Modern Age Comics
love-and-radiation:

Batgirl, by Tristan Wilder. From the now ancient “Draw Batgirl” meme.

love-and-radiation:

Batgirl, by Tristan Wilder. From the now ancient “Draw Batgirl” meme.

Emma Stone & Andrew Garfield | on the set ‘The Amazing Spider Man 2’ NYC [May 18,2013]

Source: thebeautyofsolitude

nabokoko:

 

nabokoko:

 

Source: bluearrow126

Dream Thief #1 Review

Review by Alexander Moser

What would you do if you woke up in a strange room and didn’t know where you were, or what you’d done the night before to get there?

That’s the question Dream Thief repeatedly asks the reader. John Lincoln, a pot-smoking, unemployed average joe doesn’t seem to have much going for him, except for his friendship with a former college football star. One night, the two go out at a museum and steal an Aborigine mask. The next morning, John realizes he is wearing the mask and has just killed his girlfriend. Somehow, he also gained memories of his girlfriend along with a man she killed. John doesn’t seem to question the nature of his memories, but instead questions the marijuana he smoked that night. After nearly killing a pair of drug dealers over some potentially laced weed, he falls asleep…waking up once again in front of a pile of dead bodies.

Jai Nitz works his way through a solid start to a new story, introducing the main characters, addressing their wants, needs and faults. Lincoln is clearly not the world’s greatest hero. Lincoln’s voice is clearly defined in Dream Thief. Nitz brings the concept in halfway into the story—showing us the magical mask and it’s tremendous powers. While we don’t get a perfect sense of what’s going on, the dialogue keeps the story moving, coupled by some terrific artwork.

Greg Smallwood is really the star of the book. He packs detail into each panel, meticulously constructed to carry a different vantage point and include details that will push the story ahead. He uses thick white gutters in order to push the panels out, making each stand out against the page background. Towards the end, Smallwood gets creative with his layouts, drawing ferociously large page-spreads that feel as supernatural as the story itself. He uses coloring effects near the end when John punches drug dealers to mirror his actions with the memories he learned, showing a nifty trick with artwork and coloring.

But the true moment of the book is where the image and word collide—pages 1, 11 and 19 all have similar layouts. Coupled with the first line, ”What would you do…” we see a sense of repetition that is emblematic of the story and the form of a graphic novel.

An amazing blend of word and image, Dream Thief is the next big book to pick up. The artwork alone will sell the book, regardless of what word balloons lay within.

THE GOOD

-Stellar, experimental artwork

-Story does a good job of telling us about protagonist

THE BAD

-Plot doesn’t move along until late into the book

9/10

Slade Wilson | Deathstroke

Source: crazeace

super-hero-center:

wonderful art of Ed Benes and my colors to compose by ~dinei

super-hero-center:

wonderful art of Ed Benes and my colors to compose by ~dinei

Source: super-hero-center

Source: nicothefett

thegoddamnblogman:

Man of Steel - Jeremy Roberts | More | Superman | Zod | MoS

Source: thegoddamnblogman


Batman, don’t do anything stupid!

Batman, don’t do anything stupid!

Source: batfeels

typingwriter:

AVENGERS: HawkEye Art by Francesco Francavilla
New favorite artist of mine.

typingwriter:

AVENGERS: HawkEye 
Art by Francesco Francavilla

New favorite artist of mine.

Source: francescofrancavilla.com

About

"An informal name for the period in the history of mainstream American comic books generally considered to last from the mid-1980s until present day."


Modern Age Comics is an opinionated comics blog based out of the east coast. Here you will find pictures, news, art, videos, our reviews, previews, purchases, giveaways, cosplay, con coverage, along with all things with relevance to our current era of superheroes and comic books. Every Wednesday we post the comics we pulled and shortly after post reviews. Now if there are any questions about anything we are reading or posted or even just a general comic question feel free to message or email us. #macomics


Many posts on this blog are the property of its respective owners. All content viewed on this page was attained from all kinds of public sources, which is in public domain. We do not claim to own any exclusive rights. Banner art by Bryan Taylor, Logo design by Lisa Weiss, Reviews by Alex Moser, Facebook page lead by Eric Grella, on duty tech support Dmitri Turnbull. All posts on all formats of this blog are permitted by founder/producer Kyle W. Faucher.


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