The following is a list of all comic books, graphic novels and specialty items that will be available this week and shipped to comic book stores who have placed orders for them.
12 Gauge Comics
Sherwood TX #2 (Of 5), $3.99
215 Ink
Enormous #3 (Cover A Mehdi Cheggour), $3.99
Enormous #3 (Cover B Sarah Delaine), $3.99
Action Lab Entertainment
Skyward #9 (Gene Ha Variant Cover), $3.99
Skyward #9 (Jeremy Dale Regular Cover), $2.99
Alternative Comics
Death In Oaxaca #1, $4.99
Amryl Entertainment
Cavewoman 20th Anniversary 2014 Full Color Showbook Special Edition, Ar
Cavewoman Fallen (One-Shot)(Cover B Rob Durham), Ar
Cavewoman Fallen (One-Shot)(Cover D Budd Root), Ar
Archie Comics
Best Of Archie Comics Volume 4 Tp, $9.99
Sonic The Hedgehog Archives Volume 23 Tp, $7.99
World Of Archie Comics Digest #42, $4.99
Avatar Press
God Is Dead The Book Of Acts Omega (Jacen Burrows Pure Art Incentive Cover), Ar
Uber Special #1 (Michael Dipascale Pure Rage Cover), $9.99
Big Finish Productions
Avengers The Lost Episodes Volume 2 Audio CD Box Set, $49.99
Doctor Who...
12 Gauge Comics
Sherwood TX #2 (Of 5), $3.99
215 Ink
Enormous #3 (Cover A Mehdi Cheggour), $3.99
Enormous #3 (Cover B Sarah Delaine), $3.99
Action Lab Entertainment
Skyward #9 (Gene Ha Variant Cover), $3.99
Skyward #9 (Jeremy Dale Regular Cover), $2.99
Alternative Comics
Death In Oaxaca #1, $4.99
Amryl Entertainment
Cavewoman 20th Anniversary 2014 Full Color Showbook Special Edition, Ar
Cavewoman Fallen (One-Shot)(Cover B Rob Durham), Ar
Cavewoman Fallen (One-Shot)(Cover D Budd Root), Ar
Archie Comics
Best Of Archie Comics Volume 4 Tp, $9.99
Sonic The Hedgehog Archives Volume 23 Tp, $7.99
World Of Archie Comics Digest #42, $4.99
Avatar Press
God Is Dead The Book Of Acts Omega (Jacen Burrows Pure Art Incentive Cover), Ar
Uber Special #1 (Michael Dipascale Pure Rage Cover), $9.99
Big Finish Productions
Avengers The Lost Episodes Volume 2 Audio CD Box Set, $49.99
Doctor Who...
- 8/18/2014
- by Adam B.
- GeekRest
Philip Bates is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
Following in the same vein as Doctor Who Magazine collections like The Flood, Nemesis of the Daleks and Hunters of the Burning Stone, the Ninth Doctor adventures from 2005 will be getting the graphic novel treatment this May! The Cruel Sea is expected to collect together stories by Gareth Roberts (The Unicorn and the Wasp; Closing Time); former-dwm editor,
The post The Ninth Doctor’s The Cruel Sea! appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
Following in the same vein as Doctor Who Magazine collections like The Flood, Nemesis of the Daleks and Hunters of the Burning Stone, the Ninth Doctor adventures from 2005 will be getting the graphic novel treatment this May! The Cruel Sea is expected to collect together stories by Gareth Roberts (The Unicorn and the Wasp; Closing Time); former-dwm editor,
The post The Ninth Doctor’s The Cruel Sea! appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
- 1/15/2014
- by Philip Bates
- Kasterborous.com
Fifty years of movie magic, from Tunisia to Iraq, as chosen by Omar al-Qattan, film-maker and chair of Shubbak – A Window on Contemporary Arab Culture
The Night (Al-Lail)
Mohammad Malas, 1993
A great Syrian film. It is about the director's home town of Quneitra, on the borders of the Golan Heights, which was almost completely destroyed by the Israelis after the 1967 war and remains in ruins. The film is a historical-autobiographical epic of three generations, taking you from the Syrian fight for independence against the French in the 1930s, through the 1948 war with Israel, and into recent times. Malas is probably the most highly regarded living Syrian director – he is still based in Damascus as far as I know – and this film is heavily influenced by Tarkovsky in the use of long, contemplative dream and memory sequences where time is as important an expressive element as space, dialogue or movement.
The...
The Night (Al-Lail)
Mohammad Malas, 1993
A great Syrian film. It is about the director's home town of Quneitra, on the borders of the Golan Heights, which was almost completely destroyed by the Israelis after the 1967 war and remains in ruins. The film is a historical-autobiographical epic of three generations, taking you from the Syrian fight for independence against the French in the 1930s, through the 1948 war with Israel, and into recent times. Malas is probably the most highly regarded living Syrian director – he is still based in Damascus as far as I know – and this film is heavily influenced by Tarkovsky in the use of long, contemplative dream and memory sequences where time is as important an expressive element as space, dialogue or movement.
The...
- 7/6/2013
- by Omar al-Qattan
- The Guardian - Film News
With Universal’s Battleship out Aprill 11th in cinemas nationwide, we sat down with the film’s director, Peter Berg, to discuss naval operations, the USS Missouri and 3D.
Watching the movie, it reminded me of Transformers, Alien and Robocop, are you a big fan of these sci-fi movies, and did you talk to Michael Bay?
I haven’t done a lot of science fiction, I’m a big fan of the navy and I wanted to do a navy film. I wanted to do a big movie, I wanted to do a film that had a big global reach. I didn’t want to make a film that felt really violent and brutal, so the idea of humans fighting humans felt too violent, and I had seen this Stephen Hawking documentary about Goldilocks planets and us reaching out and sending signals, and how Stephen Hawking thought this was a horrible idea,...
Watching the movie, it reminded me of Transformers, Alien and Robocop, are you a big fan of these sci-fi movies, and did you talk to Michael Bay?
I haven’t done a lot of science fiction, I’m a big fan of the navy and I wanted to do a navy film. I wanted to do a big movie, I wanted to do a film that had a big global reach. I didn’t want to make a film that felt really violent and brutal, so the idea of humans fighting humans felt too violent, and I had seen this Stephen Hawking documentary about Goldilocks planets and us reaching out and sending signals, and how Stephen Hawking thought this was a horrible idea,...
- 4/9/2012
- by Phil
- Nerdly
As a teenager I'd scoff at the unreality of the Hollywood musical, but now their numbers seem utterly delightful
We are now nearing the end of a run of days that, by my reckoning, are always the most enjoyable London can offer. They start around 22 December, when taxis, tubes and restaurants are at last empty of Christmas drunks, and end on 3 or 4 January, when work resumes. Every year during this interval, an older and easier kind of London asserts itself; also, an emptier one. The people for whom the city is mainly a work station go home to Lancashire and France. Commuters, if they bother to come in, return soberly with last-minute parcels on the teatime trains. Tourists are fewer, and easily avoided once you leave the axis that stretches from Harrods to St Paul's. On the buses, you notice more people like yourself: middle-aged, or past it, and often...
We are now nearing the end of a run of days that, by my reckoning, are always the most enjoyable London can offer. They start around 22 December, when taxis, tubes and restaurants are at last empty of Christmas drunks, and end on 3 or 4 January, when work resumes. Every year during this interval, an older and easier kind of London asserts itself; also, an emptier one. The people for whom the city is mainly a work station go home to Lancashire and France. Commuters, if they bother to come in, return soberly with last-minute parcels on the teatime trains. Tourists are fewer, and easily avoided once you leave the axis that stretches from Harrods to St Paul's. On the buses, you notice more people like yourself: middle-aged, or past it, and often...
- 12/31/2011
- by Ian Jack
- The Guardian - Film News
They shall beat their swords into plowshares
and their spears into pruning hooks;
One nation shall not raise the sword against another,
neither shall they learn war any more.
Isaiah 2:4
War is a nation’s ultimate commitment of blood and treasure. As such, the stories a people tells about its wars – and don’t tell – and the ways it remembers its wars – or chooses to forget them – tells us much about the kind of people they consider themselves to be at different times in their history, as well as the kind of people they really were…and are.
For most of the 20th century, the war film was a Hollywood staple. From one era to the next, war movies documented the nation’s conflicts, reflected the national consciousness on particular combats as well as on thinking going far beyond any one, particular war. They’ve been propagandistic and revisionist,...
and their spears into pruning hooks;
One nation shall not raise the sword against another,
neither shall they learn war any more.
Isaiah 2:4
War is a nation’s ultimate commitment of blood and treasure. As such, the stories a people tells about its wars – and don’t tell – and the ways it remembers its wars – or chooses to forget them – tells us much about the kind of people they consider themselves to be at different times in their history, as well as the kind of people they really were…and are.
For most of the 20th century, the war film was a Hollywood staple. From one era to the next, war movies documented the nation’s conflicts, reflected the national consciousness on particular combats as well as on thinking going far beyond any one, particular war. They’ve been propagandistic and revisionist,...
- 5/22/2011
- by Bill Mesce
- SoundOnSight
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