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Noches oscuras: Death Metal
Series · 8 books · 1900-2021

Books in series

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#1

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Death Metal Vol. 1

2020

Recopila: Dark Nights: Death Metal #1, Dark Nights: Death Metal #2 y Death Metal: Legends of the Dark Knight.
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#2

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Death Metal Vol. 2

2021

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#3

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Death Metal #3

2021

Con Superman liberado de su prisión de Nuevo Apokolips, ¡la alineación clásica de la Trinidad se reúne y está lista para rockear! Wonder Wo- man, Batman y Superman amplían su poder para lanzar un asalto contra el Castillo Murciélago, ¡y eso es solo el acto de calentamiento! Mientras tanto, ¡se corre una carrera infernal! El Caballero Más Oscuro está detrás de Wally West y sus poderes del Dr. Manhattan. ¡Afortunadamente, Wally tiene respaldo en forma de Barry Allen, Jay Garrick y Wallace West! Corresponde a Death Metal: Trinity Crisis, Death Metal: Speed Metal.
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#4

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Death Metal, Vol. 4

2021

Contiene: Dark Nights "Death Metal" #4 (Octubre de 2020), Dark Nights "Death Metal: Multiverse End" #1 (Septiembre de 2020) y Dark Nights "Death Metal: Robin King" #1 (Octubre de 2020), de la edición USA. ¡EN UNA AUTOPISTA AL INFIERNO! ¡Wonder Woman, Batman y Superman están atrapados en mundos de pesadilla dentro del Multiverso Oscuro! Tendrán que enfrentarse a sus enemigos más feroces una vez más si esperan cumplir su misión y recuperar un poder capaz de detener al Caballero Más Oscuro. Pero, ¿qué horrores ha desatado en la Tierra mientras ellos estaban encerrados? Autores: Scott Snyder (Guion), Greg Capullo (Dibujo), Jonathan Glapion (Tinta), FCO Plascencia (Color), James Tynion IV (Guion), Juan Gedeon (Dibujo, Tinta), Mike Spicer (Color), Peter J. Tomasi (Guion), Riley Rossmo (Dibujo, Tinta), Ivan Plascencia (Color)
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#5

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Death Metal #5 Edición Sepultura

1900

¡EL MAL HA TRIUNFADO! El Caballero Más Oscuro ha ganado. Con un poder absoluto al alcance de la mano del villano, Wonder Woman y el resto de los héroes de DC no son nada para él. Mientras el Caballero Más Oscuro vuelve su mirada hacia su verdadero objetivo, rehaciendo el Multiverso a su imagen, ¿pueden los héroes de la Tierra unirse para hacer una última resistencia? Corresponde a Dark Nights: Death Metal #5, Death Metal: Rise of the New God, Death Metal: Infinite Hour Exxxtreme!
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#6

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Death Metal #6 Edición Dream Theater

2021

¡La batalla continúa en los confines del Multiverso mientras todo el Universo DC se enfrenta al Caballero Más Oscuro! Los villanos luchan junto a los héroes, en un intento conjunto para desterrar a este demonio de los rincones más profundos del Multiverso Oscuro. Mientras tanto, el Rey Robin merodea en al cercanía junto a su ejército de Groblins. Los perros de la guerra andan sueltos y nadie está a salvo. Corresponde a Dark Nights: Death Metal #6, Death Metal: The Multiverse Who Laughs, Death Metal: The Secret Origin.
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#7

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Death Metal #7

2021

Las luces están a punto de encenderse, ¡pero la música sigue sonando! La batalla por el control del Multiverso termina aquí, con Wonder Woman interpretando su último gran éxito. ¡La guerrera Amazona está lista para acabar con el Caballero Más Oscuro! Este capítulo final incluye dos epílogos que conducen directamente a la siguiente fase del Universo DC.
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#Extra

Dark Nights

Death Metal: The Last Stories of the DC Universe #1

2020

The last battle against the Batman Who Laughs is at hand…the final fight for everything in the universe. And while the night is usually darkest just before the dawn, what would be the last thing you’d do if you weren’t sure the dawn would ever arrive? Join our heroes in their waning hours as we show their journeys through what could be their final moments…heroes that have fought a million times before, but are keenly aware this could be their endgame. These are the stolen moments detailing the last stories of the DC Universe.

Authors

Cecil Castellucci
Cecil Castellucci
Author · 38 books

Cecil Castellucci is an author of young adult novels and comic books. Titles include Boy Proof, The Year of the Beasts (illustrated by Nate Powell), First Day on Earth, Rose Sees Red, Beige, The Queen of Cool The Plain Janes and Janes in Love (illustrated by Jim Rugg), Tin Star Stone in the Sky, Odd Duck (illustrated by Sara Varon) and Star Wars: Moving Target: A Princess Leia Adventure. Her short stories have been published in various places including Black Clock, The Rattling Wall, Tor.com, Strange Horizons, Apex Magazine and can be found in such anthologies such as After, Teeth, Truth & Dare, The Eternal Kiss, Sideshow and Interfictions 2 and the anthology, which she co-edited, Geektastic. She is the recipient of the California Book Award Gold Medal for her picture book Grandma's Gloves, illustrated by Julia Denos, the Shuster Award for Best Canadian Comic Book Writer for The Plain Janes and the Sunburst Award for Tin Star. The Year of the Beasts was a finalist for the PEN USA literary award and Odd Duck was Eisner nominated. She splits her time between the heart and the head and lives north and south of everything. Her hands are small. And she likes you very much.

Gail Simone
Gail Simone
Author · 134 books
Gail Simone is a comic book writer well-known for her work on Birds of Prey (DC), Wonder Woman (DC), and Deadpool (Marvel), among others, and has also written humorous and critical commentary on comics and the comics industry such as the original "Women in Refrigerators" website and a regular column called "You'll All Be Sorry".
Francis Manapul
Francis Manapul
Author · 30 books

Francis Manapul is a comic book artist living in Toronto, Canada currently working for DC comics. His list of credits include the forthcoming Adventure Comics, and Superman Batman. In the past he's worked on titles like Legion of Super-Heroes, Iron and the Maiden, Necromancer, Sept Guerrieres, Tomb Raider, Darkness, G.I Joe and of course Witchblade. Photo by Luigi Novi.

Geoff Johns
Geoff Johns
Author · 280 books

Geoff Johns originally hails from Detroit, Michigan. He attended Michigan State University, where he earned a degree in Media Arts and Film. He moved to Los Angeles in the late 1990s in search of work within the film industry. Through perseverance, Geoff ended up as the assistant to Richard Donner, working on Conspiracy Theory and Lethal Weapon 4. During that time, he also began his comics career writing Stars and S.T.R.I.P.E. and JSA (co-written with David S. Goyer) for DC Comics. He worked with Richard Donner for four years, leaving the company to pursue writing full-time. His first comics assignments led to a critically acclaimed five-year run on the The Flash. Since then, he has quickly become one of the most popular and prolific comics writers today, working on such titles including a highly successful re-imagining of Green Lantern, Action Comics (co-written with Richard Donner), Teen Titans, Justice Society of America, Infinite Crisis and the experimental breakout hit series 52 for DC with Grant Morrison, Greg Rucka and Mark Waid. Geoff received the Wizard Fan Award for Breakout Talent of 2002 and Writer of the Year for 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008 as well as the CBG Writer of the Year 2003 thru 2005, 2007 and CBG Best Comic Book Series for JSA 2001 thru 2005. Geoff also developed BLADE: THE SERIES with David S. Goyer, as well as penned the acclaimed “Legion” episode of SMALLVILLE. He also served as staff writer for the fourth season of ROBOT CHICKEN. Geoff recently became a New York Times Bestselling author with the graphic novel Superman: Brainiac with art by Gary Frank.

Mark Waid
Mark Waid
Author · 433 books
Mark Waid (born March 21, 1962 in Hueytown, Alabama) is an American comic book writer. He is best known for his eight-year run as writer of the DC Comics' title The Flash, as well as his scripting of the limited series Kingdom Come and Superman: Birthright, and his work on Marvel Comics' Captain America.
Mariko Tamaki
Mariko Tamaki
Author · 108 books

Mariko Tamaki is a Toronto writer, playwright, activist and performer. She works and performs with fat activists Pretty Porky and Pissed Off and the theatre troupe TOA, whose recent play, A vs. B, was staged at the 2004 Rhubarb Festival at Buddies in Bad Times Theatre. Her well-received novel, Cover Me (McGilligan Books) was followed by a short fiction collection, True Lies: The Book of Bad Advice (Women's Press). Mariko's third book, FAKE ID, is due out in spring 2005. Mariko Tamaki has performed her work across Canada and through the States, recently appearing at the Calgary Folkfest 2004, Vancouver Writer's Festival 2003, Spatial III, and the Perpetual Motion/Girls Bite Back Tour, which circled though Ottawa, Montreal, Brooklyn and Chicago. She has appeared widely on radio and television including First Person Singular on CBC radio and Imprint on TVO. Mariko Tamaki is currently attending York University working a master's degree in women's studies. [MacMIllan Books]

Jerry Ordway
Jerry Ordway
Author · 46 books

Jeremiah "Jerry" Ordway is an American writer, penciller, inker and painter of comic books. He is known for his inking work on a wide variety of DC Comics titles, including the continuity-redefining classic Crisis on Infinite Earths (1985–1986), his long run working on the Superman titles from 1986–1993, and for writing and painting the Captain Marvel original graphic novel The Power of Shazam! (1994), and writing the on-going monthly series from 1995-1999. He has provided inks for artists such as Curt Swan, Jack Kirby, Gil Kane, John Buscema and Steve Ditko. Ordway was inspired in his childhood by Marvel Comics, and dreamed of drawing Daredevil, Spider-Man, and Avengers. (To date he has only worked on the latter.) He produced occasional work for Marvel between 1984 and 1988, then returned a decade later to write and illustrate a three-issue arc of Avengers (vol. 3) #16-18 (1999), as well as penciling the four-issue crossover mini-series Maximum Security (#1-3 and prologue Dangerous Planet) in 2000-2001. In 1986, along with writer/artist John Byrne and writer Marv Wolfman, Ordway was one of the architects trusted with revamping Superman, in the wake of the Ordway-inked continuity-redefining maxiseries Crisis on Infinite Earths. Launching, with a revised origin and new continuity, in Byrne's miniseries, The Man of Steel, Superman soon returned to featuring in a number of titles. After the titular title Superman was cancelled and replaced with Man of Steel, it was swiftly relaunched as Adventures of Superman, continuing the numbering of the original Superman comic, with Wolfman as writer and Ordway as primary artist. When Wolfman departed the title, John Byrne briefly took over scriptwriting duties before Ordway assumed the mantle of writer-artist and took over the series solely. Switching from Adventures of Superman, Ordway took over as writer-artist on the companion title Superman (vol. 2) between 1989 and 1991, before later returning to Adventures.. as writer. While writing for the Superman family of titles, he helped devise the epic "Death of Superman" storyline in 1992. After seven years working on the character, Ordway largely left the Superman titles in 1993, although he would make frequent returns to the character as writer and artist throughout his career. In 1994, Ordway masterminded the return of the original Captain Marvel to the DC Universe with the 96-page hardcover graphic novel The Power of Shazam!, which he both wrote and painted. The story saw Ordway depict the revamped origins of the former-Fawcett Comics superhero. An early example of the one-shot Original Graphic Novel, it proved to be a success, and was followed by an on-going monthly series, also titled The Power of Shazam! (which ran between 1995 and 1999). Ordway wrote and provided painted covers for the entire run of the regular series, as well as illustrating fill-in issues between series-regular artists Peter Krause and Mike Manley. Towards the end of the series run, he again took on the dual role of writer & artist. For Image Comics, Ordway co-created the character WildStar (with Al Gordon) in 1993, and published his creator-owned one-shot The Messenger in July 2000.

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