http://blacknerdproblems.com/spider-gwen-20-review/

Writer: Jason Latour / Artist: Robbi Rodriguez / Marvel Comics

This issue moves. Spider-Gwen #20 is one of the faster-paced issues of the series where every dialogue seems to take place during a chase, fight, or the lead up to one of them, and it makes for the type of read that reminds you why you love comics. The dialogue lives behind a vail of beautifully frenetic artwork that makes this issue flow from one conflict to the next, webbing together story elements simultaneously as Gwen and Harry recount the mess they’re in as the mess gets a little deeper in real time. Even the creative team introductions come in an ornate package with the introduction of Earth-65’s Wolverine:

Spider-Gwen #20 Panel

Wolverine’s cameo ties in well and adds a bit of humor to the drama – his name in Earth-65 is “Mr. Murderhands,” which Gwen quickly rebukes for the more familiar “Wolverine” – and his position as a bounty hunter is largely what contributes to the fun pace of this issue as he hawks down Harry (with Gwen chasing along, trying to protect him) and then turns to fight a competing would-be captor also out for Harry for the virus in his blood. The wild card, of course, is Matt Murdock and everything he has told them that might be true, but also might not be, so Gwen and Harry must unpack their predicament carefully as they swing, fight, and jump through deciding what to trust. And somewhere amid it all Gwen gets to say, “the ninjas are with me,” which is now added to my top-5 list of things I want to say in a natural setting before I die, right along with someone asking me how strong I am and me responding “I’m too strong,” a lá Remember the Titans.

Spider-Gwen #20 Panel 2

Overall, Spider-Gwen #20 is a leap in the current arc that refocuses on Gwen’s powers, what they mean for her identity, the implications her decisions will have on her as a person and hero, and her dynamic with Harry Osborne. It’s a lot, but doesn’t feel like it. Because it was fucking fun.

9.1 out of 10

Reading Spider-Gwen? Find BNP’s other reviews of the series here.

Are you following Black Nerd Problems on Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr or Google+?

June 5, 2017

Spider-Gwen #20 Review

http://blacknerdproblems.com/spider-gwen-20-review/

Writer: Jason Latour / Artist: Robbi Rodriguez / Marvel Comics

This issue moves. Spider-Gwen #20 is one of the faster-paced issues of the series where every dialogue seems to take place during a chase, fight, or the lead up to one of them, and it makes for the type of read that reminds you why you love comics. The dialogue lives behind a vail of beautifully frenetic artwork that makes this issue flow from one conflict to the next, webbing together story elements simultaneously as Gwen and Harry recount the mess they’re in as the mess gets a little deeper in real time. Even the creative team introductions come in an ornate package with the introduction of Earth-65’s Wolverine:

Spider-Gwen #20 Panel

Wolverine’s cameo ties in well and adds a bit of humor to the drama – his name in Earth-65 is “Mr. Murderhands,” which Gwen quickly rebukes for the more familiar “Wolverine” – and his position as a bounty hunter is largely what contributes to the fun pace of this issue as he hawks down Harry (with Gwen chasing along, trying to protect him) and then turns to fight a competing would-be captor also out for Harry for the virus in his blood. The wild card, of course, is Matt Murdock and everything he has told them that might be true, but also might not be, so Gwen and Harry must unpack their predicament carefully as they swing, fight, and jump through deciding what to trust. And somewhere amid it all Gwen gets to say, “the ninjas are with me,” which is now added to my top-5 list of things I want to say in a natural setting before I die, right along with someone asking me how strong I am and me responding “I’m too strong,” a lá Remember the Titans.

Spider-Gwen #20 Panel 2

Overall, Spider-Gwen #20 is a leap in the current arc that refocuses on Gwen’s powers, what they mean for her identity, the implications her decisions will have on her as a person and hero, and her dynamic with Harry Osborne. It’s a lot, but doesn’t feel like it. Because it was fucking fun.

9.1 out of 10

Reading Spider-Gwen? Find BNP’s other reviews of the series here.

Are you following Black Nerd Problems on Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr or Google+?


June 4, 2017

Why Is There a Continuing Lack of Diversity in Hollywood? — BGN Opinion

https://blackgirlnerds.com/continuing-lack-diversity-hollywood-bgn-opinion/

Have feelings on the lack of diversity in Hollywood? Read this latest op-ed on the matter here on Black Girl Nerds!

The post Why Is There a Continuing Lack of Diversity in Hollywood? — BGN Opinion appeared first on Black Girl Nerds.


June 4, 2017

Let Us Guess Your "Tekken" Animal Fighter

https://www.buzzfeed.com/huytruong/pick-your-tekken-favs-and-well-guess-your-animal-fighter?utm_term=4ldqpia

We’re all animals when Tekken 7 drops.

Images from Bandai Namco


June 4, 2017

BGN #117 I Geekin Out with Marc Bernardin and The Wall

https://blackgirlnerds.com/bgn-117-geekin-marc-bernardin-wall/

  Segment 1: Comic book writer, editor, and podcaster Marc Bernardin joins is to chat about his latest projects including a new Genius comic and his work with JJ Abrams in Castle Rock Hosted by: Jamie, Joelle and Jacqueline Segment 2: Writer Dwain Worrell chats about his latest work on the war thriller The Wall [...]

The post BGN #117 I Geekin Out with Marc Bernardin and The Wall appeared first on Black Girl Nerds.