Showing posts with label Triona Farrell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Triona Farrell. Show all posts

Saturday, September 13, 2025

Batman: Dark Patterns #10 Review

 



Writer: Dan Watters

Artist: Hayden Sherman

Colorist: Triona Farrell

Letterer: Frank Cvetkovic

Editors: Arianna Turturro & Rob Levin

Cover Artist: Hayden Sherman & Stevan Subic

Publisher: DC Comics

Issue Length: 32 Pages

Price: $4.99/$5.99 Card Stock

Release Date: September 10, 2025

 

Gordon urged Batman to move on. He argued there were other cases to solve. But Batman prided himself on seeing through patterns that weren't there. He insisted that the body found in the Rookery was part of something larger. Now, Batman wonders if he was as susceptible to suggestion as anyone else. And he is in pain. Terrible pain. Batman has fallen. Can he pick himself up and protect the city he loves? Let's leap into Batman: Dark Patterns #10 and see!

 

Story

Gordon lights the Bat-Signal every night. But Batman doesn’t show. Some people, like Mr Cabrera, believe it is for the best. Then, he and his wife discover a burning building. No one rushes to help when they glimpse a figure moving through the flames.

 

Batman has grown used to fires in Gotham. Like the children who play chicken with subway trains, and the wild dogs running loose in the Bowery, fires have become part of the background hum of his storied city. Batman saw them as the inevitable consequence of shoddy building methods, accidents among the unhoused, children playing with fire, and arson. But in Batman: Dark Patterns #10, Bruce Wayne burns. A fever rages inside him as his body struggles to recover from his recent injuries.

 

In Batman’s absence, Gordon investigates on his own. He seeks to learn who is responsible for the recent fires and may ignite more. But he may already be too late. In Dan Watters' story, Gotham perches amid a storm of whirling destruction. Fire purifies Humanity and its creations, enabling them to survive amid this storm. While the fire destroys, it also offers opportunities for renewal. Like the Phoenix, that burns when it dies to be reborn, someone seeks to cleanse Gotham by rebuilding it from the ashes of destruction.

 

Art

Hayden Sherman shows a disguised figure regarding symbols of former disciples in a fading family room. As a man and his wife pass a product of old Detroit, iron bars protect a raised planter bed fronting a house. Ignoring the coin-operated newspaper machine bolted into the sidewalk beside a streetlight, the woman raises a gloved hand, while a man studies his cellphone. Behind the windowpanes, a broken child's mask appears. Stapled to strips of fabric and adorned with a dangling belt, this symbol of a damaged youth evokes an Egyptian sarcophagus.

 

While Hayden Sherman enriches each page with a different panel layout, Triona Farrell wields a loaded palette of color on Batman: Dark Patterns #10. Bruce sleeps amid pink, purple, and green in the gray Batcave. Alfred's shadow casts a pink hue over Bruce's sweaty face. While he sleeps, Batman explores an otherworldly realm. Like his skin, pink soaks the landscape. Pink and white streak the sky. Yet Batman's black cape swirls like a wraith amid this landscape of death.

 

Frank Cvetkovic peers behind the child’s mask to reveal tiny, black, lowercase thoughts in orange paper scraps. While black uppercase dialogue in white balloons and boxes hesitate to grow bold for intonation, Alfred leans forward to clasp Bruce's hand and bows his head as if in prayer. Giant black lowercase letters reveal an illicit letter, as a man leans forward and stretches his neck to search the sky. Yet all words vanish as a familiar figure swings into action in Batman: Dark Patterns #10. Thanks to DC Comics for providing a review copy.

 

Final Thoughts

Batman sought to protect people amid a culture of corruption, decay, and disinterest. But while he solved individual cases, Batman failed to discern a pattern behind the fires in Gotham. Nor did he realize who was inspiring people to perpetrate acts of destruction. So, in Batman: Dark Patterns #10, while the Bat-Signal burns a symbol into the clouds, the architect of the chaos unleashes the final stage of his master plan.

 

Rating 9.6/10

 

To look inside see my preview of Batman: Dark Patterns #10.

 


Thursday, September 11, 2025

Batman: Dark Patterns #10 Preview

 


Gordan told him to move on. There were other cases to solve. But Batman prided himself on seeing past patterns that weren't there. He insisted that the body they found in the Rookery was part of something larger. Now, he wonders if he is as susceptible to suggestion as anyone else. 

Batman has fallen. Can he pick himself up again and protect the city he loves? 

Here's all the info from DC Connect:

 

Batman: Dark Patterns #10

Writer: Dan Watters

Artist: Hayden Sherman

Colorist: Triona Farrell

Letterer: Frank Cvetkovic

Editors: Arianna Turturro & Rob Levin

Cover Artist: Hayden Sherman & Stevan Subic

Publisher: DC Comics

Issue Length: 32 Pages

Price: $4.99/$5.99 Card Stock

Release Date: September 10, 2025

 

The final Dark Patterns case begins as Gotham burns!

 

CASE 04: Child of Fire

 

A mysterious arsonist has been secretly guiding the growth of Gotham and Batman from the shadows…now their dark design enters its final stage. Will this grand work be a success, or will the world’s greatest detective douse the blazing plot before it’s too late?

 

 

Now, let's take a look inside:

 


 

 

 



 

Thanks to DC Comics for sharing this preview with us.

Monday, June 10, 2024

Jackpot & Black Cat #3 Review

 


Writer: Celeste Bronfman

Artists: Emilio Laiso & Giada Belviso

Colorist: Brian Reber

Letterer: Ariana Maher

Cover Artists: Pablo Villalobos; Javier Garrón & Jesus Aburtov; Elizabeth Torque & Tríona Ferrell

Publisher: Marvel

Price: $3.99

Release Date: May 29, 2024

 

Mary Jane Watson disapproves of Felicia Hardy's criminal endeavors as Black Cat. Still, Mary Jane values her friendship with Felicia. Felicia has supported MJ’s burgeoning career as the superhero Jackpot. But Felicia’s new friend, Amelia Morrow, encourages Black Cat’s criminal activities. Will Amelia Morrow tear Mary Jane and Felicia Hardy apart? Let’s spin our fruit machine reels, extend our claws, leap into Jackpot & Black Cat #3, and find out!

 

Story

Last year, Amelia Morrow developed a popular phone app. When her employer refused her the credit and compensation she wanted, Amelia stole the source code and developed Obscura. Amelia adopted the supervillain name Bandwidth and used her new app to blackmail users into doing her bidding.

 

Amelia has little in common with Mary Jane or Peter Parker. Yet Amelia has spun Felicia into her web of criminal intrigue. Mary Jane wants Felicia to accept the truth. But Felicia adores Amelia and clings to the fading hope that Amelia cares for her. In Jackpot & Black Cat #3, Felicia excuses Amelia's behavior and insists she wouldn’t scare citizens into employing deadly force. Even as Felicia asserts that Mary Jane is wrong about Amelia, Felicia knows her friend is right. So why is Felicia denying the facts and the instincts that have allowed her to pursue her career without ending up in prison?

 

So far, Amelia has conned Felicia into fleecing Chance’s Flying Casino. She ordered app users to kill Mary Jane. Amelia threatened to harm Paul unless Mary Jane robbed White Rabbit’s money laundering operation. Mary Jane and Paul force Felicia and Amelia into an impromptu breakfast double date in Celeste Bronfman's story. Mary Jane wants to take down Amelia while protecting Felicia. But despite Felicia’s pleas, Amelia has no intention of playing nicely.

 

Felicia Hardy has made some strange friendships with Peter Parker and Mary Jane. While Peter cooled on Felicia, Mary Jane strives to reform her. Amelia accepts Felicia for who she is, and Black Cat enjoys playing Bandwidth’s games. But in Jackpot & Black Cat #3, the stakes get higher. People could die amid Bandwidth’s fun. Even if Mary Jane and Felicia survive, the consequences of Amelia’s actions could leave their lives in ruins.

 


 

Art

Felicia and Amelia look relaxed together in their apartment. But tensions rise as Mary Jane saunters in. Mary Jane sits across from Amelia while Paul faces Felicia. If looks could kill, they'd be lying on the floor. Felicia's hostility vanishes in the bathroom as MJ slips into teacher mode. Felicia sits on the bathtub and stares down at her knees before regarding MJ while supporting her head with her hand. But MJ doesn't soften before Felicia's Baby Don’t Hurt Me No More look. Instead, Mary Jane adopts a fighting stance and gestures while she argues her case.

 

Emilio Laiso and Giada Belviso turn on the heat when Paul and MJ leave the apartment. Paul hunches as he follows his lady love. But Paul stands beside MJ when enemies surround them in Jackpot & Black Cat #3. And Paul charges into danger at Mary Jane's side when supervillains appear.

 

Brian Reber paints Black Cat's apartment in gray, tan, pink, and purple. Mary Jane's purple top blends with Felicia's interior better than Amelia’s bright blue pajamas. Amid all the colorful passengers, Reber paints the subway train interior in gray and orange, flattens foregrounds, and adds a haze to lighten backgrounds. Little outshines Jackpot's red, gold, pink, and white suit, but a green-and-yellow multilimbed villain tries.

 

Ariana Maher spins black uppercase dialogue into white balloons and orange narrative boxes in Jackpot & Black Cat #3. Sound effects enliven the subway scenes as Jackpot's reels spin, MJ's powers manifest, and bodies slam into walls. Thanks to Marvel for providing a copy for review.

 


 

Final Thoughts

Amelia and Black Cat’s antics ruffle the Owl’s feathers and could incite another gang war. Events also force Felicia to confront her fears and doubts about Amelia. She's straddled the fence for too long. In Jackpot & Black Cat #3, Felicia Hardy must choose between friendship and love.

 

Rating 8/10

 

To preview interior art see my review at Comic Book Dispatch.

 

Monday, August 8, 2022

First Look At Crashing #1

 

Crashing #1 Cover A by Morgan Beem

 

Matthew Klein, former Vice-President of Marketing at Valiant Comics, has written his own comic series! Along with It's Alive's upcoming Nervous Rex #1, the first of Matthew's five-issue series comes out in September. Overseeing the title is former Valiant editor Heather Antos, and the colorist and letterer also number as Valiant veterans. While I'm not on a reviewer for IDW, I didn't think they'd mind if I reprinted this press release, which I found on Comiclist.com. Enjoy!

IDW is excited to announce the launch of the five-part comic book miniseries Crashing, written by Matthew Klein and illustrated by Morgan Beem (Swamp Thing, Adventure Time, Wonder Woman Black and Gold). Part Nurse Jackie and part The Boys, Crashing #1 will premiere in September and will be the third title released in IDW’s upcoming slate of original comics debuting throughout 2022 and beyond.

Less than ten years into her rehabilitation, recovering addict Rose Osler is one of a handful of doctors in the United States who specialize in treating “Powered individuals,” human beings imbued with a range of incredible—and according to some, fundamentally dangerous—superhuman attributes. Amid a sudden, rising wave of violence and chaos apparently provoked by these Powered citizens, Rose struggles to balance the ghosts of her past with the mounting pressure of her professional responsibilities, all while fighting to hold her strained marriage together and avoid the lure of getting high.

 

Crashing #1 Cover B by Jorge Corona

 

Crashing is a story about sacrifice, heroism, and self-care,” says Klein. “Over the pandemic, we saw such an increase in people needing help, falling into self-destructive behaviors, addiction, or alcoholism, it felt like there needed to be a story about a first responder who needs help but doesn’t know how to ask for it. Heroes need help, too. Whether they wear capes or stethoscopes, the responsibility of saving someone’s life can be overwhelming. We’ve all seen an extraordinary number of heroes step up on the frontlines of the pandemic. I wanted to explore a story about an everyday hero who wants to save everybody at the expense of herself and how dangerous that kind of self-neglect can be.”

“One of the things that really excites me about this project is that all our characters—and especially Rose, our main character—are flawed,” says Beem. “They all have a lot of strength but also a lot of genuine weaknesses. They make mistakes, sometimes huge ones, but they keep going. They learn to forgive others, and especially themselves. I love that because it’s something that I feel all of us can relate to.”

Crashing #1 Cover C by Liana Kangas

 

“I don’t think there’s a better time for stories like Crashing than this very moment,” says editor Heather Antos. “What Matthew, Morgan, colorist Triona Farrell, and letterer Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou have managed to capture in 22-page chapters is nothing short of an extraordinary display of humanity that will help a lot of people hopefully connect, grow, and heal. One of the greatest powers we all possess is the ability to reach out and connect with one another, but sometimes finding the strength to do so gets lost along the way. Joining Rose on her journey of self-growth while caught between powers quite beyond her has been a joy.”

Crashing #1 will be available with three variant covers for fans and retailers to enjoy, including Cover A by series illustrator Morgan Beem, Cover B by Jorge Corona, and Cover C by Liana Kangas.

For information on how to acquire copies of the Crashing comic books, please contact your local comic shop or visit www.comicshoplocator.com to find a store near you.

 


 

If you'd like to peek beneath the covers, head over to website The Mary Sue, which has an exclusive reveal of the first five pages of Crashing #1. 

Phew! My shift's finally over! See you later, folks: now it's time for me to crash!

Dragon Dave