News

DC’s Black Label is stepping up to the plate with Plastic Man: No More! Vol. 1, a hilarious and twisted body-horror comedy that follows Plastic Man staring down the barrel of his own imminent death.
A superhero able to stretch and transform his body into virtually any shape, Plastic Man/Patrick “Eel” O’Brian made his comic book debut in Police Comics #1 in 1941. Created by Jake Cole for ...
This ‘Plastic Man’ Has a Cape and a Superhero’s Mission: Cleaning Up Senegal. Dressed head to toe in plastic, Modou Fall is a familiar sight in Dakar. But however playful his costume, ...
Plastic Man #2 is a comedic superhero book I can very easily get behind. It's fun, Eel O'Brian is endearing, and there are some dark elements to keep the tone from ever approaching saccharine. I ...
Plastic Man No More! #2 delivers a highlight of DC Comics' Black Label line in a tragicomic story populated by Silver Age icons like the Metal Men.
Comedian-actor John Mulaney is down to play the DC superhero Plastic Man, but only if Warner Bros. cuts him a nice, fat paycheck.. Mulaney recently took part in GQ’s “Actually Me” series ...
Plastic Man #1 isn’t a bad superhero comic. It will read in a familiar fashion to anyone engaged with DC Comics current line. That’s the essential problem though.
Plastic Man No More! sees the criminal-turned-superhero embark on a mission with the Justice League, only for it to go terribly wrong and leave him with catastrophic cellular damage.
If you're familiar with Plastic Man and the comedic sensibilities of Ben Schwartz, it's hard not to see this as anything but a slam dunk – and the Deadpool comparison feels apt.
Plastic Man No More #1 hits stores this week, stretching the limits of noir storytelling. ... Eel O'Brian might be a superhero now–but before he was anything else, he was a crook.