team-zissou
Team Zissou
team-zissou

I mostly buy trades, but I'd say:

Japanese monster-fighting soldiers following an ancient scientist who they rescued from Limbo!!!

I'd only read the Hobgoblin issues before too, which are just as great as I remember. The trade collections tend to skip all the issues in between though, since the actual story has him as a recurring antagonist rather than one consistent story arc. It's fun following the subplots in a more coherent way now.

I don't remember the first issue I bought, but I remember Tom DeFalco's run of Fantastic Four in the 90s was the first series I ever loved and bought regularly. I later realized it was all pretty bad and ridiculous, but I had a fun time holding on to all my chromium and die-cut covers as I cleaned out my older

Not sure if anyone's started this one yet.

Of those, I'd say Lando is the only one really worth checking out.

It seemed like they resolved things enough for Harris to return and do cover work for Starman-related projects, but I always had the impression there was some bitterness there. Tony Harris kind of seems like a sour guy.

But I did read it! Wahhhhh

I'd actually recommend it. It's better than any Robinson comic I've read in quite a while, and Harris goes kind of nuts with the layouts.

It's funny that I didn't bother to hop on this thread right away because I knew it'd be inundated with Star Wars commenters, but I knew there would be a surprise if I kept digging far enough.

I actually read the book just now because I didn't want the article to spoil it for me, and it's actually really good! Like really, really surprisingly good. From the sample panels, you can see that Harris' style is a lot different and unlike anything he's done since Starman.

*sympathetically upvotes*

Fraction's run is very much OK. The cast is a little too big and unwieldy, so no one aside from Scott and Emma get much development during it. On the plus side, this was the period in which the X-Men lived in San Francisco, which I enjoyed very much. I actually moved to SF around the same time, and so it felt like an

Before I go to the comic shop, I figure I might want to ask: do you think it'll be 100% necessary to read all the issues of crossover? I was considering only buying the first and last issues, plus the ones that happen in Silk (the only title I'm buying out of the 3). It's more of a financial and shelf

I really feel for you there, especially since there have been stories about people getting shot to death over these interactions in the last couple of years.

I've noticed that older texters seem to have less of an understanding about how to adjust your phone brightness in dark settings. I think that's the part that drives me the craziest.

I think it's mainly for (1) speculators trying to buy an item that will grow in value, (2) people who enjoy collecting rare items, or (3) people who want to collect a special line of limited variant covers - Valiant has actually done some cool ones recently where they have fake CGC ratings on them.

There's a pretty intricate relationship between publishers and retailers when it comes to incentive-based variants. Often, retailers are allowed to order a single variant if they order a certain number of regular issues. There's an artificially produced demand and they're able to raise the prices.

Right. If this is an adaptation in the same setting and it's the same character but now played by a white person, then it's 100% a whitewashing.

I mostly remember the Phantom, the Shadow, and the Rocketeer (my favorite out of all of them - including Batman '89). Such a strange run of movies that were trying to chase a single blockbuster. Has Rabin covered any of these yet?