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Review: STAR WARS: OBI-WAN #1 – Time To Reflect

From writer Christopher Cantwell (Halt And Catch Fire, Regarding The Matter Of Oswald’s Body) and artist Ario Anindito (Star Wars: The High Republic) comes the recollections of one of modern fiction’s most beloved characters in Star Wars: Obi-Wan #1. With colors from Carlos Lopez and lettering from Joe Caramagna, this opening chapter offers a compelling look into one of Obi-Wan’s early memories. With a safe yet solid script and stellar visuals, this comic will be a must-have for fans of the iconic “Negotiator.”

“Fast approaches the ultimate destiny of one of the Jedi’s most renowned masters! As he spends his final days in the remote deserts of Tatooine, Obi-Wan Kenobi takes time to reflect on — and record — key moments of a heroic life long-lived. Writing in old leather-bound journals from his hermit’s hut, Obi-Wan remembers his days as a young Jedi Initiate, his trials as a Padawan, the crucible of Jedi Knighthood and the Clone Wars, and some of the earliest challenges he faced as a true Master of the Force! In this tale, Obi-Wan considers a watershed Youngling adventure he narrowly survived on Coruscant when he was but eight years of age…This is just the beginning of his Jedi journey!”STAR WARS: OBI-WAN #1

Writing & Plot

Christopher Cantwell is sure to entertain most fans with his script for Star Wars: Obi-Wan #1. This chapter sees Obi-Wan residing on Tatooine shortly before the events of the original film. Here, he’s reflecting on moments from his past that have never been seen before. This comic, as well as the whole mini-series, are set up as a frame narrative. Old Ben is sheltering in his hut riding out a sandstorm and remembering moments from his past, with each memory making up a new issue. This is a clever and fun way to give readers a collection of new tales starring one of the franchise’s most popular heroes. This issue itself offers something not yet seen in the canon: Obi-Wan when he was still a child. Watching Kenobi as a boy endure the hardship of learning the tough lessons that will go on to make him the Master he turned out to be is a compelling treat.  Admittedly, the story and its structure are pretty safe and not terribly surprising. Nothing about this comic, from its serviceable dialogue to its well-written but a bit overbearing narration, will do much to really awe dedicated Star Wars comic readers. However, this is still a completely engaging chapter that is worth a read for those who want to see Obi-Wan at a point in his life we’ve never seen.STAR WARS: OBI-WAN #1

Art Direction

Easily the most impressive aspect of Star Wars: Obi-Wan #1 is Ario Anindito’s art. Just like his work in The High Republic, Anindito brings the Star Wars universe to life with an attention to detail that perfectly matches the visual style of the franchise while keeping his own art style intact. From the sand swept plains of Tatooine to the elegance of the Jedi temple on Coruscant, every setting looks the part yet feels especially unique in this comic. Classic characters, including Alec Guiness-era “Ben” Kenobi and others who show up look fantastic, and the work Anindito has put into the numerous aliens we cross paths with really shows. Where Anindito really flexes his skill, and this comic’s biggest visual surprise, is how he texturally changes his style from “past” to “present.” There’s a visible roughness to his pencils when we’re with Kenobi on Tatooine. The flashback sequence to child Kenobi has the more expected, modern digital style with very clean lines. Both styles are great, but Anindito’s Tatooine sequence has this stunning, almost classic aesthetic. He pulls off a style that sits somewhere between Sean Phillips and Steve Epting in those scenes, and it looks brilliant.

Carlos Lopez’s colors in this comic nail the rest of this issue’s visual experience. The arid landscape of Tatooine has scarcely been more stunning than when seen here in Lopez’s range of desert tones. At the same time, the cool metallic hues of the Jedi temple and the busy lights of Coruscant are respectively elegant and full of life as they should be. The lettering from Joe Caramagna is on par with that of all other Marvel Star Wars outings. Caramagna utilizes a suitable, easily legible font that works great for the reading experience but just sort of stays out of the way. Overall, this is a visually great looking and professionally composed comic book.STAR WARS: OBI-WAN #1

Verdict

Star Wars: Obi-Wan #1 is a safe yet wholly entertaining chapter that no doubt gives diehard Kenobi fans what they want. Christopher Cantwell’s script is sharp and does a great job revealing new parts of Kenobi’s past, even if it doesn’t really do anything all that surprising. The visuals from Ario Anindito and Carlos Lopez are stunning and surprisingly varied, offering one of the best looking single Star Wars comics in recent years. Be sure to grab this little piece of Obi-Wan history when it hits shelves on May Fourth!

 

 

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INTERVIEW: Composer Philip White Scores Tyler Perry’s A Madea Homecoming

madea-interview-composer-netflix

Tyler Perry’s A Madea Homecoming is the 11th film in the long-running series about a loud and proud Black woman played by writer-director Tyler Perry. Composer Philip White blends family drama and comedy for the film’s score.

The new film in the Madea franchise centers around the return of Madea’s great-grandson, Tim (Brandon Black), who is coming home from college. Tim brings Davi (Isha Blaaker), his biracial roommate home with him. Unfortunately, Tim also has a secret to share with his family. The film descends into hilarious chaos with fights between romantic rivals and a botched marriage proposal. A Madea Homecoming delivers when it comes to everything the franchise promises.

PopAxiom and composer Philip White discussed instruments, becoming a composer, and scoring Tyler Perry’s A Madea Homecoming.

Supernatural

Philip grew up in Madrid, Spain, where he picked up guitar at thirteen. But he moved across the pond for college. Philip went to Tufts and New England Conservatory for a five-year, double-degree program. Philip says “It was great. I don’t think I would’ve enjoyed going to just one or the other. I felt I needed a liberal arts education, but I wanted a strong musical education.”

“I moved out to USC to do a one-year program for composing,” he says. Soon after, he met Christopher Lennertz and started assisting him in 2005. “I could not have asked for a better mentor. In 2008, he gave me a shot at the “James Bond: Quantum of Solace” video game.”

A lifelong Bond fan, Philip’s time on Quantum of Solace was “heaven getting to use those themes. From then on, Chris brought me into more projects on which to collaborate.”

One of those collaborations included a show with a legendary run on television — Supernatural. Philip started programming when the show began. By the third season, he began writing additional music, and by season 13 was a credited co-composer.

About Madea’s Homecoming

Philip’s collaborations with Chris brought the young composer into the world of Madea. Tyler Perry asked Chris to score Boo 2: A Madea Halloween. Chris was stretched thin by other projects at the time, so he suggested that he collaborate with Philip on it. “Tyler Perry and his team were very gracious to bring me on board. A Madea Homecoming is my fourth collaboration with the studio,” Philip explains.

“He’s a performer in the true sense of the word. He can inhabit anybody,” Philip says about Tyler Perry. After Boo 2, Philip scored Nobody’s Fool, A Madea Family Funeral, and A Madea Homecoming. He spoke to the filmmaker’s impact: “Besides his incredible creative output, he’s created this incredible studio outside Atlanta that employs a world of people. I have tremendous respect for him.”

Philip came on board when the cut was almost locked. So, the process for this project began with viewings with key collaborators. “I sat down with Joel C. High, the music supervisor for Tyler Perry Studios, who is Perry’s musical right hand, along with Sami Posner and Johnny Caruso, the music editor.”

“We figured out where the music should start and where it should end,” he says about the results of those meetings. “We figured out what styles we were looking for in different areas.”

Philip explains that the music “needed to serve the comedy and the more intense family moments.” So how did he accomplish that balance? “For the comedy, I relied on a band sound with drums, upright or electric bass, electric guitar, Hammond B3 and Rhodes, and hand percussion. That provided a feeling for whenever Madea and her entourage were on screen.”

“For the more family moments,” he continues, “we had a 22-piece string ensemble with piano and a couple of woodwinds. We had a month-and-a-half before it had to be delivered. So, a month of writing and a couple of weeks of recording and mixing.”

Adjustments

The filmmaking process is an ebb and flow of creativity and compromise. “There was a little bit of flexibility,” Philip says about the process for A Madea Homecoming. “Our music editor created a temp track for about two-thirds of the movie.”

“So, when we spot it, we can play with it and come in or out of a cue sooner or later,” he continues. “Even at the mix stage, we’re still making adjustments. A spot might feel empty, so we’ll need something there, or another spot might feel like the music’s competing with dialogue or sound effects, so it will have to be dialed down or taken out entirely.”

The rhythm of creating for film and television requires multiple viewings to understand the whole picture. “Sometimes when you’re spotting, you’re stopping and starting a lot, so it’s hard to get a flow. So, there’s always little adjustments.”

Wrapping Up

Philip explains what instruments he uses to get started on a project. “It depends on what I’m hearing the score should be. I find that if it’s going to be guitar-centric, I’ll start on the guitar. If I write for guitar, it tends to be for the guitar,” he continues. “The advantage of the piano is that it can be for anything, at least for me. I can imagine it for any number of instruments. I might also hum or sing if I feel it should be more lyrical.”

Philip’s brief list of influences begins with John Williams. “Not to be cliche, but it’s true. I remember watching Raiders of the Lost Ark in theaters when I was seven. I was blown away by the movie. I feel like he scored my childhood. Raiders, Star Wars, Jaws, and ET formed the soundtrack of my youth.”

“I love Thomas Newman. I think he’s so unique,” he continues his list. “Gabriel Yared, who is most famous for The English Patient. I love his writing. Tōru Takemitsu, who scored Ran, is just phenomenal.”

He also admires Bernard Herrmann and his collaborations with Hitchcock. “There’s a flashback scene in Madea Homecoming that we scored in a noir style, as a nod to Herrmann.”

“If I could collaborate with any of my previous collaborators, I would be in heaven. It was such a joy working with everyone at Tyler Perry Studios,” Philip declares.

Finally, what’s a dream project Philip would like to work on someday soon? “I love animation. I’d love to do more animated projects or a musical. I have a real soft spot for musicals.”

Is Tyler Perry’s A Madea Homecoming on your watch list?

Thanks to Philip White and Impact24 PR
for making this interview possible.

Find more interviews from Ruben R. Diaz!

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Read The First Four Pages Of BATMAN #123 – SHADOW WAR, PART 5

Batman #123

BATMAN #123 hits your local comic book shop on May 3 from DC Comics. The book is written by Joshua Williamson, with art by Howard Porter, Tomeu Morey drops the color, and you will read Clayton Clowes’ letter work.

About BATMAN #123:
SHADOW WAR, PART 5 – Batman and Robin are finally reunited! Together they will hunt for the truth behind the death of Ra’s al Ghul! But then who is left to defend the Secret Society against the League of Shadows? Deathstroke’s fight against the Demon’s Shadow ends with a shocking cliffhanger! Plus, what happens when you get Deathstroke infected with Joker toxin? Find out in the epic backup story!

Read the preview below.

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Five Page Preview – SPIDER-MAN 2099: EXODUS ALPHA #1

SPIDER-MAN 2099: EXODUS ALPHA #1 - That Last Page Hooked Me!

SPIDER-MAN 2099: EXODUS ALPHA #1 hits your local comic book shop this week from Marvel Comics. The book is written by Steve Orlando, with art by Paul Fry, colors work from Neeraj Menon, and you will read Joe Caramagna’s letter work. Leinil Francis Yu and Sunny Gho created the cover.


About the issue:
Miguel O’Hara is back! After fighting battles across the timestream, MIGUEL O’HARA is at last back defending his present and our future! For SPIDER-MAN 2099, the only thing constant about life in Nueva York is change. So when a cataclysmic crash creates a new Garden of Eden in what was once the American Wastelands, Spider-Man knows exactly what the next atrocity will be. Watch as THE CABAL plans to set society ablaze — and you’ll never guess who is leading them!


Read the five page preview of SPIDER-MAN 2099: EXODUS ALPHA #1 below:

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Bill Sienkiewicz Talks Inking Neal Adams’ Work

Neal Adams and Bill Sienkiewicz Batman: Odyssey Unused Page Original Art (DC, 2011)
Neal Adams and Bill Sienkiewicz Batman: Odyssey Unused Page Original Art (DC, 2011)

Legendary comic book artist Neal Adams passed away on April 28, at the age of 80. Since his passing comic book creators and fans have reflected on Adams’ influence and inspiration. Bill Sienkiewicz took the time to talk about his conversations with Adams with respect to what it was like to ink Adams’ pencil work. Sienkiewicz posted the below message on Facebook.


On inking Neal.

Neal and I would have countless discussions about his pencils and what he felt inkers did or did not do with his pencils. He was quite candid about who he felt did or did not capture what he was going for. ( and no I’m not naming names.)

He was the first to admit his pencils were deceptive; they looked very tight but were remarkably open to interpretation due to his use of the side of the pencil and of gradations of pressure. His pencils were actually quite painterly, often to the consternation of inkers who were not being hired to do grayscale or washes in their finishes…. Not that printing would accommodate them anyway.

As a result, he felt a some inkers (and in some cases ones that fans absolutely loved) missed the point of his pencils, actually often didn’t quite capture what he was going for. He felt many inkers ( both of his work and of other pencilers whose work had a full value range of blacks, whites and grays) inked the pencil lines themselves and NOT the values of said lines, with the resulting art having areas that Neal felt “punched holes” in areas of transitions, ruining the turning of the forms.

Because we ALSO discussed painting and the importance of tones, values, grays etc. I actually felt I understood what he meant.

I saw Neal’s pencils not strictly in black and white or binary terms, but very much value-dependent in context/ value-driven, and that’s what I personally tried to capture in my inks over him.

I didn’t try to ink the pencil line as a one-to-one ratio, (- i.e., one part graphite = one part India ink) I tried to ink the relative value of it, something admittedly challenging when not using grayed or watered down ink. This often meant inking some lines thinner or thicker to approximate the ‘grayness’ of said line in context. And context is key.

It wasn’t something he asked me to do; it was something I found exciting and challenging and was my own peculiar way of addressing my inking of him.

Turns out he actually liked what I did .which thrilled me. I mean thrilled me no end.

But damn, when I was “off”, he’d would not hesitate to call me and proceed to discuss what I’d done, or failed to do.

“Hey kiddo…. About page 4 panel 3…“

To be honest, I loved these conversations, which almost had the opposite effect of making me want to capture what he was looking for.

They made me give occasional thoughts to “how can I mess this up in just the right way so Neal and I will able to talk for a few hours?”

In fairness, turns out he”d also call if he really liked something I did, so I didn’t have to resort of any nefarious inking screw-ups.

I’d honestly just like to think he actually enjoyed shooting the shit and talking art with a friend.

Gonna miss those talks.

-Bill Sienkiewicz


Below is a great example of Sienkiewicz’s inks over Adams’ pencils.

Neal Adams and Bill Sienkiewicz Batman: Odyssey Unused Page Original Art (DC, 2011)
Neal Adams and Bill Sienkiewicz Batman: Odyssey Unused Page Original Art (DC, 2011)
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Review: GIANT-SIZE X-MEN: THUNDERBIRD #1 – A Second Chance… 40 Years In The Making

Read The First Four Pages Of GIANT-SIZE X-MEN: THUNDERBIRD #1

It seems that nobody stays dead anymore.

From writers Steve Orlando and Nyla Rose and artist David Cutler comes the return of a character more famous in death than in life with Giant-Size X-Men: Thunderbird #1. Featuring inks from Jose Marzan Jr. and Roberto Poggi, colors by Irma Kniivila, and lettering by Travis Lanham, this one-shot revives and reintroduces us to the first X-Man to die under Xavier’s watch. With a thoughtful, complex, and poignant script and equally thoughtful visual design, this return will undoubtedly stand as one of the most important X-Men comics in recent memory – for more reason than one.

“The world John Proudstar has returned to is completely different from the one he once knew. Looking to find refuge in the familiar, Thunderbird seeks out someone from his past at an Apache reservation…and uncovers a horrifying threat to the Indigenous mutant community. Will Thunderbird be able to save his people? Or will his justified rage lead him astray?”Read The First Four Pages Of GIANT-SIZE X-MEN: THUNDERBIRD #1

Writing & Plot

Thunderbird really wasn’t around long enough to be firmly established as a character, so it’s great to see Steve Orlando and Nyla Rose do some thoughtful character building in Giant-Size X-Men: Thunderbird #1. Having the long-dead Native American mutant given the Krakoan resurrection treatment requires a careful hand. Fortunately, Native American pro-wrestler Nyla Rose teamed up with Steve Orlando to be just that. Here, Rose and Orlando establish that John Proudstar never quite felt at home with the X-Men back when he was alive. He’s grateful for what Xavier and the X-Men did for him, but for Proudstar being in a superhero team wasn’t that much different from his time in the Marines. The choice to send Thunderbird on a journey back home immediately after his resurrection on Krakoa is a bold and wise choice. I can’t get into spoilers here, but the writing in this one-shot plays around with ideas of identity, legacy, and loyalty in ways that are both direct and buried under clever subtext. This is a very exciting comic not just for the whole “bringing back a dead character” aspect, but because it handles said resurrection with such intelligence. The socio-political ramifications both in the Marvel universe and here in reality of bringing back a Native character in the year 2021, in the wrong hands, could have ended up with some elements that were rather…problematic. Orlando and Rose really impress with their efforts here.

Major thematic and metanarrative concepts aside, this comic also succeeds in just being a good Marvel comic book. The sequence of events that set up the action have the same kind of stakes and tension that old-school X-Men comics do. Orlando and Rose’s dialogue has that classic comic book-y one-liner snark. Even with the more serious tone of some of the book’s subjects, it still knows how to be a hell of a lot of fun.Read The First Four Pages Of GIANT-SIZE X-MEN: THUNDERBIRD #1

Art Direction

Relative newcomer to mainstream comics and member of the Qalipu Mi’kmaq First Nation  David Cutler lends his craft to the pages of Giant-Size X-Men: Thunderbird #1. He, along with inkers Jose Marzan Jr. and Roberto Poggi, craft a visual experience that is unique to itself while still sharing the house style of the other Krakoa-era X-books. Cutler’s compositions are super-tight, and his actions sequences that make up the entire middle section of the comic are full of energy and a blast to witness. His facial animations and detail work, again with the assistance of Marzan and Poggi, makes even the conversational sequences engaging and endears the reader to each individually designed character. This one-shot’s pacing feels so effortless and natural because of Cutler’s careful composition. Quite a lot happens in this comic, and Cutler cuts it all together with simple yet impressive layouts. Now, the big elephant in the room regarding this comic’s art is Thunderbird’s new costume design. Liking or disliking the new suit is entirely subjective. A superhero costume can only be seen as “bad” if it somehow betrays what that character is supposed to stand for. Thunderbird wasn’t originally around long enough to be able to stand for anything. Here, under the creative thumb of two native creators, that has changed. Cutler has made John Proudstar’s new turquoise costume with the symbolism that is important to his nation and origin. Regardless if you like this costume or not, it’s certainly more meaningful than the original.

Speaking of colors, Irma Kniivila provides the rich tones of Proudstar’s new suit and every other surface in this one-shot. Her work here is vibrant and helps craft the setting of each scene with that fantastic final detail. Sunlight settling over the rocky cliff of the American Southwest has scarcely looked better in a comic. The lettering from Travis Lanham adheres to the same style that the other current X-books have been using, but with some especially great SFX features. The dialogue and narration letters are smooth and unobtrusive, hiding them in the reading experience. His FX work serves as the perfect punctuation to the action sequences, with their presence highlighting all the big impacts in those panels perfectly. Overall, this is a very solid looking comic book that offers a smooth and often gorgeous read.Read The First Four Pages Of GIANT-SIZE X-MEN: THUNDERBIRD #1

Verdict

Giant-Size X-Men: Thunderbird #1 is a bold and thoughtful return for a long-dead character. With insight and intelligence, Steve Orlando and Nyla Rose’s script engages with John Proudstar’s legacy as both the first mutant to die for Xavier, and as a Native American superhero. The visuals from David Cutler, Jose Marzan Jr., Roberto Poggi, and Irma Kniivila are well composed and rich, and perfectly pace every plot point this comic covers. Be sure to grab this major moment in mutant history when it hits shelves on May 4th!

 

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SPIDER-MAN 2099: EXODUS ALPHA #1 — That Last Page Hooked Me!

SPIDER-MAN 2099: EXODUS ALPHA #1 - That Last Page Hooked Me!

SPIDER-MAN 2099: EXODUS ALPHA #1 hits your local comic book shop this week from Marvel Comics. The book is written by Steve Orlando, with art by Paul Fry, colors work from Neeraj Menon, and you will read Joe Caramagna’s letter work. Leinil Francis Yu and Sunny Gho created the cover. The creative team compliments each other for an action-packed adventure.

Have you ever tried writing a non-spoiler review, and all you want to talk about is the last page?! It’s not easy, but we are going to do our best.


About the issue:
Miguel O’Hara is back! After fighting battles across the timestream, MIGUEL O’HARA is at last back defending his present and our future! For SPIDER-MAN 2099, the only thing constant about life in Nueva York is change. So when a cataclysmic crash creates a new Garden of Eden in what was once the American Wastelands, Spider-Man knows exactly what the next atrocity will be. Watch as THE CABAL plans to set society ablaze — and you’ll never guess who is leading them!


SPIDER-MAN 2099: EXODUS ALPHA #1 - That Last Page Hooked Me!

Orlando throws Miguel O’Hara (aka Spider-Man 2099) right into the action, and the train doesn’t stop until the last page with a massive reveal. The pacing is what makes this issue a wild ride. You can break the book up into six parts; every five pages, the book goes in a new direction. As a reader, you never get a chance to catch your breath. Then the setup and punchline Orlando puts together is pure comic book magic. It’s a solid “Oh shit!” moment. I read the issue and immediately wanted to talk with someone about it. I want validation of my reaction, and if we are talking about how a comic book made you feel, then SPIDER-MAN 2099: EXODUS ALPHA #1 has something special.

Fry brings excellent visuals to a Spider-Man book. I felt the physical height of Miguel swinging through Nueva York. The perspective of the buildings was extreme, and Spider-Man 2099 always felt fluid; the action never seemed close to the ground. Miguel also flies differently through the air than Peter Parker, and you always knew it was Miguel under the mask. Fry brought all the little details that make a comic book exciting.

Did I mention that this book is action-packed and reads at a wicked fast pace? Menon had a significant hand in creating this intense pace. Every five or so pages, the color tone of the book changes. The color changes are jarring, going from light blue to dark black red. Then the Ghost Rider is in your face with the bright yellow. Menon’s color palette for the issue keeps you on your toes and highlights the action and plot points.

Caramagna’s letter work is stellar in this issue. The volume control was perfect; I was yelling or whispering dialogue in my head. The book is pure chaos with action, and Caramagna makes a full Ghost Rider page look beautiful with a giant BOOM and then follows it up on the next page with a rollercoaster ride of a KATHOOM. Caramagna also balances the conversations between Miguel and Lyla very well. The word balloon placement acts as a cushion and allows the art to flow from panel to panel.

My favorite panel of the SPIDER-MAN 2099: EXODUS ALPHA #1 is a one-page spread of Ghost Rider going berserk (he has a chainsaw!). Fry goes off with an extreme perspective, Menon guides the eye with colors, and Caramagna drops the BOOM. You can feel the vengeance of Ghost Rider; the page is perfect.

Again, SPIDER-MAN 2099: EXODUS ALPHA #1 hits your local comic book shop on May 4th; grab your copy and let me know what you think.

Read the first five pages of SPIDER-MAN 2099: EXODUS ALPHA #1 below:

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Read The First Four Pages Of GIANT-SIZE X-MEN: THUNDERBIRD #1

Read The First Four Pages Of GIANT-SIZE X-MEN: THUNDERBIRD #1

GIANT-SIZE X-MEN: THUNDERBIRD (2022) #1 hits your local comic book shop next week (May 4th), but Monkeys Fighting Robots has a four-page preview for our readers, thanks to Marvel Comics. The one-shot is written by Steve Orlando and Nyla Rose, with pencils by David Cutler, José Marzan Jr. and Roberto Poggi inked part of the book, Irma Kniivila drops the color, you will read Travis Lanham’s letter work. Ken Lashley and Juan Fernandez brought the cover to life.

About GIANT-SIZE X-MEN: THUNDERBIRD #1:
All Elite Wrestling superstar Nyla Rose slams into Krakoa with a back-breaking one-shot featuring the first X-Man to die in action! In this mega-sized one-shot, she teams up with comics star Steve Orlando and First Nations artist David Cutler to grapple with the ramifications of Thunderbird’s recent resurrection! The world John Proudstar has returned to is completely different from the one he once knew. Looking to find refuge in the familiar, Thunderbird seeks out someone from his past at an Apache reservation…and uncovers a horrifying threat to the Indigenous mutant community. Will Thunderbird be able to save his people? Or will his justified rage lead him astray?

Enjoy the preview below:

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Read The First Four Pages Of IRON MAN #19

Read The First Four Pages Of IRON MAN #19

IRON MAN #19 hits your local comic book shop next week (May 4th), but Monkeys Fighting Robots has a four-page preview for our readers, thanks to Marvel Comics. The Conclusion of the BOOKS OF KORVAC is written by Christopher Cantwell, with art by Cafu, Frank D’Armata drops the color, you will read Joe Caramagna’s letter work, and Alex Ross brought the cover to life.

About IRON MAN #19:
THE LAST MIDNIGHT
AT LAST, THE STUNNING CONCLUSION OF THE BOOKS OF KORVAC! Tony Stark must face Michael Korvac once again, and once and for all. No cosmic powers, no allies or henchmen, and no…armor? This is the very end of a very long and very rocky journey; Tony’s going to have to get by on his own blood, sweat, and tears. For the first time in his life, he’s all out of ideas.

Enjoy the preview below.

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Review: Glamour and Gore in STEP BY BLOODY STEP #3

Step By Bloody Step

In Step By Bloody Step #3, we follow our protagonists into a city. Until now, this series has seen our characters through a harsh wilderness, as they trek onward to some unknown goal. This chapter shows a stark contrast, not only to the issues that came before, but to life outside the city walls. Writer Si Spurrier, artist Matias Bergara, and colorist Matheus Lopes lure us into a haven that’s surrounded by a battlefield.

Story

Spurrier has been setting up the themes that are at play in this issue for a while. All through the series, whenever the young girl wants to stop and enjoy herself, the armored giant insists they keep going. Step By Bloody Step #3 sees the girl finally win out in this argument. She ignores her giant companion’s silent warnings and enters a party in the city. Spurrier quickly makes it clear that there’s something off about this celebration. Whenever we’re not seeing the lavishly dressed guests talking over their glasses of fine liquor, we’re seeing the poor, war-torn landscape outside. Spurrier clues us in that this city is one that has been built through conquest. And its residents have deliberately insulated themselves from the joyless realities of life beyond their wealth.

Step By Bloody Step

Art

Bergara and Lopes work beautifully in tandem to bring this contrast to life. But they also play with some of the similarities between the evil “city people” and the little girl’s life thus far. Right before they’re met by an ambassador for the city, the girl and her armored giant protector get into a fight. The giant seems to lose its temper, stomping on the ground and creating large clouds of dust behind it. The next page shows the ambassador flying into the scene on the back of a large bird. Bergara and Lopes present these moments as mirror images of each other. The giant’s tantrum and the bird take up the same space and placement on each page, and the pages are both colored in greys, whites and muted blues. The little girl looks at her protector with an unconvinced eye from then on. It’s as though she’s saying “You’re trying to shield me from these people, but what makes you better than them?”

When the girl meets the city leader, the page bursts with color. In the center of the page, Bergara places a platter covered in delicious foods, colored vibrantly by Lopes. The food is in the foreground and we see the girl in the background looking at it. She looks small and pale compared to it. The temptation is just too big for her. From then on, we see scenes that take place in the city or just outside of it. The most effective moments occur when we see a little of both at the same time. The little girl walks through a luxurious garden, painted in stunning greens, set against the backdrop of violent skirmishes outside that show up in deep browns and twisting greys. Bergara and Lopes will not only show you the differences between the city dwellers and the poor who fight outside, but they’ll make you understand why someone could get lost in the vibrant riches of the city and forget that anything else ever existed.

Step By Bloody Step

Verdict

Step By Bloody Step is a gorgeous series. It patiently teases out themes and ideas over the course of several issues at a time. It’s drenched in subtlety yet it’s also full of action and dynamism. Pick up Step By Bloody Step #3, out from Image Comics now, at a comic shop near you!

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