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Showing posts with label John McCrea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John McCrea. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Exhibition of John McCrea artwork in Birmingham

Last Monday, 20th May, I was pleased to be invited to the launch of John McCrea's new exhibition in the centre of Birmingham, and a very pleasant evening it was.

John has worked in comics for a long time now, on characters such as Batman, Judge Dredd, Hitman, and many more. The exhibition presents a wide range of his work, with original art and prints for sale. John has a great style that's always evolving and it was great to see his original art up close.

If you're in Birmingham, the place to go is the Havill and Travis Gallery at the Primitivo Bar and Eatery, 10 Barwick Street, Birmingham B3 2NT. The exhibition is open from Monday to Friday 11 A.M. to 5 P.M. and runs for another five weeks.

Paul H. Birch was one of the people at the opening night, and he's written about it over on the Down the Tubes blog here:
https://downthetubes.net/?p=107442
John McCrea is also hosting some free workshops at the venue. See the flyer above for details.







Monday, April 17, 2017

Coming up in 2000AD...

Thanks to Rebellion for this advance look at the next issue of 2000AD, in the shops this Wednesday!


UK & DIGITAL: 19 April 2017 £2.65
* NORTH AMERICA: 19 May 2017 $7.99
* DIAMOND CODE: FEB171836

* COVER: MATT FERGUSON

Judge Dredd: Harvey by John Wagner (w) John McCrea (a) Mike Spicer (c) Annie Parkhouse (l)
Defoe: Diehards by Pat Mills (w)   Colin MacNeil (a) Ellie De Ville (l)

Brink: Skeleton Life by Dan Abnett (w) INJ Culbard (a) Simon Bowland (l)

Scarlet Traces: Cold War - Book 2 by Ian Edginton (w)  D'Israeli (a) Annie Parkhouse (l)
Cursed: The Fall of Deadworld by Kek-W (w) Dave Kendall (a) Annie Parkhouse (l) 
Available in print from: UK newsagents and all good comic book stores via Diamond.
Available in digital from: 2000 AD webshop (http://shop.2000adonline.com/) , 2000 AD iPad app (https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/2000-ad-featuring-judge-dredd/id993151052) , 2000 AD Android app (http://www.2000adonline.com/android) , 2000 AD Windows 10 app (http://www.2000adonline.com/windows10)

Saturday, April 01, 2017

Advance Preview: 2000AD Prog 2025

Here we go with the latest advance preview of next week's 2000AD, in the shops on Wednesday! All pages on this post are Copyright Rebellion A/S and used with permission. Support the longest running UK adventure weekly comic by buying it every week. Don't support pirate "sharing" sites.

UK & DIGITAL: 5 April 2017 £2.65
NORTH AMERICA: 5 May 2017 $7.99
DIAMOND CODE: FEB171836
COVER: CLINT LANGLEY

In this issue:
Judge Dredd: Harvey by John Wagner (w) John McCrea (a) Mike Spicer (c) Annie Parkhouse (l)

Brink: Skeleton Life by Dan Abnett (w) INJ Culbard (a) Simon Bowland (l)


Future Shocks: The Dream Factory by Rory McConville (w) Steve Yeowell (a) Ellie De Ville (l)


Scarlet Traces: Cold War - Book 2 by Ian Edginton (w)  D'Israeli (a) Annie Parkhouse (l)

Cursed: The Fall of Deadworld by Kek-W (w) Dave Kendall (a) Annie Parkhouse (l)

Available in print from: UK newsagents and all good comic book stores via Diamond 

Saturday, March 25, 2017

Prog Preview: 2000AD Prog 2024

Here's your weekly advance look at the next issue of 2000AD! On sale Wednesday! Very few of you comment on these Prog Previews which does make me wonder how many of you buy 2000AD. Are you interested in these weekly advance peeks (which usually appear before anyone else shows them) or do you skim past these posts? (And I suppose if you do skim past them you won't see the question. Hmm, if a bear falls on a cat in the woods and there's no one to hear it, is it alive or dead? Or something like that.

UK & DIGITAL: 27 March 2017 £2.65
NORTH AMERICA: 27 April 2017 $7.99
DIAMOND CODE: JAN171931
COVER: JOHN MCCREA & MIKE SPICER


In this issue:
Judge Dredd: Harvey by John Wagner (w) John McCrea (a) Mike Spicer (c) Annie Parkhouse (l)


Brink: Skeleton Life by Dan Abnett (w) INJ Culbard (a) Simon Bowland (l)


Future Shocks: Family Time by Rory McConville (w) Nick Dyer (a) Ellie De Ville (l)

Scarlet Traces: Cold War - Book 2 by Ian Edginton (w)  D'Israeli (a) Annie Parkhouse (l)



Cursed: The Fall of Deadworld by Kek-W (w) Dave Kendall (a) Annie Parkhouse (l)

Available in print from: UK newsagents and all good comic book stores via Diamond 

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

25 Mega Years

For some reason known best to them, British publishers seem to have a predilection for celebrating the anniversaries of their comic based on cover date, rather than date of publication. The first issue of Judge Dredd the Megazine was published in September 1990 but it's celebrating this week instead. (Issue 2 was published on October 20th 1990.)

Anyway, I'm tired of pointing things like that out. Publishers will carry on doing it long after I'm gone so let's roll with it...

The main thing is that a British comic is celebrating 25 years of continuous publication. That's not something that happens often these days. There have been hundreds, maybe thousands, of comic titles published in the UK over the last 130 years or so but very few make it this far. Judge Dredd the Megazine No.1 was cover dated October 1990, was priced £1.50, and had 52 pages in full colour, with cover art by Glenn Fabry. 

Judge Dredd had been a popular character in 2000AD since his first story in issue 2 in 1977. He was awarded his own annual in 1980 but I remember some editors at IPC / Fleetway were apprehensive about putting him in his own comic. Anyway, they finally did it in 1990 and it's still around today, albeit with a slight name change to Judge Dredd Megazine. He also still appears every week in 2000AD of course, and it'd be unthinkable for him not to. 

Let's take a quick look at the contents of that first issue from 25 years ago...

The lead strip was naturally a Judge Dredd thriller. Midnite's Children was written by Alan Grant and illustrated by Jim Baikie (9 pages)...
Chopper had proved to be a reader's favourite when he appeared in a Dredd serial in 2000AD so here he was awarded his own series. Story by Garth Ennis, art by John McCrea (10 pages)...
Next up was a four page newspaper spoof, Mega City News. Ah the early days of computer design...
The third strip in issue 1 was Young Death; the boyhood of Judge Death! Script by Brian Skuter, art by Peter Doherty (6 pages)...
Next, another Dredd story (well, it's his comic). A saga destined to become a popular classic: America, by John Wagner and Colin MacNeill (10 pages)...
Finally, another Dredd supporting character with his own series. Kenny Who? in Beyond Our Kenny, by John Wagner and Cam Kennedy (9 pages)...
All in all, a strong line up of talent and a good first issue. Marred only slightly by the matt paper stock used then which reproduced some pages too darkly. (I've tried to adjust it a bit in these scans.) 

Twenty five years later, here's the cover to today's issue of Judge Dredd Megazine (No.365) by Barry Kitson. Apart from a mention of the anniversary on the cover, and in the editorial, the celebrations are low key. 
These days the comic has 64 pages, is printed on better paper, plus it's bagged with a 64 page reprint collection, all for £5.80. The main comic features four strips including the start of a new 10 page Judge Dredd serial, Terror Rising, by John Wagner and Colin MacNeill. (Both still doing great work after all these years.)

The other strips are: 
Demon Nic by Paul Grist (15 pages)
Storm Warning by Leah Moore, John Reppion, and Tom Foster (9 pages)
Lawless by Dan Abnett and Phil Winslade (9 pages)

There's also a three page text story, Hunting With Missiles, by Karl Stock, plus features on comics. The bonus comic is a reprint of Faces by Mindy Newell and John Higgins.

The Judge Dredd Megazine has had various format changes and ups and downs over the years but personally I think it's as strong at the moment as it's ever been. I like the mixture of all new strips and comics features, and the bagged reprint comic often has some forgotten treasures. Congratulations to all concerned for 25 years of Mega magnificence. May there be many more to come!

Monday, February 16, 2015

A good week to buy ACES WEEKLY!

If you still haven't tried Aces Weekly yet there's never been a better time! As a special offer this week, publisher David Lloyd is offering Aces Weekly Volume 1 at half price! That's seven digital issues of all-new material for just £3.49! Who can argue against 50p a comic? Go Aces! 
Here's the info David sent me....

Friends,
We love you! Yes we do! And because of that, on this Valentine's Day, and until 12 midnight UK-time on Feb 20th, you can get
Aces Weekly Volume One for half-price! JUST £3.49/$4.99/€3.99 for the one where it all began - with the stupendous Mark Wheatley, Phil Hester, John McCrea, David Lloyd, Jeff Vaughan, David Hitchcock, Alain Mauricet, Alexandre Tefenkgi, Lew Stringer, Dave Jackson, Esteban Hernandez, Carl Critchlow, David Leach, Bambos Georgiou, Mychailo Kazybrid, Phil Elliott, and Rory Walker, in over 200 amazing pages!
Go to
www.acesweekly.co.uk/shop to buy Volume One, fill in the form, but then DON'T click the full-price pay button. Instead pay half-price directly via Paypal to lforlloyd@aol.com!
If you're a current subscriber who just missed getting Volume One, then it's yours half-price, too, by just purchasing through your usual account.
And then... you get all this and more... with our love... : )

Friday, September 28, 2012

New comic! ACES WEEKLY is here!

Remember, remember the 30th of September... because this Sunday sees the launch of an all-new anthology comic, Aces Weekly, - and you won't even have to leave the house to buy it! 

Aces Weekly is a brand new comic that is exclusively online, not in paper form, not requiring trudging around newsagents, not needing to wait for the postman to deliver it. It's a comic that you subscribe to and that you can access from your computer, - all for a very reasonable price.

And, as revealed on this blog back in May, issue 1 includes an all-new Combat Colin three-pager in full colour. Yes, the buffoon in a bobble hat is back!

Here's all the info from the official press release...

David Lloyd (V for Vendetta, Kickback) empowered the world
with his iconoclastic Guy Fawkes mask in V for Vendetta. Today, comic
conspirator Lloyd is changing the world with his publishing launch of an ambitious new online magazine called Aces Weekly.


Aces Weekly is a sequential art magazine, available exclusively through on-line subscription which will be released as seven weekly issues which form a volume. Each issue will have 3 landscape pages from 6 teams of contributors, plus many pages of extras such as artists sketches etc. Readers subscribe to volumes which cost £6.99/$9.99 per seven issue volume. 

Aces Weekly will be available exclusively on-line and feature all-new material.
Stored online, readers have access to their magazine wherever they have
web access. The website goes live September 30, 2012. 


What makes Aces Weekly special? The creators have more control then ever before. Lloyd explained the origin of the magazine, “The aim was to create something very much like a traditional weekly comic but without limiting the subject matter. We asked a range of creators who we knew to be excellent - the reason for the ' aces ' of our name - to do whatever they liked within certain bounds of taste, and they just came up with a great mix of stories. Creators in this business rarely get asked to do whatever they like, so that's part of the pull of the project for them. And they're enthused by the newness of the project and its potential for growth.”

Bambos Georgiou is the managing editor; “Most comic companies use creators to make money for the company, this company has been set up to make money for the creators. This time readers will know their money is going direct to the creators." All strips are creator owned.


Progenitor by Phil Hester & John McCrea

Lloyd, who along with writer Dave Jackson has created Valley Of Shadows for Acesweekly.co.uk, has gathered together some of the top names in the comic industry to appear in Aces Weekly, such as Kyle Baker, Steve Bissette, Colleen Doran, Bill Sienkiewicz, Billy Tucci and Herb Trimpe, including, alongside him in the first volume ; Phil Hester & John McCrea (Progenitor), JC Vaughn & Mark Wheatley (Return Of The Human) Alain Mauricet & Alexandre Tefenkgi (Shoot For The Moon) and David Hitchcock (Paradise Mechanism) who all contribute twenty-one page stories serialized over the first seven issue run. Also included in the first volume are stand alone three page strips by Lew Stringer (Combat Colin), Carl Critchlow (Thrud The Barbarian), David Leach (Psycho Gran), Esteban Hernández(Harmony), Phil Elliott (Gimbley)Rory Walker (Chloroform) and Mychailo Kazybrid & Bambos (Dr Queer).

Check out www.acesweekly.co.uk 

Goes on sale September 30, 2012, a seven
issue subscription costs £6.99/$9.99/€7.99
 

For updates email info@acesweekly.co.uk

Visit www.acesweekly.co.uk to see the best that comics have to offer!


Like us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/acesweekly
Follow us on Twitter at https://twitter.com/acesweekly
 

******************************

Obviously we're all hoping this project is going to succeed. Vested interest aside, it sounds like an exciting new comic and I'm eagerly looking forward to seeing what my fellow "Aces" have produced. (And very pleased that Oink's Psycho Gran is returning in an upcoming issue!) I really hope comic enthusiasts (and people new to comics) will support this because with the problems with distribution and retail in the UK the digital format is definitely one way forward. Aces Weekly is all-comic, no filler, no pandering to TV/toy brands, and definitely not bagged with a plastic toy!

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Combat Colin - back in action this summer!


 As announced at the Kapow! Comic Convention in London yesterday, Combat Colin will make his long awaited return this summer in a brand new digital comic anthology! 

The bobble-hatted buffoon will appear in a new three page full colour one-off strip in the first issue of the new comic, alongside several other new strips from various creators. 

Combat Colin was a strip I used to produce for Marvel UK's Action Force and Transformers comics back in the late 1980s. After Transformers ended in 1991, the rights to Combat Colin were returned to me. In the Nineties I self published a couple of Combat Colin specials and three-issues of Yampy Tales featuring the character mostly in reprints. In 2006 - 2009 Combat Colin appeared occasionally as a guest star in the Brickman series running in the back of Elephantmen published by Image Comics. 

Since then I've been intending to revive him in his own strip and the opportunity recently arose when David Lloyd (V for Vendetta, Kickback) asked me if I'd be interested in contributing to a new digital comic he's publishing. When I heard more details about the comic I jumped at the chance. Stay tuned for Combat Colin and his sidekick Semi-Automatic Steve battling an all-new monster!

Copyright ©2012 John McCrea
Yesterday at Kapow! David Lloyd chaired a panel to reveal more details about this great new comic. Apart from myself, the creators involved will include Kyle Baker, John McCrea, Yishan Li, Mark Wheatley, David Hitchcock, Billy Tucci, Colleen Doran and many more. David Leach will also be reviving one of his old characters, - Psycho Gran from Oink!
  
In the style of the traditional UK anthology comics, the new venture will feature several three page serials plus complete three page humour strips. (Which is how Combat Colin figures into issue 1.) There will also be bonus features such as character sketches, penciled pages, and suchlike. The aim of the comic is to be suitable for all-ages, so no nudity, bad language, excessive gore and suchlike. However that doesn't mean it'll be twee kiddie stuff. This will be a solid comic that adults can enjoy that hopefully kids will enjoy too. Basically the sort of comic that used to be published but with a modern look.

The comic will be exclusively digital and online, not print, to cut out the middlemen and produce the sort of stories creators want to do. That means no stories based on toys or TV shows. No licensed properties at all in fact. Just brand new originated comics, at a great price, and with the creators retaining the rights. Each volume of the comic will run to seven issues and readers will be able to subscribe to each volume for just £6.99 / $10 (therefore working out at a mere £1 an issue!) to read online.

Selected panels from some of the strips
I feel privileged to be in issue one and I hope I'll be able to contribute again to a future issue. More details of this great new comic will surface soon, including the title. There will also be a website, Facebook page and so on, and hopefully the usual comic news sites will help spread the news. Stay tuned!

Bambos Georgiou is the editor of the project and you can contact him for more info at bambos.georgiou@yahoo.co.uk 

UPDATE: The name of the new comic has now been revealed... ACES WEEKLY, - and it debuts on September 30th! 

Brush logo is the trademark of David Lloyd
   

Friday, August 19, 2011

Can Strip Magazine revive UK adventure comics?

Not long to go now before October's launch of Strip Magazine No.1, the brand new British adventure comic from Print Media Productions. If you want a taster (and in these comic-starved times who wouldn't?) you can read an online copy of issue zero for free at the Strip Magazine website here:

http://stripcomicmagazineuk.blogspot.com/2011/05/read-strip-magazine-issue-zero.html

The preview is just 16 pages but the actual issue one will feature a mammoth 68 pages in full colour for £2.99. Editor John Freeman has just announced that for the first few months Strip Magazine will only be available through direct sale outlets (UK comic shops, not newsagents). "We still plan to widen our sales to the UK high street in 2012," says John, "effectively 're-launching' the title after its initial tranche of content draws to a close".

Readers who were looking forward to buying the comic from their corner shop this year may be a little disappointed with this news but if you ask your nearest comic specialist shop (such as Nostalgia & Comics, Forbidden Planet, Gosh! etc) to order you a copy now you won't miss out when Strip Magazine launches in October. Please don't wait and think "Oh I'll buy it next year when my newsagent has it". The comic needs your initial support for it to grow.


"We see this as an opportunity to 'test bed' the title, in a similar way to partwork publishers who roll out test magazines in a key region to see if the project appeals" says John Freeman.

Make no mistake about it, launching a new British comic today is a brave move and not an easy path to take. There is resistance and apathy from the UK retail trade to any comic that isn't tied into some merchandised fad, and even if the comic is accepted there are huge fees to pay just to get it on the shelves, and no guarantee that the shops will actually display it correctly (or even the right way up).


Some people may use their blogs and forums to berate UK publishers for not putting out more non-licensed comics but talk is cheap. Sure, small press comics can thrive, and many of them feature excellent work on a par with mainstream comics, but to make a comic profitable in this day and age, to earn its creators a living, isn't easy. Shame on the hecklers who think it is.


Strip Magazine is exactly the kind of comic that fans of British adventure strips have been asking for, so I hope each and every one of them supports it. The strips feature top notch talent (John McCrea, PJ Holden, Ferg Handley, Kev Hopgood, and John Ridgway to name but a few), solidly told tales that aren't "mature readers" sex/gorefests, and a variety of stories. Think Lion or Valiant but with a modern twist.


For more details on the comic and to keep up with developments bookmark the Strip Magazine website:
http://stripcomicmagazineuk.blogspot.com/

A new hardcover graphic novel Mirabilis is out now from Print Media and I'll be reviewing it here shortly. (Short review for now: It's fantastic. Buy it!)

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