Robert Kirkman spoke to the media after the Energon Universe panel at New York Comic Con Saturday afternoon. I asked him what the core elements that make up Duke and Optimus Prime are; both answers are very good and have me excited for the franchise moving forward. Check out the full video clip below.
“I think the key to Optimus Prime and Daniel (Warren Johnson) could probably talk about this more is his heart, his gentleness, his compassion. He’s this very heroic character that is extremely capable in battle and does all kinds of cool stuff, but the fact that he cares and the fact that he cares about humanity and the fact that this big giant robot made out of steel has this heart to him. He’s a big softy and I think that that’s something that Peter Cullen really brought to the character with his voice work and it’s something that I’m actually in awe of how well Daniel is able to embrace that core aspect of his character I mean it’s on display in almost every scene that Optimus Prime is in and it’s really just showing the the strength of this character,” said Kirkman.
“Just wait till issue two,” Daniel Warren Johnson chimes in at the end.
Are you excited for the shared Energon Universe?
Transformers & G.I. Joe: Welcome To The Energon Universe
10:45-11:45 a.m. ET, Room 405, Javits Center
THE ENERGON UNIVERSE IS HERE! The TRANSFORMERS and G.I. JOE are back at Skybound, joined by the mega-hit Void Rivals! Superstars Robert Kirkman (Void Rivals), Lorenzo De Felici (Void Rivals), Daniel Warren Johnson (TRANSFORMERS), Joshua Williamson (Duke, Cobra Commander), Tom Reilly (Duke), and Sean Mackiewicz (SVP/Publisher, Skybound) reveal the secrets behind the biggest new comics of 2023. Moderated by Arris Quinones (Host/Co-Creator, Variant Comics). Attendees will receive a copy of the Duke #1 Aschan (while supplies last).
CAPTAIN AMERICA #2 hits your local comic book store on October 25th, but thanks to Marvel Comics, Monkeys Fighting Robots has an exclusive four-page preview for you!
About the issue: When Spider-Man interrupts date night to ask for help taking down the Sinister Six’s latest plot, Captain America begrudgingly obliges. Meanwhile, more and more of Steve’s former enemies are being recruited by a mysterious new threat – one seemingly connected to an enemy Steve faced long before he picked up the shield…
The issue is by writer J. Michael Straczynski and artist Jesús Saiz, with colors by Matt Hollingsworth, and letters by Joe Caramagna. The main cover is by Saiz.
Check out our CAPTAIN AMERICA #2 preview below:
Did you pick up the first issue of CAPTAIN AMERICA? Sound off in the comments!
From acclaimed comics creator Zoe Thorogood (Rain; It’s Lonely at the Center of the Earth) comes the newest addition to one of the medium’s bloodiest sagas in Hack/Slash: Back to School #1. Originally created by Tim Seeley and Stefano Caselli, Thorogood adds her own twisted humor and unmistakable style to this demented world with hilariously disturbing effect. With a plot that mixes humanity with the absurdly grotesque alongside phenomenal artwork, Back to School will be a must-read for series fans and horror readers alike.
“Slasher hunter Cassie Hack is only just getting used to her man-monster partner, Vlad, when she’s drawn into a new case involving a murderous bunny mascot, dead kids, and an entire squad of maladjusted teenage serial-killer hunters!”
Writing & Plot
Anyone familiar with Zoe Thorogood’s work over the last couple of years know how good she is at writing traumatized protagonists. Her streak continues with Hack/Slash: Back to School #1, albeit with a much lighter tone than her previous work. There are few modern writers who are better suited to creating a chapter of Image staple Cassandra Hack’s life than Thorogood. The Eisner-winning cartoonist takes a hold of the damaged slasher hunter fresh off of her first encounter with a slasher. While sharing some fast-food with her new monster hunting partner, a big lovable killer named Vlad, she’s confronted by another slasher – and formally introduced to the wide world of slasher slaying. Thorogood’s clearly having a lot of fun writing characters new and old for Seeley and Caselli’s beloved world of bloody horror comedy. Her script strikes a great balance between twisted humor and genuine humanity. While killing crazed slashers in bunny costumes makes for a great time, there’s no mistaking that Cassandra has gone through something wildly traumatic. Her working through that trauma while integrating herself into a school full of other traumatized girls adds a layer of depth to what could easily be a paper-thin comic story. The cast of ladies from the slasher school are all wonderfully varied and unique in their own ways. This especially goes for the chain-smoking & professionally gaudy headmaster Darla Ritz, and the bubbly Lollipop Chainsaw homage in Boo. Thorogood’s brand of disturbed humor blends in perfectly with the material laid out before, making for a comic that will be a familiar yet surprising treat for Hack/Slash fans and a blast for newcomers.
Art Direction
Unsurprisingly, Zoe Thorogood’s visual work in Hack/Slash: Back to School #1 is a stunning menagerie of bloody delight. Thorogood’s work in her original stories has demonstrated her ability to make some truly unique monstrosities, so her work here feels almost rudimentary by comparison. Her takes on Cassandra and Vlad are spot-on with Seeley and Caselli’s designs, but her distinct sequential direction and animations make them feel like her own creations. Thorogood’s designs for Darla Ritz, Boo, and the rest of the cast are rife with detail, with their own unique spins on school “uniforms.” It’s easy to see how much fun Thorogood must have designing character looks on top of drawing over-the-top gore. Speaking of gore, it wouldn’t be a Hack/Slash book without a lot of it, and Thorogood fires on all cylinders with her renderings of decapitations and smashed organs. Her color art is similar to her work on her other comics, but with a variety of tones that fit with this universe’s atmosphere while filling it with surprising shifts. She uses very little shading, instead relying on lighting and heavy pencils to add more dynamic shades to her colors. In tandem with her panel direction, sometimes creates two completely different scenes split in the middle or at a diagonal. She uses this approach early in the comic as a flashback for Cassandra, and it’s one of the cleverest approaches to a one I’ve seen in the medium. Overall, Thorogood knocks the visual storytelling out of the park with her unique artistic approach.
Verdict
Hack/Slash: Back to School #1 is a devious blast of a first issue, and a perfect fit into this established world. Zoe Thorogood takes her patented approach to writing dark humor and traumatized characters and applies them to Seeley and Caselli’s world with a natural ease. Her visuals are brilliant, as she utilizes her singular art direction to great effect, introducing us to characters new and old through her distinct creative lens. Be sure to grab this new issue when it hits shelves on 10/18!
At New York Comic Con this afternoon, Image Comics announced a new ongoing series GROMMETS from writer Rick Remender, comedian Brian Posehn, and artist Brett Parson. The book will hit your local comic book shop in April 2024. Check out a seven-page preview below.
About the series: In Grommets, two outcast best friends navigate the Sacramento suburbs of 1984, where they find a home in skateboard culture and punk rock. Grommets is both an authentic look at ’80s skate culture—a snapshot of the generation that turned skating into a worldwide phenomenon—as well as a heartfelt coming-of-age story following two friends from troubled homes navigating their damage in an era when no one cared.
The series’ title sprints from skater slang, a “grommet” is a commonly used term for a young up-and-coming skater or surfer. Since the ’60s it’s been used to describe the next generation of kids who, with youthful exuberance, love the sport but want to put their spin on it.
At New York Comic Con this afternoon, Image Comics announced a new ongoing series NAPALM LULLABY from writer Rick Remender and artist Bengal. The book will hit your local comic book shop in MARCH 2024. Check out a five-page preview below.
About the series: What if a child with unimaginable power was discovered and raised to believe he was God by a cult built upon hatred and populated by zealots utterly confident in the purity and absolute moral authority of their religion? Enter a world ruled by The Magnificent Leader, where just such a cult imposed their will on an entire world to create the ultimate theocracy. Join up and buy in—or be cast out to suffer in the toxic slums with the masses of humanity.
The story of Napalm Lullaby begins 50 years after the cult’s subjugation of Earth, when two of the messiah’s bastard children—each with powers that are strange and difficult to control—set out to escape the slums of their birth. Determined to infiltrate the Magnificent Leader’s domed fortress of adulation, they’ll stop at nothing to kill the man responsible for the nightmare they were raised in.
The premise is simple: read one comic every day for the entire year. It seems like a simple task but there is no way that I read 365 comics last year, even if you count the individual issues in collections. So, this year, I am committing myself to this reading challenge, in the hope that I can broaden my reading habits and fully engage with my favorite hobby again.
Gen V is delighting superhero fans on Prime TV with its mix of fascinating character work, twisted takes on superhero powers, and violent action sequences. It is a series that manages to deal with serious subjects, such as self harm and eating disorders, while also engaging in a superhero discourse, and still finds time to be funny and entertaining. Whether or not the series can maintain its momentum will have to be seen, but for now Gen V is great television.
We have also entered the Halloween season. So, mixing superhero stories and horror is where I wanted to go this week. I nearly read Marvel Zombies. I should have read Marvel Zombies but I couldn’t find the box they were in (I’ll keep looking). Instead I started reading the Marvel crossover/event story Fear Itself.
Fear itself came out at a time when Marvel was running event stories at least once a year. Following on from the success of Civil War, the publisher just kept trying to recreate the excitement, drama, and tie-in potential, with more and more outlandish crossover events.
After Civil War came World War Hulk, an event I tried to re-read recently and faltered about a third of the way in. The central story was okay, Hulk hits things, but the tie-in comics were hard to read. They just weren’t engaging enough.
Then came Secret Invasion, leading into Dark Reign and Siege, until finally, we reach Fear Itself in April 2011. I was initially only going to read the main title but I realised I own about 20 of the tie-in issues so I’ve fed them in and, now I’m about a third of the way through.
Fear Itself book 1 and 2 Credit: Marvel Comics
Comic Number 279: Fear Itself #1-2
I read issues one and two before deciding to include extras so there are a number of comics that fit between these two.
Like all Marvel event stories, there appears to be a writers room of creators who all have their own titles that tie in with the main story, which is credited to one writer. For Fear Itself, Matt Fraction is the lead, with Stuart Immonen and Laura Martin on art duties. Strangely, Wade Von Grawbadger gets a credit on the cover but is not listed on the title page. (I assume this is a printing error as his name turns up in issue two)
According to Joe Quesada, Marvel’s Editor in Chief at the tie, Fear Itself was a reaction to real world events, especially the rise in terror attacks and alerts in the early 2000s, and this is clear from the opening couple of issues. Issue one starts with a riot in lower Manhattan and demonstrates S.H.I.E.L.D.’s ineffectiveness at handling such problems. Without a clear villain to punch in the face, the superheroes stand by and watch as civilians and the law enforcement clash. This chaos and sense of hopelessness is a foreshadowing for the superhero antics to come. Meanwhile Sin, the daughter of the Red Skull, takes her crew of Nazi’s to fight another group of Nazi’s so that she can get her hands on a magical hammer that will grant her astronomical power. Power enough to awaken the Serpent, a mythical villain of the Asgardians that only Odin seems to know about.
The result of Serpents awakening is that Odin leads the Asgardians off Earth, abandoning the Avengers to face the oncoming storm by themselves.
The over-sized first issue includes a lot of story, and a lot of conflict. The uncomfortable riot scene in the opening pages is reflected throughout as the comic seems to focus on internal fighting rather than fighting the good fight, or battling the enemy. Nazi fights Nazi, Asgardian fights Asgardian, and humans bicker among themselves. Matt Fraction is building a world of mistrust, fractured by general animosity. He is laying the groundwork for the fear that is to come.
Issue two has seven (I think) hammers crashing to Earth, each of which is found by a hero or villain. Picking up the hammer transforms them into an Asgardian-esque, angry, smashing machine. Just like the Hulk but with runes. What is noticeable from issue two, and I think this is exacerbated by the fact I only own a few of the 100+ tie-in comics, is the lack of story. The entire issue is a montage of recognizable characters picking up hammers. Without the impressive artwork, which captures the power of each transformation, this issue would be a washout. There is no depth to it and, as a reader, you know you’re missing the narrative from other comics.
Journey Into Mystery #623 and Invincible Iron Man #503 Credit: Marvel Comics
Comic Number 280: Journey Into Mystery #622 and Invincible Iron Man #503
After reading the first two issues of Fear Itself, I went back and filtered in the tie-in comics I have. These largely consist of Iron Man and Journey Into Mystery. I did, at one point, own a lot more of the tie-ins, such as Fear Itself: Spider-Man, Fear Itself: The Home Front, and Fear Itself: The Deep, but over time I have sold these off. I think that says something about my engagement with them.
Journey Into Mystery, however, is a definite keeper for me. This is because it is the start of Kieron Gillen’s run on the comic: an excellent and superbly orchestrated story with a very clear beginning, middle, and end. Gillen takes the overused villain Loki and transforms him into an empathetic character with a complicated history and future. The current interpretation of Loki used in the movies and on television owes a great debt to Gillen’s remodeling of the character. Kid Loki, as he comes to be known, is a genius character and the story that starts in issue #622 is a complex narrative that is more akin to a Sandman story arc than it is a Marvel Superhero.
Matt Fraction’s Invincible Iron Man is also intriguing, as from this issue (and throughout Fear Itself) it deals with the characters reactions to the concept of death, whether that means the threat of or the actual physical experience. Fraction’s characters are placed in difficult situations and often react out of character as they try to deal, and even cheat, their fate. Unfortunately, the artwork in Invincible Iron Man is not always up to the task of conveying the strong emotional character acting. The visuals are dynamic but lack the nuance required for the complex discussions Fraction is trying to portray.
Journey Into Mystery #622 Credit: Marvel Comics
Comic Number 281: Journey Into Mystery #623
In which Gillen lays the groundwork for his run on the comic, albeit subtly and symbolically, just like Jonathan Hickman likes to do.
It also contains one of my favorite pages of artwork from this run. Doug Braithwaite’s painted style is magnificent and suits the epic, mythological tale that Gillen is weaving. And page eleven of this story is such a simple page but has a massive impact on me. There is something about the stacked panels and the slow zoom into the character, in this case Ikol the magpie, that packs a big punch. Braithwaite draws you into the page, into the moment and you can feel the suddenness of Loki’s arm appearing in the final panel. Despite the panel being on view from the page turn, it still has a visual impact. We see Loki leap into the pit, and the anticipation grows over the next four panels, getting ever tenser as the image tightens up on Ikol.
This is superb visual storytelling. I’ve almost forgotten what the comic was about.
American Psycho #1 Credit: Sumerian Comics
Comic Number 282: American Psycho #1
A break from Fear Itself to read a brand new comic from Sumerian Comics. American Psycho is a comic that I have very conflicting views on.
Firstly, the writing by Michael Calero is very good. The introductory voice-over resonates with Bret Easton Ellis’ original novel and lulls the reader into incorrect assumptions about the narrative. Coupled with the amazing artwork of Piotr Kowalski, the imagery and atmosphere created throughout this first issue is tangible and often unsettling. The subject matter is, as you would expect, difficult and not for the faint hearted.
And then there is a twist. When the twist comes, it doesn’t change the quality of the writing or artwork but it does frustrate me . This is because it seems to fundamentally misunderstand the original source material, just like the sequel to the Christian Bale movie. I don’t want to spoil the comic for anyone who is going to read it, but Patrick Bateman is the most unreliable of unreliable narrators, and by providing a third person perspective on the events it incorrectly interprets the narrative. This almost becomes a What If..? comic where the ‘what if’ reinforces a misunderstanding of the original text.
If this comic wasn’t linked to American Psycho, it would be easier to enjoy. But by making that connection, the creators are purposefully wanting the reader to link this to the other iterations, especially the movie version because throughout this Bateman looks exactly like Christian Bale. This is a sequel and is written with that in mind, but it contradicts the original in an important way. Unless, of course, there are to be more twists and turns and the reliability of the new narrator is as questionable as Bateman himself. In which case, this comic could become something quite special.
I think I’ve talked myself into liking this comic.
Invincible Iron Man #504-505 Credit: Marvel Comics
Comic Number 283: Invincible Iron Man #504 – 505
Tony Stark goes to Paris and fights an enhanced Grey Gargoyle. Don’t know who the Grey Gargoyle is? I don’t think it matters; I’ve never come across him before. In this story he has the ability to turn those he looks upon into stone. This causes problems when Iron Man battles him because they just keep smashing these statues to pieces.
This story allows Fraction to confront the cost of Iron Man’s battles and the lives that are lost. It’s interesting to note that the death of thousands of Parisians, although lamented, becomes a lesser tragedy than the death of a single member of the Iron Man cast. And not even a prominent member at that.
These two issues tie in directly with the larger story in Fear Itself, and the sense of terror that is a part of that narrative is prominent in both of these comics.
Fear Itself #3 Credit: Marvel Comics
Comic Number 284: Fear Itself #3
Technically Fear Itself #3 comes between the two Iron Man comics mentioned above but I don’t think it matters. At this point in the narrative, there is no sense of connection between a lot of the events that are going on. It’s like the writers had some good ideas about scenes that would look cool but didn’t know how to link them.
I’m being harsh. The purpose of this event is to entertain. They pepper the narrative with some clunky real world issues but that element doesn’t land very well. After the initial riot scene in issue one, a scene that narratively has nothing to do with the rest of the comic but is a tone setter, none of the conflicts have a meaningful impact outside of the superheroes the story focuses on. However, the hero-on-hero action is exactly what the readers of this type of comic want. Their scenes are big and brash; violent and destructive; cinematic and shocking.
So far Fear Itself has done what the Marvel Cinematic Universe has done over the last decade and a half: told tales of extravagance and excitement with characters that are larger than life.
Creepshow Vol 2 #2 Credit: Image Comics
Comic Number 285: Creepshow Vol 2 #2
Halloween is approaching and I have some great horror-themed comics ready to read. To be fair, I always have horror-themed comics ready to read, but this month I have a good excuse.
I’ve been enjoying the new Creepshow comics. The creators involved have been impressive and featured some of my favorite names, such as Becky Cloonan. This month is no exception with a beautifully chilling ghost story from Dan Watters and Abigail Larson. It has a creepy yet poetic narrator slowly unraveling the tale over carefully constructed images. Even the gutters are used to express the slow descent of the situation.
The opening story by Michael Walsh and Pat Brosseau is equally clever, misleading the reader through composition and expertly placed shadows. Although, in the end, this strip is more direct and grotesque with a final panel that will haunt me.
It’s been a good reading week, all said and done. Hopefully, I’ll be able to make it through more of Fear Itself next week and not be distracted by some real horror comics.
BLACK HAMMER: THE END #3 hits your local comic book store on October 25th, but thanks to Dark Horse Comics, Monkeys Fighting Robots has an exclusive five-page preview for you!
About the issue: A multiversal nightmare unfolds as hordes of demonic hellamentals attack Spiral City, while dark heroes congregate in hell fearful of another onslaught by the world destroyer Anti-God.
Black Hammer: The End is the next era of the Black Hammer Universe; a six-issue event series by Jeff Lemire and Malachi Ward that pulls the Black Hammer world into crisis.
The issue is by writer (and BLACK HAMMER co-creator/architect) Jeff Lemire and artist Malachi Ward, with letters by Nate Piekos. The main cover is by Ward, and there will also be a variant cover available by Wilfredo Torres and Bill Crabtree.
BLACK HAMMER: THE END is the culmination of every BLACK HAMMER story that’s been told from 2016, serving as both a conclusion and a fresh start for the Black Hammer Universe moving forward.
Check out our BLACK HAMMER: THE END #3 preview below:
Cover: Malachi WardCover: Wilfredo Torres with Bill Crabtree
Are you reading BLACK HAMMER: THE END? Sound off in the comments!
At New York Comic Con this morning, Image Comics announced the new ongoing series THE INFERNALS from co-writers Ryan Parrott and Noah Gardner, with art by John Pearson. The first issue should hit your local comic shop in February of 2024. Check out a five-page preview below.
About the series: Abraham “Abe” Morgenstern, the son of Satan, has one month to live. Before he dies, he must decide which of his three wayward children—volatile narcissist Nero, conflicted field operative Jackal, or troubled schoolgirl Bee—will inherit his shadowy empire. But will Abe ever be able to truly cede control of the Apocalypse? Or does the Antichrist have something else up his sleeve…
DAREDEVIL #2 hits your local comic book store on October 18th, but thanks to Marvel Comics, Monkeys Fighting Robots has an exclusive four-page preview for you!
About the issue: THE NEW ERA OF DAREDEVIL CONTINUES!
Industry stars SALADIN AHMED and AARON KUDER’s next exciting chapter of DAREDEVIL’s new era continues following Daredevil’s shocking status quo revealed in issue #1! Corruption is tearing Hell’s Kitchen apart! Those who have sworn to protect the city have betrayed their oaths, and Matt Murdock is seeking righteous retribution, one billy club to the face at a time! Daredevil’s losing allies left and right…so what does that mean for the love of his life, ELEKTRA?!
The issue is by writer Saladin Ahmed and artist Aaron Kuder, with colors by Jesus Aburtov, and letters by Clayton Cowles. The main cover is by John Romita Jr.
Check out our DAREDEVIL #2 preview below:
Did you pick up the first issue of DAREDEVIL (2023)? Sound off in the comments!
If you follow cartoonist Tom Scioli on his various social media, then you know the man has what seems like a limitless ability to create clever and cool concepts. One of them, WITCHMAN, is now going to be the focus of Scioli’s next comic and his first-ever Kickstarter campaign, which goes live on October 13, 2023; yeah that’s Friday the 13th! The ever-busy artist to some time to talk with us and cast a spell all about Witchman.
Monkeys Fighting Robots: Tom, why don’t you start by giving us the origin of WITCHMAN as a character? What’s the elevator pitch?
Tom Scioli:A superhero who dresses up as a witch and uses magic to fight the forces of evil.
MFR: Are there any specific comics, books or movies that inspired Witchman?
TS: It came out of a lot of time reading and thinking about Golden Age comics in the research for Jack Kirby: The Epic Life and I Am Stan. I wanted to make a dark avenger character like Batman and The Shadow. I was even thinking about Spider-Man, the Hulk and Spawn. I was thinking about how the superheroes who really capture the imagination aren’t cut from the Superman mold, it’s the ones that have a little bit of a fright element to them. Even Spider-Man, who as Peter Parker is the ultimate everyman yet the theme and visual presentation of Spider-Man is classic Halloween imagery.
MFR: How much of the world have you thought up? Like history, rogues gallery, ensemble cast; things like that.
TS: I’ve been working on it for a while so there’s a lot to draw from. I’ve got all that stuff, but I’m still refining it every day.
MFR: This is your first-ever Kickstarter campaign. What made you choose Witchman as your first crowd-funded book?
TS:The timing was right. I wanted to launch one in October, and Witchman was a perfect fit.
MFR: Was Kickstarter always the method, or did you think about other ways to publish as well?
TS: My first choice is always to have somebody else publish it. I love superheroes. When I was a kid it was so exciting to learn about a new superhero you never heard of before. It’s what I got into this medium for. At the time it was the one place you could tell superhero stories on a regular basis. I want to do original superhero comics but the traditional marketplace isn’t looking for that. I’ve been able to find a home for my non-fiction graphic novels because that’s what publishers are looking for, but nobody’s looking for new superheroes, particularly Golden Age-style heroes. If you want to do that, you have to self-publish. The beauty of the time we live in is that with crowdfunding it’s possible to create exactly the kind of thing you want, even if the industry has moved on from that paradigm a century ago.
MFR: What are your thoughts on crowdfunding in general as a method of comics publishing?
TS: I’m all for it. I’ve seen a lot of great projects come into being as a result that would’ve had a near-impossible uphill climb 15 years ago.
Witchman by Tom Scioli
MFR: Witchman is one of a number of concepts you have played around with on your Patreon and on social media. What made Witchman the one you wanted to pursue as an actual series?
TS: The people spoke. It seemed to get a really strong response out of the gate when I’d post images and pages on my Patreon and on social media. I think it has a high chance of success, because of the superhero aspects of it. It’s my first Kickstarter campaign, so I want to stack the deck in my favor and choose something that even though it’s a little out there, still has a high chance of being successful. Also, even though I’ve done a lot of work on Witchman, it’s still not quite finished. I like the idea of using crowdfunding as a way of helping me bring an in-process project to creative completion, rather than just bringing something I’ve already finished into print.
MFR: Are you approaching Witchman differently than other projects creatively?
TS: The Kickstarter campaign is part of the creative process. It’s giving me a framework and a set of incentives to complete it. It’s kind of similar to the way I worked on Transformers vs G.I. Joe or Go-Bots. I daydream and doodle and write and draw and revise until it’s time to turn in the finished work.
MFR: What’s the specific process for creating Witchman stories?
TS: I’ve been writing and drawing and putting the pieces together. There’s a soft-focus version of the story that’s slowly coming into focus. I’m a relentless editor. I’m willing to keep working and changing things up to the last moment. The best idea, and the best sequence wins. I draw the initial first draft very fast and then redraw and refine it until I’m happy with it.
MFR: Are their big, long-term plans for Witchman or is this a one-shot?
TS:It’s a one-shot for now. I want to tell a complete story. But I would love to do more with it. I think the character and the world of Witchman has legs, but one taking it one step at a time.
MFR: Any final words on Witchman or anything else you want to mention?
TS: I just want to thank everybody for their kind words and encouragement for this particular project. It’s made all the difference.
The Kickstarter campaign for Witchman launches on October 13th, 2023 and you can support it here.