Showing posts with label Claudia Ianniciello. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Claudia Ianniciello. Show all posts

Saturday, April 9, 2022

Shadowman #8 Preview

 

Shadowman #8 Cover A by Jon Davis-Hunt


The epic conclusion of Deadside War is finally here in SHADOWMAN #8, the stunning series finale!

Deadside's blights have spread far and wide across the land of the living, infecting the Earth with a terrible darkness. SHADOWMAN, PUNK MAMBO, and the all-new Abettors must seek answers in the unlikeliest of places but will even they be able to recruit enough power to stop Deadside's hostile takeover? The fate of the entire Earth rests in their shadowy hands!








SHADOWMAN #8 is written by CULLEN BUNN, illustrated by PEDRO ANDREO, colored by JORDIE BELLAIRE, and lettered by CLAYTON COWLES. SHADOWMAN #8 features covers by JON DAVIS-HUNT (Cover A), CLAUDIA IANICELLO (Horror Movie Homage Variant), and MICO SUAYAN (Pre-order Variant). 

 

Shadowman #8 Cover B by Claudia Iannicello

 

Shadowman, with the assistance of Punk Mambo and the Abettors, fights to stop Deadside as the blights get closer to covering all of Earth. Valiant’s mightiest heroes are caught up in her wake. Can Shadowman exorcise Deadside back to her dimension or will the blights change the landscape of the Valiant Universe forever?

 

Shadowman #8 Pre-Order Cover by Mico Suayan

SHADOWMAN will return in the pages of the upcoming supernatural event BOOK OF SHADOWS, also written by Cullen Bunn, on sale July and available for pre-order now!

Shadowman #8 haunts your local comic shop this coming Wednesday, April 13th.

 

Thursday, January 27, 2022

The Harbinger #4 Review

 

The Harbinger #4 Cover B by Claudia Ianniciello


If you're a longtime Valiant fan, you've likely read previous volumes of Harbinger, and know Peter Stanchek's history. In The Harbinger #4, you'll catch a glimpse inside the man known as The Renegade. 

Incidentally, he also goes by another name: Peter Stanchek.



It seems he awoke one day with Peter Stanchek's powers. Along with them came Peter's pain, and the struggles Peter's powers induced. So he decided to learn about the name burned into his consciousness.



In the last three issues, we've read an ongoing psychic interplay between Peter and The Renegade. You may have wondered: is this dialogue occurring in the present? Or is it a future conversation being overlaid on past events? 

In The Harbinger #4, we may not get a definitive answer to that question. At least, after their brief meeting at the end of first issue and the beginning of the second, we get a much longer confrontation between the two men.

The two Peter Stancheks.

 


If your memories have been taken from you, who are you? Neither of the two, it seems, actually knows. Peter certainly doesn't. As for The Renegade...

In his case, I get the feeling he chose the title because it just seems to fit.



At times, I wasn't even sure as to the identity of some of the characters the two discuss, as they relive traumatic scenes from Peter Stanchek's life. This is largely because Robbi Rodriguez, while a fine penciler and inker, seems better schooled in Manga than Comics. Oddly, his characterization of The Renegade reminds me of the Doctor Tomorrow from another universe, who meets young Bart Simms in Doctor Tomorrow #1.

Or, at least, the way he looked after the big fight in Doctor Tomorrow #3.



At least we're on certain ground, when Robbi Rodriguez draws Toyo Harada and the Bleeding Monk.


 

Writers Jackson Lanzing and Collin Kelly suggest that Peter Stanchek carried a lot of guilt over mistakes he made in the past. At times this seems excessive, given how much good Peter has also done, and how he's attempted to make up his mistakes.

Sure, he's knowingly done wrong. Yet each time, he's attempted to make those situations right.



One of the reasons Rico Renzi's extravagant coloring works so well for me is because Peter is such a sensitive soul. He's no psychopath. He's completely and totally unable--on his own--to drown out all the thoughts and feelings of others. Or at least he was, until he awakened, seemingly newly born, in The Harbinger #1.

It makes sense that such a sensitive soul would see the world far more intensely than you or me.



Sadly, Jackson Lanzing and Collin Kelly's story in The Harbinger #1 will not answer all your questions about exactly what transpired between Peter and The Renegade before this series started. But I guess that's a good thing, as it'll keep us coming back to learn more in upcoming issues.

At least Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou's lettering makes the symbiosis--or the sense of commonality that Peter and The Renegade share--perfectly clear.



The Harbinger #4 may contain more horizontal two-page layouts than I'd prefer. Sometimes the way Robbi Rodriguez draws the characters could be more clear. Yet Jackson and Lanzing's ongoing mystery intrigues me, and Robbi Rodriguez, aided by colorist Rico Renzi and letterer Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou, creates evocative and captivating imagery.

 

 

Although it doesn't contain a huge amount of present-day action, I count The Harbinger #4 a winner, and look forward to future installments in this exciting and thought-provoking series.

Dragon Dave

Monday, January 24, 2022

The Harbinger #4 Covers

 

The Harbinger #4 Cover A by Robbi Rodriguez


In The Harbinger #4 Cover A, Robbi Rodriguez shows Peter Stanchek caught up in a web of power woven by The Renegade. It reminds me of those great battles between Harry Potter and his nemesis Lord Voldemort. Amid this psychic maelstrom wrought by these two powerful beings, can either survive?

I must say: it is such a treat to see Valiant Entertainment commission the interior artist to do covers as well. You can be certain that they'll portray events in the stories correctly. It's always neat to see, after they've done twenty interior pages, how they will summon up one unscripted image of their own.

Although he's not credited, I presume interior colorist Rico Renzi colored Robbi Rodriguez's The Harbinger #4 Cover A as well.


The Harbinger #4 Cover B by Claudia Ianniciello

I love how Claudia Ianniciello evokes Peter's battle with his past for her The Harbinger #4 Cover B. Peter has had a contentious relationship with most of the people he's befriended or worked with in the past. As with Cover A, this cover is fully in line with story events.

I always appreciate when a cover isn't just a tantalizing image, but is also true to the story.


The Harbinger #4 Pre-Order Cover by Damion Scott

Finally, Damion Scott's The Harbinger #4 Pre-Order Cover shows us a close-up of The Renegade. As you've no doubt noticed, Damion's representations of story characters is a little different from Robbi Rodriguez's portrayal. But, as with Covers A and B, his cover also relates specifically to story events, and I love how The Renegade is crushing The Harbinger title on this one.

Incidentally, if you've been collected The Harbinger Pre-Order Editions, this is what you'll see if you put issues #1 through #4 together.

 


I wish I could show this larger. Still, isn't it fun?

Dragon Dave