Interview with Award Winning Finnish Graphic Artist Petri Hiltunen
A dual-language interview with Finnish cartoonist and comic artist Petri Hiltunen
A dual-language interview with Finnish cartoonist and comic artist Petri Hiltunen
In this week’s viewing: Concrete Revolutio mixes it up further with Martian monsters, Iron-Blooded Orphans makes it into orbit, and more!
In the spirit of its predecessor, the return of Weirdbook with issue 31 is simply here to entertain us with fresh new “weird” stories from a talented team of writers.
For Halloween, Steve looks at one of the oldest, and perhaps the best-known “monster movie” of them all, James Whale’s “Frankenstein,” starring Boris Karloff.
Just remember to look both ways before you cross the street and don’t eat all your candy all on one night.
Read an exclusive three chapter excerpt from Ed Greenwood’s Hellmaw: Your World Is Doomed
In this week’s viewing: Kagewani gets down to business, Concrete Revolutio has barely begun to complicate, and more!
This week Steve drops back ten years to review an underapreciated movie, “Constantine,” with Keanu Reeves and Rachel Weisz, telling us why he thinks the movie deserves another look.
In this week’s viewing: The final commentary lineup for the season is whittled down, but not by much!
Penumbra is looking for submissions: Axxon is looking for Columbian authors, plus – new releases, new films and new events!
Readers will be taken back as they discover a new kind of old hero in the graphic novel collection MONO Vol. 1 by Liam Sharp, Ben Wolstenholme, and Fin Cramb.
Craft and moodiness, ghosts and romance in Guillermo del Toro’s Crimson Peak.
In this week’s viewing: The start of fall premiere week runs the usual gamut from tired formulas to fascinating experiments.
The audio publication of Locke and Key by Joe Hill and Gabriel Rodriguez give a new perspective to the macabre world that fans have enjoyed for over half a decade.
In this week’s viewing: Three terrific shows come to a close.
If there’s one trend that really has me smiling this season, it’s the unusually high number of anime-original shows.
In this week’s viewing: Rokka sort of ends, and more!
In this week’s viewing: Hypotheses fall by the wayside as it’s time to stop hinting and start revealing.
The feature length films of 1940 hold quite a few suprises.
Every single author writing professionally in the field in 1940.
A series devoted to helping voters select the 1941 Retrospective Hugo Awards.
In this week’s viewing: Writers are taking it easy, except for the ones at Gatchaman Crowds insight which have more things to say!
The world’s greatest detective crashes into Clive Barker’s infamous realm of horror
Filled with airships, dragons, zombies, robots, and a wide array of other gear driven inventions, Lincoln’s Wizard is a fresh Steampunk take on the War Between the States.
Early science fiction and fantasy magazines of the twentieth century, of which Amazing Stories was chief, employed artists for their interior illustrations who could produce images of great variety using only ink applied to paper.
In this week’s viewing: Lots of important flashbacks– try not to get lost!
In this week’s viewing: Charlotte and Rokka uncork fantastic new powers, and more!
Buddie steps in for Kirkman and finally reveals (copyrights attached) what caused the zompocalypse!
In this week’s viewing: How to develop characters by killing people off, and more!

Recent Comments