A Million Ways to Die Hard

Category: Books,Arts & Photography,Photography & Video

A Million Ways to Die Hard Details

Review "...Tieri really “gets” John McClane. He knows exactly why we love the guy", Wonder Alliance"perfect for horror fans..." , Bloody Disgusting Read more About the Author Frank Tieri has written comics for Marvel, DC, and Image, and is well known for his gritty portrayal of criminals and lowlifes. Some of his titles include New Excalibur, Iron Man, Wolverine, Weapon X, Underworld, a post-"Avengers Disassembled" Hercules mini-series, Wolverine/Darkness, X-Men: Dracula vs. Apocalypse, Civil War: War Crimes, and World War Hulk: Gamma Corps.  Mark Texeira was born and raised in New York City. He was granted a Presidential Scholarship at the School of Visual Arts, where he attended for two years before dropping out to pursue a commercial art career. During this period, Texeira studied at the Art Students League. His oil paintings soon won mentions at the Society of Illustrators. Comics titles Texeira has contributed to include The Punisher War Journal, Ghost Rider, Wolverine, Spider-Man: Legacy of Evil, Black Panther, Moon Knight, Vampirella, Cyclops, Hercules, and Jonah Hex. Adrian Crossa has worked for comic-books and magazines in Spain, the UK, France, and America. He has worked on a number of genres from superhero action tales to revolutionary steampunk stories and kids magazines. In his free time, he likes to draw cute monsters and creepy characters. You can follow his work at adicrossa.artstation.com.   Read more

Reviews

A lot of the reviews claim that they didn't like it because it was too graphic in its depiction of violence. That isn't the issue here. The problem is that they have a decent idea, and do nothing with it. For a killer to be basing their kills on movies, they're all rather bland. They set it up as the 30th anniversary of what happened at Nakatomi Plaza, with Holly, Takagi's son, and the sister of Hans Gruber (and Simon, but they don't mention him, essentially ignoring all the other movies). But instead of having Nakatomi be an interesting set piece and fleshing out those characters...they're just fodder, and it moves away from the building almost immediately. Just a lot of wasted potential.Also **spoiler alert**...the killer is someone from Mclain's past as a rookie detective, named Moviefone. Firstly, the name is...just horribly stupid. Secondly, Moviefone WASN'T EVEN A THING IN THE 70s/80s when Mclain would have been a rookie detective.Just awful.

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