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Warbound
News | Reviews | Calendar
A Marvel Comics miniseries written by Greg Pak with pencils by Leonard Kirk and Rafa Sandoval
During the "Planet Hulk" epic, the Hulk bonded with a group of alien warriors in the slave pits of Sakaar. They became the Warbound, sworn to stand by each other, in life and in death. After fighting alongside the Hulk during "World War Hulk," the Warbound now find themselves enmeshed in a new adventure right here on planet Earth -- joined by one of the Hulk's greatest loves and facing one of the Hulk's deadliest enemies.
Newsarama on "Warbound" #1:[Pak] takes great care to flesh out and solidify the personalities of his players, and the effort shines through.... This may be the most familiar “Incredible Hulk” book on the stands. It stars monsters on the run from oppressive government forces hellbent on destroying them without empathy or understanding. People who enjoyed seeing the Hulk out of place during Planet Hulk, should enjoy seeing the situation flipped, with his Warbound acting in his familiar role. |
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Reviews
Wizard digs "Warbound" #5
Andy Serwin gives "Warbound" #5 the nod at WizardUniverse.com:The action comes fast and furious, as you’ve come to expect with the Hulk spinoff books, and Pak and Kirk don’t disappoint. There’s even a touching death scene that sets off a...
Comixtreme raves over "Warbound" #4
Adam Chapman has posted a rave review for "Warbound" #4 at Comixtreme.com. Here's an excerpt:This issue was flat-out fantastic. Pak is an excellent writer, and he clearly has genuine affection for these creations of his, the Warbound, as well as...
Wizard loves "Warbound" #4
"Warbound" #4, written by Greg Pak with pencils by Leonard Kirk, hit comic book stores yesterday, and WizardUniverse.com has posted a rave review. Here's an excerpt:It all boils down to an orgy of earth-shattering violence, gorgeously rendered by Kirk in...
Wizard loves "Warbound" #3
Another great review for "Warbound" #3, written by Greg Pak with pencils by Leonard Kirk, this time from WizardUniverse.com:I want to marry Leonard Kirk’s pencils on Warbound #3; I love them that much. Greg Pak’s carved himself a nice little...
Comixtreme likes "Warbound" #3
"Warbound #3, written by Greg Pak with pencils by Leonard Kirk, racks up another four star review from Comixtreme, which notes, "Pak has guided these characters since their creation, and they’re just as intriguing here as they ever were." Click...
ComicCritique.com names Pak "Writer of the Year"
In his "2007 in Review" column at ComicCritique, Adam McGovern has named Greg Pak the Writer of the Year -- and has some very nice things to say about "Hulk" and "Hercules" editor Mark Paniccia. Here's the blurb:Pak was the...
Another Comixtreme.com rave for "Warbound" #2...
... this time from Adam Chapman. Here's an excerpt:This has been a surprisingly good and enjoyable mini-series so far, and I'm looking forward to what comes next for the Warbound, and for Hiroim and Korg in particular (as they are...
Ain't It Cool loves "Warbound" #2
Here's an excerpt:This is the single most tense comic book sequence I’ve read all month. Writer Greg Pak knocks this one out of the park with his clever perspective, panel placement, and set-up for tension. This miniseries is a surprise...
Comixtreme digs "Warbound" #2
In a nutshell:Good issue, great characters, I hope Pak has plans for them after this miniseries.Click here for Blake M. Petit's full advance review. "World War Hulk Aftersmash: Warbound" #2, written by Greg Pak with pencils by Leonard Kirk and...
Comixtreme reviews "Warbound" #1 again -- and likes it again!
Comixtreme has posted another review of "Warbound" #1 -- this time by Adam Chapman. An excerpt:This is a very entertaining issue, as we see the irony of the Warbound being in the Hulk's situation. Pak makes both the Warbound AND...
Newsarama digs "Warbound" #1
Newsarama has posted a review from Brendan McGuirk of "World War Hulk Aftersmash: Warbound" #1, written by Greg Pak with pencils by Leonard Kirk and Rafa Sandoval. An excerpt:[Pak] takes great care to flesh out and solidify the personalities of...
Comixtreme digs "Warbound" #1
Comixtreme.com as posted an advance review by Blake M. Petit of "World War Hulk Aftersmash: Warbound" #1, written by Greg Pak with pencils by Leonard Kirk. An excerpt:Greg Pak here makes very good use of some of the threads from...
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Distinctions
In his "2007 in Review" column at ComicCritique, Adam McGovern has named Greg Pak the Writer of the Year -- and has some very nice things to say about "Hulk" and "Hercules" editor Mark Paniccia. Here's the blurb:
Pak was the one in 2007 to pick up the Grant Morrison banner and prove that crossovers can be art. In the main World War Hulk mini the relentless momentum of Pak’s narrative and the punishing physicality of John Romita Jr.’s bravura visuals conveyed anxieties run amok and real-life war-weariness raised to a hysterical pitch. Pak’s regular Incredible Hulk book was an even more fascinating narrative of the War’s underground factions and captive bystanders, conveying the human cost and psychic shockwaves of conflicts real and fantastic like few other comics of our war-torn decade. The other “fronts” in tie-in titles were almost all as interesting — especially the deranged displaced-persons/profiteer melodrama in Zeb Wells’ Heroes for Hire — and the ramifying followup books shaded the narrative across the genre spectrum, from the sober and humane postwar elegy of Pak’s Aftersmash one-shot to the inventive suspense and moral ambiguity of his lost-platoon Warbound mini to the offbeat insurrection comedy (!) of the Incredible Herc ongoing (!!), an on-the-road (and on-the-run) adventure with Hercules and Amadeus Cho alone against SHIELD in a battle where what’s most at risk is heroism itself (this last one a real-life dream-teamup between Pak and rising auteur Fred Van Lente as co-writer). Every precinct of what I think of as the Paniccia Comics Group — that most original and oddball corner of Marvel’s overall cosmos, under editor Mark Paniccia’s wise dominion — gave its all for the kind of epic that will hopefully become a trend; call it event-garde. Click here to read the whole column
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