Tag Archives: Marvel

Previews Reviews: September 2009

Look at this, they are actually letting me write another one! If this is your first time joining me, the purpose of this column is to scour Diamond’s Previews catalog and highlight upcoming releases which may not be on your radar, but which, for one reason or another, deserve a closer look. Alternatively, I make fun of people/an ass of myself.
Like I said last month, letting your retailer know that you are interested in one of these titles will make him or her a lot more willing to take a risk on it, especially in these times of economic uncertainty, when most of them just go for the guaranteed sales and ignore everything else. Pre-ordering is even better. Not doing so, on the other hand, will ensure the failure of independent creators and small press publishers and all that is good in the world.
Anyway, the cover for the September 2009 Previews announces Nekron, the Lord of the Undead, as the driving force behind all the stuff going down in DC’s Blackest Night crossover. Which I’m not reading, by the way, because I really dislike crossovers. More accurately, I dislike crossovers that require me to buy comics by creators whose work I generally don’t enjoy in order to get the full story. I also dislike having ongoing series that I follow interrupted with editorially-mandated tie-in issues, which are designed to temporarily boost the sales of any given title, but are also a surefire way of getting me to drop the book completely.
That, and DC’s recent string of Big Event comics has been pretty weak in general. I don’t mean to be a dick, but it’s true. The denouement to the murder mystery central to Identity Crisis, which stumped the world’s greatest detectives with access to highly advanced forensics tools, ended up being, um, SPOILER ALERT, “It was a crazy lady with a flamethrower!”. That just doesn’t hold up to any scrutiny. Infinite Crisis and Final Crisis featured less rape and crying, but neither ever really managed to generate any momentum, and for all their ambition and scope, they both ended with a return to the status quo. Both were also impenetrable to new readers, and when high-profile books like that only appeal to a niche audience, it makes one wonder how concerned DC really is about comics’ declining readership.
Anyway, I might still pick up Blackest Night in collected form, if I hear good things about it. After all, what I’ve read of Geoff Johns’ Green Lantern has been pretty decent. You guys should check that out, if you haven’t already. I’d tell you why, but summarizing Green Lantern plots always makes them sound a lot sillier than intended.
You think I’m kidding? You try it.
The upside-down back cover is something out of a time capsule, a teaser for the upcoming Image crossover Image United, featuring the original Image founders (sans Jim Lee, obviously) collaborating on each page of the project, each of them drawing their own original Image creations, as they get together to battle a yet unrevealed foe (my money is on Neil Gaiman). And the preview pages inside are as awful as you’d expect. These guys seem to bring out the worst in one another, as many of their illustrational tics are turned up to 12 here: there are no feet or background objects in sight, everyone is striking a pose with no regard for page layout or perspective or proportion (look, one of Witchblade’s breasts is bigger than Shaft’s head, and she’s standing BEHIND him, for fuck’s sake!), and so on.
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Oh, and it ships with seven (7) different covers.
BATMAN/DOC SAVAGE SPECIAL #1 (DC Comics, pg. 80, $4.99) The last time Brian Azzarello was in charge of old and obscure DC properties, he made a pretty convincing argument for their inclusion in the modern DC Universe. That was the highly underrated, joyfully metafictional Doctor 13: Architecture and Mortality. Now, he’s teaming up the original, gun-toting version of Batman with old pulp magazine hero Doc Savage for an introduction to DCs new pulp universe, which is set to feature The Spirit and a slew of other non-powered vigilantes, and where he, as a writer, should feel even more at home.
THE MIGHTY VOL. 1 TP (DC Comics, pg. 93, $17.99) I haven’t read this, but the right people are talking it up. It’s a non-DCU story of a world with a single super-hero, whose police liaison discovers that not everything about him is as good as it seems. The set-up sounds intriguing, but the art by Peter Snejbjerg of Starman fame is the biggest selling point for me.
THE AUTHORITY: THE LOST YEAR #3 (DC Comics, pg. 100, $2.99) I should be intrigued to see where this goes, what with it being co-plotted by Grant Morrison as a continuation of his aborted Authority run with Gene Ha, but the preview pages make it look like every other Authority comic I have read, and I think I might finally be over The Authority as a concept. Then again, remember when Brian Azzarello and Steve Dillon were set to relaunch the series with a storyline that was supposed to have the team fighting Jesus? I would still read that.
INCOGNITO TPB (Marvel, pg. Marvel 77, $18.99) For my money, this was the best super-hero comic put out by Marvel this year. Except it’s about a super-villain, one whose shady past catches up to him and shakes up his dreary, dead-end existence in the Witness Protection Program to the core. It lacks the enveloping sense of desperation and doom that made Brubaker’s and Phillips’ previous superhero noir series Sleeper such a compelling read, but it’s enjoyably pulpy and twisted in its own right.
POPE HATS #1 (AdHouse Books, pg. 186, $4.00) The comic book debut by the Canadian cartoonist Ethan Rilly and the winner of last year’s Xeric Foundation grant, this is a story of a young woman and her escape from both figurative and literal demons, which has been described by fellow Canadian Seth as “the most impressive debut comic I’ve seen in years.” And if there’s one good thing Canada has been able to produce, it’s great indie cartoonists. If you don’t trust Seth, trust the freaking statistics.
THE MORE THAN COMPLETE ACTION PHILOSOPHERS! TP (Evil Twin Comics, pg. 257, $24.99) I guess the fact that I will now be buying most of the material contained herein for the third fucking time speaks for its strength (or my weakness). Presented here in chronological order are the biographies and philosophies of some of the greatest thinkers in history (and one Ayn Rand), filtered through the language of genre comics. Educational and highly entertaining, this is something that both philosophy novices and professors can enjoy. Free previews here!
THE UNCLOTHED MAN IN THE 35TH CENTURY A.D. (Fantagraphics, pg. 258, $19.99) Dash Shaw is one of the most exciting new voices in comics today, and his Bottomless Belly Button graphic novel was one of my favorite books of last year, a tragicomic tale of the dissolution of an American family in the style of Jonathan Franzen’s The Corrections. This collects a lot of his early short work, including his brilliant contributions to the MOME anthology, some rarities, and a brand new story.
GANGES #3 (Fantagraphics, pg. 259, $7.95) Kevin Huizenga, on the other hand, is without a doubt the most promising cartoonist of his generation, and the Ganges books have so far been his best work. Part of Fantagraphics’ Ignatz line of oversized single issues, the stories of everyman Glenn Ganges have managed to be incredibly inventive and playful without losing out on emotional impact, and while each issue stands alone, you would be doing yourself a favor by picking up all of them.
FOOTNOTES IN GAZA (Metropolitan Books, pg. 278, $25.00) After several excursions to Bosnia and Iraq, comic book journalist extraordinaire Joe Sacco returns to the Gaza strip, in what is billed as his most ambitious work yet. The focus this time is the town of Rafah, a notorious flashpoint in this most bitter of conflicts going back to 1956, in which a bloody incident left 111 Palestinian refugees dead at the hands of Israeli soldiers. As usual, Sacco immerses himself in the daily life of this town, and through the stories of its citizens uncovers the history of bloodshed spanning the last five decades. Any book by Joe Sacco is automatically bound to be one of the most important releases of the year, and this is definitely the one book on this list I look forward to the most (after all, his Safe Area Gorazde is probably my favorite graphic novel of all time). And if the idea of comics as war reportage sounds dry to you, his work is nothing like you imagine: rather than providing casualty reports from the safety of a heavily-guarded hotel suite, Sacco is in the thick of it, crashing on people’s couches, following them around, and often risking his life just to record their stories. Deeply humanist, remarkably observant, and without any overt political agenda, Sacco is a national treasure you don’t even know you have, and you owe it to yourself to check out his work.
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OOKU: THE INNER CHAMBERS VOL. 2 (Viz, pg. 305, $12.99) In an alternate-history Edo Period Japan, a new disease has wiped out seventy-five percent of its male population, and women are running the country, while most of the men have become a bunch of pampered pansies who are protected and prostituted. This is, along with the Sig Ikki line from Viz (dig Children of the Sea), one of the more intriguing new manga releases of this year, and while the translation, which uses Shakespearean Early Modern English to mirror 17th century Japanese, takes some getting used to, the book’s reversed take on political intrigue and sexual politics is never less than fascinating. From the author of the more light-hearted cult favorite Antique Bakery.

NEXT MONTH: More of the same!

Pixar Interested in Ant-Man?

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According to EW.com Pixar may bee eying Ant-Man as a potential project once Marvel comes under the Disney banner:

“Pixar is said to already be eyeballing an Ant-Man movie.”

See? Told you.

Anyway, Edgar Wright (Shaun of the Dead, Hot Fuzz) has previously been attached to developing this project for Marvel -even going so far as to talk about it at Comic Con way back in 2006- but nothing further has been announced. So at this point, nothing but speculation and rampant fan rumors on the forums and message boards are to be had.

On a final note, keep in mind that just because Pixar is maybe looking at Ant-Man as a potential future project, it doesn’t necessarily mean they would go the computer-animated route. Pixar is currently developing their first live-action movie, John Carter of Mars

There were a lot of strong feelings on both ends of this Disney buying Marvel argument, so what are your thoughts on this teeny bit of news?

DVD GIVEAWAY: Animated X-Men Vol. 3 and 4

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Big Shiny Robot! will be giving away a set of Volume 3 and 4 of the animated X-Men cartoon series.  In order to win, all you need to do is add Big Shiny Robot! to your facebook and update your status to read, “Big Shiny Robot! (www.bigshinyrobot.com) is where I get all of my geek news!”

Then just comment here or on facebook and let us know that the deed is done.

If you’re the winner, we’ll send you an email or a facebook message asking for your address. If you don’t have a facebook profile and don’t want to start one, send us an email and we’ll enter you in the contest anyway. But just be sure to tell your friends about us. (Click the contact us link above for our email address.)  Hurry though, the contest ends September 15th!

Volume Three includes the ever excellent Dark Phoenix Saga and Volume Four features an epic showdown with Apocolypse.  This set is a must have for any X-Men fan.  For those of you too eager to see if you’ve won the contest, they’re released on September 15th and you can preorder them from Amazon here.

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Astonishing X-Men Motion Comic Trailer

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Marvel is proud to unveil the first full-length trailer to the hotly anticipated Astonishing X-Men: Gifted motion comic, based on the seminal comic story by superstar scribe Joss Whedon (Buffy: The Vampire Slayer) and renowned artist John Cassaday (Captain America). Now you can get your first look at Marvel’s newest original motion comic (available October 28th on iTunes) as the X-Men embark on a bold new mission! Discover more at www.marvel.com/motioncomics, bub!
Click here for the trailer!

FOX to Reboot Fantastic Four

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Variety is reporting that FOX is set to reboot the Fantastic Four franchise and give it a fresh start. While Akiva Goldsman is set to be producer, the same guy who wrote the script for the forth-coming Green Lantern movie, Michael Green, is on board to write the script.

The 2005 “Fantastic Four” and 2007 sequel “Rise of the Silver Surfer” were directed by Tim Story and starred Ioan Gruffudd, Jessica Alba, Chris Evans and Michael Chiklis. Since the deals for the reboot are just getting made, it is unclear if any of them will return.

Though Marvel Entertainment owns and finances properties like “Iron Man” and “Thor,” Fox controls “Fantastic Four” in perpetuity — as long as it continues making the films. Fox has the same arrangement on Marvel Comics properties “X-Men,” “Daredevil” and “Silver Surfer.” Marvel is a producer and financial participant through a licensing agreement.

It’s no secret that both F4 films were less than… “Fantastic” (I’m sorry, I couldn’t resist.) but does FOX really have the chops to “reboot” a bad set of films they were responsible for in the first place? Of all the studios that own Marvel characters, it has been FOX that I have been the least impressed with. I’m hoping that maybe, just maybe, one of these days FOX will hit their stride and put together some great Marvel movies as they did with the first two X-Men films. Of course, in an ideal world, Marvel would use their newfound parent company, Disney, to buy back some of these properties and keep everything in house (which would be sure to incite more bitching and moaning about how people think Disney will ruin their beloved Marvel characters), but it seems for the time there are no plans to do so.

And in the mean time, this robot is left wondering when his beloved Daredevil will finally get a second chance…

Gamestop Managers Conference 2009 Inside Report

Managers Conference Inside report day 1

An inside friend at the Gamestop Managers conference 2009 has sent me an email with a load of information regarding the gaming industries hot and heavy titles and a quick coverage of everything they have experienced thus far.

HALO 3 ODST

Bungies long-awaited shooter was available for play, and for any Halo fan they will not be dissapointed, for anyone looking to see the series be revitalized and explode into a new frontier for the Halo genre, they will be. It’s a touched up Halo 3. The Firefight mode, sporting an impressive four player coop showed off a large amount of new weapons unnamed to us, and a great amount of cool units. Brutes with jet packs jumping obstacles, the shield runners moving in a Phalanx formation, and the snipers were DEADLY accurate, the game definitely requires more skill to hold up against the covenant waves then its predecessor.

Over-all I give the game an 8 from the experience, the visuals were good, gameplay flowed

Marvel Ultimate Alliance 2
All you marvel kids hold onto your hats, the game looks better than the first iteration of the series, and the character list is fantastic, the playable demo allowed control of Storm, Spider-man, The Human Torch, and the Cap, provided you pick the “rebellious side”, leading you to then battle and unlock a re-tooled dead-pool. If you pick the side of the pro-enlistment group you are given Iron Man, The Hulk, The Thing, and Wolverine. I assume the sides twist and writhe as you progress the story, and the twists take effect. SPOILER ALERT!! Upon further questioning of the Activision staff, tho the game is based upon and follows the civil war comic series, Captain America does not surrender as he does in the series, and he will not be killed. The only answers beyond that we could get is, “You will not see this ending coming.”

Marvel’s preview rating 7.5 for gameplay, and an 8 for story.

Forza Motor Sports 3

A great simulation racer for anyone who wants to drive the cars they’ll never own at incredible speeds through gorgeous scenery. The game looked and felt great. The one button driving for idiots like me made it super simple to just dive into the game and tear up the tracks. I also really liked the rewind feature, where simply pressing the back button will rewind to a check point about 15 yards back so that you can retake a turn you messed up, or avoid an accident you may have caused. And with stronger car customization support. This game will definitely out do Forza 2 by leaps and bounds.

Rating 9

Split Second

I don’t do racers, I dont even pretend to understand cars, and damn this game caught my eye. The HUD is all on the back of the car, your drift time, speed, gear, all cleanly integrated into the vehicle. The world is very well designed and looked gorgeous, and to keep the destruction junkies like myself interested you earn power plays. When you trigger the events, literally changing the entire track, whether you destroy the airports control tower, bring a plane crashing into the track, or roll a semi across the lanes to clear out the other racers, this game brings what I felt was the next step for Burnout-style destruction racing.
Reserving this game at GameStop will get you a limited edition die-cast car, and the code to download it in game when it releases.

Preview rating for Split Second 8.5

Modnation Racing


PS3 owners if you haven’t read up on this, do it! Fully customizeable worlds in the spirit of LBP, make your character look how you want, make your kart look how you want, unlock new items, pieces, clothing weapons by winning races. And in the loving theme of the play/create/share gaming an amazingly fluid track creator. Everything renders instantly in HD, you control lighting effects, path interruptions, ramps, weapons drops (mario kart much?). This game will be a must have for any gamer, the kart racing element was hilarious and the multiplayer aspects were genius.

The PSP Go


The system is sleek, shiny and launching October first with Gran Turismo five right on its heels, a good buy for any digital media focused gamer. The usual concerns come up with no UMD slot being present, and Sony did not comment on any plans to make the UMDs you may already own rippable. The 16 gig built in memory, and the expandable pro duo micro slot makes it a great value for those of us who hate carrying game carts/discs around.

COOL facts you may not have known
The PSP Go can sync with almost every blu-tooth device making your ps3 wireless headset a useable gaming piece for your go. Also most games will be developed in support of the DualShock 3 controller, which can also sync with your psp-go to control the games. The video output will still be built in so you can use your PSP Component cables to connect your go to your tv, sync your DualShock 3 and play PSP on your tv, not a bad deal at all. It will still support all other PSP features, and be sold along side the current PSP 3000.

Gran Turismo PSP

39.99 800 cars, 35 tracks, solid graphics great racing. This is a great psp title available October 1st.

Ghost Busters for the PSP
on NOV 3, 2009 the game will launch for PSP, AND, all other versions of Ghost Busters will see a price drop to coincide with the launch.

DJ HERO
was fanastic, rhythm game enthusiasts will love it, and enthusiasts of DJing will find it to be a fantastic translation of their art into a game. great mixes and a huge lineup of 100 songs. Buy this game

It will retail for 39.99 and ship very soon this holiday season, the graphics are re touched, and the game looks fantastic!!  Both redone games for 40 bucks? Hells yeah.

More info to come as the week rages on! Comment with any questions and I’ll get answers as fast as possible.

Ultimate Monthly

Welcome to the first installment of Big Shiny Robot’s monthly ongoing Earth 1610 recap and review, Ultimate Monthly. Let’s cut the bullshit, and dive right into it…

 uxm-requiemUltimate X-Men has run it’s course, bowing out with a beautifully illustrated final issue, laying to rest the series as well as a plethora of it’s characters. Picking up shortly after the conclusion of Jeph Loeb’s Ultimatum with Kitty Pride slinking through the Triskelion to retrieve Wolverine’s remains for burial. Back at Xavier’s campus, Rouge, Jean Grey and Iceman, the surviving X-Men, prepare to lay their fallen teammates to rest in a mass grave. The services are interrupted when Mystique, Sabertooth and Assemble crash with a proposition to start a new X-Men team. A fight ensues, some ass gets kicked and the Brotherhood of Mutant stragglers leave with their tails between their legs, leaving the X-Men to bury their friends and family and walk away from superheroism forever.
This book seems to do the series some justice, after several years of bad art, bad writing and poor  sales. Ben Oliver’s art in the book is fantastic: subtle and shy away from the bulging muscles, square jaws and big tits and ass artwork Mark Brooks’ had endowed the book with in it’s final days. Aron E. Coliete has penned a fine issue, the first in his disappointing run on the book. Happily this story doesn’t involve a shitty reimagining of Alpha Flight, human/sentinel hybrids or after school anti-drug dramas. So long Ultimate X-Men, if Mark Millar or Brian Bendis had been writing you you’d be missed.

Ultimate Fantastic Four: Requiem
Written by Joe Pokaski
Illustrated by Robert Atkins

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An Open Letter to Ultimate Fantastic Four.

“Dear Ultimate Fantastic Four,

When you broke your cherry as a well written and well drawn retooled version of Stan Lee’s classic I was nothing short of amazed. When I asked a clerk at my comic store how this book came to be, he explained that when two very talented writers love each other they come together they produce one kick ass book. You were very special, managing to develop an amazing story about a family that incidentally had super powers. The Thing cried himself to sleep, Mr. Fantastic was a snot nosed kid with daddy issues, the Invisible Woman was a compassionate girlfriend and good big sister and the Human Torch played practical jokes and couldn’t grasp the concept of having power and responsibility and it pulled on everyone’s heart strings.
Yes, you did pass through the hands of many a writers, but they all knew how to push you forward and successfully reinvent classic stories of your older brother, the original Fantastic Four. That was until someone at Marvel decided to hand you over to the talentless Mike Carey, who took all those three dimensional aspects you had and tainted them with bad dialogue and even worse, convoluted stories that shat out your integrity like a hooker with dysentery. There was so much potential and yet, you were cut down in your youth, now we’ll never see Reed and Sue tie the knot, or see Ben Grim become the godfather of their children or Johnny Storm grown into his own as a superhero.
In your final issue, you pass through yet one more writer, one not as moronic as Carey, yet one very banal, not quite giving you your dues. Our last 32 pages of you consists of a badly drawn backstory to how the Human Torch gets sucked into the pendent of the demon named Dormammu. The trauma you had ensued during the events of Ultimatum seemed to have little to no barring on your four beloved heroes and everyone goes their different ways, us readers included. It’s like a bad break up, sent over a text message. I feel bad for you Ultimate Fantastic Four, you were abused by bad writers and may you rest in peace.

~Humanjunk”

 ultimate-avengers-1Welcome to a new chapter in the Ultimate universe. Ultimatum is over and the damage has been done. Heroes have died, teams have disbanded and they need to be avenged and the surviving members of S.H.I.E.L.D.’s Ultimates are gonna do it. Mark Millar returns to his motley crew of dysfunctional superheroes with the talented Carlos Pacheco to take on Captain America’s  son and new foe, the Red Skull. The first issue of this new ongoing series is damn good, but it’s hard to expect anything less from Mark Millar. It’s balls out action packed and well paced, you finish 32 pages wanting more in the best way possible. The book has the potential, if you read Marvel books and this isn’t in your hold you’re an imbecile.

 usm-21We knew Ultimate Spider-Man wasn’t really going to die. How could Brian Michael Bendis let that happen? Ultimate Spidey single handedly launched what is probably the best web slinging title in 20 years. It’s also happens to be one of the best books regularly published by Marvel, it’s consistently good, it moves forward and has everything a reader could want in a superhero book, melodrama, great villains, adventure and heart. Well, welcome to volume two of Ultimate Spider-Man. It’s a brand new era for the young hero having survived the cataclysmic events of Ultimatum and officially earning the respect of New York City as a hero. Anyone who followed Ultimatum knows that a lot of characters died, heroes and villains alike, but not all of them; not the Kingpin of New York, Wilson Fisk and not Mysterio, who’s now gunning to run the underbelly of New York’s organized crime.
Bendis treats the book as a new beginning; it’s light hearted and feels like an episode of Degrassi rather than a John Hughes high school dramady. It’s snappy and fun and certainly the antithesis of the Earth 16010’s last few hellish months of death, violence and mayhem. Sadly, artist Stuart Immonen has moved on to greener pastures (Bendis’ ongoing New Avengers) and has been replaced by David LaFuente. LaFuente’s art certainly contributes to the books light and new found cuddly atmosphere, but doesn’t really do it any justice. His close ups of character faces are absolutely hideous and looks like the art of an anime obsessed 6th grader who can’t draw his way out of a paper bag. Spidey’s head is a huge, round grapefruit on a toothpick and when the mask is off, Peter Parker looks androgynous which is creepy when he makes out with a horribly drawn Gwen Stacy. LaFuente’s character designs are Hot Topic chic and cater to the blind. What Bendis sees in this hideous art is beyond me.
As good as the writing is, Ultimate Spider-Man #1 is a frustrating book. It picks up 6 months after Ultimatum and skips a lot of potentially interesting story and character development; like how does a 15 year-old, who’s already lost so much, cope with being a hero in such a traumatic event; how does his relationship with Mary Jane dissolve and why does he rebound with Gwen Stacy? Long time readers of the first volume of Ultimate Spider-Man will feel slightly gypped by the book, like Bendis tried to fix something that wasn’t broke. But, most comic book readers fear change, so let’s all wait and see how it unfolds.

What’s coming up this month?

The next issue of Ultimate Spider-Man hits shelves and Marvel Digital Comics this Wednesday (September 3rd) and continues the New World According to Peter Parker arc and on September 9th look for Ultimate Avengers #2. Warren Ellis returns to the Ultimate Universe for the first time since his stellar Ultimate Human with the first of a four issue mini series called Ultimate Armor Wars; where Tony Stark has to prevent the theft of his technology, which will hit your local comic store on September 16th.

Until next month, cheers!

Deadpool #900 Has Arrived!

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Official Press Release from Marvel A brief word from the Merc with a Mouth:

It is I, the whimsical Wade Wilson, wishing you a wonderful warning (That’s not too much alliteration is it?) – Buy Deadpool #900, with seven all new stories, my first team up and more!  It seems like only yesterday I was starring in Deadpool #13, but here I am, at the apex of comic glory!  This issue is so big only the most hardcore Deadhead (Isn’t that the name for fans of the Grateful – Shut Up!) creators could handle it!  In the first of seven stories, “Pinky Swear”, is presented by Joe Kelly and Rob Liefeld.  “One Down” is brought to you by Charlie Huston and Kyle Baker and “Close Encounters” is created by Jason Aaron and Rick Staggs.  Mike Benson and Damian Scott deliver “Shrunken Master” while Fred Van Lente and Dalibor Talijic present “Silent But Deadly.”  “What Happens in Vegas” is told by Duane Swierczysnki (Is that how you spell it?) and Shawn Crystal.  And lastly, we have “Great Balls of Thunder on the Deep Blue Sea” by Victor Gischler and Sanford Greene  Watch as your favorite crimson comedian faces off against probe-happy aliens (They didn’t even offer us a drink!) and killer mimes (Did their guns have silencers? Bwahaha)!  But the fun doesn’t stop there, I also meet a shrink that’s crazier than me (You’re crazy?) and partake in a heinous assassination (My favorite type!)!  Bear witness as I wade through (Get it?) the trials and tribulations that every average psychopathic regenerating cancer-ridden red spandex-wearing mercenary assassin has to deal with! And look at that cover by Dave Johnson (I know, it’s so awesome, eh?)—and he’s doing a variant cover too!

Marvel and I have agreed that if retailers don’t check their orders on Deadpool, I will be sad. You wouldn’t like me when I’m sad (No more of my issues that sell out every single time ever!)!  Guns (Guns!), chicken, aliens, mimes, battery cables, and guns (Guns!), ARE YOU NOT ENTERTAINED?  Buy Deadpool #900, starring me, the Merc with a Mouth, immediately when it comes out (Twice!)!

DEADPOOL #900 (AUG090527)

DEADPOOL #900 VARIANT COVER (JUL098089)

Written by JASON AARON, MIKE BENSON, VICTORE CHARLIE HUSTON, JOE KELLY, DUANE SWIERCZYNSKI, AND FRED VAN LENTE

Penciled by KYLE BAKER, SHAWN CRYSTAL, SANFORD GREENE, ROB LIEFELD, DAMIAN SCOTT, RICK STAGGS & DALIBOR TALIJIC

Cover by DAVE JOHNSON

Variant Cover by DAVE JOHNSON

FOC –9/24/09, On Sale – 10/14/09

Marvel Releasing 6 Film Animation Set!

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Lionsgate Home Entertainment has announced the release and the deatails for the Marvel 6 Film Set that will be released later this year on October 13 for around $50.

The set will include the 6 animated feature films that Marvel has released so far. Each film will include the special features it came with upon its original single-disc release (specs below). This seems to be a good deal if you have yet to pick up any of Marvel’s animated features yet as you will be paying less than $10 a film. All of these are worth viewing, and in my opinion, worth owning if you are a Marvel/superhero fan.

The Marvel 6 Film Set is available for pre-order now over at Amazon.

DVD Specs:

Ultimate Avengers: The Movie
• “Avengers Assemble” featurette
• The Ultimate Voice Talent Search
• What Avenger Are You? DVD-Rom game
• First Look at Ultimate Avengers 2
• Avengers Trivia Track

Ultimate Avengers 2
• “The Ultimates” featurette
• The Ultimate Gag Reel
• First Look at The Invincible Iron Man
• First Look at Doctor Strange
• What Avenger are You? DVD-Rom game

The Invincible Iron Man
• Alternate Opening Sequence
• “The Origin of Iron Man” featurette
• The Hall of Iron Man Armor
• Iron Man Concept Art
• A Look at Doctor Strange

Doctor Strange
• The Best of Marvel Videogame Cinematics
• “Who is Doctor Strange?” featurette
• A First Look at Avengers Reborn
• Doctor Strange Concept Art

Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow
• “Legacy: The Making of Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow” featurette
• A First Look at “Hulk Vs. Wolverine”
• A First Look at “Hulk Vs. Thor”
• “Kid Power: Next-Gen Marvel” featurette

Hulk Vs.
• Hulk Vs Wolverine: Audio Commentary with Craig Kyle and Chris Yost
• Hulk Vs Thor: Audio Commentary with Craig Kyle and Chris Yost
• “First Look – Wolverine and the X-Men” featurette
• “First Look – Thor: Tales of Asgard” featurette

Go Go Gadget: Marvel Digital Comics Go Portable

This comes to us from the Marvel website. Looks like the PSP will be the first to get portable comics. They are going to have classic and select comics available for download and reading on your PSP with a program that will make it easier to read. Here’s and excerpt and check out the full article here.

Today at gamescom in Cologne, Germany, Sony Computer Entertainment Europe announced the digital reader for PSPTM (PlayStation®Portable), a new service that will allow PSP owners to access a range of media on their PSP. The digital reader service will be launched with Digital Comics this December, putting PSP owners in control of a huge library of Digital Comics from several provider partners including—you guessed it,  Marvel!

So this is great news. And while its not exactly what I would like to see its definitely a step in the right direction. If this is a success on the PSP hopefully other people will pic it up and we can have comics on our Kindle’s or the rumored Apple IPad. Good work Sony.