| Comic Review: Pachyderme |
By RevN4
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Tuesday, November 12th, 2013 at 9:00 pm |
Pachyderme
Written by Frederik Peeters
Illustrated by Frederik Peeters
Translated by Edward Gauvin
Self Made Hero
Release Date: October 1, 2013
Cover Price: $19.95
Pachyderme opens with Carice, a 1950s bourgeois housewife stuck in traffic while on her way to visit her hospitalized husband. When she realizes there was an accident ahead caused by an injured elephant in the middle of the road, she decides to cut across the woods to reach the hospital on foot. and with that, Carice begins a lucid dream, a waking journey filled with alien babies, hogs, Swiss spies, and buried passions. Pachyderme is a piece of comic literature. Frederik Peeters, who both wrote and illustrated the book, has created a multi-layered narrative. Our protagonist Carice begins this very surreal journey unaware of who she really is. She thinks she knows who she is. She thinks she knows what she wants. But she has buried her true passions, her true callings, amidst the passions of others. She has become what others want her to be.
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| Comic Review: Doctor Who: Prisoners Of Time #10 |
By cGt2099
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Tuesday, November 12th, 2013 at 7:00 pm |
Doctor Who: Prisoners Of Time #10
Written by Scott & David Tipton
Art by Elena Casagrande, Arianna Florean, Azzurra M. Florean
Cover by Francesco Francavilla, Charlie Kirchoff, Dave Sim
IDW Publishing
Release Date: November 06, 2013
Cover Price: $3.99
The 50th Anniversary of Doctor Who is almost here, and the days are counting down until the release of The Day Of The Doctor and An Adventure In Space And Time. Meanwhile, IDW continues their ongoing celebration of the anniversary with the tenth installment of Prisoners Of Time, a multi-Doctor story spanning twelve issues. It has been the comic event of the year as far as I am concerned. With issue #10, we turn to the David Tennant era of Doctor Who. The Tenth Doctor and companion Martha Jones arrive in Los Angeles at the Griffith Observatory during the 1950s, where Hollywood filmmakers are creating a robot-packed sci-fi movie at the location. As Martha is swept off into becoming a star in the movie, the Doctor learns that numerous members of the cast and crew are disappearing.
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| Moratorium Coming On ‘The Twilight Zone’ Definitive Edition DVD Collections |
By Empress Eve
| @
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Tuesday, November 12th, 2013 at 6:00 pm |

If you’re a fan of The Twilight Zone and want to get your hands on some of the DVD collections, now’s the time to do it because at the end of this month, Image Entertainment will be putting all “Definitive Editions” of The Twilight Zone on moratorium. The moratorium, effective December 1, 2013, affects all the individual season “Definitive Editions” DVDs, as well as the popular DVD box set The Twilight Zone: The Complete Definitive Collection, which contains all 156 complete episodes along with bonus materials like the Rod Serling bio-documentary Submitted for Your Approval, interviews with the show’s writers, the unaired the series’ pilot, audio commentaries with Martin Landau, Leonard Nimoy, Cliff Robertson, and more. All other Twilight Zone box sets and individual season releases in the Image Entertainment library will still be available, including The Twilight Zone: The Complete Series (Episodes Only DVD Collection) and The Twilight Zone: The Complete Series Blu-ray box set.
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| Comic Review: Justice League Of America, Volume 1: World’s Most Dangerous |
By Waerloga69
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Tuesday, November 12th, 2013 at 5:00 pm |
Justice League Of America, Volume 1
World’s Most Dangerous
Hardcover | Paperback | Kindle
Written by Geoff Johns
Pencils by David Finch
Inks by David Finch
Color by Sonia Oback and Jeromy Cox
Letters by Rob Leigh
Cover by David Finch
DC Comics
Release Date: November 12, 2013
Cover Price: $24.99
Who do you call if the world’s greatest heroes go bad? That’s the question that Director Amanda Waller poses to Colonel Steve Trevor in the first few pages of Justice League Of America, Volume 1: World’s Most Dangerous. Deciding to build a response team is easy enough, but filling the roster is something far more difficult. Kicking things off, they start the list off with Hawkman (one of my favorite of the DC Comics bunch) who is known for his brutality as much as for his moral code. The next addition is Katana, whose sword is far more than just steel. Next up they bring in Vibe, a hero that we haven’t heard about in decades (this version is a reboot, not the original one from yesteryear). Curiously, Waller insists adding Stargirl and her powerful Cosmic Staff, though not quite in the capacity you might think. The true powerhouse of this team is the always adaptable Martian Manhunter, though getting him on the team was more than a little work. To keep things balanced, Waller also has the new Green Lantern and Green Arrow on the team roster. But Trevor has an addition of his own, the always dangerous Catwoman. Not to be a public member of the team, she is intended for the behind the scenes and under the table jobs that pop up.
...continue reading » Tags: David Finch, DC Comics, Geoff Johns, Jeromy Cox, JLA, Justice League, Justice League of America, New 52, Rob Leigh, Sonia Oback, World's Most Dangerous | |
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