#MOMB Submit!

May 26

Silver Banshee by Kent Williams

Silver Banshee by Kent Williams

Batwoman by Bruce Timm

Batwoman by Bruce Timm

Peter Venkman by Dan Brereton

Peter Venkman by Dan Brereton

May 25

Blueberry by Moebius

Blueberry by Moebius

Stray Toasters by Bill Sienkiewicz

Stray Toasters by Bill Sienkiewicz

Storm by Eric Canete

Storm by Eric Canete

Spider-Man by Stuart Sayger

Spider-Man by Stuart Sayger

Convention Report: Kapow! 2012 -

http://bit.ly/eA8V8J

MOMBcast #137 -

http://bit.ly/eA8V8J

Competition: Win The Coldest City! -

http://bit.ly/Kkexhw

May 24

MOMBcast #137 is recording tonight! Get involved!

MOMBcast #137 is recording tonight!

As always, we welcome contributions - 2-5 minutes of audio sent to MOMBcast@gmail.com - and questions/comments either here, at G+, FB or at the same email address.

We’ve also got a copy of Antony Johnston and Sam Hart’s beautiful new espionage GN The Coldest City to win - it’ll be tied into tonight’s show, so listen and keep an eye out here or at MOMBcomics.com for details on how to enter.

Oh, and we’re still asking you that question about animated movie adaptations of comics - go comment here or at G+ or FB in the relevant place and we’ll talk about that tonight, too!

If you know anyone who might be interested in this stuff, can you tell them about it please? Pretty please?

May 23

Venom by Andrew Robinson

Venom by Andrew Robinson

Rei by Bruce Timm

Rei by Bruce Timm

Boba Fett by Dan Brereton

Boba Fett by Dan Brereton

This scene is one of my earliest comic memories. It was the first point at which I saw a comic character making a mistake, which meant it was probably the first time I really processed them properly as characters and human.
Spider-man has webbed up a doorway to stop a criminal escaping, but then realises that the criminal is escaping out of the window instead, and in his hurry to catch them he forgets his own webbing.
It seems gloriously ridiculous out of context, but if memory serves it was part of a pretty intense and dramatic story featuring Alex Summers (Havok).

This scene is one of my earliest comic memories. It was the first point at which I saw a comic character making a mistake, which meant it was probably the first time I really processed them properly as characters and human.

Spider-man has webbed up a doorway to stop a criminal escaping, but then realises that the criminal is escaping out of the window instead, and in his hurry to catch them he forgets his own webbing.

It seems gloriously ridiculous out of context, but if memory serves it was part of a pretty intense and dramatic story featuring Alex Summers (Havok).

(Source: rraaaarrl, via godiseven)