Showing posts with label Wonder Woman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wonder Woman. Show all posts

Monday, January 27, 2014

Artists Assemble. Wonder Woman.

A weekly event where members of the group can submit art based on a weekly theme. The art must be your own and match the theme.



This weeks theme is Wonder Woman. Nice easy week which will no doubt draw a few people out of the woodwork.


Wonder Woman by Tristan Gage Bell


Wonder Woman Smash by Jimmy Trassen


Wonder Woman by Jimmy Trassen


A Jim Lee WW re-creation by Jimmy Trassen


Wonder Woman by Brett Buffington


Comfy Wonder Woman by Zeena Benjamin


Rouge vs Wonder Woman by Kevin Miller


Warriors by Kevin Miller


Wonder Woman and company by Kevin Miller


Wonder Woman by Jason Hendrickson


Sailor Wonder Woman by Melbert Martin


Wonder Woman by Thorsten Schmitz


Wonder Woman by Breannah Luini


Lynda Carter as Wonder Woman by Christopher Masson


Wonder Woman by Jason Graziano


Wonder Women Retro pin up style by Thorsten Schmitz


Lynda Carter tattoo variant by Adam Bayes


Wonder Woman by Richard Chin


Seems that Diana Prince is getting style tips from Simon Williams aka Wonder Man by Christopher Masson


Lil Wonder Woman by Jason Graziano


1st try at Linda Carter as WW by Kevin Miller


WW Bruce Timm Style by Kevin Miller


Vintage Animated Look by Rodney Celerio


A kryptonian Wonder Woman by Rodney Celerio


A second attempt at Wonder woman by Richard Chin


Friday, January 3, 2014

50 Most Influential Fictional Characters #10-6

From November 28th to December 25th 2013, we collected top ten lists from both members of the Facebook group and visitors to the site to compile the list of CBNAH Top 50 Most Influential Fictional Characters of All Time. Today we bring counting down from #10-6.

10. Iron Man


Created By: Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Larry Lieber and Don Heck
From: Iron Man and Avengers
First Appearance: Tales of Suspense #39 (1963)

Tony Stark aka Iron Man is playboy billionaire, genius engineer and industrialist. One of the first superheroes to be apart of the establishment. Outside of fighting supervillains, Iron Man has fought against world real situations such as terrorism and corporate crime. Along the way the character has suffered a long battle with alcoholism. Thanks to the three Iron Man films, the character went from a high B-level character into a superstar.

9. The Doctor


Created By: Sydney Newman, C. E. Webber and Donald Wilson
From: Doctor Who
First Appearance: An Unearthly Child (1963)

Doctor Who is by far the most successful Sci-Fi show in television history. With fans all over the world have been watching the adventures of The Doctor for fifty years. In Britain, where the show was first aired, The Doctor has greatly influence British culture. The series is showing no signs of slowing down and has expanded in other mediums like novels, radio dramas, and several spin off shows.

8. Buffy Summers


Created By: Joss Whedon
From: Buffy the Vampire Slayer
First Appearance: Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Movie) (1992)

Buffy Summers made her first appearance in the Buffy the Vampire Slayer film in 1992. The film did okay, but it wasn't until the Buffy television series in '97 that saw the character exploded in popularity and became a strong role model for the modern female audience. She fought her own battles, grew as a character and after each battle, she would push herself to the limit to become a great slayer.

7. Sherlock Holmes


Created By: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
From: Sherlock Holmes
First Appearance: A Study in Scarlet (1887)

Sherlock Holmes is consider to be many scholars to be the greatest character in fiction. The character has influenced and inspired many generations of people to study forensic science and crime scene investigation. The detective has influenced many other fictional characters like John Luther to Hercule Poirot.

6. Wonder Woman


Created By: William Moulton Marston
From: Wonder Woman and Justice League
First Appearance: All Star Comics #8 (1941)

In the male dominated world of superhero comics, Wonder Woman made a great impact in her comic debut in 1941. She fought for love, justice and sexual equality, which lead Wonder Woman to be popular with female readers and a feminist icon. She's one of the most powerful characters in the DC Comics and can match strength with Superman and apart the holy trinity of DC, along with Superman and Batman. She still inspires female readers to this day.

Monday, December 24, 2012

2 Cent Holiday Reviews - Marvel NOW & The DCnU


Hello everyone and welcome back!  This week is going to be all big two comics.  Come back in a few days for some lesser-known publisher reviews, including the newest issue of Saga.  For now, let's take a look at Avengers #2, Avengers Arena #2, Captain America #2, FF #2, Thor God of Thunder #3, Wolverine & The X-Men #22, Uncanny X-Force #35, X-Factor #249, Batwoman #15, Green Lantern #15, Green Lantern Corps #15, Supergirl #15, Sword of Sorcery #3, and Wonder Woman #15.  Let's go.









 Avengers 2:  Top quality art, top quality writing....but I'm still waiting.  Too much set up can cripple a series.  Luckily, the first two issues were released two weeks apart so my patience isn't being tested.  Yet.  If issue three doesn't take place in the present and only offers more back story then I might just drop this.  I remain to have high hopes.  In Hickman We (still) Trust!
 Avengers Arena 2:  This issue really pulls at your heart strings.  If you thought the last chapter was brutal, wait until you see the barely note-worthy/noticed death here.  The entirety of this month's production focuses on one of the new and more innocent characters unlovingly dubbed as "Deathlocket".  It's exactly in Battle Royale's spirit where we get the perspective of an innocent child trapped in this murder game, alone and filled with fear.
 Captain America 2:  It's been one year since issue one.  Cap and his young charge Ian (the baby) have been surviving the harsh wasteland of Dimension Z on instinct alone.  There are predators everywhere and worse yet, organized monsters with weaponry, armour and transport.  But Cap never falters.  He never gives up hope.  Even when captured.
 FF 2:  The machine that goes "boop boop!"  I loved that.  As expected, the mission that should have taken the official Fantastics away for four minutes is taking longer, leaving Scott and the new recruits as the permanent team.  The media takes a dump on our heroes which leaves many of them not very confident.  Mole Man shows up to get a piece but he is shut down quickly.  And Darla finally dons the Thing's body suit.  All this, plus Allred art.
 Sword of Sorcery 3:  Amaya continues her rigorous training and her aunt calls for a meeting in neutral lands.  The end of the issue also answers how/when she joins up with the JLD, something that was bugging me before.  Meanwhile, in the Beowulf back up, we learn something interesting about the current DC verse.  Something that happened in the stories past, which is our present.
 Thor God of Thunder 3:  The God Butcher story arc continues and it is magnificent!  From the art to the writing, everything is very imaginative.  I may not be enjoying the current Wolverine ATXM storyline, but this Aaron has me gripped by the short hairs.  Things get darker/more complex and Thor remembers feeling fear.
 Batwoman 15:  Strange.  I thought I had purchased Batwoman and not the Guilt-Riddled Diary of Detective Maggie Sawyer.  I hate when Batwoman does this; one, not featuring Williams' art and two, the focus of the book landing on one of its minor characters.  The creators may think it is artsy but it's just dissatisfying.
 Green Lantern 15:  Baz continues his quest to prove his innocence.  The third army is everywhere and they've just landed on Earth.  Our only hope...Lantern B'Dg?!!
 Green Lantern New Guardians 15:  Lesson 5: Greed.  And a lesson hard-won.  Someone sacrifices their life aiding Kyle's troop and it's heartbreaking.  Next:  Rayner VS Ganthet!
 Supergirl 15:  Kara and H'el, sitting in a tree.  I guess even alien chicks dig goth boys.  In this issue:  the city of Kandor, a plan to save Krypton, and super hormones!
 Wonder Woman 15:  Diana's search for her family continues and takes her to Manhattan's underground.  This particular sibling does not want to be found or involved in any more "family business"  but Lenox and Diana give him no choice.  The New God Orion however will make their job more difficult.
 Wolverine & The X-Men 22:  I'm not enjoying this circus arc at all.  Did Aaron's brain take a vacation?  Or is he reserving all his creative fluids for Thor: God of Thunder?  Either way, it's a silly, childish and I hate to say it, stupid arc so far.  I really want it to end.  Also, the new characters Eye-Boy and Shark-Girl are super lame.  You have a generation of students to work with but you invent two of the most ridiculous characters in comics?  Hell, one of the New X-Men kids is even an Atleantan, what was the point of creating Shark-Girl????  Waste.
 Uncanny X-Force 35:  Final Issue.  Remdender tries to end things on as much as a positive note as a book of this nature will allow.  Not a mind blowing ending and some of the character personalities felt a bit forced (Deadpool) but I guess they needed to set up the title for its next version.  I however will be getting off at this stop.
X-Factor 249:  Think I'm starting to lose interest in this book. Once it was a favourite I thought could never do wrong, now I'm just bored.  I was expecting it to get more interesting after its haircut (the shedding of half the cast) but it really hasn't.  The art is always bad which the writing typically saves but it wasn't enough this time.  I'm getting tired of the same formula each issue:  Madrox doubts himself, M is a bitch, Longshot is dumb, Layla is mysterious, Shatterstar is brave, Rictor is whiny, Pip is vulgar, etc etc.  Next month is the title's 250th issue and the last chance it gets.

Friday, December 7, 2012

2-Cent Reviews: DC New 52





A quick glance at how the last half of DC's November books went.  Come back Sunday for some non-big two reviews.  For now though, Justice League 14, Sword of Sorcery 2, Legion of Super-Heroes 14, Demon Knights 14, Green Lantern New Guardians 14, Wonder Woman 14, Batwoman 14, Supergirl 14 and Flash 14.



Justice League #14:  I'm glad they wrapped up the Cheetah storyline quickly because all the juicy stuff happens in the last 2 pages.  That Aquaman panel set in the water was eye popping.  Honourable mention go to the Shazam back up; it flows like a movie and I can't wait until the climax.
 Sword of Sorcery #2:  I'm really starting to love this book, which mean it's going to get cancelled, probably right as it gets super epic.  We meet more of the different houses, all of them named after gems.  Fantasy like that is fun.  And if it's even possible, the back-up story is ten times as awesome.  Try SOS!!
 Legion of Super-Heroes 14:  Final issue for me.  I love Paul Levits but this isn't doing it for me any more.  I needed to cut down anyway, my pile is getting huge.  Also, I fucking HATE Chemical Kid.
Demon Knights 14:  Last issue's betrayal seems to be pulling back layers on an unforeseen plan.  Vandal Savage steals the entire comic with one panel.
 Green Lantern New Guardians 14:  I like Arkylo.  I like him a lot.  But I want to see the rest of the new guardians more.  Good issue, looking forward to these lantern lessons wrapping up though.
 Wonder Woman 14:  Diana meets her younger sibling, another Zeus offspring that has felt the wrath of Hera's jealousy.  It's a touching story of tragedy as the next storyline begins to form.  The last page:  NEW GODS!
 Batwoman 14:  Oh that luscious JH art, I don't know how this book isn't 3.99.  Wonder Woman is still guesting as things take a turn for the mythological.  No wait, the was the last two issues.  Things actually take a turn to Gotham City as Medusa unleashes her forces there.  Good looking book with a poetic narrative.  It's been a fun ride seeing the contrast between the two strong leading ladies.
 Supergirl 14:  Kara meets H'el, a strange being who claims he's another Kryptonian survivor.  He's well intentioned but Supergirl is weary of all he's claiming to offer.  And finally, after 14 issues into the series, Kara grasps command of the English language for an old fashioned last page twist!
Flash 14:  Gorilla Warfare drops hard on Central City and the Flash's only back up are the Rogues.  But even that may not be enough.  Manapul's art and Buccellato's colours remain electric.  Also in this issue, a little bit more insight into the speed-force's history.