David Mack

Dark Horse Pushes 12 Creator-Owned Series For SDCC
Dark Horse Pushes 12 Creator-Owned Series For SDCC
Dark Horse Pushes 12 Creator-Owned Series For SDCC
Over the last twelve days, Dark Horse has thrown a spotlight on twelve new creator-owned titles that they plan to promote at this year's San Diego Comic-Con. The series include the Fight Club sequel from Chuck Palahniuk and Cameron Stewart, a new Hellboy series from Mike Mignola and John Arcudi, and Joëlle Jones and Jamie S. Rich's Lady Killer. Also in the mix; new series from Jeff Lemire, Matt Kindt, Rafael Albuquerque, and Cullen Bunn, and sequels to Colder, from Paul Tobin and Juan Ferreyra, and Alabaster, from Caitlin R. Kiernan and Joëlle Jones.
Six Things The New 'Alice Cooper' Comic Series Should Include
Six Things The New 'Alice Cooper' Comic Series Should Include
Six Things The New 'Alice Cooper' Comic Series Should Include
The world of comics fans who also love larger-than-life horror rock acts from the 1970s (so everyone who read Kiss: Psycho Circus) was abuzz Thursday upon news of a new Dynamite Entertainment Alice Cooper comic series by writer Joe Harris (The X-Files), artist Eman Casallos (The Ninjettes) and cover artist David Mack (Kabuki). Dynamite's description of the new series, which launches in September, touts it as the story of Cooper's secret role as "The Lord of Nightmares." He's apparently been locked out of his kingdom by a usurper and is struggling to regain his title. That sounds pretty cool, but does it really encompass all that is Alice Cooper? We don't think so. Here are some other aspects of Cooper we hope to see in the comic's pages.
Best Art Ever (This Week)
Best Art Ever (This Week)
Best Art Ever (This Week)
  We make a regular practice at ComicsAlliance of spotlighting particular artists or specific bodies of work, as well as the special qualities of comic book storytelling, but because cartoonists, illustrators and their fans share countless numbers of great pinups, fan art and other illustrations on sites like Flickr, Tumblr, DeviantArt and seemingly infinite art blogs that we’ve created Best Art E
Best Art Ever (This Week): Jim Henson, Alien, Amethyst, Street Fighter
Best Art Ever (This Week): Jim Henson, Alien, Amethyst, Street Fighter
Best Art Ever (This Week): Jim Henson, Alien, Amethyst, Street Fighter
We make a regular practice at ComicsAlliance of spotlighting particular artists or specific bodies of work, but because cartoonists, illustrators and their fans share countless numbers of great images on sites like Flickr, Tumblr, DeviantArt and seemingly infinite art blogs that we’ve created Best Art Ever (This Week), a weekly depository for just some of the pieces of especially compelling artwor
Marvel Unveils ‘I Am Captain America’ Variant Covers [Art]
Marvel Unveils ‘I Am Captain America’ Variant Covers [Art]
Marvel Unveils ‘I Am Captain America’ Variant Covers [Art]
To coincide with this summer's Captain America: The First Avenger feature film, Marvel has commissioned a series of themed variant covers to be made available with comics on sale in June and July. Titles from across the line will have alternate "I Am Captain America" cover artwork depicting real world Americans of various vocations and ethnicities in the idiom of Captain America... Read
Marvel’s ‘Alias’ Heads to TV as ‘AKA Jessica Jones’ with ‘Twilight’ Screenwriter
Marvel’s ‘Alias’ Heads to TV as ‘AKA Jessica Jones’ with ‘Twilight’ Screenwriter
Marvel’s ‘Alias’ Heads to TV as ‘AKA Jessica Jones’ with ‘Twilight’ Screenwriter
While development of Guillermo del Toro and David Eick's version of The Hulk has been public knowledge since news broke last month, it looks like Marvel's first new live-action television series will actually be AKA Jessica Jones, based on the MAX Comics series Alias by Brian Michael Bendis that took a gritter look at the Marvel Universe through the eyes of a former superheroine turned private inv
Comics FutureStars: The High School Yearbook of the Comics Industry
Comics FutureStars: The High School Yearbook of the Comics Industry
Comics FutureStars: The High School Yearbook of the Comics Industry
If you ever need a reminder that the early '90s were a strange, strange time for the comics industry, then look no further than Comics FutureStars. Released by Majestic Entertainment in 1993, FutureStars was a showcase for nearly a hundred artists who were thought to be the next wave of up-and-comers who would ride the infamous boom to stardom...

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