Feb 9, 2015

MARVEL, SONY Join forces, intergrates SPIDER-MAN into the MARVEL CINEMATIC UNIVERSE

Marvel Entertainment pretty much shocked the internet tonight when they dropped a bombshell announcement.

Marvel and Sony Pictures have reached an agreement to integrate Spider-Man into the Marvel Cinematic Universe proper.

The new Spidey's first appearance will be in an upcoming Marvel Studios film, but it has not been announced which (My money is on Captain America 3: Civil War).

Following that, Sony Pictures and Marvel Studios have a deal in place to co-produce a Spider-Man film, which will hit theaters on July 28, 2017 (A date originally taken by third Thor film, Ragnarok). Spider-Man will be recast and rebooted (sans an origin retelling).

The film will be produced by a partnership of Amy Pascal (recent ex-head of Sony Pictures) and Kevin Feige, who has been the mastermind behind the Marvel Cinematic universe. While the new film will be co-produced with the Marvel Studios crew, Sony Pictures will take care of distribution, marketing and will actually own the film. 

With this new development, and the new Spider-Man film taking a spot originally used by another film, Marvel has restructured their release schedule through 2019.  They are as follows:
  • Thor: Ragnarok - November 3, 2017
  • Black Panther - July 6, 2018
  • Captain Marvel - November 2, 2018
  • Inhumans - July 12, 2019
All other previously announced Marvel Studio release dates remain unchanged.

Press Release Follows

Feb 6, 2015

DC: NEW 52 Ending (In Name Only). Some books being cancelled, new books being launched.

DC says 'enough' to continuity.

I'm not really the best guy to write about this, I'm not a huge DC guy. News is news though, so here we go. I just won't have really in depth commentary on the subject.

It was announced earlier today that DC, in the aftermath of their Convergence event, is cancelling a slew of books (27 of their 52 to be exact) and launching 2 dozen new ones in their place. They are also dropping the "New 52" label from all their titles.

Supposedly, this move will also bring about a shift in DC's storytelling.

"In this new era of storytelling, story will trump continuity as we continue to empower creators to tell the best stories in the industry," DC Comics Co-Publisher Dan Didio commented.

There are a couple of strange moves in this new strategy. Supergirl is among the titles cancelled, even though a TV series staring the character was just green lighted by CBS.
Also, just as (if not more) puzzling is that both Bizzaro and Bat-Mite are getting their own titles. Yes, Bat-mite.

It will be interesting to see how this new direction plays out for DC. The de-emphasis on continuity will clearly free up the writers in what they can do in future stories, but for continuity freaks like me, it could take a while to adjust to it.

DC Titles

Continuing

  • Action Comics - Greg Pak/Aaron Kuder
  • Aquaman - Cullen Bunn/Trevor McCarthy
  • Batgirl - Cameron Stewart/Brenden Fletcher/Babs Tarr
  • Batman -  Scott Snyder/Greg Capullo
  • Batman/Superman - Greg Pak/Ardian Syaf
  • Detective Comics - Brian Buccelato/Francis Manapul
  • Catwoman - Genevieve Valentine/David Messina
  • Deathstroke - Tony Daniel/Tony Daniel
  • Flash - Rob Venditti/Van Jensen/Brett Booth
  • Gotham Academy - Becky Cloonan/Brenden Fletcher/Karl Kerschl
  • Gotham By Midnight - Ray Fawkes/Juan Ferreyra
  • Grayson - Tim King/Tim Seeley/Mikel Janin
  • Green Arrow - Ben Percy/Richard Zircher
  • Green Lantern - Robert Venditti/Billy Tan
  • Harley Quinn - Amanda Conner/Jimmy Palmiotti/Chad Hardin
  • Justice League - Geoff Johns/Jason Fabok
  • Justice League United - TBD/Travel Foreman/Paul Pelletier.
  • Lobo - Cullen Bunn/Cliff Richards
  • Secret Six - Gail Simone/Dale Eaglesham
  • Sinestro - Cullen Bunn/Brad Walker
  • New Suicide Squad - Sean Ryan/Carlos D’Anda
  • Superman - Gene Luen Yang/John Romita Jr.
  • Superman/Wonder Woman - Peter Tomasi/Doug Mahnke
  • Teen Titans - Will Pfeifer/Kenneth Rocafort
  • Wonder Woman - Meredith Finch/David Finch

New Titles 

  • Bat-Mite - Dan Jurgens/Corin Howell
  • Batman Beyond - Dan Jurgens/Bernard Chang
  • Bizzaro - Heath Corson/Gustavo Duarte
  • Black Canary - Brenden Fletcher/Annie Wu
  • Constantine: The Hellblazer - Ming DoylE/Riley Rossmo
  • Cyborg - David L. Walker/Ivan Reis/Joe Prado
  • Dark Universe - James Tynion IV/Ming Doyle
  • Doomed - Scott Lobdell/Javier Fernandez
  • Dr. Fate - Paul Levitz/Sonny Liew
  • Earth 2: Society - Daniel H. Wilson/Jorge Jimenez
  • Green Lantern: Lost Army - Cullen Bunn/Jesus Saiz/Javi Pina 
  • Harley Quinn/Power Girl - Jimmy Palmiotti/Amanda Conner/Stephane Roux
  • Justice League of America - Brian Hitch
  • Justice League 3001 - Keith Giffen/J.M. DeMatteis/Howard Porter
  • Martian Manhunter - Rob Williams/Ben Oliver/Paulo Siqueira
  • Midnighter -Steve Orlando/ACO
  • Mystic U (Title Not Final) - Alisa Kwitney/Mauricet
  • Omega Men - Tom King/Barnaby Bagenda
  • Prez - Mark Russell/Ben Caldwell
  • Red Hood/Arsenal - Scott Lobdell/Denis Medri
  • Robin, Son of Batman - Pat Gleason
  • Section Eight - Garth Ennis/John McCrea
  • Starfire - Jimmy Palmiotti/Amanda Conner/Emanuela Lupacchino
  • We Are Robin - Lee Bermejo/Rob Haynes/Khary Randolph

Feb 3, 2015

The Force Returns to Marvel Comics

The story thus far...

Lucasfilm's sale to Disney has brought about many great things. Starting this year, Star Wars will be back in theaters, with the original cast returning too! The transition to Disney subsidiary has had a couple bittersweet side effects though...the loss of the Star Wars Expanded Universe and Dark Horse's loss of the Star Wars license.

Beginning in 1977, Marvel obtained the license to publish Star Wars comics, resulting in a run of 107 issues, which came to an end in 1987.
Dark Horse scooped up the property two years later and has published it since. They were a very instrumental part of the creation of the Expanded Universe, helping to weave an incredible continuation of the stories beyond what had appeared on screen.
However, after acquiring Lucasfilm, Disney seemed to say, "Wait a minute, why are we licensing out the comic book rights? We OWN a comic company!" And with that, they opted to not renew the agreement with Dark Horse, resulting in Star Wars coming "home" to Marvel this year.

So, why do I bring all of this up? Well, both of these major changes factor into the new series in a big way.  You see, Star Wars (2015) is not only the first Star Wars comic series in almost 3 decades to be published by Marvel, it's also the first to come along in a "post Expanded Universe" world, working directly in the new "Official Star Wars Canon".

But how does Star Wars #1 stack up? Is it a new, brilliant, fresh start or a worrying sign of what's to come? Read on, and we'll find out.

Review

Click to Purchase @ Comixology



Star Wars #1
Written by Jason Aaron
Art by John Cassady
Release Date: January 14, 2015






The rebellion has just recently lead a successful attack against the Empire's ultimate weapon, and in the process landed a crippling blow. Now, a lone shuttle from Tatooine arrives in the Corellian Industrial Cluster on the moon Cymoon 1. Aboard it is Han Solo, working as an official emissary for Jabba The Hutt in a negotiation with the Empire over a deal for some supply depots.

Apparently the Stormtroopers are still terrible shots
This is how the stage is set at the beginning of the book, taking place shortly after the end of Episode 4.  We are introduced to some Imperial officers and Han Solo alone, but soon enough the entire gang is back together and we're jumping back into the old Star Wars crew we know and love (Even Obi-wan makes an appearance via Blue Ghost Speech Bubbles™).
The best thing I can say about this comic, is it just feels right. The tone, the story...it's all familiar, like meeting an old friend again after a long time apart.

It plays out in a similar way to the Princess Leia rescue in Ep. 4, with disguised characters infiltrating, being discovered/revealed and then everything escalating into a gunfight. Threepio nervously reporting over comm-link, R2's gadgets, Han & Leia bickering, it's all here. There's even a cute throw back to the Jedi mind trick.  Contained in these pages are many of the same beats I have come to love (and want) from a classic Star Wars story.

Jason Aaron's script for this is just delightful (yes, I said delightful). I haven't always enjoyed everything of his I've read, but I am so happy he is at Marvel now. It's like he was made to write this.  He nails everything. The characterizations and dialog is spot on. Han talks like Han. Threepio like Threepio, etc. Everything is written in a way that is just completely captures the characters and how they were portrayed in the original trilogy.

I just realized Leia is now a Disney Princess.
The art in this book is gorgeous. That's to be expected though, it is John Cassaday's work, after all.  Cassaday's likenesses are pretty ridiculous. He renders these actors almost exactly. The characters aren't all there is to rave about though. His architecture is also incredible, invoking the style of the sets and props of the original films so well. Again, nothing feels out of place at all, even if you are reading this directly after watching Episode 4.

In all, this is a very satisfying book. There isn't a terribly huge amount of ground covered in it, but this is just laying the foundation for what is to come in the title's future. From what has been shown so far though, once this book really gets rolling, it will be one hell of a ride.

Feb 2, 2015

Crisis on Infinite Blogs

Well, here I am, posting the inaugural post here at Knowhere.

Welcome.  This is a place where you can find me (and hopefully another person or two) praise, complain and just all around celebrate comics.  There are a few different types of content that will be coming your way in the future
  • News
  • Editiorals/Commentary
  • Reviews
  • Deal posts for digital comics
  • Even more!
If this post reads really wooden and like a corporate post or something like that...sorry. I'm not good with introductions.

With that said, Fuck yeah, let's get on with it!

Oh yeah. One more thing you can expect.
  • Foul Language