Image Comics has announced a new on-going to arrive this October from creators Steve Orlando and Davide Tinto. COMMANDERS IN CRISIS follows a team of superheroes, brought together by a collapsed Multiverse, to solve a murder mystery on our world.
Steve Orlando’s success rate with DC characters. coupled with his fondness for Championship Wrestling, promises to fill this new series with unparalleled bombast and energy. Davide Tinto’s penchant for sharp lines and action-emphasizing perspective should make for action panels that are gorgeous and pulse-pounding.
You can read Image’s full press release below.
Are you looking forward to this series? Let us know what you think in the Comments section, and please share this post on social media using the links below.
NEW SERIES COMMANDERS IN CRISIS TAKES FLIGHT THIS OCTOBER FROM IMAGE COMICS
PORTLAND, Ore. 07/03/2020 — Fan favorite Steve Orlando (Wonder Woman, Doom Patrol: Milk Wars, Martian Manhunter) teams up with Davide Tinto (Marvel Action: Spider-Man) for a superhero story unlike any other in the forthcoming Commanders in Crisis. This new ongoing series is produced by Arancia Studio—the Italian media company which worked on Mirka Andolfo’s bestselling Image Comics titles—and will launch from Image Comics this October.
“Commanders in Crisis is all the energy and creativity I’ve served for the past five years, now completely unchained!” said Orlando. “No rules, no restraints, the type of strange and passionate ideas that brought me into the medium in the first place. Comics should be bold, comics should be big, and comics should be badass. This is my first freelance launch since 2015, and we’re taking a nuclear shot across the bow. No vanilla vengeance here! This is a fight for comics as they need to be.”
The last survivors of the Multiverse live among us under new, superheroic identities, five survivors of doomed worlds…taking a second chance to ensure our world lives on. A new twist on strange superhero comics, with a bleeding-edge eye on the modern moment, Commanders in Crisis follows in the footsteps of Doom Patrol and Thunderbolts as five unexpected heroes come together to solve a murder unlike any other. The victim? Compassion itself…This is ideacide!
Tinto added: “I am really happy about being onboard for Commanders In Crisis. Steve is a great guy and a fantastic writer and publishing with Image Comics, which put out Invincible, my favorite superhero comic, is a dream come true. I am very thankful for the opportunity.”
This intense, weird action thriller will remind readers of the importance of compassion and hope in the present moment—all while putting fists to faces along the way!
Commanders in Crisis #1 will be available at comic book shops on Wednesday, October 14.
Commanders in Crisis #1 will also be available for purchase across many digital platforms, including Amazon Kindle, Apple Books, comiXology, and Google Play.
Racism was woven into our cultural fabric before we would even call ourselves the United States. It’s woven into the red, white, and blue of our beloved flag. From Uncle Tom’s Cabin to I Am Not Your Negro, we’ve made attempts in our art to apologize for and otherwise contend with our country’s past. It’s difficult to strike a balance in messaging. If you lean too sentimental, you miss the point. Too violent and you risk re-traumatizing those who experience racism daily and feel the ripples of slavery. Infidel from Image Comics manages to strike the balance.
In the midst of our new revolution and artistic efforts to help an American audience unlearn racism, my thoughts turned to this 2018 graphic novel. Written by Pornsak Pichetshote and illustrated by Aaron Campbell, I first read this a few months ago.
Alert: If you haven’t already read Infidel, here’s your SPOILER WARNING!
A Familiar Story
Infidel is a horror graphic novel originally released as a five-issue series by Image. It’s the story of a young Muslim woman named Aisha who is being haunted by the racist ghosts of explosion victims on the top floor of her apartment complex.
The haunting comes at a time when Aisha is dealing with tension between her white fiancé Tom and his mother Leslie, due to the older woman’s prejudice. Aisha is forgiving while Tom is not, putting her in an intermediary position and causing confusion for Tom’s young daughter, Kris. His bitterness and anger are shared by Aisha’s best friend Medina who, like Aisha, has lost her faith.
It turns out that this lack of faith is precisely what keeps Aisha around her fiancé’s family, and Medina’s story is ostensibly the same. Found family keeps these women alive. Tragically, the ghosts start to intensify these already strained relationships.
Despite an Atavan prescription, an investigation, and some exploration of the occult, nothing but another explosion can rid Aisha and her friends from these ghosts. Faith, a theme of the book, is also ineffective. Other than making a McGuffin out of Aisha’s misbaha (prayer beads), faith, like the occult elements, is weak in the face of the destructive power of racism, mental illness, and murder. As Medina says early in the book, “Racism’s a cancer that never gets cured. The best you get is remission.” Prescient words that resonate with current feelings of cynicism and weariness.
Medina doesn’t believe Leslie’s changed
An Unlikely Choice
Medina embodies this cynicism and weariness, making her an unlikely choice of heroine. And yet she must avenge Aisha who becomes comatose after a ghost-involved accident which also causes the death of Leslie and serious injury to Kris.
Medina does her best to continue Aisha’s interrupted investigation. However, once she does find out the truth, her attempt at vanquishing the occult demons fails. The misbaha that could have exorcised the ghost breaks. Thus, Medina is forced to blow up the apartment complex, setting us back into the vicious cycle of racist blame.
The violence in this particular portion of the book is hard to witness given its roots in reality. Medina’s a martyr, but a villain to the press in the aftermath. We’ve read it before. Here, what keeps the reader invested is the empathy we now feel for these women. We want to scream at the reporters, “Medina was a person! She had no choice!”
I’d argue that the violence was necessary for such an emotional payoff. Medina couldn’t write her own story just like other victims of racial violence.
Reaching Out
In the aftermath of the explosion, Aisha wakes from her coma. She’s been declared innocent in the death of Leslie. Her new pastel world gets juxtaposed with a conversation between two white developers as they assess the ruins of Aisha’s apartment complex. They joke about the tragedy, and one tries to convince the other that people can change if you give them a chance. He says, “You just have to have faith” as the ghosts resurface behind them. It’s a self-aware sentiment reminding us that expressions of faith are tantamount to indifference in our harsh world.
What saves this from turning into a completely bleak ending is the image of Aisha reaching for her mother’s hand with Kris’s drawings making up the background. The message here being that cultivating strong bonds across divides can heal our broken society.
Infidel‘s creators, especially in the final chapters, balance the violent and avoid the sentimental except where it may serve a broader point. Their healthy cynicism gives the story nuance, appealing to the jaded reader. The creators want us to feel empathy and anger by the end. Anger toward racism, empathy for the victims of it, and perhaps, the urgency needed to enact social change.
A Familiar Hate
The book was indeed very timely when it came out in 2018, responding to a rise in Islamophobic hate crimes in the U. S. That was also the year in which President Trump’s “Muslim ban” saw its day in court. Regardless, Infidel doesn’t comment on these things directly. It’s never preachy, and it doesn’t rely on the ghosts to scare the reader. Rather, it poignantly delivers on the fear that racism both creates and is based upon.
One example of this can be found in a short scene in which Leslie, while riding the subway, clutches her purse tight to herself because she sees a Black man nearby. Campbell’s hard lines and attention to facial expressions turn a subtle moment into suspense. Actions like hers chill the bones of anyone capable of empathy.
We may not see the nationwide change our protests hope to achieve by the of the year. There were three years between the 1916 Rising and War of Independence in Ireland, and then another sixteen years before the country became firmly established with a constitution. It was two years between the Emancipation Proclamation and Juneteenth when every slave finally saw freedom. Racism can’t be eradicated, but social and political change will come.
Pichetshote never intended Infidel to be prescriptive. As Campbell said in an interview, “we didn’t seek to answer these questions as much as try to simply just ask the questions.” As such, it’s a good place to start to unlearn racism. You may pose the same questions asked in the book and have those difficult conversations. It may also move you to act.
Growing up is scary. Fiction is replete with metaphors for adolescence. Horror especially has mined the depths of childhood psychology since before the genre was cool. As a result, us readers may think we’ve seen and read it all before. Something is Killing the Children Vol. 1 from Boom! Studios will convince you otherwise.
In a world that gave us Stranger Things and It, Something is Killing the Children appears to be riding a trend. The book features a shy teenage protagonist, a child-killing monster, and a police investigation, all standard tropes of the young adult sci-fi/horror genre. What sets SiKtC apart is its heroine and her intriguing subplot.
WARNING: SPOILERS AHEAD
Written by James Tynion IV and illustrated by Werther Dell’Edera, the book opens with a vignette in which a group of four boys play truth or dare. The game takes a turn when one of the boys doesn’t believe that James, our shy teenager, saw a monster outside his house.
We later learn that this monster is real and that it killed James’ friends. James was only spared because he tripped on a tree root and fell down the ravine where he claimed to have seen the monster. This convenient fall leads to James being questioned by police and accused of murder by his classmates.
The story proceeds realistically from there until we actually see the monster on page twenty-eight of issue one. At this point, James’ drama has dovetailed with the mission of Erica Slaughter, our mysterious heroine.
Mysterious Heroine
Erica hunts monsters. Equipped with a flip phone, two machetes, and a bandanna with a Cheshire cat grin on it, Erica is a badass. Sure, her only friend seems to be an octopus toy that may or may not be possessed by a spirit. And so what if she’s a bit aloof sometimes? Erica does not embody any “strong woman” stereotypes. What sets Erica apart is her maternal nature toward James and other children, always comforting and sympathizing in the face of horror.
It’s as if Erica is the consoling older figure we all wish we had when we were kids afraid of the dark. She’s honest without being harsh, and always affirms James’ feelings. Despite being a reluctant and imperfect person, Slaughter is the perfect intermediary between two worlds.
In the world of SiKtC, only kids can see monsters, like a more twisted version of the Polar Express motif. Erica is the only exception to this rule. This, along with her phone calls with an unidentified employer and her fake ID made of paper, make her alluring to the reader and to James. He pressures her to let him tag along on her hunt for the monster that killed his friends and other children in the town of Archer’s Peak.
James is a stand-in for the author while Erica might be Tynion’s ideal heroine. As he said in an interview with CBR.com, “We kind of live in this world of horror day-to-day and a lot of times we want somebody to just show up who knows how to face the horror we don’t know how to face….” Erica and James make for an oddly matched yet perfect pair, adding moments of levity to a heavy horror about killing children.
That said, the story is still a horror. It’s gory and tragic. Shades of dark blue and black highlight the ominous tone and contrast the bright red viscera. Moody grays and browns steep the story in the dull colors of obsession that another character, Tommy, feels regarding the disappearance of his younger sister.
The Hunt
Tommy gets sucked into the hunt after a chance meeting with Erica at his place of work, cheekily called Applebeams. Erica reveals that she knows Tommy’s sister is missing, which sends the wrong message to Tommy. He now believes Erica is his sister’s murderer.
Tommy stalks our heroes to a cave and ends up getting in the way of Erica killing the monster. The well-meaning idiot accidentally shoots James, freaking out about the monster. But Erica manages to kill the monster, and Tommy takes James and a girl who managed to survive out of there.
Still, the hunt isn’t quite over. Volume 1 ends with a delicious twist you may have seen coming if you’ve seen the Alien films. Will James survive? Who is Erica talking to on that flip phone?
Something is Killing the Children delivers on story and art in ways television can’t. It twists our childhood fears while providing a comfort for them. No doubt the next set of issues will up the ante.
DC Comics has released another sneak peek at the DCeased: Dead Planet ahead of its July 7 release. Take a look at the Justice League of Earth-2 in the preview art below:
DCeased: Dead Planet #1 Earth-2 ‘s New Justice League Fights For Survival!
After a corrupted Anti-Life Equation turned billions into monsters—including Earth’s Greatest Heroes—our planet was as good as dead.
…or was it?
Years later, a distress call brings Dinah Lance Queen, Damian Wayne, Jon Kent, and Cassie Sandsmark—the Green Canary, Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman of Earth 2—back to a dead planet…but what will this new Justice League find waiting for them? If life still exists on Earth, who—or what—is lying in wait for these heroes? The original creative team of Tom Taylor and Trevor Hairsine reunite for the sequel to the 2019 blockbuster series DCeased!
DCeased: Dead Planet #1, written by Tom Taylor with art by Trevor Hairsine, Gigi Baldissini, Stefano Gaudiano, Rain Beredo and Saida Temofonte hits shelves next Tuesday July 7!
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine – Too Long A Sacrifice #1 hits your local comic shop July 15, but thanks to IDW Publishing, Monkeys Fighting Robots has an exclusive conversation with the writers of the series, Scott Tipton and David Tipton as they breakdown four pages from the first issue.
Greg Scott is the artist on the book, Felipe Sobreiro dropped some color, and you will read Neil Uyetake’s letter work. The cover featured above is the retailer incentive by J.K. Woodward, and Cover A is by Ricardo Drumond.
About Star Trek: Deep Space Nine – Too Long A Sacrifice #1: Death casts its shadow as Constable Odo searches for truth amid a web of treachery and lies. Everyone on the Promanade has a motive for this murder, be it vengeance, justice… or old-fashioned greed.
Enjoy the commentary by Scott Tipton and David Tipton
Page 3
SCOTT TIPTON: I’ve always liked the friendship between Bashir and Garak on DS9, and that was something we definitely wanted to touch on when we knew we were coming back. I always liked that mixture of the genuine affection Garak seemed to have for Bashir, along with the sense that Garak always knew more than he was telling you.
DAVID TIPTON:One of Garak’s favorite rhetorical tricks is to ask a question even though he already knows the answer so he can draw out even more information. Here he does that, then he hints he knows even more, and finally he backpedals, keeping Bashir in the dark. Garak’s use of words is precise and strategic even though it’s often couched in obsequiously friendly tones. It’s more likely than not that had this conversation continued, Garak would have walked away with some helpful new nuggets of information about the war, while Bashir would have learned nothing new (except those few scraps Garak chose to divulge).
Pages 4-5
DAVID TIPTON:Two-page spreads are tricky. You’re using up a lot of storytelling space, so you have to make the most of them. In this case, I love when a story moves forward dramatically in panels without word balloons. I don’t want to rely too much on word balloons to talk you through a scene like this; I want the reader to see this story, and Greg Scott’s art here is fantastic, conveying the violence and chaos of the explosion.
SCOTT TIPTON:I love this double-page spread, a bit of storytelling that we don’t utilize very often.
Greg Scott did a great job here getting across the sudden unexpected nature of the bombing, as well as subtly showing how Garak tried to protect Bashir, a surprisingly heroic move that might surprise someone who didn’t know Garak well.
Page 6
SCOTT TIPTON:Colors are great here, with the muted yet still vibrant images of Odo, Dax and O’Brien against the bombed-out gray of the destroyed restaurant Especially here where we have a lot of information we need to communicate to the reader, Greg and our colorist Felipe Sobreiro manage to convey the degree of damage done to the station.
DAVID TIPTON:That bottom panel of page 6 has very nice work by Greg and Felipe showing the significant damage to the station, with walls and arches slightly askew and Dax, Odo, and O’Brien in silhouette in the middle of it all. I like the way they’ve done a great job of showing how this destruction would affect Deep Space Nine’s asymmetric, angular, and uniquely Cardassian style of architecture and design.
Are you a Star Trek fan, and do you pick up the comic books? Comment below with your thoughts on the comic book universe of Star Trek.
In a stunning move, Marvel Comics has announced it’s pulling licensing agreements with Dark Horse for Alien,Predator, and AvP. The agreement, first established under 20th Century Fox, has been in place for 30 years. Marvel’s press release (full transcript below) explains it intends to start publishing books under the Marvel banner beginning in January 2021.
Since the release of Marvel’s press statement, Dark Horse put out a public tweet wishing Marvel and the reacquired properties well in the future. See Dark Horse’s full statement below.
Does this move by bode well for the Alien, Predator and AvP franchises? Let us know what you think in the Comments section, and share this post on social media using the links below.
MARVEL COMICS TO PUBLISH NEW ALIEN AND PREDATOR STORIES
ALL-NEW ALIEN AND PREDATOR STORIES TO KICK OFF IN 2021
New York, NY— July 2, 2020 — Today, Marvel Entertainment announced three iconic franchises – ALIEN, PREDATOR, and ALIEN VS. PREDATOR – will be launching all-new stories with Marvel Comics starting in 2021! Revealed exclusively by IGN, the new comic series will feature new and classic characters from Earth and beyond to explore never-before-seen corners of both the Alien and Predator universes.
Following the debut of Alien in 1979 and Predator in 1987, the films built a cult following and expanded rapidly to include toys, games, novels, and comic books, eventually leading to 2004’s landmark crossover Alien vs. Predator. Marvel’s new stories will draw from all of these properties, building on decades of multimedia storytelling. Get a first look at next year’s deadly new chapter with spine-chilling cover art by David Finch!
“There’s nothing more thrilling than a story that will keep you at the edge of your seat, and Alien and Predator have delivered that time and time again!” C.B. Cebulski, Editor-in-Chief of Marvel, told IGN. “I can clearly remember where I was when I saw each of these modern masterpieces for the first time, and reveling in how both masterfully weave extraterrestrial dread and drama into some of the most iconic scenes we’ve ever seen on film. And it’s that legacy that we’re going to live up to!”
“The incredible legacies of both franchises offer some of the most compelling and exciting worldbuilding in all of science fiction,” said Marvel Editor Jake Thomas. “It is a thrill and an honor to be able to add to that mythology and continuity with all-new stories set within those universes.”
“Alien and Predator are the two of the most identifiable, iconic characters of all time, and I love them for that,” said Finch. “But mostly, it’s being fortunate enough to be a kid when they were new. I’ve seen every movie they’ve ever been in, and I cannot wait to see them wreaking havoc in the Marvel Universe. I drew my pictures of them with a massive smile on my face.”
“As a visual medium, comics are the perfect place to build on those moments, and we here at Marvel are honored to begin telling these stories for fans everywhere,” added Cebulski. “As our release schedule continues to return, we can’t wait to share more in the coming months!”
Details on upcoming ALIENand PREDATORcomic book titles, collections, reprints, and creative teams will be shared at a later date. For Marvel’s most up-to-date release schedule for your favorite comics, visit Marvel.com/newcomics. Be sure to ask your local comic book shop about their current business policies to observe social distancing or other services they may offer, including holding or creating pull lists, curbside pick-ups, special deliveries and other options to accommodate. Find and support your local comic book shop at http://comicshoplocator.com or by visiting http://marvel.com/lovecomicshops.
Response from Dark Horse on July 2, 2020, 1:30pm Eastern
Animosity #28 hits your local comic book shop on August 12, but thanks to AfterShock, Monkeys Fighting Robots has an exclusive four-page preview. The 32-page book is written by Marguerite Bennett, with art by Elton Thomasi, colors by Rob Schwager, and letters by Taylor Esposito. Rafael De Latorre and Marcelo Maiolo worked on the cover.
About Animosity #28: In the aftermath of the fever-plague in the New Holy Texan Empire, Sandor and Jesse flee across the desert to rest, and face the truth at last.
Check out the full preview for Animosity #28 below:
Animosity is AfterShock Comics longest running series.
About the series: One day, the Animals woke up. They started thinking. They started talking. They started taking revenge. Now, a dog and his girl are trying to get away–out of New York City, and all the way to San Francisco, to the only person who might be able to protect and save her.
Do you have Animosity on your pull list? Comment below with your thoughts on the series.
Thirty years ago, a ghost haunted the box office, ten years later, it was a marvelous mutant invasion, and then ten years ago, the action was only all in your head.
In this time of strife we’re facing as a planet, it’s good that we have movies to get us through and bring us together. One-hundred-plus years of filmmaking provides a long, rich, and deep history to look back on. Retro reviews and analysis of old films are practically necessary full-time specialties. Month after month, films release, vying to make as much money and grab as much attention as possible. Some fall, but regardless of financial success, the lasting effect of a film on popular culture is unpredictable.
So, where does that leave past box office champs? Let’s take a look back ten, twenty, and thirty years ago at the biggest movies released in July.
1990 • Ghost • 205.3 million
Thirty years ago, Patrick Swayze and Demi Moore stole our hearts with the cross-existence, clay pot molding, Whoopi Goldberg co-starring Ghost. The film has firmly entrenched itself in pop culture history. It solidified its stars as super-celebrities, and it featured a fire soundtrack from French composer Maurice Jarre. Not to mention the song “Unchained Melody,” which likely lead to many of the births in early 1991. The film earned 505 million worldwide and only set the studio back 22 million to make.
In a distant second place was Die Hard 2. The sequel to the skyscraper action-thriller put its hero in an airport against a new set of terrorists. Presumed Innocent starring Harrison Ford came in third and coincidentally also co-stars Bonnie Bedelia from Die Hard 2. The late, great John Ritter starred in Problem Child, a sort of modern, redheaded step-cousin of Dennis the Menace. Every spider lover’s favorite creature feature, Arachnophobia with Bill Pullman and Scarlett Johansson, took fifth place but is a timeless classic popcorn movie.
2000 • X-Men • 157.2 million
Up-and-coming director Bryan Singer hit the big time when he turned the venerable comic book team the X-Men into box office super-money. X-Men kickstart-ed a franchise that added five sequels, the Wolverine spinoff series, and a New Mutants film that will one day see the light of day. Hugh Jackman’s Wolverine is as iconic as any drawn by John Byrne or Frank Miller.
As impactful as X-Men was, and it indeed dominated on a global scale, it only won the domestic box office by a mere 200,000 dollars. In a close second was the first Scary Movie starring Anna Farris, Regina Hall, and all the Wayans brothers. Coming in a close third, only two million behind, was What Lies Beneath. Harrison Ford and Michelle Pfeiffer formed a superstar team in a supernatural thriller directed by Robert Zemeckis. Eddie Murphy was hot in 2000 and milked his Nutty Professor shtick for a sequel called The Klumps. Lastly, we have the Disney made film The Kid starring Bruce Willis, which, until this writing, I did not know existed.
2010 • Inception • 292.5 million
Ten years after X-Men, Inception took the box office crown with nearly double the amount. Christopher Nolan was hot off his reimagining of Batman. For Inception, he crafted a mind-bending masterpiece of a heist movie. The cast is mind-blowing, including Leonardo DiCaprio, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Ellen Page, Tom Hardy, Cillian Murphy, Marion Cotillard, Ken Watanabe, and more. The film won four Academy Awards and made a boatload of money, further cementing Nolan’s place as the powerhouse director of the day.
Inception had competition, and it came in the form of Despicable Me, which earned 251 million. The first in the long-standing franchise introduced the world to the Minions and new costumes forever in the Halloween rotation. It hurts me to talk about the next film, but it exists, and it made enough money to land in third place. That movie is The Last Airbender, the ill-conceived live-action version of the brilliant animated series brought to un-life by M. Night Shyamalan. The power of Angelina Jolie fueled Salt’s success, a little mentioned action film from director Phillip Noyce. Paul Rudd, Steve Carell, and Zach Galifianakis teamed up for Dinner for Schmucks, a purported comedy.
July 2020 & Predictions
Does not compute. The box office is a strange place right now. The Wretched, a well-received horror film dominated weeks worth of box office returns from drive-in theaters across the country. For one day, YouTuber Eric Tabach held the #1 spot with his film Unsubscribe. July was supposed to feature the silver screen’s official return with the premiere of Christopher Nolan’s newest film Tenet. However, due to new spikes in COVID-19 cases, cinemas in the US have nixed the idea. Stay healthy and happy, readers. There’s no shortage of stuff to watch on streaming services across the interwebs!
RONIN ISLAND #12, on sale Wednesday, July 1st, concludes Greg Pak, Giannis Milonogiannis, Irma Kniivila, and Simon Bowland’s impressive original series. With Ronin Island full of Byonin, many of the townsfolk believe their only option is leaving. But Hana and Kenichi know what the Island means for so many people, and it’s going to take more than zombies to break them down.
Story
At first glance, Hana and Kenichi’s situation appears hopeless. The Byonin have officially overrun the Island, and the Shogun’s forces spur them on to wreak even more havoc. General Sato urges Hana to abandon the islanders as a lost cause, but the young hero is made of sterner stuff.
In a moving moment of action, Hana jumps to defend the people who have scorned her. We’re brought face-to-face with the protagonist we’ve grown to love at her finest—a warrior who fights not to earn love, but because she loves.
However, Hana’s strength and bravery might not be enough to stop what the Shogun has in store. He plans to let the Byonin (and possibly the bandits that have joined his side) do the dirty work. But with the Byonin morphing into a larger, stronger being, can either side hope to defeat them before the island is completely ravaged?
Artwork
Thanks to Milonogiannis’s penciling and ink work, Kniivila’s coloring, and Bowland’s lettering, readers will be treated to the unique artistic talent that’s been a mainstay throughout the series. The characters are drawn with few lines, yet convey an impressive amount of emotion and movement. Each of these scenes is fleshed out with burnt oranges and harsh reds to reflect the unforgiving landscape these Byonin and the Shogun have formed.
Conclusion
RONIN ISLAND #12 wraps up Pak’s narrative beautifully. Though much has been lost, there’s a glimmer of hope that shines through.
Were you satisfied with the series conclusion? Let us know in the comments below!
In ages of political turmoil and uncertainty, humor is one of the greatest tools we have to combat despair. That’s why Kieron Dwyer’s UNPRESIDENTED HC, on sale Wednesday, July 1st, is needed now more than ever. Our divided country could use a few laughs. And what better way to get the giggles going than by depicting Donald Trump, a.k.a. POTUS, in ways much of the world already views him?
Collections
The collection is divided into various categories, usually puns based on one of the POTUS’s personality traits. In this way, Dwyer brilliantly crafts a tour of the figure’s unseemly exploits.
The Ego has Landed
This series of panels depict the POTUS as an egotistical maniac, claiming success for ultimately insignificant things such as large crowd sizes and an illustrious fart in a bathtub.
Orange Lies Matter
The illustrations in this section point to irony of the POTUS’s administration’s stance on the Black Lives Matter movement. Using scenes of Trump highlighting the importance of his “in group” (white, cisgender males), Dwyer shows how the President embodies the false narrative he places on marginalized groups.
Putin’s Puppet
Readers will find that this group of illustrations pokes fun at POTUS’s apparent infatuation with Vladimir Putin, especially early on in his presidency. Many of these panels depict the Russian leader in a puppet master role over the oblivious Trump.
Conclusion
These hilarious sections are just the tip of the iceberg. UNPRESIDENTED HC offers plenty of political satire to keep the disheartened reader content for days. We look forward to more work from Dwyer, the creator who’s somehow put all of our jokes about POTUS into comic form.
Do you want to see more of this satire from Dwyer? Let us know in the comments below!