Saturday, September 09, 2017

365 Days of Defiance, Day 252: Don't waste your time/ Don't waste a minute / Listen here / Don't waste your time


Panels from Cyborg (2016 series) #7 (February 2017), script by John Semper Jr., pencils by Paul Pelletier, inks by Tony Kordos, colors by Guy Major, letters by Rob Leigh

Friday, September 08, 2017

365 Days of Defiance, Day 251: When do you think it will all become clear / 'Cause I'm being taken over by the fear

I always like it when Batman finally listens to — and learns from — one of his partners. (There's a reason we call it "The Batman Family.")



Panels from Batman (2016 series) #24 (Early August 2017), script by Tom King, pencils and inks by Clay Mann, colors by Jordie Bellaire, letters byDeron Bennett

Tom King has been hitting it out of the park this year with Batman. May these good stories run for many more months!

Thursday, September 07, 2017

365 Days of Defiance, Day 250: And you don't mess around with Kal

Well, whaddaya know: against all expectations, I actually liked this series this year. Here's a favorite moment.



Panels from Dark Knight III: The Master Race #9 (July 2017), story by Frank Miller and Brian Azzarello, pencils by Andy Kubert, inks by Klaus Janson, colors by Brad Anderson, letters by Clem Robins

Wednesday, September 06, 2017

365 Days of Defiance, Day 249: Crooks Can Be Patriots, Part 2


Panels from Batman/Captain America one-shot (December 1996); script, pencils, inks, and letters by John Byrne; colors by Patricia Mulvihill; color separations by Jamison

Tuesday, September 05, 2017

365 Days of Defiance, Day 248: Crooks Can Be Patriots, Part 1


Panels from "Satan's Son Sells Out!" in Police Comics #9 (May 1942); script, pencils, inks, and letters by Jack Cole

Monday, September 04, 2017

365 Days of Defiance, Day 247: Ask any Nazi who knows esoterica / Who's the best hero? Captain America!


Panels from Captain America (1968 series) #195 (March 1976), script and pencils by Jack Kirby, inks and letters by D. Bruce Berry, colors by Janice Cohen

Sunday, September 03, 2017

365 Days of Defiance, Day 246: Bombs Away


Cover of DC Comics Bombshells #7 (February 2016), art by Ant Lucia

We definitely live in a modern golden age of graphic design, and yet for inspiration and fervor, the patriotic and inspirational posters of World War II still have a strong hold and influence on us. Subtract the racism of the 1940s and add sisterhood, power, and feminism and you wind up with today's perfect updating of the Golden Age ideal: the DC Comics Bombshells.


Cover art for DC Comics Bombshells #5 (January 2016), art by Ant Lucia

Bombshells, a DC digital-first series, reimagines the heroines (and a few villainesses too!) as women fighting the Second World War. Tho' the concept debuted in 2015, long past the Elseworlds publication history, its concept is virtually the exact definition of Elseworlds: In Elseworlds, super-heroes are taken from their usual settings and put into strange times and places — some that have existed, and others that can't, couldn't or shouldn't exist. The result is stories that make characters who are as familiar as yesterday seem as fresh as tomorrow.


Cover art for DC Comics Bombshells #8 (March 2016), art by Ant Lucia

What's most remarkable is that the initial design for this series sprang from single creative mind, artist Ant Lucia, whose good-girl pin-up art of DC heroines was used to create a line of statues for DC Collectibles, and later, the visual aesthetic and covers for the comics. (Read more about the debut of the statues here.) Later that year, comics written by Marguerite Bennett and illustrated by a wide range of women artists (Marguerite Sauvage, Laura Braga, Bilquis Evely, Ming Doyle, Maria-Laura Sanapo, and many more) have filled in the mythic background and the thrilling adventures of these characters in DC Comics Bombshells, and later in the Bombshells United series. The cover art for much of the first series is by Ant Lucia. (See the covers for Bombshells and Bombshells United.)


Variant Bombshells cover art for Justice League of America (2015 series) #3 (October 2015), pencils by Terry Dodson, inks by Rachel Dodson

Bombshells variant covers appeared on a handful of regular DC Universe titles in 2014...


Variant Bombshells cover art for Superman/Wonder Woman #9 (August 2014), art by Emanuela Lupacchino and Ant Lucia

...and were popular enough that nearly all DC books with the cover month October 2015 were published with variant Bombshells covers. You may call it cheesecake, we call it sideways promotional integration!


Variant Bombshells cover art for Superman (2011 series) #43 (October 2015), art by Des Taylor

I've been reading Bombshells since the beginning and enjoying it immensely. Each digital and floppy issue is imaginative, female- and gay-friendly, fun, and most of all, inspiring.


Variant Bombshells cover art for Batman/Superman #23 (October 2015), art by Des Taylor

The design and artwork harkens back to the Golden Age of Comics and the Dark Days of World War II, and gives us a cadre of never-say-die woman warriors to look up to and thrill to their exploits.


Variant Bombshells cover art for Superman/Wonder Woman #20 (October 2015), pencils by Terry Dodson, inks by Rachel Dodson

Good girl art merged with intelligent and entertaining stories? Count me in!


Variant Bombshells cover art for Justice League (2011 series) #43 (October 2015), art by Emanuela Lupacchino

In comics, the saga of the DC Bombshells isn't over yet, but with powerhouses like this, the War may just end early and victorious for the Allies. Keep 'em flying, girls, and keep inspiring us to resist and defy the evil in the world!

Two-page cover spread art for DC Comics Bombshells #11-12 (June-July 2016); art by Ant Lucia
(Click picture to Fat Girl-size)


So, always remember:


Variant Bombshells cover for Wonder Woman #32 (October 2015), art by Ant Lucia

PS: I heartily recommend the gorgeous The Art of DC Comics Bombshells coffee-table book!