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Friday, July 3, 2026

New Music from Low Cut Connie!!!

 
New Low Cut Connie, out today! Buy HERE.
 


Watch:

Happy July 3rd, everyone! Also known as Return of the Living Dead day!


I'll be watching this tonight in celebration and jamming the vinyl soundtrack while I type this.

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In other viewing news, I rewatched Gavin Polone and Andrew Kevin Walker's much-maligned Psycho Killer the other night. I love this flick; no, it's no SE7EN, but holding it up against that film is like holding everything Shamalamadingdong does against Sixth Sense.  

I do think I figured out the elements that caused many in the Horror community to lambast this film.

    1) The egregious-as-hell scene with the tank semi that flips onto its side, takes out the fleeing female and then explodes. It's fun, but it's a bit much for a film that otherwise holds itself in a dead serious repose.
    2) The pregnancy subplot. Not needed AT ALL. 

Other than that, man, this one swings so fucking big and, I think, hits it out of the park with such an ambitious third act. Georgina Campbell is always fantastic, and James Preston Rogers is the stuff of nightmares. Oh yeah, Malcolm McDowell is fabulous as a sort of modern Aleister Crowley/Anton Lavey stand-in.




Read:

I am just now, three months into the publication run, getting to read the unearthed and completed finale to Rick Veitch and Michael Zulli's Swamp Thing run from 1988/1989, published nearly 40 years later as Swamp Thing: 1989.

Original proposed Michael Zulli cover for issue #88

Cover to the recently released issue #88

Full disclosure: while I've been aware of the Veitch/Zulli run since I read the Moore run that Mr. Veitch penciled some of back in the early 00s, I've never sought it out and, in fact, I don't think I knew that Veitch walked away due to censorship by then newly combined Time/Warner entity that owned DC Comics, or that those issues never saw the light of day and, in some cases, went unfinished. This reminds me more than a little of that Warren Ellis Hellblazer issue with the school shooting that finally came out back, oh hell, a long time ago now. 

So why was DC so worried about Swamp Thing meeting a certain historic carpenter in 1989? Five words for you:

The. Last. Temptation. Of. Christ.

Here's Paul Schrader, who wrote the screenplay adapting Nikos Kazantzakis' novel, talking about the blasphemous aspect of the story:

   

The effect the film had on Swamp Thing is the big takeaway I have after reading Stephen Bissette's afterward in  Swamp Thing 1989 issue 88, and it makes a ton of sense, even if it is still deplorable. I was thirteen in 1989, but I remember the nightly news hullabaloo surrounding Martin Scorsese's film featuring Willem Dafoe as Jesus, Harvey Keitel as Judas Iscariot and David Bowie as Pontius Pilate. I wouldn't see the film until the early 00s, but I remember that people did not like the way Christ was portrayed, so while absolutely nothing blasphemous occurs in Veitch/Zulli's comic, no corporation was going to publish a comic with the cover above so soon after Scorsese's film.

So what did DC publish instead of the original Swamp Thing issue 88? Well, it's a bit confusing, but apparently Veitch/Zulli's issues 88-91 were shelved and never finished and instead, Doug Wheeler and John Totleben stepped in and continued the course of events that had played out through the early issues of Veitch's run, where Swampy is lost in time. Wheeler's 88 deviates by omitting the Elemental's meeting with Christ, which, again, really only treated the Christ man with the utmost respect.  

Funny that, as far as we've come to see this finally published, they still did not use that original Zulli cover. 




Playlist:

Melvins/Helms Alee - Controlling Data for a Better Feeling Future
Boards of Canada - Tomorrow's Harvest
Dean Hurley - Anthology Resource Vol. 2: Philosophy of Beyond
sunn O))) - Loser
3Teeth - EndEx
The Dillinger Escape Plan & Mike Patton - Irony is a Dead Scene
The Dillinger Escape Plan - Dissociation
Spotlights - Love & Decay




Card:


From Jonathan Grimm's Eldritch Lace Tarot, which you can buy HERE.


• Two of Swords
• Page of Wands
• Queen of Cups

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

New Music from Russian Circles


While I've dabbled in Russian Circles music over the years, it wasn't until seeing them live with Young Widows last year that I really "got it." Hearing this new track from their forthcoming album Nine, out August 28th on Sargent House. Pre-order HERE

This is heavy. As. F*CK!



NCBD:

Great week! Let's get into this right away, as the first book is one I've been waiting on with gritted teeth and several others have felt a long time coming!


The book I am most looking forward to - Geoff Darrow's Shaolin Cowboy returns with a new series! Every panel of every issue of every series so far has been a work of unparalleled art, and I expect The Shaolin Cowboy: Staying A.I. Alive to be no different. 


Ordained is an action movie in comic form (already been optioned) and it has not disappointed me yet. Who isn't up for watching a Priest beat the tar out of a bunch of mobsters? 


Jeff Lemire's Minor Arcana returns to start a new arc! 


I'm not a regular FF reader, but my good friend and Drinking with Comics co-host Mike Shin picked this as a book to watch out for a few months back when the solicitation dropped, and here's why: 

"Johnny Storm has had some incredibly bad ideas in his time, but every once in a while he also has an incredibly good idea too. Unfortunately, it's hard to tell which is which until you're neck-deep in their consequences, and by then it's usually too late. We mention this only because in this issue, Johnny convinces his sister Sue to go along with a scheme to use her powers to turn the flesh of his skull invisible, so that when he flames on he can pass himself off as the Ghost Rider and settle some old scores. What could possibly go wrong?"

Now does that sound fun or does that sound fun?


The Event Horizon prequel marches on, and the depravity continues. Loving these covers and the art in general, and I'm looking forward to how this arrives at the starting point of the film. 


Last but not least, I'd all but forgotten about Gabriel Hardman's Batman/Green Arrow/The Question prestige format book Arcadia, but here it is, the final issue. Overall, I think this will read better as a trade, but I'm a sucker for the prestige format, so I'm looking forward to a full reread before cracking into this final issue.




Watch:

A trailer for Robert Eggers' Werwulf dropped two days ago and, as per my custom, I am posting it here but not watching it. This one releases on Christmas - CHRISTMAS! - and we already have a trailer? This is bound to get beaten to death well before the film lands, so I am doing my best to avoid all contact for now.


Nothing this man has done has disappointed me in the least, so I want to preserve as unspoiled an experience as I can with this one. 




Playlist:

Infinity Frequencies - Between Two Worlds
The Caretaker - Theoretically pure anterograde amnesia
Boards of Canada - Inferno
The Atlas Moth - The Old Believer
John Carpenter - Lost Themes IV: Noir
Throbbing Gristle - Once Upon A Time
Blut Aus Nord - Memoria Vetusta II: A Dialogue with the Stars
Blut Aus Nord - Memoria Vetusta III: Saturian Poetry
Russian Circles - Station




Card:

From Jonathan Grimm's Bound Tarot Deck, which you can buy HERE.


• Eight of Cups
• Two of Swords
• 01: The Magician

Eight of Cups - the glasses start to spill, the vitality is threatened: Time for a recharge before the spark of creativity returns. 

I'm in the midst of a recharge from writing after doing a pretty straight stint, day in, day out. That is the goal, but it definitely feels like it's time to fill the well.