Charlotte and Zack continue their coverage of the Ultimate Marvel line of comics!
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: RSS
[Read more…] about MUY #29: Ultimate Spider-Man & Ultimate X-MenA Comic Book Reading Order Guide For Beginners & Fans
Charlotte and Zack continue their coverage of the Ultimate Marvel line of comics!
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: RSS
[Read more…] about MUY #29: Ultimate Spider-Man & Ultimate X-MenOn my weekly livestream, Casual Krakoa Live, I review the week’s X-Men comics, and answer big questions about what’s going on with Marvel’s merry mutants! You can listen or watch below:
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
*Spoilers Follow* [Read more…] about AXE Avengers #1 & X-Men #15 | Judgement Day Catch-Up! | Comic Book Herald Live!
It is often said that Watchmen is the most influential comic ever to be released. That comics wouldn’t be where they are without it, for good and for ill. But how did we get here, exactly? More to the point, just what influence did Watchmen provide to the larger world of comics? What, ultimately, is the legacy of Watchmen? Who watched the Watchmen?
Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? is a Latin phrase attributed to the Roman poet, Juvenal. It’s most commonly translated to “who watches the watchmen?” Historically, there are two ways of understanding this question: First, under what circumstances does a government have any accountability to the citizenry it provides protection and freedom to? Secondly, it could be interpreted as a comedic absurdity; that the very idea that fallible humans could at any time, in any way, impose, teach or carry out infallible moral claims is paradoxical. Philosophically, the idea of “who watches the watchmen” is answered by analyses of power. In economic terms, for example, John Rawls posits that the behavioral incentives to maintain the rights of the population at large is the only way to guarantee those same rights for yourself. Plato’s Republic also answers this question by proposing the Noble Lie which argues that the narratives and myths of a society are what binds people and governments into carrying out their shared responsibilities. [Read more…] about Who Watched the Watchmen? The Omega Men – The End is Here
Earlier this year, we met the hero Rogue Sun during Supermassive, but we also learned he would die. So this is the set-up for the Rogue Sun comic. Dylan, the newest person to assume the mantle, has to find out who killed his dad and how to defeat a threat capable of that without knowing anything about being a hero. Writer Ryan Parrott and artist Abel craft a whodunnit mixed with a great superhero story.
In the first pages, we see Marcus Bell fighting a mysterious hooded being that knows who he is and how to mess up with the source of his powers, the sun stone. He is easily defeated. Then it cuts to Dylan, the son which Marcus abandoned. And Dylan, not surprisingly, hates his dad with all his might because the man didn’t even try to get to know him. He only seemed good at one thing: making Gwen, Dylan’s mom, sad. [Read more…] about Rogue Sun Review!
This week on Creannotators, I’m joined by comic artist Dave Acosta to talk about his work on Dragon in concert with graphic novel writer Saladin Ahmed. We discuss the creative process behind Dragon, Terrorwar on Substack, what made Dragon part of the hardest year, and new takes on Dracula.
On Comic Book Herald’s ‘Creannotators’ I’ll be interviewing some of my favorite creators in comics about specific runs, graphic novels or series, looking for their insights on the inspirations behind the work and ideas or hidden material readers may have missed. Creannotators is an audio annotative guide to enjoying the intricacies and thinking in the art. Thanks for listening, and enjoy the comics!
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
[Read more…] about Creannotators #94: “Dragon” interview with Dave Acosta!