About Jonathan Ngo

When Jonathan is not busy working in a cinema in Paris, he spends most of his time reading comic books. He sometimes even does both (don't tell his boss). Most of his love goes to indie comics but he will always be a Marvel guy at heart. He is also a film and animation fanatic.

All Articles

The Story of My Tits Preview Page
October 6, 2015
What you expect, going into a book called The Story of My Tits is a book about tits and their story. What you may not expect, however, is a story about family, life and love, birth and death, gain and loss, sickness and health. Yet this is the goal set by this 352 page graphic novel by Jennifer Hayden. How does it fare?
A Train Called Love #1 Preview Page
October 6, 2015
Garth Ennis is back in a whacky comedy title called A Train Called Love. But since it’s Garth Ennis, you know you can expect a good dose of irreverence, violence, and explicit language. How does it fare?
September 29, 2015
Jem and the Holograms celebrate their first Outrageous Annual special with 48 pages and four short stories focusing on each of our Singing and Kicking heroines. But is the show great enough to justify the 8$ ticket price? How does it fare?
September 28, 2015
Guillermo Del Toro is known for his eerie gothic and frightening tales, and this is exactly what Crimson Peak is all about, a tale of ghosts and haunted mansions, of murders and love, of life and death, obsession and despair. And with great actors such as Tom Hiddleston, Mia Wasikowska and Jessica Chastain in front of the camera, we would be right to expect a home run. How does it fare ?
Rivers of London #3 Cover
September 25, 2015
Peter Grant and Nightingale are on the track of a killer haunted car, but first they have to figure out how to get back to the present as “The Most Haunted Car of England” took them to the 1920s at the end of issue 2. How does it fare?
Blade Promo by Tim Seeley
September 23, 2015
It has been recently reported by Bleeding Cool that a push towards “Positive Reinforcement” has been made at DC Comics in order to bring more female and ethnic creators into their creative pool. But while Bleeding Cool’s Rich Johnston would like to classify all criticism as racist and sexist, it is actually easy to criticize such methods, and their current context, as they may indeed have a negative impact on diversity and creativity.