Justice League not only has the monumental job of introducing DC’s most iconic heroes, but the film also needs to set the stage for future films in the DC Extended Universe. Zack Snyder has ensured that future films will be set-up in Justice League by introducing a handful of supporting characters, including the introduction of The Flash’ love interest, Iris West. Speaking to SuperHeroHype, Kiersey Clemons (Dope) discussed her role as Iris West in Justice League, and it seems like the character is involved in some pretty exciting scenes.
“I finished all my stuff with Zack [Snyder], I wish him well and I have no idea what’s going on right now, but I’m sure whatever they’re doing is necessary. I know the parts that I did introducing Iris are f*cking sick. I can’t wait to see the movie. I’m so happy that I’ve been introduced to this genre because I didn’t really have any type of desire to be a part of any superhero world. And then I stepped on the set of “Justice League” and I was like, “Holy sh*t. All right!”
After her primary role in Justice League, Clemons will star alongside Ezra Miller in the recently announced Flashpoint movie. While Clemons couldn’t say much about that particular project, the actress did reveal how she’s approaching her schedule, in preparation for the film.
“I am just taking it project by project. I have so many projects in the works that I’m not necessarily gonna be on camera for, but I’m producing and writing. I’m kind of filling this space by working on that stuff, so when it comes around for Flash I can get our movie done and then I can produce my own stuff. The Flash is gonna be taking up a lot of my time throughout the year acting, so I want to make sure I’m preparing to do the other things I wanna do when it comes to creating and casting! The f*ckin’ actors I wanna see. I wanna see some sexy black men in a movie, you know what I’m sayin’? Those are the movies I’m gonna make.”
Clemons will be introduced in Zack Snyder’s Justice League, which will land in theatres on November November 16, 2017. Flashpoint is currently without a release date.
Fueled by his restored faith in humanity and inspired by Superman’s (Henry Cavill) selfless act, Bruce Wayne (Ben Affleck) enlists newfound ally Diana Prince to face an even greater threat. Together, Batman and Wonder Woman work quickly to recruit a team to stand against this newly awakened enemy. Despite the formation of an unprecedented league of heroes — Batman, Wonder Woman, Aquaman, Cyborg and the Flash — it may be too late to save the planet from an assault of catastrophic proportions.
Political correctness just took a hilarious turn. The creators of Comedy Central’s critically-acclaimed show Broad City recently announced that the name Trump would be censored for season four. The comedy duo already implicates this censorship on their web-shorts.
“There’s no air time for this orange (person),” co-creator and star Ilana Glazer told USA Today. “We bleep his name the whole season.” Glazer went on to say she and co-creator/star Abbi Jacobson rewrote much of the new season once “this game-show host became president of our country.”
“We didn’t originally write it like that,” said Glazer in a summer TCA conference. “This season we did more rewriting than ever before, more creatively versus logically in the rewrite period because this election happened and the world changed.”
Abbi and Ilana were very vocal in their support of Hillary Clinton during the 2016 election, and they’ve been just as vocal with their disdain for Donald Tr*mp. As previously noted, this satirical censorship is nothing new. Check out this clip below:
This is a rather bold move for a comedy show to pull, but this is nothing new for Comedy Central. The TV network is home to some notorious shows like Chappelle’s Show and South Park, the latter just recently declared will not talk about Tr*mp at all. Both South Park and Broad City have found unique ways to handle the current political climate.
What do you think of this censoring decision? Do you find it humorous or offensive? Let me know your thoughts in the comments below.
Broad City follows stoner best friends Abbi and Ilana as they navigate their hectic & hilarious lives in New York City. The show’s fourth season is premiering on September 13th. A fifth season is already confirmed by Comedy Central.
Dave Alvarez is a name that harkens back to my youth when I was a newly transplanted resident of Puerto Rico back in the summer of 1996.
I still remember when my parents told me that my father had gotten the orders for us to move to Puerto Rico. My sister, I don’t think minded so much (she was nine at the time) but as someone who had only lived there from birth until the age of two and visited only once since I was the least bit happy. Was I going to be forced to move from New York City the greatest city in the world to live in Puerto Rico? Did they have anything I had here? The TV shows? My comics? Anime? Oh, my God, I’m going to be screwed and so bored and miserable.
Luckily for me, I turned out to be wrong. Very wrong. Dead wrong. Which brings me to Dave Alvarez. You see right outside Fort Buchanan (the base we lived on) is a mall called San Patricio and in that mall, is a comic book shop called Metro Comics where I happened upon a comic called Changuy. Now my Spanish isn’t perfect and while I can have a conversation it’s a bit of a chore for me to read. But man, that didn’t matter with the beautiful animation quality art that Dave was pumping out.
For those of you wondering what Changuy is about its basically Gizmo Duck meets Darkwing Duck and that’s not doing it justice. Because it is its own thing and in my opinion lovingly inspired by the Disney Afternoon shows. Here’s a bit of a more appropriate description from Dave’s Facebook page for Changuy.
FENIX CITY! Crime is taking over it. A girl mouse named Julie builds a super suit with the latest technology to fight crime. The purpose? To sell it to the police, convince them that anyone can use it, but her project was rejected by the RSI, (Ribonucleic Scientific Institute). She decides to test it alone, and that’s when Arturo Mozambique, a common everyday change, decides to test the subject for the experiment. Now Fenix City has a new superhero. Someone that uses incredible weapons… throws himself down buildings, eats junk food, and leaves his face etched in every wall (nobody’s perfect). He is CHANGUY!
Come on I dare you to tell me that doesn’t sound like fun. Besides his work on Changuy, his fantastic newspaper strip Yenny and other comics. Including work for DC, Boom! and IDW. Dave is also a prolific character designer, storyboard artist and animator with extensive credits in the animation business.
And today we will get to know a bit about him, his love of comics and animation and his newest creations ChickenDuck and Vejigantes which I think is going to be a smash sensation and give Pokemon and Yo-Kai Watch a run for their money.
Now let’s get to that interview.
Marco: Okay so generally I hit people with a couple of starter questions. Your basic getting to know you but we’ll leave that for later. Because right off the bat, I want to talk a bit about Vejigantes.
So, tell us how the property came to fruition. If I’m not mistaken it started with your son asking you if Puerto Rico had its own Pokemon?
Dave: Yes, this came out of a mix between Pokemon and Yokai Watch. My kids are very into those and one Sunday morning we started to talk about how specifically those creations show traits of Japan and how their culture shows up in their animated shows. The obvious question popped up.
Do we have creatures or monsters in Puerto Rico? We talked about the Chupacabras and out nowhere…the Vejigantes. Which by no mean are creatures at all but talking about the Chupacabras sort of brought the idea up.
My youngest started to draw scribbles of what he thought were Vejigantes and that’s how it began.
Marco: That’s a great origin story. Now to further expand on that. What has the journey been like to get this project where it is. I’ve been following you since before you started Vejigantes but seeing it grow from a thought to designs, a card game, animation tests and plush dolls has been fascinating. What is the end goal?
Dave: The end goal is to develop a strong franchise that could stay and represent our culture in a fun way just like Japan does. The Vejigantes story is fictional so by no means I mean to teach anything through it but to entertain and create a Puerto Rican presence in the world.
Marco: Before we talk some more about The Vejigantes and the recently announced news of Changuy lets go back to your early beginnings. What made you fall in love with comics and animation? And tell us a bit about your journey getting into both entertainment fields.
Dave: I fell in love with animation first. My room walls were filled with Animation Magazine’s posters and “scenes” that I drew on my own. I wanted to learn animation but it was too expensive and my family didn’t have the resources to pay for that so I chose to make comics instead.
I wasn’t into super heroes, I was more into European comics and artists like Peyo’s Smurfs or Asterix. I saw a lot of beauty on the artwork but there was one thing that I didn’t catch that much and that was expressions.
So, I chose that as my starting point. I wanted to make expressive comics.
Getting into the field was a work of God. I cannot explain it any other way. I saw a couple of Looney Tunes comics and saw a submission request address, so I wrote to them. They answered back rather quickly so I send some samples back. A year later they called me back.
The caller was Peter Tuminello from Warner Bros Entertainment. At first, I thought it was a joke but when I realized it was real I was beyond excited. My first task was Animaniacs and after that, I was asked which book I wanted to keep drawing so I chose Looney Tunes.
After that the road to comics was interesting. I met a lot of people from comics and the animation field. At the end, I ended working on what I wanted to do first which was animation.
Marco: Now let’s talk some Changuy. Recently you announced on your Facebook page that Changuy was coming back via independent comic book publisher Angry Viking Press. How did that come together because it’s been quite a while since Changuy was in any comic shops? I wish I still had my lone copy I bought back in 96 or 97. I cherished that thing. Was this something you were pursuing? I noticed you also mentioned that there would be updates concerning toys and animation. Anything you can talk about right now?
Dave: Changuy was the first independent comic that I made in Puerto Rico. Edward Santiago was the writer, Jovany Zapata the letterer and David Martinez co-created much of Changuy’s world with me. The comic somehow traveled around the US and raised some interest from a couple of companies. Sadly, none of them came to fruition.
Jason Canty, Founder, and CEO of Angry Viking Press have asked me to add Changuy to their title lineup so I decided to give it a shot. As you said before, this is a comic that was published only in Puerto Rico in the 90’s so if it were to be published again, things have to start from the very beginning.
In benefit to the original audience in Puerto Rico, this comeback will show some origins that were unexplained back in the day. Also, the original crew will be back with a couple more new artists like Jessa Otero and Gabriel Rivera.
The animated bits have the talented voices of Ivan Joel Vega as Changuy, Marielena Alcaraz as Julie, Jose Saul Nieves as Rocketiger, Jesus Tobas as Mukarom, Lius Nation as 123 Fish and Cesar Soto as Professor Blips.
Marco: To continue the discussion about Changuy tell the readers a bit about the comic and how it came to be. I remember reading on your site a recent story you told concerning that and I want our audience to read that too because to me it sums up nicely the spirit of comics the passion and the can-do attitude it has.
Dave: The creation of Changuy was simple and naive. Tim Burton’s Batman Returns was playing on theaters. Everyone was talking about this new dark Batman and how he came to wipe Adam West’s image from our minds.
The Disney Afternoon was also a big thing by the time so you may imagine where this story is leading to.
My grandpa built me a small wooden drawing room at my grandma’s marquesina (that’s the Puerto Rican equivalent for a garage). My friends came up to visit very often to draw or just to joke around in this place. One Saturday my friend David Martinez dropped by and we started talking about Batman and how that leather suit would be a bad idea for crime fighting in Puerto Rico’s 98 degrees up weather. No matter what we couldn’t stop thinking of Adam West (not Keaton) sweating gallons under that suit.
We were laughing so hard and we started to draw thumbnails of silly situations. Batman in a drive-thru, Batman sitting on the city hall’s stairs sweating drops in mid-day waiting for the mayor to show up…etc.
Somehow during all the silliness, the Disney Afternoon topic came up. We started talking about how these classic characters were now heroes. I started sketching a Batman type Chango, (a Chango is a Puerto Rican crow).
Darkwing Duck was part of the Disney Afternoon and we talked about how he was different from all the other duck designs. I said “well, that’s because he has Roger Rabbit’s face with a duck beak over” So needless to say we tried a crow beak over the RR head shape.
The suit changed during the design stage. I’m a fan of European comics. I love the detail they add to every story. Asterisk was one of those samples. So Changuy’s suit is a salute to Uderzo’s character. He had wings on his head too at first but that changed eventually. His relationship with the Rocketiger is also a nod to Obelix and Asterix.
That weekend was glorious. Characters and situations were popping out of our minds.
We heard about this store owner who was publishing comics to all of those who had a good proposal. (Dave’s Comic Clan) So we came to him with a small Changuy story. He published what we called “el comic rosita”, (the pinky comic) because he used pink paper to publish it.
After that, we felt confident enough to publish our first formal Changuy comic book. So, we went to a printing shop where they gave us the whopping figure of $1,200 for 900 comics. We look over in other shops but prices go higher as we looked further…so it was up to the $1,200 place to do it. Needless to say, I didn’t have the money.
One afternoon I heard that my dad got a bonus at the factory he worked at. I didn’t know how to ask him so I prepared this whole presentation and how I was going to give him back his money and eventually “pay the house with the proceeds”. (That didn’t happen, of course).
One evening, after supper, I came to him trembling with my notebook full of childish dreams. He didn’t even let me start. He just smiled and pat me on the knee. He said that he trusted that I was doing the right thing. So he gave me the money.
That started it all.
Another good friend of mine Edward Santiago joined us to write stories for Changuy. Today he’s a polished screen writer.
I have a horrible handwriting so Jovany Zapata joined us for lettering. He had awesome skills and patience to do it. More friends like Yoani Fontanez and Gary Javier, (now the best editorial cartoonist I’ve seen) helped us on the way.
We distributed the comic book on our own. We filled Edward’s Toyota with $10 of gas and ran from West to East and North to South in a weekend. I still remember how much we joked around while driving and dream about the impossible. We traveled hoping to sell some comics so we could print the next issue or just to make enough money to fill the tank so we could return home.
We managed to print 6 issues. Printing prices sky-rocketed making impossible to do more.
In 2007 an editor of the newspaper El Nuevo Dia asked us to return Changuy as a comic strip. (I must add that Changuy was originally titled “Changay” (pronounced: Shan-guy). Silly concerns about readers misreading “gay” since the paper was distributed in the US came about so hence the title change).
By that time, I was really busy with the Looney Tunes comics so master illustrator Richard A. Cruz took over the art. The strip lasted a year or two. Its humor was overrated by their average elite readers.
A few attempts were made after that.
Today Angry Viking Press is bringing Changuy back to print. I’m deeply grateful to Jason A. Canty for believing in the bird or should I say…the Chango
Marco: I love that story. I never get tired of reading it. It’s so punk rock. Is there anything else you’re working on besides Changuy and Vejigantes? I’ve seen the ChickenDuck images you’ve been posting.
Dave: About ChickenDuck, yeah, there’s a small project circling around this crazy duck. ChickenDuck was a character that I created years ago. I had an image of him as a screensaver on my computer back when Windows XP was a thing.
Years later my friend Kyle Carrozza was helping me illustrate and write the Kee Kee Koki comic strips. I showed him an image of ChickenDuck. He later suggested that he should join Kee Kee as a sidekick character on the strip. That was working well, only that ChickenDuck was a more fun character to write for.
This year I posted some images of Kyle’s proposal for ChickenDuck on the comic on Facebook. Somehow people seemed to dig the character a lot so I started to make short animated bits along with my friend and Looney Tunes writer Bill Matheny. Everything is taking shape so I hope that ChickenDuck can become an official thing soon.
There’s a Kickstarter about this right now.
Marco: That’s fantastic to hear. I hope it’s a huge success. We’ll definitely need you to give us some more info on the Kickstarter at the end of this interview. Now besides your creator owned stuff and personal animation projects what are you currently working on for others in animation and comics? I know you did a story in the Jonah Hex-Yosemite Sam one shot. Which by the way I love.
Dave: I’m still playing multi-task man for comics and animation. Lol. I still illustrate the Looney Tunes comics on a regular basis. The Jonah Hex story was the most recent project. A real challenging one, by the way. Joey Cavalieri, the editor in chief told me that I could illustrate the story differently from what I normally do so I chose to redesign the Looney Tunes by mixing Bob Clampett’s, Tex Avery’s and Whitman comics style with a bit of Disney. Yeah, that’s quite a mix but it was fun.
Marco: And now this brings us to the end. But before you go I’m going to give you the chance to PIMP YOUR STUFF. This is your moment to tell the readers where they can follow you on social media, and what they should check out that you’re working on. Basically, it’s your moment to make a passionate plea to the readers as to why they should check you out and purchase your work.
Dave: Thanks for the awesome interview, Marco. Regarding my work, you may follow me on Facebook.
My official web page for commissions and art is Dave Alvarez Studios. Also, there’s our ChickenDuck Kickstarter project. You can help us create our next cartoon by following this link: The ChickenDuck Show
And last but not least, I encourage everyone to find and read more about Puerto Rican comics. Yes, I make Changuy, Yenny, and Vejigantes but there are so many creators and their creations waiting for you readers to follow their adventures. Just Google names like Turey El Taino, Sharky Tunas, Pepito, Tato y Kenepo, El Profe, El Isleño among many others and you’ll see what I’m talking about.
Samuel L. Jackson is out promoting his next film ‘The Hitman’s Bodyguard,’ and during a press junket the actor revealed his production schedule to ‘Glass’ the M. Night Shyamalan follow up to ‘Unbreakable’ and ‘Split.’
‘We start rehearsal on [September] 18th and I start shooting on the 25th. (…) I’m anxious,’ said Jackson to Collider.
‘Glass’ will look to Jackson to carry the film as he reprises his character Elijah Price (Mr. Glass), and we all know, the greater the villain, the better the hero.
About ‘Glass’ M. Night Shyamalan brings together the narratives of two of his standout originals—2000’s UNBREAKABLE and last year’s SPLIT—in one explosive, all-new comic-book thriller: GLASS. From UNBREAKABLE, Bruce Willis returns as David Dunn as does Samuel L. Jackson as Elijah Price, known also by his pseudonym Mr. Glass. Joining from SPLIT are James McAvoy, reprising his role as Kevin Wendell Crumb and the multiple identities who reside within, and Anya Taylor-Joy as Casey Cooke, the only captive to survive an encounter with The Beast. “Following the conclusion of SPLIT, GLASS finds Dunn pursuing Crumb’s superhuman figure of The Beast in a series of escalating encounters, while the shadowy presence of Price emerges as an orchestrator who holds secrets critical to both men.
‘Glass’ hits theaters on January 18, 2019.
‘Split’ was an unexpected surprise at the box office in 2017, all eyes will be on ‘Glass’ in 2019. Do you think Shyamalan can handle the pressure? Comment below.
The Teen Titans found their Raven today with the casting of 13-year-old Teagan Croft today. Deadline was the first to break the news about the ‘Titans’ series that will debut in 2018.
Raven has always been the wildcard of the team, as she’s the daughter of a demon. Her first appearance was in DC Comics Presents #26 from 1980. The cast of Croft proves that creative team behind the project understands the source material and actually using teens in the roles of our heroes, not 20-somethings pretending. It is important that the series has a broad range of ages as this will create an engaging dynamic among the team. It should be like ‘Party of Five’ with superpowers.
‘Titans follows a group of young soon-to-be Super Heroes recruited from every corner of the DC Universe. In this action-packed series, Dick Grayson emerges from the shadows to become the leader of a fearless band of new heroes, including Starfire, Raven, Beast Boy, and many others.’
‘Titans’ will be written by Akiva Goldsman, Geoff Johns, and Greg Berlanti.
Croft was part of pretty epic Australian sci-fi thriller, check out the trailer ‘The Osiris Child: Science Fiction Volume One’ below:
The Toronto Sun spoke with Shazam! director David Sandberg about the film’s lighthearted, fun tone, and how it will be different from other movies in the DC extended universe.
“The big attraction for me with that character is the fact that every kid dreams of being Superman, right? I mean I certainly did, and (Billy Batson) is a kid that gets that chance. He gets to become the superhero. So it’ll be big with superpowers in a way. In terms of what people can expect, I think this will be one of the more fun or lighthearted movies so far in the DC universe. It certainly will be a departure.”
Wonder Woman was lighter, and that has brought in Warner Bros. not only a truckload of profit, but it also gave fans a reason to be excited about the DCEU again. WB tried the darker, more bruting style of film, and it didn’t work. Now it seems they are course correcting for the better.
Are you looking forward to Shazam!? Comment below, let us know.
Netflix is taking a risk with ‘American Vandal’ as it’s hard to conceptualize this satire, but it’s a well calculated risk as it looks like the series was put together on a tight budget.
Check out the trailer:
If ‘American Vandal’ plays it straight like the trailer, a solid percentage of America will believe this story is real. That in itself is a pro and a con.
‘American Vandal’ explores the aftermath of a costly high school prank that left twenty-seven faculty cars vandalized with phallic images. Over the course of the eight-episode season, an aspiring sophomore documentarian investigates the controversial and potentially unjust expulsion of troubled senior (and known dick-drawer) Dylan Maxwell.
Created by Tony Yacenda and Daniel Perrault, the true-crime satire is comprised of eight 30-minute episodes for season one. Yacenda directs the series starring Tyler Alvarez, Griffin Gluck, Jimmy Tatro, Camille Hyde, Eduardo Franco, Jessica Juarez, Lou Wilson, Camille Ramsey, Calum Worthy, and G Hannelius.
Will ‘American Vandal’ make you binge? Comment below.
It seemed that a sequel to ‘Pacific Rim’ might not happen, but now ‘Pacific Rim Uprising’ is having a hard time finding a safe place in a very crowded 2018 release schedule.
Universal stated Wednesday, the release date to ‘Pacific Rim Uprising’ would be pushed back from February 23 of next year to March 23, according to a report by Deadline.
A big budget action film can usually find a spot during the summer, but now that you have the Marvel Cinematic Universe releasing 2-3 films a year, Warner Bros. with 2 DC Extend Universe movies a year, and an annual Star Wars film – where does a giant robot monster movie find time to shine?
Let’s look at the early part of 2018:
Feb. 2 – ‘God Particle’ sequel to ‘Cloverfield’
Feb. 9 – ‘Maze Runner: The Death Cure’
Feb. 16 – ‘Black Panther’ MCU
March 2 – ‘Red Sparrow’ Jennifer Lawrence
March 9 – ‘A Wrinkle in Time’ Disney / ‘Gringo’ Charlize Theron action thriller
March 16 – ‘Tomb Raider’ Alicia Vikander
March 23 – ‘Pacific Rim Uprising’
March 30 – ‘Ready Player One’ Steven Spielberg
April 6 – no blockbuster films
April 13 – ‘New Mutants’ X-Men
April 20 – ‘Rampage’ Dwayne Johnson
May 4 – ‘Avengers: Infinity War’
After looking at the schedule ‘Pacific Rim Uprising’ should have moved up a month and released in January instead of getting eaten alive by ‘Ready Player One,’ but every studio wants distant from ‘Star Wars: The Last Jedi.’ There will be a lot of box office failures and success stories between ‘The Last Jedi’ and ‘Infinity War.’
Do you think Legendary Pictures made the right move? Comment below.
It’s been confirmed that John Boyega’s character Jake Pentecost, is the son of Stacker Pentecostis who was played by Idris Elba.
‘Pacific Rim Uprising’ is directed by Steven S. DeKnight from a screenplay by Emily Carmichael, Steven S. DeKnight, T.S. Nowlin, and Kira Snyder. The film stars Scott Eastwood, Tian Jing, Adria Arjona, John Boyega, Burn Gorman, Charlie Day, and Rinko Kikuchi.
Grumpy Cat and Garfield is the sort of crossover that makes perfect sense when you think about it. They both like to sleep, they’re grouchy, and lovable in their own ways. Grumpy Cat/Garfield is a comic that I’ve been looking forward to. To start with, I’m one of the few people you know who likedGrumpy Cat’s Worst Christmas Ever. I also love the Garfield and Friends animated series. With both of these awesome cats, I have history and a great history with both of them. Now it is time to see if both of these cats make for a winning combination. Will this be the worst comic ever? Will it be one delicious plate of lasagna? Hopefully it isn’t as dark a day as a Monday. Now let us begin our adventure into the grouchy but lovable world of Grumpy Cat/Garfield #1.
Grumpy Cat/Garfield #1 is a clever crossover idea from Boom! and their Kaboom! imprint and Dynamite. Still can’t believe this is real but I can’t help but like that it exists.
What helps here is Mark Evanier has had a long history with Garfield from comics to TV with Garfield and Friends and The Garfield Show. Evanier knows our lasagna loving friend and his universe well, probably about as much as Garfield’s creator Jim Davis at this point. This is also Evanier’s first time writing Grumpy Cat and her universe and to be fair on my part, I’m not familiar with the Grumpy Cat comics. From this though, I find I should get more familiar with Grumpy Cat’s comic series. Even if you’re not familiar with either of them, Evanier keeps the story simple, nefarious businessman Mr. Ichabod Gross is trying to make cats act like dogs, and from one wacky idea comes wonderful results.
Now the simple premise works wonders in getting two of our favorite cats together. Both of them think Gross is a fool and ignore him immediately. You can almost figure how these cats collide with Gross yet it works and it is delightful. I also like the bits in between as Grumpy Cat’s brother Pokey and Odie have a role to play in this too. I’ve always liked Odie but Pokey was a lot of fun and I will enjoy seeing Odie and Pokey meet. Evanier crafted a neat story that gets everyone together and that’s all you need. It’s fun, it’s sweet, and it will be a blast to see how this plays out. A simple story idea that brews many neat possibilities for a fun crossover adventure. Sometimes all you need a simple hook to make a story fun and keep readers wanting more.
Yes I am a touch biased here in my liking of both Grumpy Cat and Garfield but sincerely this is a lot of fun.
I can’t rave enough about the art, Steve Uy is pitch perfect for this comic. Uy’s art has vibrant colors, wonderful expressions, and it all comes together beautifully. Evanier’s script has a lot of life to it and Uy captures the life in this comic with ease. It’s a book you can’t help but appreciate how the art merges the worlds of our feline friends effortlessly. Two different styles of characters mixing well with one another between the script and a great artist. I also enjoy Tom Napolitano’s lettering, especially in the handling of the narration of the book. The narration has a neat text style going for it, think mysterious typewriter style narration, and I like that. Even more so I love the lettering for Odie’s “Yeah! Yeah!” conveying his joyful nature perfectly.
Overall a solid start to a fun adventure. Grumpy Cat/Garfield #1 begins what should be a great time to be had by all readers.
Considering this book got me curious in learning more about Grumpy Cat’s comics, I say this is a win. I was already a fan of Garfield and now I’m game for this entire crossover adventure. If you’re a fan of one or both of them, you will have a great time with this comic book adventure. It is better than any Monday that’s for sure.
Netflix is taking ‘Narcos’ a little too far today with the release of the season three trailer. The streaming network has a Narcos truck in Manhattan serving white powdered donuts and Colombian coffee.
Watch the trailer for sesaon 3:
About ‘Narcos’ Season 3:
Cocaine cartels are all about succession: The day Pablo Escobar went down, the Cali Cartel became public enemy number one. They called themselves the Gentlemen of Cali – the biggest drug lords you’ve probably never heard of. Led by four powerful godfathers, the Cali Cartel turned the cocaine trade into a global enterprise.
Meet the Kings:
•Gilberto Rodriguez Orejuela (Damian Alcazar)- leader of Cali Cartel, “boss of bosses”
• Miguel Rodriguez Orejuela (Francisco Denis)- the brains behind the rise of the of Cali Cartel and Gilberto’s brother
• Pacho Herrera (Alberto Ammann)- the on-the-low hitman, runs the Mexican connection and international distribution
• Chepe Santacruz Londono (Pepe Rapazote)– runs the satellite NYC empire of the Colombian drug network
Just as Gilberto announces a bold plan to walk away from the business, DEA agent Javier Peña (Pedro Pascal) enlists the help of American and Colombian law enforcement to take it down. This season opens up a complex and ruthless world of new figures.
Other new players include:
• Jorge Salcedo (Matias Varela)- Cali’s head of security who prioritizes his wife and kids’ protection over his bosses
• DEA agents Chris Feistl (Michael Stahl-David) and Daniel Van Ness (Matt Whelan), who enter the operation with enthusiasm and inexperience
• Franklin Jurado (Miguel Angel Silvestre)- the cartel’s money launderer who unknowingly puts his wife, Christina (Kerry Bishe) in mortal danger
• David Rodriguez (Arturo Castro)- Miguel’s oldest son, who is reluctant at first to take a leading role in the cartel structure
Narcos hits Netflix on September 1.
Where does ‘Narcos’ rank among the Netflix great show? Comment below.