I can easily see there being some lower - selling titles that appeal to a smaller audience existing digitally at first, then as a trade, but I fully expect to
go into a comic book shop and purchase a print copy of Action Comics # 1000 when that day comes.
Try telling that to the hundreds of thousands of collectors
going into comic shops, rummaging flea markets & yard sales, and going to conventions.
The biggest news, though, is that we're working with a number of major publishers (and important smaller ones) to provide a storefront that contains deluxe digital graphic novels aimed at the «real mainstream,» the audience for graphic novels that reads Maus or Fun Home or Dotter of Her Father's Eyes but would never think of
going into a comic shop guarded by a dodgy life - size statue of She - Hulk... We think the immersive «lean back» experience that tablets provide, along with purchase ease - of - use and the ubiquitous availability that app stores provide, can, if handled right, create a sea change in the consumption of graphic novels — and, if we have our way, the whole thing will have absolutely * nothing * to do with superheroes.
Going into a comics shop and seeing them all arrayed in a display is a totally different experience, and as I don't do it that often, it always has an impact.
Have you seen a lot of usage from non-traditional comic fans (i.e. folks who probably never
go into comic shops?)
As we all know, the people who write on the Internet about comics are a tiny, tiny, tiny portion of the audience, and while they often clamor for diversity and Marvel responds to them, is there a large influx of young women, minorities, queer, and trans people
going into comics shops and buying those diverse titles or at least getting them digitally or in trade?
«You can argue some of those people are
going into comics shops after they got reintroduced, and they are buying books,» Webber said.
Not exact matches
And where do they even sell
comics these days, because I'm sure not
going into that spooky store.
It's
gone from the nightmare it was a year ago
into a source of
comic relief: — RRB -.
hi my name is brandon i am 26 i love to cook and i am big
into comic books and i like to play ps3 i like to
go camping and swimming and i have a son he is 2 and his name is tate
Video games and
comics aren't just things I love, but things I can
go into great analyst about.
It starts off interesting enough, the struggles of a stand up
comic loosely based off of Pete Holmes's life, but Apatow
goes and turns it
into
All these points have
gone into Fate of Two Worlds making the game to a must have for every
comic aficionado.
As the story
goes, DC had originally approved a
comic called The Black Bomber, which would have been about a white guy who transforms
into a black superhero when stressed.
With vulnerability and pain snapping straight
into big laughs, IRON MAN 3 has the potential for some serious emotional whiplash, but where things occasionally steer off - track and threaten to
go a little «Carry On Marvel», the choice to steep the antagonists in such deep - rooted realism prevents this
comic book outing from predictable gimmickry.
... Another
comic book movie reboot is gearing up to
go into production this year in Spawn, and creator and director Todd McFarlane has been chatting about how the title character will communicate in the film, as well as speaking about its hard R - rated tone: «It's funny in Hollywood, if you say you want to do an R - rated movie, they
go like «Oh like Deadpooland like Logan?»
Also, they
went overboard trying to stuff as many elements
into the
comics into one film as possible, instead of taking a scalpel to the overgrown GL mythos.
It's my hope, as rumors have only fueled that hope, that the Fantastic Four will be brought
into the MCU universe to fight Thanos, seeing that in the
comic book (aka The Infinity Gauntlet), nearly the entire Marvel universe
goes to war against Thanos, including various «cosmic» entities like «Galactus» (which I hope, if in the main battle, «looks like the Big G from the
comics).
There's gambling, guns, and plenty of gangsters, but I won't
go into the plot much more than that, as one of the most enjoyable parts of «Get Shorty» is the way it effortlessly moves from one
comic hitch to the next.
The advanced techniques of the Hong Kong action cinema translated from the period kung fu and wuxia film to the modern world of cops and robbers, from swordplay to gunplay, not for the first time (it was preceded
into the present by Jackie Chan's Police Story from the previous year, as well as Cinema City's highly profitable Aces
Go Places series of
comic adventures and a whole host of films from the Hong Kong New Wave like Tsui Hark's own Dangerous Encounters - First Kind, not to mention earlier films like Chang Cheh's Ti Lung - starring Dead End, from 1969), but better than anything before it.
As 20th Century Fox's X-Men spin - off Deadpool gears up to
go into production, T.J. Miller (Transformers: Age of Extinction) has revealed on Twitter that his «comedic» role in the Ryan Reynolds - headlined movie is that of Jack Hammer, a.k.a. Weasel, who in
comic book continuity (and presumably in the film too) is Wade's tech expert and -LSB-...]
I won't
go more
into the story — most comes straight from the original films and story and other bit parts (very few) are wholly new (at least to me and the few folks — some
comic fans — I chatted with afterwards).
And as
comic book films become more prevalent, perhaps this trend of world mashups will
go beyond just shared cinematic universes and
into this weird wave of smashing together disparate properties.
He
goes as far as integrating snippets of anime, clips stylized like J - POP videos, and an opening credits sequence rife with
comic book action bubbles
into his scattershot visual melting pot.
Brie Larson and Armie Hammer star in «Free Fire» - about a deal
gone bad that turns the entire movie
into a bleakly
comic shootout - «Waiting for Godot,» with guns.
I need you all to realize that this is fiction (for now) and that you must
go into this movie with the realization that this is not the same as the
comics and it is a sequel to Winter Soldier, period.
Never read the
comics, but love
going into the mystic.
Burshtein plays all of this for laughs in The Wedding Plan, and though her stylistic hand is a bit too heavy for what's a light comedy at heart, the film does have its choice
comic moments, most notably the many dates Michal
goes on with a series of eccentric suitors, one of whom offers an elaborate rationale for his refusal to look directly
into her eyes throughout their dinner together.
Honoring Daniel Clowes's poker - faced, weird - out
comic book while folding Zwigoff's own neurotic baggage
into the mix, Ghost World made desperation not only morbidly funny but also cheekily enigmatic, moving, and sort of heroic, in a Sisyphus -
goes - to - the - convenience - store way.
«The Evolution of Hulk» is a really cool look at the character's history in
comics, TV and film, while «The Unique Style of Editing Hulk» shows what
went into creating the
comic book panel look.
With the Marvel Cinematic Universe already spanning 13 movies, and DC getting
into the fray with the launch of their Extended Universe, it appears that there are only
going to be more and more
comic book adaptations in the next few years.
Jason Sudeikis as Coach Larry Snyder looks as though he is
going to
go into a stand - up
comic routine most of the time.
Before 2016's Doctor Strange film, we had no idea if Marvel Studios would ever
go as far
into its sci - fi and
comic book concepts as by introducing the theory of the multiverse, of alternate realities and dimensions and parallel universes that are living side - by - side with one another.
The last time Josh Brolin stepped
into the lead role of
comic book adaptation it was the critically maligned «Jonah Hex» in 2010, so let's just say the actor isn't
going to make the same mistake eight years later.
Comic books are the new
go - to genre for Hollywood so anything that can tap
into the fanboy market from the more traditional (Spider - Man, Batman Begins) to the less conventional (V for Vendetta [Blu - ray]-RRB- quickly gets turned
into a feature film.
But if you're
going to have a
comic book depth, it's not a bad choice to bring aboard Ron Underwood to direct, as he has proven to be able to elevate hokey material
into entertaining fare, as he did with Tremors and Heart and Souls.
Billy Crudup, a great actor, does the best he can with the
comic's most celebrated character, Dr. Manhattan, a physicist who gets transformed by a lab accident
into an enormous, walking, talking, glowing A-bomb and who teleports to Mars whenever he needs to
go to his quiet place.
LEGO Batman 3: Beyond Gotham is swooping
into New York
Comic Con 2014 to take convention
goers on a galactic adventure in the DC Universe with...
The passe
comic pair who gave us «Never Been Kissed» tamp down Amy Schumer's
go - to coarseness
into PG - 13 territory for «I Feel Pretty,» an almost - empowering, never - quite - hilarious farce that gets by on charm.
Hugh Jackman and Liev Schreiber
go into a berserker rage over this latest
comic book adaptation.
Bottom line is, as perfectly as Ryan Reynolds played the Merc With A Mouth, it was
going to take more than fourth wall - breaking and superhero satire to propel a
comic book movie
into Oscar conversation.
The Stones / Gems / big shiny things that make everything
go bye bye were first introduced in 1972's Marvel Premiere, but really brought
into the
comic mainstream in 1990/91's The Infinity Gauntlet.
We didn't want to play
into any of the stereotypes found in the
comic books, some of which
go back as far as 50 years or more.
Franco
goes on at length about the Sax Rohmer and Edgar Wallace / Republic Pictures Fu Manchu series and his affection for it and for the
comic - book series that sent a whole generation of kids
into a frenzy over the Yellow Peril, God bless»em.
I'm not
going to get
into what mutants have appeared in the series, or even the history — because I haven't read the
comics and summarizing it would take forever — so there's Wikipedia for that.
This
goes a long way tin capturing the look and feel of the
comic it derives from, and while it is an adequate Cliff Notes version of its print counterpart, what doesn't translate so well is the heart, soul, blood, sweat and tears put
into every page by Moore and Gibbons.
Admittedly I
went into Captain America: The First Avenger as a relative novice to the character's history and status as one of Marvel
Comic's oldest heroic icons.
So this was a chance to explore that more, and once you
go into space in a Marvel
comic you run
into all sorts of cosmic characters that I'm very excited to showcase.
I literally just came back from the library to pick up books I'd put on hold, and the holds pickup section is right next to the
comics section, so every time I
go I'm just pouring
comic books
into my hands almost at random.
ComiXology does a nice job of organizing
comics into story arcs, but Marvel just throws them up there, so it's a little hard to know where to start and where to
go next.