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Peppermint Anime Showcases ‘Haikara-San: Here Comes Miss Modern Part 1’ German Anime Dub Clip

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© Kazunori Yamato / Kodansha

German distributor Peppermint Anime is getting ready for a film release on home video with Mademoiselle Hanamura, which is known as Haikara-san in its release elsewhere around the world. The film is getting separate DVD and Blu-ray editions on September 28th, 2018 and we now have our first listen to the dub in its German language adaptation.

The Japanese includes Saori Hayami as Benio Hanamura, Mamoru Miyano as Shinobu Ijuin, Takahiro Sakurai as Tosei Aoe, Kazuya Nakai as Shingo Onijima, Yuki Kaji as Ranmaru Fujieda, Asami Seto as Tamaki Kitakouji, Unshou Ishizuka as Major Hanamora, Reiko Suzuki as Baaya, Kenta Miyake as Ushigorou, and Shizuka Itou as Kichiji.

The original manga was serialized in Shoujo Friend and had eight compiled volumes originally before getting a four-volume bunko edition. Here’s hoping Kodansha USA will take a chance on bringing out the bunko version here to help celebrate.

Waki has been creating manga for fifty years this year and it serves as a great anniversary present of sorts for her and longtime older fans out there. The property previously received an anime TV series back in 1978 but it ended abruptly along the way. it had a follow-up of a couple of live-action shows and a theatrical film in the years since.

Plot Concept: Benio Hanamura is a 17-year-old schoolgirl in Tokyo during the Taisho era. Benio lost her mother when she was very young and has been raised by her father, a high-ranking official in the Japanese army. As a result, she has grown into a tomboy—contrary to traditional Japanese notions of femininity, she studies kendo, drinks sake, dresses in often outlandish-looking Western fashions, and isn’t as interested in housewife duties as she is in literature. She also rejects the idea of arranged marriages and believes in a woman’s right to a career and to marry for love. Benio’s best friends are the beautiful Tamaki, who is much more feminine than Benio but equally interested in women’s rights, and Ranmaru, a young man who was raised to play female roles in the kabuki theater and as a result has acquired very effeminate mannerisms


46th ‘Attack on Titan’ Anime Episode Previewed

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The third season of Attack on Titan is underway and promotion for it is starting to filter out as well. The folks at ANIPLUS Asia are providing English subtitled previews for upcoming episodes and have a preview out for the 46th episode that lands on September 16th, 2018. Crunchyroll is streaming the series to viewers in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Nordics, Netherlands, South Africa, Central, and South America.

But, you know, imagine if the actual series page listed where things were available instead of it being a black hole of mystery.

Based on the original manga by Hajime Isayama, Tetsuro Araki served as the general director with Koizuka Masashi working on the series composition for the first season. Yasuko Kobayashi worked on the character designs while Kyoji Asano served as the Chief Animation Director. WIT STUDIO produced the animation.

The Japanese cast includes Yuuki Kaji as Eren Jaeger, Marina Inoue as Armin Arlelt, Yui Ishikawa as Mikasa Ackerman, Daisuke Ono as Erwin, Hiroshi Kamiya as Levi, Keiji Fujiwara as Hannes, Kishō Taniyama as Jean Kirschtein, Hiro Shimono as Conny Springer, Romi Park as Hanji, Ryota Ohsaka as Marco Bodt, Shiori Mikami as Christa Renz, Tomohisa Hashizume as Bertholt Hoover, Yoshimasa Hosoya as Reiner Braun, Yu Kobayashi as Sasha Browse and Yu Shimamura as Annie Leonhardt.

Series premise: Centuries ago, mankind was slaughtered to near extinction by monstrous humanoid creatures called titans, forcing humans to hide in fear behind enormous concentric walls. What makes these giants truly terrifying is that their taste for human flesh is not born out of hunger but what appears to be out of pleasure. To ensure their survival, the remnants of humanity began living within defensive barriers, resulting in one hundred years without a single titan encounter. However, that fragile calm is soon shattered when a colossal titan manages to breach the supposedly impregnable outer wall, reigniting the fight for survival against the man-eating abominations.

After witnessing a horrific personal loss at the hands of the invading creatures, Eren Yeager dedicates his life to their eradication by enlisting into the Survey Corps, an elite military unit that combats the merciless humanoids outside the protection of the walls. Based on Hajime Isayama’s award-winning manga, Shingeki no Kyojin follows Eren, along with his adopted sister Mikasa Ackerman and his childhood friend Armin Arlert, as they join the brutal war against the titans and race to discover a way of defeating them before the last walls are breached.

Third ‘Starmyu’ OVA DVD/BD Release Artwork Arrives

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The spring 2017 anime series High School Star Musical, which is mostly referenced as Starmyu, has its third OVA solicited with an October 10th, 2018 street date. As we’re just about a month away from it we now have a look at the artwork for it that definitely ties into the season. It’ll be priced at 7,500 yen for the DVD and 8,000 yen for the Blu-ray. There isn’t much listed in the way of extras at the moment but it does look like the Fan Club side will make out well with a mail order drama CD being something that you can get when ordered from there. Animate has a clear file while Amazon Japan has a fabric poster.

The project is from an original plan by Rin Hinata and will be animated at C-Station. Shunsuke Tada is directing the project based on scripts by Sayaka Harara and character designs by Asami Watanabe.

The previously announced cast so far includes Natsuki Hanae as Yuuta Hoshiya,Kensho Ono as Tooru Nayuki, Arthur Lounsbery as Kaito Tsukikage, Yoshimasa Hosoya as Shou Taigeiji, Tomoaki Maeno as Yuu Kuga, Junichi Suwabe as Itsuki Ootori, Daisuke Hirakawa as Tsubasa Hiiragi, Nobuhiko Okamoto as Rui Tatsumi, Yūma Uchida as Eigo Sawatari, Kazuyuki Okitsu as Seishirō Inumine, KENN as Izumi Toraishi, Yoshitsugu Matsuoka as Akira Ugawa, Showtaro Morikubo as Kyōji Akatsuki, Kousuke Toriumi as Christian Leon Yuzuriha, Wataru Hatano as Sakuya Sazanami and Takehito Koyasu as Haruto Tsukigami.

Plot Concept: The story involves a group of high school students at Ayana Academy, a school with music as its main focus. A trio of students are called Hanasakura-kai, designating the most talented from the music department. To get in, individuals must enter through a Star Frame class. The series tells the story of Yuuta Hoshiya*, Tooru Nayuki, Kaito Tsukikage, Shou Tengeiji, and Shuu Kuga as they aim for a position in the musical department after being spotted by Ootori, one of the Hanasakura-kai members.

It’s Kenny Vs. Levi With A New ‘Attack on Titan’ Anime Subtitled Clip

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© Hajime Isayama / Kodansha / Attack on Titan Production Committee.

The third season of Attack on Titan is underway and promotion for it is starting to filter out as well. The folks at Funimation are doing some promotion for it themselves with a new subtitled clip that goes all out with the action and all the sound effects that comes with it. Funimation is doing the dub for it soon while also handling the simulcast while Crunchyroll is streaming the series to viewers in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Nordics, Netherlands, South Africa, Central and South America.

Based on the original manga by Hajime Isayama, Tetsuro Araki served as the general director with Koizuka Masashi working on the series composition for the first season. Yasuko Kobayashi worked on the character designs while Kyoji Asano served as the Chief Animation Director. WIT STUDIO produced the animation.

The Japanese cast includes Yuuki Kaji as Eren Jaeger, Marina Inoue as Armin Arlelt, Yui Ishikawa as Mikasa Ackerman, Daisuke Ono as Erwin, Hiroshi Kamiya as Levi, Keiji Fujiwara as Hannes, Kishō Taniyama as Jean Kirschtein, Hiro Shimono as Conny Springer, Romi Park as Hanji, Ryota Ohsaka as Marco Bodt, Shiori Mikami as Christa Renz, Tomohisa Hashizume as Bertholt Hoover, Yoshimasa Hosoya as Reiner Braun, Yu Kobayashi as Sasha Browse and Yu Shimamura as Annie Leonhardt.

Series premise: Centuries ago, mankind was slaughtered to near extinction by monstrous humanoid creatures called titans, forcing humans to hide in fear behind enormous concentric walls. What makes these giants truly terrifying is that their taste for human flesh is not born out of hunger but what appears to be out of pleasure. To ensure their survival, the remnants of humanity began living within defensive barriers, resulting in one hundred years without a single titan encounter. However, that fragile calm is soon shattered when a colossal titan manages to breach the supposedly impregnable outer wall, reigniting the fight for survival against the man-eating abominations.

After witnessing a horrific personal loss at the hands of the invading creatures, Eren Yeager dedicates his life to their eradication by enlisting into the Survey Corps, an elite military unit that combats the merciless humanoids outside the protection of the walls. Based on Hajime Isayama’s award-winning manga, Shingeki no Kyojin follows Eren, along with his adopted sister Mikasa Ackerman and his childhood friend Armin Arlert, as they join the brutal war against the titans and race to discover a way of defeating them before the last walls are breached.

What’s On The Crunchyroll, Funimation, & HIDIVE Anime Streaming Calendar For September 12th, 2018

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Hump day has arrived and we’re closer to Friday than we were a day ago. Crunchyroll has a light day today with just four shows but some pretty popular ones. Funimation works three shows today with new episodes and HIDIVE goes for some live-action goodness and a classic as part of their schedule.

Crunchyroll:

  • 6:55am – YU-GI-OH! VRAINS
  • 7:30am – MEOW MEOW JAPANESE HISTORY
  • 12:00pm – FREE! -DIVE TO THE FUTURE-
  • 1:30pm – STEINS;GATE 0

Funimation:

  • 4:00 PM – How Not to Summon a Demon Lord Episode 8 Simulcast Premium TV-MA
  • 4:00 PM – HANEBADO! Episode 8 Simulcast Premium TV-14
  • 4:00 PM – Chio’s School Road Episode 8 Simulcast Premium TV-14

HIDIVE:

  • 10am – 100 Sights of Ancient Cities Live Action, Eps 23 & 24
  • 11am – Kissdum R: Engage Planet, Ep 25
  • Noon – Lone Wolf & Cub Live Action, Ep 43

Moth and Whisper #1 Review

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A dazzling delight that tickles the right kind of nostalgia.

Creative Staff:
Story: Ted Anderson
Art: Jen Hickman
Letterer: Marshall Dillon

What They Say:
Everyone knows that the two greatest thieves in the city are the Moth and the Whisper. Very few know that the Moth and the Whisper disappeared six months ago. And what nobody knows is that the new Moth and Whisper are actually one person pretending to be both of them. One supremely skilled but uncertain young genderfluid thief: Niki, the child of the Moth and the Whisper.

Niki has been trained by their parents in the arts of stealth and infiltration, but they’re still just a teenager, and now they’re alone, searching for their parents in a hostile cyberpunk dystopia. Corporations run the streets while crime lords like Ambrose Wolfe run the alleys—identity is a commodity and privacy is impossible. The truth about Niki’s parents and their disappearance is out there, but can Niki survive long enough to find it?

Content: (please note that content portions of a review may contain spoilers):
The uncertainty of a first issue is something that can be very thrilling if the book is done right. With my goal of trying just about every AfterShock series as they come out continuing on, Moth and Whisper looked stylish from the cover but seriously delivered when it came to what’s inside with creators I haven’t been exposed to before. Ted Anderson crafts a simple and familiar story here but the way it unfolds and reveals itself is spot on engaging, setting the stage for what’s to come but giving us more than enough character material, action, and the trimmings to make it feel lived in. But it’s Jen Hickman who elevates it to something special here with great layouts but some creative and really fantastically engaging design work when it comes to the characters. I was hooked from the first page and she only made it more so. So much of this book reminds me of Wagner and Mireault’s work on their segment together on the Grendel series years ago and that has me even more excited about what could come next.

Taking place in a near future where things are more advanced, the focus is on crime within a particular city and some of those that worked that world. Known as Moth and Whisper, the two are highly skilled players in the game where Moth used a range of disguises in order to perform jobs for various crime bosses, cops, and others while Whisper essentially did the same, but through a use of stealth that was unparalleled. The book showcases a lot of this from the past in great style and color design to really make it stand out all while keeping us from seeing who they are and in a lot of cases the disguise side until later. It’s almost a montage piece but it flows really well and draws you into their story as you see how they were rivals at times, partners at others, and more complicated elsewhere. So when we discover that they’ve been missing for six months and are only now getting back into the game, the real story starts.

It’s here that it becomes really interesting as we learn how they’ve truly gone missing and that the reality is that they were a couple that had navigated this city to play all the sides against each other to create chaos to make their money. It’s a brilliant little bit that you can imagine would be a high and thrill to be sure. But with them missing, their teenage son ends up having the truth revealed to him (intentionally) and he’s been set to hide until they come back. Of course, it’s been long enough now that he’s no longer in hiding but rather using the costumes and gear that his parents left behind, which includes an AI of sorts named Weaver that helps a whole lot, in order to find out who it was that likely did his parents in and deal with them – and maybe even find his parents. Niki’s not hugely detailed here in terms of past but the initial layout for the character is solid as we see him struggling with being both Moth and Whisper while also having to deal with the loss of his parents and the unknown of what’s happened to them.

In Summary:
Sometimes you come away from a first issue and just go wow. Moth and Whisper was one of those books for me that just made my day when I read it and left me excited for what’s to come, but also to begin researching the team behind it a bit more and find out what else I’ve missed by them in their respective careers. The story is straightforward and accessible but it’s wonderfully stylish and engaging with lots of potential to run with. It’s one of the best things I’ve read in a while for a first issue and I can’t wait to get my hands on more and to see what the run will be like as a whole.

Grade: A

Age Rating: 16+
Released By: AfterShock Comics
Release Date: September 12th, 2018
MSRP: $3.99

ComiXology Sets New Digital Comics & Manga For September 12th, 2018

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The big new comic book day is here and that means a lot of comics landing. AfterShock comics launches a new series today with Moth & Whisper while Archie Comics gets Archie: 1941 up and running. Boom Studios has Low Road West and Welcome to Wanderland as first issues and the folks at Dark Horse Comics have a pair of new series amid the ongoings with Joe Golem: Occult Detective–The Drowning City and Mystery Science Theater 3000. Dynamite sticks to ongoings this week as does IDW Publishing while Image Comics launches Cemetery Beach and MCMLXXV.

DC Comics begins a new series with House of Whispers while also having some fun Batman Day 2018 books in the mix. Marvel Comics gets their next Iceman series underway, having discovered people in the trades world loved it, and we also get Journey Into Mystery: The Birth Of Krakoa and Marvel Rising: Omega as new first issues.

On the Star Wars front, Marvel has the last installment of the Star Wars: The Last Jedi Adaptation as well as more Darth Vader.

On the manga side, Harlequin has several books available today while Kodansha Comics has more Space Brothers. Yen Press has a new simulpub for My Monster Girl’s Too Cool For You.

Wednesday: Same Day as Print
AAM-Markosia Tales of Astoundment Buy now!
Abstract Studio Strangers In Paradise XXV 6
Action Lab Double Jumpers: Full Circle Jerks 2 Buy now!
Action Lab Toyetica 10 Buy now!
Action Lab Zombie Tramp 52 Buy now!
Action Lab Nutmeg: Fall Vol. 1 Buy now!
Action Lab Vamplets The Undead Pet Society: Beware the Bitmares! 1 Buy now!
AfterShock Comics Hot Lunch Special 2 Buy now!
AfterShock Comics Moth & Whisper 1 Buy now!
AfterShock Comics Volition 2 Buy now!
American Mythology Productions Fear on Four Worlds 2
American Mythology Productions Stargate Universe 6
Archie Archie Double Digest 292 Buy now!
Archie Archie: 1941 1 Buy now!
Aspen Comics Dellec 1
Avatar Crossed +100: Mimic 5 Buy now!
BOOM! Studios Mighty Morphin Power Rangers Vol. 6 Buy now!
BOOM! Studios SLAM!: The Next Jam Buy now!
BOOM! Studios Garfield: Homecoming 4 Buy now!
BOOM! Studios Low Road West 1 Buy now!
BOOM! Studios Mech Cadet Yu 12 Buy now!
BOOM! Studios RuinWorld 3 Buy now!
BOOM! Studios Welcome to Wanderland 1 Buy now!
BOOM! Studios WWE: NXT Takeover Buy now!
BOOM! Studios Garfield: Trouble in Paradise Buy now!
Dark Horse American Gods: My Ainsel 6 Buy now!
Dark Horse B.P.R.D.: The Devil You Know 10 Buy now!
Dark Horse Disney Frozen: Breaking Boundaries 2 Buy now!
Dark Horse Joe Golem: Occult Detective–The Drowning City 1 Buy now!
Dark Horse Mystery Science Theater 3000 1 Buy now!
Dark Horse She Could Fly 3 Buy now!
Dark Horse The Seeds 2 Buy now!
Dark Horse World of Tanks: Citadel 5 Buy now!
DC Detective Comics (2016-) 988 Buy now!
DC Hawkman (2018-) 4 Buy now!
DC House of Whispers (2018-) 1 Buy now!
DC Plastic Man (2018-) 4 Buy now!
DC Red Hood and the Outlaws (2016-) 26 Buy now!
DC Scooby Apocalypse (2016-) 29 Buy now!
DC Sideways (2018-) 8 Buy now!
DC Suicide Squad (2016-) 46 Buy now!
DC Supergirl (2016-) 22 Buy now!
DC Superman (2018-) 3 Buy now!
DC The Flash (2016-) 54 Buy now!
DC The Immortal Men (2017-) 6 Buy now!
DC The Wild Storm: Michael Cray (2017-) 11 Buy now!
DC Titans (2016-) 25 Buy now!
DC Wonder Woman (2016-) 54 Buy now!
DC Batman: Li’L Gotham Batman Day 2018 1 Buy now!
DC Batman: White Knight (2017-) Batman Day 2018 1 Buy now!
Dynamite Charlie’s Angels 4 Buy now!
Dynamite Dejah Thoris Vol. 4 8 Buy now!
Dynamite Elvira: Mistress Of The Dark 2 Buy now!
Dynamite Nancy Drew 4 Buy now!
Fantagraphics Dementia 21
Harlequin/ SB Creative Corp. A Noble Man Buy now!
Harlequin/ SB Creative Corp. Alissa’s Miracle Buy now!
Harlequin/ SB Creative Corp. Boss’s Favorite / Rosa Buy now!
Harlequin/ SB Creative Corp. Bride on the Loose Buy now!
Harlequin/ SB Creative Corp. High Risk Buy now!
Harlequin/ SB Creative Corp. Inherited by Her Enemy Buy now!
Harlequin/ SB Creative Corp. Innocent in His Diamonds Buy now!
Harlequin/ SB Creative Corp. Last April Fair Buy now!
Harlequin/ SB Creative Corp. Shadows of Yesterday Buy now!
Harlequin/ SB Creative Corp. The Baby Factor Buy now!
Harlequin/ SB Creative Corp. The End of Her Innocence Buy now!
Harlequin/ SB Creative Corp. The Forbidden Touch of Sanguardo Buy now!
Harlequin/ SB Creative Corp. The Temp and the Tycoon Buy now!
Harlequin/ SB Creative Corp. Their Convenient Marriage Buy now!
IDW DuckTales Vol. 3: Quests and Quacks Buy now!
IDW Star Trek: The Next Generation: Through the Mirror Buy now!
IDW G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero 256 Buy now!
IDW Haunted Horror 35 Buy now!
IDW Lowlifes 4 Buy now!
IDW Star Trek: The Next Generation: Terra Incognita 3 Buy now!
IDW The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: The Tempest 2 Buy now!
IDW Transformers: Bumblebee—Win If You Dare Buy now!
Image Age of Bronze Vol. 1: A Thousand Ships (2018) Buy now!
Image Dissonance Vol. 1 Buy now!
Image Dry County Complete Buy now!
Image Elsewhere Vol. 2 Buy now!
Image Kick-Ass: The New Girl Vol. 1 Buy now!
Image Oblivion Song by Kirkman & De Felici Vol. 1 Buy now!
Image Birthright 31 Buy now!
Image Cemetery Beach 1 Buy now!
Image Crowded 2 Buy now!
Image Farmhand 3 Buy now!
Image Head Lopper 9 Buy now!
Image Hey Kids! Comics! 2 Buy now!
Image Mage: The Hero Denied 12 Buy now!
Image MCMLXXV 1 Buy now!
Image Oblivion Song by Kirkman & De Felici 7 Buy now!
Image Proxima Centauri 4 Buy now!
Image Rat Queens (2017-) 11 Buy now!
Image Scales & Scoundrels 12 Buy now!
Image Sleepless 7 Buy now!
Image The Beauty 23 Buy now!
Image The New World 3 Buy now!
Image The Weatherman 4 Buy now!
Image The Wicked + The Divine 39 Buy now!
Kodansha Comics Space Brothers 324 Buy now!
Lion Forge Comics Accell 14
Lion Forge Comics Astonisher 10 Buy now!
Lion Forge Comics Dinosaucers 2 Buy now!
Lion Forge Comics Voltron Legendary Defender Vol. 3 #3 Buy now!
Marvel Fantastic Four Masterworks Vol. 20 Buy now!
Marvel Infinity Countdown Buy now!
Marvel Infinity Countdown: Companion Buy now!
Marvel Marvel Knights Daredevil by Smith & Quesada: Guardian Devil Buy now!
Marvel Star Wars: Darth Vader: Dark Lord of the Sith Vol. 3: The Burning Seas Buy now!
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Marvel Venom Adventures Buy now!
Marvel Venom: Planet Of The Symbiotes Buy now!
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Marvel Amazing Spider-Man (2018-) 5 Buy now!
Marvel Champions (2016-) 24 Buy now!
Marvel Daredevil (2015-) 608 Buy now!
Marvel Darth Vader (2017-) 21 Buy now!
Marvel Domino (2018) 6 Buy now!
Marvel Exiles (2018-) 8 Buy now!
Marvel Fantastic Four (2018-) 2 Buy now!
Marvel Iceman (2018-) 1 Buy now!
Marvel Infinity Wars (2018) 3 Buy now!
Marvel Ms. Marvel (2015-) 34 Buy now!
Marvel Old Man Logan (2016-) 47 Buy now!
Marvel Peter Parker: The Spectacular Spider-Man (2017-) 309 Buy now!
Marvel Runaways (2017-) 13 Buy now!
Marvel Star Wars: The Last Jedi Adaptation (2018) 6 Buy now!
Marvel The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (2015-) 36 Buy now!
Marvel Venom: First Host (2018) 3 Buy now!
Marvel Weapon H (2018-) 7 Buy now!
Marvel X-23 (2018-) 4 Buy now!
Marvel X-Men Blue (2017-) 35 Buy now!
Marvel Journey Into Mystery: The Birth Of Krakoa (2018) 1 Buy now!
Marvel Marvel Rising: Omega (2018) 1 Buy now!
Titan Fighting American Vol. 2: The Ties That Bind Buy now!
Titan The Legend of Tank Girl Buy now!
Titan Doctor Who: The Road to the Thirteenth Doctor 3 Buy now!
Titan Newbury & Hobbes 1 Buy now!
Valiant Ninja-K 11 Buy now!
Vault Comics Vagrant Queen 4 Buy now!
Vault Comics Wasted Space 5 Buy now!
Yen Press My Monster Girl’s Too Cool for You 58
Zenescope Grimm Fairy Tales Tarot Vol. 1 Buy now!
Zenescope Grimm Tales of Terror: Halloween Special 2018 Buy now!
Zenescope Mainstream 5 Buy now!
Wednesday: comiXology Submit
4 Eyed Animation Comics John L. Sullivan Boston Strong Boy In Space 8
AHOY Comics The Wrong Earth 1
Antispire Antispire 7
BUBBLE Allies 13
BUBBLE Demonslayer 13
Coffee Time Comics The Black Wall 5
Comicker Chimera 10
Dead King Comics Jack Grimm: Harbinger of Death 1
Demon Logic productions The Hero Dies Alone 3
Edge Comix Stuff That Never Happened 1
Erin Ptah But I’m A Cat Person 6
Fair Spark Books Gallant & Amos 1
Far Out Press Sky Orb
Fenbeast Publications The Eelman Chronicles
Good Ideas Comics Rigor Mortis 2
Good Ideas Comics The Elvis Files 3
Helix House CySnow: The Waking Complex 4
Hyperwerks Entertainment Deity 17
Hyperwerks Entertainment Deity: Catseye 1
Hyperwerks Entertainment Deity: Catseye 2
Hyperwerks Entertainment Deity: Catseye 3
Hyperwerks Entertainment Deity: Catseye 4
Jarrod Elvin Checkers’ World 5
Jason Lenox Lords of the Cosmos 1
Keith Carmack Neoma 1
Krel Komix Argent Starr: Tales From the Archives 6
Mind Core Comics Big Man Down 4
Mirrorwood Comics Annyseed – the Blood of Another 6
Museworthy Inc. Empty Space 1
Noreon Labs The Monuments 1
Ovation Comics Fiendish Fables: The Shack on Lovecraft Isle
Pengine Creative Yarns of the Frisky Filly 4
Rio Bravo Comics El Peso Hero
ROLL Agou and His Curse
Rossowinch The Divine Gathering 1
Rustland Drive Monster-Hunting Dummy 1
Scout Comics Little Guardians Vol. 1: Trial By Spirit Fire
Shroud Media LLC Starpunch Girl 5
Starburns Industries Press Oddwell 2
The Dynamic Universe Force Six, The Annihilators: Wheels and Cogs The Complete Adventure
The Dynamic Universe Force Six, The Annihilators 23
Ugly Mug The Happiest Place
Urchin Press The Apex Society 7
W.i.N. Pictures, LLC The Couch 3
World’s Largest Lesson Rise of The Plate PioneerZ
Wednesday: New and Noteworthy
American Mythology Productions Three Stooges Matinee Madness 1
Antarctic Press Gao 1
Antarctic Press Gao 2
Antarctic Press Mangazine 2
Antarctic Press Plush 1
Caliber Comics Cursed Land 2
Caliber Comics FISK the S.U.B.S.T.I.T.U.T.E. 1
Caliber Comics The Shepherd: Vol. 2: The Path of Souls 1
Caliber Comics Caliber Presents Vol. 3: Flash from Nowhere
Caliber Comics Vanguard: Genesis
DC Death of Superman, Part 1 (2018-) 7 Buy now!
Joe Books Riftworld Legends 8 Buy now!
Wednesday: Backlist
Abrams – Abrams ComicArts Undocumented Buy now!
Archie Archie 135
Archie Archie 136
Archie Archie 137
Fantagraphics Pogo: The Complete Daily & Sunday Comic Strips Vol. 2: Bona Fide Balderdash
Fantagraphics Pogo: The Complete Daily & Sunday Comic Strips Vol. 1: Through the Wild Blue Wonder
Fantagraphics Pogo: The Complete Daily & Sunday Comic Strips Vol. 4: Under the Bamboozle Bush
Fantagraphics Pogo: The Complete Daily & Sunday Comic Strips Vol. 3: Evidence to the Contrary

Bandai Visual Adds Two ‘Horizon in the Middle of Nowhere’ Blu-ray Anime Box Set Promos

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Bandai Visual previously queued up an interesting release with a two-season deluxe box set for Horizon in the Middle of Nowhere. Set for a December 21st, 2018 release, it’ll even contain English subtitles with it and we now have two new promos highlighting it. They clock in at about a minute each and showcase some big action sequences and a couple of touches of dialogue at best. Priced at 38,000 yen, it includes a CD with fifteen songs while on-disc extras include character commentary for fourteen episodes, a digital gallery, various event and talk show videos, the clean opening and closing, and the promos and commercials.

The deluxe edition aspect of this has it coming with an exclusive story by the original creator, new music, new animation, a new live study group, a deluxe display box, and a new deluxe 52-page booklet. The set will have all new cover artwork from Tomoyuki Fujii.

Check out our review of the series.

The series is based upon best-selling author Minoru Kawakami’s novel franchise. Both seasons were directed by Manabu Ono (My Hime, Saki) and employed a staff of four Character Designers – Tomoyuki Fujii, Shinya Nishizawa, Yukiko Aikei and Kanta Suzuki- to adapt the original concepts by Satoyasu (TENKY), while script supervision and adaptation was in the capable hands of Tatsuhiko Urahata (Nana, Master Keaton, Monster, Strike Witches 2).

Plot Concept: Taking advantage of the opportunity that the Mikawa Conflict provides, Tori and his comrades attempt to rescue Horizon from the Testament Union. But even as the Floating City Musashi speeds towards its next destination, the Floating Island England, Tres España is preparing its own armada for war against the British Islanders. Now, as the quest of Horizon’s emotions builds to its climax, Tori’s new battle is about to begin in the land ruled by the Fairy Queen! The reenactment of the history described in the mysterious Testament continues as the secret of the Armor of Deadly Sins is unleashed in the spectacular second season of Horizon in the Middle of Nowhere!

[Source: Horizon in the Middle of Nowhere]


Henry Cavill Departs From ‘Superman’ Role

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With some problematic films under their belt, a creative overseer no longer involved, and significantly diminishing returns with each installment, the Superman franchise is being put on pause from Warner Bros. Pictures. The studio recently started talking up working on a Supergirl project and now word has come that Henry Cavill will not be reprising his role going forward as the Superman films are being looked at with a new direction – including the possible casting of Michael B. Jordan according to Deadline.

With the Supergirl film as a priority, Warner Bros. still feels pretty hit or miss when it comes to the projects they’re choosing, even if the intent is more on standalone pieces like Wonder Woman 1984 and Aquaman. With Ben Affleck still likely not to come back for the Batman film that’s in development, the shared universe side is pretty much non-existent at this point.

At the moment, we have three films coming out next year with Shazam!, which had a trailer, Wonder Woman 1984, and The Joker.

Cavill was recently set to take on the lead role in The Witcher series that Netflix has picked up.

It’s worth noting that while critically drubbed, the three films that Cavill appeared in as the character have made $2.2 billion worldwide.

Volition #2 Review

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Different paths align and the forward push begins.

Creative Staff:
Story: Ryan Parrott
Art: Omar Francia
Letterer: Marshall Dillon

What They Say:
In the not-too-distant future, robots are fighting for their equal rights. And when a mysterious and deadly disease known as “Rust” threatens all artificial life, salvations lies in the unlikeliest of heroes—with an obsolete construction worker known as HALE-19 and with AMBER-7T, a caregiver.

After awakening in a decommission facility, AMBER-7T is forced to rely on the dangerous and unapologetic HALE-19 in order to escape. Can these two contradictions find a way to escape or will they turn on one another to survive? Meanwhile, Art Detectives Drivas and Lawton find themselves saddled with the case of their lives and a pair of dangerous new adversaries enter the game.

Content: (please note that content portions of a review may contain spoilers):
The opening installment of Volition was an interesting if familiar one. Even the use of “Rust” as the disease that the AI’s are getting is one we’ve seen in numerous stories it still works well and fits, making for an easy drop-in point to connect. Ryan Parrott set a solid stage as we get to understand some of how this world works and some of the characters, but I think in retrospect the real winner for me was Omar Francia’s artwork. It has such a non-standard American style to it, reminding me of the European style that I had read when I was younger, with a more cinematic approach that really draws me in – particularly with the color design. It all gels together well into something really special and that first very well with a science fiction storyline.

With the second issue things are coming together a bit more as we get Hale and Amber teaming up, at least temporarily. The cold open is an interesting look at the recent past with Amber and her boyfriend with a nod to how kids these days engage in risky behavior and it provides a nice way to segue into her waking up in the decommission room that she’s in – just as the grunts that are working there are getting ready to fry the place. She’s crafty enough and spirited enough to look for a slapdash solution and that means mainlining HALE-19 into life once again and just barreling the hell out of there in a way that the guys with guns won’t notice since they’re dropping EMP blasts on the panicked robots that don’t want to be put to death here. It’s a crazy and chaotic series of events with some harsh meaning mixed into it considering the fates of those involved.

While there’s some time spent with the detectives that are following Amber and trying to get her back, and we see some career criminals later that are being brought in to deal with Amber as well, a decent bit of time is spent with the two as they connect. Amber’s filling him in well enough on what happened to her while he doesn’t reveal much. But he makes it clear that he’s not intent on going on this ride with her but owes her enough for saving her to go some of the distance in getting her out of the city. Amber really manages to resonate well throughout the book but it’s surprising just how well Hale has connected for me, coming across as the gruff older character type that’s the brick of the story and will go to the mattresses to get things done. Running that with a bit of what the bounty hunter types are up to after it reminds us just how deadly things can get here.

In Summary:
Volition scratches that particular spot that doesn’t get served by the superhero publishers and is fairly hard to get in a good way among the other publishers. AfterShock has a few science fiction books running and Volition is definitely one to check out, especially if you like a more European style of artwork to it as Francia delivers some gorgeous pages here that feel more painted than illustrated. The story is fairly straightforward, though engaging to be sure, and has me curious what twists and turns are still ahead to help step it up to something more. It’s definitely worth checking out for both story and art while the combination makes for an engaging read with lots of repeat value for the artwork.

Grade: B+

Age Rating: 16+
Released By: AfterShock Comics
Release Date: September 12th, 2018
MSRP: $3.99

‘Lupin III – The Woman Called Fujiko Mine’ Anime Rights Expired

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While most of the distributors have gotten better over the last couple of years in providing notice of impending rights expirations, there are times when it does not happen, or at least not clearly. It looks like the rights have expired for Lupin III – The Woman Called Fujiko Mine as the series was pulled last week from Crunchyroll for streaming for both free and premium users, as discovered by ChibiGoku, and Funimation has removed the dubbed episodes from streaming and the series page as well as their YouTube trailers and clips for it. If the expiration is final and not temporary, then the units out in the retail market are all there are – and we definitely recommend grabbing this stylishly done fun series.

Check out our review of the series.

Plot Concept: She’s a thief. A killer. A saint and a scandal. She’s whatever you need her to be to get the job done. After sizing you up with one sinful glance, she disarms you with a touch. You’re powerless to resist. She’s walking seduction, with an insatiable itch for the priceless and a fetish for mischief. She takes your breath away to get what she wants. She takes everything else just because she can. It’s all in a night’s work for the woman called Fujiko Mine. She’s the slinky, sultry thread that holds Lupin III’s crew together – and this is the heist that started it all.

[Source: ChibiGoku]

Eureka Seven Hi-Evolution 1 Blu-ray Anime Review

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This seems… familiar.

What They Say:
Ride the trapars and take to the skies once more! The revolutionary mecha anime returns with the story that was left untold—the earth-shattering incident where Renton’s father disappeared. With Eureka by his side, only Adroc Thurston could undo his own mistake. Now, ten years later, Renton finds himself in the care of his father’s old friends and facing a decision that will change everything.

The Review:
Audio:
The audio presentation for this release brings us the original Japanese language track and the previous English language adaptation, both of which are in 5.1, encoded using the lossless Dolby TrueHD codec. The action tends to be fast when it kicks into gear with the aerial fights as sounds whip around, but it’s never overpowering and it doesn’t feel gimmicky either. There is a good bit of impact with the bass level in several big action scenes as well which helps to give it some presence. Dialogue is well placed throughout, especially when there are numerous people on screen such as the bridge of the Gekkostate, and the depth is spot on as well in such scene. We listened to this almost entirely in Japanese having seen it in English theatrically but spot checking showed no issues with either language track.

Video:
Originally in theaters in 2017, the transfer for this feature film is presented in its original aspect ratio of 1.78:1 and is in 1080p using the AVC codec. Animated by Bones, the first act of the film is pretty much what you’d expect from a modern anime film with all the bells and whistles thrown at it. It’s a delight from top to bottom in showing off the action, the aerial fighting, the color vibrancy and design, and everything in between. It’s easy to be caught up in the whole thing as a kind of fireworks show even, just enjoying the spectacle of it all – since there’s little in the way of discernible plot for any new viewer. Once past that, we get the TV material cleaned up here with a windowboxed presentation so that nothing is cut off from any of the sides. It looks good but obviously doesn’t hold up to what we start with considering its age. But it’s a clean look that retains the right kind of feel to it even while the color definition just can’t keep up tot he new..

Packaging:
The packaging design for this release comes in a standard sized Blu-ray case that holds the two discs against the interior walls with no hinges. The set comes with an o-card slipcover that replicates the case artwork that utilizes the key visual/theatrical poster for this film with Renton looking as serious as he can at this stage while his life is in ruins all around him. It’s a good looking visual with the color deign and I like that the case went for a green stripe along the top for the format material. The back cover goes for an all-white background where we get a headshot of Eureka at the top and some nice shots from the film along the right. The summary of the premise is clean and simple and we get a good breakdown of the extras as well. Production information is straightforward in its super tiny legalese size while the technical grid breaks out both formats in a very clean and clear to read format. The first pressing sets come with a card inside that holds a filmstrip from the film while the reverse side cover artwork lets the two leads have their own panel with them set against a white background.

Menu:
The menu design for this release is one that adds a little flair to it as it’s made up of clips from the film, showcasing some really nicely designed locations and character material with colors that really stand out in a great way. This is in contrast to the slim navigation strip near the bottom that’s done in a garish green, tying into the cover nicely, which definitely stands out here. The selections are simple and easy to make and navigating for language or scene selection is a breeze as are the extras. Everything loads quickly and easy for it whether as the main menu or pop-up menu during playback and without issue. It may not be a big standout menu design but it’s effective in setting the mood.

Extras:
This release has some good extras with it that’ll delight fans of the property. We get the familiar here with the teaser and trailers but we also get about half a dozen music videos as well that are fun to watch. The big piece is the nearly thirty-minute long interview with the folks behind it where they talk about the experience and what they’re trying to achieve with it. It’s definitely a fun piece behind the scenes with the creative side of it all.

Content: (please note that content portions of a review may contain spoilers)
The arrival of Eureka Seven back in 2005 was a big event since it got a lot of broadcast love around the world while also spawning several manga, a light novel series, and a feature film four years later. A spinoff series landed in 2012 which also brought new manga but the AO work didn’t click quite as well for folks, making most figure that would be the end of it. But in late 2017 we got the start of a three-film project under the Hi-Evolution banner with much of the team come back to tell more of this tale. With this one seemingly going back to the core it was something that I was definitely interested in seeing what they’d do with, but after finishing off this first film I’m in that place where I’m just not sure what they were thinking. What we get here is a work that is very much for fans only.

What we get here is an opening thirty minutes or so where it’s all new animation and then the remaining hour focuses on material from the TV series – but reworked in terms of presentation so that it’s nonsensical. Well, not exactly nonsensical but it plays out in such a haphazard way that it’s incomprehensible. The opening act is a great way as it takes place with it dealing with Adroc as he’s realized that the plan he’s been working toward isn’t the right one and he’s intent on getting Eureka out before the light show really begins that changes the world. This whole sequence is just a thing of beauty as it plays out with the color, the fluidity of the animation, and all the designs involved. It touches on the events of ten years prior to the series start itself and we get some nods towards those at this time that we know from the Gekko. But it’s mostly focused on Eureka and Adroc and it’s simply one long action-filled sequence of beauty.

Once we get past that… well, the film pretty much bored me. It doesn’t just take up from the series at the early stages, though we get some of that with Renton in his little town before he met everyone, but it’s far more interested in spending its time with Charles and Ray with Renton’s time there. It’s all leading toward that fight with the Gekko that was coming and Renton’s decision to stop hiding away and trying to avoid everything by living with these two, and the silliness of calling them mama and papa. What the film does though is to keep moving backward and forward over and over to showcase this larger sequence of events, and a few side movements, and it just becomes such a continuity disaster that it’s impossible to really invest in it. Mind you, there’s little in the way of actual character introductions from the TV side and all, so what you end up with is a huge disconnect between that fantastic opening act and the rest of the film.

In Summary:
With as much new footage as there is at the start here it’s impossible to really call this a compilation film. A third of it is new material that looks great, sounds great, and really excites even as it’s just one massive set piece of action. Once you get past that, where the film would dig into the story, it’s a reworking of the TV material cut in new ways with lots of backward and forward movement. I’m almost feeling like they would have been better off just releasing the new material as its own OVA, light on story and connection, and just running with that. Perhaps the next two films will be different in some way, though. Once we get to the TV side of the film it just left me disinterested, especially after rewatching the show itself a few years ago, and it doesn’t present itself in a way that I think works for completely viewers either. So while I do give the content a B-grade, it’s solely for the fact that the opening act is just gorgeous and highly engaging visually with what it does. There’s great potential here but it’s so squandered that I’m hard pressed to imagine the production team being proud of it, though that stems from me not understanding the real intent here.

Features:
Japanese Dolby TrueHD 5.1 Language, English Dolby TrueHD 5.1 Language, English Subtitles, Hiroya Ozaki x Tomoki Kyoda x Dai Sato Crosstalk, Music Videos, Teaser, Theatrical Trailers, Commercials, Trailers

Content Grade: B
Audio Grade: B+
Video Grade: A
Packaging Grade: B
Menu Grade: B
Extras Grade:B+

Released By: FUNimation
Release Date: August 14th, 2018
MSRP: $34.98
Running Time: 93 Minutes
Video Encoding: 1080p AVC
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 Widescreen

Review Equipment:
Sony KDL70R550A 70″ LED 1080P HDTV, Sony PlayStation3 Blu-ray player via HDMI set to 1080p, Onkyo TX-SR605 Receiver and Panasonic SB-TP20S Multi-Channel Speaker System With 100-Watt Subwoofer.


‘My Hero Academia’ Almost Grabs Top Toonami Anime Slot

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© Kohei Horikoshi / Shueisha · My Hero Academia Production Committee

The weekend prior was a holiday and that had Toonami running a marathon block of the first seven or so episodes of My Hero Academia. While a lot of college-age viewers of anime are getting settled into their routines these days, the Toonami block continues on and has some drops from the last regular broadcast schedule. Dragon Ball Super retains the top spot with 695,000 viewers which is down just 10,000 from before – but is still down from when it was in the just over a million range a few weeks prior. My Hero Academia at the 10pm slot did well by going up 40,000 viewers as a repeat.

The new side has just a few shows with Attack on Titan going up about 35,000 viewers and Pop Team Epic down by about 25,000 viewers. Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure is pretty much even at this point.

10:00 My Hero Academia (r) 655 0.24 315
10:30 Dragon Ball Super 695 0.28 363
11:00 Attack on Titan 512 0.20 252
11:30 FLCL: Alternative (p) 440 0.17 222
12:00a Pop Team Epic 359 0.16 207
12:30a Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure: Diamond is Unbreakable 356 0.16 206
1:00a Hunter X Hunter (r) 341 0.16 201
1:30a Black Clover (r) 348 0.16 209
2:00a Naruto: Shippuden (r) 329 0.16 202
2:30a One-Punch Man (r) 285 0.14 178
3:00a Lupin The 3rd: Part 4 (r) 271 0.14 180
3:30a Cowboy Bebop (r) 268 0.14 175

[Source: Programming Insider]

Cartoon Network Expands Toonami With Another Hour Of Anime

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Cartoon Network has revealed through its Toonami Facebook page that it’s expanding it with another hour to come for the run. With it recently expanding to the 10:00 pm slot and adding in some new shows like Pop Team Epic and Attack On Titan, the block will now begin at 9:00 pm. What they’re doing with it is keeping the first couple of hours a bit more “late night Saturday kid-friendly” in a way with shows that should skew well there while the later hours gets some of the more serious stuff.

The new schedule is set to begin on September 29th with:

  1. 9:00 p.m. – Dragon Ball Z Kai
  2. 9:30 p.m. – My Hero Academia
  3. 10:00 p.m. – Naruto Shippūden
  4. 10:30 p.m. – Boruto: Naruto Next Generations
  5. 11:00 p.m. – Dragon Ball Super
  6. 11:30 p.m. – FLCL Alternative
  7. 12:00 a.m. – Attack on Titan
  8. 12:30 a.m. – JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure: Diamond Is Unbreakable
  9. 1:00 a.m. – Black Clover
  10. 1:30 a.m. – Hunter x Hunter
  11. 2:00 a.m. – One-Punch Man
  12. 2:30 a.m. – Lupin III: Part IV
  13. 3:00 a.m. – Cowboy Bebop
  14. 3:30 a.m. – Samurai Jack

Toei Reveals ‘She, The Ultimate Weapon’ Blu-ray Anime Release Packaging

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Toei revealed earlier this year that they’re digging into its archives a bit with a title that’s getting a Blu-ray release with the She, The Ultimate Weapon property. With the set released today in Japan, Toei has now put together a 30-second spot to highlight the goodness that is the show. The set will have the TV series and OVA priced at 24,000 yen. The set will include a deluxe booklet while on-disc extras include the special talks that were done, the clean opening and closing sequences, interviews, the TV spots, and the game opening along with various promos. An audio drama is also being included.

With this originally being a show that was done digitally in letterbox like other Gonzo shows that have not gotten proper Blu-ray treatment because the source materials don’t allow it, Toei talks about how this is upgraded into HD from the SD material using a special process for the upconversion.

Check out our review of the series and our Ten Years Later retrospective.

Plot concept: Not every soldier wants to fight. Not every weapon wants to be used. But when an unexpected force attacks their city, the hopes and dreams of students Shuji and Chise are shattered by the fires of war. Surviving the bombing after a mysterious defender decimates the attackers, Shuji discovers Chise in the ruins. But she is no longer the girl he has always known. Changed and twisted by military experiments, she has been altered into something no longer completely human. And even worse, though they both fight to deny it, the things that made her the person she was are slowly beginning to fade away. Can a human soul exist inside a device that was created to kill? And can any heart continue to feel love for something that is only a shell of the person it once was? The question will be answered as a young schoolgirl is transformed into the ultimate engine of mass destruction in SHE- THE ULTIMATE WEAPON!

She, The Ultimate Weapon Japanese Packaging

[Source: Saikano]


Dejah Thoris Vol. 4 #8 Review

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A sizable threat looms!

Creative Staff:
Story: Amy Chu
Art: Pasquale Qualano
Colors: Valentina Pinto
Letterer: Thomas Napolitano

What They Say:
Lies, lies, lies – as the relationship between Helium and Zodanga deteriorate, Dejah Thoris learns a harsh lesson in diplomacy. Keel Kors professes his love for the Princess, but can she trust him? Meanwhile, Dekana reveals her true colors.

Content: (please note that content portions of a review may contain spoilers):
One of the things that makes reading Dejah Thoris and the John Carter books enjoyable is that it is all pretty new to me. I’ve read a handful over the years but there’s a rich history that’s been created, something that Amy Chu is able to tap into easily for new stories. This arc has been interesting so far but bringing in the Black Martians had me going to look as to when they were first introduced as I had never heard of them before. Pasquale Qualano continues to put together a great looking book and the scale of everything is really stepped up nicely with this installment thanks to the new arrivals here. It’s definitely an important piece to set right and Qualano does it up just right.

With the attack as happened the last time around, this issue starts with a decent little hsitory lesson about the Black Martians, or the First born, and the rumor of them being from one of the moon’s, which isn’t true from what I can tell. Their story of mingling with yellows and whites that ends up with reds down the line is interesting but also that we get a lot that are still pure in a sense. And they’re definitely intense as they’re taller, meaner, and work on what seems like a larger scale in terms of ships and what they’ve been up to in this area for some time. The way the ship is captured after evacuating most of the people shows that they’re very focused on what they’re after and have the confidence to pull it off.

It’s definitely engaging to watch as the Jeddak and the rest decide what to do, though all deference is there of course. His meeting with the Black Martians makes it clear they want the weapon that was built and those being it with Ando, currently a prisoner, included in the demand. Of course, the Jeddak isn’t up for that and it sets into motion the conflict that will come, especially with him wounded early and a lot now put onto Dejah to ensure that the Black Martians don’t acquire the weapon or the architect behind it. With some good adventure within the ship so far and an interesting crew that Dejah has had to deal with, and with the idea that Dekana is about to shift her own goals here, it’s a pretty intense story overall that’s coming into focus more and more.

In Summary:
While the Dejah Thoris stories overall have been a bit uneven in some ways there’s been plenty to like in each arc. This one in particular is definitely working better for me as we’re seeing more expansions on the world at large, drawing us into new areas and peoples, while also setting up for some pretty intense fights to come with how the Black Martians are being presented. Amy Chu’s work feels more and more confident as it goes on, taking more time to breathe in a way, while Pasquale Qualano gets to illustrate more and more interesting elements of Barsoom and all that it entails. I can’t wait to see what’s next.

Grade: B

Age Rating: 13+
Released By: Dynamite Entertainment
Release Date: September 12th, 2018
MSRP: Free

‘Mao-sama, Retry!’ Light Novels Getting Anime Adaptation

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A new anime is in production for 2019 with the announcement of the Mao-sama, Retry! light novels getting the nod. Author Kurone Kanzaki revealed this on his blog that it has been given the green light. The series had an online presence in 2016 but began print publication and distribution by Futabasha in 2017 with three volumes out for it so far. A manga adaptation also got underway with two volumes out to date.

Plot Concept: The series deals with Akira Ōno, a regular guy who works at a company that manages an online game. He often plays the game as his character “Maō” (Dark Lord). But one day, when he logs on, he is whisked into the game’s fantasy world as his character. There, he meets a one-legged girl, and begins his adventures alongside her. But as he is a powerful “Dark Lord,” various nations and holy maidens journey to defeat him, and he stirs up trouble everywhere he goes.

[Source: ANN]

Charlie’s Angels #4 Review

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One crazy chaotic mess.

Creative Staff:
Story: John Layman
Art: Joe Eisma
Colors: Celeste Woods
Letterer: Taylor Esposito

What They Say:
They’ve got a mysterious boss who hides in the shadows and calls the shot. There are three of them, lovely and lethal, a trio of tough cookies you do NOT want to mess with. Introducing The Satanbratan, East Germany’s equivalent of the Angels— the EVIL equivalent! And these deadly, dastardly dames ain’t gonna rest until our favorite Angels are six feet under.

Content: (please note that content portions of a review may contain spoilers):
I’ve been enjoying the Charlie’s Angels book a good deal over its run even though there are things that frustrate me. John Layman does try to do the recap thing at the beginning while playing to the who the Angels are bit but it was kind of draining on me during the second issue, never mind the fourth – even as wonky as they get to do it here. It’s a cute little gimmick but it’s a bit run into the ground for me. What’s still working very well, however, is Joe Eisma’s artwork. I’m digging very much the style and flow of events (though his Jimmy Carter doesn’t quite click for me) and the way the action plays out is great. Especially since Celeste Woods is giving this such a fun and vibrant color design to really keep it poppin.

With the Satanbratan now involved, the book takes on a complicated series of turns. This is more for the back and forth that it employs early on in establishing what’s going on, but the basics are all put into play when read in a more linear fashion as we get the bad girls showing up to overpower the Angels as they need to use them to kill the President. Keeping one of them as a hostage with the threat of eliminating her as well as Charlie and Ted, the other two get to work with one of the Satanbratan to find the right spot and get things dealt with. What’s amusing and complicated in its own way is that Jill claims to be Kelly when they’re deciding who to keep and convinces them that she is her. Since Jill is a master at escaping situations like this, they basically trick the Satanbratan into leaving the best possible person there to escape from it all.

That puts pressure on the other two to figure it out and play along which works nicely enough and then shifts into them trying to figure out how to stop the assassination and turn it into a rescue instead. It’s a bit chaotic because of people not being who they are and the mix of the Satanbratan into it as well, particularly since one of them wants to just splatter them all. It also doesn’t help with the back and forth early on and the changes in between as it just kind of left me feeling disconnected from it all. It is, however, classic 70’s styling feints and double feints so I can’t fault Layman there. It’s just that it doesn’t flow quite as well in book form. It does, however, give us the comical scene of one of the Angels carrying Carter on her shoulder and scaling down the side of a building in Paris.

In Summary:
I’m still enjoying Charlie’s Angels overall and am looking forward to the conclusion in the next issue (and hoping we get another series down the line some). Layman has a lot of things he’s juggling here and I’ll easily admit it got confusing along the way with who is who and exactly what’s going on, especially since the Satanbratan aren’t characters that I fully connected with just yet. Eisma’s artwork continues to give me all that I want from it with some really fun and dynamic scenes and just that kind of moving and grooving tone that’s right for this era and these characters. It’s light and fun and moves with a quick step and the team really is handling it very well.

Grade: B

Age Rating: 13+
Released By: Dynamite Entertainment
Release Date: September 12th, 2018
MSRP: $3.99

New ‘Case Closed’ Anime Special Scheduled

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Good news has landed for fans of Case Closed as a two-part special is coming in January 2019. The official site updated to reveal that series, which largely focuses on one-off mysteries, will have a two-part special on January 5th, 2019 and January 12th, 2019 that adapts the Crimson School Trip arc from the manga, which ran for six chapters back in 2017 as part of the 1,000th chapter celebration.

According to Crunchyroll, the story follows Teitan High School students’ school trip to Kyoto, including the protagonist Shinichi Kudo who temporarily regains his original 17-year-old body. Many popular supporting characters, such as Heiji Hattori, Kazuha Toyama, Momiji Ouoka, Soushi Okita, and Inspector Fumimaro Ayanokoji are also confirmed to appear in the story.

Check out the key visual for it below.

Property Concept: The criminal mind is a twisted place, and Jimmy Kudo knows the shady corridors of humanity better than any detective in the game. There ain’t a bad guy in town who can outsmart him, so they try to put the super sleuth down for a dirt nap. But instead of ending up in a shallow grave, Jimmy wakes up to find himself turned back into a kid. Utilizing his unlikely new persona and the latest in crime-fighting gadgetry, he tracks down his assailants as boy detective Conan Edogawa.

[Source: Crunchyroll]

Elvira: Mistress Of The Dark #2 Review

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The second most evil Vlad strikes!

Creative Staff:
Story: David Avallone
Art: Dave Acosta
Colors: Andrew Covalt
Letterer: Taylor Esposito

What They Say:
Nevermore! The Mistress of the Dark time-travels to 1838 Philadelphia for a black-cat-and-mouse game between America’s greatest poet of horror and the scariest tyrant of medieval Europe. Elvira and Edgar Allen Poe face down a raven-ous foe, in the second chapter of ELVIRA: TIMESCREAM.

Content: (please note that content portions of a review may contain spoilers):
The opening installment of Elvira was something that I totally got into with its rhythm and fun even if I’ve never cared much for the show itself when it was on. It was something you kind of saw, laughed at for how odd it was, and then just left it for those that found a better connection to it. David Avallone really did nail the right tone and approach to it, which is similar but not the same as to what he did on the fantastic Bettie Page, so I wasn’t surprised that it clicked as well as it did for me, striking the right balance of humor and self-awareness. It also didn’t hurt in that Dave Acosta is just absolutely fantastic at bringing Elvira to life in this form and having fun with so many different settings and characters of historical importance.

With her having landed in the time of Edgar Allen Poe, well, let’s just say that she and the good Edgar are definitely the types to hang out well together. His bouncing around cemeteries for inspiration hits a certain sweet spot while also knowing the best pub to tell and hear tales at. There’s a lot of dialogue going on with some exposition and recap and then shifting quickly into her telling Edgar her tale – all whild Vlad the Impaler has arrived in this time as well. The references are a lot of fun and most of them look like they’ll avoid being too dated for the most part. Simply watching how the two interact, plus a bartender, in the pub really sets a great tone as Acosta captures the look of it all well and Andrew Covalt’s color work is top notch in giving it the right kind of warmth.

Naturally, Vlad shows up in town and the whole thing turns fairly chaotic as they get into it, especially since she realizes that he really is Vlad and the fangs thing was actually real. It has some nice nods toward other famous players of Vlad over the years (and our present day Vlad) but it turns into a fairly standard escape sequence. Avallone does work it well enough with the quips and winks at the reader so that it feels very Elvira and you can easily imagine this playing out in reality in a quirk series or film. Setting her into more time travel is a given as is knowing that Vlad will likely be a step or two behind here and just the enjoyment of seeing Elvira interacting with so many different people has you wanting this to go on for quite some time yet.

In Summary:
The second issue of the series sadly took a bit longer to get here than I would have liked but the property is one where they can mostly manage it in standalone issue form with connective tissue bringing it across. This one feels a bit more decompressed in a way since it’s not doing the heavy lifting of the setup that the first one did so everything is spread out a bit more than before and it’s a mild readjustment to get used to that. David Avallone continues to have a blast here bring Elvira to life as he captures her personality so well while Dave Acosta just breathes so much life into every panel that it’s a delight to read several times by just looking at all the little details of each page. Very recommended.

Grade: A-

Age Rating: 13+
Released By: Dynamite Entertainment
Release Date: September 12th, 2018
MSRP: $3.99

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