New original comics series from Jason Starr and Dalibor Talajić (previously collaborated on FX TV-optioned Casual Fling), published by Magma Comix! Issues 1-4 available at all comics shops worldwide. Order the collected trade edition / graphic novel of the entire 4 issue series at link below.
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In 2089, in the aftermath of the most recent world war, the former United States is controlled by four trillionaires, and artificial intelligence has taken over most jobs. Kenji Sato and Aurora Withers are among the lucky ones—employed by a prestigious robotics company. But when they’re terminated too, replaced by the very androids they created, the couple hatches the ultimate revenge plan.
Each issue features covers by Dalibor Talajić and variant covers by Goran Parlov (The Punisher). In addition, there will be incentive covers from Mike Deodato, Roland Boschi, Sean Phillips, and Dani!
Colors by Stjepan Bartolic, letters by Shawn Lee.
“Silicon Bandits #1 captures the current moment of A.I.” - Graphic Policy
“A painfully relevant and hugely gripping caper in equal measure.” - AIPT Comics
“The timeliness of a book focusing on the ethical concerns surrounding artificial intelligence is hard to understate, but Starr manages to explore these themes without going too heavily-handed into the “right or wrong” argument…Describing your comic as ‘Blade Runner meets Oceans Eleven’ is almost setting your readers up to be disappointed, but I’m happy to report that Starr, Talajić and the rest of the creative team absolutely nail that lofty claim.” - Big Comic Page
“I can’t express enough how much I love each and every panel they created.” - Chris’s Comics Corner
“Jason Starr’s premise, accompanied by the incredible graphic and narrative work of Dalibor Talajic and the colors of Stjepan Bartolic make this Silicon Bandits a book that you can’t miss, a future world so feasible that it’s scary.” - Alex Cal Oliveira (ACO)
“Jason Starr's smooth scripting eases you into this absorbing, post-World-War-Five crime thriller, and Dalibor Talajic's androids are as expressive as his humans." - Stuart Moore