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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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Review: SABERTOOTH #3 Sets Up An Escape Plan

For many comic book readers or fans of X-Men the Animated Series, Sabertooth has never been the type of mutant to devise a plan. Instead, he’s primarily used as a vicious killer or a thorn in Wolverine’s side. On occasion, like Uncanny Avengers, he was a good guy, but mostly he is the villain. So how do you write a book where we root for the villain?

Review: SABERTOOTH #3 Sets Up An Escape Plan

WRITING

Victor LaValle has done an excellent job of fleshing this book out. Adding other characters to the pit allows Sabertooth to have allies to play around with. Where LaValle shines on this issue is in his character interactions. The conversation between Nekra and Oya is incredibly well written and honest. LaValle allows us to see that both characters are self-aware and know they can’t trust Sabertooth. Nekra brings up the point that after being thrown in the pit, can she even feel comfortable on Krakoa anymore. This line runs more profound than many comic book lines and speaks volumes. There is also a conversation that happens between Madison Jeffries and Skin. LaValle uses this to show that mutants who appear normal may not be as comfortable as we believe. LaValle takes a book about a killer and makes it a heartfelt and sympathetic story. Sabertooth is in this story, but the story is about so much more.

Review: SABERTOOTH #3 Sets Up An Escape Plan

ART

The pencils by Leonard Kirk work wonderfully here. Kirk will use a close-up panel of Sabertooth’s face to emphasize his point as he tells a story. Kirk also gives us a nice-looking silhouette of our characters as they drift down the river at night. Kirk’s work is strongest when it’s simple. He allows the reader to glide from panel to panel without getting too bogged down in detail. The characters are the essential element in this issue, and Kirk puts a lot of emphasis on that. His work is intimate and allows us to get into the face of the characters we’re reading about.

The colors by Rain Beredo match up nicely with Kirk’s pencils. Beredo’s backgrounds use striking teals and pinks as our characters travel the landscape. These colors allow the characters to pop out on the page. Beredo uses excellent contrast in the light backgrounds and the tone of the heroes. The shading in this issue is effectively used as well. As Mole enters a room to visit Third Eye, his face is shaded, and his glasses are visible. This is an interesting panel that will absolutely catch your eye.

Cory Petit handles the lettering for this issue. This is essentially a pretty standard-issue as far as letters go. There are a few instances where a character screams, and Petit enlarges the font to show pain. Petit also uses a distorted word balloon as a character begs. Word balloon placement works. One panel is never overloaded with too much dialogue. As far as lettering goes, Petit continues to work his magic.

Review: SABERTOOTH #3 Sets Up An Escape Plan

CONCLUSION

Sabertooth #3 is another interesting entry in the series. It’s nice to see Creed in a different role instead of just a vicious killer. LaValle does a remarkable job of humanizing one of comics greatest psychopaths. The artwork brings the story to life in a realistic and intriguing way. Sabertooth #3 is out now, and available at a comic shop near you.

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Read The First Four Pages Of STAR WARS #23

Star wars #23
Star Wars #23 Writer: Charles Soule Artist: Ramon Rosanas Colors: Rachelle Rosenberg Letters: Clayton Cowles Release Date: May 4, 2022

STAR WARS #23 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 DAWN ALLIANCE, PART 2 OF 3 is written by Charles Soule, with art by Ramon Rosanas, Rachelle Rosenberg drops the color, you will read Clayton Cowles’ letter work, and Phil Noto brought the cover to life.

About STAR WARS #23:
THE DAWN ALLIANCE, PART 2 OF 3
The fate of THE REBEL ALLIANCE FLEET is at stake as its last remaining divisions face off in battle against the brutal tactics of COMMANDER ELLIAN ZAHRA and her crew on the TARKIN’S WILL. For Zahra, this fight is personal; her revenge will not be complete until every life lost on THE DEATH STAR is avenged. Epic space warfare in the true STAR WARS manner!

Enjoy the preview below, and May the fourth be with you!

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STAR WARS: OBI-WAN KENOBI #1 – Read The First Five Pages

STAR WARS: OBI-WAN #1

STAR WARS: OBI-WAN KENOBI #1 hits your local comic book shop next week (May 4th), but Monkeys Fighting Robots has a five-page preview for our readers, thanks to Marvel Comics. The five-issue miniseries is written by Christopher Cantwell, with art by Ario Anindito, Carlos Lopez drops the color, you will read Joe Caramagna’s letter work, and Phil Noto brought the cover to life.

About STAR WARS: OBI-WAN KENOBI #1:
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, 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!

Enjoy the preview below:

How excited are you for the Disney+ show?!

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Marvel Comics Exclusive Preview: BEN REILLY: SPIDER-MAN #4

marvel comics exclusive preview ben reilly spider-man

BEN REILLY: SPIDER-MAN #4 hits your local comic book store on May 4th, but thanks to Marvel Comics, Monkeys Fighting Robots has an exclusive four-page preview for you.

About the issue:
THE PAST KILLS! Ben Reilly has finally come face-to-face with the true villain behind his torment — and you’re not going to believe who it is! Watch as a failure from Ben and Peter’s past comes to haunt the life of SPIDER-MAN!

The issue is by writer J.M. DeMatteis and artist David Baldeón, with colors by Israel Silva, and letters by Joe Caramagna. The main cover is by Steve Skroce and Dave Stewart.

Check out the BEN REILLY: SPIDER-MAN #4 preview below:

marvel comics exclusive preview ben reilly spider-man

marvel comics exclusive preview ben reilly spider-man

marvel comics exclusive preview ben reilly spider-man

marvel comics exclusive preview ben reilly spider-man

marvel comics exclusive preview ben reilly spider-man

marvel comics exclusive preview ben reilly spider-man


Are you reading BEN REILLY: SPIDER-MAN? Sound off in the comments!

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Review: THE BONE ORCHARD MYTHOS: THE PASSAGEWAY – “Keeping Secrets, Are Ye?”

From writer Jeff Lemire and artist Andrea Sorrentino, the creative team behind Gideon Falls and Primordial, comes the pair’s next step in their spree of horror in The Bone Orchard Mythos – The Passageway. Featuring colors by Dave Stewart and lettering from Steve Wands, this graphic novel takes the intense, often cryptic style of horror Lemire and Sorrentino are known for to new mysterious heights. With a uniquely unsettling script and rule-breaking, constantly surprising visual work, this first step into a new world of terror is a must-read for horror comic fans.

“When a geologist is sent to a remote lighthouse to investigate strange phenomena, he finds a seemingly endless pit in the rocks. What lurks within—and how will he escape its pull?”

Writing & Plot

In true Jeff Lemire fashion, the script for The Passageway is just as cryptic as it is unsettling. The Sweet Tooth creator sends us on a trip with a lonesome geologist to an old, malfunctioning lighthouse. The reason he’s there: to study an immeasurably deep hole that has suddenly opened in the ground. If that’s not unnerving enough, the unusual people he’s joined by on this island, as well as the disturbing flashbacks of his own tragic past fill the book with an incessantly unnerving tone. Lemire gives us *just* enough to keep the reader hooked as we’re strung along a path of increasingly disturbing incidents on this desolate little island.

What works best about The Passageway are the moment to moments bits of horror and tension. Every conversation feels loaded and intense in a way that fills every page with a thick, unsettling atmosphere. I say “unsettling” a lot because that’s what this comic feels like. It’s more of a supernatural thriller than an outright horror book at most points. However, much like the progression and pacing of Gideon Falls, this graphic novel adds intensity through its discoveries and revelations, with dashes of genuine horror sprinkled in. Lemire teases a large, cryptic, almost Lovecraftian lore and world through the protagonist’s investigation. It’s almost a bit *too* vague for its own good, but it is all in service to where this new mythology is going. Depending on how much explanation you like your horror to have, your mileage may vary. In my opinion, this taut and intense story is my brand of mysterious, and I am looking forward to what Lemire has coming for us in the next installment.

Art Direction

Just like in Gideon Falls, Andrea Sorrentino brings the horror to life with his brand of highly detailed pencils and insane page composition. The characters in The Passageway appear just as weary as the island itself. The old fisherman and the lighthouse keeper convincingly look like real people you’d happen across in tired old fishing towns. Our younger protagonist though, the geologist, appears more weary than he should be. The events of his childhood weigh on his mind and Sorrentino explores that – both through his own expressions and various nightmares/flashbacks. The cold, rocky environment of the island further increases the sense of isolation that is prevalent in this graphic novel. Sorrentino presents the setting like an almost organic entity within itself. The lighthouse and the island are foreboding objects hiding a potentially ancient and indescribable element of horror. The hole in the ground is an impossibly dark and instantly chilling sight, and Sorrentino presents it like a maw of a sinkhole. He focuses our attention on it with a multitude of techniques. His most obvious approach, and potentially what he’s best known for, is how he frames and blocks panels. Here, he centers pages around the sinkhole and then throws the panel breakdown in an almost guided spiral around it. There’s a maze-like quality to his direction that adds layers of intrigue to this opening in the island. If you’ve read Gideon Falls than this approach won’t surprise you – but it will still entertain the hell out of you. There are still also some genuine turn of the page s#!t yourself scares that I’m sure Sorrentino was chuckling at while he drew them, knowing what they would do.

Coloring on The Passageway is completed by industry veteran Dave Stewart, also responsible for colors in the pages of Gideon Falls and Black Hammer. His work here is, as expected, tonally perfect and rich. His mottled, almost painted style of coloring creates a murky, thick atmosphere that will have you almost tasting the salt in the air. Stewart works perfectly in tandem with Sorrentino’s pencils to create this claustrophobic feel throughout the OGN. The lettering from Steve Wands, who recently worked on Lemire’s Mazebook, is clean yet fluid. The font shifts and changes based on tone, and sudden shocks and effects come out naturally and surprisingly. Overall, this is an outstanding graphic novel in terms of its visual storytelling.

Verdict

The Passageway is a tense and mysterious graphic novel on its own and a stellar start to The Bone Orchard Mythos. Jeff Lemire’s writing here may be a bit vague for some, but the book’s taut pacing and teases of lore make for an enticing and suspenseful read. The visuals from Andrea Sorrentino and Dave Stewart are atmospherically rich and nail both the comic’s unsettling tone and the genuine scares it contains. Be sure to grab this OGN when it hits shelves on June 15th!

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AfterShock Comics Exclusive Preview: SPECTRO

aftershock comics exclusive preview spectro juan doe

SPECTRO hits your local comic book store May 18th, but thanks to AfterShock Comics, Monkeys Fighting Robots has an exclusive four-page preview for you.

About the issue:
A Quartet of Quintessential Horror Tales from the Multi-Talented Juan Doe – Presented in a Single Prestige-Format One Shock! 

SPECTRO explores the unnerving spectrum of fear through four terrifying stories rooted in a cosmic game of twisted karma and phantasmagoric terror:  

1. What is at stake when sentient technology manipulates a man with projections of his desired self? 

2. What are the consequences of excommunicating a member of the nine” planets? 

3. What is discovered when an explorer travels to Mars to ascend the tallest mountain in the solar system? 

4. What happens when a scientist aboard the International Space Station is confronted with the most horrifying aspects of humankind?

In what realm of fear do these stories exist? SPECTRO.

The anthology is by writer, artist, and letterer Juan Doe. Both the main cover and the incentive variant are by Doe as well.

A horror anthology from deep within the recesses of the mind of one of comics’ most prolific talents!

Check out our SPECTRO preview below:

aftershock comics exclusive preview spectro juan doe

aftershock comics exclusive preview spectro juan doe

aftershock comics exclusive preview spectro juan doe

aftershock comics exclusive preview spectro juan doe

aftershock comics exclusive preview spectro juan doe

aftershock comics exclusive preview spectro juan doe


Are you picking up SPECTRO when it drops next month? Sound off in the comments!

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