Welcome to Team Superfriends!

Here you will find everything you need to know about Super Heroes like Batman, Superman, The Hulk, Iron Man, The Avengers and much more. Keep up to date with Movie News, Comic Book News and Video Game News or browse our store for super hero merchandise.

January 19 2010

Read This Series: Locke & Key by Joe Hill

Tagged Under : , , , , ,

Locke & KeyWhether you love Lovecraftian horror or offbeat family dynamics, you’ll want to check out Locke & Key, the Eisner-nominated series by Joe Hill and Gabriel Rodriguez. Focusing on the Lockes, a family haunted by tragedy that returns to Keyhouse, their ancestral New England home, Locke & Key combines old-school gothic horror with the infinitely relatable struggles of family life.

The Locke children–teenagers Tyler and Kinsey and kid brother Bode–are trying to put their lives back together after being terrorized by Sam Lesser, who brutally murdered their father. They’ve moved to an idyllic New England community, they’ve made new friends–including charming fellow student Zack Wells–and Keyhouse is full of new discoveries.

Like keys that turn humans into ghosts. Or open heads. Or open the Black Door, which just might lead to an unspeakable horror. Did I mention that Zack Wells is actually the reincarnation of Lucas Caravaggio, an old friend of their father’s who mysteriously disappeared more than 20 years ago, and who will stop at nothing to get all of the keys in his possession?

Locke & Key is an excellent horror read because while the artwork is fantastic and the mystery intriguing, the focus is squarely on the characters. You’ll get to know the Lockes and become invested in them, so when all hell breaks loose, you won’t be able to wait until the next issue! For more details about this awesome series, make sure to check out our interview with Joe Hill last October.

To get started, pick up the first two hardcovers, Welcome to Lovecraft and Head Games. Or, if you’re already a fan, make sure to snatch up each issue of the current story arc, Crown of Shadows. You won’t be sorry!

Questions? Opinions? We know you have them! Post them below!

December 23 2009

Angel: Only Human #5

Tagged Under : , , , , , , , ,

Angel Only Human #5 available for pre-order Great news for Angel fans! We’ve got Angel: Only Human #5 up at TFAW.com! As Gunn faces down the last of The Scourge and makes a desperate last stand, Illyria faces off one last time with her old “pet,” Baticus. How do you defeat a demon who keeps growing back all his parts?

But it’s the gruesome discovery that Gunn makes that could change the entire game. Don’t miss the epic conclusion to this exciting story from team Lobdell/Messina.

Angel: Only Human #5 arrives tomorrow, and we couldn’t be more excited to see what happens. Due to a communication error with our supplier, Angel: Only Human #5 wasn’t offered as a pre-order at TFAW.com (or any other comic book shop) until today.

Normally, when comics arrive in our warehouse, the every day low pricing kicks in and the pre-order savings disappear. Not the case with tomorrow’s release of Angel: Only Human #5.

Order by 11:59PM (PST) December 27, 2009 and you’ll save 20% regardless of whether you place a pre-order or in-stock order.

We do, however, urge you to place a pre-order now so the issue will ship according to your pre-order shipping schedule. You’ll save on shipping that way.

Note to Subscribers: Even if you have a subscription to Angel: Only Human, you’ll want to manually order your copy of Angel: Only Human #5 because it was not picked up in the subscription process at the end of October. We apologize for the inconvenience.

ORDER ANGEL: ONLY HUMAN #5 TODAY–JUST $3.19 THROUGH 12/27!

PRE-ORDER THE ANGEL: ONLY HUMAN TPB

November 12 2009

Captain Kirk Joins Madame Tussauds Hollywood: Save $8!

Tagged Under : , , , ,

With the Star Trek movie due out on DVD November 17–not to mention all of the new Star Trek comics and graphic novels IDW Publishing has released–Trekkie (or Trekker) fever has been at an all-time high.

Now Madame Tussauds Hollywood has added William Shatner’s Captain James T. Kirk wax figure to their permanent collection, and you can get $8 off general admission tickets through the end of the year when you print the following coupon. Adult tickets are normally $25 and kids tickets are usually $18, so this is a savings of more than 30-40%!

Madame Tussauds Hollywood is located just about two miles from our Things From Another World store at Universal CityWalk. Make sure to pick up some Star Trek swag or William Shatner’s Tek War comics before you head over! If you don’t live near Hollywood but are still jonesing for a personal connection to original-gangster Captain Kirk, we have copies of William Shatner Presents Tek War #1, signed by Shatner himself, in stock!

What do you think about the Captain Kirk wax figure? Is it true to life? Is anyone a big fan of Tek War? Post your comments below!

October 28 2009

Your Daily Horror: Angel Not Fade Away TPB

Tagged Under : , , , , ,

Fans of Joss Whedon’s Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel television shows have been loving the ongoing comics series from Dark Horse Comics and IDW Publishing. If you’re a fan of Fox’s late, lamented small-screen Angel but haven’t picked up the comic yet, the Angel Not Fade Away TPB is the perfect place to start!

Written by Joss Whedon himself, with art by Stephen Mooney and Jeff Johnson the Angel Not Fade Away TPB is a three-issue adaptation of the final episode of Whedon’s beloved Angel television series. This graphic novel leads to a climactic battle in an alleyway that fans now know was only the end of the beginning!

This collection includes the three-part Not Fade Away miniseries, as well as the script for the original television episode and spot illustrations.

You can order Angel Not Fade Away TPB now for just $17.99! While you’re here, make sure to check out our Angel and Horror Month pages.

Are you enjoying the Angel comic book series from IDW Publishing? State your opinion below!

October 26 2009

Writer Joe Hill Talks to TFAW.com About Locke & Key From IDW

Tagged Under : , , , , , ,

One of the most exciting new series of horror comics is Locke & Key, from Joe Hill, a relative newcomer to comics who also has a successful career as a novelist (Heart-Shaped Box) and short-story writer (The Living Dead). Locke & Key focuses on a family that, after a horrific tragedy, moves to an old family manse in New England and tries to start over. However, the kids, Tyler, Kinsey, and Bode, keep stumbling over magical keys–keys a malevolent being, Dodge, is determined to get. Dodge transforms himself into a seemingly normal American teenager named Zach and befriends the family, but he also appears to be the reincarnation of a high school friend of their father’s named Lucas Caravaggio.

Full of humor, pathos, and truly unique supernatural elements, Locke & Key has been nominated for an Eisner, and two story arcs, Welcome to Lovecraft and Head Games, are available as graphic novels. The first issue of the third arc, Crown of Shadows, will be released by IDW on November 25. Fortunately, we were lucky enough to be able to speak with the very enthusiastic Joe Hill and pick his brains about where Locke & Key is headed, and what he’s liking from the horror genre in general:

TFAW.com: Where did the genesis of Locke & Key come from? What inspired it?

Joe Hill: Basically, the long-form genesis of Locke & Key is, I had written three or four novels that I was never able to sell, including one that I had spent three years on, and it was a total heartbreaker. I sent it to every publisher in the US and Canada and England, big press and small press, and everyone turned it down. So I was a really unsuccessful writer, and the only thing I had had any luck with was my short stories, and there wasn’t any money in short stories, and it’s not like many people read them. But there are some passionate short story fans, and I had written some good ones and had won a couple prizes, and got in a year’s best collection.

A talent scout at Marvel Comics had spotted one of these stories and had got in touch with me and asked if I had any interest in writing about men in tights hitting each other, and I thought it sounded pretty great to me. So I wound up writing a one-shot, an 11-page Spider-Man story, that’s easily the most horrendous thing I’ve ever had published, it’s just a terrible piece of writing. Basically, I choked. I blew it. I really wanted to do well, and wound up not doing a very good job. And the funny thing is, it sold pretty well, because it was saved by the art. The late Seth Fisher did the illustrations, and he made what wasn’t funny very funny, and what wasn’t tense very suspenseful, and so he kind of saved my ass on it.

It was a strange experience, because I knew I hadn’t done a very good job, but I found the act of writing a comic script strangely addictive, and I had always had a comic book imagination. Most of my favorite writers were writers who had come out of comic books. Alan Moore, and Neil Gaiman. And a lot of my most important reading experiences had been in comic books, whether it was Watchmen, or Swamp Thing, or Dark Knight Returns, or Sandman. Like a lot of men of my age, I think for a whole generation of writers, the Vertigo imprint loomed large in our imaginations. So I didn’t do a very good job with the Spider-Man story, but the hook was in, and I wanted to redeem myself and do something better and keep writing in comics, so I came up with all these pitches, and I sent them around, and nothing ever happened with them. No one was much interested.

One of the concepts was for a kind of off-kilter haunted house story called Locke & Key, which involved this family settling into an old New England home, which was full of keys with unnatural powers attached to them. And that idea wouldn’t leave me alone for years afterward. I would keep thinking about it, sometimes having new ideas about characters, and keys, and events that could happen, and eventually I had some good luck, and my first book of stories came out, and I sold my first novel, and around that time, Chris Ryall at IDW got in touch with me about maybe adapting some of my short stories into comic books, and I came back to him and said, “Wait, I think I have something better.” And that was Locke & Key.

TFAW.com: One thing that really sets Locke & Key apart from other horror comics is it’s as much a family drama as it is a horror tale. What attracted you to that combination?

JH: One thing that often happens, when people do a horror movie, or a frightening TV show, or a horror comic, one mistake which often gets made is, there’s a big focus on the supernatural element and on the bad guy, but there’s no effort made to make the main characters likeable and unique and sympathetic. A lot of times they’re just types, and this is why so many of the slasher films are such a joke, why everyone laughs at them. Cause, you know, the teenagers in a Friday the 13th movie have all the emotional power of a paper target in a shooting gallery. No one really cares about them, they’re just there to be struck down by Jason.

For me, the first step to making a successful horror story is making sure the characters matter and are emotionally real and unique. You want the reader to invest in those characters and care about them, because then, when the guy shows up in the hockey mask, they’re really frightened for the main character, as opposed to just waiting to see how they get cut down.

So my intention was always to slow the pace down a little bit and focus on character as best as possible, and try to get the reader engaged in who these people are and see them as unique human beings, as opposed to types. But I think that’s true not just in horror–that’s true in every sort of storytelling. The first key element of telling a story that people care about is engaging them, making sure that they invest emotionally in the characters in the story. Because if you don’t have that, you don’t have anything.

TFAW.com: So Dodge is the ghost or the demon form of teenager Lucas Caravaggio. What was Lucas like? Was he always evil, and was he ever actually a teenager?

JH: In one sense, Dodge is the resurrection of Lucas Caravaggio. In another sense, he’s something quite a bit more, and quite a bit different. And we’re sort of revealing his true nature in the very first issue of Crown of Shadows.

You know, I was a big X-Files fan. Loved the X-Files, and I loved the first couple of seasons of Lost, but I think one problem with ongoing series, one way they sometimes go bad is they keep piling on the mystery. They keep piling on the questions. And after awhile there’s too much mystery. They raise more questions than they could ever possibly hope to answer. And so one thing I’m committed to with Locke & Key is making sure that when I raise a question, I have an answer, instead of continuously heaping on mystery after mystery. In each arc, some of the major questions get answered, so hopefully when we come to the end of this thing, the very final page of the very final issue, it will be about tying up the story for a final emotional resolution, as opposed to cleaning up messes. That would be terrible. No one wants to be in that kind of situation.

So in the very first issue of Crown of Shadows, one of the things that will be revealed is why Dodge is the way he is, and why he’s capable of such terrible things. Especially considering that once upon a time, Lucas Caravaggio was actually a heroic figure. Not a bad guy at all, but one of the best of the good guys, which is pretty strange to think about, considering how we met him and what he’s done since we’ve got to know him. In many ways, Dodge was as likable as Kinsey or Tyler.

TFAW.com: Speaking of Kinsey, in Head Games, she literally removed her fear and her ability to cry from her brain. Would that essentially lead her down the same road that Lucas went?

JH: I’m not gonna say anything about where Kinsey’s headed as a character, looking ahead. I will say that, one of the things that I think is important when you’re telling a fantasy story or a horror story, is that it’s more satisfying for readers if that element of fantasy somehow raises bigger questions about real life.

So in the case of Kinsey losing her fear and her ability to cry, it’s an exaggerated look at what happens anyway to a lot of teenagers. At some point in high school, kids will often become very reckless, and develop a willingness to engage in very dangerous behavior, and take risks that they should probably know better about. So now we have that with Kinsey in exaggerated form, and it’s just an interesting way to look at a very common passage for most teenagers–a very common life passage.

TFAW.com: Can you tell us more about the questions that will be answered in Crown of Shadows?

JH: Let’s see. Well, we’re going to see a lot more of what makes Dodge tick. And we’re going to find out a little bit more about Sam Lesser. And we’re going to learn a little bit more about the Omega Key, which opens the black door. I don’t want to give it away–I want to avoid saying too much and telegraphing what we’re going to do. What I will say is there’s a big reveal on the last page of the last issue, and we’ll get an answer to one of the big questions that has been hanging around the story.

TFAW.com: Can you tell us whether Sam is there as an agent of Dodge or if he has his own agenda?

JH: Well, I’ll say this. When we first met Sam, Sam was being sort of manipulated by Dodge, and Sam is sort of a pathetic, frightening character, although I like to think it’s possible to have some sympathy for him, even though he’s committed terrible acts. But when we meet him again, his relationship with Dodge is going to be radically changed.

TFAW.com: I’ve heard that Locke & Key is going to be six miniseries. Do you think it could continue past that, or is that the end?

JH: Well, once I tell the story of Tyler, Kinsey, and Bode, I’ll be done with that. That doesn’t necessarily mean there will never be any more Locke & Key stories, but I will have told the story I want to tell. It’s important to remember that when I started Locke & Key, I didn’t know what the hell I was doing. I was still very green with this, I had only written three 11-page comic book stories, and when I did it, I had two notions. One was that it could be a continuing thing that would run somewhere between 36 and 48 issues. And I had a lot of the story plotted out. But I also wasn’t sure it would succeed–it could have tanked, or been a big bomb–so I also had a plan for six issues, and then if this thing had completely tanked, I had an escape hatch where I could finish the story in another six issues. And it wouldn’t have been very good, but it wouldn’t have been shameful, either.

Fortunately the comic did well, it’s been well received, it’s continued to build its readership, so I get to do the daydream, and I get to explore these stories in a very full kind of way. It’s taken me a little bit of thinking to figure out how many issues it’s going to take to tell the story, but I don’t like it when things are stretched out. So it’s possible that the series could go as many as 48 issues, but I’m aiming for 36, and I think it’s possible. I think I can tell everything I need to tell in 36. We’re going to see, though.

TFAW.com: What was it like switching from writing prose to scripting comics?

JH: I find writing comic book scripts incredibly addictive. I think it’s because the comic book form really plays to my strengths as a writer, while sort of hiding my weaknesses. It allows me to play with big, weird concepts and to build stories around dialogue and action, and I don’t have to worry about the stuff that really makes me sweat, stuff I really fret over as a novelist and short story writer–the sound of my prose, and finding a balance between description and forward motion. Because comic books are all about forward motion. Every comic book has the gas pedal pushed to the floor. As a writer and as a reader, I love that.

Another thing that attracted me to comics is I felt it would be an extension to something I had already figured out. I had already figured out how to write a pretty good short story, so I felt that comic books would offer me a chance to expand on that, maybe with a larger audience. I feel like the first really successful script I wrote was the first issue to Welcome to Lovecraft.

TFAW.com: Do you think you will stick with horror in the future, or will you branch out to other genres?

JH: I don’t know, exactly, that’s a hard one to answer. One thing is, because I do do other kinds of writing, I’ve always got a novel, I’ve always got a couple short stories I want to work on, so I try to strike a balance. I don’t think I’ll ever be carrying four or five comics at once. I’ve never been a guy who’s really hung up on cape stories. It’s been years and years since I followed the continuing adventures of super anything. I read a lot of comics–I generally read about a comic a day. But the comics I tend to read are Ed Brubaker’s Criminal and Darwyn Cooke’s Parker, Wormwood. It’s very rarely the superhero stuff. So I don’t know. But I love to write stories that have a big engine in them. I like to write stories that are suspenseful. I like the keep the gas pedal down, so I don’t know. I don’t know if I’ll always write horror comics, but it’s important that there always be an element of suspense.

TFAW.com: This interview is for horror month, and there’s been a big upswing in horror lately, in movies, and TV, and things like that. What are you attracted to in horror stories in general?

JH: I like when there’s something fresh. I like going and seeing something new and unexpected. I think that what makes Zombieland such a blast of a film, is that the suspense and the action are tense and very well paced, but it also takes the audience in very startling and unexpected directions. I don’t need a rehash of something I’ve already had. So that’s one thing I look for.

And you know, it returns us to where we started our conversation: I also look for a character I can latch into. If I really care about that main character, I will read almost anything. So Zombieland was great. The remake of The Last House on the Left was pretty awesome. It’s brilliant, and very upsetting. It was cool because no one called it in. No one treated it like they were making trash. They all acted like they were in a straight drama, and it made it much more intense. So that was good.

In terms of what’s going on in comics, I like a lot of the crime stuff that’s going on right now. I really like what Ed Brubaker is doing. I think Criminal is great, and I liked Incognito a lot. He’s put together a great body of work.

TFAW.com: Well, thanks so much Joe!

JH: Bye!

If you haven’t checked out Locke & Key yet, be sure to browse Welcome to Lovecraft and Head Games, and make sure to pre-order Crown of Shadows now to get 20% off!

What’s your take on the horror genre? Any other questions we should have asked Joe Hill? Post them below!

October 20 2009

Your Daily Horror: The Complete Underworld TPB

Tagged Under : , , , ,

In the 2003 movie Underworld, Kate Beckinsale blew the lid off her starchy English persona when she starred as Selene, the sexy, black leather-clad vampire! She continued to dazzle audience’s with her–er–dynamic abilities in the 2006 sequel, Underworld: Evolution. Now you can get both movie adaptations in one graphic novel from IDW Publishing: The Complete Underworld TPB.

The first Underworld film introduced the world to the vampire Selene and Michael, a Lycan/vampire hybrid. Then the sequel Underworld: Evolution continued their adventures. The Complete Underworld TPB contains adaptations of both of these films, as well as a bonus series prequel, “Red in Tooth and Claw”–a story set hundreds of years before the epic movies. Based on the exciting screenplays by Danny McBride, and adapted for print by Kris Oprisko (Metal Gear Solid: Sons of Liberty).

Get it while it’s hot! We have only one The Complete Underworld TPB in stock, and it’s 40% off!

For more awesome horror comics, check out our Horror Month page!

October 07 2009

Bill Willingham Talks About Angel & Fables

Tagged Under : , , , , ,

If there’s anything TFAW.com has learned about our visitors, it’s that they love the Whedonverse. So when we heard that Eisner Award-winning writer Bill Willingham–who happens to write one of our favorite series, Fables–was taking over IDW’s Angel, we called him up for a little chat.

The always-entertaining Willingham took us through his journey to Angel, why he thought the TV series ended perfectly, and what’s coming up for Fabletown. Read on!

TFAW.com: Hi Bill, thanks for talking to us. What attracted you to Angel at IDW?

Bill Willingham: Well, he’s a handsome man! No, at this point in my career, it’s more about finding people I want to work with, and there are some decent blokes over there, including Mariah Huehner, who used to be Shelly Bond’s assistant when we started Fables. So I’d worked with Mariah before in the past and I found out a couple of years ago that she’d gone out to San Diego and was now at IDW, and we’d spoken about, “Someday let’s do something together again,” and with her and with IDW and with some other publishers, those “Somedays” kept piling up, to where I thought that maybe I should let my DC exclusive go for a year or so, and start to retire some of those “Someday we’ll do something” obligations that had been hanging over my head forever. And so when I got my freedom back from DC, she and Chris Ryall called up, and they said, “Why don’t you write Angel for awhile?”

Now I love some of the work that Joss Whedon had done–Buffy and Angel, and Firefly in particular–and the idea of coming to play in his sandbox for awhile, courtesy of folks I’d wanted to work with anyway, was a nice combination. Too nice a combination to pass up.

TFAW.com: Had you been a fan of the Angel TV show before you took the job?

BW: Yeah, and that was actually a conflict, because Buffy was good, and it ended well, but the Angel series ended as perfectly as any of that kind of show should end. They’ve finally finished off the big baddie, at some great sacrifice, and they meet in an alley, and they find an entire army of ghoulies that they’re going to have to deal with that they couldn’t possibly survive.

And the implication is, of course, that these guys went out fighting. Kind of a Viking-esque tone to it, in the sense of, “Let me die with a sword in my hand.” And that was it; that was the end of the series: “Okay, let’s get to work.” And I thought that was just a marvelous, marvelous way to end it. So there was a part of me that was conflicted, because after a moment like that, you can puncture it by trying to tell what happened next.

Had I been offered the Angel book right from that moment, I would have turned it down. There was just no way to tell that story in any kind of satisfying way. But someone else had done it, some time had passed, and now you kind of take it with, “Okay the characters have gotten to this point, it’s done, regardless, so why not go ahead and pick it up?”

TFAW.com: Now that Angel and company are back from Hell, the book and the team seem to be in a period of rebuilding. What’s going to happen with “The Crown Prince Syndrome”?

BW: Well, for one thing, that’s the title of just that first issue only. It’s titled “The Crown Prince Syndrome” because one of the unreasonable demands I made, in return for considering doing this, was there were certain things to stay away from. One of the things that I was determined not to do was have the character of Connor betray his dad again, because he just did it so often. Maybe we should have him finally start growing up, say, “Okay, I keep doing things, I keep dropping my dad to the bottom of the sea, or turning him over to his worst enemy, or having an affair with the demon goddess who’s trying to destroy the world just to spite my dad.”

At some point in the growing-up process, you go through a time of acting out, but eventually, you want to grow up and become a more wise and contributing member of society, or you continue to be that kind of tantrum-y fellow–in which case, you’re a psychopath who belongs in prison, or worse. I wanted to go the other way, in that he’s wised up.

The whole idea of “The Crown Prince Syndrome” is, Connor is the crown prince of Angel Enterprises. Angel is the guy, and if he were to disappear, Connor is the next guy in line. So that’s what I did. The story arc in which this takes place is called “Immortality for Dummies.” It’s all about how in the wake of this whole return from Hell thing, in which the universe was kind of reset, but everyone still has their memories: everyone knows what they did in an alternate reality. They know that their next-door neighbor turned out to be a complete s#!t who sold his own children to the devil, or all of these bad things that happened.

So, what you have is a paranoid and suspicious city. I mean, imagine, if you will, being able to look at anyone you know, and know what their deepest, darkest thoughts were–what they’re capable of. When the chips are down, here’s what their character will reveal. And everyone knows this about everyone! And so that’s an interesting place to set the story.

I think LA, with that as a premise, is much more hellish than actually being in Hell. If you’re actually in Hell, you can say, “This is really bad, but let’s band together and make the most of it, and try to get out of it.” But if you have this sort of situation, where no one has actually done anything, but you know what everyone can, or will, or under certain circumstances would have done, that’s a pretty dire setting. So that appealed to me. And Angel is famous now; everyone knows that he’s a vampire.

The “Immortality for Dummies” thing comes from the fact that this is also LA/Hollywood land: a vampire is immortal, and his looks are never going to fade. LA is full of stars and starlets that want 300-year movie careers, and so someone kidnaps Angel to have him work for them as a living immortality factory, producing vampires. Now this story has kind of been done before, but we’re doing a new twist on it, and I don’t want to give it all away, but the company that does this, Immortality Incorporated, is cognizant of that fact that if you just make a vampire out of someone, then they have no soul and they turn into a monster-demon.

One of the benefits of knowing all this stuff about Hell is they know how all of this works. So they set up a situation where they’re going to recreate the whole Angel thing and create vampires with guaranteed, bonafide souls. And there’s a lot of gobbledegook, but the upshot is, that’s why they specifically need Angel to do the turning; no other vampire would quite work. And so, they kidnap him, and they do it in such a way that the rest of Angel Investigations, the team, doesn’t know it happened. Being Angel, they assume that he just met some new girl and he’s off with her for a week or so, being all typically morose and pouty, and, “We can never be together because of this tragic person I am,” so they’re not worried.

But Connor steps up, and says, “Okay, it’s my Dad’s company, he’s away, and I’m going to run the business,” and we’re going to see how that works out. So we have to two storylines: how’s Angel going to get out of his little problem of creating a world of rich and celebrity vampires, and how is Connor going to do running the show.

TFAW.com: Are Kate, Dez, and Gwen still part of the team?

BW: I think I’ve got the whole team there. We have Gunn, we have Illyria, not Fred–that’s the other thing. You might as well let the readers know, because this is sort of burned in, that we are not having the return of Fred. Illyria the demon is in that shape, but Fred’s gone and not coming back.

But yeah, it’s Gunn, it’s Illyria, it’s Spike, it’s Dez, James–the sort of half-fallen angel–and Kate, and George, the telepathic fish. I think I’ve got them all in there. Pretty much the whole gang. We’ll have it shake out. They’ve got a lot of Angel projects going, so in the main series I wanted to keep the cast as big as possible, so when characters are leached off for various miniseries and solo adventures, it doesn’t completely gut the core cast for the regular book.

TFAW.com: Are you going to deal with the fractured relationship between Gwen and Connor?

BW: Right out of the box, no, because Gwen is off doing something else, but she will probably get folded back into the cast. But there is going to be a little thing between Angel’s son and possibly everyone else, that they realize that Connor has this problem of picking up dad’s girls.

It may just be a running joke: when Angel gets involved with someone, asking Connor, “Can you leave this one alone, son?” We’re going to have a little fun with stuff like that. If it was all just going out and fighting monsters, that would get a little bit tedious, so you have the fun and personal relationships, and hopefully in the kind of quirky, acerbic, slightly distorted worldview that the Whedonverse is so capable of doing.

TFAW.com: With Gunn back on the team, does that mean he’s redeemed? What’s his relationship going to be like with the other members?

BW: Strained. If there’s a theme behind the whole group, it’s that they’re all broken, fallen characters. And there was this lovely, funny story arc in the Drew Carey Show, where it was done as a complete comedy and farce, where Drew and his misfit friends were actually sentenced by a judge to only be friends with each other, because the rest of society is protected, because those guys are a thing unto their own. That’s almost how I look at it, in that these people only deserve each other, in the sense that they’re all broken, they’re all, in many ways, a reflection of Angel himself: trying to be a decent person with lots and lots of baggage to overcome. So yes, Gunn fits in just perfectly on that point, doesn’t he?

TFAW.com: Yes! So, is Joss himself involved in this story arc?

BW: No. I mean, I don’t speak to him at all after that incident that one time . . .

TFAW.com: What incident?

BW: I’m making it up. I assume at some point he becomes aware of this, and if I’m going too far off the beaten track, that he might mention something, but so far, it seems to be smooth sailing.

TFAW.com: What’s it like working with Brian Denham? I haven’t seen any of his artwork for Angel yet.

BW: Brian and I have known each other since our respective careers began, when we were both just wannabe hot young turks breaking into the business. I have wanted to work with him for as long as I’ve known him, and I knew him from just when he started getting work, when he was working in a comic shop, and after 20-plus years, it’s finally worked out that we get to.

He draws like a dream and he does the one thing that in a comic like this is essential: he’s drawing Angel and the various characters on model, so you can recognize the likenesses that they came from, but he doesn’t do that thing where you’re working from publicity photos, where there’s this very cartoony style, and then there’s this very well-rendered, real person’s head stuck on these bodies. That’s always a story-disengagement problem when you have it.

What he does is with a few deft lines, he gets the essence of the character, but it fits right into his style, so there aren’t these glaring instances of, “Oh, there’s David Boreanaz’s head on that body!” He’s just note-perfect at that. So I’ll call attention to that. The readers are going to find various other reasons to just love his work when they start seeing it. I’m pretty happy with how the first issues we’re doing are turning out.

TFAW.com: Moving on to Fables, that has also taken a horror bent, with the recent story arc, “The Dark Ages,” and Mister Dark. What’s going to be happening with Mister Dark?

BW: Well, Mister Dark is not a nice fellow, I think we’ve established that. Boy, I sure hope so. If not, my skills in this funnybook business need serious reconsideration. He’s going to be the villain for awhile, it’s not going to be an easy fix. Indirectly or directly, he’s caused more calamity to the Fables than The Adversary did, in the sense that The Adversary was sort of responsible for creating Fabletown, that these were all sort of individual refugees that kind of came together, and Mister Dark, just by virtue of showing up, destroyed it in an afternoon. He did in one day what it took The Adversary centuries to accomplish.

So hopefully that sets a tone that they have quite a challenge ahead of them. And also, not by design but by the virtue in how his arrival worked, he took away all of the good stuff the Fables had going for them: all the magic, all the gold, the residence–everything! So they’re left not only homeless and on the run again, but homeless and on the run with an empty wallet and no resources whatsoever. Took all their crutches away.

And the reason to do that of course is to see what these characters are made out of. Character is revealed out of adversity, etc. etc. And so Mister Dark is going to be a lot of fun in that he’s done all that to them. That said, we’re going to have all sorts of fun stuff coming up. Some stories directly involving their attempts to defeat him, and of course, before they do that, they have to understand him. And even the very act of gathering information on this character is going to be fraught with danger.

TFAW.com: Is Mister Dark actually going to go after the Fables directly, or are they going to come into conflict with him trying to retake Fabletown?

BW: Well, that’s a good question. So far, he’s after the Fables, because he’s stated pretty clearly that he’s going to punish them for having the temerity to borrow his powers to make the Witching Well and the Witching Cloak, and things like that, and even though the Fables didn’t understand what they were doing, that’s kind of no excuse. Ignorance of the law is no excuse.

So he intends to do it, but it’s sort of like, there are two types of hunting: you can go tramping through the woods, stalking your prey, or you can set up a nice place where you know the prey is likely to come by some day, and wait for them to show up and take care of them that way. And he seems to be a pretty patient fellow, because right now, he seems to be content to sit in the ruins of Fabletown and let the Fables finally come back to him. We’ll see if that is a completely static situation, or if other circumstances warrant him taking a more active role.

TFAW.com: So what is the future of the Farm? They’re already cash strapped, they’re vulnerable to the real world for the first time. Are they going to be able to become a self-sustaining farm, or are they going to lose that as well?

BW: We don’t know, do we? I think part of doing this is as a writer, asking myself, “What are the worst things I can possibly do to these characters I love?” I think being a writer is like being an abusive husband, in the sense that the speech is like, “Oh honey, if you wouldn’t act that way, I wouldn’t have to hit you so much. It’s because I love you that I have to treat you this way!” Which is a terrible, terrible thing to do in real life. But as an author, to characters, I think that’s exactly the kind of personality you have to be. The ones you love most, you have to put through the cauldron most, because that’s where fun stories can be created.

TFAW.com: Well that brings me to Rose Red. Is she finally going to pull it together, or is she going to continue her downward spiral?

BW: Without saying particularly, let me say that the next arc following the “Witches” arc is called “Rose Red.” And it’s I think five issues long, I’ll have to check. Most of the arcs are either four, five, or six issues. But anyway, if all she’s going to do during these five issues is stay in bed and be depressed, it’s going to be a pretty boring arc. So with that said, maybe that situation we’ve set up will come to some sort of head. Either she’s going to sink further, or maybe find a way to rally and rise up out of it. No promises either way.

TFAW.com: What’s coming up with the “Witches” arc? In the last issue I read, Frau Totenkinder had regained her youth and stepped away to parts unknown.

BW: Yes. Pretty exciting. I love these moments when the readers are clued into that fact that we are not afraid to make some pretty dramatic changes to the status quo. The one we did with Frau Totenkinder in this latest issue is one we’ve been looking forward to for some time, Bucky, Shelly, and I.

We plan these things so far in advance, there’s always this little bit of frustration, that “Oh my goodness, we’re a year away from being able to do this wonderful thing,” and occasionally you get the joy of finally getting to those moments where you know the readers could be knocked over with a feather, like “Oh my god, what are they doing?”

And we’re at one now, so I’m not going to tell you what’s in the next issue, other than hopefully it will be pretty cool. What will happen is, we’ll get to meet some of the other characters of the 13th Floor, and I think that’s pretty fun. Some of them are going to be very interesting cast members.

TFAW.com: The other big recent revelation is that Beauty and the Beast are having a baby, which had been foreshadowed, and apparently it’s going to have many arms and legs.

BW: Unless the old witch has a more grotesque sense of humor than anyone suspects! I mean, what a great practical joke to play on someone, if indeed that’s what it turns out to be. I’ve played a few good practical jokes on my friends, but that one just takes the cake. With that said, I suspect that you’re beginning to understand that I’m not really going to comment on that on way or another.

TFAW.com: Yep! My question would be, they’ve been married for so many centuries, why now would they suddenly have a kid?

BW: That is a wonderful segue, and thank you very much for setting me up with that question. For the answer to that, for the mechanism of why pregnancies among Fables are rare, successful ones rarer still, and why you never saw, to a certain extent, too many bright and bushy-tailed kids running around, you should pick up the Peter & Max novel, because so many of the reasons behind things such as this are revealed.

TFAW.com: Peter & Max is a giant prequel, right?

BW: Well yes. A lot of it takes place in current times, but a lot of it takes place in the early history of Fabletown, and the pre-history of Fabletown, back in the Homelands, pre-invasion, in various places. So the book covers a lot of range in both time and space.

TFAW.com: I notice that the description of the novel mentions it’s going to reveal some secrets about Bo Peep. We haven’t seen much of her in the past, so I’m interested to see what that would be like.

BW: We will find out why Little Bo Peep lost her sheep, we will find out why Peter Piper picked a pickled pepper, we’ll even find out why that same Peter, because I couldn’t come up with any reason why they should be different characters, the same Peter put his wife in a pumpkin shell, and why that was, under the circumstances, the only intelligent and reasonable thing to do.

And those are all questions I used to ask as a kid. You hear those nursery rhymes, and I said, “Mom, why did he put her in a pumpkin shell?” That just seems like an odd thing to do. “Honey, we’re having marriage troubles, get inside the pumpkin and that will solve everything!”

If it works, it’s a tribute to all of the wonderful advisors I had on this project. If it turns out to not work as a story element, then it’s my fault. But yeah, we had to have good reasons for the characters to act this way–and not only intelligent reasons, but things that actually advanced the plot. And that was kind of a nice challenge.

But anyway, you’ll find out all that kind of stuff in the Peter & Max novel. You’ll find out why the Black Forest Witch, Frau Totenkinder, had a grudge against the town of Hamlin, and all kinds of things.

TFAW.com: Another project you have coming up that we’re excited about is the Cinderella: From Fabletown With Love series. What can you tell us about that?

BW: I can tell you that I just did the final approval on the first issue. This is being written with as little kvetching from me as possible by Chris Roberson, who’s a fine fellow, a terrific writer, and a good friend, and just to set the record straight, we became friends because he was so good a writer, not vice versa. It wasn’t quite nepotism in the sense of, “Well, I’ll just get my buddies to write comic books.” It’s more of a case of, we became buddies because they were such talented writers, and I just wanted to be in the company of that talent. So Chris Roberson is an accomplished novelist who has loved comics as long as he’s been aware of them, and he had this idea for a Cinderella miniseries.

TFAW.com: This interview is for horror month. What do you think about horror in general?

BW: I like it, I like being scared–I like being intelligently scared–I love great ghost stories, and terrific monster movies and things like that, in the tradition of the first version of The Haunting, the old black-and-white movie, which just scared the bejeezus out of me as a kid.

I do not like the more expansive definition of horror, which includes slasher flicks and things like that. That’s just about as boring to me as can be. As a general rule, I like stories that rise out of following the adventures of people who know how to act intelligently, and in a slasher flick, or things like that, you really need everyone always doing the stupidest possible thing at the stupidest possible moment in order for that to work, so I have a very low tolerance for that.

But scaring folks by just telling them a story that gets them worried, what an amazing skill that is! I would love to have that ability. I give a shot at it every once in a while–I think maybe the closest I’ve come is disturbing the readership every once in a while, but a really good case of the willies is the gold standard, and I don’t know if we’ve achieved that yet, but god bless those who can.

TFAW.com: Well, thanks again for talking with us!

BW: Thank you!

Make sure to pre-order Angel #28 now to catch Willingham’s debut issue, and catch up on Fables and Angel while you’re at it.

Have any burning questions for Bill Willingham that we didn’t answer? Are you looking forward to his take on Angel? Post your comments below!

October 07 2009

Your Daily Horror: 30 Days Of Night: 30 Days Til Death TPB

Tagged Under : , , , , ,

30 Days of Night: 30 Days Til Death TPBThe popular series 30 Days of Night gets a new twist with 30 Days Til Death–David Lapham, the Eisner Award-winning creator of Stray Bullets, climbs aboard for a frightening yet hilarious tale of vampires against vampires.

The story starts out focusing on Rufus, a would-be everyman . . . who just happens to be a vampire. Who just happens to have an entire coven of “old school” vampires out for his blood. These older vampires aren’t fond of the “new generation”–they consider them the ultimate annoying hipsters. To keep a low profile, Rufus is forced to take refuge in . . . Buffalo, New York? There he deals with relationship problems, being nice to his neighbors, and oh yeah–not being caught out as a blood-sucking fiend. The PTA doesn’t look fondly on that type of activity.

Check out the 30 Days Of Night: 30 Days Til Death TPB, available now for $16.19, and make sure to check out the rest of our 30 Days of Night comics and graphic novels to get your horror fix this month!

October 06 2009

Geek Chick: I Can’t Wait for IDW’s Star Trek Movie Omnibus

Tagged Under : , , ,

When I pore through the Diamond catalog each month, every so often something jumps out and hits my sweet spot: the perfect blend of nostalgia, sci-fi, and good old-fashioned geekiness appears right before my eyes! In the September catalog, it was IDW’s Star Trek Movie Omnibus. Six Star Trek movie adaptations in one graphic novel? Perfect. It’s a portable movie marathon–ideal for road trips, long plane rides, or rainy Saturday afternoons. I’m in.

Included are two three-part miniseries, Star Trek: The Motion Picture and 2009’s Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan, and then there are one-shots adapting Star Trek: The Search for Spock, Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, Star Trek: The Final Frontier, and Star Trek: The Undiscovered Country. I think I’m most excited to see the Star Trek gang hanging out in the ’80s with the whales. Dude!

The Star Trek Movie Omnibus is out November 25 (a week after the new Star Trek movie comes out on DVD), but you can pre-order it for 20% off: just $19.99! That’s cheaper (and easier) than running out and renting all six movies. Plus, no late fees!

What do you think of IDW’s Star Trek comics? Are they worthy of the series? Post your comments below!

October 06 2009

Land of the Dead

Tagged Under : , , , , , , , , , ,

Can you tell that I’m into zombies? Today’s featured title is George A. Romero’s Land of the Dead TPB.

Presenting a special adaptation of George A. Romero’s long-awaited zombie movie, set years in the future after the end of his Dead trilogy.

In Land of the Dead, the walking dead roam an uninhabited wasteland and the living try to lead “normal” lives behind the walls of a fortified city. But outside the city walls, an army of the dead is evolving. Inside, anarchy is on the rise. With the very survival of the city at stake, a group of hardened mercenaries is called into action to protect the living from an army of the dead.

This special collection features seven new pages of story and art, comprising a deleted scene from the movie, as well as an art gallery of covers, sample art, and more.

Quantities are limited, but we’re offering George A. Romero’s Land of the Dead TPB for 40% off the cover price! Yeah, that’s right. Yours for just $11.99. Hurry, this one won’t last long.

Check out other horror books here.