The Weekly Pull: Justice League: Road to Dark Crisis, The Closet, Marvel: June 1962, and more

It’s almost another new comic book day, which means new releases are hitting stores and digital platforms. Every week at The Weekly Pull, a file Characters book.com The team is highlighting new releases that are getting us even more excited about another week of comics. Whether these are editions from the major publisher or from the small press, or entirely new editions of ongoing series, or original graphic novels, or collected editions of old material, whether they include hoods or come from any other kind, if that excites us About the comic books this week, we’ll tell you about them in The Weekly Pull.

This week, the Justice League is on its way to dark crisisJames Tynion’s fourth comic, Substack, will be printed, and all Marvel’s June 1962 releases are collected in one collector. Plus, Clear And the bloody step by step They reach their ends, a new size of We only find them when they dieand more.

What comics are you most excited about this week? Let us know what new releases you’re looking forward to reading in the comments, and feel free to leave us some of your suggestions as well. Check back tomorrow for our weekly reviews and again next week for a new installment of The Weekly Pull.

Scan #6

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(Photo: Frances Manapole, The Science of Comedy)
  • By Scott Snyder
  • The art of Francis Manapul
  • Letters Designed by Andworld
  • Posted by Comixology

In an age when cyberpunk has been reduced essentially to a shallow aesthetic or a cheap trigger to the past, the original Comixology series by Scott Snyder and Frances Manapul. Clear It was a godsend for fans of the genre who missed its depth. Instead of dealing with cyborg ninjas and vague gestures toward transhumanism, Clear Rechecks and updates some features of Cyberpunk Central. It takes the concern that the company’s increasing control and technology dependence on risk diminishing the value of human lives and updating it for today’s algorithmically pre-defined conversations and the fluctuating mixture of awareness and lack of agency. Clear #6 He finishes the story and has a few more twists up his sleeve before the last page in keeping with his pesky cyberpunk roots. It is a story that should be better read in completed form and now is your chance. – Jimmy Lovett

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roommate #1

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(Photo: Gavin Fullerton, Image Comics)
  • Written by James Tynion IV
  • Art by Gavin Fullerton
  • chris o’lloran colors
  • Tom Napolitano messages
  • Posted by Image Comics

To say James Tynion IV is on the hot streak would be an understatement. Having won the Eisner Award for Best Writer in 2021, he continues to produce some of his most popular comedies and sets potential iterations for works like Something is killing childrenAnd the swear the truthAnd the Beautiful house on the lake. One strong thread running through all the work is an appreciation of horror, which makes for another terrifying story from Image Comics titled Wardrobe A must pick for early summer reading. Wardrobe It is a 3-issue limited series billed as an “existential family horror story” that focuses on one family’s movement across the countryside and their son’s fascination with the monsters he sees in the closet. It’s a solid request on its own, but given Tynion’s track record of developing categorical, dark metaphors, it really sends chills down my spine. Combine this concept with the work of Gavin Fullerton depicting an Irish crime ghost story swamp bodies It featured all kinds of disturbing images and subtle storytelling, and there’s no excuse to miss it Wardrobe #1 in comic book stores tomorrow. – Chase Magnet

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Justice League: Path to Dark Crisis #1

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(Photo: Daniel Samper, Alejandro Sanchez, DC Comics)
  • Written by Joshua Williamson, Jeremy Adams, Chuck Brown, Philip Kennedy Johnson, and Stephanie Phillips
  • Dan Jurgens, Rosie Campy, Lily Del Duca, Clayton Henry
  • Colors Marcelo Maiolo, Jordi Belair, Sebastian Cheng, Matt Hermes, Hi-Fi
  • Josh Reed letters
  • Posted by DC Comics

With the Justice League now “dead”, it’s up to the DC universe’s remaining heroes and villains to forge the new status quo — and that’s set to be explored this week. Path to Dark Crisis #1. With an all-star creative team at its helm, we’re starting to see some side players and legacy champions picking up the pieces in the absence of the league, as well as a deeper look at key players like Pariah. dark crisis It will surely be an important part of the capital’s near future, and you owe it to yourself to plunge into this chapter of it. – Jenna Anderson

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Marvel: June 1962 Omnibus

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(Photo: Javier Rodriguez)
  • with a different pen
  • Art through different
  • Posted by Marvel Comics

Marvel August 1961 Omnibus It is easily one of my favorite comic prints in recent memory, providing a great comprehensive look at the comics that were published side-by-side. The Fantastic Four #1. This week June 1962 He takes this creative approach even further, republishing the titles that were introduced alongside Spider-Man’s first appearance in amazing fantasy #15th. To some extent, June 1962 It was a major turning point for Marvel superheroes, as the month also featured Thor’s first use of Mjolnir, Hank Pym starting to become a superhero, and much more. Having all of those moments fully reprinted, along with criminally underrated titles like Millie the Model and Patsy and Hedy, is pretty cool, and this collection deserves to be on the shelves of any die-hard Marvel fan. – Jenna Anderson

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bloody step step number 4

Bloody step by step 4.jpg
(Photo: Matias Bergara, Image Comics)
  • Written by C Spurier
  • The art of Matthias Bergara
  • Mateos Lopez colors
  • Posted by Image Comics

It’s hard to think of a bolder move than launching a “silent” comic book series on the direct market, often awash with grueling storytelling, but Sea Spurier and Matthias Bergara seized the opportunity. Their daring experiment ends in bloody step by step #4. The series had to build on Bergara’s impressive, expressive artwork, and Bergara proved to be more than up to the task, even if the lack of script admittedly means spending a few extra minutes analyzing what happens in the plot at times. Regardless, we’re excited to see how Spurrier and Bergara ended this epic but heartwarming tale. – Jimmy Lovett

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We find them only when they are dead vol. 2: the thief

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(Photo: Simone de Meo, Boom Studios)
  • Written by Al Ewing
  • Simon de Meow’s art
  • Simone Di Meo and Mariasara Mioti Colors
  • Letters Designed by AndWorld
  • Posted by Boom Studios

We only find them when they die She prepares for her final story making it the perfect moment to get involved in this ambitious series from Al Ewing and Simone Di Meo. The story of humanity harvesting massive celestial bodies found in space actually spans decades as religious cults and social conditions evolved around the lives of its characters. It can sometimes be difficult to track this range on a summary and monthly basis, but it becomes quite immersive when you read it together. The first two volumes of the series tell a story that confronts modern sensibilities of despair but also builds a powerful metaphor for the nature of the creative industries. Amidst these powerful concepts, there is also a brilliantly designed sci-fi epic that is bound to excite any fan of the genre. For those who already know and appreciate the work of Ewing or Di Meo, this second set is not to be missed before the couple finishes their impressive story. – Chase Magnet

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