I offer up two reviews of things here that are not acually comics, but are connected in a way.
Comic-Con Episode IV: A Fan's Hope
Documentary from the guy who supersized himself, with the help of Stan Lee and Joss Whedon. Follows a bunch of con-goers during one years SDCC. There's the group of folks entering the masquerade costume competition, the collector, the comic book seller, the couple in love and the wannebe comic book artists.
It's a good documentary, saccharine at times, overly dramatic in places it doesn't need to be and it certainly loves the geek. Commentators are a who's who of geekdom, Stan Lee, Kevin Smith, Seth Rogan, the other Seth, Frank Miller, that fuckhead who did spawn...
Watch if you like comics - you will assosciate with a lot of what is said and the people featured, if not totally you will at least sympathise. Watch if you don't - you might learn something.
Marvel Unlimited
I don't have the time or the inclination to peruse comic book stores, there are none nearby and I don't really want to be assosciated with the type of person who frequents a comic book store (I have the same problem with Games Workshop, I prefer to pocket my merch without a bag and leave quickly) Marvel Unlimited is perfect for people like me, it offers up the entire Marvel back catalogue to be read either online or downloaded (12 issues at at time) to be read later. It is the Love Film for comic books.
It costs $9.99 a month which sounds like a lot but I have read over $30 worth of story already - Deadpool's got mooves - a yearly pass will set you back $99.99.
Back catalogue is only available from six months ago, if you want to read recent comics then you will need to enter the dungeons of Travelling Man or the depths of Forbidden Planet to get the latest and greatest. It'll all be available online in 6 months, I can wait for it.
One note about the app itself - it is flakey, I have the android version and it really needs some polish. It crashes frequently (every 5 issues read, rough average) the library and downloaded issues feature can be unweildy and so can the organisation and search funtion - this last point I can forgive, we are talking about over 60 years worth of material which criss crosses and twists with one another here.
Fo