Friday, March 31, 2017

REVIEW: Man-Thing #1

Writer: R.L. Stine
Artist: German Peralta
Colors: Rachelle Rosenberg
Review: Madman

I was so looking forward to a Man-Thing book starting…and then…R.L. Stine…    
I have specific tastes, things I need, as a superhero fan boy AND a giant-sized swampy Man-Thing is in the top of 10 fantasy wish list…no regrets.    
In my world Man-Thing is in this weird little family that I can’t really explain.  You see, for some strange reason, I have this weird little trinity that lives deep inside my inner comicdom… In my world, Man-Thing, Swamp Thing, and the one and only Toxic Avenger are the best of friends. It’s permanently carved into my brain, and it won’t go away. They get their own category in the card catalog of my think organ. No clue, I don’t know why, so stop asking me… Over here that’s the “radioactive spider” drawer, that’s the “tabletop gaming” file. Over there, that’s the “things necessary to survive” section... Oh, there are the guys sitting on a muddy swamp island. I know. Weird.        

Friday, March 17, 2017

REVIEW: Manifest Destiny #26

Writer: Chris Dingess
Pencils: Matthew Roberts
Inks: Tony Akins & Stefano Gaudiano
Colors: Owen Gieni
Review: Art Bee

To all of our HCB readers, we apologize. For the past couple years Manifest Destiny has made it on the list of Hammy Award winners, but none of us have had the balls to write a review of this amazing series. This trend ends today.

The first issue of Manifest Destiny hit comic book store shelves November 13, 2013. When it came out, it did not even register on my radar. My LCBS owner told me about it and convinced me to give it a read with the promise of a refund if I didn’t like it. It was love at first read. Chris Dingess has cleverly used a real historical event as the muse for this epic fantastical story of a cross-continental journey.

Since the start of the series, Lewis, Clark, and their ragtag group of “soldiers” have faced demon-like frogs, hostile natives, infectious plant life, and many other dangers. Some time ago Sacagawea joined the band as a guide and is currently pregnant. The last story arc was entitled “Sasquatch”; it was quite the event. The entire six issue arc was filled with large cycloptic beasts, insanity, cannibalism, and so much more. What really makes the series so addicting is the delicate blend of adventure and horror.      

Friday, March 10, 2017

HCB Two-in-One

Reviews: Madman

Rat Queens #1

Writer: Kurtis J. Wiebe
Artist: Owen Gieni
Letterer: Ryan Ferrier

Rat Queens is back! Happy day, clowns, wizbangs, and stuff! I honestly can’t remember when the last issue of the first volume came out off hand, but it’s been a long damn time. So long that we questioned if our beloved band of riffraff were gone for good.

A few things have changed in Rat Queen Land; one being the obvious reboot back to #1 and the other being the fact we’ve another new artist on the book, one Mr. Owen Gieni. I have no clue who he is, but after reading his first issue behind the scribbles, I’m not going to complain. Gieni will be the fourth artist on this book and it just might be a cursed gig. Original artist Ron Upchurch got himself arrested for domestic violence. Stjepan Sejic took over but soon had to quit because of health reasons, and Tess Fowler took point. I’ve no clue why Fowler was replaced but was saddened to hear of her departure, because her issues were pure eye candy. Gieni will do though.      

Friday, March 3, 2017

The Shotgun Blast!

(Apologies, McGirk...)
Reviews: Will Dubbeld

Doctor Strange #1.MU

Writer: Chip Zdarsky
Artist: Julian Lopez

So the Monsters Unleashed event isn't quite what I expected. Rather than Mole Man rallying a horde of 1950s monsters to conquer the surface world, apparently giant critters called Leviathons are wreaking havoc and heroes and good-guy monsters team up for the fight.
This particular tie-in focused on Dr. Strange and Googam, Son of Goom, and their fight against an escaped Leviathon. Strange is low on magic due to events transporting in his solo book and Googam is low on smarts, but high on moxie.
The art is phenomenal, and the story is much better than expected. Cameos from Spidey and a My Little Pony reference add to the chuckles and distract the reader from the unoriginal Leviathon premise, which seems pretty similar to Pacific Rim's Kaiju or the MUTOs from Gareth Edward's Godzilla flick.