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Because you demanded it! No, not you. To the left no, not you either. One more. There you go. You! This issue is for you! It's the long awaited Kid-with-knife.
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Join our incredible creative team as Teach meets Black Ceasar under command of his own ship for the very first time!

12/08/2008

But how? He's a tiny gopher! And will Lumpy ruin his chance to realize his dream? Kaluta Sentenced to life on abandoned Omega Disque 6, Molly helps a tribe of Amazons defeat their enemies Primal , Feb 9, No, not you. To the left One more. There you go. This issue is for you! It's the long awaited Kid-with-knife solo vehicle. He likes going out. Go with him! You'll like it!

Exclamation mark! Primal , Feb 10, The answer will surprise you! You must log in or sign up to reply here. Show Ignored Content. Your name or email address: Do you already have an account? No, create an account now. Yes, my password is: Forgot your password? Turn right on Bond. Next cross street is Minnesota, and we are two stores on the left. Books, Comics and Games. Comic Book Resources.

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Comics Worth Reading. The Savage Critic s.


  • Image Comics Sneak Peek in stores today.
  • I Love How You Love Me;
  • Forced Pregnancy (Taboo Forbidden Erotica).

Farewell, sweet prince 2 years ago. Hey, Bartender! The Top Shelf Blog. Humbled and honored Mike Sterling's Progressive Ruin. Update your Progressive Ruin feed links! The Comics Reporter. The Comic Book Shop--Yeah, we're great! ICv2 : Inside Pop Culture. Diamond Comic Distributors, Inc. When I first read this issue, I hadn't heard the song it references TV on the Radio's "Wolf Like Me" but, a few pages in, I knew that this "silent" issue was intended as a comicbook cover version of the song it was named after.

Having since listened to the track in question, I understand better how it fits together, but it's hard not to be impressed at how the story can evoke a soundtrack even when you don't know what it sounds like. The star of this issue is the irrepressible Kid-With-Knife, who first appeared way back when "Phonogram" was still in its infancy.

Comic Book Review: Forthcoming Attractions (anticipated releases this week - )

For a series that spends a lot of its time deconstructing its subject matter, it seems like a brave choice to end the series with one of two characters in the series who doesn't intellectualize music at all. Indeed, when Kohl teaches him how to use Phonomancy, he openly demolishes the series' central conceit replying: "That's magic? Hell, everybody does that. Of course, as much as technique and message are important, there's a story to tell as well.

As the "concluding" issue to a story told from multiple viewpoints, it does somehow manage to tie itself back to the first issue, and learning the final, terrible fate of Penny B in a fantastically rendered scene does provide emotional circularity to the series, and may well break a few hearts at the same time.

12222 In Review:

It would be a disservice to conclude this review without mentioning the backup strips -- 4 in total -- which include a brilliantly incongruous Viking-based contribution from Becky Cloonan. The rest span the length of the "Phonogram" chronology. The first, by Nikki Cook, goes right back to the original death of the goddess Britannia, a prologue to Rue Britannia, while the third provides a coda to the same series.

It seems particularly amusing that the physically and chronologically final strip, drawn by Sean Azzopardi, closes out the series with an analysis of the Talking Heads song, Once in a Lifetime -- which I shouldn't have to remind anyone spins on the line "My God, what have I done? And that, more or less, is it. It had depth, subtlety, and best of all, it had a point it wanted to make.

There are valid criticisms you could charge the series with. Perhaps you found it cliquey.

Perhaps you found it pretentious. Perhaps you simply thought a story about people in a nightclub wasn't really that interesting. But Phonogram was different, and ambitious, and more often than not, it met its own criteria and then some. It played with storytelling, and with format, and it did it all while looking great and having the kind of dialogue you can quote.

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