The new Peanuts movie opens Friday, November 6, from 20th Century Fox and Blue Sky Studios. The Snoopy Industrial Complex, perennially active, has kicked into high gear, circulating the newly-3D ...
Last week, Tyler Crook’s “The Lonesome Hunters: The Wolf Child” wrapped up. It was not only the best issue of the series so far, but I think it’s arguably the best comic Crook has made to date. So, ...
The webcomic creator is never far from their audience. Be it through social media, public email addresses, Discord servers, or simply the comments section beneath a page, there is a rapport and a ...
At New York Comic Con this past October, I was introduced to Jason Rodriguez by our mutual pal Joshua Hale Fialkov. Jason (editor on “Elk’s Run” and “Postcards”), was there talking about “Colonial ...
Welcome to Mignolaversity, Multiversity Comics’ dedicated column for all things Mike Mignola. Since we’re coming up on the twentieth anniversary of Christopher Golden and Mike Mignola’s Hellboy: The ...
Infantino’s natural sense for cover design was at the top of the field, and Marvel head Stan Lee took notice of the change. Perhaps fearing the move might prove successful, Lee tried to cut it off at ...
An English teacher with a PhD in language, literacy, and culture, Paul is also host of the Comics Syllabus podcast at Multiversity Comics. He tweets about comics and culture at @TwoPlai.
Oh my God! Matt reviewing ANOTHER obscure Grant Morrison title? No! Unheard of! He never does that! The Mystery Play, at it’s most basic, is a murder mystery. A small town is putting on a play ...
Faith Erin Hicks’s “Hockey Girl Loves Drama Boy” is a romance that’s unashamed of being a romance and a comic that unabashedly indulges in artistic flourishes that are so very comic booky. The very ...
“Black Magick” #1, by writer Greg Rucka and artist Nicola Scott (with color assists by Chiara Arena), introduces us to Detective Rowan Black. The balance of her separate lives as cop and practitioner ...
The character of Richie Rich, the poor little rich boy, debuted as a backup feature in “Little Dot” #1 in 1953, as part of Harvey Comics’ successful humor line for children. There was no fanfare ...
There are a lot of comics out there, but some stand out head and shoulders above the pack. With “Don’t Miss This,” we want to spotlight those series we think need to be on your pull list. At Marvel ...