Loading...

Superhero comic

Green Lantern (1960)

Green Lantern (1960)

On a strange and far-off world...where he has gone in response to a mysterious message received via his battery of power...Green Lantern battles a creature of such fantastic strength that is can resist the power-ring attacks of the Emerald Warrior!

Green Lantern (1941)

Green Lantern (1941)

Green Lantern was published by DC Comics, then known as National Periodical Publications, lasting for 38 issues from 1941 until 1949. Green Lantern had previously made is debut in the anthology series, All-American Comics, beginning with issue #16 and was popular enough to feature in his own magazine. In addition to the regular Green Lantern features, back-up stories included regular strips such as Hop Harrigan and Mutt & Jeff. Alan Scott also acquired a pet dog, named Streak, that would sometimes feature on the main cover.

Green Hornet: Reign of The Demon

Green Hornet: Reign of The Demon

If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery for most people, it could be the deadliest for The Green Hornet and Kato. With their vigilantism tearing apart organized crime, Chicago is visited by two more masked individuals: one claiming to be a friend and the other…their most formidable foe yet!

Green Hornet: Legacy

Green Hornet: Legacy

Begins at issue #34, continuing the original Green Hornet run starring Britt Reid Jr. as the Green Hornet. The name change is most likely due to the release of another Green Hornet series starring the original Britt Reid as the Hornet.

Green Hornet

Green Hornet

And we're kicking things off with a BANG as we launch the first of a new series of adventures starting with the great Kevin Smith. And let's get it out of the way, right here, right NOW - the scripts are in! Every single one! Joining Smith in bringing his unproduced screenplay to life is artist Jonathan (Black Terror) Lau as they present the one and only origin of the Green Hornet and Kato. This is the comic book version of Kevin Smith's unproduced Green Hornet film and Dynamite is the only place to get in on the action - it all begins here!

Green Goblin

Green Goblin

Seems the combination of the green goop and the electric circuitry in the Goblin's mask turns the dead-end Generation X-er into the manaical butt-kicking super-powered Green dude on the Bat Glider. Philip is a nice enough guy who got stuck in his older brother's shadow, fell in with some bad friends, and is misunderstood by his parents. Single and shy by day but a hero-by-night. He comes across as a cross between a young Peter Parker, and Jim Carrey in "The Mask".

Green Arrow: Year One

Green Arrow: Year One

The incredible creative team of writer Andy Diggle and artist Jock (THE LOSERS) rejoin to tell the definitive origin of the Emerald Archer! Oliver Queen is a frivolous playboy with little care for anyone or anything — apparently even himself. But when he's double-crossed and marooned on a desert island he finds that he does care about something... justice!

Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters (1987)

Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters (1987)

The success of this series would lead the Emerald Archer into his next volume Green Arrow (1988) that ran for 11 years and gained a surge of new fans.

Green Arrow: The Archer's Quest

Green Arrow: The Archer's Quest

A thrilling trade paperback collecting GREEN ARROW #16-21 by Brad Meltzer (IDENTITY CRISIS)! The Emerald Archer returns from the dead and sets off on an adventure that tests his courage and brings formerly hidden facets of the Green Arrow legend to light. Featuring an introduction by Senator Patrick Leahy, a foreword by Greg Rucka (WONDER WOMAN), Meltzer's original notes to the series, and the script to issue #16.

Green Arrow: Rebirth

Green Arrow: Rebirth

Together again for the first time, the Emerald Archer meets Black Canary. Questioning everything Green Arrow believes in, Dinah Lance throws the hero's world upside down, forcing him to question what he cares about more: his morals or his money?BULL'S-EYE: "Readers are aching for the reunion of Green Arrow and Black Canary, and we're finally going to give it to them." says writer Benjamin Percy. "Also returning? Green Arrow's goatee."

Green Arrow: Futures End

Green Arrow: Futures End

Green Arrow is on the hunt. Driven by inner demons, Ollie Queen travels the world and brings outlaws to justice...by breaking every law. Now, armed with cutting-edge weaponry and illegally gained intel, Green Arrow is shooting first and asking questions later.

Green Arrow/Black Canary Wedding Special

Green Arrow/Black Canary Wedding Special

NOTE: This series begins with the GREEN ARROW/BLACK CANARY WEDDING SPECIAL, continues in GREEN ARROW/BLACK CANARY issues #1-29, then concludes with GREEN ARROW (2010) #30-32.

Green Arrow/Black Canary

Green Arrow/Black Canary

The new Green Arrow/Black Canary team investigates the shocking results of the Wedding of the Century in an all-new adventure that brings the Star City-crossed lovers together!

Green Arrow [II]

Green Arrow [II]

This new series follows after Green Arrow/ Black Canary and the events in Justice League: Cry for Justice and Justice League: Rise and Fall. With Star City still decimated by Prometheus, a new forest is brought to life in the center of all the destruction by the White Lantern Ring. Green Arrow has been banished after murdering Prometheus and now lives inside this forest acting as a modern day Robin Hood. Meanwhile, Queen Industries has been bought by someone calling herself ‘Queen’ who promises to rebuild the city and starts enacting their own police force.

Green Arrow (2016)

Green Arrow (2016)

THEY SAID IT: “My touchstones are [former GA writers] Dennis O’Neil and Mike Grell, while trying to make the series my own,” says writer Benjamin Percy. “Green Arrow will be a politically and culturally relevant series. Expect stories that aim a broadhead into the zeitgeist, that are ripped from the headlines.”

Green Arrow (2011)

Green Arrow (2011)

Now, armed with cutting-edge weaponry and illegally gained intel (courtesy of his team at QCore), Green Arrow is shooting first and asking questions later.

Green Arrow (2001)

Green Arrow (2001)

When readers last saw Oliver Queen, he was seconds away from meeting his doom as he clutched a ticking bomb aboard a plummeting airplane. Until now, only Superman knew what really happened on that fateful day. But in the new Green Arrow series, readers finally get a chance to uncover the truth for themselves. Many characters populating the DC Universe are asking questions and demanding answers, including Queen's ex-lover Black Canary, his ex-partner Arsenal, and the son he hardly knew, Connor Hawke, who followed in his father's footsteps and temporarily became Green Arrow after Queen's "death." A certain Dark Knight from Gotham City has some questions of his own and he may not like the answers.

Green Arrow (1988)

Green Arrow (1988)

The story opens with a group of young adults socializing in a wooded area. They are accosted by a group of bandits, but before they have a chance to commit their act of robbery, the group is interrupted by Green Arrow. A fight ensues, leaving the robbers on the ground and Ollie sarcastically thanking them for the exercise, saying "I was beginning to think I'd have to join a health club."

Green Arrow (1983)

Green Arrow (1983)

Oliver Queen fights for justice, by day as a columnist for the Daily Star, by night as the Green Arrow. Two street toughs hold up a grocery store clerk. Before they can murder him, they are stopped by the Green Arrow. The Green Arrow activates an alarm, to signal for the police, before departing. At his home, the Green Arrow, as Queen, is accosted by Deidra Wagner, a lawyer. Queen is given a summons to appear at the reading of Abigail Horton's last will and testament.

Greatest Hits

Greatest Hits

GREATEST HITS looks at The Mates, from their humble 1960s beginnings, through the drug-fueled 1970s, and into the techno '80s, the grungy '90s, and to the present day. This is The Mates from the height of their glory to the depths of excess, as filmed by a struggling Hollywood director - one with his own dark ties to the team.

Loading...