This September Shadowline/Image Comics brings back robots, spacemen and dames to their pulp roots with the three-issue mini-series, M-THEORY!
“It’s long overdue for sci-fi pulp fiction to get back to its roots,” said co-writer Dwight L. MacPherson. “My cohorts, Bruce Brown and Mark Barentine, are also massive fans of the genre and cannot wait to go all out!”
The three issue mini-series, co-written by Dwight L. MacPherson and Bruce Brown with artist Mark Barentine, is an action-packed romp exploring every facet of science fiction featured in the golden age of pulp novels. In the first issue alone, a government scientist receives a startling transmission of extraterrestrial origin leading to terrifying discoveries leading them to the outer reaches of our galaxy and a shocking nemesis like none other!
Shadowline President Jim Valentino added, “Pulp fiction has received its due in film, so it’s a real pleasure to see Bruce, Dwight and Mark really go at it with such a high level of passion and vigor in the comic book format. I’m really looking forward to the results.”
M-THEORY, a three-issue 32-page full color mini-series at $3.50, will be in stores September 17th.
Filed under: Image Comics, News, Shadowline | Tagged: Bruce Brown, Dwight L. MacPherson, Image Comics, M-THEORY, Mark Barentine, Shadowline, Thomas Boatwright | Leave a comment »
The series comes to an end with this third and final issue. Sadly, and strangely enough, the story has tumbled down hill since the premiere issue. Gone are the elements that I loved from that initial first offering. It’s like I’m reading a complete different comic complete with other characters.
This issue follows up Ridley and Falstaff as they hunt for “the monster” in the woods. After going in circles, the people who hired them start to accuse them of being impostors. This is when the story gets interesting – a beast in the form of a reindeer starts killing the people with bow and arrows and a sword (!), atypical for reindeer killing methods (you think?). Ridley & Falstaff do what they know best, they hide! After they return to the town (and the pub), they learn that the beast was once a skilled hunter who got cursed. Well, that explains everything, doesn’t it?!
It’s so gratifying to discover great new artists in the comic book scene. I don’t often pick up independent or black & white comics, but this one grabbed my attention. The story is about two wacky and fearless monster hunters in England (Ridley & Falstaff) who sport unorthodox methods when it comes to dealing with vampires, spirits and other kinds of evil (like booze).