Superstar creator Daniel Warren Johnson is set to launch his most ambitious project to date. Fresh off his chart-topping run on Transformers, his Eisner Award-winning Do A Powerbomb, and the critically acclaimed The Moon Is Following Us, Johnson is bringing a bold new vision to Image Comics this fall with the launch of his new series, Chainkata.
Described by Image Comics as “Chicks with chainsaws. In space,” the series promises to be the culmination of a decade’s worth of storytelling. Johnson, who first gained industry attention with Space-Mullet and Extremity, has spent nine years developing the concept for Chainkata.
The series follows Luma, a chainsaw-wielding warrior queen traveling through the vastness of space. While she seeks only peace, she is constantly pursued by violence and terror, creating a narrative that Johnson promises will blend the high-stakes, epic sci-fi of his previous work on Beta Ray Bill with the deep emotional character-building found in Extremity and Do A Powerbomb.
“Ever since my start in comics, I’ve wanted to make a science fiction book that truly felt different from everything already out there,” Johnson said in the announcement. “It was 2017 when I drew the first sketch of Luma… From that point, it took me NINE years to come up with a story that I felt was worthy of being on the stands, and Chainkata is the end result of that journey.”
Johnson aims to use this project to bring science fiction back to the forefront of comic storytelling, pushing his narrative and artistic boundaries further than ever before.
Chainkata #1 is scheduled to hit comic book shops this November. It will also be available on digital platforms, including Amazon Kindle, Apple Books, and Google Play. Fans attending San Diego Comic-Con this month can expect a full promotional rollout for the series.
The creative team behind the Eisner Award-winning miniseries Little Bird is reuniting this fall for a brand-new dark fantasy project. Darcy Van Poelgeest and Ian Bertram are bringing an epic, experimental new story to Image Comics with their four-issue miniseries, The Karman Blade, set to launch this September.
Set on the outskirts of a dying, desert world, The Karman Blade follows a young man chosen by a star-forged blade to slay the despotic deity, Kalu, who hoards the world’s water. The protagonist faces a daunting trial, caught between his journey and the existential question posed by the blade itself: “Are thou he, who taketh me in hand? Are thou he, who shall slay a God?”
The creators describe the series as a bold departure from traditional fantasy. “We are committed to the idea of making something that requires collaboration from the readers as much as from ourselves,” said Van Poelgeest. “The Karman Blade is for everyone who loves the questions as much as the answers; the weirdos, and the poets—for those brave enough to embark on a quest of their own!“
Bertram added that the work is a product of deep creative passion, calling it a “feralwork” made in a “swamp of beautiful and festering creativity.”
The Karman Blade #1 will arrive in comic book shops on Wednesday, September 9, 2026.
In October, Fangoria revealed that Rick Remender and Paul Azaceta were teaming with Image Comics for an “elevated tale of whimsical horror” in The Seasons. Part of Remender’s Giant Generator line of comics, The Seasons will roll out a double-sided first issue in January. Today, Image unveiled a trailer for the new book as part of an official release.
Excitement for the upcoming The Seasons launch from The New York Times bestselling writer Rick Remender (The Sacrificers, Grommets, Deadly Class) and artist Paul Azaceta (Outcast by Kirkman and Azaceta) is ramping up and Giant Generator treated fans last weekend with the surprise drop of an eerie teaser trailer that alludes to an ancient evil at play.
Summer, Winter, Spring and Autumn are the Seasons Sisters, the daughters of the world-renowned Seasons Detectives. Ten years ago, their famous parents disappeared. Left to raise themselves, the sisters formed an unbreakable bond. Now that bond is tested as the sisters fall prey to sinister forces. The youngest sister, Spring, is the last hope of saving them from a fate worse than death. Will Spring be able to piece her shattered family back together before it’s too late for them all?
-Official Synopsis for The Seasons
“Paul and I have worked tirelessly to create a world unlike anything we’ve ever done before,” Remender told Fangoria last month. “Inspired by Miyazaki, Windsor McKay, and Tintin we wanted to make something that was delightful, poignant, and heartfelt,”he continued. “We hope you find the Seasons sisters as charming as we do. And the Ringleader and his imps as devilishly terrifying. Paul and Matheus have delivered one of the most spectacularly vibrant comics you’re going to see in the modern marketplace.”
“The Seasons is a comic that will make you remember why you fell in love with comics in the first place.”
—Robert Kirkman, Invincible, The Walking Dead
The Seasons #1 will be on shelves on January 15, 2025.
Studio8 has set Kurt Johnstad to pen the screenplay for its adaptation of the Image Comics title, Prophet. The film is based on the comic book title of the same name by Rob Liefeld, who co-created the Marvel Comics character Deadpool. The news was announced on Friday by The Hollywood Reporter. The film is set to star Jake Gyllenhaal with Extraction filmmaker Sam Hargrave on board to direct.
Johnstad takes over for writer Marc Guggenheim who wrote the original draft of the screenplay. Johnstad is perhaps best known for writing the Zack Snyder film adaption of 300, which was based on the Frank Miller comic series. He also wrote the screenplay for the adaptation of The Coldest City titled Atomic Blonde. His most recent project was Snyder’s science-fiction epic, Rebel Moon, which is now in production.
In the original comics, Prophet centered on John Prophet, a man who is conscripted by Germans near the end of World War II and soon finds himself subjected to scientific experiments that gave him superhuman strength. In the movie, though, it’ll focus on “a man who volunteers for a German experiment near the end of World War II in order to feed his family.” As of now, Prophet does not have a release date.
Over the past few years, there have been enough comic book adaptations for audiences to understand that the medium can either work tremendously well when made into a live-action TV series or turn into a failure of epic proportions. From the incredible Deadly Class, the long-running The Walking Dead, and the utter disgrace that was Jupiter’s Legacy, comic book TV adaptations come in all shapes and sizes. In most cases, not even being extremely faithful to the source material proves to be a guaranteed winning formula making it easy to accept when certain changes are made to make the show work better through a different medium. But in other cases, such as with Prime Video’s Paper Girls, some of the charm, scope, and even ambition that the original comic series displayed, which to a point were at the very heart of it, seems to have been lost along the way making the show worse for it.
Brian K. Vaughan and Cliff Chiang‘s Paper Girls, published by Image Comics, began its run on October 7, 2015, and ended on July 31, 2019 with its 30th issue. It won the Eisner for Best New Series in 2016 with its creative team winning multiple awards throughout its run. For several years it remained as one of the best-regarded series being published thus making a TV adaptation being greenlit in 2020 a not-so-surprising validation of the broader appeal of the source material.
Prime Video’s Paper Girls
As for the show, when the story begins, much like in the comic series, four Paper Girls cross paths on November 1st, 1988, Hell Day. They are soon brought into a timestream conflict between The Old Watch (similar to the Marvel Cinematic Universes’ Time Variance Authority) and the STF Underground. Following a random encounter with two STF time-travelers, they find themselves in 2019 where they learn a bit more about what is really at stake. Initially wanting no part in the war, wishing only to get back home to their 1988’s Stony Stream, they soon realize where their loyalty should reside as new friends, and older versions of themselves find themselves targeted by the Old Watch with the four girls needing to play a big part in the fight in order for the war not to be lost.
The heart of the series is, obviously, in its four leads: Erin, Mac, Tiffany, and KJ (played by Riley Lai Nelet, Sofia Rosinsky, Camryn Jones, and Fina Strazza). It is through their eyes that the story beings to unfold, and it is their fears and expectations that move the story along. But albeit the portrayal of all four girls is on point with the source material, the way audiences are expected to get to know them and, from there, connect with their personal journeys is somewhat sabotaged by the pacing in which the story is being told.
Prime Video’s Paper Girls
For context, the first episode, Growing Pains, manages to fit the entirety of the first arc of the comics. Such a breakneck pace doesn’t leave enough room for audiences to breathe. Events just happen without being fully explored, both in their meaning and in the way the girls are experiencing them. Several whoa moments from the comic series are left out making the story feel flatter and more generic than the source material deserved it to be treated. The pace throughout the rest of the season is staggering, to a fault. Some moments are borderline boring and should probably have been a bit more dynamic and fast-paced. Had the show been able to maintain a constant rhythm the entire season, taking a bit more time with the setup but not letting go once all the plot pieces were set in place, the benefits would likely be enormous.
The slow pace is also made worse by the choice to have the girls time travel to relatively similar periods. Unlike the comics, where there they either go to or reference the year 20000 and 11706 BCE, in the show we see them go from 1988 to 2019, to 1999, and eventually to somewhere in the late 50s or 60s. This dramatically reduces the impact of the possibilities presented to the girls through time travel and just how big of a scope the story is missing out on. We still get the mech robots, the pterodactyls, and the giant steampunk blimp, but all that craziness seems more like an exception rather than the norm that Paper Girls deserved.
Prime Video’s Paper Girls
What still manages to be present in the show, albeit in a not very focused way, is how it manages to capture both sides of expectation management towards the future. And the past. Paper Girls is all about how the envisioned future always seems to find a way not to present itself, and just how much that sometimes has to deal with the inability people have to move and work towards it. But that can be okay, sometimes life happens and people just have to manage to do the best they can with the cards they are dealt with. Other times, we find the best versions of ourselves in unexpected places, even if somehow we should have really seen it coming a mile away. The perfect future isn’t always the right one, and the possibilities ahead are always more important than the ones left behind. And in that regard, Paper Girls might still also have the time to make better choices in its own future.
All in all, Prime Video’s Paper Girls is overall a letdown when regarding expectations that a fan from the comic series would naturally have ahead of the show. But even with all its troubles in terms of pacing, the diminished scope that takes away from the epicness of the plot, and even some issues when it comes to sound mixing, shot composition, and editing, this might not be it for the show. Both the season finale and the main cast, which will continue to grow and perhaps lift the entire show to new heights, could still help turn things around in season two, which has already been greenlit. That display of confidence ahead of the series premiere is something not to be taken lightly, and the fact that there is still much to improve should be an opportunity to bring the series one step closer to the unforgettable nature of the source material.
Paper Girls season one is now streaming, in its entirety, only on Amazon Prime Video.
Almost three and a half years after the start of its hiatus, Saga is back. The epic space opera/fantasy series created by Brian K. Vaughan (Y: The Last Man) and Fiona Staples left us with probably one of the biggest cliffhangers in comic book history back in the summer of 2018. What initially seemed to be a relatively short break, something fairly common through the series’ run that started in 2012, turned into a very long wait. Thankfully, the wait will finally be over in January 2022.
During the “In Conversation with Brian K. Vaughan” panel at New York Comic-Con, Vaughan confirmed that the series’ next issue comes out on January 26. Even better, it will be a double-length issue. With #54 issues behind them, Vaughan and Staples may only be halfway through the story they’re telling. After all, a Saga Compendium that collected the first nine volumes of the critically acclaimed series was released back in 2019, hinting at a second one, around the same size, in the upcoming future.
Saga, a New York Times bestselling series, remains one of the most critically acclaimed series of all time, with a story that transcended its medium by bringing in new audiences to the comic book world. Saga #55 will be available at your local comic shop early next year, be sure to add it to your pull list as Hazel’s return and her reaction to the events of issue #54 will prove to be even bigger news than today’s announcement.
A few days after announcing its four main leads, Amazon’s Paper Girls is now looking to cast a few more characters to the project that will adapt the Brian K. Vaughan and Cliff Chiang comic. We’ve learned that production is actively searching for a Chinese-American girl, who is between the age of nine to eleven. She will play Missy Tieng, who is the little sister of Erin Tieng, one of the titular characters. Missy is, as of yet, set to appear in two episodes of the series’ first season. These will consist of the pilot and the fourth episode.
If you’re familiar with the comic series, it released 30 issues between 2015 and 2019. Missy is hardly a presence in the first few issues (the ones that should be the main focus of the first season). She shows up in the opening pages as her big sister is having a nightmare, where she must save her. Missy only frowns at her after Erin wakes her up from the said nightmare to check up on her. This way, having the character show up in more than a single episode at such an early stage of the show might deviate from the source material, and that it is taking extra care of highlighting her relationship with Erin. Especially as she has a more prominent role down the line. It just isn’t while she was eight years old. By dealing with time travel, the comic series often brings together different versions of the same character, from different timelines. Erin Tieng ends up meeting her older self, and in doing so, she also meets her little sister At that time, Missy was a helicopter pilot, which comes in handy as the story progresses. This way, having Missy have a bit of a larger role early on might enhance her presence further down the line.
Paper Girls will be shooting in Chicago from May 17 to June 24, and with principal photography less than a month away, we should expect several actors to join the cast. So, we could older versions of the girls or even the villains, which the comic series certainly has a lot of. The series premiere on Amazon’s streaming service is unannounced as of now. It’ll be interesting to see what other changes we might expect once the show enters production and expands its cast.
Cookie Consent
We use cookies to improve your experience on our site. By using our site, you consent to cookies.
This website uses cookies
Websites store cookies to enhance functionality and personalise your experience. You can manage your preferences, but blocking some cookies may impact site performance and services.
Essential cookies enable basic functions and are necessary for the proper function of the website.
Name
Description
Duration
Cookie Preferences
This cookie is used to store the user's cookie consent preferences.
30 days
These cookies are needed for adding comments on this website.
Name
Description
Duration
comment_author_email
Used to track the user across multiple sessions.
Session
comment_author_url
Used to track the user across multiple sessions.
Session
comment_author
Used to track the user across multiple sessions.
Session
Statistics cookies collect information anonymously. This information helps us understand how visitors use our website.
Google Analytics is a powerful tool that tracks and analyzes website traffic for informed marketing decisions.
Contains information related to marketing campaigns of the user. These are shared with Google AdWords / Google Ads when the Google Ads and Google Analytics accounts are linked together.
90 days
__utma
ID used to identify users and sessions
2 years after last activity
__utmt
Used to monitor number of Google Analytics server requests
10 minutes
__utmb
Used to distinguish new sessions and visits. This cookie is set when the GA.js javascript library is loaded and there is no existing __utmb cookie. The cookie is updated every time data is sent to the Google Analytics server.
30 minutes after last activity
__utmc
Used only with old Urchin versions of Google Analytics and not with GA.js. Was used to distinguish between new sessions and visits at the end of a session.
End of session (browser)
__utmz
Contains information about the traffic source or campaign that directed user to the website. The cookie is set when the GA.js javascript is loaded and updated when data is sent to the Google Anaytics server
6 months after last activity
__utmv
Contains custom information set by the web developer via the _setCustomVar method in Google Analytics. This cookie is updated every time new data is sent to the Google Analytics server.
2 years after last activity
__utmx
Used to determine whether a user is included in an A / B or Multivariate test.
18 months
_ga
ID used to identify users
2 years
_gali
Used by Google Analytics to determine which links on a page are being clicked
30 seconds
_ga_
ID used to identify users
2 years
_gid
ID used to identify users for 24 hours after last activity
24 hours
_gat
Used to monitor number of Google Analytics server requests when using Google Tag Manager
1 minute
Marketing cookies are used to follow visitors to websites. The intention is to show ads that are relevant and engaging to the individual user.
Pinterest Tag is a web analytics service that tracks and reports website traffic.