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Showing posts with label Ed McGuiness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ed McGuiness. Show all posts

Friday, July 8, 2011

SDCC '11: Marvel Teases New Loeb/McGuinnes Project


This morning Marvel released the following teaser for a new project by the powerhouse superstar creative team of Jeph Loeb and Ed McGuinness (Superman/Batman, Hulk). All will revealed at the Cup o' Joe Panel at the San Diego Comic Con on Saturday 23, 2011 at 2:45 PM.

At last year's SDCC, a different series was announced from the duo called 'Avengers: 3'. This project was to be released in early 2011 and feature an epic time traveling story featuring Iron Man, Thor, and Captain America. No word yet on what the status of that project is or if '_____ Reborn' has anything to do with it.


Max Beckman is a manager at Pulp Fiction in Long Beach, CA and CheapGraphicNovels.com. You can follow him on Twitter @CheapGNsdotcom and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/pulpfictioncomics. Pulp Fiction can be found on the web at www.pulpfictiononline.com and at 1742 Clark Ave. Long Beach, CA 90815.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Gabriel Hardman Should Have 'Hulk' Covered


I’m usually not a fan of one artist illustrating the cover of a comic book (it’s usually a huge industry name) and another artist completing the interiors. It makes me feel as though I’m being duped. Unless it’s Alex Ross or a Vertigo book, where the artist is not a monthly-title-guy or the cover is meant to set a tone, I prefer to immediately see the goods I’m purchasing.

The most immediate example has been the last two covers of Hulk, which former Hulk Artist Ed McGuiness has drawn (cover for Hulk #25, right). While McGuiness is no slouch, the current artist on the book is Gabriel Hardman and his Hulk is also something to behold (interior from Hulk #25 above). To be fair, Hardman did get one of the variant covers for the last issue—which, incidentally, moved me to pick up this title that I had not been reading.

My assumption is that Marvel wants to remove the Band-Aid slowly for fans of the successful Jeph Loeb/McGuiness run on the book. However, I have immediately become an enormous fan of Hardman’s and think that it has more than enough strength to sell this title. I’m hopeful Hardman will soon get to provide readers with covers that are as impressive as his interior work.

While we’re on the subject, some of Hardman’s amazing pages from issue #26 are on sale at Cadence Comic Art. A perfect holiday gift for any fan of the new Jeff Parker/Hardman run on Hulk (hint inserted here).