Saturday, June 26, 2021

Future State - Top Ten: #1. Wonder Woman

 


Writer/Artist: Jöelle Jones

This result was basically self-evident from the first issue. I say “basically” since I had it ranked second when covering just the first two weeks of Future State. Swamp Thing topped it initially, with a truly outstanding first issue that was probably never going to be easy to follow with only one additional issue (though, again, Ram V’s follow-up series has more than adequately rectified that). But Jöelle Jones had created something that was truly effervescent:

A perfect confluence of writer, artist, and character. Two out of three of those were fairly easy to accomplish, as Jones wrote and drew the comic. Her new Wonder Woman, Brazilian (as in Amazon Rainforest) Yara Flor, didn’t bother with any kind of introduction or justification, but rather plunged into Jones’s version of Wonder Woman adventures.

Now, Wonder Woman is one of DC’s Big Three, but she has never had the rich history of Batman or Superman. She’s had continuous publication and significance, but really, none of the classic storytelling. There has been a considerable uptick in great storytelling in the past twenty years or so, with Greg Rucka (at least his classic embassy run) and Brian Azzarello being the obvious highlights, but nothing that feels quite as effortless as what Jones accomplishes here.

Simply put: This is a truly fun read. It’s beautiful to look at (I’m ashamed to admit this is the first time I’ve really appreciated Jones’s artwork), but it’s playful and assured in ways I’ve never really seen in a superhero comic. Usually playful means cartoonish. That’s not what Jones does. Her Wonder Woman enjoys being Wonder Woman, and is prepared for what she encounters. Simple as that.

And it’s a complete revelation. It’s easy to see that DC envisioned Future State to be a platform for new voices. I truly hope Jones has the chance to be elevated as far as she can go. I’ve read the first issue of the follow-up, and it’s just as awesome, but now I want more! I want to see Jones unleashed! The first female lead creator in comics! 

Saturday, June 19, 2021

Future State - Top Ten: #2. Mister Miracle

 


Writer: Brandon Easton

Artist: Valentine De Landro

Out of all the backup features in Future State, Easton & De Landro’s Mister Miracle was not only the longest (running four segments serialized between Superman of Metropolis and Superman: Worlds of War) but the most consistently entertaining, which I assume is why it was longest, and also why it was picked up as an Infinite Frontier miniseries, which recently launched (and I have also enjoyed).

Unlike Tom King’s comic, which featured the more traditional Mister Miracle, Scott Free, this is a spotlight for Shilo Norman, last featured in Grant Morrison’s Seven Soldiers of Victory.

The absolute beauty of it, other than De Landro’s wonderfully simplistic, fantastic art (which, sadly, wasn’t carried over into the sequel project), is Easton’s depiction of Shilo’s relationship with his Mother Box.

Now, as a longtime comics reader who has experienced plenty of Booster Gold conversations with Skeets, just to name one example, I’ve seen this kind of interplay before. But I have never seen it better. The “man in the chair” trope the MCU Spider-Man identified and usually illustrated by Batman and Alfred tends to be defined by an exchange of information. 

Shilo & his Mother Box have a full-blown camaraderie going on.

Again, not like Booster & Skeets. Skeets tends, because Booster is often a comic character, to be the long-suffering counterpoint. The “man in the chair” itself is a gimmick of unequal weight.

Shilo & his Mother Box are pals.

And I loved that! In New Gods lore Mother Boxes are basically smartphones with AI interaction, capable of transporting the protagonist wherever they need to go via Boom Tube. Very infrequently you’ll have a Green Lantern comic where a ring is depicted like Easton does his Mother Box.

(Ooh! Ooh! Get Easton to write Green Lantern!)

The interplay between Shilo & his Mother Box is ubiquitous in the story. For me it was the whole draw. Technically Shilo is involved, the link between, the adventures playing out in the main stories of the Superman Future State titles (which themselves, again, play out in a far more satisfyingly subtle manner than the Batman family’s).

It gives the result a true personality. I hope when the sequel is collected, this is included along with it. The sequel takes a completely different tack, by the way, focusing more on Shilo specifically, but Easton is sufficiently talented, it seems, to not even miss a beat in the transition. A hugely promising new voice at DC.

Saturday, June 12, 2021

Future State - Top Ten: #3. Superman: Worlds of War/House of El

 


Writer : Phillip Kennedy Johnson

Artists: Mikel Janín, Scott Godlewski

My only previous experience with Johnson was The Last God, which I had only sampled with one issue, which I found impenetrable, so I had no idea what to expect from this.

So you might say this was the biggest surprise (other than my pick for second best of Future State!), because I thought it was brilliant!

Johnson takes a truly mythic approach to Superman, both in the woman who hero worships him at a human level and the task Superman himself has on Warworld.

What made it so amazing for me was that it turned out to be the very unlikely spiritual sequel to Tom King’s Superman: Up in the Sky, the story originally serialized in the pages of the Walmart Superman giants, which immediately became one of my favorite King comics, and Superman comics in general.

Most writers get caught up in Superman going about his everyday heroics, or try to scale him back, and yet Johnson, like King, is somehow capable of doing both.

It doesn’t hurt this comic’s standing, and legacy, to have subsequently enjoyed the early issues of Johnson’s Infinite Frontier Superman ongoing adventures.

Sunday, June 6, 2021

Future State - Top Ten: #4. Superman vs. Imperious Lex

 


Writer: Mark Russell

Artist: Steve Pugh

Future State played out in January and February 2021 for every other title, but this one’s final issue was published in March. In fact, I would’ve started in on this final ranking earlier if it hadn’t. By its first issue I knew it was a highlight, so of course I was eager to read the final one.

Yeah, I’m a Mark Russell guy. Not the most dedicated reader, but I’ve been keeping track since Prez, which was his mainstream breakthrough, and have been following loosely along ever since. Most of all I’ve been eager to see how far mainstream he can actually go.

Russell readers know his strong suit is social commentary, which tends to run contrary to expected mainstream norms, by which I mean anything remotely resembling traditional superhero storytelling. This wouldn’t be a problem if he didn’t pursue superhero comics, but Russell has. This is the first time he’s tackled Superman, though the focus here is more on Lex Luthor, who seems right up his wheelhouse (and not the first brush between the two; Russell previously tackled Luthor with a Porky Pig team-up).

The premise is Lex retiring to Lexor, a planet from Silver Age comics where he discovered he might pull off being considered the good guy.

The results are more classic Russell social commentary, including the media’s complicity in government messaging, and the public’s willingness to play along, no matter how horrible things really are.

Along the way, Superman, as well as Lois! must outsmart Lex (he’s powerless, literally, on Lexor), whose one ally is a robotic lackey willing to believe anything Lex tells him (the truest of true Lexor devotion), all while Lex flirts with going straight, or as straight as he ever gets, until he determines it simply isn’t in his best interests.

(This is significant because the citizens of Lexor really do believe he’s the good guy, which in Lex Luthor mythology is a big deal, since at times he’s depicted as being bad mostly because he knows he exists in Superman’s shadow.)

I don’t know where Russell goes from here (he’s so far absent from Infinite Frontier), but that’s pretty much always the story with one of the most interesting careers in comics.