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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Brian K Vaughan, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 9 of 9
1. INTERVIEW: Brian K. Vaughan and Steve Skroce Reflect On Their Wartime Epic, WE STAND ON GUARD

WSOGBannerBy Chris Hayden In 2015, hit writer Brian K. Vaughan (Saga, Y: The Last Man) and acclaimed artist Steve Skroce (The Amazing Spider-Man, Cable) released the six issue miniseries We Stand on Guard through Image Comics. The story is set one hundred years ahead of the present and focuses on a group of Canadian citizens […]

1 Comments on INTERVIEW: Brian K. Vaughan and Steve Skroce Reflect On Their Wartime Epic, WE STAND ON GUARD, last added: 6/1/2016
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2. Something Old, Something Lu 2/5/16 — Does MIRROR #1 Gleam? Do the PAPER GIRLS Stumble?

MirrorBannerWhat comics are worth your money this week? Managing Editor Alex Lu is here to let you know.

6 Comments on Something Old, Something Lu 2/5/16 — Does MIRROR #1 Gleam? Do the PAPER GIRLS Stumble?, last added: 2/6/2016
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3. MATT CHATS: Albert Monteys on Bringing His ‘Universe!’ to Panel Syndicate [EXCLUSIVE ART]

2015-11-18 16.11.04Brian K. Vaughan, Marcos Martin and friends made a big splash with their digital-first, pay-what-you-want series The Private Eye. But they always intended for the publisher they created, Panel Syndicate, to house more than just their stories. The first and to date the only other work to appear on Panel Syndicate is Universe! from cartoonist […]

0 Comments on MATT CHATS: Albert Monteys on Bringing His ‘Universe!’ to Panel Syndicate [EXCLUSIVE ART] as of 12/16/2015 11:45:00 AM
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4. Panel Syndicate Quietly Releases New Series “Barrier” from Vaughan, Martin, Vicente

barrier_coverPanel Syndicate quietly releases new series 'Barrier" from Vaughan, Martin, and Vicente and you should pick it up!

0 Comments on Panel Syndicate Quietly Releases New Series “Barrier” from Vaughan, Martin, Vicente as of 1/1/1900
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5. Image Comics Month-to Month Sales: October 2015 – It’s Only a Paper Moon

by David Carter Greetings, sales charts fans! It’s time once again to look at Image Comics’s sales figures. Just a reminder that I’m not doing this as a permanent gig; just filling in until Heidi finds someone to take on the indy month-to-month chart. Please refer to July’s column for a preamble and explanation as […]

8 Comments on Image Comics Month-to Month Sales: October 2015 – It’s Only a Paper Moon, last added: 11/25/2015
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6. Rumor: FX to Produce Brian K. Vaughan’s “Y: THE LAST MAN” for TV

According to Hollywood Reporter, FX has a Y: the Last Man TV series in the works.  Written by Brian K. Vaughan and illustrated by Pia Guerra, the Vertigo comic was Vaughan’s breakout success and led to his producer role on ABC’s Lost.  Vaughan is slated to be joined by Nina Jacobson and Brad Simpson from Color Force, a studio […]

2 Comments on Rumor: FX to Produce Brian K. Vaughan’s “Y: THE LAST MAN” for TV, last added: 10/15/2015
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7. Devil Dinosaur Visits the Stately Beat Manor Staff Comics Pull for 8/5/15

Last week some of our most elite staffers that contribute to The Beat found themselves in an impossible situation. When our entire team worked on apprehending Spider-Man rogue Mysterio, he suddenly opened a portal to a brand new comic book world — one very familiar to those who are acquainted to the work of Jack Kirby…that’s […]

0 Comments on Devil Dinosaur Visits the Stately Beat Manor Staff Comics Pull for 8/5/15 as of 8/5/2015 6:01:00 PM
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8. Brian K. Vaughan’s PRIVATE EYE announces a new issue, six-figures sales

 Brian K. Vaughans PRIVATE EYE announces a new issue, six figures salesThe good news is that a new issue of THE PRIVATE EYE is available. This webcomcis by Brian K. Vaughan, Marcos Martin and Munsta Vicente posits a world where an eruption in the cloud has made privacy the most valued social element.

Oh did you say “torn from today’s headlines”? When this started running last year it seemed a little farfetechd but after the burst cloud hgas spilled all of our secrets, BKV looks prescient again.

THE PRIVATE EYE is run on a “pay what you want” DRM-free download scheme, and it seems that readers want to pay quite a bit. Vaughan announced that the book has already sold more than six figures in both issues and in dollars:

Even though readers can still pay whatever they want for our DRM-free files (including nothing!), artist Marcos Martin, colorist Muntsa Vicente and I are proud to reveal that The Private Eye is already well into the six figures for both issues downloaded AND dollars earned… and that’s without advertising, corporate backers, Comixology-like distributors, or even a Kickstarter campaign. It’s all because of small contributions from readers around the world, so sincere thanks again for your coverage of our ongoing experiment.

Given that there are NO MIDDLE men for The Private Eye, that’s six figures of pure profit for well deserving creators.

Vaughan has been teasing an expansion of the Panel Syndicate tem for a while, and in his email he nopted:

And we’re also excited to say that we’ve just received the first issue of our NEXT new series at Panel Syndicate, by a very surprising creator we’ll be announcing soon. Stay tuned.  

For now, please enjoy Marcos’ striking cover for #8, featuring Gramps, an elderly Millennial struggling to make sense of the year 2076…

 

4 Comments on Brian K. Vaughan’s PRIVATE EYE announces a new issue, six-figures sales, last added: 9/22/2014
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9. REVIEW: The Private Eye #1 by Brian K. Vaughan and Marcos Martin

The Private Eye #1 isn’t about a detective – it’s literally about people looking for privacy from the public gaze. Following a somewhat simplistic central conceit, Brian K Vaughan, Marcos Martin and Muntsa Vicente manage to create an interesting world for the first issue of their new digital-only series. The characters are a little slight, but the world-building here is excellent, and makes for a decent first issue, with plenty of promise for the rest of the series. You can find the issue here.

privateeye REVIEW: The Private Eye #1 by Brian K. Vaughan and Marcos Martin

The premise of The Private Eye is that at some point the internet basically implodes, probably through nefarious means. Every inch of private information gets made public, with massive damage worldwide. As everybody nowadays shares everything about themselves with the rest of the world,  private photos, conversations, bank details, and everything gets shown to everyone else. Families collapse, businesses fall, and it looks like the press get put on an extremely tight leash. The Private Eye is set after this event, focusing on the public backlashing against their previous happiness to make themselves open books.

Not particularly a unique concept, but the creative team use it for some excellent sight gags, creating an uneven sense of humour which moves through every page of the issue. In their efforts to hide from the world, everybody now wears a mask or holographic facial mask, or paints their face – in essence, everybody becomes a totally unique individual. Vaughan doesn’t swell too much on this for the moment, leaving aside any temptation to moralise. Instead, the idea is conveyed solely through Marcos Martin’s artwork – although more accurately, it’s conveyed through Vicente’s colouring.

Vicente is the undisputed star of this first issue, taking Martin’s work and creating some blunt, strikingly coloured patterns for the world the characters live in. Buildings are bright green, the costumes are garish and manic, and the starkness of the colouring creates a futuristic landscape. It helps that Martin is drawing hovercars and people wearing squids on their heads, of course, but Vicente’s colouring does more for the issue than anything else here.  Her work is utterly fantastic, and should be one of the main reasons you continue picking up the book.

Surprisingly, Marcos Martin’s art visibly falters halfway through the issue. Whilst his layouts are well-executed and stylish, his art becomes weaker and scratchier towards the end, with the final sequence particularly wobbly. Marcos Martin on his worst day is still one of the finest artists around, with an exceptional use of poise and placement in his characters – but his work here starts to struggle partway through. His characters are well designed and entertaining, but proportion and perspective start to fall off-kilter in sequences where they aren’t supposed to, and the final few pages reveal a sketchier, less detailed side of his work.

Vaughan’s writing is, as you may expect, very strong indeed. His dialogue has picked up greatly over the years, and he falls into familiar habits less often – there’s no fact-dumps here, or the length moralistic lessons you can find sometimes in Ex Machina. Instead, this is a book which is far more confident in its central premise than previous Vaughan works – and so doesn’t reference it. The world simply is, and the creative team are happy to leave it at that. There’s no explanation or analysis given to the situation the characters find themselves in, and the writing leaves enough clues for readers to be able to piece it together themselves.

There are some very interesting quirks in the story, too, which might grow into something. The most noticable is the amount of branding on display. Each page features movie posters, book titles, snack brands, cigarette logos, corporate stores, and more. You can’t turn the page without seeing Kodak’s logo, or the Disney Store, MTV or the LA Times. It appears that whilst this futuristic America has given up and moved on from the internet, there are still some other aspects of corporate sponsorship still on display. I’ll be very interested indeed to see why the creative team are doing this, and how the motif recurs.

The second quirk of the story, which gives it a little distance from similar works, is how the press appear to have been bought out by the government, and freelancing has been dissolved. There appears to be a conspiracy building in the background, and the main hook – for me – for issue #2 will be how that subplot is developed.

Although there are some wobbles, The Private Eye #1 is a solid first issue. It isn’t revelatory – it’s just a strongly designed comic, with a brilliant sense of panel space and layout, wonderful colouring, and a story which does just enough to pitch issue #2. The characterisation will likely grow once we’re a few issues in, but at the moment the main reason to try this series is the world itself. Set on a familiar foundation, Vaughan, Martin and Vicente manage to build something uniquely different and odd. Try it for yourself!

Steve doesn’t hide from the public eye – he’s one of those very idiots who shares too much of his personal life online. Find him on Twitter, or via his stumbling webcomic with lovely Isaac Leiro, Stardark City.

4 Comments on REVIEW: The Private Eye #1 by Brian K. Vaughan and Marcos Martin, last added: 4/8/2013
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