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Thứ Ba, 18 tháng 12, 2018

First Set of Ringo Award Nominees Announced; Fewer Than 20% Women

Oddly, all of the remaining awards for Best Series, Best Story, Best Design etc. are credited to publishers, as though they didn’t need writers or artists, so I can’t as easily analyze those. The exceptions are Comic Strips and Webcomics.

Two out of five of the Best Original Graphic Novel nominees are created by women, though, so that’s a little more encouraging.

First Set of Ringo Award Nominees Announced; Fewer Than 20% Women The Ringo Awards, Baltimore Comic-Con’s award program established earlier this year, have now announced their first set of nominees, assembled through a combination of jury selection and fan voting (which may account for some of the lesser-known nominees). Out of the sixteen categories, seven are creator-based. (See below; the publisher-based awards follow this section.) Those categories have from five to nine people (or teams, in a few cases) listed. They total 52 creators nominated. Of those, ten are women, or […]

The Ringo Awards, Baltimore Comic-Con’s award program established earlier this year, have now announced their first set of nominees, assembled through a combination of jury selection and fan voting (which may account for some of the lesser-known nominees).

Out of the sixteen categories, seven are creator-based. (See below; the publisher-based awards follow this section.) Those categories have from five to nine people (or teams, in a few cases) listed. They total 52 creators nominated. Of those, ten are women, or 19% of the nominees. Two categories, Best Inker and Best Letterer, have no women nominated. Best Colorist, on the other hand, appears to be the female ghetto, with five out of seven nominees women. That’s traditional for the old-school corporate comic industry, giving the girls the crayons.

Best Cartoonist (Writer/Artist)

Daniel Clowes
Steve Conley
Hernandez Brothers
Aydin Anh Huynh (Snailords)
Kaitlyn Narvaza (instantmiso)
Skottie Young

Best Writer

PJ Haarsma & Alan Tudyk
Jody Houser
Tom King
Robert Kirkman
Jeff Lemire
Alan Moore
Mark Waid
David Walker
Gerard Way

Best Artist or Penciller

Kaare Andrews
Cliff Chiang
Rafael de Latorre
Mitch Gerards
Jason Johnson
Jason Latour
Dustin Nguyen
Fiona Staples

Best Inker

Mark Brooks
Jeremy Freeman
Jonathan Glapion
Jason Latour
Jae Lee
Danny Miki
Sean Murphy
Victor Olazaba

Best Letterer

Clayton Cowles
Taylor Esposito
Todd Klein
Troy Peteri
John Workman

Best Colorist

Jordie Bellaire
Tamra Bonvillain
Elizabeth Breitweiser
Laura Martin
Rico Renzi
Sarah Stone
Matt Wilson

Best Cover Artist

Frank Cho
Mike Del Mundo
JG Jones
Phil Noto
Ryan Sook
Fiona Staples
Sana Takeda

If you are “anyone involved in and credited with creating comics professionally”, then you can now vote at the award website. You’ll have to get through a captcha and an email address validation first, though.

Best Series

Faith, Valiant Entertainment
Paper Girls, Image Comics
Saga, Image Comics
Spectrum, Automatic Pictures
Vision, Marvel Comics

Best Single Issue or Story

Deadly Hands of Criminal, Image Comics
DC Universe Rebirth #1, DC Comics
Emancipation Day, www.redistrictedcomics.com
Faith #1, Valiant Entertainment
Locke & Key: Small World, IDW Publishing

Best Original Graphic Novel

Ghosts, Scholastic/Graphix
March: Book Three, Top Shelf Productions
Patience, Daniel Clowes, Fantagraphics
Tetris: The Games People Play, First Second
Wonder Woman: The True Amazon, DC Comics

Best Anthology

Dark Horse Presents, Dark Horse Comics
Island, Image Comics
Love is Love, DC Comics/IDW Publishing
ReDistrictedComics.com (www.redistrictedcomics.com)
Wonder Woman 75th Anniversary Special, DC Comics

Best Humor Comic

Adventures of God, Line Webtoons
Blue Chair, Line Webtoons
Giant Days, BOOM! Studios
I Hate Fairyland, Image Comics
Jughead, Archie Comics
Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, Marvel Comics

Best Comic Strip or Panel

Bloom County, Berkeley Breathed, Universal Uclick
Dick Tracy, Joe Staton & Mike Curtis, Tribune Media Services
Foxtrot, Bill Amend, Universal Press Syndicate
Mutts, Patrick McDonnell, King Features Syndicate
Pearls Before Swine, Stephan Pastis, Universal Uclick

Best Webcomic

Girl Genius, Phil Foglio (www.girlgeniusonline.com)
Siren’s Lament, Kaitlyn Narvaza (instantmiso)(www.webtoons.com/en/romance/sirens-lament/list?title_no=632)
The Middle Age, Steve Conley (www.middleagecomic.com/)
The Red Hook, Dean Haspiel (www.webtoons.com/en/super-hero/the-red-hook/list?title_no=643)
unOrdinary, uru-chan (www.webtoons.com/en/fantasy/unordinary/list?title_no=679)

Best Non-Fiction Comic Work

Cooking Comically (www.cookingcomically.com)
Dark Night, A True Batman Story, DC Comics
March: Book Three, Top Shelf Productions
ReDistrictedComics.com (www.redistrictedcomics.com)
Rolling Blackouts, Drawn and Quarterly
Tetris: The Games People Play, First Second

Best Presentation in Design

Aliens 30th Anniversary: The Original Comic Series, Dark Horse Comics
Al Williamson’s Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back Artist Edition, IDW Publishing
Britannia, Valiant Entertainment
Legacy of Luther Strode, Image Comics
Mike Mignola’s Screw-On Head and Other Curious Objects: Artist’s Edition Hardcover, IDW Publishing
Moebius Library: The World of Edena, Dark Horse Books
The ODY-C: Cycle One Hardcover, Image Comics
Spectrum, Automatic Pictures


Link : First Set of Ringo Award Nominees Announced; Fewer Than 20% Women
News Anime , Manga & Comic: Comic.MangaOnlineFree.Com - Special pages News Anime and Manga prestige, world news Manga & Anime at your fingertips

Valiant Reworks Website, Posts Free Comics (If You Can Find Them)

Valiant Reworks Website, Posts Free Comics (If You Can Find Them) I’m not convinced that “we’ve redone our website” is really news, but the ValiantEntertainment.com redesign has a few features that all comic publisher sites should consider. Some of them are basic, so it’s surprising that I need to point them out, but as a member of the press, sometimes I give up on covering something because I can’t find a suitable image of a cover or the details of a creative team on the official website. Valiant is addressing these […]

I’m not convinced that “we’ve redone our website” is really news, but the ValiantEntertainment.com redesign has a few features that all comic publisher sites should consider. Some of them are basic, so it’s surprising that I need to point them out, but as a member of the press, sometimes I give up on covering something because I can’t find a suitable image of a cover or the details of a creative team on the official website. Valiant is addressing these concerns by providing:

A complete list of their publications. Now, doing this for the last five years, since Valiant relaunched its comics in 2012, is a lot easier than the last 75 or so, but as a newer publisher, giving fans, potential readers, and other interested parties “a complete breakdown of every comic book, trade paperback, deluxe edition hardcover, and omnibus [with] a distinct synopsis, complete cover gallery, interior page preview, and a link to find your local comic shop” makes for a comprehensive resource.

An archive of all their news and announcements — which most often, means previews of upcoming titles, solicitations, and reprint mentions.

A full release calendar along with dates of appearances and events, as well as a merchandise store.

And a bit of a mixed message:

Not sure where to jump into the adventures of your favorite heroes? For the first time online, fans can now browse a selection of official Valiant reading orders and suggested starting points for each of its biggest series!

On the one hand, more reference is great — particularly if it’s kept up. (The biggest problem with large information initiatives like this is having confidence that the company has thought about maintenance, so all these great resources are still valuable and updated six months from now.) On the other, a five-year-old company already has so many crossovers and events and confusing timelines that this is needed? That’s the kind of thing that drove so many away from the big two American corporate superhero publishers that Valiant’s trying to compete with.

Finally, the reason I’m talking about this update —

Free comics and jumping-on points

For a limited time, Valiant is releasing 12 of its most acclaimed and fan-favorite debut issues and jumping-on points online exclusively at ValiantEntertainment.com!

ARCHER & ARMSTRONG (2012) #1
Written by Fred Van Lente; Art by Clayton Henry
Continued in ARCHER & ARMSTRONG VOL. 1: THE MICHELANGELO CODE TPB

BLOODSHOT (2012) #1
Written by Duane Swierczynski; Art by Manuel Garcia & Arturo Lozzi
Continued in BLOODSHOT VOL. 1: SETTING THE WORLD ON FIRE TPB

BLOODSHOT REBORN #1
Written by Jeff Lemire; Art by Mico Suayan
Continued in BLOODSHOT REBORN VOL. 1: COLORADO TPB

THE DEATH-DEFYING DR. MIRAGE #1
Written by Jen Van Meter; Art by Roberto de la Torre
Continued in THE DEATH-DEFYING DR. MIRAGE TPB

DIVINITY #1
Written by Matt Kindt; Art by Trevor Hairsine
Continued in DIVINITY TPB

FAITH (LIMITED SERIES) #1
Written by Jody Houser; Art by Francis Portela
Continued in FAITH VOL. 1: HOLLYWOOD & VINE TPB

HARBINGER (2012) #1
Written by Joshua Dysart; Art by Khari Evans
Continued in HARBINGER VOL. 1: OMEGA RISING TPB

HARBINGER RENEGADE #1
Written by Rafer Roberts; Art by Darick Robertson, Juan Jose Ryp, and Raul Allen
Continued in HARBINGER RENEGADE VOL. 1: THE JUDGMENT OF SOLOMON TPB

NINJAK #1
Written by Matt Kindt; Art by Clay Mann and Butch Guice
Continued in NINJAK VOL. 1: WEAPONEER TPB

QUANTUM AND WOODY (2013) #1
Written by James Asmus; Art by Tom Fowler
Continued in QUANTUM AND WOODY VOL. 1: THE WORLD’S WORST SUPERHERO TEAM TPB

THE VALIANT #1
Written by Jeff Lemire and Matt Kindt; Art by Paolo Rivera
Continued in THE VALIANT TPB

X-O MANOWAR (2012) #1
Written by Robert Venditti; Art by Cary Nord
Continued in X-O MANOWAR VOL. 1: BY THE SWORD TPB

Now sure, as you can see from the text, these free tastes are designed to drive you into your local bookstore or library to find out what happens, since no #1 is a complete story anymore. But I like telling readers about free comics. However, after it took me five minutes of poking around the site with no free comics found, I had to email their Marketing VP (who did a terrific job getting back to me quickly) to find out where they were.

Turns out that you go to the Comics link from the top nav, then to the individual series page you’re interested in. If there’s a free issue available, there’s a “free first issue (PDF)” link near the top. (Strangely, on their Comics page, they have a link titled Free Comic Book Day that goes to nothing. I would think this would be a good place to list them all.) So because I love you, I have linked them directly in the list above.

On the negative side, their responsive design means huge, overwhelming, busy art images on a computer screen. I’m sure it looks better on mobile, which is where all the kids surf, right?


Link : Valiant Reworks Website, Posts Free Comics (If You Can Find Them)

News Anime , Manga & Comic: Comic.MangaOnlineFree.Com - Special pages News Anime and Manga prestige, world news Manga & Anime at your fingertips

Thứ Hai, 17 tháng 12, 2018

Maker Comics: Bake Like a Pro! and Fix a Car!

Maker Comics: Bake Like a Pro! and Fix a Car! I adore First Second’s Science Comics line. Most all of them are terrific true-life graphic novels about interesting topics. Not only are they educational, they’re entertaining, and well worth reading. Now the publisher has expanded their non-fiction line with the new Maker Comics, which are similar, but focused on craft and skills instead of intellectual knowledge. The first two books are very different in topics, but both are equally informative and practical, covering things most people would benefit from learning. […]

I adore First Second’s Science Comics line. Most all of them are terrific true-life graphic novels about interesting topics. Not only are they educational, they’re entertaining, and well worth reading.

Now the publisher has expanded their non-fiction line with the new Maker Comics, which are similar, but focused on craft and skills instead of intellectual knowledge. The first two books are very different in topics, but both are equally informative and practical, covering things most people would benefit from learning. And like Science Comics, they introduce creative characters and situations to make the lessons memorable.

Maker Comics: Bake Like a Pro! by Falynn Koch (Science Comics: Bats and Science Comics: Plagues) introduces aspiring magician Sage. While her fellow apprentices are learning transfiguration or fire wizardry, she is assigned to learn baking, which bums her out. But her mentor Korian introduces her to the alchemy of the kitchen, and she grows to love creating tasty treats.

I got a kick out of Koch’s expressive characters, particularly when it comes to the talking ingredients (who want to be eaten). They’re great reminders of the core principles, which Koch does a great job establishing. The lessons are meaningful, even to someone who already knows how to make cookies. I’ve cooked several of the items covered here, but I didn’t know nearly this much about how and why the recipes came together.

I hadn’t thought before about how baking is harder than cooking, because cooking at its core just means applying heat. Baking requires combinations of ingredients, and how you do that can vary a lot. An early lesson shows why shortcuts (including instant products) don’t work as well as homemade treats, and the science of what happens during baking is covered by talking cookies.

There’s a surprising depth of detail here, a wide variety of tools and techniques as well as such information as why you’d use different temperatures of butter or the chemistry of butter and sugar combined in the creaming method. Sometimes, this reminded me of a medieval-flavored episode of Good Eats. There’s a whole bunch of info on what makes up flour and how it reacts chemically, plus the same for eggs; different kinds of sugars; and how yeast works. There are also suggestions for bakers who want to swap out eggs or dairy.

The recipes included show how to make classic chocolate chip cookies, cornbread and banana bread, pizza dough, cheesy biscuits, apple pie, and sponge cake with buttercream frosting. There are more at the back of the book, including pound cake and lemon meringue pie. Also in the back are summaries of key information, including the different baking methods, how substitutions affect cookies, and different bread techniques.

Switching gears, Maker Comics: Fix a Car! by Chris Schweizer mostly takes place outdoors. Several students have come together for Car Club with Ms. Gritt in order to learn how to maintain their vehicles. The kids have different kinds of cars, from a fairly standard sedan to a junker that needs to be rebuilt almost from scratch.

From the beginning, our narrator emphasizes how achievable this all is. Tips are provided to keep things simple and affordable. The oil change section even explains why you may not want to do it yourself, based on costs and purpose.

Topics cover what basic tools are needed, how to check fluids regularly (and when you’d want to), replacing windshield wipers, finding the source of a squeak in the drive belt, and changing a tire. The comic format is perfect for this, as the reader can see, for example, how to check oil with a dipstick as the characters do it. The use and importance of various systems are explained, including brakes, the battery and electrical system, and in the back pages, spark plugs, exhaust, suspension, and more.

I doubt I’ll be doing any of the activities shown here, but I really appreciated knowing a lot more about how vehicles run, and I feel more prepared for an emergency, like a flat tire or needing a jump start. And some of the sections — such as the one on why it’s important to be a good, patient driver or how to properly clean your car, inside and out — don’t require any mechanical effort.

I like the way each book begins with a warning page, reminding readers of different ways to avoid injury and be smart and safe about the activities. That’s particularly relevant in the Fix a Car! book, which deals with the dangers of jacks and some of the chemicals contained under the hood. Both volumes have a ton of useful information. I was surprised at how much could be covered in just 128 pages.

Both Maker Comics volumes are due out the first week in February, and they can be preordered now from your local comic shop with the following Diamond codes: Bake Like a Pro! in hardcover (DEC18 1872) or paperback (DEC18 1871), Fix a Car! in hardcover (DEC18 1874) or paperback (DEC18 1873). (The publisher provided advance digital review copies.)


Link : Maker Comics: Bake Like a Pro! and Fix a Car!

News Anime , Manga & Comic: Comic.MangaOnlineFree.Com - Special pages News Anime and Manga prestige, world news Manga & Anime at your fingertips

No Harvey Awards for 2017

No Harvey Awards for 2017 Last year, news broke that the Harvey Awards, an Eisner competitor first established in 1988, would be leaving their ten-year home at the Baltimore Comic-Con. (That convention has since established their own award program.) Now comes news that the awards will be hosted at the New York Comic Con — but not until 2018. So sorry, anyone with a great graphic novel out this year, no recognition for you! It’s understandable that it will take time to get the program […]

Last year, news broke that the Harvey Awards, an Eisner competitor first established in 1988, would be leaving their ten-year home at the Baltimore Comic-Con. (That convention has since established their own award program.)

Now comes news that the awards will be hosted at the New York Comic Con — but not until 2018. So sorry, anyone with a great graphic novel out this year, no recognition for you! It’s understandable that it will take time to get the program re-organized, particularly if they want to address some of the problems seen in the past.

Instead, there will be a reception held in October at NYCC, to honor the awards’ namesake, Harvey Kurtzman, with the actual award ceremony returning for the program’s 30th anniversary. This will be the seventh home for the Harvey Awards.

ComicBook.com had the original announcement, which includes this quote from Kurtzman’s daughter Nellie:

NYCC has grown exponentially over the past decade, and ReedPOP brings with them a team that is experienced in running successful events. With my father being a lifelong New Yorker, it is only fitting that the awards return to the city where he worked, and the comic book industry was born. In 2018, we all look forward to the reboot of the awards and having the Harveys in the setting of the largest comic book convention in North America.

I didn’t realize NYCC was trying to claim that size crown from the San Diego Comic-Con, and one wonders if “experienced in running successful events” is a statement about previous versions being considered not as successful. Or perhaps I’m just looking for trouble.

For more information, we’ll have to wait for additional press releases. The former official website at harveyawards.org is gone, with the domain snapped up by someone else.


Link : No Harvey Awards for 2017

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Angel City: Town Without Pity Out This Week – Maybe?

Angel City: Town Without Pity Out This Week – Maybe? Angel City: Town Without Pity will be in your local comic shop (if they were smart and ordered some in) tomorrow. It’s a hard-boiled but loving look back at 1930s Hollywood, where an aspiring actress gets wrapped up in conspiracies and crimes with mobsters and movie studio bigwigs (many inspired by real-life events) when she starts trying to find out who killed a friend of hers. It’s written by Janet Harvey and drawn by Megan Levens (Madame Frankenstein). The book […]

Angel City: Town Without Pity will be in your local comic shop (if they were smart and ordered some in) tomorrow. It’s a hard-boiled but loving look back at 1930s Hollywood, where an aspiring actress gets wrapped up in conspiracies and crimes with mobsters and movie studio bigwigs (many inspired by real-life events) when she starts trying to find out who killed a friend of hers. It’s written by Janet Harvey and drawn by Megan Levens (Madame Frankenstein).

The book collects the six-issue miniseries. I posted preview pages from the first issue, and my review of issue #5 includes more pages. If this aims at your sweet spot as much as it did for me — tough dame hero! old Hollywood! adventure and mystery! — you should definitely check it out.

Update: While Diamond lists this title on their new releases for Wednesday, August 9, the publisher says it’s coming out on August 16. I guess we’ll see what’s going on tomorrow! How appropriate for a mystery title.


Link : Angel City: Town Without Pity Out This Week – Maybe?

News Anime , Manga & Comic: Comic.MangaOnlineFree.Com - Special pages News Anime and Manga prestige, world news Manga & Anime at your fingertips

Well, That Was Quick! Venom Now Available for Home Viewing

Well, That Was Quick! Venom Now Available for Home Viewing Venom seemed like a crazy idea for a stand-alone superhero film, but it’s doing quite well. It’s a top 10 movie in domestic take for 2018, and it shows that Sony/Columbia doesn’t have to team up with Marvel Studios (as they did for Spider-Man: Homecoming) to make an enjoyable Spider-Verse movie. What surprised me was that it became available for digital rental last week and comes out on Blu-ray and DVD tomorrow, December 18. This is unusual because its theatrical […]

Venom seemed like a crazy idea for a stand-alone superhero film, but it’s doing quite well. It’s a top 10 movie in domestic take for 2018, and it shows that Sony/Columbia doesn’t have to team up with Marvel Studios (as they did for Spider-Man: Homecoming) to make an enjoyable Spider-Verse movie.

What surprised me was that it became available for digital rental last week and comes out on Blu-ray and DVD tomorrow, December 18. This is unusual because its theatrical release date was October 8, and there used to be at least a three-month window to avoid theater owners getting mad about competition. Clearly we’re living in new and unusual times.

I haven’t seen Venom yet — I find the drooling alien with all the teeth off-putting enough I haven’t rushed out to see it — but the fan perspective, viewing the relationship between Eddie Brock (Tom Hardy) and the symbiote as a kind of yaoi romance, has intrigued me. The filmmakers are willing to play with that idea, with this “romantic comedy” style release trailer:

Certainly, a lot of people have taken to it as an exciting movie ride that stands alone, without having to buy into an entire universe of superheroes.

Directed by Ruben Fleischer and written by Jeff Pinkner & Scott Rosenberg and Kelly Marcel, the film stars Tom Hardy, Michelle Williams, Riz Ahmed, Jenny Slate, and Woody Harrelson. Bonus features on the Blu-ray include:

  • Venom Mode: When selecting this mode the film will engage informative pop-ups throughout the film to provide insight on the movie’s relationship to the comics, and to reveal hidden references that even a seasoned Venom-fan may have missed!
  • Deleted & Extended Scenes
    • Ride to Hospital
    • Car Alarm
    • San Quentin – extended post-credits scene
  • From Symbiote to Screen: A mini documentary about the history of Venom in comics and his journey to the big screen. Interviews with Avi Arad, Matt Tolmach, Ruben Fleischer, Oliver Scholl, and director and comic fanboy Kevin Smith.
  • The Lethal Protector in Action: Go behind the scenes with the production crew and learn the secrets behind the awesome motorcycle stunts, wire stunts, and drones.
  • Venom Vision: A look at how Ruben Fleischer came to the project, gathered his team, and made Venom a reality. Utilizes interviews from cast, crew, and producers as well as Fleischer himself.
  • Designing Venom: Designing and creating Venom meant a huge challenge for VFX artists.
  • Symbiote Secrets: Blink and you may have missed it! Enjoy the hidden references throughout the film.
  • 8 Select Scenes Pre-Vis sequences: See the progression of the visual effects, storyboards and fight chorography compared to the finished film.
  • The music video “Venom” by Eminem
  • “Sunflower” by Post Malone, Swae Lee (From Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse)
  • Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse Sneak Peek: Meanwhile in another universe…

Did you see Venom? What did you like about it?


Link : Well, That Was Quick! Venom Now Available for Home Viewing

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Kiss Him, Not Me Volume 12

Kiss Him, Not Me Volume 12 I don’t have much to say about this volume except to note that, for those hanging on through the series, a major turning point occurs, as Kae finally chooses one of her suitors to focus on in a relationship. Kiss Him, Not Me volume 12 continues directly with the consequences from the previous book, in which there was a ridiculous, life-threatening fall off a cliff. I still miss the fannish behavior (and silly humor that results) that drew me to […]

I don’t have much to say about this volume except to note that, for those hanging on through the series, a major turning point occurs, as Kae finally chooses one of her suitors to focus on in a relationship.

Kiss Him, Not Me volume 12 continues directly with the consequences from the previous book, in which there was a ridiculous, life-threatening fall off a cliff.

I still miss the fannish behavior (and silly humor that results) that drew me to this series. There’s an attempt to blend both here, as Kae tries to incorporate things she’s seen in anime with the vigil she’s keeping over her friend’s hospital bedside. I found it distracting, though, and a misstep in tone.

Then comes a flashback to when Kae originally met Mutsumi in history club. That was more the kind of story I wanted to see, where Kae’s determination and lack of self-awareness seemed both realistic and adorable.

We’re finally back to the balance I prefer in the final chapter, where Kae’s obliviousness translates to her first time dating, when her inability to stop touching her boyfriend makes everyone else uncomfortable in a way that’s cringingly funny. Of course, her fan love winds up causing conflict with the needs of her relationship, in a cliffhanger that promises that the next book will revisit the series’ key premise: that a girl’s true love is her fandom.


Link : Kiss Him, Not Me Volume 12

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