Showing posts with label comics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label comics. Show all posts

Friday, July 15, 2016

Why comic books are so popular today

The comic book industry just had its best-selling month in nearly two decades.

According to The Comichron, a blog that covers comic book sales figures, June 2016 was the best-selling month for the industry since December of 1997. These figures aren't perfect, since the only way to track sales is to record the number of orders retailers are making rather than individual purchases, but they paint a pretty good picture. Retailers ordered about 8.53 million copies of the top 300 comics last month.

Read more... http://www.businessinsider.com/comic-books-are-popular-again-heres-why-2016-7

Saturday, January 30, 2016

Awesome Art Picks: Nightwing, Emma Frost, Deadpool, and More

Each week we search and gather up the coolest comic book art you won't see in actual comics. The reason you won't is because artists often draw sketches for fun or commissions and post them on their websites, blogs, and Tumblrs. Some artists even arrange commissions through their sites so be sure to check them out. This is a way to see the artists working on one book draw characters from other comics or publishers.

Read more... http://www.gamespot.com/articles/awesome-art-picks-nightwing-emma-frost-deadpool-an/1100-6434330/

Sunday, August 3, 2014

Here's A Guide To All The Hidden References In Marvel Movies

WARNING: MINOR SPOILERS As "Guardians of the Galaxy" flies into theaters this weekend, the film (which is getting rave reviews) adds another storyline to the ever-expanding Marvel cinematic universe. As with its predecessors, it is sure to come with a bunch of easter eggs. Much like Pixar, Disney...

http://www.businessinsider.com/marvel-easter-eggs-2014-8

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Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Hot Wheels meets 'Star Wars' for Comic-Con

For this year's San Diego Comic-Con, Hot Wheels has the coolest Star Wars ride this side of the Millennium Falcon.

Among the exclusive toys Mattel is offering for fans at this year's pop-culture extravaganza (July 24-27) is a Darth Vader die-cast car, the first team-up for Hot Wheels and the hot sci-fi franchise.

For $40, toy lovers can get the sleek black auto in lights-and-sound lightsaber packaging and the distinctive red associated with the villainous Sith lord from the Star Wars movies.

Read more...http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/movies/2014/06/11/star-wars-hot-wheels-darth-vader-car-exclusive/10322507/

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Marvel launches 'Season One' superhero graphic novels - USATODAY.com

Marvel Comics

Fantastic Four: Season One kicks off an all-new line of original graphic novels next year from Marvel Comics.



Over the years, Tom Brevoort has talked to many fans of Marvel Comics about the classic superhero stories of the Fantastic Four and Spider-Man, and while adored by many, he often hears how they're hokey, old-fashioned and irrelevant.

For those who don't want to read their granddaddy's old comics, Marvel is launching a Season One line of original graphic novels — the publisher's first — next year to honor the company's 50th anniversary. The hardcover books star a new, young generation of today's comic creators bringing a modern voice and sensibility to tales of classic Marvel heroes and teams.

"We're hoping to introduce folks who have never read any of these characters to these characters in this format, and also provide an interesting and illuminating story for people who have read a lot of Fantastic Four and Daredevil," says Brevoort, Marvel's senior vice president and executive editor.

"If you want to dip your toe in the water and find out the essence of what Marvel is all about, here is a nice place for you to start in big, sizable, meaty chunks."

The first wave of four graphic novels will include:

Fantastic Four: Season One by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa (Stephen King's The Stand, Glee) and David Marquez (Secret Warriors), due out in February;

X-Men: Season One by Dennis Hopeless (Legion Of Monsters) and Jamie McKelvie (Phonogram), on sale in March;

Daredevil: Season One by Antony Johnston (Daredevil) and Wellinton Alves (Nova), in April;

Spider-Man: Season One by Cullen Bunn (Fear Itself: The Deep, Sixth Gun) and Neil Edwards (Fantastic Four), arriving in May.

Brevoort says a second wave will debut soon afterward "that will get deeper into other characters, as well."

In teaming creators, Marvel looked at people such as Aguirre-Sacasa, who did a significant run on Fantastic Four a few years ago and also helped overhaul Broadway'sSpider-Man: Turn Off the Dark. "He's not someone who makes his daily bread on doing monthly comics. That gives his work a little more pop here," Brevoort says.

"We tended to gravitate toward newer, younger writers in the field. They have not been so far around the block that they're stuck down either by their own tropes or by the tropes of the medium."

Some might think this is a similar initiative as the Ultimate Universe, but the Ultimate comics that began in 2000 were overhauls of Marvel characters. Season One isn't the beginning of an entirely new universe, however.

"Everything you know about them, everything that's existed for the last 50 years still exists and is still there," Brevoort says. "These are individually new stories, even though they've got bits and pieces of old and formative origin stuff in and around them, as well."

They're not simple retellings of the origin stories, either. While you'll get a sense of that — such as the Fantastic Four shooting off into space and Peter Parker getting bit by a radioactive spider — the Season One graphic novels will focus on tales that define the characters and their relationships with each other.

"We know a lot more now obviously about what Spider-Man would grow into than anybody had any idea in 1962, and the same with Daredevil and same with the X-Men," Brevoort says. "We're able to act with a little more forethought and foreknowledge as to how these characters will grow and evolve during that period."

The Marvel books of 1961 — when the Fantastic Four first burst onto the scene thanks to Stan Lee and Jack Kirby— were the cutting edge of storytelling for the time, giving quirks and differing personalities to superheroes.

But comics are more sophisticated and cinematic in 2011, Brevoort says, and the nuance and subtlety of a more modern era will be reflected in the new line — along with certain touches of today such as cellphones.

The marketplace for the hefty graphic-novel format and increasing acceptance of it has also grown to the point where "there are plenty of more ordinary people who maybe don't feel so comfortable reading an average comic book on the train, but who don't think anything about reading something in a trade paperback or graphic-novel format. These are perfect outreaches to that kind of audience," Brevoort says.

"A contemporary will find more to their liking hopefully and more to their speed than simply going back and re-reading the early Stan Lee and Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko. Although we welcome you to do that, as well."



Marvel Season One Exclusive First Look


by Brian Truitt USA Today Jul 19, 2011



Marvel launches 'Season One' superhero graphic novels - USATODAY.com

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Oddity is a commodity at Phoenix Comicon

Fly

Jesse James Comics presents a Zenescope Entertianment signing event

The creative team from "Fly" will be signing 500 Pre-Released copies of Issue #1 from 3-4pm on Saturday, May 28th at Phoenix Comicon.

Read more about the Fly in USA Today.

These copies of Ebas' Cover A of Fly #1 will only be available at Phoenix Comicon two weeks before they hit shelves and will include a Certificate of Authenticity!

This cover is only $3.00 and will only be available during the signing times and not again until it's official release on June 8th, 2011.

Pick up Issue #1 of Fly at tables 848, 850, 852 and 854 and get signatures from Raven Gregory (writer and creator), Ebas (Cover A Artist), Eric J (series artist), Nei (series colorist), and Mike DeBalfo (Phoenix Exclusive Cover Artist)."

Phoenix Comicon, Mesa Convention Center, Spiderman

Michael Schennum/The Arizona Republic .


Spiderman checks out some comics at the Phoenix Comicon at the Mesa Convention Center

PHOENIX - The Comicon sensation hit the Valley this weekend and appears to be almost twice as big as the year before.

It's a place where oddity is a commodity.


So many people showed up on Saturday, the fire marshal had to limit the number of entries by mid-afternoon.


“It’s a chance for me to be a celebrity until reality hits me in the face this weekend,” said one man dressed as Wolverine.


Comicon, for the unfamiliar, is a place where fans of pop culture -- from horror, to comics, to science fiction -- dress up and let out their inner demon.

“We come every year,” said Rhonda Winseck who was dressed up with her entire family. “It’s fun to walk around and see all the people.”


Comicon is best known for its convention in San Diego but its numbers are doubling every year in Phoenix.


“It’s for people who felt left out and now have a place to celebrate pop culture,” said Jillian Squires who runs marketing for the show.

She thinks more than 28,000 visitors will attend over the weekend. The cost is $30 to $40.


The featured guest was Mr. Spock himself, Leonard Nimoy, from Star Trek fame.


Star Trek and Star Wars are the biggest draws, but it doesn’t stop there.


It’s a place where you can buy a gift and then speak to the person who created it, from comic books, masks, posters and so on.




by Brian Webb ABC15.com May 28, 2011
Oddity is a commodity at Phoenix Comicon

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Scenes from New York Comic Con 2010 | Crave - CNET

(Credit: Dan Ackerman)

The New York Comic Con has always paled in comparison to the much larger, but unrelated San Diego Comic-Con, as we can attest to from attending last year's small-ish show. But the Twitter buzz started building early for this year's event, and we got reports of lines hundreds of people deep just to pick up passes and tickets on Friday and Saturday.

The key to the show's newfound success is in its very liberal definition of a comic gathering. If anything, most of the floorspace was devoted to video games, television, movies, and other pop culture ephemera, although there were certainly plenty of aisles full of vintage comics and an entire room devoted to artist meet-and-greets (plus the usual gang of autograph-hawking celebs, from Lou Ferrigno to wrestler Jerry Lawler).

The biggest attraction for most gawkers is definitely the cavalcade of costumed characters. While New Yorkers are used to seeing crazy attire on the street, this collection of superheroes, game characters, and weird mash-ups is eye-opening, even for a town with Times Square's iconic Naked Cowboy. The most notable trend in this area was definitely the large number of costumed babies and toddlers -- at least a few of whom didn't look especially thrilled by their creative outfits.

Click through the photo tour above to enjoy the insanity of the New York Comic Con from the relative safe and normal confines of your laptop screen.

Bonus: Check out these flashback pics from last year's New York Comic Con:


by Dan Ackerman CNet October 10, 2010

Scenes from New York Comic Con 2010 | Crave - CNET

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Comic-Con revenue reaches superhero status - San Diego, California News Station - KFMB Channel 8 - cbs8.com

by CBS 8 July 7, 2010


SAN DIEGO, Calif. (CBS 8) - It's another reason to keep Comic-Con here in San Diego. A new report finds the annual convention is expected to bring in nearly $163 million this summer.

The new estimate of how much Comic-Con brings in to San Diego may be on the low end, because the report only took into account those coming to Comic-Con who stayed in hotels. But there's no doubt about it -- Comic-Con has a superhuman effect on our local economy, and there's now a battle brewing to keep it here in San Diego.

Part of the $163 million revenue includes over $25 million pumped into local hotels, where more than half of the 134,000 attendees stayed.

"We weren't really surprised. We always felt we had a bigger impact economically than people really think," Comic-Con spokesperson David Glanzer said.

But could Comic-Con -- which started in San Diego in 1970 -- be flying the coop? Its contract with the city ends after next year.

"We're working very hard to keep Comic-Con," Mayor Jerry Sanders said.

But Anaheim and Los Angeles, both of which have larger convention centers, are also working hard to lure the convention away. Comic-Con's board of directors has yet to decide where it will set up shop after 2012.

"There are wonderful plusses for every city, and there are some drawbacks for every city as well," Glanzer said.

While San Diego may have the hometown advantage, there is something it's lacking.

"In terms of San Diego, we don't have enough space. Hotels are an issue sometimes as well," Glanzer said.

Mayor Sanders says expanding the convention center to keep Comic-Con and to attract other high-profile conventions, is a top priority.

"The convention center is a huge economic generator, but it could literally double that economic generation once we expand it," Sanders said.

"We'd love to stay in San Diego, this is where we were born. If we can work everything out it would be great, but we have to make the decision that's best for the attendees and not just for the show," Glanzer said.

A decision on where Comic-Con will be held after the convention's current contract ends should be made before this year's Comic-Con gets under way in about four weeks. As it stands now, the convention will be here at least through next year.

A plan has been proposed to expand San Diego's convention center, which would give it 815,000 square feet of exhibition space -- the same as Anaheim's center. if approved, the larger center could potentially open by 2015.



Comic-Con revenue reaches superhero status - San Diego, California News Station - KFMB Channel 8 - cbs8.com

Saturday, March 27, 2010

RIP: Dick Giordano 1932-2010 | The Beat

RIP: Dick Giordano 1932-2010 | The Beat




Comics lost a giant with the passing this morning of Dick Giordano, a former Executive Editor at DC and an influential inker who helped shape the look of Bronze Age comics and usher in a new era of talent.

Giordano’s career included work at Charlton, Dc and Continuity Associates, the studio run by Neal Adams. As Adams’ inker on such much admired works as Batman and Green Lantern/Green Arrow, Giordano’s techniques influenced a generation of inkers, including Terry Austin, Bob Layton, Al Milgrom, Joe Rubinstein, and Bob Wiacek, essentially setting the tone for the entire Bronze Age of comics.

Giordano was equally important as an editor. At Charlton, he helped create and revamp their line of characters. That feat got him a job at DC. During his first stint there, from 1967-1970, he helped usher in a more modern era of comics storytelling with books such as Bat Lash and Manhunter, and helping to bring in the first wave of new talent to DC Comics since the Golden Age. After leaving to go to Continuity, he came back to DC in 1981 and continued at VP/Executive Editor from 1983 until 1993, where he oversaw such epochal events as the maturation of the Direct Market, limited rights for creators, the publication of Watchmen and Dark Knight and the establishment of the Vertigo line. While Giordano was not the originator of these changes, along with Jenette Kahn and Joe Orlando, he helped usher in the first truly modern era of comics.

He was much admired as a a line editor — one who supports and advises without heavy-handedness.

Giordano retired from DC in 1993, partly due to hearing loss that made working in an executive capacity difficult. However, he continued to draw and ink and was a familiar figure at conventions, and an important mentor and confidante for some of comics’ most important creators of the period. In recent years, he had suffered from leukemia and was hospitalized last week.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

ECCC: Whack, Smack! “Darkwing Duck” is Back - Comic Book Resources

ECCC: Whack, Smack! “Darkwing Duck” is Back - Comic Book Resources


Preliminary Cover Art for "Darkwing Duck" #1

He is the terror that flaps in the night. And come June, the Masked Mallard will once again get dangerous in a new four-issue miniseries from BOOM! Studios. Announced Saturday at Emerald City Comic Con, “Darkwing Duck” will be be BOOM!'s latest Disney property to make the jump to comics, courtesy of writer Ian Brill and artist James Silvani. The purple-clad hero's cartoon launched in 1991, spinning out of the popular “Duck Tales” starring Scrooge McDuck and Huey, Dewey, and Luey, and was unusual among Disney series in that it did not feature any “classic” Disney characters. “Darkwing Duck” was a superhero adventure with a strong vein of parody running throughout, as even the hero's catchphrases and soliloquies appeared to comment on themselves. Darkwing, aka Drake Mallard, is the sworn protector of St. Canard, but must balance this great power with the great responsibility of raising his adopted daughter Goslyn. They are joined by sidekick Launchpad McQuack, a carryover from “Duck Tales.” CBR News spoke with writer Ian Brill, who is also an editor at BOOM!, about bringing back the duck. more...

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Batman comic book beats Superman at auction, sets record

By Annalyn Censky, CNNMoney.com February 26, 2010: 2:55 PM ET



NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The Dark Knight may be Superman's next greatest nemesis, after Lex Luthor.

Just three days after auction site ComicConnect.com claimed to break world records when it sold an original Superman comic for $1 million, Batman stole his thunder.

A rare, high-quality copy of Detective Comics #27, which marked the first appearance of Batman in 1939, sold for $1,075,500 on Thursday. Heritage Auctions of Dallas sold the comic book to an unnamed bidder on behalf of an anonymous collector.

Seven bidders from three countries participated in the combination live and online auction, taking about eight minutes to decide on a final price -- an "eternity" in auction time, said Heritage Auctions president Greg Rohan.

On Monday, ComicConnect claimed to sell a rare copy of Action Comics #1 to an anonymous collector for $1 million.

Action Comics #1, which debuted in 1938, marked the first appearance of Superman. A lesser-quality copy set the previous comic book record, racking up $317,000 at auction last year.

Vincent Zurzolo, who co-owns ComicConnect.com with founder Stephen Fishler, said while his Superman sale only held the record for three days, he was very happy to see two comic books selling for more than $1 million.

"Records are meant to be broken," and this week will forever go down in comic book history, he said.

Both Detective Comics #27 and Action Comics #1 were originally published by National Allied Publications, a company that later became Detective Comics and then DC Comics. DC Comics and CNNMoney.com are Time Warner subsidiaries.

With several comic book films set to release in 2011, Zurzolo said he expects prices to escalate on rare copies featuring popular characters. Green Lantern, The First Avenger: Captain America and Spider-Man 4 are tentatively scheduled to open in theaters next year.

Rohan said he's seen prices for incredibly rare items, like original comic books, shoot up between 15% and 25% during the recession, while auction prices for more common collectibles have decreased.

Last month, Heritage Auctions sold a 1913 nickel, one of only 5 in the world, for $3.7 million.

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