Saturday, December 31, 2011
Saturday, December 24, 2011
Saturday, December 17, 2011
Saturday, December 10, 2011
All-Star Pulp Comics

It is with great joy that I announce the release of Airship 27 Productions' All Star Pulp, a new comics anthology featuring stories and art by an all-star cast of todays new pulp writers and artists, including yours truly. This amazing 58 page comic book features the following characters and creative teams:
The Green Lama by Adam Garcia & Mike Fyles
Jim Anthony Super Detective by Erwin K. Roberts & Pedro Cruz
Black Bat by C. William Russette & Wayne Beeman
The Blue Lady by Sean Taylor & James Ritchey III
The Rook by Barry Reese & Craig Wilson
Secret Agent X by Bobby Nash & Jeremy McHugh
Domino Lady by Percival Constantine, Rock Baker & Jeff Austin
Cover by Jeff Butler featuring the Green Lama & the Domino Lady
You can get it here. Hope you give it a try!
Labels: Airship 27, All Star Pulp, comics, Rob Davis, Ron Fortier
Saturday, December 03, 2011
Saturday, November 26, 2011
Saturday, November 19, 2011
Saturday, November 12, 2011
Saturday, November 05, 2011
Saturday, October 29, 2011
Saturday, October 22, 2011
Saturday, October 15, 2011
Saturday, October 08, 2011
Saturday, October 01, 2011
Saturday, September 24, 2011
Saturday, September 17, 2011
Retro Video IV
Labels: The Beastmaster
Saturday, September 10, 2011
Saturday, September 03, 2011
Saturday, August 27, 2011
Retro Video I
SUGAR BABY LOVE by The Rubettes
Labels: Sugar Baby Love, The Rubettes
Saturday, August 20, 2011
So close, so far ...
I’d sum up Super 8 as a sort of Bizarro-Spielberg movie – those who know their Superman lore will understand right away my opinion. I knew J.J. Abrams work from Lost, certainly one of the finest tv fiction series of recent years. I've never seen his Star Trek – utter blasphemy to me as Shatner, Nemoy and company will always be Kirk, Spock and the Enterprise crew from the old 60s original series. Still, the trailers for Super 8 had me intrigued enough to see if Abrahms was indeed capable of capturing lightining in a bottle – because that’s precisely what he tries to do with this movie, recapturing the magic of Steven Spielberg’s late 70s/early 80s movies. The result, I’m sorry to say is a resounding negative. The feeling I had as I walked away from the cinema by the end of the movie was that Abrams tried so hard to achieve this impossible task, it was almost sad to see his attempt. Super 8 is a mess, all effect and too little soul, as if Abrams is trying to mix E.T., Jaws, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, The Goonies and a bit of the first Jurassic Park too – at least those were the bits I recognized, there could be some other lost in there – but somehow fails to inject that secret ingredient that Spielberg used to have. The result is a sort of good-looking Frankenstein monster – it’s pretty to look at, but it’s loud, not subtle and a dimwit. Sad thing is, one can see that Abrams is quite talented and obviously sincere about his love for Spielberg’s early achievements. Frankly, I think it would have made for a much better film if he just had put aside the whole evil E.T. plot aside and stuck to the main kid’s story about dealing with his mom’s horrible death, finding his first innocent love, making the zombie film with his friends and just dealing with growing up in a small American town back in the early 80s. At least those are the parts that had some emotional resonance with me, much more than the stupid teary eyes bye-bye to a cannibal E.T. who just happened to eat the sheriff and a few other regular citizens, for crying out loud! Weirdest thing of all is Steven Spielberg himself produced this movie...
Captain America: The First Avenger, while also being simultaneously close and far to its source, reached much closer to its target, I think. Director Joe Johnston has yet to completely disappoint me in any of his movies, Jumanji and Jurassic Park III being two personal favorites of mine. The man does know how to direct adventure movies and does a good job at adapting Captain America to the silver screen, creating a great rollercoaster adventure that is loyal to the spirit of the marvel comics character, without a dull moment, just about the right doses of humor and seriousness, great special effects and, best of all, a great cast where Chris Evans shines as a totally believable Steve Rogers. Too good to sound true, right? Unfortunately, for this fan of the original comic book, yes. Poking fun at the character creator’s Joe Simon and Jack Kirby’s wonderful classic costume design and prefering to glorify the recent re-interpretations of the character's costume and history from the comic books did not score high points in my book. Under the Hollywood mentality of being more realistic than real, I can understand the whole modernization of the costume, even while not agreeing with it, but was it really needed to ridicule the original Cap costume by making him wear a version of it as a sort of chorus line dancer? Worse yet was the obvious whitewashing of the Nazi threat. In the original comic book, Cap fought the Nazis back in WWII and the Red Skull used to be one Hitler’s more loyal fanatics, not a betrayer. Just as Hollywood seems to have found a interest in the gratuitous idea of changing the ethnicity of well-established comic book characters (Heimdall, Perry White) I don’t understand this recent urge to turn Nazis into something else. They’re perfect villains even more so because, yes Virginia, they’re real, killed millions of innocents and once threatened to take over the world. They're an integral part of who Captain America is. Who were the producers thinking it would offend by mostly getting nazis off from the film and having the Red Skull wear that hydra insignia instead of a swastika? Germans? Lars Von Trier? Anders Breivick?
Still, what can one expect from Hollywood?
So, two summer blockbusters, one far better than the other in my opinon, still both of them, so close, yet so far to their original sources of inspiration…
Labels: Captain America: First Avenger, J.J.Abrams, Joe Johnston, Super 8
Saturday, August 13, 2011
Saturday, August 06, 2011
Saturday, July 30, 2011
The Simpsons by Banksy
Oh, the irony...
Labels: Banksy, The Simpsons
Saturday, July 23, 2011
Adventure time too
Labels: Adventure Time, Evicted, Finn, Jake, Marceline, Pendleton Ward
Saturday, July 16, 2011
Adventure Time
Here's a very small clip from the series ...
Labels: Adventure Time, Daddy Ate My Fries, Finn, Marceline, Nightosphere, Pendleton Ward
Saturday, July 09, 2011
Logorama
Labels: logorama
Saturday, July 02, 2011
Le Chat du Rabbin
Labels: BD, Joann Sfar, Le Chat du Rabbin
Saturday, June 25, 2011
Saturday, June 18, 2011
Saturday, June 11, 2011
moebius sketch 1 of 3
Labels: Jean Giraud, Moebius
Saturday, June 04, 2011
Saturday, May 28, 2011
Jack Kirby draws!
Labels: Jack Kirby
Saturday, May 21, 2011
The Tree of Life
Lately, there haven't been many current pieces of fiction, be it books, comics or films, that have caught my attention, but THIS film, I really want to see. I hope it lives up to my expectations. It premieres around my corner of the world at the end of the current month, I think.
Labels: film, Terrence Mallick, The Tree of Life
Saturday, May 07, 2011
Doug Tennapel
Labels: cintiq, comics, Doug Tennapel, wacom
Saturday, April 16, 2011
μετάνοια afterword
Before the final curtain is drawn, I'd like to thank you, dear readers, for following this comic. I hope you had at least as much enjoyment reading it as I had creating it. Originally, the comic that came to be called METANOIA was supposed to be just another clichéd adventure story set a long, long time ago in a faraway place where the hero saves the girl and both live happily ever after. Then, as I began working on the thumbnails of the pages on my sketchbook, still trying to make sense of all the loose threads for the story I had in mind, something happened: the story and characters started to change, to suggest different directions in which to go... and I decided to go along with it and be surprised, hopefully taking you in as many surprises as myself!
If you want to read the whole story in one neat site without any other different posts in the middle, you can go to http://metanoiacomic.blogspot.com/
As for the near future, this blog will proceed along with its usual heterogeneous mixture of drawings, writings and videos.
Labels: comics, metanoia, Pedro Cruz, μετάνοια
Saturday, April 09, 2011
Saturday, April 02, 2011
Saturday, March 26, 2011
Saturday, March 19, 2011
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Saturday, March 05, 2011
Saturday, February 26, 2011
Saturday, February 19, 2011
Friday, February 18, 2011
PULP NEWS !!!
First of all, both Jim Anthony Super-Detective Volume 1 and the second volume Jim Anthony Super-Detective - The Hunters, which have illustrations by yours truly, are now available for download as e-books. You can download these and other fine pulp fiction books at the Airship 27 PDF Hangar. Check it out!


Also, this year my illustrations for "Jim Anthony Super-Detective: The Hunters" got nominated as Best Interior Art for TWO Awards : The Pulp Factory Awards and The Pulp Ark Awards. I'd like to send my best regards to the kind persons behind these awards who enjoyed my work and thought it was good enough to earn a nomination. Thanks, folks, your atention is truly apreciated!
The Pulp Factory Awards ceremony will be held at this year's Windy City Paper & Pulp Show in Chicago, scheduled for 15th to 17th April.
The Pulp Ark Awards ceremony will be held at this year's Pulp Ark Show in Batesville, Arkansas, scheduled for 13th to 15th May.


Labels: 2010 Pulp Ark Awards, 2010 Pulp Factory Awards, Jim Anthony Super Detective, Pedro Cruz, pulp fiction

















