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Get Your GWOPA On!
Thursday, September 20, 2007

Emerging From The Loch
Monday, September 10, 2007

ATR at SDCC Day 3
Sunday, July 29, 2007

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Saturday, July 28, 2007

ATR at SDCC Day 1
Friday, July 27, 2007

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Get Your GWOPA On!

By Steven G Saunders
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Hello there. Welcome one and all back to yet another glorious installment of All The Rage. This week I have things for everyone, so it’s best we don’t waste time and get started.

Ready— Set—

Wait. I almost forgot the Standard Disclaimer in my excitement. Okay, so the rumours you see running on here? They may not be accurate. Hell, they could be outright non-truths. Now, I check my sources and all that jazz, but sometimes things get through. That's why I have the factor scores. They give you an idea of what the "truthinormity" of a particular piece of rumour or gossip is. Unless it's "10" there is a possibility that it's incorrect. But the closer to "10" the better. Got it? Cool. And with everything else the factor score represents how awesome I think something is, or how awesome I think you lot will think it it, or both. Anyway, it's completely arbitrary. There you go. Good luck and god-speed.

Alright, back to it: Ready-- Set--

Rumour Mini-Mill: Go!

Some Marvel and DC bits to get you started. Plus, you skimmers totally owe me for plopping this in one section. I like cheeses if you need gift ideas.

  • Dan Didio killing off Nightwing has cropped up again. I’m told he thinks Nightwing has no place in the DCU. Now Didio has admitted before that Nightwing almost didn’t make it out of Infinite Crisis, and that he was on the chopping block. I give this one a Rumour Factor score of 5 out of 10.
  • There is supposed to be another Unknown Soldier series in the works. Good news for folks like me if this pans out!
    Ooops! See? I take a month off to deal with crap and... So, the Unknown Soldier project was annouced at SDCC (I was there, I'm told). I dunno how I flubbed this, but hey... Shit happens. Anyhow, I'd like to point out that Josh Dysart is writing it, which is pretty damn cool. He's probably one of my fave writers right now, as my ravings on Conan and the Midnight God can attest to. Anyhoo, sorry, sorry. Bad Steve. Rumour Factor score of 10 out of 10.
  • Brian Denham will be replacing artist Sean Chen on Marvel’s Nova. Considering that he has been on board as a co-artist, this isn’t all that surprising. Plus, Nova is to play a big role in the future. That’s been mentioned before here, I believe, but it’s worth mentioning again. 9 out of 10
Nothing earth-shattering, but a nice start to this week’s run.

This Has A “Rumour Factor Average” Of Seven Out Of Ten


Star Wars Vector to be the new Civil War?

Dark Horse, as some of you may know, mentioned in Baltimore recently that they will be doing a “[Marvel] Civil War-like crossover” with the four Star Wars titles, called Vector. Not satisfied with this piece of birthday news, I dug a bit deeper… And thanks to some Jawa informants, I have come up with the following information on this Vector thing:
  • Zayne Carrick, the primary character from the Knights of the Old Republic comic, will be a central character. Or at least very important /central at the beginning. Details were fuzzy on this one for me to be completely positive. I do know that the new character mentioned in the Force.net article will be a Jedi Covenant operative.
  • Vector will involve Luke Skywalker, Darth Vader, and some Legacy characters.
  • Titles involved will be Knights of the Old Republic, Dark Times, Legacy, and Rebellion.
  • New characters will be introduced. Of course, this is kind of a given I would think.
  • It will kick off from something in the Undercity of Taris. Some kind of ancient, “monstrous” evil is involved.
  • It all starts in Knights of the Old Republic #25, due out in January. It will last a year.
Sure, I gained some Dark Side points, but what can I say? I really dig cookies.

Here’s to hoping it turns out great. I’ve really enjoyed the Star Wars comics thus far.

You may begin with the Civil War comparison jokes… Wait for it. Wait… Now!

Update: Some more info can be found here.

This Has A “There Is No Try, Only Cookies” Factor Of Nine Out Of Ten


Sneaky Checkmate Marketing?

I received an odd email from someone calling themselves “WKB” who is claiming to be White King’s Bishop in Checkmate, Thinker. With this message the following image was attached:



Tinkering around, I found this web address in the properties: http://www.gideonii.com/DEPUTIZATION_ORDER_OUTGOING/Order_192_101_DEPUTIZATION.gif

Since this stuff comes from the Gideon II site, and indicates that there will be “Cypher” changes, I can only assume that they are going to add something, or change the password, or something.

I really did spend some time on this whole thing; and yes, that very same thought you are thinking right now did occur to me. First things first, I got a hold of Eric Trautmann, current co-writer on Checkmate. He vehemently denied any involvement or knowledge of the site and is a bit confused over how the password ended up in Checkmate #17 (“Yeah, right”, I’m sure some of you say; don’t blame you). Eric also added that he is delighted by this website. So, even if he isn’t involved, at least he likes it.

This left primary scribe Greg Rucka. It took some time track this busy writing machine down, but he was kind enough to provide a statement on the matter: “Honestly, the first I knew about it was when I read the posts on Comic Bloc. I'm embarrassed to admit it took me about a week to figure out the username/password. I don't know who's doing it, but I sure as hell am impressed."

Greg’s not involved then? Or a clever ruse? I’ll take him on his word for now.

Hmmm… All signs also point to it not being an official DC thing either. Viral marketing? Obsessed fan-person? Covert operations from some PR source? It’s only guesswork right now. If anything else interesting pops up, I’ll make sure to mention it.

This Has A “And I Left My Ninja Suit At The Dry Cleaners” Factor Of Eight Out Of Ten


Exclusive First Born #2 Unlettered Pages

If you like Witchblade and are or plan on reading First Born, here’s a sneak peek at some previously unseen pre-lettered pages from First Born #2. Two gnomes were maimed getting these out of Top Cow’s fortified bunker.




Full details on this nice looking Ron Marz and Stjepan Sejic project can be found here.

This Has A “Prenatal Super Light/Dark Action Time!” Factor Of Eight Out Of Ten


A Fearless First Look

And for those of you looking for a neat new comic to get into, I recommend Fearless from Image, due out on November 7th. I’ve seen the first two issues, and I will tell you that Mark Sable, P.J. Holden, and David Roth really knock this one out of the park. Here’s what you should expect:
    “FEARLESS is far from typical. The lead is a literal man without fear, as behind the mask he’s paralyzed with a crippling anxiety disorder, but an anti-fear drug enables him to fight the war on crime. A life of dependency crashes down when his supply runs completely dry. What comes next is the crux of the series.” – Mark Sable

    Read all about this upcoming series here. As a special treat, what you are seeing are two pages not seen elsewhere.

This Has An “Insert Daredevil Quip Here” Factor Of Nine Out Of Ten


Markosia’s New Bad Blood, Now with More Kong!

The unlettered first looks continue with Markosia’s Starship Troopers #5, beginning the Bad Blood story arc, and being the debut of the new Troopers creative team. Check ‘em out:






Nice. Very nice. To top it off, take a look at these great King Kong: King of Skull Island covers and some of #0 which will be coming out in October:







I’ve had a chance to flip though the #0 issue and I have to say that it perfectly captures the old pulp magazines in look, feel, and style. When I was little, I would go through my father’s old comics and other fine forms of pulp literature and this Kong comic is like a time machine back to those wonderful moments in my young life.

This Has A “Will Troopers Ever Bug Kong, Though?” Factor Of Nine Out Of Ten


Rahsan Ekedal: Heating Up the Forge of War

Warhammer. One of my all-time most beloved franchises. I have played Warhammer Fantasy and Warhammer 40,000 and most of its incarnations since 1987 or so. Needless to say, when BOOM! Studios gave me an opportunity to talk to Rahsan Ekedal, the amazingly talented artist on Warhammer: Forge of War, I pounced on it like Genestealers on first edition Imperial Guardsmen. After going through some bizarre rituals that were very suspect (Tzeentchian, maybe?), I finally made contact with Mr. Ekedal….

-Audio Log Begins-

ATR: Hey, Rahsan, thanks for joining me here on the Rage. First off, I love your work on Forge of War. It's absolutely stunning. I understand that this is one of your first jobs in the industry?

Rahsan Ekedal (RE): Thanks, Steve! Happy to be here. Yeah, this is my first major gig. I did a very limited run indie called Dante's Inferno with a writer I met at the Academy of Art in San Francisco, but Forge of War is the first thing I think anyone has actually seen!

ATR: It's a good start, my friend. How did you land this gig with BOOM! anyway?

RE: Well, I bumped into Ross Richie at WonderCon last March. We talked a little bit, I showed him some samples, and he asked me to get in touch with Joe Abraham at Boom!. Joe had just taken over editing the Warhammer books - he liked my stuff, and needed someone to take on Forge of War, so that was that!

ATR: And how is working with Dan Abnett? What is the process like? Is it difficult working with clones? Readers need to know.

RE: It's a bit hard because I never know which clone I'll be dealing with day to day, and some of them are more homicidal than others... No, really Dan is great. He and Ian send me fantastic scripts every month that always get me juiced up for drawing. From an artistic standpoint, I'd say the style they've developed together on this series is great. The give me quite a bit of room to choose how each page will look, while also giving enough of a framework so I know what they're thinking, what they visualize. It's perfect.

ATR: Oh dear, I neglected Ian! Sorry, Mr. Edginton. Now he'll send the dire weasels after me. Guess I was asking for it. Anyhow, it's good to hear you guys all work together well. As far as your art is concerned, could you please tell the readers what is is that you do exactly in regards to your art duties. And what is -your- process?

RE: My robots do most of the work.

ATR: Clones and robots... what's the industry coming to?

RE: It's a brave new world, man. Get with it! When my robots aren't working, this is how it goes. I get the script from Dan and Ian and sit down and read it through about twice. Twice because the first time I generally just read it like I'm reading a book, just to get into the story and the feeling of the setting, characters, etc. The second time I really start visualizing everything, and I might make some little thumbnail notes. Dan and Ian have pretty visceral images built into the scripts, so it's usually pretty clear in my mind from the beginning. After that I move to the thumbnail stage - making little sketches that only I can read, getting panel layouts figured out, figure placement, and camera angles. After that, I move to the full size art board, and draw tight blue-pencil layouts. I scan these layouts, convert them to grayscale in Photoshop, and darken them a bit, then send them off to get approved by Boom! and Games Workshop. After all that, I finally get to do the finished pencils! We don't have an inker on this project, so Scott colors right over my scanned pencils.

ATR: Now do you work closely with Scott on the colouring?

RE: I give him notes when I visualize something specific, or when I want to make sure there isn't confusion about some detail. Color is very important to the storytelling, and we want to get it right. Scott has been great and sometimes even picks up on things I didn't indicate in the pencils, which is the definition of good collaboration in my book.

ATR: Well, this team seems to have its process down, and the results make this Sigmarite a very pleased customer. For those readers out there not in the know, Forge of War is a limited series. What does the future hold, Rahsan? When will we see more purty Warhammer comics (in a new series, I mean)?

RE: I can say definitely doing another Warhammer miniseries after Forge of War is done. I can't say much, but if everything works out, you should be seeing my pencils on both more Warhammer fantasy, as well as Warhammer 40K. And that will be rolling right after Forge of War ends.

ATR: Any chance to see your work in any Warhammer tabletop or RPG products? Speaking of which, what's your personal relation to the Warhammer franchise? Are you a gamer? And how much research did you have to do to get the results we see?

RE: Games Workshop hasn't approached me, but I'd love to. I don't get much time for painting and more traditional illustration with all the comics work, so that would be a lot of fun. As far as my relation Warhammer, I wish I had the money to afford everything! I'd like to build a huge Chaos army - that's my heart's desire at the moment. Time is an issue too - getting a book out every month take up almost every waking moment (translation: I don't have a life)! But I love Warhammer and working on the book as allowed me to delve deeper into the world, which is fantastic. I did quite a bit of research before starting issue #1, and the level of detail involved in the world of Warhammer requires new research with every new script I get. It's really important to me that I get it right. My mission is really to give the fans of Warhammer a visual realization of this world that feels right and fits with the figurines, book art, etc., while also hopefully showing it from a new angle, or revealing a new detail here and there. I want to give the fans a sense of depth, and maybe help them imagine themselves standing on some hard scrabble hill in Averland facing off against the ravenous hordes of Chaos!

ATR: Averland has cruddy weather, you jerk! I caught a chill! Um, I guess you're doing a good job, then.

RE: Sorry!

ATR: A Chaos army, huh? I always figured artist sorts as followers of the Ruinous Powers. The weather thing makes so much sense now.

RE: There's nothing I love better than fog, rain, and severed limbs

ATR: There's nothing quite as romantic, that's for sure. So, this other non-Warhammer comic you worked on... before we go, could you tell us a little about it?

RE: That project was a fictional story set in 1906 San Francisco, telling the story of a firefighter who experiences the Great Earthquake that destroyed the city. It was a collaboration between a handful of students from the Academy of Art, which is where I studied before landing with Boom!. It also required a lot of research (I guess you could say I'm a bit obsessive), but it was fun to rebuild old San Francisco in my head, and then destroy it!

ATR: That sounds great! Where can people find this comic?

RE: They can go to http://www.dantesinfernothemovie.com, and I believe they can download a digital version there, although I'm not positive about what's currently available there, since the writer/creator handles that whole aspect.

ATR: I'm definitely checking that out. Alright, Rahsan, it's been great having you on here, man! As a HUGE Warhammer freak (I insisted that I wear my Imperial Aquila belt-buckle with my snazzy wedding suit, for instance) I'm happy I got the opportunity to talk to you. You're welcome back anytime, so don't be a stranger. The closing words are yours, sir. But they have to end with "...there is only war".

RE: Thanks so much, Steve! If anyone hasn't picked up issue #3 of Forge of War yet, it's really cool, especially if you love Dwarfs kicking ass! And issue #4 will be coming out soon, with lots more brutal violence and perhaps a... Griffon? Oops, did I say that? So till then - in Sigmar's name - there is only war.

-End Log. Thought of the Day: Fire Purges the Unclean-

And only two Astropaths burned out during this whole affair. Not bad. For more forbidden data, please visit the vaults over at BOOM! Studios.

This Has A “So, Are Dark Elves Canadian?” Skull Factor Of Ten Out Of Ten


For the Kids: Batman Strikes!

I realise that not many kids read, or really should be reading, this column—but I’m sure some fellow parents do. One great thing about the comics industry is Johnny DC and the titles it carries. That said, a great thing about Johnny DC is Batman Strikes. An upcoming issue in January will have the first team-up in the Batman Strikes universe of Poison Ivy and Harley Quinn (which is also the same universe of The Batman TV show). It starts with issue #41 and is called “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun”, and has them on the run in Gotham City, winding up at a stadium that will probably seem familiar to some Chicago baseball fans. This sure to be good story is written by Russell Lissau and the artist is to be announced.

Speaking of writer Russell Lissau’s work on Batman Strikes, his third issue (#38) is coming out in October and is titled “Pretty Poison”, and is one of his all-time fave scripts from what I understand. As you may surmise, this too features Poison Ivy. Take a gander at some of Christopher Jones’ pencils on the issue here.



Be sure to also take a look at Mr. Lissau’s MySpace page where he talks about Hope: New Orleans which is in stores now.

This Has A “Poison Ivy CAN Be Good For Kids” Factor Of Nine Out Of Ten


The Parting Grapeshot and Other Projectiles

Quote of the last week goes to Mike Sterling over at the Progressive Ruin blog. His thoughts on Heroes for Hire #13 (aka “Heroes for Hentai”) arriving at his store “Ah, this seminal cover which had folks in the comics internet shooting out loads of white-hot anger, leaving them breathing hard with their passion, has found its release this week to, at least at our shop, no in-store ejaculations of outrage. So at least there's a happy ending.” Brilliant!

Entertaining rant and commentary on Iron Man over at Scans Daily. Here’s an appropriate song to go along with it, I think. Caution! This song uses the Fuck-Word. You’re welcome, Jason (Bazinet not Brice, but hello to that Jason, too). Oh, and of course, Moon Knight agrees that Tony is a dick.

Scans Daily can also be incredibly entertaining to nerdy gamer types (like myself). Take for instance this recent entry. Ah, ye olde Advanced Dungeons & Dragons comic. Probably my favourite thing (along with the Forgotten Realms one and Hellblazer aside) that DC ever released. This entry deals with AD&D #23—“Why Lawful isn’t the best alignment”. I’d like to note that Kenzer & Company did a decent D&D comic series… If you can find it, it’s worth checking out.

Over at C.B. Cebulski’s blog, he reminds us that the Tales of the Fear Agent trade is coming out, of which he has a story in. Fear Agent is awesome, so it’s worth a mention here. Okay, C.B. is pretty cool, too. He so owes me some tacos. Why? Only he knows. Ask him and he might tell you. Maybe.

My arch-nemesis John Layman has a great idea for a new column name: “The Flying Rumor Friar”. Very imaginative, man. All that stuff he says about me having sex with animals? Completely true. There was a steamy Thundercats love scene that was inspired by me (which was sadly cut, I hear).

On a much more somber note, Neil Gaiman talks about his friend Robert Jordan’s passing. That last bit where he say that if he stayed home he could keep everyone alive actually choked me up a bit. It’s truly a sad time for fantasy fans.

Finally, my pal Daniel Lundie of Futurius sent me this birthday picture he did for me. Very cool, man. Bribery and flattery will get you everywhere, I’m told. Speaking of Futurius, I’ll have an excellent little preview of things to come from them next week.



Well, folks, that’s it for another ATR. Thanks for dropping by. Some personal issues helped push this back by a day or two. Yeah, I know, and I just got back, too! Things will iron out. They better, anyway. For now, you should expect ATR on Mondays, or thereabouts. The weekends are too damn packed for me lately and I hate writing up a column on Thursday (because much of my best stuff knocks at my door on Friday or Saturday). Inconsistent? Heck yes, and you have my apologies. However, things have been set in motion to alleviate this problem. Just hang in there and everything will be fine. It’s either that or extra-terrestrial domination complete with clockwork cyborg weasels and peanut butter death rays.

It’s quite easy to track me down, and I encourage it. If you have comments, suggestions, complaints, ideas, tips, things I just have to see: please o’ please, drop me a line.

Email: steves@silverbulletcomicbooks.com
Livejournal: http://synabetic.livejournal.com (a good place to find out the status of ATR or some cool hints as to what’s to come)
MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/synabetic
ComicSpace: http://www.comicspace.com/steven_g_saunders
Diary of a Grognerd: http://grognerd.blogspot.com/
And on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com you can find me under my full name: Steven George Saunders

You may also IM me if you so desire, and see that I’m online. People have done this before, and I’m a very good sport about it. I like to talk. Can you tell? Instant Messaging info can be found in my various profiles (I think Livejournal has the best selection).

Oh, yes, and let's not overlook Steve's Rage Cage, the ATR Forums. Feel free to spout off on there and speak you mind. About whatever you want, really. All I ask is that people play nice with each other. I will try to place items that didn't make the column and other tidbits, too, and other insidious messages as pertaining to me obsession with weevils.

Take care, dear readers! Until next time…


Has Steve really irritated, annoyed or provoked you?
Get your revenge at Steve's Rage Cage message board.







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