Joseph Mallozzi's Blog, page 15
June 13, 2025
June 13, 2025: The Columbo rewatch continues with…Identity Crisis!
This episode aired November 12, 1975.
Patrick McGoohan directed and guest-starred in this episode which, not coincidentally, contained a few nods to his series, The Prisoner, including the classic line: “Be seeing you.”. The chimes of his office clock are also the same as the chimes of the town clock in The Prisoner.
According to McGoohan: “Peter wanted a director he could rely on. I had been spoiled in England. I was given total control of the project I directed. So I was wary about directing an American television show, but I was given total control by Peter and Everett Chambers. They had a classy story. It needed some work, but Peter was a wonderful actor for a director. Peter is a meticulous man. He is a very careful actor. My association with Columbo continued because Peter liked me and I liked him. If he said, “I want you to do this,:” I would try to do it.”
This was one of Peter Falk’s favorite episodes.
My thoughts on this episode in chronological viewing order…
Leslie Nielsen! This episode if going to be hilarious!
Whoa. Those crushed green velvet chairs are something else.
The lady snapping photos of people at random like they’re all on some romantic night out together. Did she assume Brenner and A.J. Henderson were a couple? If so, how progressive of them for 1975.
Not sure what’s going with these conversations, but feels very Spy Games.
What’s that behind your back? Oh, this? It’s a tire iron. I’m going to change a flat as soon as I finish chatting with you.
Aha! Half a poker chip!
Aha! The other half of the poker chip!
Columbo is smitten with the dancer.
“What do you think?
“I think she’s remarkable.”
Uh, shouldn’t he be paying attention to what the bartender is telling him?
I don’t understand the “hilarious” revelation that the dancer is shy.
The chiming clock in the background of the recording is supposed to establish an alibi. How overwhelmingly weak.
Hey, it’s Vito Scotti in what will be his final Columbo appearance.
So far, I’m finding this episode a bit dry.
I like Columbo doing a little jump so he can get a peek over the hedge.
Columbo passes on the drink but grabs an hors d’oeuvre. What happened to our hard-drinking detective from earlier episodes?
The big mistake suspects make on this show is to offer up possible explanations for puzzling scenarios. Why was the victim hit head on? Does that suggest he knew his attacker? I would answer “I don’t know. You’re the detective.”
That old man make up is…not entirely convincing.
Ah, the good ole cost-saving O.S. explosion.
Whoa! He looks pretty good for a guy who survived an explosion.
Who is this weird raincoat-wearing stranger striking up a conversation with this little girl, telling her how pretty she is?
Columbo claims he doesn’t drink when he’s on duty (He used to!) but accepts a Beaujolais…which he doesn’t drink.
What language is McGoohan speaking with the servant?
“The guy who wrote Marriage of Figaro.”
“Mozart.”
“That fella.”
He had Columbo’s house bugged? I’m surprised this isn’t a bigger deal.
Columbo chatting in Italian. Great.
The reasoning behind the closing of the office blinds is a huge reach.
Tying his alibi to the chiming clock is clunky.
It couldn’t have been the night before because the Chinese only announced their pulling out of the Olympics that morning. But, come on, he’s CIA. He could well have been privy to this information beforehand.
And on the basis of that, he readily admits his guilt? Ooof. I guess he assumes it doesn’t matter because he’s CIA and won’t face any consequences, but still.
Great performances and direction but the script lost me. A rarity for me with this show – I was bored. With a bullfighter-themed episode up next and a finale considered by many fans to be one of the show’s worst, season 5 may rank as one of Columbo’s worst. So far.
Here is my revised episode rankings: 1. Forgotten Lady, 2. Negative Reaction, 3. Any Old Port in a Storm, 4. Double Exposure, 5. A Friend In Deed, 6. Double Shock, 7. A Stitch in Crime, 8. Death Lends a Hand, 9. Suitable for Framing, 10. Publish or Perish, 11. Dagger of the Mind, 12. Requiem for a Falling Star, 13. Prescription: Murder, 14. Murder by the Book/Ransom for a Dead Man (tie), 15. By Dawn’s Early Light, 16. Swan Song, 17. Troubled Waters, 18. Lady in Waiting, 19. An Exercise in Fatality, 20. Etude in Black, 21. Playback, 22. The Most Crucial Game, 23. Blueprint for Murder, 24. Lovely But Lethal, 25. A Deadly State of Mind, 26. The Most Dangerous Match, 27. The Greenhouse Jungle 28. Identity Crisis, 29. Dead Weight, 30. Short Fuse, 31. A Case of Immunity, 32. Candidate for Crime, 33. Mind Over Mayhem.
Assuming Brenner doesn’t get a free pass because he’s CIA, do we think Columbo has enough evidence for a GUILTY verdict, or would Brenner be looking at an ACQUITTAL? The chiming clock. The blinds. Foreknowledge of the Chinese decision? Oh, he’s walking. ACQUITTAL.
Finally, here’s a peek at our upcoming Columbo viewing schedule…
Monday, June 16th: A Matter of Honor
Friday, June 20th: Now You See Him
Monday, June 23rd: Last Salute to the Commodore
Friday, June 27th: Fade in to Murder
Monday, June 30th: Old Fashioned Murder
Friday, July 4th: The Bye Bye Sky-High IQ Murder Case
Monday, July 7th: Try and Catch Me
Friday, July 11th: Murder Under Glass
Monday, July 14th: Make Me a Murder
Friday, July 18th: How to Dial a Murder
Monday, July 21st: The Conspirators
The post June 13, 2025: The Columbo rewatch continues with…Identity Crisis! appeared first on Joseph Mallozzi's Weblog.
June 12, 2025
June 12, 2025: Happy Dark Matter Day!
Dark Matter premiered 10 years ago today.
Let’s commemorate the anniversary with the full 22 minute 15 second blooper reel….

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June 11, 2025
June 11, 2025: Amazing Covers!
A few that caught my eye this week…
Eddie Brock: Carnage #5 – cover art by Juan Ferreyra
Exceptional X-Men #10 – cover art by Carmen Carnero
Giant-Size Amazing Spider-Man #1 – cover art by Lee Bermejo
Magik #6 – cover art by Ramon Villalobos
New Avengers #1 – cover art by Andy Park
Supergirl #2 – cover art by Stanley Artgerm Lau
Which were YOUR favorites?
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June 10, 2025
June 10, 2025: SG-1! Atlantis! Universe! What were your favorite episodes of each show?
Weigh in with your favorite episodes!
I’m thinking I may kick things off the first week of July with daily posts similar to what I’ve been doing with Columbo, offering behind-the-scenes insights and trivia. And maybe I’ll also invite a guest to join me and do an X spaces live broadcast to discuss two episodes at a time, Tuesday and Thursday nights as well as one Sunday afternoon broadcast.
What do you think?
The post June 10, 2025: SG-1! Atlantis! Universe! What were your favorite episodes of each show? appeared first on Joseph Mallozzi's Weblog.
June 9, 2025
June 9, 2025: Our Columbo rewatch continues with…A Case of Immunity!
This episode aired October 12, 1975.
Hector Elizondo, who played Hassan Sabah, fondly reflected on his experience shooting this episode: “You know what I remember? I remember laughing a lot. We had a great time.”
Four months after this episode aired, actor Sal Mineo, who played Rahman Habib, was stabbed to death.
Jeff Goldblum is an extra in this episode, part of the crowd demonstrating outside the embassy.
My thoughts on this episode in chronological viewing order…
Hooboy. I’ve got a bad feeling about this one.
Couldn’t they wait until they were done turning the place upside-down before summoning the security guard?
Columbo stepping on the poor guy’s robe (!).
Hmmm. The rifle misfired. How fortuitous for the murderer. So who had access to the guns?
Aha! The coffee from his 3 o’ clock break is almost full and cold.
Columbo on the priceless antique: “I think my wife go ours at the farmer’s market.”
Aha! The security guard had to have been surprised by someone he knew.
Again Columbo steps on his robe and we hear it rip. If this is a proper running gag, it has to happen one more time and completely tear away.
Columbo surmises it was an inside job. That was easy enough to put together.
Hmmm. He finds it suspicious that there was no ceiling dust on the documents from the explosion. Maybe because they were in the safe, no?
Uh oh. The protestors can identify Habib. He’s a goner.
Only 20% of the time that Columbo assumes innocence is he correct. That’s why I always say you have to assume the worst of people.
Ah, back in the good old days when a single blow to the back of the head was enough to render someone instantly unconscious.
Is that fall enough to kill him? Whiplash, probably, but death?
Columbo doing a bit of a Get Smart imitation, leaning up against the valuable antique and almost knocking it off its pedestal.
The dead man was wearing glasses when they found him. Really? The glasses managed to stay on despite the crash? Highly doubt that.
“Where’s your sign?”asks the protestor.
“I don’t have one,”replies Columbo
“Here,”says the protestor, handing him his protest sign. “Hold this.”
Columbo does and joins the protest.
“I’m fuzz”
“That’s cool.”
Can’t get much more 70’s than that exchange.
His majesty looks like he’s 16.
Columbo dipping his fingers in the beef. How uncouth.
He seems to have a problem with escargots, but didn’t he order and eat them in a previous episode? Somebody look into this for me.
“Haricots verts Bordelaise.”
“That looks like green beans.”
Columbo surmises the cash couldn’t have come from the safe and Habib could not have made that New York reservation.
After being accused of pursuing a vendetta and being ordered to back off, Columbo: ““Well that’s all well and good except for one thing. [—] He’s the murderer.”
This is the second time in as many episodes Columbo wears a tux!
“Wife insisted I wear striped pants,”Columbo confides. Reminds me of the time I was invited to my wife’s sister’s wedding in Japan. My father-in-law suggested I wear a traditional men’s kimono and Akemi loved the idea, throwing suggestions my way. I considered then, ultimately, opted to just wear a suit. The day of the wedding I show up and – every Japanese man in attendance is wearing a suit. I would have looked like a complete idiot!
“These are new. Sixteen ninety-five.” Columbo and his obsession with getting a good deal on shoes.
Columbo, parked outside the embassy liked a homeless man.
Seriously, why would Hassan even entertain Columbo’s presence at this point?
Columbo lays out his proof and…Hassan admits his guilt?! Why? What an idiot.
And, sure enough, it was a set-up.
What fate would await Hassan in his home country? Maybe Western prison food is preferable.
While this episode wasn’t as bad as I feared, it wasn’t particularly memorable either. Caricatures and amusing Columbo moments aside, the mystery itself wasn’t all that interesting to me and neither were any of the secondary characters. I also thought the Gotcha moment a little lame, one step above secretly tape recording a confession. Kinda weak.
Here is my revised episode rankings: 1. Forgotten Lady, 2. Negative Reaction, 3. Any Old Port in a Storm, 4. Double Exposure, 5. A Friend In Deed, 6. Double Shock, 7. A Stitch in Crime, 8. Death Lends a Hand, 9. Suitable for Framing, 10. Publish or Perish, 11. Dagger of the Mind, 12. Requiem for a Falling Star, 13. Prescription: Murder, 14. Murder by the Book/Ransom for a Dead Man (tie), 15. By Dawn’s Early Light, 16. Swan Song, 17. Troubled Waters, 18. Lady in Waiting, 19. An Exercise in Fatality, 20. Etude in Black, 21. Playback, 22. The Most Crucial Game, 23. Blueprint for Murder, 24. Lovely But Lethal, 25. A Deadly State of Mind, 26. The Most Dangerous Match, 27. The Greenhouse Jungle 28. Dead Weight, 29. Short Fuse, 30. A Case of Immunity, 31. Candidate for Crime, 32. Mind Over Mayhem.
Finally, in the event Hassan hadn’t confessed or made use of his diplomatic immunity, would Columbo have had enough evidence for a GUILTY verdict, or would Hassan have been looking at an ACQUITTAL? I think that, in this case, the circumstantial evidence wouldn’t have been enough. ACQUITTAL!
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June 8, 2025
June 8, 2025: Sharky Sunday!
Out and About with Sharky – The Distillery!

Twitchy –

Doing his part for the environment –

A visit to the vet –

Freeze-frame!

How many treats does Sharky eat in a day? [Spoiler: It’s actually double this.]
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June 7, 2025
June 7, 2025: Five more crime shows for your reconsideration!
Although I may have slowed down, the Crime Binge continues (ticking past 775 international crime shows and counting!). Here are five recent favorites…
Your Friends & Neighbors – 1 season – United States
A hedge fund manager resorts to burglary after losing his job, targeting wealthy neighbors to maintain his family’s lifestyle, but makes a fateful error breaking into the wrong home.
Reservatet/Secrets We Keep – 1 season – Denmark When her neighbor’s au pair goes missing, Cecilie is compelled to personally investigate but as she uncovers the truth, her perfect world falls apart.
Daredevil: Born Again – 1 season – United StatesMatt Murdock finds himself on a collision course with Wilson Fisk when their past identities begin to emerge.
El Jardinero/The Gardener – 1 season – SpainLa China Jurado and her emotionally impaired son Elmer use their gardening company as a cover for their contract killing activities – until the day Elmer falls for one of his targets.
Adolescence – 1 season – United KingdomWhen a 13-year-old is accused of the murder of a classmate, his family, therapist and the detective in charge are all left asking what really happened.The post June 7, 2025: Five more crime shows for your reconsideration! appeared first on Joseph Mallozzi's Weblog.
June 6, 2025
June 6, 2025: Our Columbo rewatch continues with…Forgotten Lady!
This episode aired September 14, 1975.
Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers were offered the roles of Henry and Grace Willis, but turned them down.
This was the last year of Peter Falk’s contract and the assumption at the time was that this would be the show’s final season.
According to Falk, this episode was a bit of a challenge: “We had all kinds of problems getting that one to two hours.”
The butler and maid are watching a 1975 episode of The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. One of the guests being interviewed is Della Reese. This reminded me of a story Stargate director Peter DeLuise once told us about the time his father, actor-comedian Dom DeLuise, was booked on the Redd Foxx Show. Arriving on set, Dom met Redd and enthusiastically thanked him for inviting him to appear on his show. A bewildered Redd asked him who he was and when Dom replied “Dom DeLuise”, Redd angrily shouted back to his people: “Dom DeLuise?! I said get Della Reese!”
My thoughts on this episode in chronological viewing order…
I get the sneaking suspicion she resents her husband.
She reminds me of Nora Desmond in Sunset Boulevard. Also Ida Lupino’s character in The Twilight Zone’s “The Sixteen Millimeter Shrine”.
The public will “learn to love her all over again.” Not sure if that’s how it works.
Uh oh. He’s refusing to bankroll her vanity project.
Love these old timey home theater experiences.
Ah, the timing comes down to the switching of the reels, thereby establishing an alibi.
The butler is three feet away in the screening room and has to use the intercom to talk to her instead of just poking his head around the corner.
Love how’s she’s dressed for the occasion as a cat burglar.
Gets the prints on the weapon and the powder burns on his hands. She’s smart.
And the locked bedroom door to make it look like a suicide.
She’s pretty spry for a woman her age, climbing down that tree.
She gets back just a little late and has to change the reel herself. Good thing Jeeves wasn’t on the ball.
Not sure what’s going on. Why is she burning the film?
They’re married, but sleep in separate rooms. How convenient.
That’s a very odd cut on them attempting to force open the bedroom door.
Given all the isolated shots of clocks, I know this one is going to come down to the timing.
Columbo looks like he just got out of bed.
Turns out he did!
Forgot his jacket, badge, and watch. “Lucky I didn’t show up in my pajamas.”
The butler has to loan him a note pad and mechanical pencil that Columbo isn’t quite sure how to use at first.
Love the butler also helping him out with that impromptu ashtray.
Why does a man who is about to kill himself bother taking sleeping pills? And isn’t it suspicious that he was so looking forward to his upcoming trip?
Cadaveric Spasm. Sounds like the name of a character from one of the Harry Potter books.
The butler nabs Columbo before he can make off with his note pad and mechanical pencil. I’m telling you, Columbo is a kleptomaniac.
Hmmm. Those suspiciously clean slippers.
This soundtrack is certainly whimsical. I feel like I’m watching a 50’s family sitcom.
She seems to be losing it a little, incapable of separating herself from her fictional character –
“Rosie was a character in a film.”
“There’s no difference.”
It’s an affliction that would later strike actor Steven Seagal.
You’re going to be the busiest girl around.
“You won’t even have time to go to the powder room.” Isn’t the powder room the bathroom?
“You won’t even have time to pee!”
I love this bit of Columbo promising Dog he’ll take him out for a hot dog and Dog responding enthusiastically.
The butler’s reaction “Not you again!” is great.
Columbo not so subtly listening in to the phone conversation. And then presents himself – starstruck. He’s a fan!
Ned Diamond’s response to Columbo asking him what he can do about having two left feet is pretty brilliant: “Become a critic.”
Columbo is also starstruck by Grace, which is kind of sweet.
“A light goes on out here and sometimes I can’t turn it off.” This line really sums him up.
This whole “Did he go out for the gun or have it with him?” is interesting. The smallest pieces of the puzzle coming together.
She’s been forgetful lately. Hmmmm.
Passes up on the opportunity to watch a surgery. I don’t blame him. My wife, on the other hand, would happily take the surgeon up on that offer.
Columbo hasn’t been on the gun range in five years!
“…then falls in love with a young exiled White Russian prince who happens to be a midget…” Who happens to be? Not exactly high-brow reading.
Aha. He purchased a book, no doubt planning to read it. So why would he commit suicide with such a fascinating novel on his reading list?
These guys dancing in top hats look like that gang from The Warriors. What were they called? The Top Hats?
She can’t remember Columbo’s name. Hmmmm.
The whole dog-eared and not dog-eared pages argument strikes me as kind of silly.
“People don’t usually forget to do the things they usually do.” Well said.
Not the kind of book you would read if you were going to commit suicide? Really? What kind of reading material would be more in line with someone wishing to commit suicide? The sequels to 50 Shades of Grey?
Who would want to kill him? Columbo doesn’t have an answer for that. Or does he?
This whole b story in which Columbo is hounded about failing to go to the gun range feels like padding. Is there a point?
Columbo on the flag flying at half mast: “Is this as far up as it goes?”
The butler indignantly replies: “There’s been a death in the family!”
Maurice Evans is absolutely brilliant as Raymond.
Whoa! Ned loved her and wanted to marry her. And she knew all along!
Dog gets his own ice cream. Glad he ordered the vanilla.
Now Dog has ice cream all over his face!
Love this beat of Columbo dancing up the stairs.
Also love this beat of Columbo eyeing the tree, looking very much like Mr. Bean.
What a great reveal out of the window of Columbo hanging from the tree branch, calling down to Dog who circles the ground beneath him.
What IS that outfit she’s wearing? What are those furry bell bottoms?
Columbo points out that if he could climb out the window, then anyone could.
He has to turn down her kind offer because he promised Dog he’d take him to the park. Love her incredulous reaction.
Columbo has to draft a buddy to take the gun test for him. Hmmmmmm.
This is a great scene of Columbo laying out his theory to Ned Diamond who refuses to believe Grace could be capable of murder.
Can I just say that Grace Wheeler is probably the most likable Columbo murderer since Carsini in “Any Old Port in a Storm”. She wants to make sure Mr. and Mrs. Columbo have a good time because they’re such big fans. And then has a very sweet moment with her maid. She’s very likable. A tragic figure.
Wow, Columbo cleans up well. He looks great in that tux. Distinguished and confident.
Why did the film take 15 minutes longer to run the night of the murder?
“You know who else likes champagne? Raymond.”
He’s testing her by breaking the film!
Holy plot twists! She’s suffering from a progressive memory disease that affects her short term memory. The clues were all there!
And another shocker! That’s why hubby didn’t want to bankroll her. Because he didn’t want to add pressure to her. He did it out of love! And she misinterpreted his actions and killed him for it.
She has two months at most.
“My problem sir, is that I don’t think she even remembers killing him.” Sad and tragic.
Ned selflessly takes the fall: “For you, Grace. For you.”
“It’s not going to take much to break your story.”
“Might take a couple of months.”
And, of course, that’s all she has.
And in that last lingering shot, she has already forgotten, lost in the film and visions of her past. Powerful.
Wow. That…was superb. I see a lot of Columbo aficionados critique the episode for its longer run time, but it doesn’t drag for me. The whole gun range b-story feels like pointless padding, but Mark Dawidiziak, author of the Columbophile, argues it parallels and foreshadows the main story, with Columbo finding someone to take the fall for him the same way Diamonds takes the fall for Grace.
This one had was equal parts comedy and tragedy, the more humorous moments (Columbo’s interactions with Dog and Raymond, dancing up the stairs, dangling off that tree branch) proving equally as memorable as the shocking reveals (Grace’s condition, Ned’s sacrifice, that final moment). And the performances were simply superb. I think Raymond the butler is probably my favorite supporting player to date.
There are a number of episodes I’m only watching for the first time and this was one. And it was great. How great? Well, this may shock you but here is my revised episode rankings: 1. Forgotten Lady, 2. Negative Reaction, 3. Any Old Port in a Storm, 4. Double Exposure, 5. A Friend In Deed, 6. Double Shock, 7. A Stitch in Crime, 8. Death Lends a Hand, 9. Suitable for Framing, 10. Publish or Perish, 11. Dagger of the Mind, 12. Requiem for a Falling Star, 13. Prescription: Murder, 14. Murder by the Book/Ransom for a Dead Man (tie), 15. By Dawn’s Early Light, 16. Swan Song, 17. Troubled Waters, 18. Lady in Waiting, 19. An Exercise in Fatality, 20. Etude in Black, 21. Playback, 22. The Most Crucial Game, 23. Blueprint for Murder, 24. Lovely But Lethal, 25. A Deadly State of Mind, 26. The Most Dangerous Match, 27. The Greenhouse Jungle 28. Dead Weight, 29. Short Fuse, 30. Candidate for Crime, 31. Mind Over Mayhem.
Finally, though a pointless exercise as Grace would never live to see trial, do we think Columbo has enough evidence for a GUILTY verdict or would Grace be looking at an ACQUITTAL? In this case, he’s got a fair amount of circumstantial evidence, but I honestly don’t think it’s enough to add up to a conviction. So, should a miracle occur and Grace survive the disease, then I think she bucks the odds again and dances off into the sunset. ACQUITTAL!
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June 5, 2025
June 5, 2025: Marathons Ahoy!
First and foremost, thanks to everyone who took time to offer recommendations for our upcoming “Best Episode Of…” watch marathon. Check out Thursday (June 3rd’s) blog entry for a full listing of the 30 sci-fi shows that will be the focus of our lengthy watch-athon.
Prior to that, however, I’d like to do another marathon – Time Loopalooza – in which we will review pretty much every time loop episode produced, 37 in all, from the original Twilight Zone’s 1961 episode “Shadow Play” to Agents of Shield’s 2020 episode “As I Have Always Been”. Should be fun!
I’m thinking we’ll go Columbo rewatch concluding with the show’s seventh season, then Time Loopalooza, and then the Best Episode of marathon – which should take us to October, Halloween month, where I’m thinking of doing a “Scariest Episode of….” marathon.
It would be great to do a live watch or even a recorded watch but, in a likelihood, I’ll probably stick with the current format of simply writing up my thoughts (along with some behind-the-scenes insights and trivia).
I have completed my 2024 crime novel read-a-thon, finishing up (though not technically accurate as I DNF’d) the last book this afternoon. I ended up adding another two dozen books to the list in order to include this year’s Edgar Awards nominees for a grand total of 113 titles (maybe closer to 116 if I can track down a few that have eluded me). Whew! I’ll put together a list of my Top 10 Crime Novels of 2024 in the coming days – and then start checking out what 2025 has to offer in the genre.
Good timing too as it looks like Akemi and Sharky and I are off to Montreal for another 10 day stay. Loading up the kindle!
Also, busy on the work front – developing a pitch, going out with a couple, and consulting on something else.
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Quick addendum. Tomorrow, our Columbo rewatch continues with – spoiler alert for a 50 year old episode! – what is one of my favorite episodes of the show to date….
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June 4, 2025
June 4, 2025: Amazing Covers!
A few that caught my eye this week…
All-New Venom #7 – cover art by David Baldeon
Imperial #1 – cover art by Adi Granov
Wolverine #8 – core art by Daniel Warren Johnson
Justice League: The Atom Project #6 – cover art by Otto Schmidt
Power Rangers Prime #7 – cover art by Keyla K. Valerio
Be Not Afraid #1 – cover art by Reiko Murakami
Power Rangers Prime #7 – cover art by Li Cree
Heat Seeker: Exposed #1 – cover art by Stanley “Artgerm” Lau
Heat Seeker: Exposed #1 – cover art by Lucio Parrillo
2000 AD Nov. 2024 Progs – cover art by Nick Percival
So, which are YOUR favorites?
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