Posts Tagged ‘Ongoing series’

Young Liars (comics)

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

Cover of Young Liars #1 (May, 2008). Art by David Lapham.

Young Liars is a comic book series created by David Lapham. It is published by DC Comics as a part of that company’s Vertigo imprint. The first issue was released in March 2008.

The book centers around a group of 20-somethings in modern day New York City, though the story quickly expands to other parts of America and the world. All of them have disturbing secrets about themselves that they keep from the others, and even the readers are left to decide what is true and what are lies.

Publication history

In April 2009, Lapham announced that the title had been cancelled, with the last issue being #18.

Characters

  • Danny: The protagonist of the book. He is an aspiring musician who moved to New York along with Sadie. He is obsessively in love with Sadie, and often falls into extremely self-destructive behaviour. He has tried to kill himself multiple times in the series, including trying to set himself on fire, leaving horrific burns on his torso (Though he claims to the others that he got them elsewhere).
  • Sadie: The other central character in the story. Sadie is the daughter of the owner of the Brown Bag Superstore (A Wal-Mart style store), and has run away from her family. As a result, her family have sent the Pinkertons out to find her. She has a bullet lodged in her brain, which causes her to act erratically. Namely, she only wants to dance, fight, and sleep with Danny. She repeatedly brings up warnings about “The Spiders from Mars” and their plans to enslave Humanity, though at this point it is not certain if this is a result of her injury, if she’s lying, or if what she says is in fact true. As the story progresses, it becomes evident that Danny has a manipulative hold on her.
  • Big C: CeeCee is a Groupie for rock bands. Danny hates her and insultingly calls her Big C. She was in college at one point, but dropped out to “have a rock star’s babies” instead. Instead, she got Syphilis and is now unable to have children, though it does not stop her from sleeping with Musicians. While she and Danny dislike each other, they have bonded in later issues.
  • Donnie: Donnie is a male cross-dresser. All the other characters seem to like him, despite their own conflicts amongst themselves. He is also a Heroin addict, and has overdosed at least once.
  • Annie X: A former fashion model, Annie begins in the story by bussing tables at a club. Ironically, despite the nickname, she is not anorexic but actually bulemic. She generally dislikes both Sadie and Danny, particularly for the troubles with the Pinkertons that they brought upon the group.
  • Runco: Although rich, Runco is obsessed with Get-Rich-Quick schemes. He is the one who suggests that the group to go to Spain in order to “recover” a painting. He has repeatedly informed the Pinkertons of Sadie’s whereabouts in hopes of profit, though this has backfired on him.
  • Puss Bag: An English Punk Rock fan that the group meets in Spain. It’s unclear at this point if Puss Bag is actually his name or not. According to him, his mother was kicked in the stomach by Johhny Rotten of the Sex Pistols while he was still in the womb. Though he’s friendly to all of the characters and even saves them on a couple occasions, Danny takes an immediate disliking to him, largely because he thinks Puss Bag slept with Sadie.
  • The Pinkertons: A group of elite killers who are in pursuit of the Young Liars. Sadie describes them as “Nazis injected with special powers by the Spiders from Mars”. They tend to be somewhat questionable masters of disguise, but make up for this with their Sadism, including castrations and beheadings. It is not likely that they have any connection with the real life Pinkerton Agency.

Plot

The story opens up outside of a nightclub, where Sadie beats up a Bouncer and later a Gang member. The main characters are all introduced inside, where Runco tries to convince them to go to Spain. When they refuse, he calls the Pinkertons, who quickly advance on the nightclub. Meanwhile, Donnie shoots Heroin in the bathroom, and Danny tries to tell Sadie he loves her, with no success.

Issue 2 sheds some light on Danny’s background and how he met Sadie. He worked in a Brown Bag Superstore (In the firearms department), and was trying to put a band together with some friends. Even at this point, he was obsessed with Sadie, and was upset when his best friend ditched him to go to a concert with her.

In a near suicidal state, Danny crashes the concert, and with gun in hand, takes a drugged Sadie away just before a group of Pinkertons looking for her advance on his friend. After he escorts her home, Danny returns to his own home only to find his friend’s severed head in the fridge, and his mom and brother dead. (As with many aspects of the story, whether this is actually what happened is up to debate).

Back to the Nightclub, the Young Liars flee just as the Police raid the building, while Donnie is having an Overdose. Outside, they encounter the gang member from before, as well as some of his friends. The Pinkertons arrive and kill the gang members, but Sadie steals a Garbage Truck and they make their escape. They take Donnie to a hospital, where yet another Pinkerton (disguised as a doctor) takes Sadie at gunpoint. Sadie and Danny kill him, which freaks out the others. They all eventually decide to flee the country, and go to Spain on Runco’s get-rich-quick scheme.

On the cruise to Spain, Danny and Sadie have sex. They eventually have to hijack the ship and go the rest of the way by Lifeboat, as Runco lied to the others about paying for the tickets. Once they get there, Sadie goes missing. This causes extreme anguish for Danny, as he thinks that she will now start having sex with other people. She is in actuality at a Bar fighting Puss Bag and keeping score.

Danny drinks with and confides in Big C, and reveals that it was actually him who shot Sadie in the head. The two drunkenly have sex, but are interrupted by Maxim, the midget head of the Pinkertons. He proceeds to castrate Danny and rape Big C, but then is attacked by Donnie and Puss Bag, stabbed in the eye, and jumps out a window.

Danny leaves the hospital shortly after, determined to save Sadie. Puss Bag tells him that she went with Runco and Annie X to steal the painting. In flashbacks, we see what led up to Sadie getting shot in the head. Where she killed a man (though she claimed he was one of the Spiders from Mars) and Danny helped her cover it up. Sadie constantly belittled Danny and seems to have different memories of meeting him than what was in issue #2. In a rage, he chases her down and shoots her.

Meanwhile, both Runco and Annie contact the Pinkertons in hopes that they will be rewarded, but instead get captured. When the others arrive, Runco gets decapitated, and the Pinkertons demand to know where Sadie is. Sadie drives through the window on a motorcycle and kills all the Pinkertons. Immediately after, she has a stroke resulting from the bullet in her brain and collapses. Danny attempts to kill himself, but Puss Bag knocks him out.

In an odd flashback, Sadie is on Mars, where the Spider race is planning to use her to lay thousands of eggs and amass an army to conquer the earth. She listens to the Earth DJ Danny Duoshade, and wins a contest to go to a concert. She stows away on a flying saucer heading to Earth, and causes it to crash land. She takes Spider form and possesses a young girl.

She goes back to the child’s dysfunctional home (the mother and father being Danny and Big C). However, other Spiders have also survived, including Sadie’s father, who impregnates her with eggs. The DJ Danny Duoshade (Who also looks like Danny) arrives, and Sadie is able to acquire a gun from him. She kills all but five of the Hatchlings, and vows to get the others. Back in “the real world”, Danny reveals (to the reader) that he created the Duoshade identity to try to manipulate Sadie. Danny, Puss Bag, and Sadie visit her mother, as Sadie wants to destroy all of the space spiders. Her brother comes in, and Sadie shoots him, killing him as the mother’s lover comes in with a militant group. The group manage to get away, and in the process, Sadie’s mother is killed along with the entire group, but not before two flashbacks reveal that Cee was once pregnant and miscarried. Finding solace with Danny, he had sex with her when Sadie is away. When C miscarries again, she saves the fetus and puts it in a box. Danny finds out, and throws it in a garbage disposal. In the other, Danny had set himself on fire to cover up something important.

Returning to the present, Sadie and her friends stage a showdown against the Pinkertons at her father’s home. In the midst of the ensuing carnage, Danny commands the Pinkertons to release Sadie, shedding his shirt to show his burn scars and a spider tatoo underneath it, declaring himself the King of all Spiders.

Collected editions

The series is being collected into trade paperbacks:

# Title Release date Collected material Pages ISBN
1 Daydream Believer December, 2008 Issues #1-6 144 ISBN 1-40121-978-0
2 Maestro June 10, 2009 Issues #7-12 144 ISBN 1-40122-272-2

War is Hell (comics)

Monday, June 8th, 2009

War Is Hell #9, the first issue with original content<br />
art by Gil Kane (inks possibly by Dick Giordano[1])

War Is Hell was a horror/war comic book series from Marvel Comics in 1973-1975. For its first six issues, it featured reprints of old war comics, followed by two issues of reprints of Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos. Beginning in issue #9, the series featured new material; the star of the series became Death, who forced a dishonorable Polish man named John Kowalski, killed in the Invasion of Poland (1939), to die countless deaths from other lives. A War Is Hell limited series featuring Phantom Eagle appeared in 2008.

John Kowalski

During the series, Kowalski inhabited different bodies of those about to die, not necessarily of the same side or gender, sometimes not even the same time period (although set primarily during World War II, including both the European and Pacific theatres), and needed to change things for the better before he was killed. Death would summon him from the nether regions each story, and Kowalski wondered how many times he would have to do so as penance. The series was created by writers Tony Isabella, Roy Thomas, and Chris Claremont with an uncredited assist from Steve Gerber on issue #9 (acknowledged in the letter column of issue #12), and artists Dick Ayers and Frank Springer.

The series was canceled with issue #15, and we learned Claremont’s intentions for Kowalski when he wrote volume 2 of Man-Thing and incorporated the character into its final two issues (#s 10 & 11). By this point (the early 1980s), Kowalski had become an aspect of Death. He made Bobbie Bannister (a recently-orphaned by murder rich girl introduced by Claremont in Man-Thing vol. 2 #5) another aspect of Death as they battled Sheriff John Daltry, who was possessed by the sword of Captain Fate. He caused the deaths of Doctor Strange, Man-Thing, Jennifer Kale, and Chris Claremont himself, although these deaths were undone by the end of the story, in order to battle Thog the Nether-Spawn, who was using Fate and Daltry as his pawns in another gambit to take over Earth-616.

Kowalski later appeared with Scarlet Witch in a story by Dennis Mallonee (writer) and John Ridgway (artist) in Solo Avengers #5.

Bibliography

  • War Is Hell #9 – “War Is Hell!” Isabella, Thomas, Claremont, [Gerber], Ayers, Springer (19 pp)
  • War Is Hell #10 – “The Corridor” Isabella, Claremont, Ayers, Springer (18 pp)
  • War Is Hell #11 – “Winter Kill” Claremont, Perlin, Trapani (18 pp)
  • War Is Hell #12 – “My Love Must Die” Claremont, Perlin, Hunt (19 pp)
  • War Is Hell #13 – “Today Is a Lovely Day to Die” Claremont and Trimpe (17 pp)
  • War Is Hell #14 – “The Duty of a Man” Claremont and Evans (17 pp)
  • War Is Hell #15 – “A Christmas Eve in Hell” Claremont and Trimpe (17 pp)
  • Man-Thing vol. 2 #10 – “Came the Dark Man, Walkin’, Walkin’…” Claremont, Perlin, Wiacek (22 pp)
  • Man-Thing vol. 2 #11 – “Hell’s Gate!” Claremont, Mayerik, Wiacek (22 pp)
  • Solo Avengers #5 – “A Love That Never Dies” Mallonee and Ridgeway (11 pp)

Phantom Eagle

Main article: Phantom Eagle

In 2008, a new five-issue limited series, titled War Is Hell: The First Flight of Phantom Eagle, appeared under the MAX imprint. Phantom Eagle (Lt. Karl Kaufman) was a World War I hero created by Gary Friedrich and artist Herb Trimpe (artist) in 1968, and the new fstory was by Garth Ennis (writer) and Howard Chaykin (artist).

Reprints

The series began as a reprint book, mostly from Atlas Comics-era war comics, adding Sgt. Fury for its last two issues before printing new material. The first six issues contained four stories an issue, each around five pages.

  1. Reprinting stories from Battle #30 (1 story) and #55 (3 stories)
  2. Reprinting stories from Battle Action #30, (1 story) Battlefront #30 (2 stories), and Battle #55 (1 story)
  3. Reprinting stories from Battle Action #15 (1 story) and G.I. Tales #5 (3 stories)
  4. Reprinting stories from Battleground #15 (3 stories), and War Comics #17 (1 story)
  5. Reprinting stories from Battlefront #34 (1 story), and Battleground #20 (1 story) and # 18 (2 stories)
  6. Reprinting stories from War Comics #30, “Court Martial” by Werner Roth, Battleground #15, and War Comics #17
  7. Reprinting Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #17
  8. Reprinting Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #18

Collected editions

  • War is Hell: The First Flight of The Phantom Eagle (Marvel Max, hardcover, 120 pages, November 2008, ISBN 0-7851-1643-5)

Tiny Titans

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

Tiny Titans #1 (April 2008). Art by Art Baltazar.

Tiny Titans is a comic book series by Art Baltazar and Franco Aureliani. It is published by DC Comics, beginning publication in February, 2008. The first issue was also released as part of the annual Free Comic Book Day promotion in May, 2008.

Tiny Titans stars alternate versions of the DC Universe’s characters, primarily those from the Teen Titans series. It is set in a kid-friendly, elementary school environment. Issues typically consist of several individual stories as opposed to one cohesive storyline.

Recurring Characters and Jokes

Although the comical nature of the stories feature a wide variety of characters, several are part of recurring jokes.

  • Robin is one of the more featured characters and is generally considered the leader, though no one seems to take him seriously. In one attempt to prove his character, Robin briefly changes his name and costume to Nightwing, but still fails to garner any respect.
  • Beast Boy and Terra appear as part of a very one-sided relationship, in which Beast Boy’s romantic (though ridiculous) advances towards Terra are met with thrown rocks.
  • Deathstroke (Slade) is the [[principal (school)|principal of the kids’ school, Sidekick City Elementary. The kids tend to think of Principal Slade as a mean guy, and they’re usually right.
  • Psimon is often called Brainiac because of his exposed brain, and he always has to remind people what his name is, but they don’t listen.

References to DC continuity

  • In Tiny Titans #12, The Monitor is a hall monitor, who is constantly thwarted by The Anti-Monitor.
  • In Tiny Titans #13, page 16 shows a “signed portrait” of Dan Didio, as well as Billy Batson and the Magic of Shazam! #1, Final Crisis #1, The New Teen Titans #1 and Superman #199.

Trade Paperback Collections

Vol. # Title Collected material Pages ISBN#
1 Welcome to the Treehouse Tiny Titans #1–6 144 ISBN 1-40122-078-9
2 Adventures in Awesomeness Tiny Titans #7–12 144 ISBN 1-40122-328-1

The Stand (comics)

Friday, June 5th, 2009

Promotional image of Randall Flagg

The Stand is a Marvel Comics adaptation of Stephen King’s epic novel of the same name. It will consist of thirty issues divided into five story arcs. It will be overseen by King, written by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa and illustrated by Mike Perkins.

Story arcs

# Title Issues Dates
1 Captain Trips 5 September 10, 2008January 28, 2009
2 American Nightmares 5 March 11, 2009 -

Other releases

# Title Dates
1 The Stand Sketchbook July 9, 2008
v  d  e

Stephen King bibliography

Novels
Carrie (1974) · ‘Salem’s Lot (1975) · The Shining (1977) · The Stand (1978) · The Dead Zone (1979) · Firestarter (1980) · Cujo (1981) · Christine (1983) · Pet Sematary (1983) · Cycle of the Werewolf (1983) · The Talisman (1984; with Peter Straub) · It (1986) · The Eyes of the Dragon (1987) · Misery (1987) · The Tommyknockers (1987) · The Dark Half (1989) · Needful Things (1991) · Gerald’s Game (1992) · Dolores Claiborne (1992) · Insomnia (1994) · Rose Madder (1995) · The Green Mile (1996) · Desperation (1996) · Bag of Bones (1998) · The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon (1999) · Dreamcatcher (2001) · Black House (2001; with Peter Straub) · From a Buick 8 (2002) · The Colorado Kid (2005) · Cell (2006) · Lisey’s Story (2006) · Duma Key (2008) · Under the Dome (2009)
The Dark Tower series
The Gunslinger (1982) · The Drawing of the Three (1987) · The Waste Lands (1991) · Wizard and Glass (1997) · Wolves of the Calla (2003) · Song of Susannah (2004) · The Dark Tower (2004)
Richard Bachman novels
Rage (1977) · The Long Walk (1979) · Roadwork (1981) · The Running Man (1982) · Thinner (1984) · The Bachman Books (1985) · The Regulators (1996) · Blaze (2007)
Short fiction collections
Night Shift (1978) · Different Seasons (1982) · Skeleton Crew (1985) · Four Past Midnight (1990) · Nightmares & Dreamscapes (1993) · Hearts in Atlantis (1999) · Everything’s Eventual (2002) · Just After Sunset (2008)
Non-fiction
Danse Macabre (1981) · Nightmares in the Sky (1988) · On Writing (2000) · Secret Windows (2000) · Faithful (2004; with Stewart O’Nan)
E-books
Riding the Bullet (2000) · The Plant (2000; unfinished) · Ur (2009)
Screenplays
Creepshow (1982) · Cat’s Eye (1985) · Silver Bullet (1985) · Maximum Overdrive (1986; also director) · Pet Sematary (1989) · Sleepwalkers (1992)
Teleplays
Sorry, Right Number (1988) · Golden Years (1991) · The Stand (1994) · The Shining (1997) · Chinga (1998; with Chris Carter) · Storm of the Century (1999) · Rose Red (2002) · Kingdom Hospital (2004) · Desperation (2006)
Stage plays
Ghost Brothers of Darkland County (2007; with John Mellencamp)
The Dark Tower comic series
The Gunslinger Born‎ (2007) · The Long Road Home (2008) · Treachery (2008) · The Sorcerer (2009) · The Fall of Gilead (2009)
The Stand comic series
Captain Trips (2008) · American Nightmares (2009)
Related articles
Tabitha King · Joe Hill · Owen King · Bryan Smith · Peter Straub · Rock Bottom Remainders · Dollar Baby · Media based on Stephen King works · Castle Rock, Maine · Derry, Maine

The End League

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

Cover of The End League #1

The End League is a fictional superhero team appearing in their self-titled monthly comic book series by Dark Horse Comics, which began in January 2008.

Created by Rick Remender and Mat Broome, this series focuses on the struggles of the last of the superheroes in a world in which the supervillains have prevailed and enslaved what remains of the world.

Publication history

The series started in January 2008 and was written by Rick Remender, with pencils by Mat Broome and inks by Sean Parsons.

As of issue number five, Broome left for Marvel and Eric Canete will take over art duties, with Dave Stewart providing the colouring. With the new art team in place for the start of the second story arc, the title will start appearing on a monthly basis.

Characters

Team members

  • Astonishman (Brian Terrance) – Known as the world’s greatest hero, he was more than one hundred years old before his death. Astonishman blamed himself for the state of the world due to his involvement in The Green Event (see below). He possessed super strength, super hearing, flight and invunerability. Astonishman drew energy from the Earth’s core. When his skin was broken, he leaked the very energy that granted him his powers. Upon his death, the energy vacated his body in a blast of nuclear proportions. He died from grievous injuries sustained at the hands (and hammer) of Thor.
  • Soldier American (Nicholas “Nick” Winters) – Active since the 1930s, Soldier American participated in a government program that gave him the speed and strength of ten men. He also has the ability to create energy machetes. During a raid on a food facility, he killed his longtime sidekick The Devil Boy while possessed by the villain Scarecrow Sinister.
  • Blur Girl (Rebecca Watts) – Blur is the fastest human left alive. She is Astonishman’s goddaughter and in a romantic relationship with The Blue Gauntlet.
  • The Blue Gauntlet (Palmira) – Described by writer Rick Remender as “a pacifist powered by an ancient alien parasite,” Palmira is in a lesbian relationship with Rebecca. Her powers seem to be mainly energy-based. She can also fly.
  • Mother Hive – Mother Hive is a powerful telepath who coordinates the team missions from the safety of the Citadel of Seclusion.
  • The Arachnakid- An extremely tall and lithe adventurer with two pairs of arms, sharp teeth, and an acerbic wit used to hide his loneliness and self-pity.
  • The Prairie Ghost- Deemed by series writer Rick Remender a “living poltergeist,” the Prairie Ghost’s powers and personality have yet to be fully revealed. He possesses a strong, ghostly steed and wields mystical chains as weaponry. He speaks with a Southern accent and seems to be of a rather bellicose mentality. He, like Codename Black, does not seem to have any compunctions regarding using lethal force when necessary.
  • Brother Occult – Called the “mysterious Master of the Nether Realms,” this mage’s power seems to be derived mainly from the bargains he makes with various demons, such as one known as Azul. Azul is supposedly bound in servitude to Brother Occult.
  • Divinity – A self-described “god-killer,” Divinity is one of the “big three,” a subgroup comprising the leadership of The End League. The other members are Codename Black and Astonishman. Divinity wields a powerful sword which can both wound and heal (as evidenced by its temporary restoration of Thor’s mental capacity, post-lobotomy). The series hints at strong sexual/romantic tension between her and Astonishman.
  • Codename Black (Zane Ladle) A mysterious non-Magnificent clad in an impressive suit of armor and revealed to have extensive knowledge of martial arts, as well as near-perfect skills in planning. He also seemingly shows little to no hesitance when it comes to the use of lethal force (as seen in issue #2). According to a conversation with his arch-nemesis, the Smiling Man, Black’s family all received powers during the Green Event. They subsequently went mad and became super villains. This has further stoking the flames of Codename Black’s paranoia regarding all Magnificents. Soldier American openly described him as a “schizophrenic.”
  • Grimwood – Described by writer Rick Remender as a “spirit-man made of Earth stuff,” Grimwood is an enormous humanoid with an extremely easygoing demeanor. He also seems to be the most philosophical of the remaining Magnificents, and does his best to keep his friends optimistic. He has something of a father-son relationship with Arachnakid, and is relentless in his desire to protect his friends and the remaining innocents on Earth after the Green Event.

Adversaries

  • Thor – The Norse God of Thunder and son of Odin, Thor disobeyed his father’s orders, refusing to return to Valhalla, instead staying on Earth to help mankind. He is mysteriously absent and presumed dead on the day of The Green Event. It is hinted he and Astonishman are at around the same level in terms of sheer power; Astonishman’s monologue in issue 1 supports the theory the two titans were friends at some point. Thor arrives at the end of issue 1, lobotomized by and completely under the control of Dead Lexington. He beats Astonishman to death between moments of lucidity brought about by Divinity’s sword.
  • Charles “Dead” Lexington – Archenemy of Astonishman, Dead Lexington was responsible for tricking Astonishman into triggering The Green Event. Following “The Day of Annihilation” (an event in which most of the world’s superheroes died, see Plot Synopsis below), Dead Lexington has appointed himself the ruler of the world. In exchange for power he has made a deal with a demon called Nargor’ri the Ravager, offering the demon all the nations of the world except for his city New Lexington.
  • Scarecrow Sinister – Capable of possessing others, Scarecrow Sinister operates a food facility for Dead Lexington in the remains of northern Canada and seems to have the ability to possess the bodies and minds of others, turning them into puppets to follow his will. While Scarecrow Sinister was possessing Prairie Ghost to kill Soldier American, Blur Girl killed the villain by throwing his body out of a building.
  • The Smiling Man – A clown-like villain inhabiting a trap-filled amusement park in the city of Lore, formerly known as Los Angeles. Easily the most unhinged villain, he openly acknowledges the homoerotic undertones of his relationship with Codename Black. He evidently keeps a “stable of wives” with whom he regularly seems to have sex with. He is also related to Codename Black, but not a member of the Family Fear.
  • Wolfsangel – A brutal Nazi warlord with seemingly reptilian characteristics. He plans to overthrow Dead Lexington by using the hammer of Thor and the clones of dead superheroes. He conducts his experiments in his city called the Berlin Dome.
  • Minister of Matter – (Peter Ladle) Member of the Family Fear, Dead Lexington’s most trusted associate and one of Codename Black’s brothers. He now has joined forces with Wolfsangel and other villians to overthrow Dead Lexington.
  • Sonic Eel – (Jen Ladle) Member of the Family Fear and Codename Black’s sister.
  • Azul – A demon once forced to serve Brother Occult. It has become a herald to Nargor’ri.
  • Nargor’ri the Ravager – A inter-dimensional demon whose sole purpuse is to end all life for mortals and gods. It has already killed all the Norse gods in Asgard and is moving on to Olympus and Earth.

Plot synopsis

The End League

In May 1962, the superhero Astonishman triggered a worldwide cataclysm known as The Green Event. His archenemy, the villain Dead Lexington, led Astonishman to believe an alien ship at the bottom of the ocean was a communist nuclear facility. Astonishman detonated a nuclear missile in the ship. That exploded the alien power core, releasing a wave of radiation and knocking the Earth off its axis. The radiation killed three billion people; one in ten thousand of the survivors would later develop superhuman abilities. The Norse god Thor had remained on Earth after all of the other classical gods left. Believed to be the only being whose power equaled Astonishman’s, Thor went missing on the day of The Green Event and was believed dead.

Picking the best of the superhumans, Astonishman formed the Squadron of Righteousness. Its mission was to repair the damage done to the planet and to protect humanity against the other superhumans, now supervillains. Eventually the supervillains joined forces and eliminated the world’s superheroes in an event known as The Day of Annihilation. Astonishman and the remaining superheroes escaped to Astonishman’s Citadel of Seclusion. They remained hidden for 12 years. Known as The End League, the heroes spent that time focusing on survival and searching for the Hammer of Thor, Mjolnir, which they believe can save the world.

On the twelve year anniversary of The Day of Annihilation, the starving members of The End League planned a raid on Scarecrow Sinister’s food facility in northern Canada. Astonishman gathered a strike team consisting of himself, Soldier American, Prairie Ghost, Divinity, Brother Occult and the rookie Blur Girl. Once onsite, Brother Occult’s demon servant Azul attacked the team and betrayed them to Dead Lexington. Dead Lexington appeared via remote monitor to gloat that he knows where the Citadel of Seclusion is and will be attacking it shortly. As Blur Girl runs off to warn the team, she is stopped by a now-lobotomized Thor who stands ready to kill his former allies.

The brain-damaged Thor and the End League battle. Blur Girl and Soldier American are quickly injured and out of the fight. Astonishman is initially paralyzed by doubts about their ability to defeat Thor but joins in the fight. Divinity temporarily restored Thor’s lucidity with her sword. He warned Astonishman a greater danger threatens Earth and then tells Astonishman that he must kill him. After Thor again loses his mind, Astonishman is still reluctant to strike a lethal blow. Thor strikes a mortal blow against Astonishman with Mjolnir. The energy released explosively from Astonishman’s body apparently kills the both of them. Mjolnir is undamaged and recovered by someone, possibly Lexington.

Lexington proclaimed Astonishman’s death to the public and moved to consolidate his power. He sent his agents to abduct Kelly Klein, the leader of an underground church. Codename Black had promised Astonishman he will protect her. Codename Black fought the agents but they were successful in capturing Klein. Black, here, is shown using lethal force against one attacker, ruining her superpowers in one throat-crushing maneuver.

In the Nether Realm, Azul gloats to the captive Brother Occult. Azul tells him Lexington freed the demon, but Azul serves a greater power, Nargor’ri the Ravager, who arrives in the final scene with a promise to “end all”.

Collected editions

The series is being collected into trade paperbacks:

  • Ballad of Big Nothing (collects issues #1-4, 104 pages, Dark Horse Comics, October 2008, ISBN 1595821953)
  • Weathered Statues (collects issues #5-8, 104 pages, Dark Horse Comics, May 2009, ISBN 159582300X)

Secret Six (comics)

Monday, June 1st, 2009

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The Secret Six is the name of three distinct, fictional comic book teams in the DC Comics universe, plus an alternate universe’s fourth team. Each team has had six members, led by a mysterious figure named Mockingbird whom the characters assume to be one of the six themselves.

This comic book team is unrelated to either the 1931 gangster movie The Secret Six or the real-life covert group of radical abolitionists who assisted American Civil War-era revolutionary John Brown.

Publication history

Original Secret Six

The Secret Six first appeared during the Silver Age of comic books in the initial team’s seven-issue title, Secret Six (May 1968 – May 1969).

Unusually, the premiere issue’s story began on the cover, and continued on the interior’s page one. This strike team of covert operatives consisted of August Durant, Lili de Neuve, Carlo di Rienzi, Tiger Force, Crimson Dawn, and King Savage.

Created by writer E. Nelson Bridwell and artist Frank Springer, the ongoing series ceased publication with the identity of Mockingbird unrevealed. The first two issues were reprinted in The Brave and the Bold #117 & 120, (March & July 1975).

Secret Six revived

The revived Secret Six, in Action Comics Weekly #612 (Aug. 9, 1988), cover art by Paul Gulacy.

Writer Martin Pasko and artist Dan Spiegle introduced an updated version of the team as an eight-page feature in the omnibus title Action Comics Weekly #601 (May 24, 1988).

They revealed Mockingbird as Durant, who now reunited the team after five years while also assembling a new team consisting of Mitch Hoberman, Ladonna Jameal, Tony Mantegna, Luke McKendrick, Vic Sommers, and Dr. Maria Verdugo. The following issue saw the entire first team, including Durant, die. The feature ran through Action Comics Weekly #612 (Aug. 9, 1988), with DiRienzi succeeding Durant as Mockingbird.

A second arc of this team, by writer Pasko and original Silver Age artist Springer, ran in Action Comics Weekly #619-630 (Sept. 27 – Dec. 13, 1988). DiRienzi died, and his son Rafael disappeared amid intimations that he may be the successor Mockingbird.

Villainous Secret Six

The next version of the team, introduced in Villains United #1 (July 2005), consists of the pre-existing DC characters Catman, Deadshot, and Cheshire, and the newly created Ragdoll, Scandal Savage, and Parademon. Another member, Fiddler, is killed by Deadshot on order of Mockingbird. Later Parademon is killed and Cheshire betrays the group to the Society, only to be shot by the Society’s Deathstroke, who doesn’t trust her for being a traitor (Cheshire eventually turns up alive and plotting revenge). The Mockingbird for this version of the team is eventually revealed to be Lex Luthor.

In the 2006 Secret Six limited series, (written by Gail Simone with art by Brad Walker and Jimmy Palmiotti), Knockout, who was revealed as a mole infiltrating the Secret Society of Villains in Villains United, has officially joined the group to be with her lover, Scandal. At the end of issue #1, Catman asks the Mad Hatter be the sixth member of the group. While Catman meets with the Mad Hatter, Doctor Psycho orchestrates a series of attacks designed to wipe out the Six. Hatter is literally kicked off the team by Ragdoll, who says that one eccentric fop in the group is enough. His replacement is Harley Quinn, who later quits.

In Birds of Prey issues #104-106, the Secret Six face off against Oracle’s Birds of Prey in Russia for the soul of Tora (Ice). They have since disbanded after Harley Quinn quit the team. Subsequently, in Birds of Prey #109, Knockout was attacked and killed by the same assassin who had been stalking the New Gods and killing them off, one by one. Earlier in the issue, Knockout comments in passing that Catman was going soft and Deadshot returned to the Suicide Squad. Harley Quinn is reformed in Countdown #43. Scandal Savage, Rag Doll and Catman were later seen in Salvation Run.

DC launched a new Secret Six series in September 2008, reuniting Catman, Deadshot, Scandal, and Ragdoll, and adding Bane (hinted at by Simone months earlier as “an A-list Batman villain”) and an original character named Jeannette, who appeared in the third issue. The Six have been hired to retrieve Tarantula from Alcatraz Island, and find a card which she stole from Junior, a mysterious villain who supposedly runs the entire West Coast mob. This Junior has practically the entire villain community at her beck and call, all afraid of her, even those in Arkham Asylum. The six later learn that the card in question was made by Neron, and says “Get Out Of Hell Free.” Soon, the Six are attacked by a small army of super-villains, all wanting to recover the card and collect the reward of $20 million for each of the six, under the orders of Junior, who captures and tortures Bane, whose strong principles and moral convictions, paired with his fatherly fondness of Scandal keep him from betraying his new team. It is later revealed that Junior is in fact Ragdoll’s sister and daughter of the first Ragdoll. She has the ghastly appearance of an old clown, with sliced skin and eyes stitched wide open to give the appearance of a clown. The Six escape, and head for Gotham, with Deadshot seemingly betraying them and leaving with Tarantula. The Six manage to catch up to Deadshot, only to be attacked by Junior and the Supervillains, and the Mad Hatter, who is revealed to be the one who hired them, simply so they would be killed. Tarantula sacrifices herself by pulling herself and Junior in front of the Supervillains’ combined attack, seemingly destroying the card along with them. However, it is later shown that Scandal is now in possession of it.

Other versions

Tangent comics

A version of the Secret Six appeared in DC’s alternate-universe imprint Tangent Comics, in the one-shot Secret Six #1 (Dec. 1997), by writer Chuck Dixon and artist Tom Grummett. This team consists of the Atom (Adam Thompson), the Flash, the Joker, the Spectre (Taylor Pike), Plastic Man (Gunther Ganz), and Manhunter. The group also appear in the Tangent: Superman’s Reign series (2008).

Collected editions

The stories have been collected into trade paperbacks:

  • Villains United (collects 6-issue limited series, 144 pages, January 2006, ISBN 140120838X)
  • Secret Six:
    • Six Degrees of Devastation (collects 6-issue limited series, 144 pages, March 2008, ISBN 140121231X)
    • Unhinged (collects Secret Six #1-6, 144 pages, August 2009, ISBN 1401223273
  • Birds of Prey: Dead of Winter (collects Birds of Prey #104-108, 128 pages, March 2008, ISBN 140121231X)

Northlanders

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Cover to issue #1 of Northlanders (December 2007). Art by Massimo Carnevale.

Northlanders is an American comic book series published by DC Comics under their Vertigo imprint. The stories are fictional but set in and around historical events during the Viking Age.

Northlanders is written by Brian Wood, illustrated by various artists on a per storyline basis and painted cover art by Massimo Carnevale. The first issue of the series was published on December 5, 2007.

Plot

Wood has said that the series will be divided into standalone eight issue story arcs separated by two-issue arcs.

In the first arc, “Sven the Returned,” (issues #1-8) we follow the protagonist Sven, a self-exiled Viking warrior serving in the Byzantine Varangian Guard, as he returns (in A.D. 980) to his birth region in the Orkney Islands in order to reclaim his rightful inheritance.

The second arc, “Lindisfarne,” (issues #9-10) is about a young boy and the sacking of the Lindisfarne monastery in A.D. 793, the beginning of the Viking Age.

The third arc, “The Cross + the Hammer,” (issues #11-16) is set around Dublin, Ireland circa the Battle of Clontarf (A.D. 1014), and follows the chase of an Irishman who attacks the occupying Viking forces using guerrilla tactics.

Collected editions

The series is being collected into trade paperbacks:

# Title ISBN Release date Collected material Artist
1 Sven the Returned ISBN 1401219187 October, 2008 Northlanders #1-8 Davide Gianfelice
2 The Cross + the Hammer ISBN 140122296X July, 2009 Northlanders #9–10, “Lindisfarne” Dean Ormston
Northlanders #11-16, “The Cross + the Hammer” Ryan Kelly

Awards

  • 2007: Nominated for the Eagle Award for “Favourite Comics Cover published during 2007″ for cover the of issue 1B by Adam Kubert

Kick-Ass

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Kick-Ass #2 (May 2008).<br />
Second-printing variant cover art by John Romita, Jr.

Kick-Ass is an ongoing, creator-owned, American comic book series written by Mark Millar and illustrated by John Romita, Jr. It is published by Marvel Comics under the company’s Icon imprint.

Story

Dave Lizewski, an otherwise ordinary New York City high school student and the child of Greg Willer, loving single father, takes his interest in comic books as inspiration to become a real-life superhero. He assembles a suit and mask, which he wears under his normal clothing, begins exercising, and practices things like walking on roofs, sating his ambitions for a time. He eventually seeks to fight crime, his first attempt at which leads to a severe beating and stabbing by thugs, followed by his wandering into the street and being hit by a car. He retains his secret identity, however, stripping off and hiding his costume before paramedics arrive.

Telling his father he was mugged, he undergoes intense physical rehabilitation, including four operations. He is released weeks later, and as soon as he is off crutches dons the suit once more and goes on patrol. When he saves a man from a beating, an onlooker catches the scene on a cellphone camera and uploads it to YouTube, turning Lizewski into an overnight sensation christened with the name Kick-Ass.

In school, the mugging excuse used to cover up his bruises spawns rumors Lizewski is a gay prostitute. Believing them, his longtime crush, Katie Deauxma, adopts him as a “gay best friend”. Lizewski goes along with this in an effort to spend time with her. His father, worried about him, gives him a can of police-issue pepper-spray for protection.

As Kick-Ass, Lizewski sets up a MySpace account, so people can contact him for help. The first such request he investigates leads him to an apartment of violent lowlifes who try to kill him. He is rescued by a costumed young girl wielding a sword named Hit-Girl, who kills all the attackers and then leaves to join a grown man named Big Daddy. The two disregard Lizewski, who later learns that Kick-Ass has inadvertently inspired a subculture of people dressed in makeshift, original superhero costumes. Later, one such hero, the Red Mist, appears, and teams with Kick-Ass on street patrol. The two gain great public popularity after nearly being killed rescuing a cat from a burning building.

After the burning building adventure, Big Daddy and Hit Girl approach Kick Ass for a possible team up to take down a local drug kingpin. Unfortunately Red Mist turns out to be a informant for the drug dealers who ambush the two vigilantes and capture Kick-Ass when he tries to meet them .

Promotion

Prior to the series launch a viral campaign featuring a short video of the main character of the comic, Kick-Ass, being “caught on tape” performing a heroic act was uploaded to YouTube and spread around the Internet. Later, a MySpace page was created, supposedly maintained by the character, where it was written that “Mark Millar [...] is doing a comic-book about me with [...] John Romita Jr.”

A charity auction was held to name the main character. The winner, Dave Lizewski, chose his own name.

Each issue also singles out specific comic shops, crediting them for taking part in the “home-made effort” to promote the book and encourages readers to support them.

Film

Main article: Kick-Ass (film)

A film adaptation was reportedly in the script stage in May 2008. The Hollywood Reporter said production would be fully financed by Matthew Vaughn’s MARV Films, the script written by Vaughn and Jane Goldman, and the movie directed by Vaughn. The industry trade magazine gave the financed amount as $30 million, while Millar updated the figure to $65 million. Extras such as Benjamin Jordan and Oliver Welts from Uxbridge school have said the set and special effects for the film are incredible and can see that a lot of the money has been mainly spent on sets that may only been seen in the movie once.

Aaron Johnson has been cast as the main character Dave Lizewski. Nicolas Cage will play a former cop who, in his quest to bring down an evil druglord played by Mark Strong, has trained his 11-year-old daughter to be the ruthless vigilante Hit Girl, being played by Chloë Moretz. Lyndsy Fonseca has been cast Lizewski’s crush, Katie Deauxma. Christopher Mintz-Plasse has been cast as Red Mist. Series creator Millar, a native of Scotland, has asked Scottish TV children’s-show host Glen Michael to make a cameo appearance. Wrestler Big Daddy V said he has a part in the movie.

House of Mystery

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Cain and Gregory move out in the final issue of The House of Mystery.

The House of Mystery is the name of several horror-mystery-suspense anthology comic book series. It had a companion series, House of Secrets.

First series

Genesis

“House of Mystery” started out as a horror anthology, featuring tales of the supernatural as well as supernatural-themed mystery stories. However, with the growing backlash against horror comics in the mid-1950s, as well as the advent of the Comics Code Authority and its restrictions on horror-themed storylines (banning stories dealing with such supernatural fare as werewolves, vampires, and such), the series quietly was revamped into dealing with science-fiction type monsters and other mystery-suspense type tales that were permitted by the comic code.

Super-Heroes

In the mid-1960s, the series was revamped to include super-hero stories: From House of Mystery #143 (June 1964) through #158 (April, 1966), the Martian Manhunter headlined the series, as his back-up feature from Detective Comics was moved to “House of Mystery”. This was also followed up with the introduction of Dial H for Hero, who was introduced in House of Mystery issue #156 (January, 1966) and took over as headliner until #173 (March-April 1968).

Return of Horror

With issue #174, EC Comics veteran Joe Orlando was hired by DC to take over as editor of “House of Mystery”. As the Comic Code Authority was now being challenged, by both DC and Marvel over content restrictions, the series returned to its overt horror themes. The first issue (House of Mystery #174) under Orlando would be a reprint issue of old horror/suspense stories as the new direction would truly begin with House of Mystery #175 (May-June 1968). The issue would introduce a new figure to the series, Cain, the “able care taker” of the House of Mystery who would introduce nearly all stories that would run in the series before its cancellation (Cain would also host the spin-off series Plop! and ultimately become a recurring character in The Sandman.

Under Orlando’s stewardship, the series won a good deal of recognition in the comics industry, including the Shazam Award for Best Individual Short Story (Dramatic) in 1972 for “The Demon Within” in #201 by John Albano and Jim Aparo, and the Shazam Award for Best Humor Story in 1972 for “The Poster Plague” by Steve Skeates and Sergio Aragones. The series also featured stories by writers T. Casey Brennan (#260, 267, 268 and 274) and Scott Edelman (#257, 258, 260, 264, 266, 270, 272, 273).

Orlando would ultimately step down from the series, appointing Karen Berger as editor of the book, her first for DC Comics. Under Berger, the series experimented with long-form storyline with the popular I…Vampire serial. “I… Vampire” revolved around the heroic vampire, Andrew Bennett, who sought to defeat his nemesis and former lover Mary, the Queen of Blood. This series began in #290 (March, 1981) and would last until #319 (August, 1983), two issues before the title ended with #321 (October, 1983).

The classic “House of Mystery” series is widely regarded as one of the cornerstones of the Vertigo comic line. In recent years, DC Comics has reprinted stories from the original run: three black and white “Showcase Presents” volumes have been published, reprinting the series from #174-194, #195-211 and #212-226 respectively. A one shot reprint (in color), Welcome Back to the House of Mystery, featured ten of the most highly-regarded stories as selected by Alisa Kwitney in a Cain wraparound by Neil Gaiman and Sergio Aragonés, under the Vertigo imprint. The first issue from 1951 was also reissued under the Vertigo imprint. [1]

Elvira’s House of Mystery

In 1986-87, DC comics would published a new series, Elvira’s House of Mystery. It would last 11 issues plus a special. The series was a quasi-follow up towards the original series, with famed horror movie hostess Elvira tasked by the House with finding Cain, though she spent much of her time making fun of him, introducing horror stories similar to the original series. One issue of this series, #3, was released without Comics Code Approval and contained masturbation references, but subsequent editorial comments in later issues stated that the experiment in releasing an unapproved issue was not considered successful.

2008 series

Main article: House of Mystery (Vertigo)

DC’s Vertigo imprint began a new ongoing series in May 2008, written by Matthew Sturges and Bill Willingham. It features a different story each issue, told by people trapped in a “purgatory-like house.” Cain is one of several figures in the series.

The House

The House of Mystery also exists as a location in the DC Universe (in Kentucky) and the Dreaming. The origins of the House of Mystery are unknown. In fact, very little is known about the House of Mystery in general, lending credence to its name. The architecture is indeterminate and actually changes periodically. The same holds true for the inside of the house: the rooms constantly shift about, and one never enters the same room twice. The House of Mystery lies in the same graveyard as the House of Secrets, its companion. Whereas Abel resides in the House of Secrets, Cain makes the House of Mystery his abode.

Cain is not the only person to have resided within the House; in addition to boarders, including Mister Mxyzptlk, Elvira also took shelter within the House. Her brief stay in the House of Mystery is notable for two reasons: first, the House of Mystery is established as being the same House throughout its publication history. Three distinct personalities of the House are shown: the original horror House of Mystery, a dark humour “House of Weirdness”-style which harkened back to Cain’s stint in Plop!, and the current version of the House of Mystery in Kentucky. The second reason is the timing of Elvira’s stay. She took up residence during the Crisis on Infinite Earths, which resulted in an identity crisis for the House itself. Elvira, tasked by the House of Mystery to find Cain, took over his role of host for a brief period, while Cain was relegated to being the butt of jokes during occasional cameos.

The House of Mystery possesses sentience, along with mystic powers. It has possessed someone before, and merged with the House of Secrets briefly. This also ties into the constantly shifting appearance of the House of Mystery. It was torn down in The House of Mystery #321, but its existence was restored during the Crisis.

The House of Mystery appears mainly in various Vertigo titles, especially those tied into Neil Gaiman’s Sandman; it has also appeared briefly in Resurrection Man. Most recently something called the House of Mystery appeared in 52 # 18, where it seems to have been used for some time as a base for a team of detectives called the Croatoan Society, which counts both Detective Chimp and Ralph Dibny as members. It is unclear if the Croatoan’s House of Mystery this is meant to be the same as the original House of Mystery, a post-Infinite Crisis version of the original House of Mystery, or simply a different location with the same name. Cain’s name did, however, appear on this house’s mailbox, implying some sort of connection to the original House.

Superman (along with Mister Mxyzptlk) made an appearance in the house in issue #53 of DC Comics Presents. Batman entered the house in The Brave and the Bold #93, tripped on a floorboard, and would have been shot had his pursued’s gun not jammed. He never actually met Cain, who instead narrates a story about him occurring in Scotland, climaxes in a castle he describes as “a Hose of Mystery” rather than “the House of Mystery.”

House of Mystery (Vertigo)

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Cover of House of Mystery #1 (July 2008). Art by Sam Weber.

House of Mystery is an occult and horror-themed comic book anthology series based on the classic House of Mystery series that ran from 1951 to 1983. It is written by Bill Willingham and Matthew Sturges. It debuted in July 2008, published by the Vertigo imprint of DC Comics.

Plot

Cain (of Cain and Abel) attempts to return to the House of Mystery, his home in the Dreaming, and finds that it has disappeared. Meanwhile, in Texas, a former architecture student named Bethany “Fig” Keeler flees her burning house, saving only a handful of sketches she once made of a house from her dreams. Keeler is pursued by a “Pair of the Conception”, agents of an entity known as the “Omneity”; they are two people, a male and a female, always holding hands. If they let go of one another, they will disappear. The pair chases her through a door and unwittingly into the House of Mystery, where she meets the inhabitants of the house bar and discovers the terms of what is apparently her imprisonment. Everyone must pay for their drinks with stories, and no one can leave without being picked up by the house’s mysterious coachman. None of the house’s occupants are sure why some people might get to leave and others not, so each person’s stay is at least ostensibly eternal until the coachman inexplicably turns up to take them away. This doesn’t stop some of the inhabitants from trying to get out, nor does it stop Cain from attempting to get back in.

Collected editions

The series is being collected into trade paperback:

  • Room and Boredom (collects House of Mystery #1-5, 128 pages, January 2009, ISBN 1-40122-079-7)