Leah, June, and their toddler daughter, Lyle, move into a gorgeous brownstone in Brooklyn. Leah is the stay-at-home mom who looks after Lyle. She is also pregnant with their second child. June is the ...
Perhaps needless to say, Fight Club 2 is a bit convoluted. At times, it’s easy to question why this tale was segmented into separate issues. Sometimes the episodic structure just doesn’t really work. ...
The first pages of Fight Club 2’s latest issue reiterates a fact that many may be reluctant to accept: This is a comic book and Palahniuk isn’t afraid to adopt the appropriate conventions when necessa...
As quickly as he made it there, Sebastian is swept from the oven and into the inferno, as the regime finally accepts him back into the club. On the opposite end of the spectrum, Marla bounds from spin...
As last issue’s climax may have suggested, the lull of Fight Club 2 is over. Fresh from a recent, Marla-spurred beating, we are awarded both a literal and proverbial new face of Sebastian. Likewise, w...
This week I decided to check out Morgan O’Neill’s The Factory. It was originally made in 2008 but wasn’t released on DVD until 2013. How unfortunate! This film follows the fixated de...
In The Haunting of Sarah Hardy, a young girl named Sarah witnesses her delusional, unbalanced mother commit suicide by running off into the sea and drowning herself (at Sarah’s father’s fu...
Fifty years removed, it’s still a bit haunting to be counted among the Crypt Keeper’s many “little pretties.” With the power of Dark Horse, Tales from the Crypt Volume I has been extracted from the EC...
Anarchy in the U. K. is experiencing some minor technical difficulties. Fresh from the minds of writer-artist tag team Montynero and Martin Simmonds comes Death Sentence: London, the sequel to Titan C...