As for Astonishing, apparently
Matt, it occurred to me that maybe
it was the fact that Lockheed is an alien, rather than the fire itself, that had the effect - mutant powers don't work on him (the bad guy), which would tie in with the "cure". Granted, the Fan. 4 got their powers via space (at least that's their original origin - I assume that hasn't changed) so they may still have been able to whip him.
Ohmygod, did I mention that I LOVE Batman: Year One?
Has anyone else heard about this?
Has anyone else heard about this?
That's cool, and fits neatly with Ple's take on multiple interpretations of the same myth.
Has anyone else heard about this?
Oh, that's just plain cool.
Reminds me of some of the Manga interpetations of the Marvel Universe, some of which weren't half bad.
Ex Machina's got a huge buzz, but having flipped to the last page of issue #1, I'm not so sure I can read the whole thing.
That's cool, and fits neatly with Ple's take on multiple interpretations of the same myth.
Singing Spidey, perhaps? At least once Bollywood gets a hold of it.
Has anyone else heard about this?
Whoa. That's just wicked cool. I hope it's written well. Wow.
Singing Spidey, perhaps? At least once Bollywood gets a hold of it.
Spidey plays cricket!
On a different note, did anybody pick up the Ex Machina or Challengers of the Unknown debuts last week?
Ex Machina just looks very good for most of its length and then the very last page re-casts into something--well, astonishing. (You're all going to go look at the last page and kill the buzz now, aren't you?) And the hooks Vaughan plants for future forward-story and back-story fill are intriguing.
I'm just a bit worried that it's an ongoing without a definite end-date, because a lot of the impact-by-implication he's got going on will be less meaningful if the story's drawn out too much.