Action

Trending:

#1

Invincible

Girls, acne, homework, supervillains. When you're a teenager it pays to be Invincible. Mark Grayson was just an average kid living in a world full of super heroes. It wasn't until he was a teenager that he gained fantastic powers thanks to his biological father Omni-Man. He was able to fly faster than a jet, lift buildings like Hercules, and battle acne like Proactive. Girls, homework, super villains, it's just another day in the life of the one and only Invincible. Join Mark Grayson in his incredible adventures into the unknown and catch some astonishing surprises while you're at it. This is probably the best superhero comic in the entire universe, or so it claims.Written by Robert Kirkman and illustrated by Ryan Ottley.PublishersIssues #0-73 published by Image Comics.Issues #74 and up published under the Skybound Entertainment imprint of Image Comics.Collected EditionsTrade Paperback CollectionsVol. 1: Family Matters (#1-4)Vol. 2: Eight is Enough (#5-8)Vol. 3: Perfect Strangers (#9-13)Vol. 4: Head of the Class (#14-19, Image Comics Summer Special)Vol. 5: The Facts of Life (#0, 20-24)Vol. 6: A Different World (#25-30)Vol. 7: Three's Company (#31-35, Pact #4)Vol. 8: My Favorite Martian (#36-41)Vol. 9: Out of this World (#42-47)Vol. 10: Who's the Boss (#48-53)Vol. 11: Happy Days (#54-59, The Astounding Wolf-Man #11)Vol. 12: Still Standing (#60-65)Vol. 13: Growing Pains (#66-70, Invincible Returns #1)Vol. 14: The Vitrumite War (#71-78)Vol. 15: Get Smart (#79-84)Vol. 16: Family Ties (#85-90)Vol. 17: What's Happening (#91-96)Vol. 18: The Death of Everyone (#97-102)Vol. 19: The War At Home (#103-108)Vol. 20: Friends (#109-114)Vol. 21: Modern Family (#115-120)Vol. 22: Reboot? (#121-126)Vol. 23: Full House (#127-132)Vol. 24: The End of All Things Part One (#133-138)Vol. 25: The End of All Things Part Two (#139-144)Ultimate CollectionsVol. 1 (#1-13)Vol. 2 (#0, 14-24, Image Comics Summer Special)Vol. 3 (#25-35, Pact #4)Vol. 4 (#36-47)Vol. 5 (#48-59, The Astounding Wolf-Man #11)Vol. 6 (#60-70, Invincible Returns #1)Vol. 7 (#71-84)Vol. 8 (#85-96)Vol. 9 (#97-108)Vol. 10 (#109-120)Vol. 11 (#121-132)Vol. 12 (#133-144)Library Collections - "The Complete Invincible Library"Vol. 1 (#0-24, Image Comics Summer Special)Vol. 2 (#25-47, Pact #4)Vol. 3 (#48-70, The Astounding Wolf-Man #11, Invisible Returns #1)CompendiumsVol. 1 (#0-47, Image Comics Summer Special, Pact #4)Vol. 2 (#48-96, The Astounding Wolf-Man #11, Invincible Returns #1)Vol. 3 (#97-144)Non-U.S. Collected EditionsEl Asombroso Hombre Lobo - Volumen 2 (#57) (Spanish)

#2

Spawn

Al Simmons, once the U.S. government's greatest soldier and most effective assassin, was mercilessly executed by his own men. Resurrected from the ashes of his own grave in a flawed agreement with the powers of darkness, Simmons is reborn as a creature from the depths of Hell. A Hellspawn. Now Spawn must choose between his life on Earth and his place on a throne in Hell.WritersTodd McFarlane #1-8, 12-15, 21-101, 103, 104, 115, 120-134, 139-141, 143, 146-150, 185-200, 202-206, 213-275, 277-323, 327-336 (TOT 261)Terry Fitzgerald #5Neil Gaiman #9Dave Sim #10Frank Miller #11Grant Morrison #16-18Andrew Grossberg #19, 20Tom Orzechowski #19, 20, 88Alan Moore #37Brian Holguin #71, 72, 74-104, 107-126, 128-133, 135-142, 144-150, 186-191 (TOT 80)Steve Niles #100, 105, 106David Hine #150-184Robert Kirkman #200Jonathan David Goff #200, 201, 203-211, 215-225, 228-240, 296, 297, 302-305 (TOT 41)Will Carlton #201-217, 219 (TOT 18)Paul Jenkins #251-254Erik Larsen #259-266 (TOT 8)Tom Leveen #269-274 (TOT 6)Darragh Savage #276-282 (TOT 7)Jason Shawn Alexander #276-282 (TOT 7)Scott Synder #300Philip Tan #306, 307Rory McConville #323-336 (TOT 14)PencillersTodd McFarlane #1-15, 21-24, 27, 29, 30, 33, 50, 195, 196, 200, 255, 259-267, 300-303, 305 (TOT 42)Greg Capullo #16-20, 26-37, 39, 41, 43, 45, 47, 49-75, 78-101, 103, 128, 146, 150, 193, 195, 196, 300, 301 (TOT 84)Marc Silvestri #25Tony S. Daniel #38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48 (TOT 6)Dwayne Turner #75-77Angel Medina #100-127, 129-139, 142-150 (TOT 48)Nat Jones #139-141Phillip Tan #150-164, 306, 307 (TOT 17)Lan Medina #165Brian Haberlin #166-178, 180-184 (TOT 18)Mike Mayhew #179Whilce Portacio #185-192, 194, 197 (TOT 10)Rob Liefeld #196Khary Randolph #198Erik Larsen #199, 258-266 (TOT 10)Szymon Kudranski #200-250, 256, 257, 268-275, 283, 291 (TOT 63)Jonboy Meyers #250-256 (TOT 6)Jason Shawn Alexander #276-282, 284-290, 292-305 (TOT 28)J. Scott Campbell #300Jerome Opena #300, 301Clayton Crain #301Ken Lashley #308, 309Jim Muniz #310Carlo Barberi #311-336 (TOT 26)Thomas Nachlik #321, 323, 327Trade PaperbacksSpawn Book 1: Beginnings (#1-5)Spawn Compendium Volume 1 (#1-50)Spawn Compendium Volume 2 (#51-100)Spawn Compendium Volume 3 (#101-150)Spawn Compendium volume 4 (#151-200)Spawn Compendium Volume 5(#201-250)Spawn Compendium Volume 6(#251-300)Spawn Book 2: Dark Discoveries (#6-9 & 11)Spawn Book 3: Revelation (#12-15)Spawn Book 4: Escalation (#16-20)Spawn Book 5: Death & Rebirth (#21-25)Spawn Book 6: Pathway to Judgement (#26-30)Spawn Book 7: Deadman's Touch (#31-34)Spawn Book 8: Betrayal of Blood (#35-38)Spawn Book 9: Urban Jungle (#39-42)Spawn Book 10: The Vengeance of the Dead (#43-47)Spawn Book 11: Crossroads (#48-50)Spawn Book 12: Immortality (#51-54)Spawn: The Armageddon Collection Part 1 (#150-155)Spawn: The Armageddon Collection Part 2 (#156-164)Spawn: The Complete Armageddon Collection (#150-163)Spawn: The Complete Armageddon Collection (#150-164; digital only)Spawn: New Flesh Collection (#166-169)Spawn: Neo Noir (#170-175)Spawn: Endgame Volume 1 (#185-190)Spawn: Endgame Volume 2 (#191-196)Spawn: Endgame Collection (#185-196)Spawn: New Beginnings Volume 1 (#201-206)Spawn: New Beginnings Volume 2 (#207-212)Spawn Resurrection (#251-255)Spawn: Satan Saga Wars (#256-262)Spawn: Hell On Earth (#263-275)Spawn: Dark Horror (#276-283)Spawn: Enemy of the State (#284-290)Spawn: Vengeance (#291-297)Spawn: The Record-Breaker (#298-301)Spawn: Aftermath (#302-307)Spawn: Omega (#308-315)Spawn: Shadows(#316-323)Spawn: Bad Business(#324-330)Spawn: Sinn War (#331-337)Spawn: Battle for the Throne Part 1(#338-343)Spawn: Battle for the Throne Part 2(#344-349)Origins Trade PaperbacksIn 2009 the trades were redesigned and reformatted in the Origins Collection:Spawn Origins Vol. 1 (#01-06)Spawn Origins Vol. 2 (#7-8, 11-14)Spawn Origins Vol. 3 (#15-20)Spawn Origins Vol. 4 (#21-26)Spawn Origins Vol. 5 (#27-32)Spawn Origins Vol. 6 (#33-38)Spawn Origins Vol. 7 (#39-44)Spawn Origins Vol. 8 (#45-50)Spawn Origins Vol. 9 (#51-56)Spawn Origins Vol. 10 (#57-62)Spawn Origins Vol. 11 (#63-68)Spawn Origins Vol. 12 (#69-74)Spawn Origins Vol. 13 (#75-80)Spawn Origins Vol. 14 (#81-86)Spawn Origins Vol. 15 (#87-92)Spawn Origins Vol. 16 (#93-98)Spawn Origins Vol. 17 (#99-104)Spawn Origins Vol. 18 (#105-110)Spawn Origins Vol. 19 (#111-116)Spawn Origins Vol. 20 (#117-122)Spawn Origins Vol. 21 (#123-128)Spawn Origins Vol. 22Spawn Origins Vol. 23Spawn Origins Vol. 24Spawn Origins Vol. 25Spawn Origins Vol. 26Spawn Origins Vol.27Spawn Origins Vol.28Spawn origins Vol.29Spawn Origins Vol.30Hardcover EditionsSpecial limited edition of 1.200 copiesStarting in 2010 hardcover "Origins" collections were also released; each hardcover edition collects an average of two of the "Origins" trade paperbacks.Spawn Origins Collection Book 1 (#1–12)Spawn Origins Collection Book 2 (#13–25)Spawn Origins Collection Book 3 (#26–37)Spawn Origins Collection Book 4 (#38–50)Spawn Origins Collection Book 5 (#51–62)Spawn Origins Collection Book 6 (#63–75)Spawn Origins Collection Book 7 (#76–87)Spawn Origins Collection Book 8 (#88–100)Spawn Origins Collection Book 9 (#101–112)Spawn Origins Collection Book 10 (#113-125)Spawn Origins Collection Book 11(#126-138)Spawn Origins Collection Book 12(#139-151)Spawn Origins Collection Book 13(#152-163)Spawn Origins Collection Book 14(#164-176)Deluxe Edition HardcoversEach deluxe edition collects two of the "Origins" hardcovers.Spawn Origins Collection: Deluxe Edition Volume 1 (#1–25)Spawn Origins Collection: Deluxe Edition Volume 2 (#26–50)Spawn Origins Collection: Deluxe Edition Volume 3 (#51–75)Spawn Origins Collection: Deluxe Edition Volume 4 (#76–100)Spawn Origins Collection: Deluxe Edition Volume 5Vault EditionsSpawn Vault Edition Volume 1 (#1-7)Spawn Vault Edition Volume 2 (#8-15)Non-U.S. Collected EditionsSpawn Edición Integral - Volumen I (#1-8 & #11-15) (Spanish)Spawn Edición Integral - Volumen II (#9-10 & #16-26) (Spanish)Spawn Edición Integral - Volumen III (#27-38) (Spanish)Spawn Edición Integral - Volumen IV (#39-50) (Spanish)Spawn Edición Integral - Volumen V (#51-68) (Spanish)Spawn: La promesa (#151-157) (Spanish)Spawn: Destrucción (#158-162) (Spanish)Spawn: El monstruo de la burbuja (#174-178) (Spanish)Spawn Fin del juego - Volume 1 (#185-190) (Spanish)Spawn Fin del juego - Volume 2 (#191-196) (Spanish)Spawn Resurrección (#251-255) (Spanish),

#3

Kick-Ass

OverviewKick-Ass is the first "book" (volume) in Mark Millar and John Romita Jr's creator owned series published by Marvel's independent imprint, Icon Comics. Book three of the Series entitled Kick-Ass 2 ran from Dec 2010 through May 2012, while book two entitled Hit-Girl began Aug 2012 and is currently being released monthly. The first series was collected in Kick-Ass.HistoryOriginally publishing monthly, beginning in February, 2008, the series met several severe delays spanning from a month, to five months between issues, concluding on February, 2010. The initial delay was a result of John Romita Jr's work on Amazing Spider-Man. Later, the delays continued as Mark Millar and John Romita Jr began work with Matthew Vaughn on the feature film adaptation. The film wrapped before the final issue was done. In late 2006 the opportunity to name Kick-Ass's civilian identity was auctioned off for charity. Dave Lizewski won the auction and chose his own name for the character.Series synopsisThe series follows Dave Lizewski your average comic book loving teenager in a real world take of his foray into vigilanteism where superheroes only exist in comic books. Bored of his mundane life, Dave wonders why no one has ever tried to become a costumed hero before, and so, he makes a costume, begins a regimen, and joins the fight against crime as Kick-Ass. His first encounter doesn't go as planed. But soon enough Kick-Ass finds out he isn't alone in the fight against injustice as he meets Big Daddy, a pseudo Punisher, and his ten year old daughter, Hit-Girl, whose sword mastery and agility rival that of a ninja. After Kick-Ass gains a bit of attention off a youtube clip, Dave's class mate crush, Katie Deauxma, develops a crush on his costumed hero persona, Kick-Ass. While others find inspiration in his heroics and begin to follow suit, creating hero clubs and the like, but one of the inspired, The Red Mist, becomes an overnight sensation, gaining adoration from the media, local authorities, and the blogosphere, out shining Kick-Ass. But Kick-Ass won't have any of it. And so, a friendly rivalry is born as Kick-Ass, The Red Mist, Big Daddy and Hit-Girl team-up to take on New York City's biggest mob boss Johnny G.Film adaptationThere are a few key differences between Kick-Ass the comic and Kick-Ass the film. Gore and vulgarity is toned down for the film adaptation. Big Daddy and Hit-Girls origin differs drastically. The over all tone of the book is very dark, gritty and real, while the film skews somewhat lighthearted, funny and fun. Both film are very similar up to the half way point, then differ from one another to a degree, a potential occurrence of both comic and film being worked on at the same time.Collected EditionsKick-AssKick-Ass: The Dave Lizewski Years Book One

#4

The Amazing Spider-Man

An All-New Marvel Now title. Continued from Superior Spider-Man (2013). Peter Parker returns as Spider-Man. The series lasted for 18 regular issues, with a few special Point One issues. After issues 18, the series ended due to the Secret Wars event and was replaced with the Amazing Spider-Man: Renew Your Vows tie-in mini-series. After the events of Secret Wars, the series was restarted as The Amazing Spider-Man Vol 4.The series also had an The Amazing Spider-Man Special one-shot.Collected EditionsTPBs:Vol. 1: The Parker Luck (#1-6)Vol. 1.1: Learning To Crawl (#1.1-1.5 and material from #1)Vol. 2: Spider-Verse Prelude (#7-8)Vol. 3: Spider-Verse (#9-15)Vol. 4: Graveyard Shift (#16-18)Vol. 5: Spiral (#16.1-20.1)HCs:The Amazing Spider-Man Volume 1 (#1-6 & #1.1-1.5)The Amazing Spider-Man Volume 2 (#7-18)Omnibuses:Original Sin Companion (#4-5)Spider-Verse (#7-15)Also:Silk: Out of the Spider-Verse Vol. 1 (#4-6)

#5

Bone

The series centers around the Bone Family, white, bald cartoon caricatures with big noses. In the opening pages the three Bone cousins—avaricious Phoncible P. "Phoney" Bone, goofy cigar-smoking Smiley Bone, and everyman character Fone Bone—are run out of their hometown of Boneville after Phoney decides to run for mayor and built a balloon [thought to be an evil god later in the story] on top the head of a statue of Boneville's founder. The balloon broke the head off of the statue and all the towns people ran Phoncible, Smiley, and Fone out of town. After crossing a desert and ending up in the mysterious Valley, the cousins are separated by a sea of locusts, and must individually make their way across the fantasy landscape pursued by rat creatures. They joyously reunite at a local village called Barrelhaven, where they are taken in by a mysterious girl named Thorn and her even more enigmatic grandmother. Fone Bone instantly develops a crush on Thorn when he meets her, and repeatedly attempts to prove his love through poetry. As they stay longer in the valley, they encounter humans and other creatures who are threatened by a decrepit dark lord, the Lord of the Locusts. The Bones are quickly drawn into the events around them, compelling them on a hero's journey to help save the world.Although Boneville is never actually shown in the story, it is implied as technologically contemporary: Fone refers to its extensive downtown, Phoney carries dollar bills, and Smiley refers to the presence of nuclear reactors and a CornDogHut. In contrast, the Valley is depicted as somewhat medieval, judging by its lifestyle, use of a bartering system, weapons and modes of transportation, and Phoney persistently refers to the valley people as " yokels."Although essentially a high fantasy, Bone also displays slapstick humor, particularly in The Great Cow Race (issue #10) and Phoney Bone's ongoing efforts to become rich off the credulous valley residents. As the series progresses to graver issues and a more serious level, its characteristic use of broad humor lessens but continues to recur.

Import a comic
You can find the ComicVine ID at the end of the URL, e.g. http://comicvine.gamespot.com/<name>/4050-<id>/

You need to be logged in to access this page.