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Warren Ellis is having a crack at reimagining the Project Superpowers universe, and Blackcross #1 hits in March. We’ve had an advance peek and it’s not what might be expected, with a strong horror bent. Here’s some brand new pages of Colton Worley’s art to give you a taste, as well as variant covers by Jae Lee, Gabriel Hardman, Declan Shalvey and Tula Lotay.
All small towns have secrets. All small towns have ghosts. Blackcross, in the Pacific North West of America, has more secrets than most. And it is being haunted by something impossible. BLACKCROSS, a supernatural extension of the PROJECT SUPERPOWERS mythos, is a ghost story about something reaching out from the other side of the night, through the forest and mist of this remote town, to grasp at the hearts of a handful of people who may not find out that they’re the targets of a strange killer until it’s much, much too late.
TweetIntroducing the best crime-fighting comic on the shelves right now: The Spider. No, not that Spider, but this one from Dynamite Entertainment that you quite possibly haven’t been reading. But fear not! The first trade collection has just been released, making this a handy time to catch up and enjoy the first 6 issues in one delicious [...]
Seconded. Dynamite’s Spider has been a great read from the get go. Suspensful, pulpy plot plus fantastic visuals by Colton Worley. The John Cassaday covers don’t hurt either.
I buy it.
Although unless ‘Masks’ is a tale told out of continuity, the Spider is now part of a larger universe.
Thanks for the kind words. Always glad to hear when people like The Spider.
I don’t want to short David Liss, ’cause he certainly carried his creative weight, but let me echo that Worley is tremendous here. This may be the best visual representation any pulp hero has ever gotten in comics.
Mike
[...] The Beat – The Spider – Terror of the Zombie Queen [...]
Jeremy – the John Cassaday covers are excellent! I was remiss in not mentioning them as well.
saipaman – I confess I haven’t read Masks (though it’s on my list) but so far at least none of The Spider books have featured other characters or seen plots that go off page and into another book… I had forgotten that the character is also in Masks though!
Colton – glad you like! I’ve been raving about this comic to everyone, and I’m in complete agreement with Mike there.
An absolutely great read, and Worley definitely killed it on the art.
I picked up the first two issues -but then missed a few. I liked the book alot (great ending to the first issue) but somehow missed subsequent issues. Thanks for the review- I’m gonna get the trade.
[...] The Beat: Review – The Pulp Fiction of The Spider, Terror of the Zombie Queen [...]