Wolverine (1988) by John Byrne!

When I think of Wolverine, the first artist that comes to mind is John Byrne. This vintage sketch is an indicator of why.
Previews and Reviews that are Z's Views

When I think of Wolverine, the first artist that comes to mind is John Byrne. This vintage sketch is an indicator of why.

I was going through the Zablo Vault and found this really cool Mr. Miracle art by John Beatty. Hard to believe it was done 45 years ago.

Christopher Shy knocks it out of the park again with his alt poster for Fright Night!

Dan Brereton recently posted this excellent painting he did for an illustrated prose crime magazine way back in the 90s. We need a magazine like that these days.

I love this Noir illustration that Howard Chaykin created for a role-playing game. Pretty rare art, wouldn’t ya say?
Source: Jeffery A. Dobberpuhl.

Marv from Frank Miller’s Sin City is one of my all-time favorite characters. I love seeing artists do their “take” on the big lug. Today we have Marv by Alex Maleev!
Source: Luis Romero.

Sin City (2005)
Director: Robert Rodriguez, Frank Miller based on Sin City created by Frank Miller
Screenplay: Frank Miller, Robert Rodriguez
Stars: Mickey Rourke, Clive Owen, Bruce Willis, Jessica Alba, Devon Aoki, Alexis Bledel, Powers Boothe, Jude Ciccolella, Jeff Dashnaw, Rosario Dawson, Benicio Del Toro, Elijah Wood, Carla Gugino, Josh Hartnett, Rutger Hauer, Greg Ingram, Nicky Katt, Jaime King, Michael Madsen, Frank Miller, Brittany Murphy, Nick Stahl, Nick Offerman, Jason Douglas, Michael Clarke Duncan, Rick Gomez and Tommy Flanagan.
Tagline: Walk down the right back alley in Sin City and you can find anything.
The Plot…
Four interconnected tales from Sin City…
The Customer is Always Right… A hitman that marks don’t see coming until it is too late. (Bookends the movie.)
That Yellow Bastard… For Detective John Hartigan (Willis) it’s his last day on the job. He’s thinking about the thick steak his wife has waiting for him at the end of his shift. But first, Hartigan is going to have a run-in with a serial killer who preys on children. Hartigan learns that the sick bastard is the son of a Senator, and is now prepping his next victim. Hartigan knows this can only end one way. He’ll save the child or die trying.
The Hard Goodbye… Marv (Rourke) is a ex-con hardcase. Last night he had a one night stand with a goddess named Goldie. She was beautiful beyond belief. Marv wonders why she picked a big scary mug like him when she could have any man she wanted. He’ll have to work it out later. He just woke up. Goldie is in bed beside him. Dead. Someone snuck in and murdered her while they were sleeping. And now Marv hears cops coming up the stairs. Someone set him up. Someone killed Goldie. Marv knows once he finds the killer the hell he sends the murderer to will seem like heaven after what Marv does to him. But first the cops outside his door…
The Big Fat Kill… When Shellie’s ex-boyfriend, Jackie Boy (Del Toro) shows up unexpectedly with his crew, he’s surprised to find Shellie’s new boyfriend, Dwight (Owen) there. The events that follow will lead to a potential turf war… unless Dwight and some of his friends from Old Town can set things right.
Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…
Sin City, the movie, is what Robert Rodriguez called a “translation” of three of Frank Miller’s Sin City graphic novels – The Hard Goodbye; The Big Fat Kill, That Yellow Bastard and Miller’s Sin City short, The Customer is Always Right. They are some of my all time favorite comics and the movie is a beautiful “translation”.
Quentin Tarantino is listed as a guest director. Tarantino directed the scene between Dwight and Jackie Boy before the cop pulls the car over.
Rodriguez filmed the opening “intro” before Miller agreed to the Sin City “translation”. Rodriguez wanted to prove that Miller’s Sin City tales could work as a movie that complemented the comics. The comic panels from each tale were used as storyboards.
Robert Rodriguez working with Frank Miller to bring Sin City to the big screen was a dream project for me. Magnificent casting was the icing on the cake. If you like the comics, you should enjoy the movie.
Sin City (2005) rates 5 of 5 stars.



I’m diggin’ Fran Galán‘s take on The Crow. Hope you are as well.

Marv from Frank Miller’s Sin City is one of my all-time favorite characters. I love seeing artists do their “take” on the big lug. Today we have Marv by Ariel Olivetti!

I’ve always been a fan of John Beatty’s take on Wolverine.

Christopher Shy‘s excellent alt movie poster for Prophecy reminded me of the horror film that doesn’t get enough love.
Prophecy was written by David (The Omen) Seltzer, directed by John (Ronin) Frankenheimer and starred Talia (Rocky) Shire, Robert (Damien: Omen II) and Armand (I, the Jury) Assante.
I saw Prophecy when it was first released. I liked it much better than expected. I’ve seen Prophecy at least once since then (years ago) and thought it held up well. Thanks to Christopher Shy, Prophecy is now on my list for another watch.

The more I see of Undertaker by Ralph Meyer, the more I want to check out English versions of his graphic novels.

The last thing you want to get is Nick Fury giving you the side-eye. The first thing you want is Nick Fury drawn by Steranko.