Pretty cool except for the part where I was really terrified and now my knees are all dizzy.

Willow ,'Never Leave Me'


Other Media  

Discussion of Buffy and Angel comics, books, and more. Please don't get into spoilery details in the first week of release.


Steph L. - Feb 13, 2005 7:09:25 pm PST #7511 of 10000
I look more rad than Lutheranism

Okay, the second one down on this page of Superman is a Dick is the funniest cover EVAH. It's Superman's and Batman's smiles that make it so damn funny.


Kalshane - Feb 13, 2005 7:26:31 pm PST #7512 of 10000
GS: If you had to choose between kicking evil in the head or the behind, which would you choose, and why? Minsc: I'm not sure I understand the question. I have two feet, do I not? You do not take a small plate when the feast of evil welcomes seconds.

I personally love, in addition to the one I tagged and Teppy quoted the last one on this page. [link]


Polter-Cow - Feb 13, 2005 7:30:15 pm PST #7513 of 10000
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

I can't believe those are real. Are they really real? I cannot believe it. Those are Photoshopped, right? Really well?


Thomash - Feb 13, 2005 7:43:27 pm PST #7514 of 10000
I have a plan.

I can't believe those are real. Are they really real? I cannot believe it. Those are Photoshopped, right? Really well?

Well, I don't know about the others but I have read that first one with the bubble-car. I can believe that they're real.


Jeff Mejia - Feb 14, 2005 6:16:27 am PST #7515 of 10000
"Don't think of yourself as an organic pain collector racing towards oblivion." Dogbert to Dilbert

If I wanted to start him on Batman comics, which would be a good one? Are they too dark for a 9 year old? Are there current (i.e. not old collector's issues) series that might be good for him to read?

As noted above, The Batman Strikes is the current "all-ages" Batman title and ties into the current The Batman cartoon. However, the two previous "all-ages" Batman titles, Batman: Gotham Adventures and Batman Adventures, tied into the earlier Batman cartoon and is, IMHO, the superior title. There are many trades collecting the series.

Bruce Wayne's parents were shot when he was eight years old, in a street alley, while he watched. In the movie it was the man who would eventually become the Joker. In the comic book, it wasn't the Joker, it was just some random mugger.

Interesting note: The Batman: Gotham Adventures/Adventures series I mentioned above used the Joe Chill character as the one who killed the Waynes, but Batman never caught him. In the last issue of the series, though, there was an interesting, bittersweet coda to that story.

However, Bruce Wayne is just pretending to be a pampered, billionaire playboy. Bruce Wayne is the disguise, while Batman is the real person.

I recently read an interview, I think it was of Scott McDaniel, where he noted that Chuck Dixon once told him that the real person was the one who was in the Batcave, with the costume on, but with the cowl off.

Red Son = I didn't have the last-page OMG reaction that you did, but still -- that is a *seriously* good comic.

Another curious note: the ending came from an idea that Grant Morrison gave to Mark Millar.


esse - Feb 14, 2005 10:25:40 am PST #7516 of 10000
S to the A -- using they/them pronouns!

the real person was the one who was in the Batcave, with the costume on, but with the cowl off.

That's it for me. I like that idea best.


DavidS - Feb 14, 2005 10:29:16 am PST #7517 of 10000
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

That's it for me. I like that idea best.

It's a appealing in its resistance to binary thinking.


esse - Feb 14, 2005 10:36:27 am PST #7518 of 10000
S to the A -- using they/them pronouns!

Indeed. My women's studies training cheers.


sumi - Feb 15, 2005 12:32:29 pm PST #7519 of 10000
Art Crawl!!!

Pleides! Action Comics #827!!!

New Astounishing tomorrow?

I have many comics to pick up -- what with begin too broke and too far away from the shop to pick up my comics last week.


Jeff Mejia - Feb 15, 2005 5:56:38 pm PST #7520 of 10000
"Don't think of yourself as an organic pain collector racing towards oblivion." Dogbert to Dilbert

Astounishing #8 is due tomorrow.

The big news for me is that Promethea #32 comes out tomorrow - the blurb is the only way to adequately describe it:

In a series that pushed the boundaries of mainstream comics to the edge, this unbelievable final issue goes a little bit further! Alan Moore and J.H. Williams III deliver the most gloriously experimental issue of PROMETHEA yet, in which the reader takes an incredible trip through the magical cosmos with Promethea as a guide.

But there's more! While other comics allow the reader only one way to read a book, this issue gives you several options — one of which is assembling its 32 pages into a giant double-sided poster. Once the poster has been assembled, the pages form two lovely images (one on each side) that are only discernible as a complete entity! Final issue.

Of course, anyone new to the series would be totally lost. I picked up issue #16 as the first comic I ever bought purely for the art on the cover. At the time, I was such a novice that I was barely aware who Alan Moore was. I quickly learned, and Promethea became the first title I actively sought back issues. Issue #12 probably took over 4 hours to read - something I never experienced in a single-issue comic before.

I only hope that my shop actually ordered the comic. Things haven't been running smoothly lately. I did order the issue online, but it won't get to me until next week.