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Posts Tagged ‘spider-woman bendis maleev motion comics marvel’

New Releases 5/26/10

Posted by dailypop on May 25, 2010

For the complete list of this week’s comics, click here.

Not sure where your local comic shop is? Try comicshoplocator.com!

(note: all information including ad copy is from the publisher)

If you can’t make it to the shop, just click on any of the images below to be taken to an online retailer. I don’t get any referrals for these sales, I’m just doing my bit to spread the word on some neat products.

Thunderbolts #144

Thunderbolts #144
By: Jeff Parker, Kev Walker, Marko Djurdjevic
The new era for Marvel’s always-evolving, always controversial team kicks off here! It’s a beginning, a return, a departure, and an arrival of a new artist (MARVEL ZOMBIES 3 & 4′s Kev Walker) all rolled into one in a fresh, shocking status quo!The most dangerous people on Earth are now all in one hellish prison, and the only way out is through rehabilitation and contribution to society via The Thunderbolts…under the leadership of the steel-hard-skinned Avenger named Luke Cage! So bring on the first participants: Juggernaut! Crossbones! Ghost! Moonstone! And Man-Thing? Against the sordid recent history of the group as a black ops kill squad, can Power Man restore the Thunderbolts to their rightful potential?

Find out as the entire series is revamped, and also discover why ComicsBulletin.com says: ‘Jeff Parker writes villains with his typical panache…This is why I read comic books.’

Weapon X Noir #1

Weapon X Noir #1
By: Dennis Calero, C.P. Smith

Spinning from the pages of X MEN NOIR: MARK OF CAIN ‘In the fourth century, Saint Jerome said that the face was the mirror of the mind, and eyes without speaking confess the secrets of the heart.I wear a false face, true. One that is hideous and deformed, to hide my true nature. Or perhaps it is the mask that is real, and the face of a DEMON.’

Doctor Who 1st Doctor Unearthly Child Action Figure, $24.99

Doctor Who 1st Doctor Unearthly Child Action Figure

Imported from the UK!

School teachers Barbara Wright and Ian Chesterton become intrigued by one of their students, Susan Foreman, and they visit her home address – a junkyard at 76 Totter’s Lane – where they meet her grandfather, the Doctor. The Doctor and Susan are aliens who travel through time and space in their ship, the TARDIS, which looks like an ordinary police box but holds within a huge gleaming control room. This action figure depicts the first Doctor, William Hartnell, in the costume he wore in Doctor Who’s first episode, ‘An Unearthly Child,’ with a hat, cape, scarf, and longer jacket.

Doctor Who: Hornets' Nest, Circus of Doom

Doctor Who: Hornets’ Nest, Circus of Doom
In Blandford, 1832, ringmaster Antonio exerts a strange influence on the townsfolk. When the Doctor steps into the ring, he discovers that Antonio has some familiar demons of his own. Tom Baker reprises his role as the beloved fourth Doctor in this multi-voice production. This is #3 in a series of five stories.

Doctor Who: Hornets' Nest, A Sting in the Tale

Doctor Who: Hornets’ Nest, A Sting in the Tale
In a bleak midwinter, an order of nuns protect their Mother Superior from ravaging dogs. But something is very wrong here indeed — and the Doctor is about to get badly stung. Tom Baker reprises his role as the beloved fourth Doctor in this multi-voice production. This is #4 in a series of five stories.

Doctor Who: Hornets' Nest, Hive of Horror

Doctor Who: Hornets’ Nest, Hive of Horror
The Doctor and Mike must face their enemy in a final battle. They have an unwilling accomplice — and loyalties are about to be tested to the limit. Tom Baker reprises his role as the beloved fourth Doctor in this multi-voice production. This is #5 in a series of five stories.

Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep: Dust To Dust #1

Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep: Dust To Dust #1

By: Chris Roberson, Robert Adler, Trevor Hairsine, Benjamin Carre
A science-fiction publishing event! Who hunted androids before Rick Deckard? Taking place immediately after World War Terminus ends, the problems with artificial life – androids – become apparent.

The government decides they must become targets, hunted down, but who will do the dirty work? Two men are assigned: Malcolm Reed, a ‘special’ human with the power to feel others’ emotions, and Charlie Victor, who’s the perfect man for the job – or is he?

Meanwhile Samantha Wu, a Stanford biologist, fights to save the last of the world’s animals. John W. Campbell Memorial Award-nominee Chris Roberson writes the prequel to John W. Campbell Memorial Award-winner Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, one of the greatest science fiction novels ever published!

Read the rest of this entry »

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Digital Spider-Woman

Posted by dailypop on February 8, 2009

Ever since Brian Michael Bendis announced that Spider-Woman was part of his New Avengers line-up, fans have reacted with an almost unanimous cry of ‘Spider-Woman??!!’ but that has not stopped Bendis who firmly believes that the character deserves better exposure on the printed page.

Introduced in the 1970′s by Archie Goodwin, Sal Buscema and Jim Mooney, Spider-Woman has always been an odd character. Convoluted history (both the mythical mountain of Wungador and Hydra feature prominently in her tangled web of genesis) and questionable status (she’s not really related to Spider-Man in any way) have hampered her success in the past, but Bendis’ insistence to place her on the most important team book Marvel publishes has put her at the tip of the fan boy mind. The fact that Spider-Woman was revealed to be a secret Skrull infiltrator (the Queen no less!) only makes her more important to Marvelites the world over.

spider-woman

Her new series hitting the shelves this April by Bendis and star collaborator Alex Maleev (both of whom teamed up for an award-wining Daredevil run) will also be accompanied by a motion comic created especially to take advantage of both the character’s new prestige and the wonders of the motion comic itself. A few of you may be familiar with this recent invention that has included such high profile comics as Astonishing X-Men, Batman: Black and White and the Watchmen, but all of those projects use still images from the original static works.

The Spider-Woman motion comic, however, will be something entirely new.

Because of it’s digital motion aspects, Bendis is writing “Spider-Woman” in a completely different style from his other books. “I had just written the pilot to ‘Powers,’ and I had written a pilot for HBO. So I was writing in this television motif, and when it was time to start writing these things, I thought, ‘Well I could go back to comics script format, but me and Alex have been working together for almost 10 years and know our comic book bones pretty well.’ So I focused this material as episodic scripts.” Bendis explained. “I’ll notate what would happen in the comic book. Like there will be side notes saying, ‘This will be a double page spread.’ or ‘This is a half page spread.’ But I’ve really focused on the language of these ‘mobi-sodes’ So it’s written very differently. I’ve written ten episodes so far.”

“Spider-Woman” is Alex Maleev’s second digital motion project. It’s the added dimensions of sound and movement that make the digital motion format so compelling for the artist. “It’s an enormous challenge, as we have to fit the animation within certain borders,” Maleev said. “I don’t expect smooth sailing, but as everything before, we always managed to pull it off. I am looking forward to solving the puzzle.”

Maleev feels that there isn’t just one or two particular elements that made “Spider-Woman” right for the digital motion medium. “As an artist, I look at it from a visual point of view, her costume and colors, guest appearances, locations, time, weather, all of it will be interesting to animate,” the artist stated. “It’s not the character alone, it’s the whole project that seems right for the job.”

The “Spider-Woman” digital motion comics are being designed with the intent to move, and providing the art for them is a slightly different process then creating art for a standard print comic. “The episodes are broken down in storyboard format and drawn in pieces, or layers. The backgrounds are separate and some will be in 3-D,” Maleev explained. “More or less what I’d do for the regular comic, but this time I have to think of how to animate it and keep the viewer intrigued.”

To create the “Spider-Woman” digital motion comics Maleev has to be more than just an artist, he also has to wear the hat of a director as well. “It is difficult, because the responsibilities are greater. I am comfortable providing a comic book on a monthly basis and still have time off,” Maleev stated. “This project will keep me swamped and grounded for a long, long time. But being finally behind the camera and yelling ‘action’ is the cherry on top of the cake. (It’s not as romantic as you imagine; we sit in a studio full of computers and glare at the screen for hours).”

(read more at cbr.com)

More of a cult comic book super heroine to be sure, the return of this character to the covers of Marvel Comics has resulted in a striking visual, perhaps due to the combo of vivid costume colors and the fact that Spider-Woman basically looks like a naked shapely woman painted red. Let this be a lesson to comic book creators the world over, if you cannot make your character easily understandable at least make her visually interesting.

The new Spider-Woman will be hitting comic shops and iTunes in two months.

Recommended:
Essential Spider-Woman, Vol. 1 (Marvel Essentials) (v. 1)
Essential Spider-Woman, Vol. 2 (Marvel Essentials) (v. 2)
New Avengers Vol. 2: Sentry
Secret Invasion

Posted in comic books, Marvel | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

 
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