Tuesday, November 10th, 2009
By Austin

In case you didn’t get enough Resident Evil yesterday, Capcom Unity has a second exclusive preview of Resident Evil #3 - this time a backup story featuring art by upcoming Authority artist Al Barrionuevo!
Check it out here.
One Comment
Monday, November 9th, 2009
By Austin
More news on the zombie front: Resident Evil is back! Take a look at IGN’s preview of issue #3 to check out the chops on the new artist, Jheremy Raapack.
This guy is *good*, but you don’t need me to tell you that.

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Friday, November 6th, 2009
By Austin
Art by Mike Bowden

2 Comments
Thursday, November 5th, 2009
By Austin
Half the fun of working on Victorian Undead has been watching all of the coverage the book’s been getting from the zombie blogosphere - it’s really amazing how many blogs there are dedicated solely to the walking dead.
I’m seeing news items pop up from sites like The Inevitable Zombie Apocalypse… The Dead Walk…. A World On Fire… Send More Cops (named after a great gag from Return of the Living Dead)… and BuyZombie.com. Needless to say, my RSS reader has grown in the last couple months. I thought I was a pretty hardcore zombie buff, but I really have to take my hat off to these guys.
And, be sure to check out CBR’s interview with writer Ian Edginton, in case you haven’t already.
_
4 Comments
Wednesday, November 4th, 2009
By Austin
OK, so - I’m pretty excited about the way Authority is going in the next few months. If the Barrionuevo art teases we’ve been posting here weren’t enough to get a WSU fan excited, I don’t know what would be, really.
It’s been a long time since I’ve read a lot of these comics, I’ll admit. Thanks to a bit of digging around the offices, I was finally able to track down the two Authority paperbacks I’d been missing. These next couple weekends will be about kicking back and brushing up on my Authority continuity. Hell, I may start with Ellis’s StormWatch run and go straight through to the Authority from there. (Just looking down the spines, it’s amazing just how many outstanding writers and artists worked on these books over the years.)
Because it’s bound to come up, and I just have to ask: What are everybody’s all-time favorite Authority runs?
10 Comments
Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009
By Austin

We’ve speculated quite a bit here recently, wondering how artists like Al Barrionuevo and Tim Seeley are able to draw so many heroes and villains in a single comic (and often, a single page.)
Another question, however - how does one prepare themselves to WRITE that many characters into a story? There are several fans out there with an encyclopedic knowledge of the WSU (at least a few of you are regulars in our comments section) - but I know at least I’d need to go back and do a LOT of reading just to make sure I’m able to keep everyone straight.
Over at Broken Frontier, upcoming WildCats writer Adam Beechen explains how he was able to prep himself to write a comic story that includes hundreds of the WSU’s characters. Check out his column here.
7 Comments
Monday, November 2nd, 2009
By Austin
We all love awesome crowd shots. Judging by your reaction to our WildCats
#19 sneak peek from Tim Seeley, so do you.
You know who else can draw the hell out of a WildStorm group shot? Al Barrionuevo. I mean, look at this - there’s what, 50 characters in there? More? And have I mentioned this guy’ll be drawing the Authority ongoing? (I have, but I like to rub it in.)
From The Authority #18.

14 Comments
Saturday, October 31st, 2009
By Austin

Ok, I know it’s not normal to post here on a weekend, but this isn’t any normal old Saturday. What better way to prep for trick or treating than flipping through Trick ‘r Treat (which I borrowed the fun Fiona Staples art from) or one of WildStorm’s other gruesome offerings?
Have a nice weekend, and please, try not to eat all your candy at once.
One Comment
Friday, October 30th, 2009
By Austin
Art by Philip Bond.

2 Comments
Thursday, October 29th, 2009
By Austin
We’ve got a pretty eclectic group of characters hitting the shelves from WildStorm lately - from immortal, machete-wielding serial killers and super-powered teenagers to elves and super soldiers. In the mood to try something a bit more rooted in (our) reality? Chuck Dixon’s gritty WWII alternate history, Storming Paradise, just hit shelves. The book reads great in one volume - chronicling the invasion of Japan at the end of a World War II where the Manhattan Project had never come to be.

One Comment