Tooth and Claw by Kurt Busiek and Ben Dewey is a fantasy series about a group of wizards who try and bring a hero through time to save the world. The series will debut on Nov. 5 and promises to be a “big, sprawling adventure about animal people.” Rick Remender and Sean Murphy are joining together for Tokyo Ghosts, a story about media conglomerates. In Remender’s own words, the series charts the consequences of major corporations influencing the law, an “exponential increase" of people’s current digital lives. As expected, the series looks gorgeous with Murphy’s art and is due out next year.
Joe Casey and Paul Maybury have a series called Valhalla Mad about gods coming to Earth to party. It will be noticeably “lighter” than Casey’s other recent output at Image. No date has been set for this series. Becky Cloonan and Jordie Belanger have a sci-fi mystery series called Southern Cross for a “wintery” release. It’s being described as a cross between Robocop and Stephen King, following a woman’s journey to a refinery moon the truth about her dead sister.
Gabriel Hardman and Corinna Bechko’s Invisible Republic is a “huge passion project” about “one man’s rise to power after an unspeakable act of violence.” Both creators described it as a sci-fi story with Breaking Bad elements, but promise it will stay very grounded and character focused. Invisible Republic arrives in November. Gabriel Hardman’s digital series Kinski is coming to Image as well. The story is a quirky crime thriller about a man who finds a puppy and, after discovering its owner is neglectful, goes on a righteous crusade. Kinski will be released in November. John Arcudi and James Harren’s Rumble promises to be like a Louis C.K. show directed by David Fincher with inhuman characters. Neither creator was on hand for the presentation but it sounds interesting at the very least!
Ray Fawkes claims Intersect could only be published by Image. He also claims the story will be very body-focused, like a Cronenberg film with elements of David Lynch’s surrealism. From the preview, the series is about merging and shifting bodies and the melding of ideas, language, and sound. Like Embassytown but more hardcore. Tom Neely and Keenan Marshall Keller are teaming up for The Humans, a story that follow a bunch of trouble makers as “they fight and fly down the road to oblivion on a ride filled with chains, sex, leather, denim, hair, blood, bananas and chrome.” The series was originally going to be self-published, but Image managed to convince the creators to release it with them. © Copyright 2002-2025 by Toon Doctor Inc. - All rights Reserved. All other texts, images, characters and trademarks are copyright their respective owners. Use of material in this document (including reproduction, modification, distribution, electronic transmission or republication) without prior written permission is strictly prohibited. |