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News Roundup 2025-08-03

Personal / Website News

Vanya Issue Seven Review

New comic book review up at my website!

Alas, I could not keep the momentum going so I missed a week, but this is still pretty prolific for me getting these reviews written and published.

Cover shows Vanya holding a long spear. There is an erupting volcano and Dino bones at her feet. It is night time with a full moon and silhouettes of pterodactyls flying about.
Vanya #7 cover done by Sean Joyce. Image from the Bad Bug website.

My review of issue seven of the neo-jungle girl series Vanya is now online and can be read here. Technically, I am now all caught up on this series! I do have a PDF of issue eight, but not the physical copy and associated Kickstarter swag, and since I like to cover that sort of stuff, a review of issue eight will have to wait until it arrives (which should be in the near future).

Upcoming: Interview with Jeff Mariotte

Want to give a heads up to my readers to come back this Wednesday. I conducted an interview with Jeffrey Mariotte and it is going online on the 6th! You don’t want to miss it!

Uncovering Stranger Things – Italian Edition

Uncovering Stranger Things, edited by Kevin Wetmore and published by McFarland in 2018 (see their product page here) now has an Italian edition!

Publisher Cue Press has published a translated version of this collection (it looks like back in 2023?) and here is the cover art:

Italian version of the book. It is called "I segreti di Stranger Things. The cover shows a young girl in red hair, wearing headphones, looking up. Possibly levitating.
Italian edition of Uncovering Stranger Things published by Cue Press.

I segreti di Stranger Things can be purchased at Cue Press at this link here. If you want to read my essay about Stranger Things and synthwave music in Italian, it is called “Notti perse e giorni pericolosi: Il disfacimento delle relazioni fra Stranger Things e synthwave” in this publication. Check it out for sure!

Aside from a brief snippet of my Castle of Blood/Danza Macabra masters thesis being translated into French (see below!), this is the first time something I’ve written has appeared in another language (in its entirety). Career milestone unlocked!

Panthans Journal #339

The newest issue of the The National Panthans Journal has been published. This issue contains a re-print of my review of issue two of the adult/neo-jungle girl series Vanya: The Lost Warrior. Of course my write up can also be read at my website here.

Cover is by Mark Wheatley. It shows a 4 armed aliens holding two swords, in a dungeon, fighting John Carter and Dejah Thoris.
National Capital Panthans #339.

Paraphrased from the zine: The National Capital Panthans Journal is a monthly publication issued as a .PDF file on the Saturday before the first Sunday of each month. Contribution of articles, artwork, photos, and letters are welcome. Send submissions to the editor: Laurence G. Dunn at laurencegdunn AT gmail.com in a Word document for consideration.

Sincere appreciation to Laurence for the opportunity to have my work published in the journal.

ECOF 2025

In September of 2025 there will be an Edgar Rice Burroughs Chain of Friendship (ECOF) event down in Willcox, AZ. This event is to celebrate the 150th birthday of Burroughs while also honoring him with a plaque in the town due to his stationing there with the 7th U.S. Cavalry in the 1890s. (Note: another ERB convention was held in Willcox back in 2019 and an event recap of that can be read at ERBZine #7059).

Here is the flyer for the 2025 event:

The flyer shows desert mountains with three insert images: one of a young Edgar Rice Burroughs in 1896, one of the author Jeffrey J. Mariotte (who is the guest of honour), and one of the Willcox train depot in the 1880s. The flyer reads was follows: Edgar Rice Burroughs ERB Inc.'s Commemoration of ERB's 150th Birthday! 7th Cavalry Historical Monument Celebration Willcox, AZ, September 25-28, 2025. Formal Dedication on September 27th, 2025. Sponsored by the Suplher Springs Valley Historical Society and the Arizona Apache Deveils Chapter of the Burroughs Bibliophiles.
Flyer for the Edgar Rice Burroughs Circle of Friendship (ECOF) Gathering in Willcox, AZ 2025.

Here is the press release:

RENOWNED AUTHOR EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS’ CAVALRY SERVICE TO BE MEMORIALIZED IN WILLCOX, AZ

“Tarzan” Creator and Pop Culture’s Influential “Grandfather of Science Fiction and Fantasy” Commemorated for His 150th Birthday.

WILLCOX, AZ – The renowned “Master of Adventure” Edgar Rice Burroughs started his adult life as a cavalryman at Arizona’s Fort Grant in May of 1896. This September, as part of the late author’s 150th birthday celebration, his cavalry service will be memorialized with a monument at the restored Southern Pacific train depot in Willcox, where he arrived on his way to Fort Grant (35 miles north).

The influential creator of Tarzan of the Apes, John Carter of Mars, and The Land That Time Forgot series of stories wrote in his “Autobiography” that he specifically requested “to be sent to the worst post in the United States” and was then promptly assigned to Fort Grant in Arizona Territory, where his troop would spend some time hunting after the Apache Kid and other outlaws.

Many believe that Burroughs’ initial stay in Arizona influenced his first Martian story, Under the Moons of Mars, which begins with the first chapter titled “On the Arizona Hills.” The John Carter Martian stories would go on to influence generations of science fiction and fantasy books and movies, and would inspire many young people to become scientists, engineers, and astronauts. He would later author the books The War Chiefand Apache Devil, both set in Arizona during the Apache Wars of the 1860s – 1880s.

This Willcox Edgar Rice Burroughs Chain of Friendship (ECOF) Gathering will take place from September 25 to 28, 2025, with the 7th Cavalry Historical Monument formal dedication ceremony on Saturday, September 27th from 10:00 AM – 12:00 Noon near the historic Southern Pacific Railroad Depot.

The monument dedication at the Willcox train depot will include guest speakers and participation of local Buffalo Soldier reenactors. All other convention events will take place at the Elks Lodge #2131 in Willcox, and will include discussion panels, a “huckster” (vendor) room, Guest of Honor and speaker Jeffrey J. Mariotte (author of Tarzan and the Forest of Stone), Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. speakers, a Saturday night banquet/ dinner, a Tarzan movie screening, and other surprises.

These events are sponsored by the Sulphur Springs Valley Historical Society and the Apache Devils chapter of The Burroughs Bibliophiles. The celebration is open to the public for free (except for the dinner and movie), but full attendees can register for a fee that covers a goodie bag, a huckster table, and the Saturday dinner.

This is a must-attend event for fans of Edgar Rice Burroughs and pop-culture historians alike. If you’d like to visit the place where it all began, don’t miss this very special celebration. (Note that some convention activities will require full event registration – the registration form is provided separately.)

The Holiday Inn Express & Suites Willcox is offering a special daily room rate of $119 plus taxes for the nights of 25 to 27 September for attendees. The group name is “ECOF.” You can make reservations at this rate by calling the hotel at (520) 384-3333; rooms are limited. The address is 1251 N. Virginia Ave, Willcox, AZ 85643.

If you would like more information about the 2025 ECOF event, please call Frank Puncer at 520.281.1818, or email him at fwpuncer at gmail dot com.

Here is the registration from:

Michele and I will be in attendance for this convention, so I’ve added it to the appearances section of my website as well. I’ll be doing a presentation on Tarzan as a Maciste-like peplum character in Tarzan and the Lost Empire. Hope to see yall there!

Publishing Recap

Below is a recap of my external publishing endeavors so far in 2025.

Cover art of the Panthans Journal #332. It depicts a woman and a man with a hawk head, hunkered in a hole, firing laser pistols. The art is by Mark Wheatley.
Panthans Journal #332

Comic Book Review: “The Moon Maid: Catacombs of the Moon #2″ reprinted in the National Capital Panthans Journal #332.

A continuation of the cover of #332. This cover shows the woman and the hawk man, defensively shooting laser pilots out of a hole in the ground, wile savage barbarians with bows and axes descend upon them. The art is by Mark Wheatley.
Panthans Journal #333

Comic Book Review: “The Moon Maid: Catacombs of the Moon #3″ reprinted in the National Capital Panthans Journal #333.

Cover art of Panthans Journal #335, done by Mark Wheatley. It shows Tarzan leaping from a tree branch. All the colors are very dark blue, so it might be night time in the jungle.
Panthans Journal #335

“Tarzan Cocktail: Deconstructed – Reconstructed” reprinted in the National Capital Panthans Journal #335.

Original can be read here.

Panthans Journal #338. Cover is by Mark Wheatley. It shows Dejah Thoris riding atop a mountain against a red martian landscape with a domed building in the background.
Panthans Journal #338

“She’s Got the Killer Instinct: Vanya Issue 01” reprinted in the National Capital Panthans Journal #338.

Original can be read here.

Cover is by Mark Wheatley. It shows a 4 armed aliens holding two swords, in a dungeon, fighting John Carter and Dejah Thoris.
National Capital Panthans #339.

“Hunter – Lover – Killer: Vanya 02” reprinted in the National Capital Panthans Journal #339.

Original can be read here.

Cover art for "Merry Creepsmas - The Red Book". It is red with a large X-mas tree that appears to have small, globby bodies as ornaments. The cover reads: Wicked Shadow Press Merry Creepsmas: The Red Book Christmas-Themed Horror Stories Edited by Parth Sarathi Chakraborty
Merry Creepsmas – The Red Book

“There’s Always Room” in Merry Creepsmas: The Red Book. Edited by Parth Sarathi Chakraborty. Wicked Shadow Press, 2025.

Cover art for the Burroughs Bulletin #109 by Dan Parsons. The top says "The Burroughs Bulletin New Series #109 Fall-Winter 2024". The art shows a T-rex chomping on a dude in a striped shirt. Below him are explorers with rifles. Behind him his a prehistoric sky, jungle, and a waterfall.
Burroughs Bulletin #109

“Tagliolini al Tarzan: Interview with Actress Bella Cortez on Taur the Mighty” in The Burroughs Bulletin #109. Edited by Henry Franke III. February, 2025.

Calls for Papers/Proposals

Here are some new pop culture CFPs that have crossed my path or I am sharing on behalf of my colleagues. Links to these will also be in the CFP page on the navigation bar.

Twainian Regeneration: Adaptations of the Works, Life, and Legacy of Mark Twain

This session is sponsored by the Mark Twain Circle of America.

American author Samuel Langhorne Clemens (1935-1910) achieved lasting fame as Mark Twain, an identity that served as both his pen name and the persona he cultivated for the public. Twain’s writings and his distinctive character have dispersed across time and space, and the resulting Twainian tradition incorporates these elements in many ways. 

Importantly, his works and iconography have long been the focus of adaptation. This process begins with the illustrations commissioned for the initial publication of his texts, Twain’s own attempts to rework and expand his stories, and contemporary caricatures of his person, and it continues with retellings of Twain’s stories, linked texts (such as prequels, midquels, and sequels) connected to his work, recastings and restagings of his tales, and new adventures for Twain himself. These adaptations, appropriations, and transformations of Twain appear in diverse forms and formats including anime series, artworks, cartoons, comics, films, games, historical fiction texts, home video releases, graphic novels, illustrations, memorials, musical theater productions, mysteries, performances, plays, radio broadcasts, science fiction works, sculptures, song lyrics, stamps, television programming, theme park attractions, and tourist sites. 

Each adaptation regenerates aspects of Twain for new audiences revealing fresh insights into the reception of his works, life, and legacy. They also highlight both the timelessness of Twain as well as his timeliness for the present of each new text that his writings and his person have inspired. A resource guide for the session can be accessed at https://tinyurl.com/TwainianRegenerationRG.

We seek proposals that engage with these texts in the belief that each adaptation regenerates aspects of Twain for new audiences revealing fresh insights into the reception of his works, life, and legacy and highlighting both the timelessness of Twain as well as his timeliness for the present of each new text that his writings and his person have inspired.

Link to submit abstract: https://cfplist.com/nemla/Home/S/21918

2025 Harry Potter Academic Conference (HPAC)

Friday and Saturday, October 17–18, 2025 (Eastern Time)
Virtual conference (digiHPAC)


Deadline for proposals (academics & community members): September 1, 2025

ABOUT: The Harry Potter Academic Conference returns for its 14th annual gathering, which will be a fully online format known as digiHPAC. We are a non-profit, interdisciplinary conference that provides a forum for scholarly inquiry surrounding the Harry Potter literature and related cultural phenomenon. Open to scholars of any experience level, from established academic researchers to community members and students, this is a space curated to be inclusive and welcoming to all. The conference is held in person at Chestnut Hill College in Philadelphia in even-numbered years and online in odd-numbered years.

PRESENTATIONS: digiHPAC presentations are presented over Zoom, live or pre-recorded, in 30-minute windows (20 minutes for presentations and 10 minutes for Q&A). Panel discussions, teaching sessions, or other alternative proposals may request a longer presentation time. Topics can include, but are not limited to, close textual criticism, diversity and inclusion, psychology, philosophy, political science, and film, music, religious, and fandom studies. Past presentations have been accepted on the Harry Potter book and film series, the Fantastic Beasts film series, and the Potterverse in dialogue with other works. More information about HPAC can be found at harrypotterconference.com.

PROPOSALS: Please submit abstracts of 150–250 words describing your proposal at harrypotterconference.com/submit. Multiple abstracts may be submitted but will be evaluated individually. Submission deadline is September 1, 2025, and acceptance notifications will be sent by mid-September 2025.
Any questions? Please email Patrick McCauley (mccauleyp@chc.edu) and copy harrypotterconference@gmail.com.

Please see our website for HPAC’s statement on our commitment to maintaining an LGBTQIA2S+ inclusive space in the fandom.

Cinema’s First Epics in Focus: Silent Epic Film from Literary Adaptation to Contemporary Epic Narratives

Though epic cinema is most commonly associated with the mid-century triumphs of Hollywood, its origins extend far deeper into the history of the medium, reaching back to the earliest days of film, long before the advent of sound. The first documented uses of the term “epic” in relation to film stem from the nascent Italian industry, where monumental productions like L’Odissea (1911, dir. Francesco Bertolini, Giuseppe de Liguoro, Adolfo Padovan) not only astonished audiences with unprecedented scale but employed vast promotional efforts to assert a distinctly national— and as Maria Wyke and Pantelis Michelakis have noted, overtly nationalistic—cinematic identity. This movement towards epic during the silent era, often drawing inspiration from classical epic poetry and Christian narrative, has been understood to be important in the broader context of the nationalist fervor that swept through Europe in the years leading up to and following the First World War, yet has been curiously overlooked by film scholars, due in large part to the fragility of early film materials and inconsistent archival practices which have led to the loss of many key works. This neglect is particularly regrettable when we consider that the silent epic was central to the major artistic and ideological shifts that defined the early cinematic project, deeply enmeshed in the ontological debates over cinema’s status as a visual and rhythmic art—debates that were especially vibrant in early French and German cinema—and later in the drive toward naturalism that would come to dominate Hollywood, championed by figures such as André Bazin and Siegfried Kracauer. The continued presence of the epic, from the silent era through to the sound era, underscores its fundamental role in cinema’s dialogue with other arts as well as its longitudinal development, and in recognizing the centrality of early epics to the history of film, this edited volume seeks to reassert their study, not only as historical artifacts but as key contributions to an ever-evolving art of cinema.

Building on the conversations initiated during the Cinema’s First Epics in Focus conference (May 2025), we aim to build a comprehensive edited volume which gathers a selection of expanded papers from the event, complemented by new scholarly contributions that critically engage with the silent epic and its reverberations across film history, media theory, and related fields. We hope to move beyond the framework of film philology completely, opening up the field to more interdisciplinary approaches that consider aesthetics, temporality, material culture, and the shifting meanings of “epic” across media in interconnected relation. We believe this collection would fill a significant gap in the scholarship and could serve as a foundational reference for future work on both epic and early cinema as, to our knowledge, no existing volume addresses the silent epic across such a broad yet coherent set of methodologies and global perspectives. We are particularly interested in contributions that interrogate the intersections between epic form and silent cinema through innovative and open methodologies—whether from film and media studies, classical reception, visual culture, performance studies, or archival research. By foregrounding these diverse perspectives, the volume seeks to move beyond narrowly textual or genealogical approaches, and instead open up a wider discursive field through which the silent epic can be understood as a transmedial and transhistorical phenomenon.

While the volume retains the conference’s original focus on adaptation, national identity, cinematic scale, and the episteme of early film, the discussions brought forth by participants have revealed key thematic axes that we now wish to foreground:

Genre:

The volume seeks to examine the epic as a contested and evolving genre. Contributions may explore the tensions between prescriptive and descriptive models of genre, the shifting boundaries between epic and tragedy across media, and the historical and theoretical slippages in the definition of “epic” across literature, cinema, and other arts. We welcome work that revisits classical, romantic, and modern theories of genre in light of early cinematic practice.

Time and Temporality:

Essays may address the intersections between epic time and cinematic time, considering how film reconfigures notions of epic duration, rhythm, and repetition. We are particularly interested in studies that employ film theoretical methodologies—such as montage theory—to reframe literary epic, and vice versa.

Material Culture and Reception:

We encourage research on the material and institutional contexts of silent epic film: distribution networks, live musical accompaniment, promotional ephemera, newspaper reception, and archival challenges. To what extent do these material elements participate in constructing the epic as a form? How might production and reception conditions shape our understanding of the epic mode in film? How important was this surrounding context for the epic’s formation as a cinematic mode in the silent era?

The Silent Era:

What makes the silent period uniquely generative for the epic form? We invite proposals that attend to the technological, stylistic, social, economic and industrial specificities of the silent era, and their formative impact on the emergence of cinematic epic traditions.

Adaptation and Intermediality:

How are epic modes rearticulated through the visual and narrative strategies of early film? What happens to epic’s narrative authority, scale, or temporality when it migrates across media? How does medial transposition function for the epic—what is gained, lost, or transformed in the process of adaptation? We welcome contributions that consider the semiotic logics at work in each medium and how these shape the reception and reinterpretation of epic structures, characters, and themes.

Identity:

We welcome analyses of the epic as a cultural and political form, examining how epic narratives serve as mediators of national, social, or class identity. How does the epic negotiate questions of inclusion, exclusion, and transformation within diverse sociopolitical contexts, both in its production and reception?

In addition to these central themes, the volume remains open to broader considerations of silent epic film, including (but not limited to):

  • Representations of mythological, biblical, or historical themes;
  • National cinemas and epic aesthetics;
  • Theatricality, realism, and expressionism in silent epic form;
  • Gender, class, ethnicity, colonialism, and spectatorship in early epic cinema;
  • Archival recovery and the status of lost or restored epic films;
  • Scale and mise-en-scène in silent epic film;
  • Modern cinema and silent epic film;
  • Comparative studies of silent epic film, particularly on marginal or non-angloeuropean film.

We are currently preparing a formal book proposal to be submitted to a major academic press, with Blackwell and Routledge among our intended publishers.

Submission Details:

Please submit your complete text (maximum of 8000 words), along with a short biographical note (max. 150 words), to the editors by September 15th, 2025. Contributions may be written in English, French, Spanish, or Portuguese, but accepted papers must be submitted with an English version for publication.

Contact:

Vítor Alves Silva (University of Porto) – up202204445@up.pt

João Paulo Guimarães (University of Porto, ILCML) – guimaraesjpc@gmail.com

Larson Powell (University of Missouri Kansas City, Curators’ Distinguished Professor of Film – Emeritus) – powelllar@umkc.edu

We look forward to receiving your proposals and continuing the vibrant conversations sparked by the conference.

Miscellaneous Tidbits

Some fun things I shared online from these past few weeks. Highlighting things from my personal collection of pop culture artifacts. Or artifacts I’m digging out of the archive. Just, general cool or unique things to show off.

Autographs from the Archive

Here are some autographed treasures I’ve shared on social media recently.

Lord of the Rings (Bakshi Version)

Decades before Peter Jackson amazed audiences with his Lord of the Rings trilogy, Ralph Bakshi put out the rotoscoped masterpiece of The Lord of the Rings. I’m a huge Bakshi fan (Cool World FTW!), and I remember watching this movie when I was young and, frankly, being kind of terrified by it.

Snap case DVD of Lord of the Rings. Cover show the hobbits crossings a narrow bridge. with orcs and spears escorting them. In black ink it is signed "Pete S. Beagle" and "To Nick, Steven E. Gordon".
Personal copy of the Ralph Bakshi Lord of the Rings film, signed by Peter S. Beagle and Steven E. Gordon.

Anywho, I met Bakshi once, at SDCC back in 2006, where he signed some of my other movies, but at the time I didn’t have a copy of LOTR. However, in the years since I’ve procured a copy and had it signed by two folks.

The first is Peter S. Beagle, author of The Last Unicorn, but who also did the screenplay of the Bakshi LOTR. He was a guest at a Glendale Vintage Paperback Show where he signed my DVD.

Next animator/cartoonist Steven E. Gordon sign my DVD. Gordon worked with Bakshi on a couple of projects (like Fire and Ice). He is a staple of the different comic book conventions in the LA area. He did a pinup girl commission for me one time – I’ll have to share that!

New Sword and Sandal Acquisitions

The ever growing peplum research library grows with these recent sword and sandal films acquisitions.

Hercules and Hercules Unchained Blu-rays

Hercules (1958) and Hercules Unchained (1959) have two brand new HD/Blu-ray releases from Artus films! Check these bad boys out:

Two Blu-rays. They are not in the standard blue case but instead cardboard slip cases. Hercules shows Hercules on the cover, whipping a set of chains about, and Hercules Unchained shows Hercules in front of a pillar with a woman falling into his embrace.
Hercules and Hercules Unchained Blu-rays from Artus Films.

If Artus Films sounds familiar, it is because they are the ones that put out that ornate Castle of Blood (1964) release (see my post about that here) that cites my Castle of Blood masters thesis in French!

As far as I can tell (looking at dvdcompare.net) there has not been an English/state-side Blu-ray release of either Hercules or Hercules Unchained yet (which is rather strange since they are iconic, important films in the peplum genre). So if you want a Blu-ray of these films, Artus seems to be the only release currently (but there is no English audio or subtitled on either). PeplumTV.com has a few musings about the possible print source of these releases, which can be read here.

News from Friends

Cool kids I know have been busy lately! Here are some signal boosts I’d like to give out.

New Fan2Fan Episodes

Bernie and Pete have some new episodes of their Fan2Fan podcast online.

Here is their part two of discussing the documentary American Scary:

Horror Hosts and American Scary Part 2 Fan2Fan Podcast

Here is their part one discussion of filming locations:

Movie Locations Part 1 Fan2Fan Podcast

And here is their part two discussion of filming locations:

Movie Locations Part 2 Fan2Fan Podcast

Older episodes of Fan2Fan can be found at its Libsyn page or via your podcast app of preference.

Cyanide Constellations and Other Stories

Poet and dark fiction author extraordinaire Sara Tantlinger has a new collection coming out this autumn! It is titled Cyanide Constellations and Other Stories and featured wicked bad ass artwork by Devin Forst.

Cover art by Devin Forst. Depicts what looks like three witches with multiple horns. Above them looks like webbing and a tiny full moon. The middle witch is holding a long spear with string coiled around it.
Cyanide Constellations and Other Stories (Photo provided by Sara Tantlinger)

Sara’s new book can be pre-ordered from Dark Matter Ink – here is the book’s product page. The release date is October 21st, just in time for Halloween!

Categories
Comics

The Prehistoric Purge: Vanya 07

The Story So Far

Vanya, Serah, Niya, and Guy are four soldiers from the future trapped in the prehistoric past, surviving against dinosaurs, savage humanoids, and the Torridians, a race of warrior aliens hellbent on conquering humanity. Their adventures have taken them across the jungle primeval, and they are eventually captured by the Bone Tribe, a cult of barbarians that Niya was a part of, who engage in sexual rituals in order to hatch a Torridian Dragon. The Bone Tribe outfit Serah and Guy with cranial implants that link them to a network shared by the cybernetic dinosaurs unleashed by the Torridians. The four eventually make their escape from the Bone Tribe and part different ways: Vanya and Serah trek to one of humanity’s outposts while Niya and Guy attempt to hide the Torridian Dragon Eggs they absconded with. 

Cover shows Vanya holding a long spear. There is an erupting volcano and Dino bones at her feet. It is night time with a full moon and silhouettes of pterodactyls flying about.
Vanya #7 cover done by Sean Joyce. Image from the Bad Bug website.

Issue 07 Plot

Looks can the deceiving as it turns out the war being raged by the Torridians is not going well. There is a plague that has decimated the Torridian numbers, pushing General Tora into making a hasty decision to press on the attack, bolstered by their cybernetically outfitted dinosaurs.

At Terran Base Alpha, Serah, still receiving visions from her implant due to it being connected to a network of dinosaurs and savages, recovers in an infirmary. The alien Relo Quarr, a combat strategist, informs Vanya about the Torridian plague and the Torridian Dragons.

The Witch is leading three saber-toothed tigers. She has a skirt but is topless. Her eyes are covered in dark makeup that flows down, like the comic book character Dawn.
The Witch of the Bone Tribe.

Niya and Guy are apprehended by Elah and the Astral Guard who also have an interest in the Torridian Dragon eggs. Their efforts to retrieve the eggs that Niya had hidden are thwarted by the Witch of the Bone Tribe, who seeks to fulfill a prophecy that will allow her to ascend to becoming a powerful queen while an intergalactic war rages about. 

Commentary

The transition from issue six to issue seven of Vanya is jarring to say the least as there are multiple jump cuts in the plot. 

The first huge leap is the Torridian plague that has, as one of General Tora’s subordinates states, reduced their attacking force to a third of its size. All the prior issues of Vanya have shown the Torridians decimating the humans, and out of the blue, one page into issue seven, it turns out the Torridians are actually the ones being wiped out. It is a War of the Worlds type situation going on. It is not unwelcomed in the narrative at all, it just so suddenly pops up into the narrative. 

The second leap involves Vanya and Serah who are at a titanic military base called Terran Base Alpha. In the prior issue, the last panel that featured Vanya and Serah show them walking through the jungle, passing by a giant alligator snapping the neck of a dinosaur, as they make their way to Outpost Nine. Issue seven fast forwards to Serah in an infirmary, with Vanya chatting with the newly introduced Quarr. It feels like there is a bit of retconning going on (Outpost Nine to Terran Base Alpha) and that a chunk of story is missing. Even if the rest of Vanya and Serah’s journey to the outpost was uneventful, there is a transition that feels missing.

Once readers can get their bearings straight on both of those narrative threads, issue seven begins to make the bigger picture of the Vanya comic as a whole much more cohesive. Motivations are made more overt on why characters are doing what they are doing, but also in the process, using the prophecy of the Witch from the Bone Tribe sets it up so that all the major players of the comic (Vanya and company, the Astral Guard, the Torridians, the Bone Tribe members, and so on) can begin to converge. The Vanya series started with a fun, albeit shotgun approach of tossing all these genre ingredients (time travel, space travel, dinosaurs, jungle women, robots, lots of sexploitation, etc.) into the story cauldron. Issue seven is doing the heavy lifting at glueing everything together. 

As predicted in issue six, the Astral Guard are just bluster. Elah tries to project an aura of superiority over the captured Niya and Guy, but in her over confidence she is easily fooled. She and her Astral Guard (which are supposed to be the best of the best of the best, the very same elite school of soldiers Vanya was training to be) are led right into an exploding trap while looking for the Torridian Dragon eggs. The explosive trap that Niya placed in the prior issue going off does raise an eyebrow as Niya is also hurt in the process. Did she forget about the trap? Did she try to lead the Astral Guard to the trap so she and Guy could escape, and she underestimated its blast radius? Did the Bone Tribe Witch move the explosive, which is why everyone got hurt by it? Regardless, the high-tech Astral Guard, who are escorting two prisoners who they deem as deserters and probably untrustworthy, who *should* be hyperaware of everything around them in the hostile, primitive world, are easily dispatched by Niya’s (the Witch’s) trap. If it was not for the aforementioned plague, the Torridans could have laid waste to humanity as the Astral Guard have been lackluster at responding to their force. 

The Bone Tribe Witch coming back as a major antagonist is a delight. She appears much more formidable, scheming, and that she has it together – composed. She has a trio of sabretooth tigers with her that are under her control, which does introduce an interesting alternative perspective to prior events in the story. Back in issue two there is a sabretooth tiger stalking Vanya and company, who reappears with companions in issue five and attacks the Bone Tribe, providing a deus ex machina for Vanya to escape. This initial take away may not actually have been the case. Instead, it could have been the Bone Tribe Witch from the beginning, using her network of sabretooth tigers to monitor the world (and thus end up keeping tabs on Vanya), and it was not a stalking cat that chose to attack the Bone Tribe in its pursuit of Vanya, but that it was actually at the bidding of the Bone Tribe Witch to usurp the Bone King. If this turns out to be the case, that is a major bravo reveal. And if not, well, The Bone Tribe Witch is still a commanding character, much more so than Elah or General Tora. 

Relo Quarr talks to Vanya. Relo has long black hair and grey skin. He looks like an elf with extremely knife-sharp features.
Relo Quarr and Vanya.

Finally, issue seven does introduce a new character, the alien Relo Quarr. Previously the interstellar conflict seemed to be humans vs. the Torridians, but Quarr mentions the Galactic Alliance, which places the Vanya series more in a Star Trek Federation vs. Klingons type setup. Quarr himself looks like a combination of a Lord of the Rings elf and a Turian from the Mass Effect series of games. In other words, he looks pretty cool. But not nearly as cool as the final panel of the issue that finally reveals a Torridian Dragon that looks straight up like a sinister Balrog from LOTR

Covers and Swag Impressions

The Kickstarter for issue seven of Vanya was concluded in April of 2024, with physical orders shipping in October later that year. Cover-wise, there are eleven different covers, some only obtainable as an add on. The covers all have a mix-mash of non-nude covers, topless-only, all nude, holofoil, and metal variants. All told there are thirty different cover incarnations.

Sean Joyce returns from issue six to do the standard cover for issue seven, bringing his sword and sorcery style with him. There is a gothic quality to Joyce’s cover, as Vanya stands, spear in hand, against the night sky, with a full moon and silhouettes of pterodactyls fly about. Replace the volcano with a castle and the flying reptiles with bats, and this cover oozes gothic sentiments.

Vanya is bathing in a waterfall on a bright blue sky day. There are tropical trees on the horizon along with some flying pterodactyls.
Personal copy of Vanya #7 cover done by Aleriia V.

The best cover of issue seven goes to Aleriia V who depicts the most vibrant Vanya yet. V’s Vanya goes all in on the jungle girl cheesecake style but executes them in a way that gives the cover art an oil painting-like quality. The cover shows Vanya bathing in a waterfall and makes it a great companion piece to the Bruno Sousa / Tommy Shelton cover for issue three which also shows a bathing Vanya.

Two cosplay prints. Both Show Alaina Rose Lee with dark red hair and holding a spear, walking about large boulders.
Cosplay prints of Alaina Rose Lee as Vanya.

Vanya issue seven is the first time the series has branched out and done cosplay covers, with pinup model Alaina Rose Lee gracing a set of four covers available as an add-on set [NOTE: Alaina Rose Lee was featured in the inaugural issue of Bachelor Pad’s “Nylon Nightcap” series. My write up about that issue can be read here]. Other pictures from the Alaina/Vanya photoshoot became prints as part of the issue’s Kickstarter swag. 

Tarot Card shows Vanya swinging on a vine, escaping from a T-rex. The card is "The Hanged Man". The Xenoguest advert shows a woman wearing black leather booths, top and jacket, with neon green lights around her, forming bracelets and a sword. It's like green cyberpunk.
Vanya Tarot Card and Xenogeist advert.

The final bit of swag for issue seven (unless one contributed over $50 in which they also received a sticker set) is an advert for Bad Bug’s Xenogeist series and a Vanya tarot card. These tarot cards have been neat to receive, and hopefully Bad Bug makes an actual tarot deck available in the future. The tarot card for this issue is for The Hanged Man. It shows Vanya swinging on a vine, with a blue-scaled tyrannosaur behind here, and an exploding volcano in the distance. The art on this card does match the name of the card, with Vanya hanging from a vine (the Rider-Waite shows a man hanging upside down from a tree). 

Conclusion

Despite having to orient oneself with some jarring jump cuts between issue six and this one, issue seven is a quintessential issue in the Vanya story. The introduction of the Torridian plague, the reveal of the Torridian Dragon, and the arrival of a competent villain (the Bone Tribe Witch) and beefer human allies (Quarr), it looks that the Vanya series is trying to rebalance itself. This is going to become critical because future issues are going to have to juggle a huge conflict with lots of moving pieces if the Witch’s prophecy comes to fruition. It is going to be exciting. 


For more information on Vanya and the comic’s creative team, check out the links below:

Also, consider checking out the reviews I’ve done of other titles published by Bad Bug:

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Going Commando: Vanya 04

The Story So Far

Two hundred plus years in the future mankind has mastered both space and time travel. Vanya is a Time Guard, a warrior in training who must spend a year in the prehistoric past honing her survival and combat skills. Her skills are much needed as the Torridian alien race have launched a massive attack against humanity. Vanya and her romantic partner, Serah, travel the primeval jungle, dealing with dinosaurs and savages, as they make their way to an armory to supply themselves against the alien threat.

Cover depicts Vanya sitting at a campfire, inspecting a blood soaked stone spear. There is a shadow of a roaring T-rex behind her.
Standard non-nude cover of Vanya issue 4 by Zoran Jovicic. Image from the Bad Buy website.

Issue 04 Plot

After days of jungle trekking and having lost Reed to a Tyrannosaurus attack, Vanya and Serah are rescued by a contingent of soldiers who are also stranded in the past after attempting to escort a group of scientists to safety after a Torridian attack. Though their outpost looks ramshackle from the outside, the inside is fitted with computers and tech, a cafeteria, and most importantly, a shower in which Vanya and Serah partake of together before being joined by another soldier named Guy.

A panel from the comic that shows a human outpost. The outpost looks jumbled together, made of stone, wood, and metal. A hovercraft swoops toward it.
Human outpost in the prehistoric past.

Vanya gives a debriefing to Captain Jax about her adventures training as a Time Guard while he fills her in on the Torridian attacks against Earth. The captain has a mission to retrieve some supply caches, so it is back to the jungle for Vanya, Serah, and Guy, though armed with rifles because who knows what threats will be awaiting the trio out in the wild.

Commentary

The previous issue of Vanya was a bit on the slower side in pacing. Though the narrative was partially upended when Reed was suddenly and swiftly dispatched by a T-Rex, the overall plot seemed to slow down a bit as the characters had not made much progress to their goal to find the armory. Issue four, on the other hand, course corrects this and throws a barrage of new ingredients into the “story stew”: the rescue of Vanya and Serah, the outpost of human soldiers, new characters including Lucas (who has had a prior relationship with Serah) and Guy (who takes the place of Reed), new weapons, a new mission (that is similar to their old mission [find the armory/find the supply caches]), and, of course, the first time confrontation between Vanya and crew with Niya and her entourage. Basically, A LOT happens in issue four which brings on more excitement and more surprises.

Panels from the comic. The first panel says "It's beautiful" and it's a plate of Panel of Vanya eating a Croissants. The next panel shows Vanya biting into a Panel of Vanya eating a Croissant saying "Mmmm this is the best thing ever." The final final shows Guy winking saying "Second best thing" with Vanya replying "Mmmm".
Panel of Vanya eating a Croissant.

One of those surprises is a subtle one by the new character of Guy. Guy initially comes off as hyper masculine, proclaiming himself to Vanya as “the second-best thing” (with a wink) referring to his sexual prowess in the shower with her and Serah. In a normal B-movie situation, Guy is the type of soldier to be a braggart who will later receive sort of comeuppance. Yet, later in the issue, Guy raises his rifle to shoot at a herd of Ankylosaurus but is stopped by Vanya: “… just don’t shoot at anything until it growls at you, ok?” In normal pop culture situations, a character like Guy would see his masculinity and authority challenged, especially coming from a woman. An attack on him. Yet, he does not take it that way at all. He takes in what Vanya is showing him, confirms with a “Got it” and proceeds on normally (and by “normally” meaning him, Vanya, and Serah all share a moment of intimacy in a river before continuing their mission as professional soldiers). In fact, in a perhaps ironic twist, it is Serah who later fires her gun at a group of Compsognathus and then getting chastised by Vanya for giving away their position. 

The Guy/Vanya/gun scene is a small scene (probably more meant to underscore the deadly nature of the dinosaurs and what they are capable of), but coupled with many other similar small scenes (such as Serah reuniting with Lucas, Serah joining in with Vanya and Reed, and so on), it paints the future world of Vanya as a post-jealousy environment and more pro-gender equality society. As hinted at in the review of issue one, these sort of scenes (coupled with the graphic violence and explicit sex) gives Vanya strong Paul Verhoeven vibes. 

The end of the issue becomes the first encounter between Vanya and Niya. Both sets of humans manage to injure each other, but there are no fatalities on either side and in the end Vanya and company are captured. It is a little shocking at how easily Niya took Vanya down. Is Niya a better warrior? Has Vanya lost her touch so quickly after having a retaste of civilization? Something else? Regardless, Vanya needs to get her poop-in-a-group because the final page of the issue ominously ends with Niya and cohorts leading the three heroes to “a surprise.”

Vanya sitting atop of a brontosaurus at night above a canyon glowing purple.
Vanya 04 non-nude variant cover by JC Fabul and Bryan Magnaye. Personal copy.
A nude Vanya sitting atop of a brontosaurus at night above a canyon glowing purple.
Vanya 04 nude variant cover by JC Fabul and Bryan Magnaye. Personal copy.

Aside from the standard cover by Zoran Jovcic (who does the interior art as well), Vanya #4 sports a variety of alternate covers, in both non-nude and nude editions by a handful of other artists. The best alternative cover for issue three is done by Renato Camilo and Tommy Shelton. If Camilo’s name sounds familiar it is because they hands down did the best alternate cover for issue two and the second-best cover for issue three. Camilo has a distinct style that fits the Vanya covers, one that is hard to describe but can easily be seen such as in the character’s dreadlocks that looks like headless but powerful snakes from Medusa. Camilo depicts Vanya with a balance of cheesecake glam and sword and sorcery warrior woman aesthetic. There is a slight hint of parody in the Camilo/Shelton cover: the raptor in the background is searching around, akin to the scene in Jurassic Park where the raptors are trying to sniff out Tim and Lex Murphy who are hiding in the kitchen. Vanya, on the other hand, is not hiding from the raptor, but actively ignoring it as she focuses on giving morsels to the Compsognathus (Compys in the comic) as if giving bread to ducks.

Cover depicts Vanya sitting down, wearing no clothes. She is holding a piece of meat in her hand and feeding it to a tiny dinosaur. Behind Her a blue striped Raptor hunts around.
Renato Camilo and Tommy Shelton nude variant cover of Vanya 4. Personal copy.

Since the Kickstarter campaign was wildly successful a few stretch goals were unlocked that included physical ephemera for backers. First there is a holographic art print of Vanya done by artist Zach Raw who has done covers for other Bad Bug titles, such as Bad PussyAstrowitch, and others. With its cyberpunk-ish imagery and purple tones the print evokes some hardcore synthwave vibes. 

Shiny art print. It shows an armored Vanya shooting from her pistol while leaping through the air.
Holographic art print by Zach Raw.

And finally, there is also a set of dinosaur trading cards (artist unknown). The cards look kid-friendly being duotone in nature: the dinosaurs are all white (inviting someone to colour them in with crayons) while the backgrounds are all a single colour: red for the raptor, orange for the stegosaurus, etc. The cards are both charming and disarming, being so “accessible” in nature in contrast to the Vanya comic with is full of sex and over the top violence. 

Five baseball card sized dinosaur trading cards. The dinosaurs and black and white while the backgrounds are one colour. The Stegosaurus is orange, the triceratops is green, the pteradcyl is purple, the raptor is red, and the Plesiosaurus is blue.
Dinosaur trading cards for Vanya issue 4.

Overall, a big “wow” for issue four. Just the right amount of jungle adventure, fighting, erotica, dinosaur cameos, and plot advancement. Things are going down in the world of Vanya, past, present, and future. 


For more information on Vanya and the comic’s creative team, check out the links below:

Also, consider checking out the reviews I’ve done of other titles published by Bad Bug:

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Comics

She’s Got the Killer Instinct: Vanya Issue 01

The Story

In the far future of 2288 AD, mankind has mastered time, dimension, and space travel. Leading humanity’s front-line conquerors are the Astral Guard, fierce warriors who are battled hardened by spending a year surviving in the prehistoric past.

The standard cover for the first issue of Vanya. Vanya is armed with a bow while a triceratops charges at her. There is a full moon in the sky.
Standard cover of Vanya issue 01.

Vanya Tepanov is such a candidate for the Astral Guard, currently eight months into her year of living in four billion years in the past. Each day is a test of her skills, instinct, and luck, as she must deal with the likes of sabretooth tigers, Pteranodons, raptors, and even other Astral Guard trainees, dubbed Time Guards, that she is warned to stay away from. However, a chance encounter (and a night of passion) with a Time Guard named Reed jumpstarts Vanya’s newest escapade where the prehistoric past and the highly advanced future clash. 

Commentary

Vanya issue one is a crowdfunded comic book published by Bad Bug Media, the first in a planned twelve issue run. Kickstarted in August 2021 and shipped to backers in February 2022, Vanya is an ambitious, multi-genre adult comic. The Kickstarter campaign states that the series is for fans of Sheena: Queen of the Jungle, and that it is a “sci-fi twist on the jungle girl genre.” The first issue of Vanya is written by Mike Tener (who is also the editor in chief of Bad Bug), with art by J. C. Fabul (The Dragonfly) and Zoran Jovicic (Burlap), colours by Bryan Magnaye (MilitiaTwin Worlds), and lettering by Aaron Locust (Death NellHyperGeist). 

With its multi-genre approach, Vanya is ambitious and high concept. The future scenes hint at both a Blade Runner colonial setting (replicants at off world colonies vs. Astral Guards conquering new planets) and a Starship Troopers style of fascism (levels of citizen ship). The time traveling aspect of Vanya looks to take inspiration from Ray Bradbury’s story “A Sound of Thunder” in that going to the past is business-like, matter-of-factly, mixing hunting/safari-ing and surviving. Lastly, the jungle girl aspect is greatly emphasized, combining the menacing and awe-nature that dinosaurs evoked in Jurassic Park, the agility and nimbleness jungle girls like Sheena exhibit, and the eroticism of Budd Root’s Cavewoman, but fully embracing the pornographic elements that the genre normally only hints at. This is a lot to juggle, but Vanya anchors itself with its focus on the prehistoric/jungle girl aspect of the comic.

A nude cover of Vanya issue 1. It depicts a naked Vanya emerging from the sea at night. Behind her, off in the distance, is a brontosaur.
Nude cover variant of Vanya issue #01.

Usually, the first issue of a new comic IP is unwieldy as it tries to accomplish too much (introduce characters, setting, plot, and so on) in too little space. Vanya is surprisingly quite concise in setting its game pieces: the one page pseudo-Star Wars opening text paints the big picture, while the comic proper does a succinct job at establish Vanya’s personality and goals (she wants to become an Astral Guard so her and her girl beau Serah can move to another world), establishes the risks, dangers, and day-to-day life in the prehistoric past (dodging tigers to fending off infections). As with the multiple genres, most comics would crumble under the weight of what Vanya is going for, but instead it pulls it all off effortless, at least in this debut issue.

Like the dinosaurs of the past, Vanya goes big, and its first issue is cleanly edited, drilled down to a concise story that could scatter in too many directions but does not. The action scenes are thrilling (taking down an entire Pteranodon and riding it into the ground), there is an air of intrigue that comes from unknown forces in the future, and the sex and nudity is integrated into the plot and not simply there to just be titillating. 


For more information on Vanya and the comic’s creative team, check out the links below:

Also, consider checking out other reviews I’ve done of titles published by Bad Bug: