 2011
● The top 5 vote-getters in each category will be forwarded on to Stan Lee, who will hand select the winners
● Winners will be presented the opportunity to write or illustrate MTV Comics’ The Seekers (and earn approximately 10k)

Details here.

Grant Morrison Interview

Comics Alliance has a pretty revealing interview with writer Grant Morrison about his work on Batman Incorporated, films and his upcoming work on the rebooted Action Comics, in which we’ll see a new, inexperienced Superman.

With Action Comics, we’re certainly dealing with a Superman that doesn’t have his parents anymore. Both Ma and Pa Kent are dead in this version, and it’s kind of like the original Superman where you saw him standing over their graves in the same way that Batman did and vowing to always fight for the right. He’s kind of a lot more isolated in that sense, even though he’s not a brooding or inward-turning character like Batman is.

Catch the whole interview here.

X-Men and FF in November

Marvel released two teasers today. Here they are.

X-MEN: REGENESIS – UNCANNY X-MEN!

UNCANNY X-MEN #1

Written by KIERON GILLEN
Art & Cover by CARLOS PACHECO

ON SALE NOVEMBER 2011

FOUR

Coming November 2011.

Hmmm..it doesn’t say Fantastic Four, and Johnny Storm is dead, so who knows what this will be. I guess we’ll find out when the November solicitations are released next month.

Sweet Inspiration

Photo, and coffee, taken by me while on holiday in Sydney. We don’t have Starbucks in Perth, or Krispy Kreme either. We have lovely weather though.

 

Dark Horse August Variants

Here’s a look at some of Dark Horse’s variant covers for August. Here’s all of them.

 

Batman’s Best Quotes

Like every good action hero, the Dark Knight Detective is a man of few words. When he speaks, people listen, whether they be low-life crims, intergalactic madmen or super-powered team-mates. Batman’s words can be just as painful, and memorable as any of the broken bones he gives those who get in his way. Here’s a mere sampling of the DC hero’s best, from the comics page to the screen.

1987’s Justice League International #5 is host to a classic Batman scene. Throughout their run of the re-vamped League in the 1980s writers Keith Giffen and J.M. DeMatteis, joined by the multitude of facial expressions from artist Kevin Maguire, established a new era, filled with bold humour and whacky adventures. The new Justice League (consisting of Captain Marvel, Dr. Fate, Mister Miracle and a few other heroes who were previously mere second-stringers) can barely tolerate each other at times, let alone save the world. Things come to a head when Batman and Green Lantern freshman Guy Gardner have a heated discussion about the leadership of the League. Actually, it’s the annoying Gardner who gets heated. Batman remains as cool as a cucumber while Guy points his finger and claims he’s the “top dog,” to which Batman replies, “This isn’t a kennel, Guy, so stop acting like a mongrel.” However when the ring-wielder’s rants continue, Batman stays with the canine theme, claiming Guy is, “all bark and no bite.” With eyes bulging and fists at the ready, Gardner charges at the Dark Knight. Batman is not amused and knows that actions speak louder than words – and hits him. One punch straight to Guy’s ugly mug. With boasting undone, Guy lands on his back unconscious, leaving Blue Beetle to break into hysterics and Black Canary to despair that she missed it.

Director Tim Burton’s 1989 Batman film may not adhere to the source material (Joker killed Bruce Wayne’s parents?! Huh?!), but it did one thing right. To a generation of kids, and quite a few adults, it made Batman cool. Considering the campy TV series two decades previous, that was no easy task. Outside of the comics the Caped Crusader had really only be seen as a vehicle for Adam West’s theatrics and as a cardboard character on the animated Super Friends series. Casting comedic actor Michael Keaton seemed like a huge leap in the wrong direction, but he brought a darkness that no-one saw coming. Descending upon the screen enveloped in steam and shadows The Dark Knight confronts two terrified thieves on a rooftop. Dispatching one with lightning quick moves, his remaining partner shouts with horror, “Who are you?!” The vigilante leans forward and whispers with menace, stamping his claim on the criminal and all like him with two simple words of raw power – “I’m Batman.” Two words so powerful infact that they were echoed in Batman Begins when crime boss Carmine Falcone wonders, “What the hell are you?” before being taken into the darkness and chained to a spotlight in a declaration to all of Gotham’s criminals.

The adult nature of 2004’s seven issue mini-series Identity Crisis by novelist Brad Meltzer and artist Rags Morales was a revelation to those unaware of the tragedy inherent in the modern DC Universe. With the rape of a superhero’s wife, bloody violence and the betrayal of Batman by mind wiping hero Zatanna, the tale is a superbly mature look at the complex lives of crime-fighters. The World’s Greatest Detective is on the case of the mysterious death of Sue Dibny (wife of former Leaguer, Elongated Man) while the other heroes scramble to protect themselves and their loved ones from the unknown killer. Batman is a force of nature as always, determined to solve the mystery while all around him unravels, leading him to ruminate on his very purpose as a ‘normal’ man surrounded by powerful beings he’s increasingly distrustful of. “People think it’s an obsession. A compulsion.  As if there were an irresistible impulse to act. It’s never been like that. I chose this life. I know what I’m doing. And on any given day, I could stop doing it. Today, however, isn’t that day. And tomorrow won’t be either.” A reminder that Batman’s greatest asset is his undying determination.

The animated Justice League Unlimited TV show was a dream for comic book aficionados, with it’s huge cast of heroes from DC’s comics. In the first season’s final episode, Epilogue, we are given a look at the future, 65 years from now.  Terry McGinnis, the hero from another DC ‘toon, Batman Beyond, is told by former government agent Amanda Waller that she manipulated Terry’s DNA so he could become the genetic son of Bruce Wayne, in order to continue his legacy. The elderly Bruce agrees. He knows that the earth needs someone like him, reminding the defiant Terry that Batman plans for every possibility, and while clutching his medication, exclaims, “The world does need a Batman. It always will.”

The 2005-06 mini-series Infinite Crisis, though bewildering to DC newbies, is the stuff that makes superhero comics great – worlds at stake, sacrificial deaths and multi-layered story telling. DC’s Trinity (Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman) gather at the wreckage of the moon based JLA HQ, the Watchtower, to discuss recent events, such as Wonder Woman’s murder of the traitorous Maxwell Lord, leading to tirades on the corruption of power and the nature of good and evil, and forcing Batman to examine his often antagonistic friendship with the Man of Steel, spouting forth, “Everyone looks up to you. They listen to you. If you tell them to fight, they’ll fight. But they need to be inspired. And let’s face it, “Superman” … the last time you really inspired anyone was when you were dead.” Ouch.

You can tell a lot about a person with their last words. In 2009’s Final Crisis #6 Batman met his Maker while saving the universe, but took out classic Superman villain Darkseid at the same time.  Bruce broke his vow to never use a gun in his final appearance, as it was a gun that destroyed his parents all those years ago. It was also a gun that destroyed any potential for normalcy, and gave the world evil’s worst enemy. So, staring down the reborn god of evil with the instrument of his own creation in his hands and moments before he became a steaming corpse, what did he say? What else could he say, but “Gotcha.”

Extra Sequential Podcast #52-Cats

58 mins. Celebrating World Cat Day, we take a feline focus on some of our favourite cat-themed characters. Catwoman, Black Panther, Doraemon and oh, so many more. Also, DC’s controversial approach to female creators, and race within superhero comics.

LISTEN TO IT BELOW, DOWNLOAD IT HERE OR ON iTUNES

You can email us at kris (at)extrasequential(dot)com and befriend us on the NEW ES Facebook page.

1:50 NEWS

George Lucas loses the rights to the Stormtroopers design

Bane from The Dark Knight Rises

Batman: Arkham City game costumes

First pic of the new Superman

Laurence Fishburne is the new Perry White

Miles Morales, the new Ultimate Spider-Man

DC’s reaction to female creators

He-Man documentary

The Vault, and Nonplayer have been picked up for potential films

Our very own trailer!

21:58 THEME-CATS

Black Panther

Catwoman, and Catgirl

Catman

Hellcat, Tigra and Cheetah

Blacksad

Apocalypse Meow

Cat Eyed Boy

Doraemon

Hello Kitty

Marsupilami

Krazy Kat

Catbert (from Dilbert)

Garfield

Hobbes (from Calvin and Hobbes)

Horse (from Footrot Flats)

The X-Men’s Beast

Black Cat

2 in We3

Fritz the Cat

ThunderCats

Streaky the Super Cat


Here’s Selina Kyle

Released via The Dark Knight Rises’ official website is this first look at Selina Kyle, as played by Anne Hathaway. I guess it has elements of her Catwoman costume and maybe here she’s stealing Batman’s new Batpod. Nothing too exciting yet.

The Deep: Here Be Dragons Review

The Deep from Tom Taylor and James Brouwer is now out from Gestalt Publishing. Catch my review of this all-ages adventure here at Broken Frontier. In short – it’s awesome and you should get it.

You can catch my interview with Taylor here.

 

He-Man Doco and M.A.S.K DVD

The complete series of the 1985-86 cartoon M.A.S.K is being released from Shout! Factory on DVD on August 9. That was a good cartoon, and there were a lot of them in the ’80s.

Illusion Is The Ultimate Weapon!

Led by multi-millionaire Matt Trakker, the Mobile Armored Strike Kommand—better known simply as M.A.S.K.—defends the world against Miles Mayhem and his nefarious international criminal organization known as VENOM, the very same group responsible for the death of Trakker’s teenage brother. With his own son, Scott, and secret strike force—including his friends, engineer Bruce Sato, courageous historian Hondo MacLean, mechanic Buddy Hawks, rocker Brad Turner, computer expert Alex Sector, stunt driver Dusty Hayes, and beautiful martial artist Gloria Baker—it’s up to Trakker, equipped with special power-granting masks and a garage of special militarized vehicles, to keep the world safe from Mayhem and the villainy of VENOM.

For the first time on DVD, all 65 episodes from the animated series that ran 1985-1986.

Bonus Features:

Unmasking M.A.S.K.: retrospective interview with show writers on this hit animated series

Saturday Morning Krusaders: entertaining look back with loyal fans

Speaking of great cartoons from the past, a new documentary is in the works focused on the apparently muddy origins to He-Man. Entitled Toy Masters, you can see the trailer below, which is 7 minutes long and not edited with much excitement, but I’ll certainly see the finished film.

First Henry Cavill Superman Image

British actor Henry Cavill (The Tudors, Immortals) is Superman in Zack Snyder’s (300,Sucker Punch) 2013 Superman reboot. Laurence Fishburne was officially cast as his boss at The Daily Planet, Perry White. Yes, White is..white, but I can see Fishburne in the role.

The suit is obviously textured, for easier special affects use I’d assume, and there’s no sign of the famous spit curl or red undies. The cape looks huge too, but overall, I like it. It’s darker, like the original comics costume, and the smashed safe wall seem to allude to a powerful fight for the Man of Steel. Finally!

The noticeable thing is that by the time this gets to the screen, the new comics costume, as designed by Jim Lee, will have already been out for 2 years, but I guess this film costume is what most people associate with the Man of Steel, plus the more armoured new comics version would probably look rather odd in action.