<![CDATA[io9: Flight]]> http://cache.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/io9.com.png <![CDATA[io9: Flight]]> http://io9.com/tag/flight http://io9.com/tag/flight <![CDATA[Transhumans Go On Quests for Doom In This Week's Comics]]> darkseidis.jpgIf there was ever a contest for "most perfect new comic for io9 readers," Jonathan Hickman and JM Ringuet may have come up with a winner with their new series Transhuman. Add in a new anthology of SF and fantasy for kids, some collections of classic and... well, less than classic material and a new comic based on Peter David's Star Trek: New Frontier series of novels, and this Wednesday may be the day that you have to give all your money to the comic man. Find out more after the jump.

Transhuman1.jpgImage Comics' Transhuman is a new series by Pax Romana and The Nightly News creator Jonathan Hickman and artist JM Ringuet that oozes potential joy for the faithful. A "mockumentary" about genetic engineering, superheroes and the effort to mass-market a combination of the two, the series looks set to confirm Hickman's reputation for both visually-arresting work and an ability to play well within the SF genre. If you want to know more, you can find a 5-page preview of the first issue here (PDF).

flightexplorer.jpgAnother premiere that's worth paying attention to this week is the first volume of Flight Explorer, the kid-centric spin-off from popular anthology Flight - It may not all be science fiction, but with a new story about the top-heavy monster Jellaby, and another strip called Zita the Spacegirl, this should be considered for the childlike near you. Even if that happens to be you yourself.

(You can read some more about the book, including seeing preview pages, here).

The third book appearing for the first time on Wednesday is Star Trek: New Frontier #1, a new mini-series tying into the New Frontier novel series. Both the novels and the comics are being written by Peter David, allowing for both coherent continuity and full-on nerditry, both of which are heartily approved around these here parts.

ironmandoom.jpgElsewhere, it's all about the collections. Marvel is putting out hardcover collections of their popular time-travelling 1980s Iron Man versus Doctor Doom stories in Iron Man: Doomquest and their not-so-popular "The Devil annuls Spider-Man's marriage" story in Spider-Man: One More Day.

Meanwhile, DC pulls in some of the best of their 1980s output with the complete run of Dan Jurgens' greedy jerk anti-hero in Showcase Presents: Booster Gold, and then reprints some comic history with the fourth and final volume of Jack Kirby's Fourth World Omnibus, which not only reprints Kirby's final stories starring Orion, Mr. Miracle and Darkseid, but also does its best to return Kirby's final work with the characters, graphic novel The Hunger Dogs, to the way it was before editorial forces demanded rewrites and changed the ending to make the production of more Super Powers figures that little bit easier. Previously unseen, reworked and re-inked art, and restored script and structure on the strip provides something like a Director's Cut version of one of the lost masterpieces of superhero comics by one of the greatest comic artists who ever lived... which has to be worth a look, right?

As ever, a full list of the week's releases can be found here, and the place to find your personal comics emporium can be found here. Now go and buy the Fourth World book and make a dead comic mastermind a happy ghost already.

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http://io9.com/371673/transhumans-go-on-quests-for-doom-in-this-weeks-comics http://io9.com/371673/transhumans-go-on-quests-for-doom-in-this-weeks-comics Tue, 25 Mar 2008 09:00:07 PDT Graeme McMillan http://io9.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=371673&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[Paul Giamatti Wears Fully-Functional Rocket Belt in "Pretty Bird"]]> One of the films at Sundance that flew under the radar this year was jetpack fantasy Pretty Bird, based on the book The Rocketbelt Caper. The film is billed as a comedy, but the real story is both weird and disturbing — more of a comedy of errors. It explores the story of an engineer who built a rocket belt that can fly you around like the Rocketeer, and who was subsequently kidnapped and tortured by his angel investor. But the really crazy part? The belt prop actually worked.

Paul Giamatti starred in and produced the film, but was scared shitless by the rocket belt, which can send your ass up in the air for 30 seconds before it cuts out. "It's a real thing. But they only fly for 30 seconds, and they're incredibly dangerous, but they exist." While the belt in the film runs on compressed air and crossed finger, the belt in The Rocketbelt Caper hasn't been seen since the benefactor kidnapped the inventor and held him captive in a box after he refused to cough up the ten million bucks a judge awarded him in a court case. Lesson learned? Angel investors are stranger than science fiction.

Real-life rocket man stuns Giamatti [USA Today]

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http://io9.com/349481/paul-giamatti-wears-fully+functional-rocket-belt-in-pretty-bird http://io9.com/349481/paul-giamatti-wears-fully+functional-rocket-belt-in-pretty-bird Mon, 28 Jan 2008 13:30:22 PST Kevin Kelly http://io9.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=349481&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[The Age of Zeppelins Has Arrived]]> Aeros, a company that specializes in lighter-than-air blimps, is set to market the first modern-day zeppelin to the consumer market. They're selling the combination blimp/jet, the "Aeroscraft," as a luxury airliner that can take off and land vertically — thus eliminating the need for airports. Plus, they can hover! And they can go a speedy 222 kilometers per hour. Aeroscraft ML866 [Dezeen]

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http://io9.com/332729/the-age-of-zeppelins-has-arrived http://io9.com/332729/the-age-of-zeppelins-has-arrived Wed, 02 Jan 2008 08:00:18 PST Annalee Newitz http://io9.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=332729&view=rss&microfeed=true