Omar Francia

Review: The Scene of the Crime is the Story in 'Mercury Heat'
Review: The Scene of the Crime is the Story in 'Mercury Heat'
Review: The Scene of the Crime is the Story in 'Mercury Heat'
Doing a police procedural in a fantasy setting isn't an entirely new idea in comics. Antony Johnston and Justin Greenwood launched the genre into a fresh orbit last year with The Fuse. Before that, Top 10 and Powers mashed it up with superhero universes. Just last week, the first issue of Si Spurrier and Jeff Stokely's The Spire dragged it into a Jim Henson-esque fantasy world. Now, with Mercury Heat, Kieron Gillen and Omar Francia have transported the murder mystery far enough into the future that Murder She Wrote is studied as one of the classics, and far enough from Earth to reach the solar system's smallest, hottest planet. This first issue doesn't quite reveal how Mercury Heat is going to stack up against the competition, but it does introduce a fascinating, dense setting.
The ‘Mass Effect’ Of a Free iPhone Comic From Dark Horse
The ‘Mass Effect’ Of a Free iPhone Comic From Dark Horse
The ‘Mass Effect’ Of a Free iPhone Comic From Dark Horse
Since its debut this past Tuesday, "Mass Effect 2" has been clogging trending topics on social networks, forcing gamers to call in sick to work and even gaining the attention of Hollywood with its intense brand of action and sci-fi. But comic fans don't necessarily have to shell out for the price of admission to see what all the futuristic fuss is about...