Guns

Jon Burgerman Turns Film Posters Into Violent Action Scenes
Jon Burgerman Turns Film Posters Into Violent Action Scenes
Jon Burgerman Turns Film Posters Into Violent Action Scenes
I'm not really here to spoil your weekend with The Hard Questions, but I think there's an interesting debate you can have about whether advertising can truly be art. Like, we all have movie posters that we love, but does the idea of trying to sell you something change the nature of art? Does turning an aesthetic into a commodity cheapen it, and if so, what about all the Renaissance art that was commissioned from working artists in order to do just that? Is the Sistine Chapel really any different from Drew Struzan's Indiana Jones posters? Folks, I don't know. I do, however, know that you can take existing advertisements and transform them into something that's fun and engaging. That's exactly what artist Jon Burgerman has done with a series of photos called "Head Shots," where he takes the standard action movie poster to its logically violent conclusion while traveling through the subway. It's a pretty fantastic use of the stuff that's already out in public, and you can check out a few of the best ones below
ComicsAlliance Reviews Todd McFarlane’s ‘Spawn’ Year One, Part 2: Justice & Payback
ComicsAlliance Reviews Todd McFarlane’s ‘Spawn’ Year One, Part 2: Justice & Payback
ComicsAlliance Reviews Todd McFarlane’s ‘Spawn’ Year One, Part 2: Justice & Payback
Two weeks ago, Image Comics shipped the 220th issue of Spawn, marking 20 years of continuous publication of the supernatural antihero series created by Todd McFarlane. To help commemorate the 20th anniversary of Spawn, ComicsAlliance is embarking on a venture that is every bit as ambitious: a four-part overview of the first "year" of its publication (Being an early Image book, Spawn som
Rob Liefeld’s Dreams Are One Step Closer To Reality
Rob Liefeld’s Dreams Are One Step Closer To Reality
Rob Liefeld’s Dreams Are One Step Closer To Reality
Despite having a solid twenty years of Cable comics to draw inspiration from, military science has yet to create a rifle with the diameter of a good-sized oak tree that can still be carried around by one person, but as we learned this morning, the people at Area51Tactical...
Guns Week Begins at ‘Overcompensating’
Guns Week Begins at ‘Overcompensating’
Guns Week Begins at ‘Overcompensating’
When Jeffrey Rowland's quasi-autobiographical webcomic "Overcompensating" recently printed a strip about guns -- and an accompanying t-shirt reading "Keep Your Bullets Out of My Body" -- readers could have been forgiven for thinking he was taking a stand in support of gun control...
Keep Your Bullets Out of My Body: The T-Shirt
Keep Your Bullets Out of My Body: The T-Shirt
Keep Your Bullets Out of My Body: The T-Shirt
Topatoco has a new shirt for sale pulled from a recent "Overcompensating" strip where Jeffrey Rowland took a bold anti-getting shot policy. As he explains at the store:"To be completely clear, I don't think people shouldn't be allowed to own guns...