[REVIEW] ‘SUPERMAN: RED AND BLUE #1’ REMINDS US WHY WE LOVE THE MAN OF STEEL
Superman: Red and Blue #1 is more than another comicbooky action romp. It reminds us what it means to be a hero.
Superman: Red and Blue #1 is more than another comicbooky action romp. It reminds us what it means to be a hero.
Pandemics. Protests. Secret police. This was science fiction a few months ago. Just ask Heart Attack Volume 1 by Shawn Kittelsen and Eric Zawadzki.
X-O Manowar #1 is about Aric of Dacia’s struggle to be a hero in the modern day. Aric’s attempts at superheroics are often left…wanting.
Tom King and Mitch Gerads team up once again to deconstruct another classic Silver Age B-list superhero, nine panels at a time.
‘Freaks’ is a fun, low-key, genre-bender that shines through its well-observed moments with the central family. The Blu-ray release really makes the images pop and the special features are good enough to make it a worthwhile purchase.
The Dark Knight returns to Gotham after Bane and his dead father tried to kill him. Yeah, it’s been a wild ride and it gets even wilder in Batman #80.
In this iteration of World Literature, I will address how superheroes came into existence blasting us to the ancient past with the first epic in history from Mesopotamia: The Epic of Gilgamesh, introducing the first Superhero ever!
Spider-Man 2 turns 15 today. Is it still king?
“You’re always sorry, Charles. And there’s always a speech,” Magneto tells Professor X. “But nobody cares.”Ain’t that the truth.