Oops!
If you're seeing this, you'll need to:
Click Here to Refresh
or swipe down to refresh...
Still not working?
Check your Internet connection or restart your phone
Need more help?
Email us at
support@hipcomic.com
Anima #4 Break Out
Cover Date: June, 1994
Dr. Maxilla Yale brings Anima back to the Tellus Institute to reunite with her mother. Both she and her mother continue to have dreams about a giant wolf named Fenris and Anima’s alter-ego Animus, and Yale experiments on a willing A ...
Issue Description
Dr. Maxilla Yale brings Anima back to the Tellus Institute to reunite with her mother. Both she and her mother continue to have dreams about a giant wolf named Fenris and Anima’s alter-ego Animus, and Yale experiments on a willing Anima to discover the truth about the dreams. Yale brings Anima to a spiritual location in the desert, where Yale tricks Anima into releasing Animus. However, in doing so, Animus is pulled from its native dimension Arkana, leaving the Fenris wolf alone fighting something called the Nameless One. In Arkana, the Nameless One kills Fenris, which also causes Willow Mason to be trapped in her dreams. Nameless One follows Animus to our world, where Anima and Animus fight Nameless One. Anima draws energy from Yale, causing her to age. Meanwhile, the battle attracts the attention of others, including Anima’s brother Jeremy, Agent Kyle Woodleaf, and other residents of Arkana.Anima (1994)
- Publisher
- DC Comics
Volume Description
Anima was a 16 issue series produced by DC Comics that ran from 1994 to 1995. The series followed its titular protagonist, Anima, and her alter-ego Animus. Anima, one of the new heroes created during the 1993 Bloodlines annual crossover event, was one of the few heroes that managed to spin off into its own series. Anima first appeared in the New Titans crossover annual of that event.Writing duties for the Anima series were given to science fiction and fantasy writers Elizabeth Hand and Paul Witcover. While Hand and Witcover had collaborated in the past on stories and blogs, this was the first time for both of them writing in the world of comics. According to Witcover, he and Hand had wanted to build a world that “ripped off everyone from Carl Jung to Kurt Cobain in the process.” Witcover called Anima a “gonzo-feminist comic,” visiting a lot of the common feminist themes both he and Hand would explore in their science fiction stories.
Hand and Witcover gave Anima a rich supporting cast, including the band Boojum ( Liv, Alison, Judy, Slam, and Dred), Alison’s family, and O.D.D. Agent Woodleaf. The writers also delved into topics such as lesbianism and featured an H.I.V. positive supporting character. In addition, Hand and Witcover created the world of Arkana, filling it with concepts similar to Neil Gaiman’s Dreaming (Hand and Gaiman had been old friends). Hand and Witcover slightly retconned Anima’s origin from New Titans Annual #9, in order to better fit in with their ideas around Arkana. This retcon was explained away as part of the Zero Hour event.
Artwork for the majority of the series was handled by Steve Crespo, who up until then had done some one-shot work for DC. Inking duties would rotate through the series, with a lot of DC regulars and up-and-comers providing inking.
Anima was cancelled after 16 issues. After the cancellation of her series, Anima would bounce around the DC universe, and eventually wind up as a member of numerous teenage teams, including Young Justice, the Teen Titans, and the Blood Pack.
Please first Sign In before leaving a review.