Section: Comics

Black Lightning: Some Things You Can’t Make Right
Black Lightning: Some Things You Can’t Make Right

Black Lightning lovers, welcome back to the land of the free! We’re now ten weeks deep into season one, and there’s something that’s been bugging me for the last few episodes. It started off as a small thing, but now?

No Comments Top
The Infinity Wars are Coming

The reach of INFINITY COUNTDOWN has expanded to every corner of the multiverse, but the question remains…Countdown to what?

This July, writer Gerry Duggan, artist Mike Deodato Jr., and colorist Frank Martin answer that query with one word that resounds throughout infinity: War.

In INFINITY WARS: PRIME #1, the heroes and villains of the Marvel Universe reap what they sow as their frantic search for the Infinity Stones leads to cosmic madness like never before. The simmering events of recent months spiral into something much, much bigger in this colossal story.

Prepare to hear all the details from Marvel at C2E2 on April 6-8—but for now, take a look at the Mike Deodato Jr. cover for issue #1.

Infinity Wars: Prime #1 cover by Mike Deodato Jr.

Get ready for INFINITY WARS: PRIME #1, by Gerry Duggan, Mike Deodato Jr., and Frank Martin, this July!

No Comments Top
Creator Commentary: Old Man Hawkeye #2

In our Creator Commentary series, we give the floor to our storytellers as they present behind-the-scenes looks at the decisions that go into every last panel and page—in their very own words. Today we prepare for this week’s release of OLD MAN HAWKEYE #3 by taking a closer look at issue #2 with writer Ethan Sacks. Read up on our coverage of issue #1, then dive into #2 below. 

Ethan, over to you…

Hunter and Hunted

In issue #2, Jebediah Hammer, a descendant of Justin Hammer, (and the merchant that was with Hawkeye when the Madrox gang first attacked) is frantically packing because he knows there will be consequences after the events of last issue. So he’s trying to get his family out of there. His wife thinks he’s totally overreacting but of course he’s not, spoiler alert, because on page 2, my favorite page so far in the series that Marco is an absolute wizard at, we see that Bullseye’s found them.

What I wanted to do for this scene is capture the vibe of “Inglorious Basterds,” the very opening with Christoph Waltz, where he plays this Nazi and he’s in this farmhouse and it’s this really tense scene because on the surface it’s just a conversation but you know it’s going to end badly at some pointyou just don’t know when. So I was trying to sort of capture that vibe a little bit. I really like how the scene came out, not patting myself on the back or whatever, but between the art and the conversation I think it’s pretty cool.

But meanwhile, we have Hawkeye who’s started his quest and the first thing he does is search for one of the Wastelands purveyors of information. So who sees everything? A guy with a giant eyeball for his head. I just love the visual for the Orb. So he goes and of course the Orb would have a club called Eye Candy—an exotic dancer joint.

Light and Dark

Apart from the mob drama scene, I also wanted to show one of the most heartbreaking things about this world is how these heroes are totally debased and how generations are going to grow up not knowing what a hero is. I thought the idea that these people would be watching women and men scantily clad as heroes and sort of the voyeuristic thing of that would be heartbreaking so there was a little bit of a visual I was hoping to get here.

From page 5, I just want to say every day should be colorist appreciation day and I want to give a shout-out to Andres Mossa. So what he did here is, you look at this club and if you notice every panel is alternating with shades of blue and shades of purple because of the strobe effect of the lights of the pulsing dance vibe. So that is just an example of how you may not notice it the first time you see it but that is a skilled colorist right there, basically makes the story better.

Related to the color, you’ll see the flashbacks have this fiery red, it looks like a hell, so that’s just the mark of a great colorist, bringing you in and out of different locales with the palette.

We see a couple pages later, Bullseye has this computer interface which gives an advantage to him, so you’ll see that through the book a little bit.

Targets

One little subplot (that’s a very small subplot in this issue), with Jebediah Hammer and his wife Susannah, there’s actually kind of a love story. They clearly love each other because when, spoiler alert, Jebediah Hammer basically has his artery cut by a playing card and he’s dying, his last act is drawing out a clue in his own blood because basically he’s warned by Bullseye, “You better come through before you die or I’m going to kill your wife.” So he saves her and she, spoiler alert, lives no matter what the last page seems to indicate. I just wanted a little bit of love in this horrible, horrible existence to actually mean something.

You’ll notice too that Hawkeye is starting to miss more frequently. Throughout the book we’re going to see the consequences of his diminishing eyesight, so during the big action scene in this book, which Marco rendered amazingly, we’ll start to see some more of that.

The most damning two-page spread is a flashback scene. We parse out a little bit about the horrible event, 45 years ago, that’s driving Hawkeye now. We know from a line in “Old Man Logan” that he kind of was upset that he was left alive. We kind of wanted to show that, so we get to see a lot of dead Avengers. I felt a little bit like a serial killer, just choosing who would be on this page and how they died and why they were included in this team. But the thought that I had was that there would be several Avengers teams, all of a sudden imagine you’re getting an alert that all these super villains are attacking out of nowhere so they send teams to various locations—and Hawkeye was in charge of one of them. Captain Marvel would have been in charge of one of them, Black Panther would have been in charge of one of them, Captain American, certainly—and we know from “Old Man Logan” how he died and where he died.

So this was a team that was sent to Las Vegas, and we know it’s Las Vegas because Thor’s hammer is there, and the city is now called Hammer Falls. So we’re telegraphing stuff that we will learn later in more detail. I will say this, there is a clue on this page as to the identity of the people he’s hunting but you have to be really, really eagle-eyed to figure it out.

Coming out of the flashback to the present, Hawkeye takes a swig of bourbon, and it’s Marcus Daniels…which is the name of a minor super villain called Blackout. You can keep an eye out, there are going to be little tweaks here and there or little visuals here and there that kind of allude to the super villains who weren’t so super that they earned monuments or anything.

Family Fortunes

Speaking of which, when Bullseye has tracked Hawkeye’s trail to Tanya’s garage on page 17, panel 2, he confronts Clint’s daughter Ashley about his whereabouts, and she’s wearing an “Angar and the Screamers” t-shirt. That’s another little Easter egg—kind of figured she’d be into punk and that sounded as punk a band as there would be in the Wastelands. I really like her character, and I wanted her to stand up to Bullseye and Bullseye to be impressed enough that he doesn’t kill her right where she stands. I like that exchange where she’s not intimidated at all by him. Possibly because she’s so young that she doesn’t know who he is, but she clearly doesn’t care one way or the other, so I like that about her.

Then we have the second to last page, Hawkeye reaches the location where he’s going to have his first major fight next issue with one of the people he’s looking for. Especially because I have such a gifted art team working on this, I wanted to explore a new type of setting. What would an amusement park look like in this world? We’ll see more of it in next issue but of course it’s Arcade’s Murderworld because who else would have started a theme park?

There’s another little clue as to who his first opponent is on the bottom of that page.

Then finally, we see—this is the big cliff hanger in this issue on page 20—we see, as poor Susannah is burying her husband and kids and confessing her love for her family, she is disturbed by three Venoms.

So basically what we find out is the Madroxs can of course keep replicating themselves, but also duplicate the symbiote, which is going to be a big headache for Hawkeye later in this series. So it’s Venoms—plural—and his troubles are just beginning.

Continue the story by reading OLD MAN HAWKEYE #3, from Ethan Sacks and artist Marco Checchetto, on March 28!

No Comments Top
Relationship Roundup: Clark Kent and Lois Lane
Relationship Roundup: Clark Kent and Lois Lane Let's be real, with ACTION COMICS #1000 right around the corner, you all probably knew this one was coming. Read more
No Comments Top
Relationship Roundup: Clark Kent and Lois Lane
Relationship Roundup: Clark Kent and Lois Lane Let's be real, with ACTION COMICS #1000 right around the corner, you all probably knew this one was coming. Read more
No Comments Top
Top 10 Tragic Deaths

Say it with me, True Believers: It’s! Time! To! Get! Sad!

That’s right, in the latest Marvel Top 10, we take a look at some of the most heartbreaking, gut-wrenching, Earth-shattering deaths in Marvel history! Featuring fatalities and funerals from issues of PETER PARKER: THE SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN, DAREDEVIL, RUNAWAYS, UNCANNY X-MEN, and more, this Top 10 list will be a delightfully distressing trip down memory lane.

So grab some unhealthy food and get ready to eat your feelings as you dive into Marvel’s Top 10 Tragic Deaths!

No Comments Top
DC’s Legends of Tomorrow: Sums and Parts
DC's Legends of Tomorrow: Sums and Parts

Welcome back, Legends fans! Hopefully you managed to make it through this past weekend without having to fight any killer clones or struggle through any existential crises, but if you did, hey, it looks like you made it!

No Comments Top
Captain Marvel Essential Reading

With the announcement of today’s big Captain Marvel news, we thought it was the perfect time to leap back into the history of Carol Danvers with a look at some of her greatest Marvel Comics stories!

There’s no time like the present (unless your hero is stuck in a different dimension during a galactic search for an Infinity Stone), so get caught up with the current Carol Danvers series in New York Times best-selling author Margaret Stohl‘s MIGHTY CAPTAIN MARVEL! The cosmic hero and her Alpha Flight crew get entangled in a fight for the safety of planet Earth, a war against the Hydra Captain America in Secret Empire, and a mind-bending search for the Reality Stone in this ongoing series.

The Mighty Captain Marvel (2017) #1

The Mighty Captain Marvel (2017) #1

What is Marvel Unlimited?

The tumultuous events of Secret Empire spun each hero off into their own encounters with their pasts, their legacies, and their namesakes in the GENERATIONS series. And in GENERATIONS: CAPTAIN MARVEL & CAPTAIN MAR-VELL, Carol and her predecessor find themselves in a strange plane of existence contemplating their relationship and the meaning of the heroic title they’ve both held.

Generations: Captain Marvel & Captain Mar-Vell (2017) #1

Generations: Captain Marvel & Captain Mar-Vell (2017) #1

What is Marvel Unlimited?

The Avengers aren’t the only group of super heroes that have counted Carol as one of their best. In A-FORCE, Captain Marvel joins a new hero called Singularity to combat one of the most fearsome threats from across the multiverse alongside She-Hulk, Dazzler, Medusa, and Runaway Nico Minoru!

A-Force (2016) #1

A-Force (2016) #1

What is Marvel Unlimited?

The heartbreaking events of Civil War II presented some of the most challenging moments in Carol’s recent history. Compelled by ideology to fight her friend and ally Iron Man, the Marvel Universe plunged into a super hero war, leaving Captain Marvel’s professional and personal lives altered forever.

Captain Marvel (2016) #6

Captain Marvel (2016) #6

What is Marvel Unlimited?

Prior to that, the spacefarer solidified her position as one of Marvel’s greatest heroes in legendary writer Kelly Sue DeConnick and artist David Lopez‘s 2014 CAPTAIN MARVEL series. In this 15 issue run, Danvers comes to a crossroads with a new life and new romance before making a dramatic decision that sets her on a new course for the stars.

Captain Marvel (2014) #1

Captain Marvel (2014) #1

What is Marvel Unlimited?

Finally, prepare for this July’s launch of the latest entry to the legend of Captain Marvel with writer Margaret Stohl and artist Carlos Pacheco‘s LIFE OF CAPTAIN MARVEL! Carol Danvers was just a girl from the Boston suburbs who loved science and the Red Sox until a chance encounter with a Kree hero gave her incredible super powers. Now, she’s a leader in the Avengers and the commander of Alpha Flight.

…But what if there was more to the story? When crippling anxiety attacks put her on the sidelines in the middle of a fight, Carol finds herself reliving memories of a life she thought was far behind her. Uncover the true origin of Captain Marvel this summer!

Jump into these Carol Danvers stories—and thousands more from across the Marvel Universe—on Marvel Unlimited right now!

No Comments Top
First Look: The Origin of Phantom Girl
First Look: The Origin of Phantom Girl Read more
No Comments Top
JULIE BENSON AND SHAWNA BENSON TAKE AIM AT GREEN ARROW
JULIE BENSON AND SHAWNA BENSON TAKE AIM AT GREEN ARROW Fan-Favorite Co-Writers of Batgirl and the Birds of Prey Make Their Mark on The Emerald Archer Read more
No Comments Top

Back to Top