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After committing a bloody massacre on a criminal ring, two cops – and brothers – decide to take separate paths: one to uphold the law, the other to do what the law cannot stomach. 35 years later, veteran cop Frank Lincoln takes one last assignment, investigating a gruesome string of vigilante killings with echoes from his past. But as his estranged brother prepares for retirement and trains his brutal replacement, Frank has one last chance to find redemption, and put a stop to the cycle of murder.

Created by: Michael Schwarz & John Schwarz
Written by: David Lapham
Executive Producer: Sam Worthington
Illustrated by: Leonardo Manco

Series Library: Damaged
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News/Reviews
Tuesday July 19th, 2011
R News Episode 8: Damaged

DAMAGED #1:
Created by: Michael Schwarz & John Schwarz
Executive Produced by: Sam Worthington
Written by: David Lapham
Illustrated by: Leonardo Manco
Colored by: Kinsun Loh
Cover Art by: Alex Maleev

After committing a bloody massacre on a criminal ring, two cops -- and brothers -- decide to take separate paths: one to uphold the law, the other to do what the law cannot stomach. 35 years later, veteran cop Frank Lincoln takes one last assignment, investigating a gruesome string of vigilante killings with echoes from his past. But as his estranged brother prepares for retirement and trains his brutal replacement, Frank has one last chance to find redemption and put a stop to the cycle of murder.

See an 8 page preview at: http://www.radicalpublishing.com/titles/comics/damaged

Posted by at 18:47 0 comments
Tuesday July 19th, 2011
R News Episode 8: Damaged

DAMAGED #1:
Created by: Michael Schwarz & John Schwarz
Executive Produced by: Sam Worthington
Written by: David Lapham
Illustrated by: Leonardo Manco
Colored by: Kinsun Loh
Cover Art by: Alex Maleev

After committing a bloody massacre on a criminal ring, two cops -- and brothers -- decide to take separate paths: one to uphold the law, the other to do what the law cannot stomach. 35 years later, veteran cop Frank Lincoln takes one last assignment, investigating a gruesome string of vigilante killings with echoes from his past. But as his estranged brother prepares for retirement and trains his brutal replacement, Frank has one last chance to find redemption and put a stop to the cycle of murder.

See an 8 page preview at: http://www.radicalpublishing.com/titles/comics/damaged

Posted by at 18:47 0 comments
Monday July 18th, 2011
Damaged #1 is a step in the right direction

Review by Marc Mason

I haven’t been very impressed with most of the recent output by Radical Comics lately but DAMAGED #1 is a step back in the right direction for the company. This is the first issue of their collaboration with Sam Worthington’s “Full Clip” imprint, and by bringing in writer David Lapham and artist Leonardo Manco, the company demonstrates just how seriously they’re working to make it a success. The story is clean and simple: Frank Lincoln- the toughest cop in San Francisco, the man that heads up their anti-organized crime taskforce, is being put out to pasture by the city government and replaced with a young idealist. But before Frank spends his last day on the job, he’s going to have to deal with two problems. Training his replacement? Easy enough. But the arrival of a vigilante who is murdering mobsters by the dozen? Considering that Frank is more than passing familiar with the identity of the shooter, that’s going to be a bit more problematic. Lapham is a pro at this kind of story, and his dialogue and pacing here are tasty, and Manco remains one of the best, most underrated artists in comics today. Recommended.

Click here to go to this review at Comics Waiting Room.

Posted by at 23:33 0 comments
Monday July 18th, 2011
PopMatters exclusive with John and Michael Schwarz, part two

Article by Shathley Q

Comics, as John Schwarz reminds me, is something of a long game. “We try to work out exactly what it is we expect from the story,” he says, talking about the brothers’ process in developing high concepts. “One of the things I love about comics and always have loved is the episodic nature of how you tell the story. It’s a long form that you can’t really do in film, even in a film trilogy, in that way. So that’s how I like to approach it. Something like Damaged, when we conceived the idea, I couldn’t see it any other way, other than a comic at the time.”

“And as you’ll see when you read the six issues that there is something unique to comics you can do with the way that time passes. You can have a break between issues where the next issue picks up at the second that the previous issue left off. Or it picks up months or a year after the previous issue left off. That’s one of the things I love, you can’t even get that across even in television. That’s one of the things we want to do with Damaged, and one of the many reasons why Damaged works in a comic rather than in a film at this point.”

It’s easy to get lost in the thought. There’s clearly been years of practice not only at the design of ideas, but at the meditations that go around making art. And the Schwarz brothers benefit from each other. Like the Mandarin word for “strength,” which is simply the ideogram for two men (while one rests, the other works), the brothers are locked in a creative and symbiotic two-step. Never quite in-sync, they always seem to expand the topic by offering unexpected insights.

Rather than simply commenting on the tensions of the social media generation, the Schwarzes seem to be reenacting these dramas in their creative process. But it reaches deeper than simply two brothers hanging out together, exchanging shared codes. They’ve always been nested in a creative group.

“We’ve always had a cluster of friends back in Australia,” Michael says, “A lot of them are actors John went to acting school with back in Sydney. And we’ve always been trying to get into things in the Ozzie industry. I’ve always been trying to get into writing and directing. It’s a really tough industry in Australia to break into; it’s smaller, it’s not really based in genre things and the kinds of things we like. “

“It just so happened that one of our creative partners back in Australia became a big movie star, all of a sudden. And through him we were able to get this partnership going in America, which is a creative new playground for us. It’s where the genre stuff that we love is really encouraged and embraced. I came over to America last March, and John was already here as an actor, and we just formed this company with our partner Sam.”

The “Sam” referred to is none other than Sam Worthington, star of the phenomenally successful Avatar, the reimagining of the Ray Harryhausen classic Clash of the Titans and the upcoming Last Days of American Crime. “Sam’s our third brother,” I’m told later in the interview. Was it by Michael or John? What stands out is not the author, but the signature of their shared faith in the confluence of the creative process.

“The important part is that we’re all mates trying to battle it out. Sam is like a brother as well,” Michael says. “It’s no different Johnny and I working together, than working with him.” This only reinforces the idea that the brothers have always considered the mechanics of creativity nestled within the folds of an artistic cohort.

It’s this foreknowledge that sets the stage for a certain kind of expectation when I ask the brothers about the psychic price paid for their first creative foray into comics being a project like Damaged. The brothers are after all at the very beginning of their careers, not at the end. So is there any kind of cognitive dissonance they experience when writing this kind of story? There’s the tantalizing silence a brief hesitation that hangs in the Los Angeles morning. Have I hit on the one question that the brothers were wholly unprepared for?

Not at all in the slightest. There’s a slight chuckle by Michael. Could he have anticipated this as early as my opening salvo of questions? John steps in to answer, almost immediately, “In one sense it’s about the end of careers, but it’s also about the start of careers. It’s basically something we looked at from the angle of the two new proteges (Frank’s and Henry’s). Basically they’re starting up their careers as well.”

There’s another chuckle from Michael, “If those themes are there they really come from a subconscious level. Retirement’s not really a thing I’ve thought about.” It’s striking to measure both responses against what I have already established about the brothers’ creative process.

With John’s response there’s a clear sense that even I’ve been drawn into the brothers’ creative milieu; reframing my question as he did is something he’d done only with Michael thus far. It is abundantly apparent that the brothers both are able to extend their creative process to respond directly to whatever environment they find themselves in. There’s an adaptive intelligence at work here, one that secures itself by extending itself.

Michael’s response is no less striking. It comes as a deep-rooted recognition of the possibility of being shaped by the world, and a simultaneous refusal to be that simple clay shaped by unconscious forces. Michael underlines the secret valor of creativity; that being creative is a quiet and abiding resistance that transmogrifies mere existence into basic human-ness of living.

And these unassuming but thoroughgoing responses probe me to revisit they earlier dismissing of their big break (with Sam Worthington’s success) coming as nothing more than a stroke of luck. With the kind of determined resilience their responses betray, would they really have hit the big time only as a chance encounter? The brothers certainly evidence enough concerted drive and imagination for them to adapt their circumstances. And it seems clear that they would have made a big splash anyway, that luck rather than simply happening “to” them, is something they’ve been manufacturing themselves.

The self-effacing attitude to their own success engenders something else; a kind of stymieing of any resistance to their creativity. At the very moment of John’s answer when even their interviewer was being imbricated in the brothers’ creative process, I deeply wanted to participate.

Perhaps this is key to the new kind of projects the Schwarz brothers and Full Clip Productions are ushering into the world. The establishing of a new kind of creativity that does not so much “capture” the audience as implicate them, offering them infinite opportunities for participation. The idea that social media is not a fad, not juvenile but a sober, functional idea is confirmed by the kind of creativity the brothers bring. Their profound and abiding collaboration with Radical points to this being the case; a place transmedia exists as a concept. And spearheading this beguilingly elegant revolution in entertainment is the story of a dream come true, of a creative team finding the place in the world they always deserved.

It’s hard to remain jaded in the face of this. Damaged and Full Clip could just be the beginning we’ve all along deserved, perhaps even without our realizing our need for it.

Click here to go to this article at PopMatters.com.

Posted by at 21:50 0 comments
Thursday July 14th, 2011
Damaged #1 is a new take on an old setup

Review by Bill Sherman

Self-rated "mature," Radical Comics' six-ish mini-series Damaged opens on a suitably violent note. In it, a heavily scarred Frankenstein-ian figure with a police badge scar on his chest walks into a redneck bar in Dunbar, Oklahoma. He's looking for a quartet responsible for the rape and strangulation of two teenaged girls, but when most of the bar patrons rally around their perp drinking buddies, the hulking vigilante sets fire to the place and kills all but a few innocents. "You nodded for his alibi," he tells one of the doomed barflies, "that makes you an accessory."

Cut to San Francisco four weeks later - and the newly appointed head of the city's task force on organized crime, Jack Cassidy. The new commander is replacing retiring copper Frank Lincoln, who has a personal connection to the Dunbar vigilante. When the latter seemingly shows up and begins taking out hitherto untouched local mobsters, both Cassidy and Lincoln get involved. By the end of the first issue, it's the older cop who has an edge over the new guy, though one suspects that control of the investigation will shift more than once over the remaining five issues.

Scripter David (Stray Bullets) Lapham, a pro at writing hard-boiled comics, takes this familiar set-up (courtesy Michael and John Schwartz) and invests it with the right dose of violent cynicism. Aided by artist Leonardo Manco, who shows an affinity toward rendering the roadhouse and late-night diner settings that are de rigueur in a tale like this, he pulls us into the story quickly and keeps us there. "A man can't be sorry," Lincoln says near the end of the first issue. "He can only try to clean up the mess he's made." On the basis of its first issue, lovers of Dirty Harry/Death Wish-styled crime fiction should enjoy the blood smeared clean-up.

Click here to read this review at Seattle PI.

Posted by at 16:16 0 comments
Wednesday July 13th, 2011
Comic Book Bin takes a look at Damaged #1

Review by Andy Frisk

Radical Publishing’s first imprint, Full Clip, delivers its first book, Damaged, and ironically, (in reference to the new imprint’s moniker) there’s barely any full clips left by the end of the first issue of this crime drama/action tale. Set in modern day San Francisco, Damaged tells the story of two brothers who seek justice both within and without the justice and law enforcement systems. One is an upstanding and high ranking member of the SFPD. The other is a very Punisher-like type of vigilante whose own sense of justice is way outside of the law. Once the two were on the same side of the law, but a particularly violent action on the part of one caused them to diverge and seek justice through radically different means, even if their goals remain the same. Nearing retirement, Frank Lincoln might not be as through with the world of law enforcement and corruption as he wishes. San Francisco’s corrupt mayor, Frank’s well meaning young replacement, the Russian Mafiya, and Frank’s vigilante brother Henry are all making walking away from his life’s work ever the more difficult. San Francisco needs their veteran cop, but will he succumb to his brother’s tactics?

That’s just one of the many plot threads and well developed characters created by Michael Schwarz and John Schwarz and flushed out by writer David Lapham (The Young Liars). Crime drama/action stories are literally a dime a dozen, and in order to stand out from the crowd a new crime drama/action tale must have strong and well developed, or at least well fleshed out, characters. While Frank and his brother Henry seem rather archetypical in nature, several subtle hints are dropped that some surprises regarding their characterization might develop over the next few issues. Lapham is a master at developing characters so some solid characterization is most likely awaiting the readers of Damaged.

Another thing that Lapham is a master of writing is a good ole’ fashioned action scene, and Damaged #1 is chocked full of them. Artist Leonardo Manco (Hellblazer: All His Engines) brings these scenes, along with the more quiet character development scenes, to beautifully realistic life. Manco has an excellent eye for facial nuance, body language, and realistic detail. All of which makes him an excellent choice for this cinematic like work.

It will be interesting to see where the story takes the brothers. Damaged is slated to run for a total of six issues, which is a little longer than most of the earlier Radical series, but has become more commonplace of late with series such as Earp and Abattoir. If you liked Earp, or any of the many Michael Mann crime dramas like Collateral, Heat, or Miami Vice, then Damaged is for you.

Click here to go to this review at Comic Book Bin!

 

Posted by at 20:48 0 comments
Monday July 11th, 2011
MajinOni6 reviews Damaged #1

Click here to go to this review at MajinOni6's YouTube channel. Click here to preview Damaged.

Posted by at 20:30 0 comments
Thursday June 30th, 2011
PopMatters exclusive with John and Michael Schwarz, part one

Article by Shathley Q

You know when you write this part up,” says John Schwarz, “you should write it up like a classic L.A. crime noir novel.” There’s an exuberance in John’s voice. Like he’s talking to me across the chasm of a great and improbable triumph. Like if right now we’d fade to black, this would be the ending the audience deserves. But this sensation is only the briefest of flashes. At the mention of “crime noir” and “LA”, Michael immediately jumps in. “Of all the offices in all the world, why’d she have to walk into mine….” And a split-second later, John completes the frame. “We don’t actually tell people this, but Mike’s last name is Hammer.” There’s a deep, resounding chuckle from all round, breaking through the Los Angeles morning.

It had started when Michael began talking about settling into L.A. over the last 10 months or so and how Full Clip Productions, a partnership between brothers Michael and John Schwarz, and a third partner had made the seemingly impossible jump from marginal status within the Australian film industry, to setting up in Hollywood. It was early afternoon and Michael left the exterior door to his office open.

This was the door that opened onto a courtyard. “It’s really great sharing office space with Radical,” Michael had began. He goes on to talk about the stunning array of A-listers that frequently appear at Radical. Some of them often mistake his office (his exterior being opened more often than not) for the reception area of Radical itself. “So it’s happened more than once,” Michael continues, “Getting the people you’re used to seeing on a movie screen walk through my office like it’s the most normal thing in the world. Recently it happened with Rosario Dawson. She just walked across the courtyard and into my office.”

It’s hard not to imagine this scene playing out in a cinematic metaphor like John Woo’s ‘bullet-time’. Everything slows down to super-slow-mo, and moments take up minutes of screen time. Michael continues, “She was really polite, and asked if this was Radical Studios’ offices. I was dumbstruck, then I realized I had to direct her to where she needed to go.” There’s a brief chuckle, then John interjects with a suggestion. “You know when you write this part up,” John Schwarz says…

If anything this animated reciprocity, this throwing back-and-forth of ideas, each round building on what the other brother had just said, lies at the heart of the Schwarz brothers interaction. And it’s this that allows for the vibrancy in Full Clip’s first foray into comics, the brothers acting as creators on the Radical-published book Damaged. It’s a thing to behold, even at the distance of a phone call. Michael or John would have an idea, but not a complete idea. Rather it would be the germ of an idea, the seed, and in a matter of moments there’d be a first teasing out by the other brother, and then a second expansion when the idea’s originating brother gets the idea again.

Talking with the brothers you get a sense, in the immediacy of what Japanese culture labels The Now, of exactly what a steep psychic price can be paid for creativity. It’s being lost in a forest. There’s no immediate peril, but all danger lurks all around. And fortunately for you, the Schwarz brothers are acting as guides. Their banter is of the kind that allows you to immediately, instinctually trust them.

The dynamic of their relationship is most likely at the core of what makes Damaged so psychologically gripping. The story of two brothers on opposite sides of the concept of justice (one a police officer, the other a vigilante), is animated by the Schwarz brothers’ own interpersonal dynamic. It’s hard to offer up a clear comparison of what Damaged is, because the book is almost peerless within comics. You’d have to reach beyond the mass-market appeal of the 90% that fills the market. But you do get rare glimpses of the territory Damaged is mapping out. David Lapham’s (who scripts the actual issues of Damaged) Stray Bullets, for example. Rick Remender’s Last Days of American Crime, Ed Brubaker’s first collection of the original Criminal, a storyline called ‘Coward’. Don Rosa’s psychology of success so often portrayed in his Uncle Scrooge stories.

The truth about Damaged as that at its heart, it’s best compared with something Shakespearean. There’s more than enough of Othello or Romeo and Juliet or Henry V, where interpersonal relations set the tone for a much broader social unraveling. But there’s an equal amount of Hamlet or, especially, King Lear, where there’s a brooding, a meditativeness and the world seems on pause.

As our conversation continues, I ask about the particular comparison to King Lear. Damaged’s fictive brothers, Henry the vigilante and Frank the cop, are after all on the cusp of seeking their own proteges. With Frank’s already having made an appearance in the form of Detective Jack Cassidy. How do the brothers deal with the psychological intensity of writing characters at the ends of their career? Caught in that King Lear moment of needing to appoint successors.

The answer, which comes after a pause, is anything but the easy, simple resolution that you might mistakenly expect from the creators of such riveting true crime fiction. “That is the real crux of the story,” Michael begins to answer, “That is really what Damaged all boils down to; what are your ideologies, what are your codes? And how do you pass that on? And when you do pass that on, it truly is tested, truly is questioned. It’s then that you find out whether you’re right. Whether your life’s work has been the right thing.”

But it’s more than just that. John offers his point of view. “The real drama comes from whether or not a code can be passed on without being radically changed. You’ll pretty quickly discover that Damaged is about generational change. It’s about the arrogance of youthfulness.” And back to Michael, “In the first issue already you can sense that there’s a desperation with Frank. He’s being forced out into retirement by his superiors. And this young jackrabbit is taking over his work. So in Cassidy, Frank can see the chance to create someone in his own image. Someone who can stand for the same morals he does, and keep the work going.”

Both Michael and John are just at the beginning of their careers and not the end. So is there any cognitive dissonance at writing this kind of story at the start of a career? There’s the most polite of sighs. As if the question has really struck home. And then Michael begins to answer.

Click here to go to this article at PopMatters.com.

Posted by at 16:12 0 comments
Tuesday June 28th, 2011
Damaged #1 "delivers on almost every level," says Player Affinity

 Review by Nicole D'Andria and Kevin Beckham

Damaged is the first book to be printed under the Full Clip Imprint at Radical in association with Sam Worthington’s production company, Full Clip Productions.

Damaged is the story of two brothers, Frank and Henry Lincoln, long estranged after a violent event in their shared past which forces them apart. Over the course of 35 years, the brothers pursue separate paths, each upholding his own vision of the law—Frank, an upright citizen, becomes a distinguished veteran of the San Francisco PD, while Henry, a hardened vigilante, enforces the sort of justice the law cannot stomach. As the brothers approach retirement, each attempts to train a younger protégé in his image. Sparks fly as the two brothers and their differing views collide—and the fate of the city may hang in the balance.

Nicole:

A big muscled anti-hero abounds in this issue and he’s packing some serious heat. Henry, this comic’s version of the Terminator, is by far the most entertaining part of the issue, giving us some of the greatest (and not to mention only) action-packed scenes. The opening of the comic is great, giving some fast-paced action. Then after about a dozen pages of action, slight problems come up with the story. It becomes slow-paced, which is magnified by the fast-paced action that the issue started with. The pacing makes the story feel outrageously disjointed, but has an interesting symbolic meaning—if you squint hard enough. The bulk of the issue is focused on a lieutenant Frank. The pacing differences between panels with Frank and Henry could artistically show how different their personalities are, with Frank thinking deeply about everything and Henry pulling out the literal big guns. The rest of the story is solid, despite the clichéd police force that cares only about looking good. This corruption in the force is actually written very well and would be more interesting if the comic did not start us off with the monstrous high that was Henry blowing the bad guys away. Another problem is the sound effects the comic insists on using. Seeing the words “Boom!” and “Beep” splayed out on a panel takes the seriousness out of the scene and makes the reader feel disconnected from the story.

A bigger problem with this issue is the artwork. The many close-ups on characters’ faces in this issue, while managing to convey some emotional meaning, are almost completely destroyed by the odd pencil work covering their faces, making it look like blackheads are abundant on their skin. When the art shines, it is only thanks to the colors. There is usually too much shadowing, but also great uses of lighting that remind me of a movie. The colors also stay pretty dark and dull, giving the comic an authentic comic noir feel.

The comic has a few rough patches, but delivers on almost every level with likable characters, a beautiful assortment of colors that almost manages to distract us from the poor artwork, and an intriguing storyline that has me coming back to read the next issue of Damaged—pick it up for that comic noir feeling or just to watch Henry work his magic with a gun. Either way it’s a win.

Kevin:

One of the best parts about this book is the big slap in the face that the book kicks off with. Some old-school, hardcore S.O.B. extracts his own brand of justice on some local scum in a bar…classic. That does a great job grabbing your interest right off the bat. Then it slowly guides you into the tale of Lt. Jack Cassidy and how the “Fat Cats” want him in charge because he’s their new favorite golden boy. They want him to be Frank Lincoln's successor due to the fact that he's retiring, he’s lost the drive and they want him out, doesn’t want to play ball, he’s old and sucks, and so on. That’s where the story hits the heavy political cop angle and to tell you what, it really worked. Add a little backstory on the Mr. Hardcore and put the two protagonists together and there you go. It felt like it carried a longing kinship to the sweet 80’s cop storylines. It feels gritty, refreshing and familiar all at once.

One of the best panels in the book is when we witness a cop by the name of Isaac Lordsman watching two men burn to death in a car accident just because they had ties to the Russian mafia. Inflicting that vigilante justice is the kind of grittiness that made me smile. We need more of that in comics.

The art of Leonardo Manco does have that odd “we painted over real people, Greg Horn look,” leaving some of the panels stiff and awkward looking, especially when the action gets heavy. The fire fight in the bar has a trucker catching a bullet in the face. The look on his face cracks me up every time. Not that the art work is bad by any means but it does take a second to get adjusted to that style.

Overall, David Lapham's (Stray Bullets) telling of Michael and John Schwarz’s Damaged is an interesting read right off the bat. It has a healthy blend of drama and action. So if this is the kind of material that Radical and Full Clip are going to be responsible for, then sign me up!

Overall Score – 8.8/10

Click here to go to this review at Player Affinity.
Go to a preview of Damaged #1 by clicking the image below. 

Posted by at 16:02 0 comments
Thursday June 23rd, 2011
First Comics News says Damaged #1 "leaves you wanting more"

 Review by Grant Offenberger

What if the Punisher was written for adults instead of children? That’s what you get from Damaged. 35 years ago, Police officers Frank and Henry had a disagreement on how to enforce the law. Frank went on to become a police captain and head of the Special Task Force on Organized Crime. Henry on the other hand has gone on to become the Punisher or Dirty Harry. He takes the law into his own hands and he has crime on the run.

The only problem is that after 35 years of fighting crime both men are nearing retirement. It’s a fast paced story full of action that clearly establishes the main characters and the life choices they have made, and the price they have paid for these choices. The end of the first chapter leaves you wanting more, which after all is the point.

The art is both beautiful and gritty at the same time, it is matched perfectly to the story. Leonardo Manco does himself proud with his attention to detail and great facial expressions. While the series has lots of action is also has many moment with the characters sitting and talking, and those scenes require someone with Leonardo Manco’s skills.

My only disappointment was the cover didn’t match the series. Frank Lincoln has a heavy Tom Selleck mustache throughout the entire story, which seems to be missing on the cover and Henry Lincoln who appears to be a man in his late sixties throughout the story is much younger on the cover.

All and all an excellently comic and I can’t wait for issue two!

Click here to go to this review at First Comics News!

Posted by at 16:06 0 comments
Wednesday June 22nd, 2011
AICN highly recommends checking out Damaged #1

Review by Mark Miller

DAMAGED starts out with an amazing action sequence that immediately tells you that this is a comic that goes for the gut. A man decked in ammo breaks into a bar and accuses some of the patrons of raping and killing some girls. The carnage he wreaks afterwards is a clear indication that this man is not to be effed with and this comic is the kind of balls out action I love to see.

DAMAGED tells the story of two very different brothers; one, Frank, a decorated police task force leader who knows and follows the law to the letter. The other, Henry, operates outside of the law, sees how corrupt the system is, and has decided to be a one man wrecking ball to organized crime. Though in this issue, it appears that they haven’t seen each other in years, Frank knows Henry’s handiwork even before he sees his brother. This seems to be a story of brothers at odds. Not a story that is completely out of the ordinary. My own brother and I are vastly different from one another. But set to the backdrop of a corrupt, mafia ridden city, and the tension between two brothers on opposite sides of the law (one a cop, the other a vigilante) is taken to a Shakespearian level. Writer David Lapham is usually skilled with dialog, but recently has been making waves coming up with some of the sickest shit ever to be paneled on a page with his runs on CROSSED and CALIULA at Avatar. Here, he reigns in the shock and makes this a more realistic take on justice as seen through two vastly different lenses.

Leonard Manco was always an artist I watched out for, but he seems to have fallen off the earth recently. His work here and in BOOM!’s HELLRAISER shows that he still is one of the most talented artists in the biz. His handling of both the grit of action and gore and the delicate detailings of his faces shows a range few artists can match. Even in smaller panels, there’s a texture and detail to the faces that one rarely sees. Manco has always been good, but lately he’s become a finely tuned artistic machine.

DAMAGED plays out like a movie and I’m sure, given Radical’s track record and the production studio, Full Clip, backing and providing story ideas for this miniseries, that it will go for a cinematic adaptation. If it looks anything like the comic I just read, I’d love to see a film version. As is, DAMAGED is a gritty police noir with gripping drama and visuals that gouge their way into your mind so you won’t forget them. I highly recommend you check out DAMAGED when it hits stores in August.

Click here to go to this advance review at Ain't It Cool News!

Posted by at 23:32 0 comments
Thursday June 16th, 2011
Radical Publishing Announces Debut of DAMAGED

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Radical Publishing Announces Debut of DAMAGED

June 6, 2011, Los Angeles, CA—Radical Publishing in association with Sam Worthington’s Full Clip Productions is proud to announce the debut of its new series, Damaged, which hits store shelves August 3rd, 2011.

This new crime series is created by Michael and John Schwarz of Full Clip Productions, and written by Eisner Award-winner David Lapham (Stray Bullets). Damaged is illustrated by Leonardo Manco (Hellblazer) with cover art by acclaimed artist Alex Maleev.

Damaged tells of the story of two brothers, Frank and Henry Lincoln, long estranged after a violent event in their shared past forces them apart. Over the course of 35 years, the brothers pursue separate paths to enforce justice…. Frank, an upright citizen, becomes a distinguished veteran of the San Francisco police department, while Henry, a hardened vigilante, enforces the sort of justice the law is not allowed to. As the brothers approach retirement, each attempts to train a younger protégé in his image to take on the mafia underworld that corrupts the city by the bay. Sparks fly as the same crime scene and political powers bring the two brothers face to face on different sides of the law.

Check out more Damaged announcements on R News (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qalV9QgT_7s) or Radical’s Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/RadicalPublishing) and Twitter (http://www.twitter.com/radicalcomics) feeds!

About Radical Publishing: Radical Publishing is a division of Radical Studios, a leading multimedia company producing award-winning print, digital, and motion picture content, including Hercules, Last Days of American Crime, and Legends. The company was founded in 2007 by Barry Levine and Jesse Berger. For more information, visit www.radicalstudios.com.

Posted by at 22:22 0 comments
Thursday June 16th, 2011
Comic Book Resources features an 8-page preview of Radical's Damaged

 Click here for an eight-page preview of Radical and Full Clip Productions' Damaged #1, hosted by CBR!

Posted by at 21:16 0 comments
Wednesday June 15th, 2011
Nerdlocker reviews Damaged #1, out this August

Click here to go to this video at Nerdlocker's Youtube channel. While you're there, don't miss what's happening at Radical's R News channel

Posted by at 20:03 0 comments
Thursday June 9th, 2011
MTV Geek features a preview of Damaged #1

 Click here to go to MTV Geek's preview of Damaged #1, created by Michael and John Schwarz of Full Clip Productions, written by David Lapham, illustrated by Leonardo Manco, and executive produced by Sam Worthington.

Posted by at 21:55 0 comments
Thursday June 9th, 2011
PopMatters praises the "prosaic visual storytelling" and "blistering pacing" found in Damaged #1

 Review by Shathley Q 

Is there any way to watch X-Men: First Class and not feel betrayed? Maybe not so much betrayed, but cheapened. We were promised something with First Class. Not just a top notch movie (and to a certain degree the movie did just fine as a Cold War era political thriller), but something transformative.

We were promised a long hard look at how Charles Xavier turned his back on childish things to become the sober, dedicated man of peace we recognize from the earlier X-Men films. We were promised the story of Erik Lensher letting go of his anger and his pain to become the powerful protector of mutant rights that is Magneto. We were promised the sight of how the ernest friendship between these two powerful forces, became the very cause of fixing them in their opposing views.

X-Men: First Class was supposed to be the battle for ideas.

And watching the wooden back-and-forth between James MacAvoy’s onscreen Professor X and Michael Fassbender’s Magneto, over a tedious game of chess leaves you cold. There’s little in X-Men: First Class to save you from feeling cheapened.

But what would a battle of wills and a battle of ideologies really look like?

Coming this August, Radical Publishing’s partnership with Sam Worthington’s movie production company Full Clip offers one of the most thoughtful and severe battle of not just wills, but of ideologies. Written by crime genius David Lapham (who defined the genre with his creator-owned series Stray Bullets) and drawn by the phenom that is Leonardo Manco, Damaged shows opposing views can grow in the rich and fertile soil of brotherly love.

Damaged is the story of Frank and Henry, separated some 40 years ago. Henry has become a vigilante, mercilessly gunning down those people who deserve judgment in the eyes of justice. Frank has remained in the San Francisco police department, dedicating his life to undoing the corruption that runs rampant through the city. And both men have decades of doing things their way.

Lapham writes with a brio seldom seen. There’s an energy to his writing that captures perfectly the mood of these two men. The book’s first 18 panels are wordless, showing the fierce dedication and sober forethought that Henry has used to keep himself alive all these long years. Henry will walk into a bar and be the only one to walk out again. Finding the drama in such mundane violence—and communicating it wordlessly to the reader—is what signals Lapham as being very much at the top of his game.

If Henry’s introduction is impressive—Lapham’s sheer skill ensures that it is—then Frank’s is even more so. Initially we come to hear of Frank secondhand. He’s washed up, a has-been who’s been riding on the coattails of the one good bust he made decades ago. Instead we’re embedded with the young up-and-comer Jack Cassidy who is being offered Frank’s job by the Captain, the Chief and the Mayor.

Lapham leaves just enough in the scene to make sure it doesn’t ring true. And when we finally meet Frank hiding out at McGee’s Diner, the years of disillusion rages almost uncontrollably for him and us both. However, Damaged isn’t simply about the differing points of view that the two brothers take; one vigilante and the other lawman. It’s about the relationship between the two, and the damage that’s done, one to other, in the name of brotherhood.

With unifying events in the nation’s recent history, the question of ideology has never been more important than now. Whose will be done? Can we live together? Or will the idea of Union need to come undone? Brothers Michael and Jonathan Schwarz, creators of Damaged, have raised the idea in a cogent and topical way.

There’s no way that Damaged doesn’t succeed. It seems weighty, lofty, aspirational. It feels exactly like all of the last decade: like the debates around how to resolve the financial crisis of 2008 and its causes, like finally delivering justice to Bin Laden. Damaged succeeds because Lapham has sufficient insight to construct a drama of resilience and self-determination coming into conflict with reliance and cooperation. And this drama succeeds because it feels exactly like the ongoing drama of being American.

* * *

PopMatters is proud to present an exclusive 8-page preview of the sleeper hit of the fall. Be the first to get your hands on artist Leonardo Manco’s beautifully prosaic visual storytelling and writer David Lapham’s blistering pacing.

Click here to go to this article, where you'll find an 8-page preview of Damaged #1!

 

Posted by at 21:42 0 comments
Wednesday June 8th, 2011
R News Episode 8: Abattoir #5 and Damaged #1

This R News covers Abattoir #5 by Darren Lynn Bousman (Saw) and Damaged #1 by John and Michael Schwarz and Sam Worthington's Full Clip Productions. 

ABATTOIR #5:
Created by: Darren Lynn Bousman
Concept by: Michael Peterson
Written by: Rob Levin & Troy Peteri

DAMAGED #1:
Created by: Michael Schwarz & John Schwarz
Executive Produced by: Sam Worthington
Written by: David Lapham
Illustrated by: Leonardo Manco
Cover Art by: Alex Maleev

 
 

 

Posted by at 21:19 0 comments
Wednesday June 8th, 2011
R News Episode 8: Abattoir #5 and Damaged #1

 

This R News covers Abattoir #5 by Darren Lynn Bousman (Saw) and Damaged #1

by John and Michael Schwarz and Sam Worthington's Full Clip Productions. 

ABATTOIR #5:
Created by: Darren Lynn Bousman
Concept by: Michael Peterson
Written by: Rob Levin & Troy Peteri

DAMAGED #1:
Created by: Michael Schwarz & John Schwarz
Executive Produced by: Sam Worthington
Written by: David Lapham
Illustrated by: Leonardo Manco
Cover Art by: Alex Maleev

 

 

 

 

Posted by at 21:19 0 comments
Friday February 25th, 2011
Radical's Damaged featured in Hollywood Reporter article

Excerpted from an article by Eric Sundermann

Sam Worthington just discovered television.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, the actor's production company, known as Full Clip Productions, has signed its "debut development and first-look TV deal" with NBC Universal International. And it appears that the company -- founded by Worthington, John Schwarz and Michael Schwarz last year -- will focus their development on original content and spin-off programming, based on graphic novels. Its first graphic novel, titled Damages, releases this summer.

Click here to read the full article at Hollywood.com.

 Damaged

Posted by at 01:31 0 comments
Wednesday February 2nd, 2011
Sequential Tart gives Damaged #1 a 7/10

Review by Olwyn Supeene

Radical Publishing

Credits
Writer: David Lapham
Penciler: Dennis Calero
Inker: Dennis Calero
Colorist: Dennis Calero
Cover Artist: Alex Maleev
Other Creators: Michael Schwarz and John Schwarz

Grade: 7

Police Captain Lincoln is called in to investigate the slaughter of a mob boss and his men. The scope of the shooting points to multiple gunmen, but Lincoln recognises the pattern as belonging to one man — someone he once worked with, and who has been carrying out vigilante justice since his voluntary disappearance years ago. The captain's view on the matter is strong, but the full extent of their history is only hinted at. The issue ends ambiguously.

The art is what really makes this comic work. It's dark and gritty, fraught with low camera angles and selective close-ups. The feel is a cross between noir and horror, despite relatively low levels of bloodshed; shadows are sharp and lights are carefully and deliberately placed. Some of the page layouts are a little too artistic to be really intuitively readable, but they're easy enough to figure out.

This is a solid first volume that presents more questions than answers. While the premise is somewhat cliche, the setup doesn't seem completely predictable. I am interested to see what happens next.

Click here to go to the original article at SequentialTart.com!

 

Photobucket

Posted by at 20:29 0 comments
Monday November 29th, 2010
Comic Book Bin Review of Damaged/Hollow Point FLIPBOOK

Review by Leroy Douresseaux

Radical Publishing has published a preview of two upcoming series as a “flipbook” under the Radical Premiere imprint.  Damaged is a crime comic created by Michael Schwarz and John Schwarz of Full Clip Productions, a venture with actor Sam Worthington (Avatar).

 According to Radical, Damaged focuses on “two brothers committed to justice in different ways – one inside the law, one violently beyond it.”  The 12-page preview of Damaged introduces Capt. Frank Lincoln, who, while investigating a slaughter of Russian mobsters, discovers that a ghost from his past may be behind the massacre.

The second preview is of Hollow Point, a crime comic created by screenwriter Ron L. Brinkerhoff (the Kevin Costner-Ashton Kutcher film, The Guardian).  Hollow Point focuses on an assassin who survives a near fatal gunshot and according to Radical, “…begins to experience disturbing visions from beyond the grave. He soon realizes the bullet meant to kill him has opened a third eye into the spirit realm.”  None of that happens in this 12-page preview.

 

Both series are intriguing, which I think is the whole point of these “Radical Premiere” comic books – pique the interest of as many readers as possible.  At the cover price of $1, readers can discover a title they might like, especially if they are fans of a previewed title’s genre, for little financial risk.  Radical Publishing is certainly good at genre, for instance, matching a quality crime writer with an artist whose graphic style and storytelling is ideal for crime comics.

Honestly, I will probably read Hollow Point… because I’ll probably get a review copy. Damaged, however, I am ready to read now (although it isn’t due until next summer).  It looks like a gritty, brutal, violent tale with some elements similar to The Punisher.  I like how the dialogue colors some of the characters as cruel and cynical.  The art by Dennis Calero is solid, but I like how Calero twists and distorts the faces and figures to embellish mood and character.

In the final analysis, Damaged/Hollow Point successfully previews two new crime series that intrigue.

Click the image below to view the full article.

Damaged_lowres.jpg

Posted by at 19:24 0 comments
Monday November 29th, 2010
Radical Premiere: Damaged

Radical Premiere: Damaged

Created by: Michael Schwarz & John Schwarz
Written by: David Lapham
Illustrated by: Dennis Calero
Editor: Renae Geerlings
Cover: Alex Maleev

Published by: Radical Comics

Offered as a flip book with Hollow Point for only a dollar. Can’t really go wrong with that. A sampling of two upcoming titles for only a buck? Great idea.

Damaged is told from the point of view of Captain Frank Lincoln as he investigates a murder scene. It’s a brutal scene with multiple bodies. The dead is a Russian gangster named Oloaf. The investigating officer thinks it’s the work of multiple men. Lincoln knows otherwise.

We never see the man, just a description. Lincoln knows who did this, his former partner named Henry.

A classic Punisher tale with a slight twist. It’s the twist that makes this interesting as Lincoln won’t allow Henry do turn his city into a river of blood. But which cop is right? Which is doing the true job? Thats what this series will be about.

Lapham’s script is decent. The story moves at a good pace and makes sense as it flows.

The art is the problem though. Characters change appearance from one panel to the next. Expressions are different then the script would lead you to believe. The first officer, that fills Lincoln in on the scene, appears to be a complete psycho in one panel with a maddened and crazy expression. The art doesn’t flow well, jumping in angles and views making it hard to follow.

The basic plot seems along the lines of the Punisher. It’ll be interesting to see how this differs, if it does. The premiere does it’s job though, even with the art not being that good, there’s still enough here to make me interested in the actual series when it comes out.

As this is a sample, it won’t receive a grade, just a simple yes or no. Yes means I’ll pick up the series when it comes out. No means I’ll leave it on the shelf.

Damaged receives a: Yes

Go to the Pryde’s forums and share your thoughts on this issue.

To view more, go to www.kittyspryde.com/

Damaged_lowres.jpg

Posted by at 19:04 0 comments
Friday July 16th, 2010
Full Clip, Radical Get "Damaged"

At 2009's Comic-Con International in San Diego, Sam Worthington and his good friend from drama school Michael Schwarz went looking for comics. "It was mainly Michael in his basement playing 'Guitar Hero' and reading comic books. I thought[I'd] get him out of the damn basement and send him to Comic-Con, you know. He needs to try and learn that the world is massive," joked Worthington.

"We've always loved comic books and graphic novels," added John Schwarz, Michael's brother and that third partner in Full Clip Productions. "Mike was kind of almost like the professor of it, we were both juniors. He was the master, you know what I mean? So we said 'Why don't you go to Comic-Con and see what you can do'."

"Mike actually astounded me, blew me away, when he came back and he made all of these connections," the actor continued. "I was expecting [him] to come back drunk and say, 'Thanks for the opportunity.'" [Laughs]

nstead, Michael began a relationship with Radical Studios. First, they looked at Rick Remender's "Last Days of American Crime" with an eye toward a feature film. "'Last Days of American Crime' got me straight away," recalled Michael. "The thing about Radical is that they've been around for only two years, and during that time they were only a year old, but they've kind of got this swagger about themselves that they've been around for so much longer... (click here to read the full interview at CBR.com)

Posted by Radical Publishing at 23:08 0 comments
Monday July 12th, 2010
Sam Worthington Talks Last Days, Damaged and Patriots

   During a recent interview at Radical Studios, Sam Worthington discussed with MTV his Full Clip Productions imprint with Radical that was launched with his partners John Schwarz and Michael Schwarz, and his new comic book projects The Last Days of American Crime, Damaged and Patriots. View a portion of this interview below.

 
View the full interview here.
 


Variety also reported the unveiling of Patriots.

"Patriots," created by Worthington and Full Clip partners and brothers Michael and John Schwarz, centers on the concept of "If you had to sacrifice one continent to save the other six, would you do it?" It's the second comic that will be produced under Full Clip's imprint deal with Radical -- which allows Full Clip to develop intellectual property and can lead to Worthington and John Schwarz starring in feature versions of select projects.

Worthingtion discussed the project Friday at an informal news conference at Radical's offices. The first project in development is the recently announced "Damaged," which revolves around two brothers committed to justice in different ways -- one inside the law, one violently beyond it.

Worthington noted Friday that he's known the Schwarz siblings for 15 years and expressed confidence in his ability to track the intricacies of publishing while still working as an actor. "It's not that hard for me to tell them that something sucks," he added...

Click here to read Variety's article.

Posted by at 18:11 0 comments
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