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Todd McFarlane and Neil Gaiman over several Spawn characters, and artist Tony Moore's Walking Dead lawsuit against Robert Kirkman. Other creators, including Eric Powell, Jill Thompson, Ron Marz, and Joe Keatinge, added their voices in support of the...
Maybe those are tie-ins by Buckley’s definition, but my understanding (from interminable conversations with friends who read the series) is that Fear Itself 1-7 was not a complete story, unless you’re using the most generous definition of complete in...
He can certainly try, and he can do it as best he possibly can, but it's constantly juggling that sleep deprivation versus staying stronger
With Amazing Spider-Man #679.1 out next week (preview here) and marking the one-year anniversary of the initiative, Newsarama contacted Marvel senior vice president of sales and circulation David Gabriel via email for his take
Man Without Fear goes down to Subterranea in the ninth issue of Mark Waid's run on Daredevil, on sale next week. Check out a four-page preview after the jump. IGN has landed a preview for Mark Waid's Daredevil #9, on sale February 15th. In this issue of...
Mark Waid continues to do new and interesting things with Daredevil , this time sending him to Subterranea to hang out with the Moloids and the Mole Man himself. We've got an early look at Daredevil #9, written by Waid with art from Paolo Rivera , on...
I know this sounds like generic comic book puffery but I don't know any other way to say it, is that at the end of the throwdown at least one of these men walks away from it radically, radically different than he is now
In the wake of SHADOWLAND I honestly wasn’t sure I had any interest in reading a DD comic for a while. Everything about that aspect of the Marvel Universe and the character basically got dark for getting dark’s sake and, of course, to move a few more...
That sounds so simple and you would think it is and it’s not. And it’s actually really very hard. So, when I am reading a Mark Waid script—I’ve had the good fortune of reading his scripts off and on over the last decade or so, and watching how his...
Mark Waid (born March 21, 1962 in Hueytown, Alabama) is an American comic book writer. Full Article
He can certainly try, and he can do it as best he possibly can, but it's constantly juggling that sleep deprivation versus staying stronger
I know this sounds like generic comic book puffery but I don't know any other way to say it, is that at the end of the throwdown at least one of these men walks away from it radically, radically different than he is now
It's a temporary fix at best. It's kind of doomed to failure because Plutonian is full-bore insane
It's not just a four-issue slugfest between the two characters. We've actually already seen Max and the Plutonian mix it up a little bit in current issues of 'Incorruptible.' While this certainly culminates in a showdown, it's much more about the origins of these characters
It started as just a typical hero/villain adversarial relationship, but what Plutonian realizes -- again, without giving away too much of the story -- as he deals with adult Max, is that he dealt with young Max as a boy without either of them realizing it
weary of giving people the wrong impression.
Max figures into Plutonian's origin a lot more than either man realizes
