Supernove ! - Nuove promesse di Marvel e DC

Aperto da American_Gaijin89, 19 Gennaio 2011, 12:36:18

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American_Gaijin89

- Prima di tutto farei notare ai mangofili la citazione Eiichiro Odesca nel titolo.  :ahsisi:

Topic dedicato alla scoperta dei volti nuovi nel roster Marvel e DC (o anche altri editori, perchè no)!


Perchè: Johns, Morrison, Bendis e Brubakka hanno già raggiunto l'età pensionabile ? Chiederete voi; No però, con i tempi che corrono, è meglio iniziare a programmare la vecchia fin da subito.   ( :boiate: )

Comunque iniziamo una carrellata dei primi nomi che mi vengono in mente:

Nick Spencer

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"While in college, Spencer wrote three pitches to Marvel Comics soon after the Marvel Knights imprint launched in 1998. According to Spencer, "Joe [Quesada] didn't like the first two but the third one was a Black Cat pitch that was a Jackie Brown kind of Tarantino-esque thing. He said he liked that one but they weren't going to do anything with anybody new at the time." After another pitch was rejected, this time by Oni Press, Spencer went on to work in other fields, including politics and music, before he successfully pitched Existence 2.0 to Jim Valentino of Image Comics.The first issue was released in July 2009. A second miniseries, Existence 3.0, followed in November. In 2010, Paramount Pictures acquired the rights to Existence 2.0, and a film is in development through Platinum Dunes with Miles Millar and Alfred Gough to adapt and executive produce. Spencer also wrote Forgetless and Shuddertown at Image. An A.V. Club review of Shuddertown stated that Spencer "has become one of the finest practitioners" of crime noir in comics.
Spencer's first ongoing series, Morning Glories, was released in August 2010.He has written a seven-part Jimmy Olsen co-feature for DC Comics beginning in September's Action Comics #893 which will conclude in a one-shot to be released March 30, 2011 and is writing the T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents monthly debuting in November 2010. He was scheduled to take over as the writer of Supergirl in January 2011 with issue #60,, but DC announced soon after that he will only be co-scripting one issue. Spencer is scheduled to begin writing Iron Man 2.0, a new War Machine ongoing for Marvel Comics in February 2011"


Opere Pubblicate/in corso:

DC Comics

   * Action Comics #893-896 - "Jimmy Olsen" co-feature (began September 2010)
   * Jimmy Olsen one-shot (March 2011)
   * Supergirl #60 (co-writer)
   * T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents #1-up (begins November 2010)

Image Comics

   * Existence 2.0 #1-3 (2009)
   * Existence 3.0 #1-4 (2009–2010)
   * Forgetless #1-5 (2009–2010)
   * Fractured Fables (OGN) - "Cinderella" (2010)
   * Morning Glories #1-up (2010–present)
   * Shuddertown #1-4 (2010)

Marvel Comics

   * Iron Man 2.0 #1-up (begins February 2011)

Fonte: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nick_Spencer

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Jonathan Hickman



"Hickman was the runner-up in the first Comic Book Idol and went on to draw and write a number of series.

He is the creator of The Nightly News,[1] published under Image, and has also worked on Marvel's Legion of Monsters, on the story N'Kantu, the Living Mummy: MustDie/EatSoul.[2][3]

He has also designed covers for Virgin Comics, most significantly Andy Diggle's Guy Ritchie's Gamekeeper [4] and Garth Ennis' Seven Brothers. He also wrote "The Core" for Top Cow's Pilot Season in 2008.

He is currently working on three new projects under Image: Pax Romana,[5] Red Mass for Mars, with Ryan Bodenheim,[6][7] Transhuman, with J. M. Ringuet and an ongoing series titled Plus.[8]

He is collaborating with Brian Michael Bendis and editor Tom Brevoort on a new Marvel ongoing series, entitled Secret Warriors[9][10] It follows Nick Fury and a group of superpowered operatives as they undertake espionage operations in the wake of Secret Invasion. Stefano Caselli will be the artist. He will also collaborate with Shuster Award winning artist, Dale Eaglesham on one of Marvel's flagship books, Fantastic Four and with Sean Chen on the limited series Dark Reign: Fantastic Four. He will also be writing another ongoing series for Marvel called S.H.I.E.L.D..[11][12][13][14]

Hickman mentioned at his website, Pronea, that he would write a column for comic book blog and podcast, iFanboy, at some point in the future.[15] This post was reinforced on episode #119 of iFanboy,[16] and again on February 12, 2008 with the launch of their new website.[17] On February 12, 2008 the first edition of Hickman's column, "Concentric Circles" was released.[18]

Hickman's work on Fantastic Four, SHIELD and Secret Warriors has garnered him immense praise and is now considered one of the best and most unique writers in the industry"


Opere Pubblicate/In corso:

   * The Nightly News (script and art, 6-issue limited series, Image Comics, November 2006 - September 2007)
   * "The Living Mummy" (script and art, in Legion of Monsters: Satana, Marvel Comics, June 2007)
   * "Black Circle White: The Recycle Soul Project" (script and art, in Popgun Volume 1, Image Comics, November 2007)
   * Pax Romana (script and art, 4-issue mini-series, Image Comics, December 2007 - November 2008)
   * Transhuman (script, with art by J. M. Ringuet, 4-issue mini-series, Marvel Comics, March–November 2008)
   * Red Mass for Mars (script, with art by Ryan Bodenheim, 4-issue mini-series, Image Comics, June 2008 - July 2010)
   * Pilot Season: The Core (script, with art by Kenneth Rocafort, one-shot, Top Cow, July 2008)
   * "Secret Warriors: Declaration" (script, with co-author Brian Bendis and art by Stefano Caselli, in Dark Reign: New Nation, one-shot, Marvel Comics, February 2009)
   * "Bobby and Sam in Mojoworld" (script, with art by Nick Pitarra, in Astonishing Tales vol. 2, 6-issue limited series, Marvel Comics, April–September 2009)
   * Secret Warriors (script, with co-author Brian Bendis and art by Stefano Caselli, ongoing series, Marvel Comics, April 2009 - ongoing)
   * Dark Reign: Fantastic Four (script, with Sean Chen, limited series, Marvel Comics, May–September 2009)
   * "Doctor Doom: ...And I'll Get the Land" (script, with Adi Granov, in Dark Reign: The Cabal, one-shot, Marvel Comics, June 2009)
   * Fantastic Four #570- (script, with Dale Eaglesham, ongoing series, Marvel Comics, October 2009 - ongoing)
   * "Shang-Chi: Master of Kung Fu & Deadpool in: The Annual Race to Benefit Various and Sundry Evil Organizations and Also the Homeless. Now with Beer and Hot Dogs." (script, with art by Kody Chamberlain, in Shang-Chi: Master of Kung Fu, one-shot, Marvel Comics, November 2009)
   * Dark Reign: The List - Secret Warriors (script, with pencils by Ed McGuinness, one-shot, Marvel Comics, December 2009)
   * S.H.I.E.L.D. (script, with Dustin Weaver, ongoing series, Marvel Comics, April 2010–present)

Fonte: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Hickman

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Kieron Gillen



"Gillen has written for both print and online comics. He has worked for Warhammer Monthly and Chaos League.

Since 2003, Gillen has collaborated with artist Jamie McKelvie on a comic strip for the official Playstation Magazine UK, entitled Save Point.

His current project, described by Gillen as "my first real comic,"[6] is another collaboration with McKelvie, the pop-music urban fantasy Phonogram. Veteran comics writer Warren Ellis has dubbed it "one of the few truly essential comics of 2006."[7] The first issue, published by Image Comics, went on sale in August 2006, the first series ran for six issues. The second series run for seven issues, and was launched in December 2008.

On April 14, 2008 it was announced that Gillen would be collaborating with the artist Greg Scott to expand the Warren Ellis's newuniversal mythos with "a story about killing the future" set in 1959[8] and he wrote Crown of Destruction a Warhammer Fantasy comic.[9] The Phonogram sequel "The Singles Club" started in December 2008, a series of one-shots.[10][11] He also got more work at Marvel with a Dazzler story and a Beta Ray Bill one-shot and mini-series.[12]

His workload at Marvel increased in late 2009. At HeroesCon it was announced he would be writing a Dark Reign tie-in with the Dark Avengers: Ares mini-series.[13] During the 2009 Chicago Comic Con it was announced that Gillen will collaborate with Steven Sanders on a new ongoing series known as S.W.O.R.D from Marvel Comics.[14][15] Gillen will also be writing Thor, following J. Michael Straczynski, from issues #604[16] to 614.[17] In late 2010 he started his own ongoing series, Generation Hope, an X-Men spin-off that leads on from the end of the "Second Coming" storyline.[18][19][20][21]

He has also written a series for Avatar Press called The Heat."


Opere Pubblicate/in corso:
   
* Phonogram: Rue Britannia (with Jamie McKelvie, 6-issue limited series, Image Comics, August 2007–May 2008)
   * newuniversal: 1959 (with Greg Scott, one-shot, Marvel Comics, July 2008)
   * Crown of Destruction (with Dwayne Harris, 4-issue mini-series, Boom! Studios, September–December 2008)
   * Phonogram: The Singles Club (with Jamie McKelvie, 7-issue limited series, Image Comics, December 2008-February 2010)
   * X-Men: Manifest Destiny #5: "Dazzler: Solo" (with Sara Pichelli, Marvel Comics, March 2009)
   * X-Men Origins: Sabretooth (with Dan Panosian, one-shot, Marvel Comics, April 2009)
   * Secret Invasion Aftermath: Beta Ray Bill: "The Green of Eden" (with Dan Brereton, one-shot, Marvel Comics, June 2009)
   * Dark Reign: The Cabal: "The Judgement of Namor" (with Carmine Di Giandomenico, one-shot, Marvel Comics, June 2009)
   * Beta Ray Bill: Godhunter (with Jose Angel Cano Lopez, 3-issue mini-series, Marvel Comics, August–October 2009)
   * Dark Avengers: Ares (with Manuel García, 3-issue mini-series, Marvel Comics, December 2009–February 2010)
   * S.W.O.R.D (with Steven Sanders, 5-issue mini-series, Marvel Comics, January–May 2010)
   * Thor #604-614 (with Billy Tan and Richard Elson, Marvel Comics, February 2010–September 2010)
   * New Mutants #11: "Hel's Valkyrie" (with Niko Henrichon, Marvel Comics, March 2010)
   * Siege: Loki (with Jamie McKelvie, one-shot, Marvel Comics, April 2010)
   * CBGB #1: "A NYC Punk Carol / The Helsinki Syndrome" (with Marc Ellerby, Boom! Studios, May 2010)
   * The Mystic Hands of Doctor Strange: "The Cure" (with Frazer Irving, one-shot, Marvel Comics, May 2010)
   * World War Hulks: Spider-Man vs. Thor #1-2 (with Jorge Molina, 2-issue mini-series, Marvel Comics, July 2010)
   * Generation Hope (with Salvador Espin, Marvel Comics, November 2010–ongoing)
   * Uncanny X-Men #531-... (with Matt Fraction, Marvel Comics, December 2010–ongoing)


Fonte:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kieron_Gillen

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Scott Snyder



"Snyder graduated from Brown University in 1998 with a degree in creative writing, and then worked at Walt Disney World for about a year.[2] Snyder's Disney World stint strongly influenced his writing; he later recalled, "it did a world of good for my writing[...]All the things I ended up writing about, those things that are deeply frightening to me—fear of commitment and growing up, fear of losing loved ones, the wonder and terror of falling in love—all of it was constantly being played out all around me in this weird, cartoonish, magnified way at Disney, if that makes sense."[2]

Snyder received his MFA from Columbia University in 2002. His first collection of stories, Voodoo Heart, was published by the Dial Press in June 2006 to highly positive reviews. The collection received starred reviews from Publishers Weekly and Booklist, and was a Kirkus Reviews "Hot Debut" of the year. The New York Times published a positive review by author Andrew Sean Greer in the Sunday Book Review.[3]

Stephen King picked two of the included stories—"Wreck" and "Dumpster Tuesday"—for the 2007 The Best American Short Stories anthology shortlist. Voodoo Heart was shortlisted for the 2006 Story Prize.

He is currently at work on a novel tentatively titled the Goodbye Suit.

Snyder teaches writing at Columbia University, NYU, Sarah Lawrence College and SUNY Southampton. He lives in Stony Brook, NY with his wife, Dr. Jeanie Ripton, and their son, Jack.

In 2009, Snyder began writing for Marvel Comics. His first foray into the genre was a one-shot focusing on the first Human Torch, part of Marvel's 70th Anniversary celebrations. He is currently working on the 4-issue Iron Man: Noir for release in April 2010.

Vertigo Comics began publishing American Vampire,[4] Snyder's first creator-owned, ongoing series, in the March of 2010.[5] The first five issues feature an original storyline by Stephen King.[6]

It has been announced he is the new writer of Detective Comics and a DC Exclusive talent.[7]

Snyder is a dedicated fan of Elvis Presley."


Opere Pubblicate/in corso:
 
   *Voodoo Heart, Dial Press, June 2006
   *Human Torch, One-Shot Marvel Comics, 2009
   *American Vampire, Vertigo Comics, March of 2010-ongoing
   *Detective Comics, DC Comics, 2010-ongoing

Fonte: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scott_Snyder

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Paul Cornell



"Already known in Doctor Who fan circles, Cornell's professional writing career began in 1990 when he was a winner in a young writers' competition and his entry, Kingdom Come, was produced and screened on BBC Two. Soon after, he wrote Timewyrm: Revelation, a novel for the Virgin New Adventures series of Doctor Who novels. Timewyrm: Revelation was a reworking of a serialised fan fiction piece Cornell had penned previously for the fanzine Queen Bat. Several other Doctor Who novels followed, including the award-winning Human Nature.

Cornell then began working for Granada Television, where he wrote for the popular children's medical drama Children's Ward and created his own children's series Wavelength for Yorkshire Television, which ran for two series. He made the crossover to working in adult television full-time in 1996, when he was one of the main contributors to Granada's supernatural soap opera Springhill, which ran for two years on Sky One and later on Channel 4.

After a short stint on Coronation Street, he began working for other production companies, including contributing an episode in 1999 to Red Production Company's anthology drama series Love in the 21st Century for Channel 4. His episode, entitled Masturbation, starred Ioan Gruffudd as Jack. He was due to be one of the writers on Red Production Company's planned Queer as Folk spin-off series Misfits, but the series was never made, being abruptly cancelled by Channel 4.

In the 21st century he has written mainly for the BBC, contributing episodes to all three of their regular medical dramas: Casualty, Holby City and the daytime soap opera Doctors. He also contributed to the 1950s-set Sunday evening prime time drama series Born and Bred and was one of the writers of the 2005 series revival of Doctor Who, writing the episode "Father's Day". The episode was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form in 2006 and came third in terms of votes for its category. Cornell later wrote a two-part story for Doctor Who's 2007 series, based on his 1995 Virgin New Adventures novel Human Nature. The title of the first episode was also "Human Nature", while the second was titled "The Family of Blood".[1] In 2008, the two episodes were nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form.[2]

In February 2006, Cornell announced in a post on his weblog [3] that he would be writing an episode for the BBC's forthcoming Robin Hood, produced by Tiger Aspect Productions for the same Saturday evening family slot as Doctor Who. He later announced on his blog that he was also writing a second Robin Hood episode for later in the first series. His first episode, "Who Shot the Sheriff?", aired on BBC One on 21 October 2006. His second, "A Thing or Two About Loyalty", followed on 2 December 2006. He also wrote an episode for the second season of another Saturday evening family adventure programme, the ITV science-fiction series Primeval, transmitted in February 2008.[4]

He also wrote the one-off pilot Pulse, which was shown on BBC Three in early June 2010.[5]

Outside of television, he has been active in various other media, having written six Doctor Who novels for Virgin Publishing and BBC Books during the 1990s, three Doctor Who audio dramas for Big Finish Productions and a fully-animated internet-broadcast Doctor Who adventure, Scream of the Shalka (starring Richard E. Grant as the Doctor) for bbc.co.uk in 2003. He has also written two mainstream science-fiction novels, Something More and British Summertime for Gollancz, and various novels, short stories and audio dramas based around a character he created for the New Adventures, Professor Bernice Summerfield, and whom he later licensed to Big Finish Productions.

He has also co-authored (often working with Keith Topping and Martin Day) several non-fiction books on television, including The Guinness Book of Classic British TV, X-treme Possibilities (a guide to The X-Files), and The Discontinuity Guide (a humorous guide to Doctor Who). (Topping and Day's Doctor Who novel The Devil Goblins from Neptune was also based on an original idea with Cornell.) He has also written comics, both for Doctor Who Magazine and the 2000 AD spin-off Judge Dredd Megazine.

He has written Wisdom, a 6-issue limited series for Marvel Comics' MAX imprint, featuring the character Peter Wisdom, with art by Trevor Hairsine and Manuel Garcia.[6]

It was announced at the 2007 Wizard World Chicago comic book convention that Cornell would be following Chris Claremont on Marvel's New Excalibur. Plans were to subsequently changed with the cancellation of the New Excalibur title and Cornell's new project was announced as being titled Captain Britain and MI: 13.[7][8] The third trade paperback, Vampire State, was nominated for the 2010 "Best Graphic Story" Hugo Award.[9]

Cornell has also written Young Avengers Presents #4 (April 2008)[10] and a Fantastic Four mini-series comic, True Story, which started in July 2008, which featured the team encountering characters from the pages of literary classics.[11][12] In 2008, he wrote a comic which featured on the Doctor Who website.[13] He has also written the Young Avengers limited series that ties into Dark Reign[14][15] and Black Widow: Deadly Origin a mini-series that ties into the character's appearance in Iron Man 2.[16]

Cornell became the next Action Comics writer after War of the Supermen.[17] Cornell signed with DC Comics exclusively in 2010 as part of writing for Action Comics.[18] By January 2011, he has completed Batman & Robin #17-19 and works on a Knight & Squire six-issue miniseries."


Opere pubblicate/In corso:

   * Doctor Who:
         o "Stairway to Heaven" (with co-author John Freeman and pencils by Gerry Dolan and inks by Rex Ward, in Doctor Who Magazine #156, 1990)
         o "Teenage Kicks" (illustrated text story, in Doctor Who Magazine #163, 1990)
         o "The Chameleon Factor" (with pencils by Lee Sullivan and inks by Mark Farmer, in Doctor Who Magazine #174, 1991)
         o "Emperor of the Daleks" (with co-author John Freeman and art by Lee Sullivan, in Doctor Who Magazine #197-202, 1993)
         o "Time and Time Again" (with art by John Ridgway, in Doctor Who Magazine #207, 1993
         o "Metamorphosis" (with art by Lee Sullivan, in Doctor Who Yearbook 1993)
         o "Blood Invocation" (with art by John Ridgway, in Doctor Who Yearbook 1995)
   * Pan-African Judges (with Siku, in Judge Dredd Megazine vol. 2 #44-49, 1993–1994)
   * Deathwatch: "Faust & Falsehood" (with Adrian Salmon, in Judge Dredd Megazine vol. 3 #8-13, 1995–1996)
   * XTNCT (with D'Israeli, in Judge Dredd Megazine #209-214, 2003–2004, trade paperback, XTNCT: CM ND HV G F Y THNK YR HRD NGH!, 48 pages, hardcover, December 2006, ISBN 1-904265-69-3)
   * Wisdom (with Trevor Hairsine and Manuel Garcia, 6-issue limited series, Marvel Comics, 2006, tpb, 144 pages, August 2007, ISBN 0785121234)
   * Young Avengers Presents #4 (with Mark Brooks, Marvel Comics, April 2008, collected in Young Avengers Presents, 144 pages, October 2008, ISBN 0785129758)
   * Captain Britain and MI: 13 #1-15 plus annual (with Leonard Kirk, Marvel Comics, May 2008-July 2009):
         o Secret Invasion (collects Captain Britain and MI: 13 #1-4, 104 pages, Panini Comics, January 2009, ISBN 1846534070, Marvel Comics, March 2009, ISBN 0-7851-3344-5)
         o Hell Comes To Birmingham (collects Captain Britain and MI: 13 #5-9, 120 pages, Panini Comics, June 2009, ISBN 1846534232, Marvel Comics, July 2009, ISBN 0-7851-3345-3)
         o Vampire State (collects Captain Britain and MI: 13 #10-15 + annual #1, 184 pages, Marvel Comics, October 2009, ISBN 0-7851-3952-4)
   * Fantastic Four: True Story (with Horacio Dominguez, 4-issue mini-series, Marvel Comics, July–October 2008)
   * Dark Reign: Young Avengers (with Mark Brooks, 5-issue limited series, Marvel Comics, May–September 2009)
   * Black Widow: Deadly Origin (with Tom Raney and John Paul Leon, 4-issue mini-series, Marvel Comics, forthcoming)
   * Dark X-Men: The Beginning #1-3 (with Leonard Kirk, Marvel Comics, September–October 2009, hardcover, December 2009, ISBN 0-7851-4230-4)
   * Dark X-Men (with Leonard Kirk, 5-issue limited series, Marvel Comics, January 2010-ongoing, premiere hardcover, June 2010, ISBN 0-7851-4526-5)
   * Action Comics #890- (with artist Pete Woods, DC Comics, June 2010-)
   * Knight and Squire #1-6 (with artist Jimmy Broxton, limited series, October 2010-)
   * Batman & Robin #17-19 (with Scott McDaniel, November 2010-January 2011)

Fonte:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Cornell

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Brian Wood



"Wood's first professional work in comics was the 5-issue miniseries Channel Zero, published by Image Comics in 1997, created as part of a final project for graduation from Parsons. Channel Zero is set in a dystopian near-future New York City where the tenets of Mayor Giuliani have grown into a freedom-restricting government initiative called 'The Clean Act'. The protagonist is Jennie 2.5, a DIY media personality. Channel Zero was orphaned shortly after Image Comics sold out of the first print run of the collection, opting not to return to press. AiT/Planet Lar acquired it soon afterwards and has kept the graphic novel in print.

Wood was absent from comics for several years, working at a series of internet design jobs during the dot-com boom. In early 2000, Warren Ellis offered Wood a co-writing job on Marvel Comics' Generation X, as part of Ellis's Counter-X run (in which Ellis served as 'Plotmaster'). Wood co-wrote issues #63–70 with Ellis, and wrote #71–75 on his own. The series was canceled as part of incoming editor-in-chief Joe Quesada's attempts to simplify the X-Men franchise.

Wood returned to creator-owned comics between 2001 and 2003, producing several graphic novels and miniseries, including Couscous Express, The Couriers, and Jennie One for AIT, Pounded for Oni Press, and Fight For Tomorrow for DC's imprint Vertigo. He was employed as AIT's art director for roughly six months, creating not only their current logo and branding, but covers for many of the books they published during this time. He also found time to work again with Warren Ellis, creating 14 covers for the critically-acclaimed Wildstorm series Global Frequency.

In late 2003, Wood quit his staff job at Rockstar Games and teamed with artist Becky Cloonan to create the monthly series Demo. Each of the 12 issues told its own complete story, and included eight pages of "backmatter", bonus material that was intentionally left out of the eventual collected edition. Demo was highly successful, earning two Eisner Award nominations, many positive press mentions and multiple editions in foreign languages.

As a career milestone, Demo indicates a shift from Wood's earlier high concept action-adventure work. Demo, and much of his later work, tends towards focused human dramas with strong emotional elements.
The Demo format proved so successful that Wood went on to replicate it, with minor changes, for his 12-issue series Local at Oni Press, begun in 2005 and drawn by artist Ryan Kelly. Local differs from Demo in that it includes a focal character, Megan McKeenan, whose character arc is gradually traced through the series, although she is not always the protagonist within each issue. This difference has led Local down its own path; Wood refers to it as "transcending its 'done in one' format to really be about Megan's story, her life, that progression over time".[1]

2006 also saw the publication of the graphic novel The Tourist from Image Comics, and Supermarket, a 4-issue series from IDW drawn by Kristian Donaldson.

In August 2006, DC announced that Brian Wood has been signed to an exclusive 2-year contract.[2] While an exclusive contract, it still allows for Wood to complete his current commitments to other publishers, including Local at Oni Press, and Dogs Day End with Top Shelf.

Brian Wood's other current work is DMZ, a critically-acclaimed ongoing series from Vertigo for which he is quickly becoming best-known, Northlanders, a historical-fiction series set during the Viking Age, and The New York Four, a YA graphic novel, a new Demo miniseries as well as the re-release of the original Demo collection.. all from DC/Vertigo and DC/Minx."


Opere pubblicate/In corso:

   * Channel Zero:
         o Channel Zero (1997), originally published by Image Comics
         o Jennie One (2003), illustrated by Becky Cloonan
         o Public Domain: A Channel Zero Designbook (2002)
         o Public Domain 2 sometimes called "PD2", self-published convention exclusive (2009)
   * Couscous Express (2002), illustrated by Brett Weldele
   * Generation X #63–75 (2000), Marvel Comics, illustrated by Steve Pugh and others; partly co-written by Warren Ellis
   * Vampirella/Witchblade #1: Brooklyn Bounce (2003), illustrated by Steve Pugh.
   * Pounded (2003), 3-issue Oni Press series, later collected in trade paperback, illustrated by Steve Rolston
   * The Couriers:
         o The Couriers (2003), AiT/Planet Lar graphic novel, illustrated by Rob G.
         o Dirtbike Manifesto (2004), AiT/Planet Lar graphic novel, illustrated by Rob G.
         o The Ballad of Johnny Funwrecker (2005), AiT/Planet Lar graphic novel, illustrated by Rob G.
   * The Tourist (2006), Image Comics graphic novel, illustrated by Toby Cypress
   * Supermarket (2006), 4-issue IDW Publishing series, later collected in trade paperback, illustrated by Kristian Donaldson
   * DMZ (2005– ), ongoing DC/Vertigo monthly series, illustrated by Riccardo Burchielli and Brian Wood
         o vol. 1 On The Ground (6/2006), collecting DMZ #1-5 (ISBN 1-4012-1062-7)
         o vol. 2 Body of a Journalist (2/2007), collecting DMZ #6-12 (ISBN 1-4012-1247-6)
         o vol. 3 Public Works (9/2007), collecting DMZ #13-17 (ISBN 1-4012-1476-2)
         o vol. 4 Friendly Fire (3/2008), collecting DMZ #18-22 (ISBN 1-4012-1662-5)
         o vol. 5 The Hidden War (7/2008), collecting DMZ #23-28 (ISBN 1-4012-1833-4)
         o vol. 6 Blood In The Game (1/2009), collecting DMZ #29-34 (ISBN 1-4012-2130-0)
         o vol. 7 War Powers (2009), collecting DMZ #35-41 (ISBN 1-4012-2430-X)
         o vol. 8 Hearts And Minds (2010), collecting DMZ #42-49 (ISBN 1-4012-2726-0)
         o vol. 9 M.I.A. (2011), collecting DMZ #50-54 (ISBN 1-4012-2996-4)
         o vol. 10 Collective Punishment (2011), collecting DMZ #55-59 (ISBN 1-4012-3150-0)
         o vol. 11 Free States Rising (2011), collecting DMZ #60-66
   * Local (2005–2008) Oni Press, illustrated by Ryan Kelly, lettered by Hope Larson and Bryan Lee O'Malley.
   * Demo (2003–2011), illustrated by Becky Cloonan
         o Demo Vol. 1 (2003, 2005, 2008) (ISBN 1-4012-1621-8)
         o Demo Vol. 2 (2011) (1-4012-2995-6)
         o Demo: The Twelve Original Scripts (2004), with spot illustrations by Becky Cloonan
   * Fight For Tomorrow (2003, 2008), DC/Vertigo, illustrated by Denys Cowan and Kent Williams (ISBN: 1-4012-1562-9)
   * Counter-X Vol. 2 (2008), Marvel Comics, co-written with Warren Ellis, illustrated by Steve Pugh. Collects #63-70 of Generation X. (ISBN 0-7851-3305-4)
   * Northlanders (2007– ), ongoing DC/Vertigo series, art by Davide Gianfelice, Dean Ormston, Ryan Kelly, and Massimo Carnevale
         o vol. 1 Sven The Returned (10/2008), collecting Northlanders #1-8 (ISBN 1-4012-1918-7)
         o vol. 2 The Cross + The Hammer (2009), collecting Northlanders #11-16 (ISBN 1-4012-2296-X)
         o vol. 3 Blood In The Snow (2010), collecting Northlanders #9-10, 17-20 (ISBN 1-4012-2620-5)
         o vol. 4 The Plague Widow (2010), collecting Northlanders #21-28 (ISBN 1-4012-2850-X)
         o vol. 5 Metal And Other Stories (2011), collecting Northlanders #29-36 (ISBN 1-4012-3160-8)
   * The New York Four (7/2008) graphic novel for DC/Minx, art by Ryan Kelly (ISBN: 1-4012-1154-2)
   * The New York Five (12/2010) miniseries for DC/Vertigo, art by Ryan Kelly
   * DV8 "Gods & Monsters" (2010–11), DC Comics/Wildstorm, illustrated by Rebekah Isaacs. (ISBN: 1-4012-2973-5)

Fonte: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Wood_%28illustrator%29

Spiacente, ma non sei autorizzato a visualizzare il contenuto degli spoiler.


Jeff Lemire



"emire was born and raised in a small farming town in Essex County, Ontario, near Lake St. Clair.[2] Lemire attended film school, but decided to pursue comics when he realized that filmmaking didn't suit his solitary personality.[2]

After self-publishing the Xeric Award-winning comic book Lost Dogs in 2005 via his Ashtray Press imprint, Lemire found a home at Top Shelf Productions. He produced the Eisner and Harvey Award-nominated Essex County Trilogy for Top Shelf in 2008–2009.

Lemire serializes a science-fiction strip called Fortress in the quarterly UR Magazine.

In 2009, the DC Comics Vertigo published Lemire's The Nobody, a two-color tale of identity, fear and paranoia in a small community. Lemire is currently writing and drawing the new monthly full-color Vertigo series Sweet Tooth.[3][4] He then moved over to the DC Universe to write the one-shot Brightest Day: Atom, with Turkish artist Mahmud Asrar, designed to act as a springboard for an Atom story to co-feature in Adventure Comics.[5] He also relaunched the Superboy series featuring the character Conner Kent.[6]

He currently lives in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. He is married and has a son.[7]"


Opere Pubblicate/In Corso:

   * Lost Dogs (self-published "Ashtray Press", 2005)
   * Essex County Trilogy:
         o Tales From The Farm (Top Shelf Productions, 2008)
         o Ghost Stories (Top Shelf Productions, 2008)
         o The Country Nurse (Top Shelf Productions, 2009)
         o The Collected Essex County (Top Shelf Productions, 2009)
               + Contains the three main stories "Tales From The Farm", "Ghost Stories" and "The Country Nurse"
               + Added short stories "The Essex County Boxing Club" and "The Sad and Lonely Life of Eddie Elephant Ears."
               + Bonus materials, such as: unused promotion art, a deleted scene, character designs and so on.
   * The Nobody (original graphic novel, Vertigo, 2009)
   * Sweet Tooth Book 1: Out of the Woods' (graphic novel, Vertigo, 2010)
   * Sweet Tooth Book 2: In Captivity (graphic novel, Vertigo, 2011)

   Series

   * The Fortress (serialized comic strip in UR Magazine, June–September 2006)
   * Bio-Graphical - (3, 1-Page comic strips published in Driven magazine, June–December 2008)
   * Sweet Tooth (script and art, Vertigo, 2009-ongoing)
   * Brightest Day: Atom (with Mahmud Asrar, one-shot, DC Comics, 2010)
   * Atom (with Mahmud Asrar, 10 page co-feature in Adventure Comics, DC Comics, 2010)
   * Superboy (with Pier Gallo, DC Comics, forthcoming)

Fonte: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeff_Lemire

Spiacente, ma non sei autorizzato a visualizzare il contenuto degli spoiler.


Rick Remender



"While in the early stages of his comic book career, Remender worked in animation on such films as The Iron Giant, Anastasia, Titan A.E. and The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle. He penciled the final mock comic book cover in the opening sequence of Ultraviolet and taught animation and comic art part time at the Academy of Art University in San Francisco.[citation needed]

He has illustrated album covers and promo art for punk/metal bands such as NOFX, 3 Inches of Blood, Pitch Black, Lagwagon and No Use for a Name.[citation needed]

Remender illustrated the comic book adaptation of the movie Man With the Screaming Brain, which was published in 2005 by Dark Horse Comics and year later he drew the series The Last Christmas, which was written by Brian Posehn with Gerry Dugan and inked by Hilary Barta.

On January 8, 2007 it was announced on his column Against The Grain that he would be teaming up with French artist Paul Renaud for a Red Sonja one-shot published by Dynamite Entertainment titled "Vacant Shell".[1] He is also working on the horror line Crawl Space with Kieron Dwyer, which will include stories like XXXombies.[2] He had previously worked with Dwyer on Sea of Red[3] and Night Mary.[4]

Remender was working on the Dark Horse Comics series The End League,[5] as well as launching a giant robot series Gigantic,[6][7] he will also be relaunching Fear Agent[8] and starting a new series at Image Comics called Sorrow.[9]

He became co-author of Punisher War Journal with Matt Fraction from issue #19 to 25 and then was the main writer on the new and eighth Punisher series. IDW Publishing also released a "master edition" of Black Heart Billy.[10] In April 2009, Remender signed an exclusive writing contract with Marvel Comics[11] but was still able to release the series The Last Days of American Crime through Radical Comics.[12][13] In late 2010 he launched the new title Uncanny X-Force.[14][15]

He served as a writer on Electronic Art's game Dead Space and is currently the lead writer for the upcoming video game Bulletstorm, currently in development by People Can Fly (in association with Epic Games) to be published by Electronic Arts."


Opere Pubblicate/In corso:

   * Captain Dingleberry (Slave Labor Graphics, 1999)
   * Black Heart Billy (IDW Publishing, 2000-2009)
   * Doll and Creature (Image Comics, 2005)
   * Night Mary (IDW Publishing, 2005)
   * Man with the Screaming Brain (with Bruce Campbell & Hilary Barta, 4-issue mini-series, Dark Horse Comics, 2005)
   * Sea of Red (with Salgood Sam & Kieron Dwyer, Image Comics, 2005- 2007)
   * Strange Girl (with Eric Nguyen, Image Comics, 2005-2008)
   * Fear Agent #1-32 (with Tony Moore, Jerome Opeña, Image Comics and Dark Horse Comics, October 2005- present)
   * Last Christmas #1-5 (with Brian Posehn & Gerry Duggan, Hilary Barta, Image Comics, 2005-2007)
   * Red Sonja: "Vacant Shell" (with Paul Renaud, one-shot, Dynamite Entertainment, 2007)
   * XXXombies (with Tony Moore and Kieron Dwyer, Image Comics, 2007)
   * Sorrow (with co-author Seth Peck and art by Francesco Francavilla, 4-issue mini-series, Image Comics, August 2007 - March 2008)
   * The End League #1-9 (with Mat Broome, Eric Canete, Dark Horse Comics, January 2008 - November 2009)
   * Punisher War Journal #19-25 (with co-author Matt Fraction, ongoing series, Marvel Comics, July 2008 - January 2009)
   * Gigantic (with Eric Nguyen, 5-issue limited series, Dark Horse Comics, November 2008 - January 2010)
   * Punisher vol. 8 #1- (with Jerome Opeña, Tan Eng Huat, Tony Moore, Dan Brereton, Roland Boschi, ongoing series, Marvel Comics, March 2009 - ongoing)
   * Thunderbolts #137 (with Mahmud A. Asrar, Marvel Comics, December 2009)
   * Doctor Voodoo: Avenger of the Supernatural #1-5 (with Jefte Palo, Marvel Comics, December 2009 - April 2010)
   * The Last Days of American Crime (with Greg Tocchini, 3-issue mini-series Radical Comics, December 2009 - August 2010)
   * Uncanny X-Force #1- (with Jerome Opeña, Esad Ribic, ongoing series, Marvel Comics, December 2010 - present)

Fonte: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rick_Remender

Spiacente, ma non sei autorizzato a visualizzare il contenuto degli spoiler.



To Be Continued...

Selina Kyle

Grande Iago! Bel topic!  :up:
Io credo TANTISSIMO in Scott Snyder  :wub:


Una mela al giorno...

American_Gaijin89

Citazione di: Selina Kyle il 19 Gennaio 2011, 12:45:05
Grande Iago! Bel topic!  :up:
Io credo TANTISSIMO in Scott Snyder  :wub:

Io sono portato sempre a sperare nelle nuove leve, son fatto così  :lol:

Comunque aiutatemi anche voi con i nomi che vi vengono in mente  :sisi:

Riguardo agli editori indipendenti vorrei citare Michael Alan Nelson, di cui ho già letto le ottime Dead Run e Hexed per Boom! Studios.

Occhi nella Notte

Grande Iago... questo è un gran topic... anche perchè effettivamente uno non ci pensa, ma funziona come nel calcio... si è sempre alla ricerca di nuovi autori talentuosi... veramente spero che ne trovino parecchi che abbiano la freschezza e la genialità di Johns...
Degli autori che tu hai postato purtroppo non ne conosco nessuno...  :(

Solo quando l'ultimo campo sara' sporcato,
l'ultimo fiume inquinato, l'ultimo animale avvelenato e l'ultimo albero abbattuto
che gli uomini capiranno che non possono mangiare i soldi.

I Miei Articoli  http://www.dcleaguers.it/author/occhi-nella-notte<br />
Collezione Tavole Originali  http://www.comicartfans.com/GalleryDetail.asp?GCat=46736<br />
COMPRO http://www.dcleaguers.it/forum/mercatino/%28vendo%29-parte-della-mia-collezione/msg1438045/#msg1438045

Selina Kyle

Cornell, Hickman, Fraction (dici che è già troppo affermato per essere inserito?), Diggle, Brian Wood, e qualche nuova leva della Marvel che vi piace.  :up:


Una mela al giorno...

Green Arrow

Per quanto riguarda la DC, sono assolutamente da aggiungere Jeff Lemire e Paul Cornell  :up:

Citazione di: Selina Kyle il 19 Gennaio 2011, 12:58:28
Cornell, Hickman, Fraction (dici che è già troppo affermato per essere inserito?), Diggle, Brian Wood, e qualche nuova leva della Marvel che vi piace.  :up:

Fraction, Diggle e Brian Wood mi sembrano già parecchio affermati  :look:


American_Gaijin89

#6
Citazione di: Occhi nella Notte il 19 Gennaio 2011, 12:57:06
Grande Iago... questo è un gran topic... anche perchè effettivamente uno non ci pensa, ma funziona come nel calcio... si è sempre alla ricerca di nuovi autori talentuosi... veramente spero che ne trovino parecchi che abbiano la freschezza e la genialità di Johns...

Concordo  :up:

Citazione di: Selina Kyle il 19 Gennaio 2011, 12:58:28
Cornell, Hickman, Fraction (dici che è già troppo affermato per essere inserito?), Diggle, Brian Wood, e qualche nuova leva della Marvel che vi piace.  :up:

Secondo me Fraction, Hickman e Diggle sono già piuttosto affermati, te che pensi Gatta ?  :mmm:

Gli altri li aggiungo subito !

Citazione di: Oliver Queen il 19 Gennaio 2011, 13:09:01
Per quanto riguarda la DC, sono assolutamente da aggiungere Jeff Lemire e Paul Cornell  :up:

Lemire giusto !  :o

Edit_ Finchè posso edito direttamente il primo post  :sisi:

Daredevil

Bel topic :up:

Ok per Fraction e Diggle, ma Hickman secondo me va inserito. Così magari come Aaron.

Murnau

Aaron scrive da anni una serie vertigo e adesso ha in mano due delle icone Marvel. Mi pare già abbastanza affermato.
Vendo vari Alan Moore, Grant Morrison, Frank Miller




Tu non sai che cosa voglia dire sentirli tutti addosso, gli anni, e non capirli più.
                                                                                                                                   La notte, 1961

Non c'è storia più grande della nostra, quella mia e tua. Quella dell'Uomo e della Donna.
                                                                                                                                    Il cielo sopra Berlino, 1987

Azrael

Bel Topic  :clap:

Seguirò con attenzione Snyder  :ahsisi:
INSTAGRAM: AZRAEL'S CAVE

The Batman (2022) - Batcycle 🦇 REEL

The Batman (2022) McFarlane by Jim Lee 🦇 REEL 🦇



Fedele all'Ordine di Saint Dumas e al Pipistrello
Combatteremo le idee con idee migliori

Doktor Sleepless

In questo momento secondo me l'unico che merita qualcosa fra le nuovissime leve è Rick Remender.

Ammappera, Scott Snyder esce dalla Brown. Voglio sentire il parere di BJ al riguardo.  :lol:

Selina Kyle

Sicuramente Aaron, Diggle, Wood sono già affermati, stanno nel mezzo fra i grandi e giovani.. però così come "spotlight" ce li metterei, della serie "teneteli d'occhio, leggeteli, se non li conoscete". :D
Però Iago giustamente gestisci il topic come preferisci.  :up: :up:


Una mela al giorno...

Daredevil

Citazione di: Doktor Sleepless il 19 Gennaio 2011, 13:59:38
In questo momento secondo me l'unico che merita qualcosa fra le nuovissime leve è Rick Remender.
Ma Hickman perchè non vi piace? :cry:
Citazione di: Doktor Sleepless il 19 Gennaio 2011, 13:59:38
Ammappera, Scott Snyder esce dalla Brown. Voglio sentire il parere di BJ al riguardo.  :lol:
:sisi: :lolle:

Post Uniti: 19 Gennaio 2011, 14:04:06

Citazione di: Oliver Queen il 19 Gennaio 2011, 13:09:01
Per quanto riguarda la DC, sono assolutamente da aggiungere Jeff Lemire
Com'è? Non ho ancora letto nulla di suo.

Selina Kyle



Una mela al giorno...

Murnau

Mister Nessuno di Jeff Lemire è BELLISSIMO, però vi deve piacere il genere Coconino.

Post Uniti: 19 Gennaio 2011, 14:11:50

Citazione di: Doktor Sleepless il 19 Gennaio 2011, 13:59:38
In questo momento secondo me l'unico che merita qualcosa fra le nuovissime leve è Rick Remender.

Mah, è bravino, ma per ora non mi basta. Secondo me ha del potenziale, aspetto che sbocci davvero.
Vendo vari Alan Moore, Grant Morrison, Frank Miller




Tu non sai che cosa voglia dire sentirli tutti addosso, gli anni, e non capirli più.
                                                                                                                                   La notte, 1961

Non c'è storia più grande della nostra, quella mia e tua. Quella dell'Uomo e della Donna.
                                                                                                                                    Il cielo sopra Berlino, 1987