The Friday Review: Leave It To Chance: Shaman's Rain
By Nick Brownlow
As new issues of LEAVE IT TO CHANCE finally arrive in stores, Ninth Art invites you to take a chance on the first album format collection of James Robinson and Paul Smith's wonderful adventure yarn - for children of all ages.

The Friday Review: Zero Girl
By John Connors
Amy Smootster is an unconventional girl, and hers isn't so much a story as an experience. One that's not to be missed. If you haven't dabbled in the world of Sam Kieth before, it's time to get your feet wet.

The Friday Review: Skreemer
By Frank Beaton
Courtesy of X-STATIX, there's something of a Pete Milligan revival in the works. Ninth Art revisits one of the author's earliest US works; a pre-Vertigo classic that gives the gangster genre a Modernist twist.

The Friday Review: Domu: A Child's Dream
By Nich Maragos
Everyone knows AKIRA, but Katsuhiro Otomo's chilling earlier work explores the same themes of immaturity, poverty and power with just as much dynamism and style, and is by far the more accessible work for new readers.

The Friday Review: Three Fingers
By Zack Smith
If you believed Porky Pig when he said, 'Th-th-that's all, folks', think again. There's more to life in the Hollywood cartoon-making machine than acme anvils and silly symphonies. Ninth Art visits Cartoon Babylon, courtesy of Rich Koslowski.

The Friday Review: The Invisibles: Say You Want A Revolution
By Brent Keane
As the final volume of Grant Morrison's unruly epic hits stores, Ninth Art goes back to the lighting of the fuse with the very first volume. It's the perfect place to join the Invisibles. If, y'know, you're into that whole 'linear' thing.

The Friday Review: Cathedral Child
By Steve Parker
A cathedral sized computer with an angel in its architecture. Software that sings of old magic and new technology. All to be found in CATHEDRAL CHILD, Lea Hernandez's story of love that conquers, power that corrupts and music that shapes the world.

The Friday Review: The Hunting Party
By Nick Brownlow
One of the great European comic artists, Enki Bilal proves the perfect draughtsman for a bleak winter's tale about history, brutality and Cold War politics. Ninth Art joins the party.

The Friday Review: Daredevil: Born Again
By Brent Keane
The Bendis/Maleev run on DAREDEVIL is enjoying great critical and commercial success - but BORN AGAIN is the story that really established the complexities of the character - and the story that many fans hold up as the definitive DAREDEVIL tale.

The Friday Review: Chloe
By Robert Young
If you know the work of Xeric grant winner Hans Rickheit, you'll be well equipped for the stomach churning impact of CHLOE. If you don't know his work, then this is your chance to discover one of the most disturbing comics around.

Older reviews




All contents
©2001-5