Last week, we ran an article providing an abbreviated history of underground comix. It covered the decade or so when the undergrounds were at their peak popularity, and explained how they were largely ...
Production company Hivemind have announced a TV and film partnership with EC Comics, including plans for a television series inspired by “Weird Fantasy,” and a biopic about former EC publisher and MAD ...
Multiversity’s history column returns with another installment of year-by-year analysis of the comic industry. Following our earlier coverage of 1932, today’s article on 1933 will be focused mainly on ...
To fully appreciate the importance of the small press, it’s vital to understand how they’ve been impacting mainstream books. It’s difficult to track down certain specifics due to the low key nature of ...
As a millennial, I missed a lot of the comics boom of the 90’s. It’s been hailed as a golden era by several comics enthusiasts, usually the men with a ponytail who breathe a little heavier whenever a ...
Dungeons & Morty & Destruction & Death & Rick & Swords & Sassery & Hashtag & Ampersand & It all ends here, people & oh, yeah-Dragons. Patrick Rothfuss, the multiple award-winning, bestselling author ...
Hope Larson’s ‘Eagle Rock’ trilogy has provided some of the most satisfying and entertaining comic booking of the past few years. The story, about a creative, kind young girl named Bina navigating her ...
In 1996, a cutting-edge CG cartoon opened with two warring spaceships falling to Earth, and its mysterious occupants reformatting themselves to resemble the planet’s (living and extinct) lifeforms. It ...
Deadpool might be an Avenger now, but he’s also got his own private team of mercenaries…the legally-cleared-to-be-called MERCS FOR MONEY! Got a problem you can’t solve on your own and a pile of money ...
For the second half of FutureDude’s Small Press Spotlight we’re looking at the first issue of “Brainstorm,” with the added bonus of some behind-the-scenes details of its creation. Imagine if the US ...
Some things are so bizarre that they are wonderful, even if the beholder has no idea why. Grant Morrison and Cameron Stewart’s Seaguy definitely meets the bizarre criteria, while still presenting an ...
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