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[MIL]⋙ [PDF] Gratis Time Bomb eBook Justin Gray Jimmy Palmiotti Paul Gulacy

Time Bomb eBook Justin Gray Jimmy Palmiotti Paul Gulacy



Download As PDF : Time Bomb eBook Justin Gray Jimmy Palmiotti Paul Gulacy

Download PDF  Time Bomb eBook Justin Gray Jimmy Palmiotti Paul Gulacy

After discovering a secret Nazi bunker from World War II, a small team of scientists accidentally triggers the detonation of the OMEGA BOMB, signaling the end of the human race as we know it. To prevent this terrible tragedy, the New World Order sends specialists Jack McCrea, Ken Weinhauser, Christian Granger and Peggy Medina back one day to stop the Omega Bomb from ever detonating. But, instead of traveling 24 hours back in time, the team finds themselves stranded in Nazi Germany. Now trapped in a concentration camp with no one left to trust, the team tries desperately to find a way to destroy the Omega Bomb, before it's too late for all of humanity!

Time Bomb eBook Justin Gray Jimmy Palmiotti Paul Gulacy

Great book & beautiful art work inside

Product details

  • File Size 74019 KB
  • Print Length 64 pages
  • Publisher Radical Publishing (March 9, 2011)
  • Publication Date March 9, 2011
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B009S2ZVDW

Read  Time Bomb eBook Justin Gray Jimmy Palmiotti Paul Gulacy

Tags : Amazon.com: Time Bomb eBook: Justin Gray, Jimmy Palmiotti, Paul Gulacy: Kindle Store,ebook,Justin Gray, Jimmy Palmiotti, Paul Gulacy,Time Bomb,Radical Publishing,COMICS & GRAPHIC NOVELS General,COMICS & GRAPHIC NOVELS Science Fiction
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Time Bomb eBook Justin Gray Jimmy Palmiotti Paul Gulacy Reviews


Time travel story where our heroes -- who are really kind of a team of jerks, but that's to be expected given their occupations -- get to fill Nazis with bullet holes while saving the world? I'm in. I'm a big fan of just about everything the team of Palmiotti and Gray do, and this is a fine example of their creative collaboration. I also really dig Paul Gulacy's art, and it shines here. Given my druthers, I might have liked one more comic-length issue of material here to wrap up some ends, or expand other areas, but that is a minor quibble. This story has a real pulp feel that hits me right in the sweet spot, and I'm happy that Radical went out on the limb to publish it. I'd sure like to see more stuff like this from all parties involved!
Like I said in the title, how is this not been turned into a movie? Absolutely great concept and execution. The creators do a great job about mixing the past and the present without making it seem like they are forcing a plot that isn't needed. Gray and Palmiotti came up with a story that is not only original but just well thought out and handled. They were added in this by art great Paul Gulacy on board for the art and he pulls off that spy feel of the story while not hacking on the specifics of the era. I'm not sure if there is a sequel possibility but if anyone could pull it off, this team is the ones that could pull it off.

Great job team!
It's 2012 and a construction project in Berlin, Germany, has uncovered a long-lost, hidden Nazi fortress located half a kilometer below the city's streets. A mysterious extra-governmental agency known as the New World Order investigates, and in the process sets off a missile that has been waiting down there for more than 60 years. The missile goes up, up, up into the air, then explodes above the city, releasing a powerful and deadly new bio-weapon that quickly kills everyone in the area and immediately starts to spread, faster than any disease known to man. The New World Order calculates that it will soon reach the entire planet, killing everyone in less than a week.

How do they decide to stop it and save the human race? Simple by sending a team of operatives back in time a few years to tell Berlin officials not to dig in that area in the first place. But time travel is an inexact science and the team soon finds itself in 1945 Germany, at the tail end of World War II, behind enemy lines, with a chance to stop the missile before it even completed.

Yes, it's an improbable plot, but that doesn't stop authors Jimmy Palmiotti and Justin Gray and artist Paul Gulacy from turning it into a nonstop thrill ride of a graphic novel. Time Bomb is like a science-fiction action movie between paper covers. After just a few pages of setup, the story kicks into high gear and never lets up. There's gunplay, plot twists, sex, sweat, death, torture, James Bond-type gadgets, heroic sacrifices, explosions, quirky characters, a mad-scientist villain (complete with goatee and facial scar), and plenty of dead Nazis.

Palmiotti and Gray have created a pretty good team of characters to fill the book. They're dangerous killers, but with enough personality to make them good heroes (or at least heroic enough in the face of their dangerous mission). Although the major plot twist/secret reveal two-thirds of the way through the book is obvious from the first chapter, there are enough other twists and turns in the story to keep readers off their toes.

And of course, if you're going to tell a comics story full of tough guys, sexy women, guns, explosions, and Nazis, there's no better artist to turn to than Paul Gulacy. He set the tone for series like this in the 1970s with Master of Kung-Fu, and he's gotten better at it every year since. Gulacy's one weakness as an artist is in depicting emotion His characters' expressions rarely vary from their tight-lipped stony coldness. There are a few scenes in this book that might have elicited more empathy for the characters if they had shown the slightest bit of pain, interest, fear, or even pleasure, but on the other hand, this isn't the type of story that relies upon those types of moments. It's full speed ahead, and damn the consequences.

Time Bomb is pulpy fun. Ultimately, it doesn't make a lick of sense, but what science-fiction action movie does? It's an adventure--a good, solid, done-in-one read that entertains. If that's what you're in the mood for, then look no further.

Reviewed by John R. Platt
Holy hell what a fun read. An old Nazi fortress is found underground in Berlin, and as a research team is sent in, they unwittingly release something called the Omega bomb- a splurge of bio-chemical warfare that consists of the fastest moving and most lethal virus the world has ever seen. With only days left before the end of all life on the planet, a team of specialists are brought together to make use of the Time Bomb experiment, an abandoned project of our own dealing with time travel. Hoping to send the four aces back only a few days so as to warn the world's powers that be of this Nazi threat, humanity's last chance instead lands in something they were not all all expecting.
Palmiotti and Grey have a winner here, with a politically topical framework diving head over heels into an adventure story hipdeep in science fiction and the ugliest sides of war. Their premise is unbelievably grim, but maintained in presentation with a realistic, albeit glib, style. The characters are all with well-formed personalities, but the atmosphere compels the reader to acknowledge the feeling that this is the kind of action-packed no holds barred plot that may not be at all kind to its stars. Great banter, intelligent exposition, and a sweet cliffhanger ending for this first issue.
Gulacy is a master at what he does. He's been steadily working for more than thirty years and his style is so good it hasn't seen much reason for change. Although in the past few years, some genius editors have realized how much more solid even his work can be when paired with craftsmen inkers and colorists, and that is exactly what he has here with Yoakum (whose work has grown immensely since his early days long ago at Defiant) and Beredo (who worked over Gulacy on the Penance mini-series not too long back). This is as cool a team as art teams can possibly be, and the total package here has already proven that this will be one drunken rollercoaster of a series.
Lots of shooting and some naughty words, this is by no means for the kids, but for longtime fans of Gulacy's work, and for those who enjoy seeing Palmiotti and Grey cut loose from the Big Two, this is the way to fly. A rock-solid setup to what will undoubtedly be an eventful thriller, Time Bomb is worth the money. (It's actually double the page count of a standard monthly, for almost the same price. So yea- very worthwhile). I cannot wait to see where this goes.
Great book & beautiful art work inside
Ebook PDF  Time Bomb eBook Justin Gray Jimmy Palmiotti Paul Gulacy

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