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We're joined by comics writer Joe Keatinge (Shutter, Marvel Knights: Hulk, Ringside) to talk about Man-Wolf's ascension to godhood in the Other Realm, a world beyond imagination. RIYL: Hawkwind, van murals, cosmic awesomeness.
Joe Keatinge is the Eisner Award-winning editor and writer behind so much good stuff, including Popgun, Shutter, Glory, Ringside, Stellar, Marvel Knights: Hulk, and Morbius: The Living Vampire. Find him at joekeatinge.com and support the Kickstarter for The BeBop #1, which includes his story, "Skull-Man: Man of a Thousand Skulls."Howard the Duck (©1986 Universal Pictures) was directed by Willard Huyck, with a screenplay by Huyck and Gloria Katz. It stars Lea Thompson, Jeffrey Jones, and Tim Robbins, plus a duck costume. George Lucas was the executive producer. The Marvel Comics adaptation, Howard the Duck the Movie #1-3, was adapted from the movie script by Danny Fingeroth, with art by Kyle Baker, ©1986 Marvel Comics. Here's the CBR.com article that Bryan was talking about, which features Kyle Baker and Joe Sinnott finishing the exact same page of John Byrne's layouts."Marvel by the Month" theme v. 2.0 by Robb Milne, sung by Barb Allen, with bass by Ryan ‘Biff’ Dudder. "Howard the Duck" performed by Lea Thompson, Dominique Davalos, Liz Sagal, Holly Robinson Peete (as Holly Robinson), produced by Thomas Dolby, and written by Thomas Dolby, Allee Willis, and George Clinton, ©1986 MCA.Visit us on internet at marvelbythemonth.com and follow us on Instagram at @marvelbythemonth.
Ibrahim Moustafa (High Crimes, Jaeger, James Bond: Solstice, Count) didn't really win a gold medal at the 1928 Olympics, but it's a fun bit that we're not going to drop anytime soon. Keep up with all the great stuff he has going on at ibrahimmoustafa.com. Follow his Instagram action figure customization adventures and his very good political takes on Twitter, which he is on so we don't have to be. Joe Keatinge is the writer of Shutter, Glory, Ringside, Stellar, Marvel Knights: Hulk, and Morbius: The Living Vampire and many other great things. He was also the Executive Editor of Image Comics' Eisner Award-winning anthology Popgun. Check out his website at joekeatinge.com for a beautifully curated collection of vintage goodness, and harass him for not posting more stuff on Instagram.Dr. Strange was written and directed by Philip DeGuere for Universal Television. It was distributed by NBCUniversal Television Distribution and aired on CBS (whaaa?) on September 6, 1978 as a pilot for a series that never materialized. We found it on the dark recesses of the internet, and you can too."Marvel by the Month" theme by Robb Milne, sung by Barb Allen. All incidental music by Paul Chihara. Visit us on internet at marvelbythemonth.com and follow us on Instagram at @marvelbythemonth.
Joe Keatinge is the writer of so many great comics, including Shutter, Glory, Ringside, Stellar, Marvel Knights: Hulk, and Morbius: The Living Vampire. He also won an Eisner as the Executive Editor of Image Comics' anthology Popgun. Check out his website at joekeatinge.com for a beautifully curated collection of vintage goodness. And don't miss his #spinnerrackdiaries on Instagram.Comics Released This Month (ones we discuss are in bold): Amazing Spider-Man #42, Amazing Spider-Man Annual #3, Avengers #33, Daredevil #21, Fantastic Four #56, Sgt. Fury #35, Strange Tales #150, Tales of Suspense #83, Tales to Astonish #85, Thor #133, X-Men #25, ©1966 Marvel Comics. "Marvel by the Month" theme by Robb Milne, sung by Barb Allen. All incidental music by Robb Milne. Visit us on internet at marvelbythemonth.com and follow us on Instagram at @marvelbythemonth.
Maybe we should have called this one "Atlas by the Month"? In the decade before Stan and Jack blew the doors off of the comics world with Fantastic Four #1, the company then known as Atlas Comics tried to relaunch their three biggest superheroes of the 1940's: Captain America, the Human Torch, and the Sub-Mariner! Our pal Joe Keatinge (Shutter, Ringside, Stellar, Marvel Knights: Hulk, Morbius: The Living Vampire) takes us on a tour of how these WWII heroes were retrofitted for the Red Scare in a pre-Comics Code world! Reading List: Captain America's Weird Tales #74, Young Men #24-28, Captain America Comics #76-78, Sub-Mariner Comics #33-42, Human Torch Comics #36-38, Men's Adventures #27-28. (Thanks to Tom Brevoort for his website articles and his chapters in Marvel Chronicle, which provided invaluable information.) "Marvel by the Month" theme by Robb Milne, sung by Barb Allen. All incidental music by Robb Milne. Visit us on internet at marvelbythemonth.com.
Comics Manifest | Inspiring Interviews with Influential Creators in Comics
Joe Keatinge is a writer of Image, Skybound, Marvel, and DC comics with amazing titles including Glory, Tech Jacket, Marvel Knights: Hulk, Adventures of Superman and his current Hit image titles Shutter and Ringside, as well as the executive editor of the Harvey and Eisner award winning Image comics anthology, POPGUN.
This week, Matthew and Stephen take a walk into Midian and examine Clive Barker's Nightbreed #1 from BOOM! Studios. Clive Barker’s Nightbreed #1 Writer(s): Clive Barker, Marc Andreyko Artist(s): Piotr Kowalski WHY WE LOVE IT: Comics are full of outcast characters, but this is an outcast story, Clive Barker-style. True to this modern horror master’s other work, NIGHTBREED is full of horrifying creatures that captivated us in the 1990 film and live on in this new story. Plus, writer Marc Andreyko is a HUGE fan of NIGHTBREED! WHY YOU’LL LOVE IT: Before FABLES, before ONCE UPON A TIME, Clive Barker created a secret town of monsters that live among us. Don’t worry if you’ve never seen the film—Barker and writer Marc Andreyko (MANHUNTER) have crafted a story that all horror fans can enjoy. Add to the mix Piotr Kowalski’s art (MARVEL KNIGHTS: HULK) and this is a story that can’t be missed WHAT IT’S ABOUT: The Nightbreed is a secret society of monsters and misfits that hide away from humans, but have been a part of this world since time immemorial. Explore both the past and the present of this clandestine tribe, unleashing new secrets and horrors as they fight to coexist with mankind. Show your thanks to Major Spoilers for this episode by becoming a Major Spoilers VIP. It will help ensure Dueling Reviews continues far into the future!
This week, Matthew and Stephen take a walk into Midian and examine Clive Barker's Nightbreed #1 from BOOM! Studios. Clive Barker’s Nightbreed #1 Writer(s): Clive Barker, Marc Andreyko Artist(s): Piotr Kowalski WHY WE LOVE IT: Comics are full of outcast characters, but this is an outcast story, Clive Barker-style. True to this modern horror master’s other work, NIGHTBREED is full of horrifying creatures that captivated us in the 1990 film and live on in this new story. Plus, writer Marc Andreyko is a HUGE fan of NIGHTBREED! WHY YOU’LL LOVE IT: Before FABLES, before ONCE UPON A TIME, Clive Barker created a secret town of monsters that live among us. Don’t worry if you’ve never seen the film—Barker and writer Marc Andreyko (MANHUNTER) have crafted a story that all horror fans can enjoy. Add to the mix Piotr Kowalski’s art (MARVEL KNIGHTS: HULK) and this is a story that can’t be missed WHAT IT’S ABOUT: The Nightbreed is a secret society of monsters and misfits that hide away from humans, but have been a part of this world since time immemorial. Explore both the past and the present of this clandestine tribe, unleashing new secrets and horrors as they fight to coexist with mankind. Show your thanks to Major Spoilers for this episode by becoming a Major Spoilers VIP. It will help ensure Dueling Reviews continues far into the future!
This week, Matthew and Stephen look through the aperture of Shutter #1 and give their thoughts on the title. SHUTTER #1 STORY: JOE KEATINGE ART / COVER A: LEILA DEL DUCA COVER B: DUSTIN WEAVER COVER C: BRANDON GRAHAM COVER D: EMMA RÍOS INDIANA JONES FOR THE 21ST CENTURY! Marvel Knights: Hulk and GLORY writer JOE KEATINGE teams up with artist extraordinaire LEILA DEL DUCA for her Image Comics debut in an all-new ongoing series combining the urban fantasy of Fables and the globe-spanning adventure of Y: The Last Man. Kate Kristopher, once the most famous explorer of an Earth far more fantastic than the one we know, is forced to return to the adventurous life she left behind when a family secret threatens to destroy everything she spent her life protecting. Show your thanks to Major Spoilers for this episode by becoming a Major Spoilers VIP. It will help ensure Dueling Reviews continues far into the future!
This week, Matthew and Stephen look through the aperture of Shutter #1 and give their thoughts on the title. SHUTTER #1 STORY: JOE KEATINGE ART / COVER A: LEILA DEL DUCA COVER B: DUSTIN WEAVER COVER C: BRANDON GRAHAM COVER D: EMMA RÍOS INDIANA JONES FOR THE 21ST CENTURY! Marvel Knights: Hulk and GLORY writer JOE KEATINGE teams up with artist extraordinaire LEILA DEL DUCA for her Image Comics debut in an all-new ongoing series combining the urban fantasy of Fables and the globe-spanning adventure of Y: The Last Man. Kate Kristopher, once the most famous explorer of an Earth far more fantastic than the one we know, is forced to return to the adventurous life she left behind when a family secret threatens to destroy everything she spent her life protecting. Show your thanks to Major Spoilers for this episode by becoming a Major Spoilers VIP. It will help ensure Dueling Reviews continues far into the future!
The crew chats about Amazing X-Men, Avengers World and Marvel Knights: Hulk as they take your questions, give you the latest Marvel news and much more!
Greg chats it up with Joe Keatinge, fresh off of this month's Image Expo, and you'd better have a comfy chair to listen to this one in, because it is a behemoth! Over two and a half hours of comics talk straight from the man who brought you Hell Yeah!, Glory, and your soon-to-be-favorite title Shutter (announced at the Expo with artist Leila Del Duca), Joe is candid as always, and speaks his mind about Image, Marvel, DC, and a whole bunch of comics on either side of the Atlantic. Find out at what age he read Maus (it's a single digit), what he thought the biggest news out of the Expo was, what his original plans for Morbius were, and what event nearly collapsed the entire comic book industry. All this, plus updates on as many of the 10 books he has coming out in April 2014 as legally allowed: Shutter, What If: Age of Ultron, Marvel Knights: Hulk, the Glory hardcover, and more. AND after that, there's a special segment after the outro with Joe just after he interviewed Jim Steranko at last year's Collector's Con! Robots From Tomorrow is a weekly comics podcast recorded deep beneath the Earth's surface. You can subscribe to it via iTunes or through the RSS feed at RobotsFromTomorrow.com. You can also follow Mike and Greg on Twitter. Music is John Hughes by Anamanaguchi. Enjoy your funny books.
The group talks about Disney Kingdoms: Seekers of the Weird, Marvel Knights: Hulk and Miracleman as they take your questions, give you the latest Marvel news and much more!
Ant Man, Daniel Karhunen and Snow Manilas, Julian Lytle’s Ants, Will Pfeifer and Red Hood and the Outlaws, the awesome Dick Picasso Presents Avant Garde anthology and 1 2 Space from Timothy O’Briant, Harry Moyer, John Dudley, Dave Frank, Jon O’Briant, John Karnes, and Robert Hafferman, David Lapham and Stray Bullets at Image (Cerebus, Queen and Country, Age of Apocalypse, Deadpool MAX, Young Liars, Valiant, Dark Dominion and Defiant, Warriors of Plasm, and much more), John Holmstrom and Cometbus #53 by Aaron Cometbus (The Ramones, Blondie, Sex Pistols, High Times, Screw, The Mutant Monster Beach Party, The Legend of Nick Detroit, The Clash, and…Journey? More, too!) and outstanding Best of Punk Magazine hardcover from !t and Harper Collins, The Artist Within from Dark Horse (Wrightson, Art Adams, Neal Adams, Moebius, and lots more), PLUS Ron Richards crashes the party to throw down on the Image Expo (January 9, 2014 in San Francisco), Black Science #2, Matt Fraction, Howard Chaykin, lingerie, and BJs in Satellite Sam, Ian Churchill and Revenger, Joe Casey’s SEX, Marvel Knights Hulk, All-New X-Men, Year Zero, Arrow, Jonathan Hickman and Nick Dragotta’s East of West, Walking Dead, Ryan Browne and God Hates Astronauts, Dennis Hopeless and Mike Norton’s The Answer, Inhumanity #1, Game of Thrones, Family Guy, Kiss Me Satan from Victor Gischler and Juan Ferreyra from Dark Horse, Parker’s Slayground by Darwyn Cooke and IDW, Brain K. Vaughn and Fiona Staples’ SAGA, Joe Hill’s Thumbrint, Afterlife with Archie #2 by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa and Francesco Francavilla, Jeff Lemire’s Trillium from Vertigo, and a whole mess more!
Reviews: Dead Body Road #1, Indestructible #1, Justice League 3000 #1, Krampus #1, Marvel Knights Hulk #1, Misfits, The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug The Podcast Wife Erica Schultz returns to spread the Christmas cheer! News includes: Sony promises Spider-Man spin-off films, Frank Miller's Detective #27 cover gets reinstated, Miller's 300 comic book sequel Xerxes will probably not be complete until after the 300 movie sequel, Archie Comics teams with Toys For Tots, Disney Channel to make series starring villain's kids and more! Leave your iTunes comments! 5 stars and nothing but love! Thanks for listening!
Can you feel the magic forming? In your heart? We gathered to talk about the few books we read this past week but also our red hot love for Five Ghosts: The Haunting of Fabian Gray. That's our book club, boyo. Setlist includes: (01:15) - Fabian Cortez™ (05:40) - Comic chatter: Sherlock Holmes: Moriarty Lives, Marvel Knights: HULK 1, and Astro City 7 (21:47) - Lightning Round™: Justice League 3000 1, Batman 26, and Sledgehammer 44: Lightning War (23.49) - Five Ghosts: The Haunting of Fabian Gray Hosts: @dale_a | @slim | @JonesyLovesBeer. Special thanks to YOU for our iTunes reviews and/or ratings so far; they help spread the word about the show. Sponsored by: The Comic Book Shop. The best place to grab your print or digital comics.
Arrancamos con Alex+Ada #2 de Jonathan Luna y Sarah Vaughn, que siguen cocinando a fuego lento la historia de este joven ordinario que no sabe muy bien qué hacer con el androide que le han regalado. Captain America: Living Legend acaba en su número 4, con Diggle al guión y Agustin Alessio a los lápices, para terminar con decencia pero sin trascendencia esta historia de ciencia ficción y soldados rusos. Cataclysm: Ultimate Spider-Man #2 mantiene el equipo titular del personaje (Bendis y Márquez) y aunque se lee fácil y los personajes disfrutan de sus momentos para brillar, en realidad es un relleno más de este evento del Universo Ultimate en el que no está pasando nada. Inhumanity: Awakening es el cómic con más texto de la semana, deshonroso honor para Matt Kindt, secundado por un dibujo malillo de Paul Davidson. Y de un cómic que el Dr. Snack califica como "horrible", pasamos a otro que solo considera "montonero": Marvel Knights: Hulk #1 del guionista Joe Keatinge y el dibujante Piotr Kowalski. Bruce Banner acaba en París y... Del montón. En Uncanny X-Men #15 de Bendis y Kris Anka las mujeres se van de compras. No, en serio, la historia es sobre las mujeres del equipo yéndose de compras. Y lo que les pasa entre tanto, claro. Manifest Destiny de Chris Dingess y Matthew Roberts editada por Image, a la que llegamos un mes tarde porque esta semana ha salido el número 2, nos habla de unos Estados Unidos en la era del descubrimiento del Oeste. Solo que con un toque sobrenatural. Una pareja se pasea en una expedición de cartografía y zoología y se encuentran con cosas bizarras. Y marcad bien el número de este podcast, porque el 23 es el número en el que al Dr Snack le gustó un cómic de DC. Superman/Wonder Woman #3 de Charles Soule y Tony Daniel. Los personajes están escritos con criterio y la trama superheroica, sin ser original, al menos está bien llevada. Y rematamos esta semana muy variada con unos comentarios bstante gratuitos sobre algunos cambios en las ediciones de los hardcover de Marvel. Porque a veces no hay Noticia Chorra y porque a veces nos apetece salirnos un poco del molde.Matt Kindt no acierta con las palabras y Paul Davidson no anda mucho mejor con los dibujos. Y de un cómic que el Dr. Snack califica como "horrible", pasamos a otro que solo considera "montonero": Marvel Knights: Hulk #1 del guionista Joe Keatinge y el dibujante Piotr Kowalski. Bruce Banner acaba en París y... Del montón. Uncanny X-Men #15 de Bendis y Kris Anka. Las mujeres se van de compras. No, en serio, la historia es sobre las mujeres del equipo yéndose de compras. Y lo que les pasa entre tanto, claro. Manifest Destiny de Chris Dingess y Matthew Roberts editada por Image, a la que llegamos un mes tarde porque esta semana ha salido el número 2, nos habla de unos Estados Unidos en la era del descubrimiento del Oeste. Solo que con un toque sobrenatural. Una pareja se pasea en una expedición de cartografía y zoología y se encuentran con cosas bizarras. Y marcad bien el número de este podcast, porque el 23 es el número en el que al Dr Snack le gustó un cómic de DC. Superman/Wonder Woman #3 de Tony Daniel. Donde por una vez los personajes están escritos con criterio y la trama superheroica, sin ser original, al menos está bien llevada. Y rematamos la semana esta muy variada con unos comentarios muy aleatorios sobre algunos cambios en las ediciones de los hardcover de Marvel. Porque a veces o hay Noticia Chorra y porque a veces nos apetece salirnos un poco del molde.
Arrancamos con Alex+Ada #2 de Jonathan Luna y Sarah Vaughn, que siguen cocinando a fuego lento la historia de este joven ordinario que no sabe muy bien qué hacer con el androide que le han regalado. Captain America: Living Legend acaba en su número 4, con Diggle al guión y Agustin Alessio a los lápices, para terminar con decencia pero sin trascendencia esta historia de ciencia ficción y soldados rusos. Cataclysm: Ultimate Spider-Man #2 mantiene el equipo titular del personaje (Bendis y Márquez) y aunque se lee fácil y los personajes disfrutan de sus momentos para brillar, en realidad es un relleno más de este evento del Universo Ultimate en el que no está pasando nada. Inhumanity: Awakening es el cómic con más texto de la semana, deshonroso honor para Matt Kindt, secundado por un dibujo malillo de Paul Davidson. Y de un cómic que el Dr. Snack califica como "horrible", pasamos a otro que solo considera "montonero": Marvel Knights: Hulk #1 del guionista Joe Keatinge y el dibujante Piotr Kowalski. Bruce Banner acaba en París y... Del montón. En Uncanny X-Men #15 de Bendis y Kris Anka las mujeres se van de compras. No, en serio, la historia es sobre las mujeres del equipo yéndose de compras. Y lo que les pasa entre tanto, claro. Manifest Destiny de Chris Dingess y Matthew Roberts editada por Image, a la que llegamos un mes tarde porque esta semana ha salido el número 2, nos habla de unos Estados Unidos en la era del descubrimiento del Oeste. Solo que con un toque sobrenatural. Una pareja se pasea en una expedición de cartografía y zoología y se encuentran con cosas bizarras. Y marcad bien el número de este podcast, porque el 23 es el número en el que al Dr Snack le gustó un cómic de DC. Superman/Wonder Woman #3 de Charles Soule y Tony Daniel. Los personajes están escritos con criterio y la trama superheroica, sin ser original, al menos está bien llevada. Y rematamos esta semana muy variada con unos comentarios bstante gratuitos sobre algunos cambios en las ediciones de los hardcover de Marvel. Porque a veces no hay Noticia Chorra y porque a veces nos apetece salirnos un poco del molde.Matt Kindt no acierta con las palabras y Paul Davidson no anda mucho mejor con los dibujos. Y de un cómic que el Dr. Snack califica como "horrible", pasamos a otro que solo considera "montonero": Marvel Knights: Hulk #1 del guionista Joe Keatinge y el dibujante Piotr Kowalski. Bruce Banner acaba en París y... Del montón. Uncanny X-Men #15 de Bendis y Kris Anka. Las mujeres se van de compras. No, en serio, la historia es sobre las mujeres del equipo yéndose de compras. Y lo que les pasa entre tanto, claro. Manifest Destiny de Chris Dingess y Matthew Roberts editada por Image, a la que llegamos un mes tarde porque esta semana ha salido el número 2, nos habla de unos Estados Unidos en la era del descubrimiento del Oeste. Solo que con un toque sobrenatural. Una pareja se pasea en una expedición de cartografía y zoología y se encuentran con cosas bizarras. Y marcad bien el número de este podcast, porque el 23 es el número en el que al Dr Snack le gustó un cómic de DC. Superman/Wonder Woman #3 de Tony Daniel. Donde por una vez los personajes están escritos con criterio y la trama superheroica, sin ser original, al menos está bien llevada. Y rematamos la semana esta muy variada con unos comentarios muy aleatorios sobre algunos cambios en las ediciones de los hardcover de Marvel. Porque a veces o hay Noticia Chorra y porque a veces nos apetece salirnos un poco del molde.
On The Rack 019 – 12/11/2013 Coming to your local comic book shop on Dec, 11, 2013, Batman Black & White, NOVA #11, MARVEL KNIGHTS: HULK, ALEX + ADA #2, and more!