Rob Guillory is back with Farmhand #2, the comic book series from Image Comics that proposes the theory that we could supply amputees with their missing body parts, simply by growing them on plants and trees. I...
I have really enjoyed the four issue run of Medieval Spawn and Witchblade from Image and Top Cow Comics. The writing/artist team of Brian Haberlin and Brian Holguin have created one of the most aesthetically pl...
I'll be the first to admit if pressed, I am a John Layman fan. From the second I picked up Chew #1 I knew that this guy had my kind of humor running through his veins and I'd be buying his work whenever the cha...
Ales Kot and Tradd Moore’s The New World starts off strong with the tried and true Terminator 2 style opening where the bombs go off and the world, well actually the United States of America is now changed fore...
I love a good B-movie! Not the ones that try to be campy, those are trash, but rather, the ones that commit to an over-the-top idea and go all in. There's something genuine about those films that cannot be repl...
The Last Siege is a unique title in the knights-and-castles style genre. While most stories told within this backdrop employ elements of the fantastic such as dragons, orcs, elves, and the like, The Last Siege ...
Stellar returns with issue #2 from Skybound Entertainment. I found the first issue to be a pleasant surprise as I do not typically care a lot for the space/sci-fi genre. Stellar #1, however, offered a story ful...
The first issue of Image Comics' The Weather Man caught me completely off guard. I had no idea what to expect and all I really knew for sure was that I was a big fan of the writer, Jody Leheup. Well, if you rea...
Outpost Zero is a new title from Image Comics that gives us a glimpse of life inside some kind of giant bio-dome placed right in the middle of an uninhabitable, frozen wasteland. Life seems to be manageable, if...
I didn’t know what to think when I first started reading Image Comics' new graphic novel, Son of Hitler. From the title, and even the cover, I assumed that I was in store for some sharp, political satire. Perha...