Action Comics #12 (DC)
Grant Morrison rounds out the first year of the New 52 Action Comics by pitting Superman against Captain Comet, one of DC's cosmic superheroes, in an epic showdown. Hey, it's the most relevant Comet's been in years!
Aquaman #11 (DC)
Geoff Johns continues the saga he may be only spending a little while longer on, if recent reports are to be believed. Still, if it's true, he's still done far more to make Aquaman a vital character than anyone in the dozens of attempts over the years. If nothing else, this will make an epic, massive collection, and be put right alongside Brightest Day, where Johns and Peter S. Tomasi previously worked on the character.
Atomic Robo and the Flying She-Devils of the Pacific #2 of 5 (Red 5)
A better issue than the previous one, filled with Brian Clevinger's trademark wit, and Robo's hapless reactions to the insanity around him.
Atomic Robo Presents Real Science Adventures #5 (Red 5)
The latest issue of this anthology series is highlighted by Robo's confrontation with the man who killed Nikola Tesla (in this comics iteration), who was the creator of Atomic Robo (in the comics).
Batman: Earth One - Special Preview Edition (DC)
Yes, I bought and reviewed the full graphic novel last month, but I thought it'd be fun to see what it might feel like as a monthly-installment-sized edition. Yes, this only covers the first fifteen pages, but it really does have a different feel. There's a bonus preview of Scott Snyder's New 52, but the provided content is practically impenetrable, and certainly doesn't sell the Court of Owls concept, even though that's the name of the collection the preview is hawking.
Batman Incorporated #3 (DC)
The horrific shooting in Aurora, CO, delayed release of this book, though not necessarily shipments. Morrison brings back Matches Malone, Bruce Wayne's underworld alter ego, while we learn what's really going on with Damian, who has for now assumed the identity of Redbird (which was also the name of Tim Drake's Robin-mobile).
Batman and Robin #12 (DC)
Tomasi concludes his Terminus arc with a big bang, which is a little disappointing in that Terminus didn't quite receive enough time to develop as a villain. Long story short, the series was better earlier this year.
Before Watchmen: Comedian #2 of 6 (DC)
I read elsewhere that Edward Blake's introduction to Vietnam seemed a little generic. I guess I haven't saturated myself with enough Vietnam fiction, since I found it to be pretty fascinating. On the one hand, the Comedian considers this battlefield to be just another battlefield. On the other hand, this is a guy whose best friend was just assassinated. He has a right to be a little cynical, have an impulse to let loose a little. That's my perspective, anyway. Brian Azzarello also provides a fascinating insight into the possible origins of the emerging drug culture we still live in today, playing along the same notes as the second issue of Silk Spectre. (If you need a little perspective on it, Before Watchmen is an unlikely but certainly welcome forum.)
Before Watchmen: Nite Owl #2 of 4 (DC)
Whatever else I might have had to say about this issue is kind of overshadowed by the recent passing of comics legend Joe Kubert, who inked this series over son Andy's art. I'm not a historian of the craft, but I can certainly appreciate Kubert's huge legacy, and it's a shame that he had to die in the middle of his last great contribution. As I said in my thoughts for the first issue, Joe's inking made a definite impact on Andy's art in this book, one that spoke to the generational nature of the project. Where some people have only been able to view Before Watchman through the Alan Moore controversy, I've relished it as a chance to view comic books in their most pure and relevant form, something creators like Kurt Busiek and James Robinson have been trying to do ever since, well, Watchmen. Comics have, for better or worse, come to be defined by superheroes and legacies, and that's something Before Watchmen fully embraced, what the original stories were all about, in fact. And Joe Kubert had a huge role in developing that. Sorry to see you go.
Before Watchmen: Ozymandias #2 of 6 (DC)
The genius of Before Watchmen can also be explained this way: we're finally going to see Ozymandias and Comedian on equal terms. That's something the original stories surprisingly avoided. At the end of this particular issue, we begin to see a rectification.
Creator-Owned Heroes #1 (Image)
Image has slowly become the go-to home for every conceivable comic book project, and while the founders envisioned a forum to create superheroes that would contend with the popularity of the books they left behind, the projects that've come along over the past decade have redefined the company as a catch-all for creators who would otherwise look for a place in small presses. Which has in essence made Image a large small press. Sometimes a book like The Walking Dead can happen, but that's very much the exception to the rule. Jimmy Palmiotti and Justin Gray, regular writing partners who regularly work for the Big Two, join forces with Steve Niles (best known for his horror efforts) in launching a new anthology format, almost magazine-like offering, working on dream projects. The problem is that the format short-changes those dreams. To be frank, the examples in this debut issue don't feel like they were worth the effort. But maybe they're better with commitment.
Demon Knights #12 (DC)
Paul Cornell may be writing this series for the trades. I think that's the best thing to say about it. I love Demon Knights, and I also wish it could be something more. It's a rolling, sometimes rollicking adventure, but every time it seems like we're finally getting somewhere...it's the end of the issue. So, Cornell may be writing for the trades. This is not a complaint.
Earth 2 #4 (DC)
James Robinson continues his chronicle of the alternate Justice Society, in which everything old is new again. This now includes Al Pratt, the original Atom, who in this version of events is a soldier in the world army that sprang up in response to the Apokolips apocalypse.
Green Lantern #11 (DC)
Black Hand puts together a creepy family reunion and Sinestro brings Hal Jordan to his own personal Batcave, allowing us our first glimpse of the next Green Lantern. Seriously, Geoff Johns could write this franchise forever.
National Comics: Eternity (DC)
The first of a series of one-shots reimagining various DC properties ("National Comics" is what the company was before it embraced the Detective in one of its flagship titles). Jeff Lemire sees Kid Eternity basically as a Ghost Whisperer. That's as much as there is to see here.
Peter Parker, Spider-Man #156.1 (Marvel)
I guess Marvel is releasing Point One issues of cancelled Spider-Man series to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the web-slinger. This one is written by Roger Stern, a veteran I know best from 1990s Superman (but he's been around!).
RASL #15 (Cartoon)
The final issue of Jeff Smith's second comic book opus (his first being, of course, Bone), and finally an explanation for the title (an acronym for Romance at the Speed of Light, which was also the name of the third collection, and title of the eighth issue). Things've boiled down to Rob's need to destroy the journals of Nikola Tesla (yes, the same dude as the comics creator of Atomic Robo) in order to save the universe, lest they be used to destroy it (which in fairness to Rob is a process that was already started across several alternate realities). The big problem Rob gets to overcome in the finale is the revelation that Maya, the source of the eponymous tattoo and motivating factor in so many ways for Rob's journey throughout the series, is also his biggest threat. He's been running the whole time toward this moment. It's still disappointing that the series only lasted fifteen issues, but as Smith himself pointed out elsewhere, that still adds up to a lot of pages for any collection, and one way or another, this will sit proudly next to Bone on any discerning reader's shelf. Perhaps like Demon Knights, it will read better and last longer in the memory in trade format.
Red Hood and the Outlaws #11 (DC)
Again, I have to say how different this series is from just about anything else, not just because of the distinctive art from Kenneth Rocafort, but because of Scott Lobdell's writing, which moves along at its own pace, a little like Grant Morrison's. It is, then, any wonder that Lobdell and Rocafort have been tapped as the latest replacements in Superman? Perhaps this will solve two issues. This is a book that deserves to stand out, but it's also one that can be alienating (much like the heroes in the book themselves, who are all alienated), as has been proven since its launch last fall. Perhaps more a little more convention will help readers discover how awesome it is. This issue, by the way, features some familiar and unfamilar backstory for Koriand'r, better known as Stargirl. Apparently she has some Farscape in her.
Showing posts with label Demon Knights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Demon Knights. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Unbeatable Comics From Last Week
Here's a quick roundup of the comics I read last week:
Atomic Robo Presents Real Science Adventures #4 (Red 5) is another fine entry in this anthology series, with a highlight of the continuing Bruce Lee serial, in which the late martial arts master admits recruiting Robo as a pupil because it's hard for a guy like Bruce to find a decent sparring partner.
Batman and Robin #11 (DC) sees Damian continue to work his way through past Robins by confronting Jason Todd (a rare appearance by the Red Hood outside of his own book) while the Terminus gang brands people with the bat symbol.
Before Watchmen: Minutemen #2 of 6 (DC) features the team coming together for the first time and probably sees Darwyn Cooke give more characterization to Silhouette than any previous appearance. (Perhaps more notable given that Before Watchmen collaborator J. Michael Straczynski did a version of the character in his own epic The Twelve.)
Charmed #22 (Zenescope) makes a little more sense than the last issue for readers who haven't exactly been following the series regularly, especially as concerns the return of Prue and her relationship to the Charmed Ones.
Demon Knights #11 (DC) moves the story along more than some issues, with a huge push from King Arthur and assist from the first appearance of Morgaine La Fey.
Peter Panzerfaust #5 (Image) moves the boys along to Paris, where they discover their Nazi troubles are far from over.
Saucer Country #5 (Vertigo) may be the best issue of the series so far, showcasing the cleverness of Arcadia as she kills two birds with one stone, learning more about what happened to her during a hypnotherapy session without letting on what she actually remembers to a duplicitous psychiatrist.
The Shade #10 of 12 (DC) demonstrates our antihero doing pretty much the same thing against the enemies who set Deathstroke against him in the first issue.
Atomic Robo Presents Real Science Adventures #4 (Red 5) is another fine entry in this anthology series, with a highlight of the continuing Bruce Lee serial, in which the late martial arts master admits recruiting Robo as a pupil because it's hard for a guy like Bruce to find a decent sparring partner.
Batman and Robin #11 (DC) sees Damian continue to work his way through past Robins by confronting Jason Todd (a rare appearance by the Red Hood outside of his own book) while the Terminus gang brands people with the bat symbol.
Before Watchmen: Minutemen #2 of 6 (DC) features the team coming together for the first time and probably sees Darwyn Cooke give more characterization to Silhouette than any previous appearance. (Perhaps more notable given that Before Watchmen collaborator J. Michael Straczynski did a version of the character in his own epic The Twelve.)
Charmed #22 (Zenescope) makes a little more sense than the last issue for readers who haven't exactly been following the series regularly, especially as concerns the return of Prue and her relationship to the Charmed Ones.
Demon Knights #11 (DC) moves the story along more than some issues, with a huge push from King Arthur and assist from the first appearance of Morgaine La Fey.
Peter Panzerfaust #5 (Image) moves the boys along to Paris, where they discover their Nazi troubles are far from over.
Saucer Country #5 (Vertigo) may be the best issue of the series so far, showcasing the cleverness of Arcadia as she kills two birds with one stone, learning more about what happened to her during a hypnotherapy session without letting on what she actually remembers to a duplicitous psychiatrist.
The Shade #10 of 12 (DC) demonstrates our antihero doing pretty much the same thing against the enemies who set Deathstroke against him in the first issue.
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Unbeatable Comics: Paul Cornell
Demon Knights #10
writer: Paul Cornell
artist: Diogenes Neves
Saucer Country #4
writer: Paul Cornell
artist: Ryan Kelly
Paul Cornell has been one of the best writers in comics for several years now. One of these two books may finally help comic book fans realize that.
"Look! It's a pirate sea serpent!" Lines like that, combined with a guest character who briefly breaks into the heavy British dialogue used so well in Cornell's Knight & Squire, are just token examples what helps set his work apart. The whole book demonstrates his ability to juggle both character and story, whether he's dancing around the nature of Shining Knight or once again using the juxtaposition between Jason Blood and Etrigan to convey the depth of relationships any good story should have. By the time the climax of the issue reaches Zombie King Arthur, you realize anything can and will happen in a Paul Cornell story.
In Saucer Country, meanwhile, everyone's still trying to figure out if the alien abduction that serves as the crux of this book actually happened, but that's proving trickier than expected (which is exactly what Cornell's going for). Arcadia Alvarado is currently governor of New Mexico, but she's going to be running for president, so there's good motivation for her wanting to know exactly what happened to her. She's not the only one.
Her ex-husband Michael is the one with the least amount of credibility, and exploring his side of events has been equally fascinating, especially since it's far less likely anyone will believe him. Last issue we saw how he started to rationalize his experience by turning the aliens into rabbits, trying to cover up his own memories. To retrieve them, he visits a hypnotherapist known for his radical views on alien abduction. Naturally, when Alvarado's men hear his version, they're skeptical, or to be more accurate, dismissive. Then Arcadia makes the radical decision to visit the hypnotherapist herself.
The whole point and approach of Saucer Country is that the truth is not a simple thing. In The X-Files, it was famously declared to be "out there," and perhaps it is, but some people have to live with that ambiguity a little closer to home, with incredibly high personal stakes. There's a lot of ways this can be explored. Cornell has decided to let it speak for itself, and nothing about it is easy. That's a testament to his ambition, and vision.
The thrill is always waiting to see what he does next.
writer: Paul Cornell
artist: Diogenes Neves
Saucer Country #4
writer: Paul Cornell
artist: Ryan Kelly
Paul Cornell has been one of the best writers in comics for several years now. One of these two books may finally help comic book fans realize that.
"Look! It's a pirate sea serpent!" Lines like that, combined with a guest character who briefly breaks into the heavy British dialogue used so well in Cornell's Knight & Squire, are just token examples what helps set his work apart. The whole book demonstrates his ability to juggle both character and story, whether he's dancing around the nature of Shining Knight or once again using the juxtaposition between Jason Blood and Etrigan to convey the depth of relationships any good story should have. By the time the climax of the issue reaches Zombie King Arthur, you realize anything can and will happen in a Paul Cornell story.
In Saucer Country, meanwhile, everyone's still trying to figure out if the alien abduction that serves as the crux of this book actually happened, but that's proving trickier than expected (which is exactly what Cornell's going for). Arcadia Alvarado is currently governor of New Mexico, but she's going to be running for president, so there's good motivation for her wanting to know exactly what happened to her. She's not the only one.
Her ex-husband Michael is the one with the least amount of credibility, and exploring his side of events has been equally fascinating, especially since it's far less likely anyone will believe him. Last issue we saw how he started to rationalize his experience by turning the aliens into rabbits, trying to cover up his own memories. To retrieve them, he visits a hypnotherapist known for his radical views on alien abduction. Naturally, when Alvarado's men hear his version, they're skeptical, or to be more accurate, dismissive. Then Arcadia makes the radical decision to visit the hypnotherapist herself.
The whole point and approach of Saucer Country is that the truth is not a simple thing. In The X-Files, it was famously declared to be "out there," and perhaps it is, but some people have to live with that ambiguity a little closer to home, with incredibly high personal stakes. There's a lot of ways this can be explored. Cornell has decided to let it speak for itself, and nothing about it is easy. That's a testament to his ambition, and vision.
The thrill is always waiting to see what he does next.
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Swear to Bendis, I'm Not Becoming a Convert
BATMAN AND ROBIN #9 (DC)
I feel like I’ve been reading a lot of this book recently
for some reason, don’t know why…Anyway, this particular issue is the newest one
and is a tie-in with the “Night of the Owls” event inspired by events in Scott
Snyder’s BATMAN, and features young Damian Wayne getting to exert himself
against a Talon and a bunch of army officers he’s attempting to rescue, one in
particular who has become a target of the Court thanks to some unresolved
business from centuries ago, the American Revolution to be precise. If anything, Peter Tomasi helps make clear
that the Court of Owls is basically a Freemasons type of secret society in this
episode, even if he kind of stumbles in the few scenes not dominated by Damian
(any scene with Damian is dominated by Damian).
Nothing overtly connected to previous issues occurs, but there are
subtle connections. Patrick Gleason will
be back, and hopefully the regularly scheduled storytelling will also resume
next issue.
CHARMED #21 (Zenescope)
My sister is kind of obsessive about CHARMED, the TV show,
though she enjoys the comic book, too.
My access to the comic was severed last year when I backed out of my
subscriptions with Midtown, so I jumped at the opportunity to resume access to
this book, along with some others. My
sister seems content to read the trade collections (there are now three), so I’m
actually wondering if I should even pass these individual issues to her
anymore. The comics tend to be a little
less about the Halliwell sisters and more about the big stories, which I
suppose might simply be a difference of the mediums. Another difference? Prue can finally return, as has apparently
happened. Prue was the sister played by
Shannon Doherty, who left the TV show at the end of the third season, never to
be seen again. Hopefully Paul Ruditis
nails this opportunity. The current big
story? The sisters have lost their
powers, while everyone else in the world now has them, and disaster has
resulted. And yes, this is when Prue
returns.
DEMON KNIGHTS #9 (DC)
I’ve been investigating exactly the background Paul Cornell enjoyed
before entering the exciting world of comics, and it was usually summed up
with, “worked on DOCTOR WHO.” Turns out
he started out as a fan who got to write some fiction, book-form, and some of
that led to work on the actual TV version of DOCTOR WHO, and he’s also got a
few pieces of original fiction out there, but it may be safe to say that his
name has gained greater recognition as he’s begun his career in comics. Since coming to DC, Cornell has truly
blossomed, certainly in his Lex Luthor arc in the pages of the pre-New 52
ACTION COMICS (must-read material), and now in the pages of DEMON KNIGHTS, a
fantasy series that functions much in the same way as his acclaimed CAPTAIN
BRITAIN AND MI:13, sadly cut short before its time. DEMON KNIGHTS is what that series would have
been like had Cornell been given complete creative control (one of CB&MI13’s
most notable arcs was a tie-in with SECRET INVASION), and in many ways feels
like what Grant Morrison’s SEVEN SOLDIERS OF VICTORY would have read like as an
ongoing series. Most of the characters
involved have their own agendas, but their common destinies (as of this moment,
since characters like Jason Blood/Etrigan and Vandal Savage are active in
modern times as well) are currently involved in the continuing legacy of
Camelot. The famed wizard Merlin is a
virtual stand-in for Walter Bishop from FRINGE, which I find utterly
fascinating. It’s Cornell’s ability to
make anything fantastic to be relevant that marks him not only to be one of the
best writers in comics today but arguably a threat to be the best writer of
tomorrow. If that’s not enough reason to
read him now, I don’t know what is.
GREEN LANTERN #9 (DC)
The secret origin of the Indigo Tribe is exploded by Geoff
Johns in this issue, and as usual, he manages to tie it in with the intricate
mythology he’s both inherited and greatly expanded on within the Green Lantern
mythos. If you’re a fan, you know who
Abin Sur is, and how he helped set BLACKEST NIGHT into order; now it becomes
clear that he was looking past those events, too, and that’s why he helped
create the Indigo Tribe, under circumstances and with a partner you’ll have to
read this issue to fully enjoy. Suffice
it to say, but this is probably the most important issue so far in the New 52
era, and is probably the one that finally links the work Johns was doing
previously with the soft reboot that “War of the Green Lanterns” helped usher.
MOON KNIGHT #12 (Marvel)
One of the things referenced in the letters column
substitute from BRILLIANT #3 was this wrap-up of the series Brian Michael
Bendis improbably agreed to do, handling one of Marvel’s problem children, a
character who’s had multiple chances at ongoing series and pretty much failed
at all of them, for decades now. Bendis,
so far as I can tell with this issue, seems to have concluded it makes sense to
make Moon Knight actually seem crazy and isolated, given that his tenuous grip
on reality has always suggested that. If
I’d known this earlier, I might have sampled the series earlier, but for many
years now, I assumed Bendis was a Marvel stooge the company’s fanboys embraced
simply because he was ubiquitous and seemed to write every other title for
them. Granted, a lot of his Avengers
work (and there was an avalanche of it) definitely seemed to support that
theory every time I sampled it, but there was other stuff that suggested he was
more competent than that. BRILLIANT
nailed that for me, and so now I’m free to approach Bendis from a new
perspective. This is one of my rewards.
ULTIMATE COMICS SPIDER-MAN #10 (Marvel)
This is another. I
sampled the first issue of this second reboot of the Ultimate Spider-Man adventures
(the first to not feature Peter Parker), featuring the introduction of Miles
Morales as only the third new Spider-Man in Marvel history (I’ll give you a
nickel for naming the other one, and I’m not referring to clones who may or may
not answer to the name Ben Reilly). It’s
amazing how vividly inspired Bendis has been by his long tenure with Ultimate
Spider-Man. This alone has secured his
status in comics history, and I’m kind of hitting myself for not reading
another Morales adventure until now. But
this is a good one to jump back into with, as he finally learns the truth about
Uncle Aaron, which is another of those brain-numbingly obvious superhero
stories that few writers have actually done it.
Treat yourself and discover it for yourself.
WASTELAND #37 (Oni)
Another issue!
Concluding “Under the God,” Michael and Abi finally get to leave the
Cross Chains town of Godsholm, sort of like THE BOOK OF ELI but with less
Denzel Washington, and shev off back along their journey to A-Ree-Yass-I, along
with Gerr, who will soon help all of us better understand what exactly is going
on. This is an epic adventure that may
finally find its audience once it concludes so that there can no longer be any
doubt concerning its brilliance. Christopher
Mitten may be working on other stuff, too, but this will be his legacy.
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
Teenage Wasteland
Here I go again. I
really shouldn’t have, but I opened a box at Heroes & Dragons, meaning I
will be reading comics on a regular basis again, in a more limited capacity
than I have in the past, when I didn’t have a ton of impulse control. This time I’ll be reading on the stuff I
really want to read. Some of my
selections have been shaped by the extended trial I’ve been on for the past
year, some by decisions I made before it.
It’s really an effort to read books that may be unavailable typically,
things I don’t want to miss, things I won’t have had the ability to catch if I
hadn’t made this decision. For instance,
as visitors to Comics Reader will know by now, I’m a fan of Oni Press’s
WASTELAND, a comic that spent a great deal of time recently not actually being
published, but the circumstances that forced that particular break were
recently resolved, and throughout 2012 it’s been back on a regular basis. I haven’t seen it in any comic book store I’ve
visited since Newbury Comics, so in order to read it without a lot of hassle,
opening up a box was a decision that was more or less necessary.
There are two kinds of people who read comics: those with
arrested development and those who are simply developing. I don’t mean to disparage either group, but
the fact is, it takes a special kind of person to be interested in stories told
in illustrated form, especially when the most popular stories in the medium
feature outsized personalities in colorful costumes. Part of what drove me to reading comics in
the first place was vindicated frustration from a childhood deprived of them
when I was most keen to do so; I’ve been playing catch-up for twenty
years. I was a teenager by the time I
was able to fulfill this ambition, and it so happened that at the time, there
were a lot of comics being published that rewarded continued interest, and that
helped develop a habit. Yes, reading
comics is a habit; otherwise they wouldn’t be released in monthly increments.
Again, none of this is a bad thing. In fact, I think it’s a very good thing,
because comics have an ability to remove the filter many storytellers force on
themselves, making their tales more mundane, more ordinary, more constrained by
things that have actually happened. That
in itself isn’t a bad thing, and in some instances can be a very good thing,
but the universal is at its best in the sublime, when it activates the
imagination. There are more benefits to
looking beyond the simple and embracing the abstract. Comics do this better than any other expressive
form except perhaps music. For some
reason, but you combine a static image with words, the words become more
important, if you let them.
That being said, let’s look at some examples:
AQUAMAN #8 (DC)
Geoff Johns continues to expand his vision of Aquaman beyond
the simple parody that pop culture has embraced in the past ten years, abetted
by lackluster comic book portrayals in endless relaunches throughout many
decades (Tad Williams, I contend, remains the sole exception) since the
character’s creation. Some creators have
understood the potential of his unique setting, the mythology that Aquaman
alone can truly tap into, but Johns is looking beyond that simple vision and
tapping into how Aquaman’s life and career can be shaped outside his
connections to the Justice League and embrace, like his Green Lantern stories,
a far greater world than ever before. To
wit, Johns opens this issue with the young Arthur Curry attempting to distance
himself from humans who could never understand him, following the death of his
father, thrusting him into a dawning awareness of his Atlantean heritage. He eventually meets others who understand
him, but they aren’t the Justice League, but rather a whole myriad of outcasts. As I’ve been saying, anyone who hasn’t read
AQUAMAN yet should probably start doing so soon, because if history is any
indication, Johns has a lot more planned, and this is just the foundation.
THE AVENGERS #1 (Marvel)
A reprint of the 2010 relaunch, Brian Michael Bendis (guru
of all things Earth’s Mightiest Heroes) picks up the pieces of many conflicts
he himself has helped engineer, reassembling the team once more and then
bringing back time-traveling Kang for a more specific purpose. There are moments where the gravity of what
everyone’s been through is clear, but there’s also the trademark flippant style
of Bendis that has likely built him his following (it’s no wonder he moonlights
as the Ultimate chronicler of Spider-Man, since that’s his natural character
vein). This one’s a freebie, which is
really smart, given the movie that pretty much everyone is going to see this
summer, many in multiple visits.
AVENGERS VS X-MEN #0 (Marvel)
I got this reprint, too (had to pay for it, though), the one
that looks like the most obvious gimmick in a long series of Marvel events
since Bendis came aboard, but it spears someone really did figure out that
there’s a story to be had, too. Bendis
started the ball rolling with HOUSE OF M (not to mention “Disassembled”), but
the House of Ideas finally figured out what to do with mutant messiah Hope,
too, tying her in with the Phoenix saga that was the highlight of the Claremont
era that made the X-Men rise to the prominence it still enjoys today. If this event figures out how to handle all
of what it promises competently, it may be the most important story from Marvel
in the past decade.
BATMAN AND ROBIN #5 (DC)
Seeing this even earlier issue from the story I snapped up in
one of my previous visits, I couldn’t pass it up. I am now thoroughly convinced that the series
has already earned a prominent spot in the eventual 2012 QB50. Peter Tomasi and Patrick Gleason are creating
the most important in-continuity Batman stories, period.
DEMON KNIGHTS #7 (DC)
Another issue that fills in one of my gaps, Paul Cornell’s
period heroics are just as astonishing as everything else he does, featuring
historic heroes in ways only Grant Morrison previously approached with SEVEN
SOLDIERS OF VICTORY. If you want,
consider this an ongoing series inspired by some of the mini-series in that
project.
JUSTICE LEAGUE #8 (DC)
Geoff Johns again, once again putting the focus on a
relative outsider, approaching the League from the outside in. This time it’s Green Arrow, more famously
depicted as an older, more cynical hero obsessed with social causes and his own
legacy. As a younger version, he does
seem a little more superfluous, so it’s no wonder the League wants nothing to
do with him (even if they have other reasons besides), even when he finally,
petulantly, gives voice to the reasons he wants to join, which more accurately
reflect the Oliver Queen we know and love.
The backup Shazam feature continues, and is already a definitive version
of the character. But what else did you
expect from Geoff Johns?
RED HOOD AND THE OUTLAWS #8 (DC)
I can’t decide whether I actually want to read this series
on a regular basis, but I keep getting drawn to it because Jason Todd is such a
compelling character, a damaged individual with a tragic past, sometimes awful
tendencies, and a road to redemption.
Scott Lobdell has captured this perfectly, and Kenneth Rocafort is an
extremely unusual artist for DC (the only negative this issue is the cartoonish
fat woman who’s the villain of the story), and another strong draw. Forget the backlash concerning the costume of
Starfire. You need to at least sample
this series.
SAUCER COUNTRY #2 (Vertigo)
Sometimes it’s better to miss the first issue of a comic
book, and in this case, it’s almost mandatory.
Arcadia Alvarado will be running for President, but she believes she was
abducted by aliens. Do you believe
her? That’s the whole thrust of this
series from Paul Cornell, finally getting the chance to stretch himself a
little, with a concept entirely created by himself, in a book that has the
potential to be the next great Vertigo project.
THE TWELVE #12 (Marvel)
WATCHMEN as retold by J. Michael Straczynski and Chris
Weston finally concludes. Okay, it’s not
really WATCHMEN, more like Captain America retold in the manner of
WATCHMEN. Regardless, this was an
ambitious project of motivations and fate that proved fascinating and then
frustrating when Straczynski took an extended break, leading many fans for
several years to fear that it would never be concluded. So important to Weston, actually, that he
produced a one-shot on his own to continue the saga of the WWII heroes
suspended and then revive in modern times, only to succumb to their own
failings, THE TWELVE comes to a worthy if quiet conclusion, befitting its focus
on character ahead of sensation.
Hopefully it will take its place among the seminal superhero stories.
WASTELAND #36 (Oni)
It’s a little strange for this reader to dive
back into the series now that RESURRECTION artist Justin Greenwood has settling
in as replacement for Christopher Mitten, whose distinctive style helped shape
the early issues of Antony Johnston’s epic vision of the future, especially
after having read (and written synopses for here at Comics Reader) the first
six collected editions. I have missed
four issues between the last one featured in the paperbacks and what I was
surprised to find waiting for me last week.
Michael and Abi, on their way to A-Ree-Yass-I, have stumbled into
another town overrun with overblown egos.
If you were at all hesitant about WASTELAND before, it may be easier to
catch exactly what this series is all about with these new issues, with new art
but the same complex storytelling Johnston has been employing from the start.
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Batman without Grant Morrison, Part 2
Last year I wrote about Batman comics from the perspective
of someone who could just barely at that time accept that there were other
writers in 2011 capable of writing a compelling story and not be named Grant
Morrison.
Yes, I’m part of the Grant Morrison orthodoxy. At that point, he’d just launched BATMAN,
INCORPORATED, the last stage of an epic saga that had already delivered “Batman
R.I.P.” and the launch of BATMAN AND ROBIN.
In 2012, BATMAN, INC. is slated to finally begin its endgame, returning
as part of the second wave of the New 52.
Other writers have been able to dominate the bat-sandbox in the
meantime. You may have heard of Scott
Snyder, for instance. Before we reach
him, let’s just go over the two books I’m not actively reading. DETECTIVE COMICS currently features Tony
Daniel continuing his fairly traditional version, while BATMAN: THE DARK KNIGHT
is the comic any fan who isn’t already invested in the character can enjoy if
they’d like. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed
Daniel’s work in the past, but in an effort to streamline my comics purchases,
I haven’t really attempted to keep up with his stories since last fall.
BATMAN #6 (DC)
Scott Snyder: right, then.
This issue probably does a fine job of summing up exactly the approach
he’s taken with the franchise. Where
someone like Morrison takes in an expansive look at what others have done and
what can be done on top of that, Snyder has built something of his own. The issue actually reads a lot like Frank
Miller’s Batman, with art from Greg Capullo that could easily be mistaken for
pages from THE DARK KNIGHT RETURNS (probably intentional). It’s a little disappointing that the story in
the issue falls into the same basic territory Morrison touched on in “R.I.P.”
and can also be found in “Knightfall,” or otherwise an enemy that seems to not
only have outsmarted Batman, but outmuscled him as well. Yet Batman outlasts his foe Talon, embodiment
of the Court of Owls, a layer of intrigue Snyder has added to the Gotham City
tapestry (building on what he and Kyle Higgins established in GATES OF GOTHAM)
that may or may not become a permanent addition to the landscape (depends on
what’s left to play with once the big crossover’s done). Let’s get another thing out of the way: the
cover of this issue is a classic, and was something I needed to have in my
collection. But yeah, Snyder is at the
head of a major crossover arc while Morrison’s feet are still in the sandbox. It’s not sacrilegious, but it’s definitely
interesting. Will fans ultimately
remember this Court of Owls business with as much enthusiasm as what Morrison
is on the verge of completing? Well,
that’s what I’m talking about, Batman without Grant Morrison. It actually has happened before, and it’ll
happen again, and it’s actually happening right now.
BATMAN AND ROBIN #s 6-8 (DC)
I was as big a fan of Peter J. Tomasi and Patrick Gleason in
the pages of GREEN LANTERN CORPS as anyone, and so was pleased as punch when
they were tapped as the regular successors of Morrison in the pages of the book
he launched to further the adventures of the new Robin, Damian Wayne, and
whichever Batman happens to be under the cowl.
But I didn’t really expect much from it.
I mean, it’s Damian. Who writes
Damian better than Grant Morrison? I
think I can now confidently say, Peter J. Tomasi. I happened to stumble across this blockbuster
story in total by complete accident. I
had no idea it happened until I looked at one issue, then another, until I had
all three. Basically the son of Henri
Ducard tries to seduce Damian to the dark side, years after failing to
impressive the formative Bruce Wayne.
Ducard, as BATMAN BEGINS reminded fans, was one of Batman’s main
influences as he developed the skills necessary to wage his war on crime. (Strangely, very few comics have used Ducard
since the 2005 film that elevated his profile.)
Damian is no dummy, but he becomes more manipulated than he expected,
leading to a shocking event the last of these issues dedicates itself to
resolving, a major development in the life of the two heroes in the title of
the series. You don’t expect something
like this, because most writers skirt character development as much as
possible, and yet that’s what this whole story is about. It solidifies Tomasi as arguably more
important to the ongoing legacy of Batman than Snyder in the foreground of
Snyder’s big moment, and makes BATMAN AND ROBIN a must-read. At the very least, you must read these
issues. They’ll tell you everything you
need to know.
I’ve got some other comics to talk about, too:
ACTION COMICS #s 7-8 (DC)
The problem with Superman is that most writers think of him
more as an ideal than a functioning character, even when they’re working with
all of his most traditional elements. Do
you really think Grant Morrison would make the same mistake? Concluding his opening arc on this New 52
reboot, Morrison forces the Brainiac connection to its best possible results,
forcing Superman to face his human and Kryptonian heritages in ways only Grant
Morrison is capable of doing. The
conclusion is perhaps more fascinating than the rest of the storytelling,
leading Superman in a typical Morrison direction, exploding all conventional
wisdom, leaving him muttering in Kryptonian, and the reader wondering just
where else Morrison intends to go.
AQUAMAN #7 (DC)
Geoff Johns finally gets around to exploding mythology with
Aquaman, meanwhile, introducing, brilliantly, a whole different league of
allies that will hopefully allow readers and writers to finally acknowledge
that Aquaman is not just some schmuck who talks to fish and serves as a de facto
member of the Justice League. If you’ve
been waiting for an excuse to check this one out, this is it.
DEMON KNIGHTS #8 (DC)
Paul Cornell, meanwhile, is doing that kind of work in this
overlooked series. In this issue, Jason
Blood and Etrigan are thrust into the spotlight, their weird and complicated relationship
explored, all in the greater context of this brilliant comic.
GREEN LANTERN #8 (DC)
Hal Jordan is not one to accept limitations, and Geoff Johns
has been exploring more of Hal in the pages of the New 52 relaunch than he
managed in most of the past six years, where the most famous Green Lantern got
swept from one momentous development in the greater mythology after
another. There are still big things
happening, but Hal seems more ready to try and be himself again than at any
point since his REBIRTH. Too bad things
like the Indigo Tribe finally playing its hand keep getting in his way.
JUSTICE LEAGUE #7 (DC)
Geoff Johns has secretly reshaped the Justice League into a
team that supports the story of Wonder Woman, and this issue he gets to get back
to that, spending considerable time with her forgotten lead association, Steve
Trevor, who serves as official liaison for the team with government officials
who are just as awestruck as the general public. Only Steve sees things clearly, and now there’s
someone who looks to exploit his budding cynicism…
NIGHTWING #7 (DC)
One of the perks of writing GATES OF GOTHAM with Scott
Snyder is that Kyle Higgins gets to put Dick Grayson close to the front of the
Court of Owls saga, as this conclusion to the first arc of the New 52 NIGHTWING
relaunch helps make clear. Finally
discovering the awful truths behind the assassin Saiko and all the
complications he discovered in returning to Haly’s Circus, Dick learns that he
was supposed to be recruited as one of many Talons who are now being activated
to challenge Batman’s control of Gotham’s future. And to think I originally feared that Dick
would lose all the respect he’d gained in his several years as Batman…
RED HOOD AND THE OUTLAWS #6 (DC)
I’ll be the first to admit that there’s no real way to hide
the fact that I haven’t supported this series as much as I’d like to, despite
vigorously opposing the ridiculous backlash that built up against it almost
instantly. I love that Jason Todd has
his own book, and that it’s being done intelligently. This is probably the most important issue to
date, with Scott Lobdell exploring how Jason met Starfire, the center of all
that controversy given that she apparently still dresses in the comics the way
she didn’t in the cartoon. Starfire’s
prior relationship with Dick Grayson becomes just one of the fascinating focal
points of the issue, how Jason reacts against it and then accepts her as an
ally, and how this is probably the first time anyone has addressed the fact
that Koriand’r is an alien who has basically been marooned on Earth. That’s why you should ignore what you’ve
heard and read this series.
SUPREME #63 (Image)
Alan Moore’s final script is much the same as
his other heavily-inflected Supreme stories, but it at least provides a really
convenient segue to what comes next in this latest Extreme relaunch. Worth a look.
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Demon Knights #5
writer: Paul Cornell
artist: Diogenes Neves
This is my second issue of Paul Cornell's Demon Knights, but I don't feel near as lost as you might expect, considering the last issue was a spotlight on a single member of the ensemble, and this one splashes everyone into the mix (and ends up reading a lot like Cornell's excellent Captain Britain and MI13).
Cornell is one of my favorite writers, so that's why I keep sampling this book, even though I'm never sure when I'll get to read another issue, much less how long he'll get to write this one (longevity is not one of his strong suits, which I attribute to editorial decisions more than anything).
One of the great virtues of this series, aside from Cornell himself (and Diogenes Neves) is the way it helps shape DC history, even bringing in historical Amazons (which is something I'm surprised hasn't really been done before). Too often comics are written from the perspective that an ongoing project either takes place in the crowded present, as a Western, or the distant past. This one's a welcome example of the rich prospects to be found elsewhere, where we can find Etrigan in his element for the first time; check in with Vandal Savage, who's easily one of the most interesting characters DC usually has no clue what to do with; and even check in with the Shining Knight legacy, recently explored by Grant Morrison in Seven Soldiers.
Yet it seems few readers are paying attention, which is a curse Cornell has been stung with for far too long now. Will it take his new Vertigo series, Saucer Country, for fans to finally take notice?
artist: Diogenes Neves
This is my second issue of Paul Cornell's Demon Knights, but I don't feel near as lost as you might expect, considering the last issue was a spotlight on a single member of the ensemble, and this one splashes everyone into the mix (and ends up reading a lot like Cornell's excellent Captain Britain and MI13).
Cornell is one of my favorite writers, so that's why I keep sampling this book, even though I'm never sure when I'll get to read another issue, much less how long he'll get to write this one (longevity is not one of his strong suits, which I attribute to editorial decisions more than anything).
One of the great virtues of this series, aside from Cornell himself (and Diogenes Neves) is the way it helps shape DC history, even bringing in historical Amazons (which is something I'm surprised hasn't really been done before). Too often comics are written from the perspective that an ongoing project either takes place in the crowded present, as a Western, or the distant past. This one's a welcome example of the rich prospects to be found elsewhere, where we can find Etrigan in his element for the first time; check in with Vandal Savage, who's easily one of the most interesting characters DC usually has no clue what to do with; and even check in with the Shining Knight legacy, recently explored by Grant Morrison in Seven Soldiers.
Yet it seems few readers are paying attention, which is a curse Cornell has been stung with for far too long now. Will it take his new Vertigo series, Saucer Country, for fans to finally take notice?
Thursday, January 5, 2012
Demon Knights #4
writer: Paul Cornell
artist: Michael Choi, Diogenes Neves
This is one of the books from the New 52 that I had intended to sample a long time ago (y'know, relatively speaking), but didn't have a chance to given my altered circumstances (not the least of which being, I don't technically read comics anymore, or definitely differently than I used to). Finally, I found my opportunity. To my surprise, I came upon an issue that doesn't even feature most of the so-called Demon Knights (as far as I can tell, this may be the first issue that term is even used inside the actual book), but instead focuses on the backstory of Shining Knight, and his strange relationship to Merlin and prophecy. Paul Cornell has consistently impressed me as a writer, whether on Captain Britain and MI:13, Knight & Squire, or Action Comics. If all goes well, he will be the next important DC writer, in the same league as Geoff Johns and Grant Morrison. This issue is just the latest example for me.
artist: Michael Choi, Diogenes Neves
This is one of the books from the New 52 that I had intended to sample a long time ago (y'know, relatively speaking), but didn't have a chance to given my altered circumstances (not the least of which being, I don't technically read comics anymore, or definitely differently than I used to). Finally, I found my opportunity. To my surprise, I came upon an issue that doesn't even feature most of the so-called Demon Knights (as far as I can tell, this may be the first issue that term is even used inside the actual book), but instead focuses on the backstory of Shining Knight, and his strange relationship to Merlin and prophecy. Paul Cornell has consistently impressed me as a writer, whether on Captain Britain and MI:13, Knight & Squire, or Action Comics. If all goes well, he will be the next important DC writer, in the same league as Geoff Johns and Grant Morrison. This issue is just the latest example for me.
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