<![CDATA[io9: the great unknown]]> http://tags.lifehacker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/io9.com.png <![CDATA[io9: the great unknown]]> http://io9.com/tag/thegreatunknown http://io9.com/tag/thegreatunknown <![CDATA[Get Your Summer Movie Thrills Early]]> With the major publishers taking it easy after recent big events, it falls to independent books to come up with movie tie-ins and new ideas this week... Thankfully, they're more than up to the task.

Firstly, let's get Marvel and DC out of the way; the former is pushing Secret Invasion pretty hard this week, with four collections from the storyline coming out (Frontline, Incredible Hercules, Thunderbolts and the definite pick of the bunch, Captain Britain and MI-13, written by Doctor Who's Paul Cornell and highly recommended). DC, meanwhile, offers the final Diana Prince retro Wonder Woman collection, as well as the somewhat pricey ($295) Rorschach Prop Gun and Mask Set, in case you want to pretend to be a crazy guy who eats too many beans.

Of course, if Watchmen isn't your 2009 movie of choice, IDW would like to have a word... Especially this week, when they're releasing the first collection of their alternate world Transformers epic All Hail Megatron and the first issue of the self-explanatory GI Joe: Origins series.

If you'd rather get a jump on the movies of tomorrow, however, perhaps you should take a look at The Zombies That Ate The World, the undead satire from French publisher Les Humanoids, or perhaps Andrea Atoms, the debut of a new Flash Gordon-esque female space hero. You can even catch up on indie superhero soap Dynamo 5 with a specially-priced "zero issue" to fill in all the gaps in your knowledge.

Pick of the week, though, is The Great Unknown, a series we've previously covered, and one that simply doesn't disappoint: What if someone really was taking the best ideas out of your head? This new series will answer that question... and teach you new reasons to be paranoid in the process.

Remember, your local comic store can always be found, of course, via the Comic Shop Locator Service, but this week more than many offers the chance to meet the new. Check the complete list of this week's new comic releases if you don't believe me.

]]>
http://io9.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5154808&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[The Great Unknown Is Filled With Your Ideas]]> What if you've had the greatest idea in the world... and then someone steals it from you? And what if that happens again and again and again? You've probably just stepped into The Great Unknown.

Unknown, a new comic series premiering in February from Image Comics, is the work of writer and artist Duncan Rouleau, who calls the story,

an autobiography with a “few” embellishments. The story comes from my strongly held belief that I came up with the sardonic method of ending sentences with the word “NOT!” waaay before others started saying it. I’ve had similar situations arise over the years (like my invention of jazz and the Hot Pocket) yet I still remain unsung for those diamonds as well. This got me thinking – what if a guy (like me) did come up with grand notions and someone was able to steal them before he could establish his claim? He wouldn’t be any the wiser and what he would chalk up to unfortunate timing in the zeitgeist would, in fact, be the wholesale robbery of his destiny.


Talking about the book at Comic Book Resources, Rouleau has the perfect answer to explain what made him create the series now:

I wanted to do it before someone else did.

The Great Unknown launches in February next year.

http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=19293">Men On Action: Duncan Rouleau Dives Into "Great Unknown" [Comic Book Resources]

]]>
http://io9.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5118777&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[Metal Man Discovers The Great Unknown]]> Not content with mixing science, time-travel, superheroics and beautifully confused visuals in DC Comics' recent miniseries Metal Men, comic creator Duncan Rouleau is setting his sights a little bit higher with his next project, a "lo-fi sci-fi mystery" story about a whole new form of identity theft called The Great Unknown, asking, what if someone could pluck an idea out of your head without you even knowing it?

The new series — just one of many announced by Image Comics and Rouleau's studio, Man of Action (creators of Cartoon Network's hugely successful Ben 10) during last weekend's Baltimore Comic-Con — centers around a "directionless genius" who discovers that someone is literally stealing thoughts from out of his head... and decides to track down the culprit. Rouleau explained what the story is really about:

The big theme of the story is 'What defines you? The ideas in your head or the actions you take?' It’s also about piracy — intellectual piracy. And privacy. With the technological age we’re in, our humanity is being redefined and made public — ripped apart, cut up and posted on the internet. How long will it be before people go right into our minds to get that information directly — without our consent? I think that technology is only about five years away.

While we're not convinced by his Fringe-esque take on where mindreading science is right now, we're definitely looking forward to this existential whodunnit-and-what-does-who-really-mean-anyway when it premieres in comic stores next year.

Man of Action: Four New Comic Projects With Image [Comic Book Resources]

]]>
http://io9.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5056550&view=rss&microfeed=true