What I love about Free Comic Book Day is that it's basically the best shot most companies have at being visible to the average reader. For the folks showing up just for free comics, it probably won't make much of a difference. For the folks who show up to comics shops every Wednesday or in any other sense on a regular basis, it's a chance to find out what companies outside of DC and Marvel are doing (because let's face it, for the average fan, it's still basically just DC and Marvel). I don't know how many sales these free comics result in (for a long time, I bought Atomic Robo comics in part because Red 5 always included it in their FCBD releases, when Red 5 had Atomic Robo in its slate), but it says a lot about the companies, what they're willing to release for the annual celebration.
Here again is what I got, and what I thought after reading through all of it:
Animosity Tales (AfterShock)
Marguerite Bennett's comic is basically the flagship of AfterShock, another would-be Image in a crowded indy scene. What was more interesting than the story featured in the issue was the summary of the series to date, which reads a heck of a lot like The Walking Dead. So if you want your zombies to instead be animals, this is the comic for you.
Bloodshot (Valiant)
I've been a supporter of the Valiant relaunch for years (not specifically from the start, but around the time The Valiant came out). While I don't love everything they publish, I still maintain that this is the discerning superhero fan's best bet for a coherent modern landscape to follow, the Ultimate version of the classic Valiant characters, the condensed version of what the New 52 attempted. And Bloodshot has been a part of it, and been a favorite of mine, for years. This take is from Tim Seeley, who's been an underrated star of the modern comics landscape whether in his DC work or elsewhere. But Seeley's take on Bloodshot feels hollow compared to what Jeff Lemire was doing. Lemire pulled off Bloodsquirt! He wants a Bloodshot that's actually the complete reverse of Lemire's, all action and no character study. I thought that was the best part of the modern Bloodshot! Anyway, also included is the latest chapter of the Rai saga, Fallen World, which reads a lot better. It's from Dan Abnett, who could use a breakout solo project.
Deadly Class (Image)
I'd sampled the series previously, but this particular issue was a brilliant way to highlight what makes it truly awesome, and I'm glad all over again that there's a TV adaptation, which I hope to catch. Remender's a particularly busy creator, the hardest working concept engine not named Mark Millar, who takes all manner of risks with high concepts.
H1 Ignition (Humanoids)
Here's Mark Waid's latest attempt at a startup. Dude's been at this for twenty years now, and...has yet to find one that truly sticks (or as with Boom!...sticks with). This one's all about straining for modern credibility, the social awareness that actually...turned off a lot of Marvel fans. Maybe it works better with new characters. I don't know. But this preview is somewhat poorly put together. I have little faith of it sticking any better than his previous efforts. I have no idea why Waid strayed so far from what he did so brilliantly in the pages of The Flash. Maybe someday he rediscovers that spark.
Interceptor (Vault)
Donny Cates is another firecracker in modern comics, but one that's working equally hard at mainstream (with Marvel) as with his personal projects. Since this isn't a well-loved era for Marvel, fans haven't really rallied around him, but I like to see what he's doing. I like his storytelling in this issue. He's definitely worth keeping an eye on.
Punchline (Antarctic Press)
Here's the best comic I read from the bunch! It's a superhero book from other than DC/Marvel, which is always an interesting prospect. There will be great material done elsewhere (see: Valiant) and there will be shoddy stuff. This looks like great stuff.
Part of what makes it look great is the artwork, naturally. Matthew Weldon seems like the closest I'll get to classic Stuart Immonen, before he started adding detail into his clean forms. There's some rough work in there, but Weldon is like Patrick Gleason more interested in shadow than warm figures, a moody look at its best that the touch of reality Bill Williams seeks in a script that looks more to the human than superhuman.
I like the details Williams includes, like the fact that the Black Arrow is actually two people sharing a costume to evade seekers of secret identities. (I'd read that comic, too, thank you!) It feels like a genuinely fresh take, just when you thought you'd seen everything. There's a collection already available with the rest of the story, which I think I might actually track down (read: order online). And I guess there's more new issues coming.
Stranger Things (Dark Horse)
As I've said, I haven't been initiated into the Stranger Things cult, and this comic didn't make me consider reconsidering. Fortunately there was also a Black Hammer backup, with Jeff Lemire presenting the "Cabin of Horrors," clearly an homage to House of Mystery and such. Eventually we meet Jack Sabbath (familiar to Black Hammer fans?), who has just discovered that his backstory might be different than he previously thought. Cowritten by Ray Fawkes, in defense of whom I sort of exiled myself from Millarworld a few months back. Also discovered that Mice Templar artist Victor Santos has been working at Dark Horse recently, with a long-running espionage comic called Polar, which might be worth checking out. See, Free Comic Book Day??? Success.
Year of the Villain (DC)
Again, not technically a FCBD release, but for the second year in a row a cheap DC comic meant to promote upcoming stories. Scott Snyder is the brains behind a new Underworld Unleashed/Forever Evil-type event headlined by the bad guys. I really wish Lex Luthor could just stay the antihero he's done so well in stories like Final Night and Geoff Johns' Justice League, but he keeps getting dragged back into villainy. This is one of those stories where "he's finally gone too far." More significantly, Brian Michael Bendis signals he may be interested in working on Batgirl comics, with a tale that finally allows Barbara Gordon to remember she was pretty badass as Oracle, too.
Star Wars Day: May the 4th Be With You (Marvel)
Again, not technically a FCBD release (but part of another of the things last Saturday was culturally). Besides some previews for various comics, there are some creator interviews, including one spotlighting Kieron Gillen's creation of Doctor Aphra, whom he repeatedly describes as a Star Wars version of Indiana Jones. (Yes, yes, yes: Harrison Ford played both Indy and Han Solo, but Gillen's point is that Aphra collects artifacts...but with a more nefarious agenda in mind!) On the whole, I'm quite happy that Marvel got the rights for Star Wars back from Dark Horse (other than Dark Horse's brilliant adaptation of The Star Wars), as it sticks much closer to film material and less creating whatever the hell it wants. I just can't decide if Aphra is closer to the Dark Horse mentality than Marvel's...
Showing posts with label Star Wars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Star Wars. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 8, 2019
Sunday, October 2, 2016
Quarter Bin 98 "Star Wars: Shattered Empire #2"
Star Wars: Shattered Empire #2 (Marvel)
From December 2015
writer: Greg Rucka
artist: Marco Checchetto, Angel Unzueta, Emilio Laiso
Thanks to a deliberate purchase and then an incidental one (in one of those convenient packs this issue also came from) of the first issue, I know how this mini-series began, twice, but until now hadn't read further into the story. Finally!
Shattered Empire is part of the new initiative that replaces all the other stories that tried to flesh out what happened after Return of the Jedi. In fact, Shattered Empire starts immediately at the end of Return of the Jedi, with the parents of The Force Awakens character Poe Dameron participating in the Battle of Endor.
That's all well and good. Greg Rucka usually writes strong female characters, and so his focus is squarely on Poe's mum, Shara. This issue she's drafted to escort Princess Leia to Naboo. Yes, this is a story that not only takes the prequels seriously, but remembers that Leia's mum was Queen Amidala. I like the prequels. I like stories that make nice logical connections, too.
The part of this comic that doesn't work nearly as well for me is the Emperor having a fail-safe program that's more or less a complete duplicate of Order 66, which indicates to all surviving Imperial forces that they must eradicate the Rebellion. Listen, if this had been remotely possible, that would've happened well before the events depicted in A New Hope. It's this very kind of shoddy storytelling that the Disney canon was theoretically envisioned to replace.
Frankly, I'm surprised to see someone like Rucka participating in it.
From December 2015
writer: Greg Rucka
artist: Marco Checchetto, Angel Unzueta, Emilio Laiso
Thanks to a deliberate purchase and then an incidental one (in one of those convenient packs this issue also came from) of the first issue, I know how this mini-series began, twice, but until now hadn't read further into the story. Finally!
Shattered Empire is part of the new initiative that replaces all the other stories that tried to flesh out what happened after Return of the Jedi. In fact, Shattered Empire starts immediately at the end of Return of the Jedi, with the parents of The Force Awakens character Poe Dameron participating in the Battle of Endor.
That's all well and good. Greg Rucka usually writes strong female characters, and so his focus is squarely on Poe's mum, Shara. This issue she's drafted to escort Princess Leia to Naboo. Yes, this is a story that not only takes the prequels seriously, but remembers that Leia's mum was Queen Amidala. I like the prequels. I like stories that make nice logical connections, too.
The part of this comic that doesn't work nearly as well for me is the Emperor having a fail-safe program that's more or less a complete duplicate of Order 66, which indicates to all surviving Imperial forces that they must eradicate the Rebellion. Listen, if this had been remotely possible, that would've happened well before the events depicted in A New Hope. It's this very kind of shoddy storytelling that the Disney canon was theoretically envisioned to replace.
Frankly, I'm surprised to see someone like Rucka participating in it.
Saturday, October 1, 2016
Quarter Bin 97 "Star Wars: Obi-Wan & Anakin #1"
Star Wars: Obi-Wan & Anakin #1 (Marvel)
From March 2016
writer: Charles Soule
artist: Marco Checcetto
Charles Soule, otherwise known as one of my favorite new writers of the past few years, very easily. I was crushed when he left DC for Marvel, but relieved when I saw him work on quality projects at his new home, including the excellent Lando Calrissian mini-series. So here he is again, bringing his trademark grasp of character back to Star Wars and...characters as depicted and depicted in the prequel era???
The horror! Except for someone like me, who inexplicably likes the prequels, and is happy that not only is Marvel dipping its toes into those waters, but allowing someone the caliber of Soule to not only do it for them, but do it brilliantly.
As if there was ever any doubt.
The relationship between Obi-Wan Kenobi and Anakin Skywalker is one of the most important ones in all of Star Wars lore. Their hellacious fight in Revenge of the Sith was long a part of franchise legend, even before the movie ever existed, and its sequel in A New Hope leant the very first movie considerable emotional depth. And yet, their relationship was otherwise one of friendship. Obi-Wan was the one person, besides Padme, who took Anakin seriously, warts and all. So Soule can be comfortable allowing Anakin to voice the same kinds of doubts and theories that would lead to Darth Vader we'd previously only seen between him and Padme, and Obi-Wan accept it in stride.
The best part, the big twist, of this issue however, is the Jedi ending up on a world that has no place for their kind, and in fact has no idea what a Jedi even is. It's an irony that the Jedi-heavy prequels alienated fans, while the Jedi-light originals, and The Force Awakens, have been such fan-favorites. One would almost venture to assume that it's Jedi the fans don't like. They like their lone wolves, thank you very much.
So putting a couple of prequel-era characters into a situation ripe for that kind of storytelling is yet another sign of Soule's genius. I love that guy. He might actually get some readers to be okay with the prequels. Such a feat is worthy of a Jedi.
From March 2016
writer: Charles Soule
artist: Marco Checcetto
Charles Soule, otherwise known as one of my favorite new writers of the past few years, very easily. I was crushed when he left DC for Marvel, but relieved when I saw him work on quality projects at his new home, including the excellent Lando Calrissian mini-series. So here he is again, bringing his trademark grasp of character back to Star Wars and...characters as depicted and depicted in the prequel era???
The horror! Except for someone like me, who inexplicably likes the prequels, and is happy that not only is Marvel dipping its toes into those waters, but allowing someone the caliber of Soule to not only do it for them, but do it brilliantly.
As if there was ever any doubt.
The relationship between Obi-Wan Kenobi and Anakin Skywalker is one of the most important ones in all of Star Wars lore. Their hellacious fight in Revenge of the Sith was long a part of franchise legend, even before the movie ever existed, and its sequel in A New Hope leant the very first movie considerable emotional depth. And yet, their relationship was otherwise one of friendship. Obi-Wan was the one person, besides Padme, who took Anakin seriously, warts and all. So Soule can be comfortable allowing Anakin to voice the same kinds of doubts and theories that would lead to Darth Vader we'd previously only seen between him and Padme, and Obi-Wan accept it in stride.
The best part, the big twist, of this issue however, is the Jedi ending up on a world that has no place for their kind, and in fact has no idea what a Jedi even is. It's an irony that the Jedi-heavy prequels alienated fans, while the Jedi-light originals, and The Force Awakens, have been such fan-favorites. One would almost venture to assume that it's Jedi the fans don't like. They like their lone wolves, thank you very much.
So putting a couple of prequel-era characters into a situation ripe for that kind of storytelling is yet another sign of Soule's genius. I love that guy. He might actually get some readers to be okay with the prequels. Such a feat is worthy of a Jedi.
Sunday, October 11, 2015
Reading Comics 172 "A final week..."
It always sucks having to tell your local comics shop that you have to close your hold file. But that's what happened last Wednesday...
When I started this blog at the end of 2010, I was headed toward what I thought was the end of a very enjoyable period of reading comics that'd begun six years earlier. Instead, Flashpoint and the New 52 succeeded in sucking me back in. It's always a question of money. I walked away from comics in 1999 because I needed money for college. The intended 2011 break was because I was entering my worst financial period (and it just got worse and worse until finally...it got better). Now, it's because I will be entering a unique period of my life, dedicated to my sister and her baby. I don't know when I'll have comics money again. It's wise to walk away sooner rather than later, without that dangling period like I gave myself the last time, keeping the window open. The window is closed.
It sucks, in some ways, because I would love to read Dark Knight III in its individual installments. I would love to read Klaus from Grant Morrison. And there are other comics I won't have a chance to read, or haven't heard about yet, and...
So it's better to try and not think about that. This was a good year, a very good year, and it was one in which a lot of great stories ended. Which makes all this far more fitting than I could've imagined. If there has to be another moment to walk away, this is as good a moment as there can be.
All that being said, I made sure the last week was a good one, too.
18 DAYS #4 (Graphic India)
This issue is more or less an incredibly abbreviated version of the classic Bhagavad Gita, in which Arjuna and Krishna have an epic heart-to-heart. I've grown to appreciate how this Morrison project has opened up the Iliad of India. This is pretty much what I always hoped Shanower would've done with Age of Bronze (a project that is apparently indefinitely on hold). Shanower, left to his own devices, is far less interesting than the kind of liveliness he exhibited adapting Baum's material in Marvel's Oz series. Even if Morrison himself isn't writing 18 Days directly, his blueprint has proven invaluable, and the results have been continually and even increasingly impressive. I will try and keep tabs on this series, and hope to catch Morrison's other Graphic India project, Avatarex, at some point, too.
ATOMIC ROBO AND THE RING OF FIRE #2 (IDW)
The letters column humbles me as a fan of Robo. Clearly there are fans out there who are much more on top of Robo mythology...
BATMAN & ROBIN ETERNAL #1 (DC)
The debut of DC's lately weekly (scheduled for half a year) celebrates the Boy Wonder legacy, which as a long-time fan of Robin I'm very happy to see. There's also a "Robin War" crossover coming up, making this an excellent time for Robin fans in general. The story here seems to be clever even if at the same time a little clumsy, one of those "there's new information about the past that we're revealing now and it happens to be a deep, dark secret!" deals that's kind of trademark Snyder (see: Court of Owls, etc.). Dick Grayson is at the center of the action, both in flashback and in the present. Jason Todd and Tim Drake play support this issue, as does Harper Row, the apparent would-be Robin who instead became Bluebird. Stephanie Brown, who was Robin, will be part of the story. Left out so far is Damian Wayne (who will be a part of "Robin War"), as well as Duke Thomas (We Are Robin). The best part of this issue on the creative front is Tony Daniel returning to the Batman family.
BLOODSHOT REBORN #7 (Valiant)
I'm so, so glad I ended up catching up on The Valiant, because this follow-up has just been brilliant.
THE MISADVENTURES OF GRUMPY CAT (AND POKEY!) #1 (Dynamite)
Yeah. I read this. I love that an Internet star has finally managed to start branching out past their Internet roots. The meme of all memes has already become a Christmas movie, and now Grumpy Cat is a comic book star as well. This issue features three tales. In all of them Grumpy Cat is forced to be more than just, y'know, grumpy. Establishing a working fictional world turns out to be more entertaining than you might expect. I didn't previously have anymore interest in Grumpy Cat than the millions of casual Internet denizens who saw the endless memes, and theoretically this will be about as far as my experience will go, but I'm rooting for the idea. I'd love to see the Christmas movie at some point. Hopefully Grumpy has more staying power than poor Hoops & Yoyo, whose hilarious greeting cards seem to no longer be in stores, and whose own Christmas special joined the heaps and heaps of recent Christmas specials that apparently have no chance at all at becoming immortal in the same way as ones created half a century ago. But things can change, right?
HEROES: VENGEANCE #1 (Titan)
When Heroes debuted, I thought it was a horrible misfire. Ironically, I became a hopelessly devoted fan at the very same time everyone else walked away from it. So I'm glad Heroes Reborn is happening, and checking out this companion comic seemed like a good idea. It was. This issue, anyway, links superheroes with the masked stars of Mexican wrestling. One of the best things for fans of the original series who also happened to be comic book fans was the art of Tim Sale being featured in the visions of various characters, which I believe was later featured among the material DC published at that time. It's unlikely that Sale will pop up again. Or that Jack Black will show up and shout, "Nachooooo!"
INVINCIBLE IRON MAN #1 (Marvel)
Brian Michael Bendis finally writes Tony Stark. I don't know why this took so long to happen. I mean, I know this technically happened during the many years Bendis wrote Avengers comics, but to have Bendis write Stark directly is kind of one of those dream creative matches. As I've remarked before, the movies so many people love probably wouldn't exist without the tone Bendis set in the comics, and that's especially true of Iron Man. So that's exactly what you can expect here. The best part is that this means there's finally, finally a readable Iron Man comic. As far as I can tell, this has never happened before. I mean, not completely. It's just, Marvel has never attempted to capitalize on the character's momentum, never tried, even in the wake of the huge success of the movies, to make him a true headlining act. How to make this sound better? Bendis is finally writing a Doctor Doom worthy of his considerable reputation, too. Do you need anymore reason to read this one?
STAR WARS: SHATTERED EMPIRE #2 (Marvel)
I appreciate the effort to make the Rebellion's victory less clear-cut, and the comparative restraint Marvel is showing in keeping the Empire around, but I think once again, the results are not exactly to my liking. I have all the faith in the world for The Force Awakens, but I guess I'm glad I won't be reading the rest of Shattered Empire. End of story.
STAR WARS: LANDO #5 (Marvel)
On the opposite side of the spectrum is the remarkable insight Charles Soule brought to Lando. So apparently I did end up missing an issue, but not so much of the storytelling. Poor Lobot ends up with his inevitable robotic lobotomy, but the logic of how and why it happens, and what it means to Mr. Calrissian, is flawless. This ended up being a true highlight of the year.
TELOS #1 (DC)
King and Pagulayan continue where they left off in Convergence, and I'm glad this happened. Telos is a second chance for DC to create a true star from the New 52 era after Pandora didn't quite pan out (I think they just waited too long to pull the trigger on her). To continue weaving Brainiac into the mythology is brilliant.
And...that's it, folks.
When I started this blog at the end of 2010, I was headed toward what I thought was the end of a very enjoyable period of reading comics that'd begun six years earlier. Instead, Flashpoint and the New 52 succeeded in sucking me back in. It's always a question of money. I walked away from comics in 1999 because I needed money for college. The intended 2011 break was because I was entering my worst financial period (and it just got worse and worse until finally...it got better). Now, it's because I will be entering a unique period of my life, dedicated to my sister and her baby. I don't know when I'll have comics money again. It's wise to walk away sooner rather than later, without that dangling period like I gave myself the last time, keeping the window open. The window is closed.
It sucks, in some ways, because I would love to read Dark Knight III in its individual installments. I would love to read Klaus from Grant Morrison. And there are other comics I won't have a chance to read, or haven't heard about yet, and...
So it's better to try and not think about that. This was a good year, a very good year, and it was one in which a lot of great stories ended. Which makes all this far more fitting than I could've imagined. If there has to be another moment to walk away, this is as good a moment as there can be.
All that being said, I made sure the last week was a good one, too.
18 DAYS #4 (Graphic India)
This issue is more or less an incredibly abbreviated version of the classic Bhagavad Gita, in which Arjuna and Krishna have an epic heart-to-heart. I've grown to appreciate how this Morrison project has opened up the Iliad of India. This is pretty much what I always hoped Shanower would've done with Age of Bronze (a project that is apparently indefinitely on hold). Shanower, left to his own devices, is far less interesting than the kind of liveliness he exhibited adapting Baum's material in Marvel's Oz series. Even if Morrison himself isn't writing 18 Days directly, his blueprint has proven invaluable, and the results have been continually and even increasingly impressive. I will try and keep tabs on this series, and hope to catch Morrison's other Graphic India project, Avatarex, at some point, too.
ATOMIC ROBO AND THE RING OF FIRE #2 (IDW)
The letters column humbles me as a fan of Robo. Clearly there are fans out there who are much more on top of Robo mythology...
BATMAN & ROBIN ETERNAL #1 (DC)
The debut of DC's lately weekly (scheduled for half a year) celebrates the Boy Wonder legacy, which as a long-time fan of Robin I'm very happy to see. There's also a "Robin War" crossover coming up, making this an excellent time for Robin fans in general. The story here seems to be clever even if at the same time a little clumsy, one of those "there's new information about the past that we're revealing now and it happens to be a deep, dark secret!" deals that's kind of trademark Snyder (see: Court of Owls, etc.). Dick Grayson is at the center of the action, both in flashback and in the present. Jason Todd and Tim Drake play support this issue, as does Harper Row, the apparent would-be Robin who instead became Bluebird. Stephanie Brown, who was Robin, will be part of the story. Left out so far is Damian Wayne (who will be a part of "Robin War"), as well as Duke Thomas (We Are Robin). The best part of this issue on the creative front is Tony Daniel returning to the Batman family.
BLOODSHOT REBORN #7 (Valiant)
I'm so, so glad I ended up catching up on The Valiant, because this follow-up has just been brilliant.
THE MISADVENTURES OF GRUMPY CAT (AND POKEY!) #1 (Dynamite)
Yeah. I read this. I love that an Internet star has finally managed to start branching out past their Internet roots. The meme of all memes has already become a Christmas movie, and now Grumpy Cat is a comic book star as well. This issue features three tales. In all of them Grumpy Cat is forced to be more than just, y'know, grumpy. Establishing a working fictional world turns out to be more entertaining than you might expect. I didn't previously have anymore interest in Grumpy Cat than the millions of casual Internet denizens who saw the endless memes, and theoretically this will be about as far as my experience will go, but I'm rooting for the idea. I'd love to see the Christmas movie at some point. Hopefully Grumpy has more staying power than poor Hoops & Yoyo, whose hilarious greeting cards seem to no longer be in stores, and whose own Christmas special joined the heaps and heaps of recent Christmas specials that apparently have no chance at all at becoming immortal in the same way as ones created half a century ago. But things can change, right?
HEROES: VENGEANCE #1 (Titan)
When Heroes debuted, I thought it was a horrible misfire. Ironically, I became a hopelessly devoted fan at the very same time everyone else walked away from it. So I'm glad Heroes Reborn is happening, and checking out this companion comic seemed like a good idea. It was. This issue, anyway, links superheroes with the masked stars of Mexican wrestling. One of the best things for fans of the original series who also happened to be comic book fans was the art of Tim Sale being featured in the visions of various characters, which I believe was later featured among the material DC published at that time. It's unlikely that Sale will pop up again. Or that Jack Black will show up and shout, "Nachooooo!"
INVINCIBLE IRON MAN #1 (Marvel)
Brian Michael Bendis finally writes Tony Stark. I don't know why this took so long to happen. I mean, I know this technically happened during the many years Bendis wrote Avengers comics, but to have Bendis write Stark directly is kind of one of those dream creative matches. As I've remarked before, the movies so many people love probably wouldn't exist without the tone Bendis set in the comics, and that's especially true of Iron Man. So that's exactly what you can expect here. The best part is that this means there's finally, finally a readable Iron Man comic. As far as I can tell, this has never happened before. I mean, not completely. It's just, Marvel has never attempted to capitalize on the character's momentum, never tried, even in the wake of the huge success of the movies, to make him a true headlining act. How to make this sound better? Bendis is finally writing a Doctor Doom worthy of his considerable reputation, too. Do you need anymore reason to read this one?
STAR WARS: SHATTERED EMPIRE #2 (Marvel)
I appreciate the effort to make the Rebellion's victory less clear-cut, and the comparative restraint Marvel is showing in keeping the Empire around, but I think once again, the results are not exactly to my liking. I have all the faith in the world for The Force Awakens, but I guess I'm glad I won't be reading the rest of Shattered Empire. End of story.
STAR WARS: LANDO #5 (Marvel)
On the opposite side of the spectrum is the remarkable insight Charles Soule brought to Lando. So apparently I did end up missing an issue, but not so much of the storytelling. Poor Lobot ends up with his inevitable robotic lobotomy, but the logic of how and why it happens, and what it means to Mr. Calrissian, is flawless. This ended up being a true highlight of the year.
TELOS #1 (DC)
King and Pagulayan continue where they left off in Convergence, and I'm glad this happened. Telos is a second chance for DC to create a true star from the New 52 era after Pandora didn't quite pan out (I think they just waited too long to pull the trigger on her). To continue weaving Brainiac into the mythology is brilliant.
And...that's it, folks.
Friday, July 10, 2015
Reading Comics 168 "7/8/15 - One of the Best Weeks of the Year"
Covered this edition: Batman #42, Bloodshot Reborn #4, Civil War #1, Descender #5, Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency #2, Earth 2: Society #2, Providence #2, Saga #30, Spider-Verse #3, Star Trek/Green Lantern #1, Star Wars: Lando #1, and Strange Fruit #1.
To say last week was disappointing for a comic book addict like me would be an understatement. This is not to say that there nothing worth reading, but nothing that interested me, nothing from my pull list and, well, nothing else that I wanted to read.
So this week was an embarrassment of riches. Very good (or very bad) for a comics addict. I ended up reading a bunch of stuff I hadn't read previously, or continuing to read stuff that I don't typically read, or enjoyed a bunch of new stuff, and of course a bunch of stuff I've been reading all along.
Kicking off is Batman #42 (DC), the second issue of the Bat Gordon era. Visually the costume in full armor still looks and will always look ridiculous, and Gordon's military haircut looks ridiculous, but...this is still the best Batman Snyder has ever written. It's the first time he's allowed himself full control, and it shows. The fact that astute readers knew Bruce Wayne was never dead, and Snyder has shown every willingness to play along, keeping him in every issue "post-death," including the issue with "his death" after "his death," this is what I've been waiting for. This is an exercise in patience. Obviously this is an exception, and if it hadn't been hugely popular from the start, DC would never have stuck around this long. But thankfully this is an instance where popularity eventually gives way to material justifying the hype. I don't know how popular this material will be, in the short- or long-term, but I have to imagine, however much longer Snyder sticks around, he will be back to writing Bruce Wayne as Batman, and will be the better for having this experience under his belt.
It's also clear that the villain concept was in part an excuse for Capullo to do a version of Clayface after discovering how well he does it visually in Batman #20 (excellent cover). I would have maybe capitalized on the horn concept and named the villain Horn (although I guess there are other members of the gang, so there's always a chance, right?).
Bloodshot Reborn #4 (Valiant), meanwhile, is something I picked up because I just read The Valiant, and thought it was pretty brilliant, and because of the timing, which was even better than I thought, I realized this series existed and I should probably start reading it. It's the first of two Jeff Lemire comics from this week (just as there are two from Charles Soule), and both are winners (just like Soule's). Bloodshot, as I've explained elsewhere, is a kind of Wolverine, and in this iteration without any of the baggage and written in the full knowledge that it's perhaps is best to just concentrate on what makes him interesting, which is his background and how it continues to impact him. In The Valiant, Bloodshot lost his powers, and so Reborn is the journey of getting them back. In this instance, picking up the narrative four issues in (I wanted to try and catch up with whatever was available, but when that meant the latest issue as it was released and only one other plus a few of the preceding series, I opted just for this one) proved no problem at all. Whatever else has been done in Reborn to date, this issue captures the journey perfectly, exactly as I hoped it'd be from The Valiant.
And even with surprises, such as Bloodsquirt. Kind of like Bloodshot's Bat-Mite, Bloodsquirt is part of the hallucinations Bloodshot is experiencing as he tries to deal with his situation (the other person he sees is the woman responsible for taking away his powers, but in this scenario, unlike House of M's Scarlet Witch, the late Geomancer was a good guy who was very much Bloodshot's friend, which is why she did what she did, right before she died). The nanites, meanwhile, that previously gave Bloodshot his powers have been infecting other people, and he's able to absorb them back when he finds these people. Anyway, the whole thing is pretty fascinating, and executed perfectly. I'm once again glad that Valiant exists, and that I've found my way in.
Civil War #1 (Marvel) is one of the many, many Secret Wars spin-offs featuring past notable Marvel stories, whether standalone events or arcs within a given series. Civil War ought to be polarizing. Originally, it concluded with Captain America's assassination, but in this version that never happened, and things degenerated to a certain extent as the "Old Man Logan" arc did in Wolverine (which has become another Secret Wars spin-off, not to mention one of the titles announced as becoming an ongoing once Secret Wars ends, and Hugh Jackman's vision for his last performance as Wolverine).
This is written by Charles Soule. When his exclusive contract with Marvel was originally announced, I conceived of it as a nightmare scenario, not because I had enjoyed his DC work so much, but because I feared Marvel wouldn't know what to do with him. But as it turns out, that wasn't really the case at all. If anything, he might be perfectly suited at Marvel, where he can use his best instincts to bring out Marvel's best instincts. This is in fact a best case scenario. At DC he was for the most part marginalized. At Marvel he has the opportunity to become the company's next signature writer, succeeding Brian Michael Bendis and Jonathan Hickman. I would be very happy to see that happen.
Civil War, then, is a kind of audition. I mean, arguably all of these Secret Wars spin-offs are auditions, either for talent or for the continuing viability of old concepts. In that, Marvel again has an edge over DC. With Convergence, DC was letting fans know once again (and I do mean once again) that it hasn't forgotten its own history, but it was never going to revive anything. DC is always looking forward, aggressively, often to the detriment of fans who want desperately to cling to the past. Marvel isn't like that. It's often just as merciless as DC when it chooses to change things, but it usually goes out of its way to assure fans that things are going to be okay (unless you're a mutant). Anyway, it's always trying to do things organically, whereas DC is that pesky genetic engineering that everyone has such a passive-aggressive relationship with.
All that's to say, Civil War, and Soule along with it, is once again a fascinating concept. The problem Marvel has, despite all its virtues (and I'm convinced Marvel fans celebrate the virtues and ignore everything else, on the whole), is that most of the time, once it's come up with an idea it really has no idea what to do with it. The idea eventually, inevitably, peters out, or mutates so many times that it become irrelevant.
What Soule accomplishes here, as he usually does, is succeed in once again grounding the original idea without losing sight of how to once again progress it. The original hook of the original Civil War is played out to its logical conclusions, going full American Civil War by creating separate nations: The Iron, which obviously is led by Tony Stark, and The Blue, which is led by Steve Rogers. Perhaps with the less comic booky version of Captain America's assassination (otherwise, the opposite of what Brubaker chose to do) in the original in mind, Soule has an attempt by Stark and Rogers to negotiate sabotaged by a gunshot. This Civil War is not dominated by meaningless battles between superheroes, but as a true war of ideology (which is what Kingdom Come was so good at depicting, but more on Mark Waid later).
It's also nice to see Leinil Francis Yu at work again. He's been a signature Marvel artist for years. Linking Yu and Soule is hopefully symbolic of past and future. Although they could certainly continue working together.
Descender #5 (Image) features one of my favorite story tropes, the exposure of a fraud. Back in the second Harry Potter book/film, The Chamber of Secrets, I was inordinately fascinated by the character of Gilderoy Lockhart in large part because he was exposed as a fraud. I mention all this because this issue of Descender answers what I was looking for after the previous issue: Why should I care about Dr. Quon, erstwhile creator of adorable boy robot Tim? Well, as it turns out, because he's a fraud.
And we learn this through the most grisly means possible. I guess I haven't read enough Lemire to know how typical this is for him, but as far as Dustin Nguyen goes, I wouldn't have expected it, certainly not in his current mode of looking about as innocent as a comic book can, especially with killer robots running amok (although Driller, who is a Killer, can run amok as much as he wants, as far as I am concerned).
Which is to say, Dr. Quon is tortured, in the most direct way possible: a buzz saw is used to amputate his left hand. Without no warning, mind you!
So Descender continues to surprise, and this is a very good thing, for a series that is proving more and more that what Saga started, other can and might actually do better. Which is something fans of Saga probably never expected in a million years, let alone less than a handful of them. (Luckily, ah, Dr. Quon still has a hand to grab things with. But he won't be clapping again any time soon...)
Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency #2 (IDW) continues to be the most improbably comic book ever (probably), and just as interesting a read for it, featuring the obscure Douglas Adams creation featured in two and a half books and nary a holiday to his credit. Interestingly, the issue doesn't really try to advance the story at all, but merely let the chaos unleashed in the first one continue. Although we do get introduced to Kate Schechter, from the second and better Dirk Gently book, The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul, this time with far less Norse mythology surrounding her.
One has the sense that IDW, and Chris Ryall, totally got that Adams was always a guy interested in nutty concepts and great dialogue, because that's what's to be found here, unabashedly.
And for those keeping score, I offered the theory in my review of the previous issue, which had never occurred to me before (because I hadn't given much thought to Adams's past) that Dirk Gently is another Doctor Who figure for his creator. And the guys behind the comic seem to think so, too, because (and I can't name which one, because I'm not nearly as big a fan of Doctor Who as I am Douglas Adams) at one point Dirk dons a hat and looks the spitting image of one of the regenerations of Doctor Who.
So there's that.
Earth 2: Society #2 (DC) continues this pocket universe's hot streak. Conceptually, I've loved the concept since it debuted as one of the second-wave titles in the New 52, because creatively it offered so much potential, which a number of writers at this point have capitalized on. Convergence gave it the best possible spotlight, but the best possible storytelling has apparently saved for Society itself.
Traditionalists, purists, and other such individuals would probably have preferred the Justice Society of America concept to remain exactly as it was originally conceived, which is what the Justice League continues to represent. And I think Geoff Johns pushed the original vision as far as it could go. So, much like the Silver Age gave birth to a new Green Lantern and a new Flash, the same has been done for the Justice Society.
Here's where it truly begins to pay off, because now there is a society, and it's as literal as you can possibly get (in a good way), a whole society defined by the superheroes at its heart, survivors of an obliterated Earth. And now we see what transpires next. Terry Sloan, the original Mr. Terrific, has been transformed into a leader of questionable ethics manipulating events to his benefit. I think there was some resistance to this previously, but at any rate I wasn't reading that material, and as presented here it works wonderfully, and he's in a situation that fully exploits his potential. The same, hopefully, will be true of all the characters, including Dick Grayson as Batman. This is a series that is going to take its time unfolding the story, and two issues in that's definitely what's been happening. There are more introductions this issue, oddly enough, which might as well mean anyone who was reluctant to give it a try before has another opportunity to come aboard.
Because this is suddenly some of the best comics around. Good storytelling, great art (and I liked Jorge Jimenez's work instantly last issue), and builds on a concept that is becoming better and better all the time.
Providence #2 (Avatar) is part of my continuing efforts to get a handle on Alan Moore. His reputation has Moore out to be the best writer comics have ever seen, but my own views have been more contentious. The last time I have him a shot was Avatar's own Crossed +100, a spin-off of the Garth Ennis series, which to my mind embodied all Moore's worst instincts.
This time, however, Moore seems to be interested in what might actually be his true legacy: creating comics that attempt to be as literally the embodiment of the term "graphic novel" as you can get. While fans might know him for Watchmen or Batman: The Killing Joke, Moore is also known for V for Vendetta and From Hell, both of which are very much relevant to any discussion of Providence. When he tells a superhero story, Moore is able to disguise or even distort his best instincts. But elsewhere he can't. Even the Guy Fawkes mask can't obscure his real interests. I have this theory that Moore is actually ambivalent about the comic book medium, or at least superheroes, whatever possibilities they might have, because for him they're nothing but memories he formed decades ago. When he tells a story about superheroes, it is about them, not with them. Later, with League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, he did tell stories with them, but superheroes of a different kind. The difference is often hard to reconcile.
Anyway, Moore is interested in telling stories about characters interested in what he is. Providence is a story of the occult, but in the way Stoker's original Dracula was, as something that's stumbled into like The Blair Witch Project. This is the second issue, mind you, and I didn't read the first, but I'm not sure how much story I missed because of that. The Alan Moore that exists today will never again have the impact he did in the '80s. I don't know how he feels about that, but I think he's becoming comfortable with that. In the '90s he was still trying to recapture what he'd lost by abandoning DC. Providence might be the first time he's tried to move past that, return to what he once was, before superheroes dominated his legacy. So if you're interested in that, you might be interested in Providence.
As for me, I found it interested if sedate. If there must be irreconcilable differences between fans of Alan Moore and fans of Grant Morrison, this is what you would compare, say, Annihilator against. And as different as the approaches are, for me there is no comparison. Give me Morrison and Annihilator any day of the week. Providence, meanwhile, glimpses for a moment the world Morrison's Nameless exists in. Considering that I wish Nameless were a little less lunatic, maybe Providence actually represents the bridge that might still exist between them...
Saga #30 (Image) is the issue before a hiatus. Vaughan and Staples have been taking these throughout Saga's run. As far as I know, it's the first time a comic book has deliberately done this, and it's probably a smart idea. I mean, other than tradition, there is no inherent reason why an ongoing series has to publish continuously month after month for the duration of its existence.
The issue also presents a "season finale," which is something I hope future trades will help distinguish (ideally, I guess I'm arguing, there would be distinct collections for each "season," which is to say the material that exists between hiatuses). For some time now, the story of Alana and Marko has been defined by their being apart. They finally stumble back into each other's company.
The other major thing is that our helpful narrator Hazel once again reveals something major about what the future looks like, which in this instance (it hasn't always been as artful) is a very good thing, with excellent timing (which is another reason why I think the "season finale" concept should be better emphasized): she won't be returning to mommy and daddy any time soon.
In a way, Saga is taking on the feel of Lost (which Vaughan worked on), recognizing the inherent drama of reunions between characters who have complicated relationships with each other. For me, this is another very good thing. Sometimes I struggle to see what exactly Saga hopes to accomplish. As of now, this is my conclusion, and I'm happy with that.
Spider-Verse #3 (Marvel) is one of the many, many Secret Wars spin-off releases, which I finally decided to be interested in because it's written by Mike Costa. I was previously reluctant to embrace Costa's Spider-Man material because I feared he'd ultimately amount to about as much as Wasteland's Antony Johnston when he waded into Daredevil material a few years back. Sometimes my favorite comic book writers don't write for DC or Marvel, and when they do, the results are less than favorable. But Costa (responsible for so many excellent Cobra stories for IDW's G.I. Joe comics) has been doing his Spider-Man stories for a few years now, and apparently Spider-Verse is becoming an ongoing (as Web Warriors) in the fall, so I decided to quit fighting it.
I want Costa to do the kind of material I love Costa doing, but that's just not happening with G.I. Joe. I liked Avengers: Millennium, saw the potential to get close to what I wanted, so I decided to give Spider-Verse a shot. And it seems to be even closer than Avengers: Millennium. As you may or may not know, Spider-Verse means the Spider-Man version of DC's multiverse, endless variations of the character. The most famous one recently isn't of Spider-Man himself, but his dead lover Gwen Stacy, who is officially known as Spider-Gwen, and apparently wildly popular. She's more or less the lead of this issue, too. Costa has figured out how to present these characters in a group the way he normally does individually in his Cobra stories, focusing on their varying perspectives. This I was glad to see.
Star Trek/Green Lantern #1 (IDW) is something that could very easily be a bad gimmick, as comics that mix different properties with different timelines must inevitably be (the Star Trek/X-Men crossover, I still have no idea how anyone could ever take that seriously), but as of this first issue, makes perfect sense. I have no idea what the second issue will have to say about that, but let's focus on the positive!
What's great is that it also gives me a chance to read a good issue of two properties that aren't currently giving me much in that regard. (As always, I provide the John Byrne caveat; because my local shop doesn't regularly stock his work, I don't have a chance to read it regularly, unless I wanted to go the digital route.) I haven't read IDW's Star Trek work with any regularity in a few years, and more often than not discover that I'm not missing much. Robert Venditti's Green Lantern, meanwhile, is much the same.
This issue takes place in IDW's favorite Star Trek sandbox at the moment, stories set in the Abrams reboot era. I think it's a mistake to routinely feature Kirk's Enterprise adventures at a time when new movies are still being produced. Once in a while is fine. I think there's much more valuable opportunity looking around the corners, which is what IDW used to do, even in the Abrams era. Anyway, but that's exactly what this comic is doing, too, except with Green Lantern.
Or more accurately, the corpse of Ganthet. That's a wonderful image. With all the times the Guardians have been slaughtered over the years, I never imagined such an image would be so impactful, but there you are. Until Hal Jordan (presumably) shows up on the final page, there isn't even anything to worry about time-wise. Ganthet could easily have lived to Kirk's time (the Guardian's are the universe's oldest beings in DC speak). He brought the last rings across the whole spectrum (red, yellow, blue, violet, orange, and indigo) created or embellished by Geoff Johns, and as Kirk's crew examines the corpse and the rings, the comic has ample opportunity to let the reader enjoy the Abrams era for what it is, a distinct version of familiar Star Trek.
Again, I have no idea what the next issue does to affect the continuing viability of the concept, but so far so good...
Star Wars: Lando #1 (Marvel) is unquestionably the one I've been dying to read since I had first heard about the series. I've loved Lando since he first sauntered into Star Wars in The Empire Strikes Back, and this comic is written by Charles Soule.
As I've mentioned repeatedly, I had great misgivings when Soule went exclusive to Marvel. His Red Lanterns was the work that made me a fan of Soule, and I didn't want to see it end. (Well, DC ended it anyway, in the end.) When I saw Lando announced, with Soule as writer, I saw it as the best chance to see Soule in the mode I knew best from him.
Turns out it's better than that. Never mind what I already said about Soule above, this one's better than I could have imagined. It not only features Lando, which is obvious, but takes him in new and unexpected directions. Now, I'm about to reference Lost again. Unlike a lot of fans, my affection for it not only didn't go away after the way it ended, but was actually amplified by it. I loved the whole final season, in fact. This is relevant, because in Soule's mind, Lando is something of a Sawyer, a con man who given the chance could absolutely go straight. When we meet Lando in Empire Strikes Back, that's exactly what happened to him, but the Lando we meet is difficult to imagine as anything else. I read and enjoyed the L. Neil Smith books, too, but they were part of the whole thing that suggested if Lando had ever been any different, he was basically Han Solo.
Which is not very imaginative. Given a chance, Han would never have become an administrator. But Lando loves a good con, because a con is basically an opportunity, and that's what con men love. As a con man, Lando suddenly makes perfect sense. And his Cloud City buddy Lobot becomes fully alive in the comic, too, plus a number of nefarious associates that make it seem just as if Star Wars: Lando is the first time anyone really tried to do additional Star Wars material. Because this is exactly what Star Wars was always meant to be.
And so why care about Lando at all? I liked him because he really wasn't involved in Luke's adventures. Other than snatching Luke from that weathervane, if you think about it Lando really has nothing to do with him in his two movie appearances. But this doesn't stop him from being, arguably the most confident man in the room, even when he quickly realizes he's got to switch allegiances. That deal he strikes with Vader turned out to be a bad idea. So he flips. He's the only character to do that, too. Han, if you'll remember, spends most of his time actively trying to avoid entanglements. That's what he had in common with the old Lando. He didn't see the opportunity Luke represented even though it was staring him in the face. He came back because he grew to care about the boy. Not Lando.
All of which is to say there was always unexplored potential in Lando. As of now, there's less. Or, more.
Strange Fruit #1 (Boom!) is the first installment in the Mark Waid story fans have been waiting for since Kingdom Come.
Whereas Alex Ross has been trying to recapture his Kingdom Come glory ever since (just as the project itself was originally embraced as "the next Alex Ross project" after Marvels, which Kurt Busiek followed up with the similar Astro City), Waid seems to have been incredibly reluctant, which is probably because initially he didn't understand what he'd accomplished. Before Kingdom Come, Waid was a fan who became an editor who got to write The Flash and then anything else he wanted. But along the way, he had the opportunity to do something big, Kingdom Come. Even though fans (like me) claim the best of his Flash was incredibly hard to surpass, that's exactly what he did. He set the bar higher than anyone could have imagined, and I think like Waid himself, everyone has been struggling to catch up with it.
This was transcendent material, for Waid, for superheroes, and in some ways, comic books in general. Snooty fans won't even take superhero writers seriously, will try and create mainstream credentials by being anything but. What Waid realized was that this wasn't by any means necessary. But having someone like Alex Ross around to make it visually distinctive would probably help.
Here he was J.G. Jones, whose most visually distinctive work previously was on the landmark covers of the weekly series 52, which are among the rare covers to get their own collection. Jones has gone to some trouble to evoke Alex Ross, but where Ross tends to be minimalist, Jones sketches in the rest.
Otherwise the rest is entirely Waid. The only other times he's invoked Kingdom Come was to try and recapture the scope of superhero storytelling, which resulted in lesser works like The Kingdom and the Irredeemable/Incorruptible universe. Strange Fruit is nothing like that. And considering the charged nature of race relations, and even the status of the Confederate flag (interested observers can make much of the issue's final image on that score), it's beyond timely. It's timeless in the best Kingdom Come manner. It's Waid coming home to Boom!, yes, but it's also Waid coming to terms with a part of his legacy he has finally come to embrace, a challenge he set aside and has returned to at last.
At its heart, Strange Fruit is a variation on Superman. It even evokes Django Unchained. But it is distinctly its own, too. It looks at politics, too, by the way, but at its heart is a social landscape at turmoil with itself, trying to come up with easy answers and finding that to be a difficult task. And suddenly, there's this black man standing there, tearing the whole scene asunder, come to Earth like Superman, in a rocket that crashes in a field, but this is a full-grown man.
Who and what he is are matters for the three remaining issues. I highly recommend you investigate the results for yourself. And welcome back, Mark Waid. It's been a long time.
To say last week was disappointing for a comic book addict like me would be an understatement. This is not to say that there nothing worth reading, but nothing that interested me, nothing from my pull list and, well, nothing else that I wanted to read.
So this week was an embarrassment of riches. Very good (or very bad) for a comics addict. I ended up reading a bunch of stuff I hadn't read previously, or continuing to read stuff that I don't typically read, or enjoyed a bunch of new stuff, and of course a bunch of stuff I've been reading all along.
Kicking off is Batman #42 (DC), the second issue of the Bat Gordon era. Visually the costume in full armor still looks and will always look ridiculous, and Gordon's military haircut looks ridiculous, but...this is still the best Batman Snyder has ever written. It's the first time he's allowed himself full control, and it shows. The fact that astute readers knew Bruce Wayne was never dead, and Snyder has shown every willingness to play along, keeping him in every issue "post-death," including the issue with "his death" after "his death," this is what I've been waiting for. This is an exercise in patience. Obviously this is an exception, and if it hadn't been hugely popular from the start, DC would never have stuck around this long. But thankfully this is an instance where popularity eventually gives way to material justifying the hype. I don't know how popular this material will be, in the short- or long-term, but I have to imagine, however much longer Snyder sticks around, he will be back to writing Bruce Wayne as Batman, and will be the better for having this experience under his belt.
It's also clear that the villain concept was in part an excuse for Capullo to do a version of Clayface after discovering how well he does it visually in Batman #20 (excellent cover). I would have maybe capitalized on the horn concept and named the villain Horn (although I guess there are other members of the gang, so there's always a chance, right?).
Bloodshot Reborn #4 (Valiant), meanwhile, is something I picked up because I just read The Valiant, and thought it was pretty brilliant, and because of the timing, which was even better than I thought, I realized this series existed and I should probably start reading it. It's the first of two Jeff Lemire comics from this week (just as there are two from Charles Soule), and both are winners (just like Soule's). Bloodshot, as I've explained elsewhere, is a kind of Wolverine, and in this iteration without any of the baggage and written in the full knowledge that it's perhaps is best to just concentrate on what makes him interesting, which is his background and how it continues to impact him. In The Valiant, Bloodshot lost his powers, and so Reborn is the journey of getting them back. In this instance, picking up the narrative four issues in (I wanted to try and catch up with whatever was available, but when that meant the latest issue as it was released and only one other plus a few of the preceding series, I opted just for this one) proved no problem at all. Whatever else has been done in Reborn to date, this issue captures the journey perfectly, exactly as I hoped it'd be from The Valiant.
And even with surprises, such as Bloodsquirt. Kind of like Bloodshot's Bat-Mite, Bloodsquirt is part of the hallucinations Bloodshot is experiencing as he tries to deal with his situation (the other person he sees is the woman responsible for taking away his powers, but in this scenario, unlike House of M's Scarlet Witch, the late Geomancer was a good guy who was very much Bloodshot's friend, which is why she did what she did, right before she died). The nanites, meanwhile, that previously gave Bloodshot his powers have been infecting other people, and he's able to absorb them back when he finds these people. Anyway, the whole thing is pretty fascinating, and executed perfectly. I'm once again glad that Valiant exists, and that I've found my way in.
Civil War #1 (Marvel) is one of the many, many Secret Wars spin-offs featuring past notable Marvel stories, whether standalone events or arcs within a given series. Civil War ought to be polarizing. Originally, it concluded with Captain America's assassination, but in this version that never happened, and things degenerated to a certain extent as the "Old Man Logan" arc did in Wolverine (which has become another Secret Wars spin-off, not to mention one of the titles announced as becoming an ongoing once Secret Wars ends, and Hugh Jackman's vision for his last performance as Wolverine).
This is written by Charles Soule. When his exclusive contract with Marvel was originally announced, I conceived of it as a nightmare scenario, not because I had enjoyed his DC work so much, but because I feared Marvel wouldn't know what to do with him. But as it turns out, that wasn't really the case at all. If anything, he might be perfectly suited at Marvel, where he can use his best instincts to bring out Marvel's best instincts. This is in fact a best case scenario. At DC he was for the most part marginalized. At Marvel he has the opportunity to become the company's next signature writer, succeeding Brian Michael Bendis and Jonathan Hickman. I would be very happy to see that happen.
Civil War, then, is a kind of audition. I mean, arguably all of these Secret Wars spin-offs are auditions, either for talent or for the continuing viability of old concepts. In that, Marvel again has an edge over DC. With Convergence, DC was letting fans know once again (and I do mean once again) that it hasn't forgotten its own history, but it was never going to revive anything. DC is always looking forward, aggressively, often to the detriment of fans who want desperately to cling to the past. Marvel isn't like that. It's often just as merciless as DC when it chooses to change things, but it usually goes out of its way to assure fans that things are going to be okay (unless you're a mutant). Anyway, it's always trying to do things organically, whereas DC is that pesky genetic engineering that everyone has such a passive-aggressive relationship with.
All that's to say, Civil War, and Soule along with it, is once again a fascinating concept. The problem Marvel has, despite all its virtues (and I'm convinced Marvel fans celebrate the virtues and ignore everything else, on the whole), is that most of the time, once it's come up with an idea it really has no idea what to do with it. The idea eventually, inevitably, peters out, or mutates so many times that it become irrelevant.
What Soule accomplishes here, as he usually does, is succeed in once again grounding the original idea without losing sight of how to once again progress it. The original hook of the original Civil War is played out to its logical conclusions, going full American Civil War by creating separate nations: The Iron, which obviously is led by Tony Stark, and The Blue, which is led by Steve Rogers. Perhaps with the less comic booky version of Captain America's assassination (otherwise, the opposite of what Brubaker chose to do) in the original in mind, Soule has an attempt by Stark and Rogers to negotiate sabotaged by a gunshot. This Civil War is not dominated by meaningless battles between superheroes, but as a true war of ideology (which is what Kingdom Come was so good at depicting, but more on Mark Waid later).
It's also nice to see Leinil Francis Yu at work again. He's been a signature Marvel artist for years. Linking Yu and Soule is hopefully symbolic of past and future. Although they could certainly continue working together.
Descender #5 (Image) features one of my favorite story tropes, the exposure of a fraud. Back in the second Harry Potter book/film, The Chamber of Secrets, I was inordinately fascinated by the character of Gilderoy Lockhart in large part because he was exposed as a fraud. I mention all this because this issue of Descender answers what I was looking for after the previous issue: Why should I care about Dr. Quon, erstwhile creator of adorable boy robot Tim? Well, as it turns out, because he's a fraud.
And we learn this through the most grisly means possible. I guess I haven't read enough Lemire to know how typical this is for him, but as far as Dustin Nguyen goes, I wouldn't have expected it, certainly not in his current mode of looking about as innocent as a comic book can, especially with killer robots running amok (although Driller, who is a Killer, can run amok as much as he wants, as far as I am concerned).
Which is to say, Dr. Quon is tortured, in the most direct way possible: a buzz saw is used to amputate his left hand. Without no warning, mind you!
So Descender continues to surprise, and this is a very good thing, for a series that is proving more and more that what Saga started, other can and might actually do better. Which is something fans of Saga probably never expected in a million years, let alone less than a handful of them. (Luckily, ah, Dr. Quon still has a hand to grab things with. But he won't be clapping again any time soon...)
One has the sense that IDW, and Chris Ryall, totally got that Adams was always a guy interested in nutty concepts and great dialogue, because that's what's to be found here, unabashedly.
And for those keeping score, I offered the theory in my review of the previous issue, which had never occurred to me before (because I hadn't given much thought to Adams's past) that Dirk Gently is another Doctor Who figure for his creator. And the guys behind the comic seem to think so, too, because (and I can't name which one, because I'm not nearly as big a fan of Doctor Who as I am Douglas Adams) at one point Dirk dons a hat and looks the spitting image of one of the regenerations of Doctor Who.
So there's that.
Earth 2: Society #2 (DC) continues this pocket universe's hot streak. Conceptually, I've loved the concept since it debuted as one of the second-wave titles in the New 52, because creatively it offered so much potential, which a number of writers at this point have capitalized on. Convergence gave it the best possible spotlight, but the best possible storytelling has apparently saved for Society itself.
Traditionalists, purists, and other such individuals would probably have preferred the Justice Society of America concept to remain exactly as it was originally conceived, which is what the Justice League continues to represent. And I think Geoff Johns pushed the original vision as far as it could go. So, much like the Silver Age gave birth to a new Green Lantern and a new Flash, the same has been done for the Justice Society.
Here's where it truly begins to pay off, because now there is a society, and it's as literal as you can possibly get (in a good way), a whole society defined by the superheroes at its heart, survivors of an obliterated Earth. And now we see what transpires next. Terry Sloan, the original Mr. Terrific, has been transformed into a leader of questionable ethics manipulating events to his benefit. I think there was some resistance to this previously, but at any rate I wasn't reading that material, and as presented here it works wonderfully, and he's in a situation that fully exploits his potential. The same, hopefully, will be true of all the characters, including Dick Grayson as Batman. This is a series that is going to take its time unfolding the story, and two issues in that's definitely what's been happening. There are more introductions this issue, oddly enough, which might as well mean anyone who was reluctant to give it a try before has another opportunity to come aboard.
Because this is suddenly some of the best comics around. Good storytelling, great art (and I liked Jorge Jimenez's work instantly last issue), and builds on a concept that is becoming better and better all the time.
Providence #2 (Avatar) is part of my continuing efforts to get a handle on Alan Moore. His reputation has Moore out to be the best writer comics have ever seen, but my own views have been more contentious. The last time I have him a shot was Avatar's own Crossed +100, a spin-off of the Garth Ennis series, which to my mind embodied all Moore's worst instincts.
This time, however, Moore seems to be interested in what might actually be his true legacy: creating comics that attempt to be as literally the embodiment of the term "graphic novel" as you can get. While fans might know him for Watchmen or Batman: The Killing Joke, Moore is also known for V for Vendetta and From Hell, both of which are very much relevant to any discussion of Providence. When he tells a superhero story, Moore is able to disguise or even distort his best instincts. But elsewhere he can't. Even the Guy Fawkes mask can't obscure his real interests. I have this theory that Moore is actually ambivalent about the comic book medium, or at least superheroes, whatever possibilities they might have, because for him they're nothing but memories he formed decades ago. When he tells a story about superheroes, it is about them, not with them. Later, with League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, he did tell stories with them, but superheroes of a different kind. The difference is often hard to reconcile.
Anyway, Moore is interested in telling stories about characters interested in what he is. Providence is a story of the occult, but in the way Stoker's original Dracula was, as something that's stumbled into like The Blair Witch Project. This is the second issue, mind you, and I didn't read the first, but I'm not sure how much story I missed because of that. The Alan Moore that exists today will never again have the impact he did in the '80s. I don't know how he feels about that, but I think he's becoming comfortable with that. In the '90s he was still trying to recapture what he'd lost by abandoning DC. Providence might be the first time he's tried to move past that, return to what he once was, before superheroes dominated his legacy. So if you're interested in that, you might be interested in Providence.
As for me, I found it interested if sedate. If there must be irreconcilable differences between fans of Alan Moore and fans of Grant Morrison, this is what you would compare, say, Annihilator against. And as different as the approaches are, for me there is no comparison. Give me Morrison and Annihilator any day of the week. Providence, meanwhile, glimpses for a moment the world Morrison's Nameless exists in. Considering that I wish Nameless were a little less lunatic, maybe Providence actually represents the bridge that might still exist between them...
Saga #30 (Image) is the issue before a hiatus. Vaughan and Staples have been taking these throughout Saga's run. As far as I know, it's the first time a comic book has deliberately done this, and it's probably a smart idea. I mean, other than tradition, there is no inherent reason why an ongoing series has to publish continuously month after month for the duration of its existence.
The issue also presents a "season finale," which is something I hope future trades will help distinguish (ideally, I guess I'm arguing, there would be distinct collections for each "season," which is to say the material that exists between hiatuses). For some time now, the story of Alana and Marko has been defined by their being apart. They finally stumble back into each other's company.
The other major thing is that our helpful narrator Hazel once again reveals something major about what the future looks like, which in this instance (it hasn't always been as artful) is a very good thing, with excellent timing (which is another reason why I think the "season finale" concept should be better emphasized): she won't be returning to mommy and daddy any time soon.
In a way, Saga is taking on the feel of Lost (which Vaughan worked on), recognizing the inherent drama of reunions between characters who have complicated relationships with each other. For me, this is another very good thing. Sometimes I struggle to see what exactly Saga hopes to accomplish. As of now, this is my conclusion, and I'm happy with that.
Spider-Verse #3 (Marvel) is one of the many, many Secret Wars spin-off releases, which I finally decided to be interested in because it's written by Mike Costa. I was previously reluctant to embrace Costa's Spider-Man material because I feared he'd ultimately amount to about as much as Wasteland's Antony Johnston when he waded into Daredevil material a few years back. Sometimes my favorite comic book writers don't write for DC or Marvel, and when they do, the results are less than favorable. But Costa (responsible for so many excellent Cobra stories for IDW's G.I. Joe comics) has been doing his Spider-Man stories for a few years now, and apparently Spider-Verse is becoming an ongoing (as Web Warriors) in the fall, so I decided to quit fighting it.
I want Costa to do the kind of material I love Costa doing, but that's just not happening with G.I. Joe. I liked Avengers: Millennium, saw the potential to get close to what I wanted, so I decided to give Spider-Verse a shot. And it seems to be even closer than Avengers: Millennium. As you may or may not know, Spider-Verse means the Spider-Man version of DC's multiverse, endless variations of the character. The most famous one recently isn't of Spider-Man himself, but his dead lover Gwen Stacy, who is officially known as Spider-Gwen, and apparently wildly popular. She's more or less the lead of this issue, too. Costa has figured out how to present these characters in a group the way he normally does individually in his Cobra stories, focusing on their varying perspectives. This I was glad to see.
Star Trek/Green Lantern #1 (IDW) is something that could very easily be a bad gimmick, as comics that mix different properties with different timelines must inevitably be (the Star Trek/X-Men crossover, I still have no idea how anyone could ever take that seriously), but as of this first issue, makes perfect sense. I have no idea what the second issue will have to say about that, but let's focus on the positive!
What's great is that it also gives me a chance to read a good issue of two properties that aren't currently giving me much in that regard. (As always, I provide the John Byrne caveat; because my local shop doesn't regularly stock his work, I don't have a chance to read it regularly, unless I wanted to go the digital route.) I haven't read IDW's Star Trek work with any regularity in a few years, and more often than not discover that I'm not missing much. Robert Venditti's Green Lantern, meanwhile, is much the same.
This issue takes place in IDW's favorite Star Trek sandbox at the moment, stories set in the Abrams reboot era. I think it's a mistake to routinely feature Kirk's Enterprise adventures at a time when new movies are still being produced. Once in a while is fine. I think there's much more valuable opportunity looking around the corners, which is what IDW used to do, even in the Abrams era. Anyway, but that's exactly what this comic is doing, too, except with Green Lantern.
Or more accurately, the corpse of Ganthet. That's a wonderful image. With all the times the Guardians have been slaughtered over the years, I never imagined such an image would be so impactful, but there you are. Until Hal Jordan (presumably) shows up on the final page, there isn't even anything to worry about time-wise. Ganthet could easily have lived to Kirk's time (the Guardian's are the universe's oldest beings in DC speak). He brought the last rings across the whole spectrum (red, yellow, blue, violet, orange, and indigo) created or embellished by Geoff Johns, and as Kirk's crew examines the corpse and the rings, the comic has ample opportunity to let the reader enjoy the Abrams era for what it is, a distinct version of familiar Star Trek.
Again, I have no idea what the next issue does to affect the continuing viability of the concept, but so far so good...
Star Wars: Lando #1 (Marvel) is unquestionably the one I've been dying to read since I had first heard about the series. I've loved Lando since he first sauntered into Star Wars in The Empire Strikes Back, and this comic is written by Charles Soule.
As I've mentioned repeatedly, I had great misgivings when Soule went exclusive to Marvel. His Red Lanterns was the work that made me a fan of Soule, and I didn't want to see it end. (Well, DC ended it anyway, in the end.) When I saw Lando announced, with Soule as writer, I saw it as the best chance to see Soule in the mode I knew best from him.
Turns out it's better than that. Never mind what I already said about Soule above, this one's better than I could have imagined. It not only features Lando, which is obvious, but takes him in new and unexpected directions. Now, I'm about to reference Lost again. Unlike a lot of fans, my affection for it not only didn't go away after the way it ended, but was actually amplified by it. I loved the whole final season, in fact. This is relevant, because in Soule's mind, Lando is something of a Sawyer, a con man who given the chance could absolutely go straight. When we meet Lando in Empire Strikes Back, that's exactly what happened to him, but the Lando we meet is difficult to imagine as anything else. I read and enjoyed the L. Neil Smith books, too, but they were part of the whole thing that suggested if Lando had ever been any different, he was basically Han Solo.
Which is not very imaginative. Given a chance, Han would never have become an administrator. But Lando loves a good con, because a con is basically an opportunity, and that's what con men love. As a con man, Lando suddenly makes perfect sense. And his Cloud City buddy Lobot becomes fully alive in the comic, too, plus a number of nefarious associates that make it seem just as if Star Wars: Lando is the first time anyone really tried to do additional Star Wars material. Because this is exactly what Star Wars was always meant to be.
And so why care about Lando at all? I liked him because he really wasn't involved in Luke's adventures. Other than snatching Luke from that weathervane, if you think about it Lando really has nothing to do with him in his two movie appearances. But this doesn't stop him from being, arguably the most confident man in the room, even when he quickly realizes he's got to switch allegiances. That deal he strikes with Vader turned out to be a bad idea. So he flips. He's the only character to do that, too. Han, if you'll remember, spends most of his time actively trying to avoid entanglements. That's what he had in common with the old Lando. He didn't see the opportunity Luke represented even though it was staring him in the face. He came back because he grew to care about the boy. Not Lando.
All of which is to say there was always unexplored potential in Lando. As of now, there's less. Or, more.
Strange Fruit #1 (Boom!) is the first installment in the Mark Waid story fans have been waiting for since Kingdom Come.
Whereas Alex Ross has been trying to recapture his Kingdom Come glory ever since (just as the project itself was originally embraced as "the next Alex Ross project" after Marvels, which Kurt Busiek followed up with the similar Astro City), Waid seems to have been incredibly reluctant, which is probably because initially he didn't understand what he'd accomplished. Before Kingdom Come, Waid was a fan who became an editor who got to write The Flash and then anything else he wanted. But along the way, he had the opportunity to do something big, Kingdom Come. Even though fans (like me) claim the best of his Flash was incredibly hard to surpass, that's exactly what he did. He set the bar higher than anyone could have imagined, and I think like Waid himself, everyone has been struggling to catch up with it.
This was transcendent material, for Waid, for superheroes, and in some ways, comic books in general. Snooty fans won't even take superhero writers seriously, will try and create mainstream credentials by being anything but. What Waid realized was that this wasn't by any means necessary. But having someone like Alex Ross around to make it visually distinctive would probably help.
Here he was J.G. Jones, whose most visually distinctive work previously was on the landmark covers of the weekly series 52, which are among the rare covers to get their own collection. Jones has gone to some trouble to evoke Alex Ross, but where Ross tends to be minimalist, Jones sketches in the rest.
Otherwise the rest is entirely Waid. The only other times he's invoked Kingdom Come was to try and recapture the scope of superhero storytelling, which resulted in lesser works like The Kingdom and the Irredeemable/Incorruptible universe. Strange Fruit is nothing like that. And considering the charged nature of race relations, and even the status of the Confederate flag (interested observers can make much of the issue's final image on that score), it's beyond timely. It's timeless in the best Kingdom Come manner. It's Waid coming home to Boom!, yes, but it's also Waid coming to terms with a part of his legacy he has finally come to embrace, a challenge he set aside and has returned to at last.
At its heart, Strange Fruit is a variation on Superman. It even evokes Django Unchained. But it is distinctly its own, too. It looks at politics, too, by the way, but at its heart is a social landscape at turmoil with itself, trying to come up with easy answers and finding that to be a difficult task. And suddenly, there's this black man standing there, tearing the whole scene asunder, come to Earth like Superman, in a rocket that crashes in a field, but this is a full-grown man.
Who and what he is are matters for the three remaining issues. I highly recommend you investigate the results for yourself. And welcome back, Mark Waid. It's been a long time.
Monday, February 16, 2015
Star Wars #2 (Marvel)
writer: Jason Aaron
artist: John Cassaday
A curious thing happened to Star Wars comics recently. No, I don't mean leaving Dark Horse for the first time in a quarter century, returning to the Marvel fold in conjunction with the franchise being in the hands of Disney and on the heels of Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens.
No, they've become popular. It's kind of a slap in the face to Dark Horse. The debut issue of the flagship in Marvel's launch (like the new films, there are spin-offs for individual characters as well) sold like hotcakes, an instant collectors item the likes of which comics in general haven't seen in years. At my local comics shop, people were buying two and three (etc.) at a time. I never even saw the first issue.
So here I am with the second. What're the results? It doesn't even seem important that the writer is Jason Aaron, an acclaimed member of the Marvel fold whom I personally still know best from his Vertigo series Scalped.
Aaron has placed his series in the aftermath of A New Hope. Luke wears the yellow jacket he rocked in the awards ceremony. The Rebellion is trying to capitalize on the destruction of the Death Star. And Darth Vader ain't happy. He also doesn't seem to know who Luke Skywalker is.
At first it didn't really bother me, but the more I think about it, this is a sizable plothole. I mean, Vader isn't just some shmoe, he's a Sith, a practitioner of the Force. You might explain the gap as Vader's apparent disinterest in either of his offspring, or perhaps simply his understandable confusion about how exactly Revenge of the Sith ended, whether he has offspring at all. And yet, there's a real argument to be made that he would have known in an instant who the mysterious pilot was, a confusion from the end of A New Hope he would've cleared up much more quickly.
That's the central element of the issue, and whether or not you go along with it probably defines what you think of it. They'll obsess over it if they're not primed to accept just about anything. The minute they have reason to reject even one thing, something like this would drive them crazy.
I suspect most fans just won't care. For me, it's reason enough to give up.
artist: John Cassaday
A curious thing happened to Star Wars comics recently. No, I don't mean leaving Dark Horse for the first time in a quarter century, returning to the Marvel fold in conjunction with the franchise being in the hands of Disney and on the heels of Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens.
No, they've become popular. It's kind of a slap in the face to Dark Horse. The debut issue of the flagship in Marvel's launch (like the new films, there are spin-offs for individual characters as well) sold like hotcakes, an instant collectors item the likes of which comics in general haven't seen in years. At my local comics shop, people were buying two and three (etc.) at a time. I never even saw the first issue.
So here I am with the second. What're the results? It doesn't even seem important that the writer is Jason Aaron, an acclaimed member of the Marvel fold whom I personally still know best from his Vertigo series Scalped.
Aaron has placed his series in the aftermath of A New Hope. Luke wears the yellow jacket he rocked in the awards ceremony. The Rebellion is trying to capitalize on the destruction of the Death Star. And Darth Vader ain't happy. He also doesn't seem to know who Luke Skywalker is.
At first it didn't really bother me, but the more I think about it, this is a sizable plothole. I mean, Vader isn't just some shmoe, he's a Sith, a practitioner of the Force. You might explain the gap as Vader's apparent disinterest in either of his offspring, or perhaps simply his understandable confusion about how exactly Revenge of the Sith ended, whether he has offspring at all. And yet, there's a real argument to be made that he would have known in an instant who the mysterious pilot was, a confusion from the end of A New Hope he would've cleared up much more quickly.
That's the central element of the issue, and whether or not you go along with it probably defines what you think of it. They'll obsess over it if they're not primed to accept just about anything. The minute they have reason to reject even one thing, something like this would drive them crazy.
I suspect most fans just won't care. For me, it's reason enough to give up.
Monday, May 6, 2013
Reading Comics #113 "Free Comic Book Day, Part 2"
By Saturday evening I'd lost my opportunity to experience Free Comic Book Day in its purest form, and yet the hangover proved perhaps more interesting than the regularly-scheduled celebration. I've previously discussed my visit to Muse Comics in Colorado Springs on the day itself. Now we'll talk about Sunday.
There are a surprising number of comic book stores in Colorado Springs. As of this year there are even two shops for Escape Velocity, formerly known as Bargain Comics, which should be considered the godfather of them all. There's also Heroes & Dragons, which was my entry point in the city when I moved here in 2007. Ed's Cards and Comics is the third of these, rounding out the shops carrying new releases on a regular basis. Yesterday I didn't go to any of these. Instead I felt like making a trip to CK Comics in Manitou Springs, just to visit it for the first time.
After some initial scouring I wasn't terribly impressed. It seemed like much more of a comics novelty shop than anything, and doesn't even overtly display new releases. Yet it had been advertised by the FCBD site as participating in the event. I already knew that Heroes & Dragons doesn't participate. Escape Velocity is usually good to have some extra copies after the day itself, but doubtfully the main ones. So CK it was...hopefully. I looked and I looked. Eventually I found one of those comic book boxes on the floor, and it contains oodles of FCBD comics. Not all of them, but at this point I'm far more of a beggar than a chooser, right?
Still, this was a bountiful offering. Here's what I got and what I thought of them:
Bongo Free-for-All (Bongo)
This publisher almost exclusively deals with Simpsons comics (with Futurama tossed in every now and again). I've read some of it, strictly on a sporadic basis. I love the cartoon, have for years (but mostly must abstain from the ever-persistent is-it-worse-than-before? debate as I don't get to watch on a regular basis these days, although every time I've watched new episodes I've still been amused), and the comics do a good job of capturing its spirit in a different format. The characters do in fact translate well even without their distinctive voices. There are several stories in the issue. The first involves Bart behaving atypically well, which itself isn't the apocalyptic development everyone takes t for, but merely the result of a bet he made with Milhouse, his best friend. It's the lead and best story. Another one features L'il Homer concerning his reluctance to take a bath and his father (known as Grampa or Abe) trying to tell him a cautionary tale that is welcomed much differently than intended. The art takes subtle liberties from the Matt Groening archetypes, which is always nice to see.
Chakra the Invincible (Graphic India)
The most notable thing about this one is that it's the latest of the latter-day Stan Lee creations. What's different about this one is that it's very much from the basic '60s archetype (I guess that's the word of the day) he established at Marvel, set in India. I don't know if there's a wide American audience for this, but seems much more natural and capable of sustaining more than just a novelty act than just about anything he's done for years. He's credited for concept and story, but he's not a writer. The other thing of note is the "Invincible" subtitle. Invincible is also a long-running Robert Kirkman series over at Image (a hundred issues and counting!), so it's a little funny to see this word (also frequently used in association with Iron Man) in use again.
Grimm #0 (Dynamite)
Dynamite is one of many smaller publishers that lives and breathes on licensed comics and established properties. Grimm is also a TV series, one that seems to be amassing a cult audience that grows over time. It's pretty clever, and this issue explains the whole concept, how the main character is a descendant of the famous brothers who helped codify fairy tales. He alone is capable of seeing the true faces of the monsters who have integrated themselves into modern society. The issue also includes a preview for the upcoming Damsels, which is a lot like what Bill Willingham has been doing in Vertigo's Fables, or the TV series Once Upon a Time, or even the cheesecakey comics of Zenescope. The writers, Leah Moore and John Reppion, have been Dynamite's in-house literary classics/adaptation experts since their work with Alice in Wonderland and Dracula. With the success of this spring's Oz the Great and Powerful in movie theaters, it may very well prove that fairy tale characters are due to succeed vampires and zombies as the new obsession.
Infinity (Marvel)
A preview for an upcoming event book, Infinity is also a canny bid to capitalize on the appearance of Thanos in the credits of last summer's blockbuster Avengers flick. The company is making a concerted effort to shift its space-based properties to greater prominence, and this is a huge art of that. The writer is Jonathan Hickman, who continues to try and elevate his name in the comics pantheon (Thanos was previously the baby of legend Jim Starlin). The title is a nod to the classic Infinity Gauntlet (and its various sequels), which is also one of the odd bit of convergences between Marvel and DC, which bases a lot of its legacy on Crisis on Infinite Earths (and its various sequels). Most of this preview with weird alien creatures and a mythology that only in its final pages points to Thanos, thereby making the whole thing exactly like Avengers. (Marvel tends to repeat itself a lot.) The artist is Jim Cheung, whom I still associate with the original Young Avengers. He's got a playful yet serious style, which looks quite different in this altered context. There's also a reprint of a vintage Thanos appearance. For the record, Thanos has my vote as undisputed best Marvel villain.
KaBoom! Summer Blast! (Boom!)
KaBoom is the young readers imprint of Boom!, a company that at this point might as well admit that it has all but been driven into irrelevance by the licensed properties on display here. Adventure Time is a crudely animated cartoon series that captures the spirit of the way children play (when they're playing something other than video games). Amusingly (and confusingly), the story of Finn and Jake featured here takes the form of the classic Choose Your Own Adventure books. There are a lot of crazy arrows directing how to read it, but it's almost as much fun (and appropriate) to read all of the possible directions at the same time. There are a few other such segments (including one based on te Ice Age movies), and there are also ones based on Peanuts and Garfield, two classic comic strips. Peanuts creator Charles Schulz has been dead for more than a decade, and newspapers have continued to rerun the old strips, plus the regular airing of the Christmas TV special, but it's good that these characters live on in new adventures. Amusingly, this one is all about Charlie Brown teaching the reader how to draw Linus, all while obsessing over baseball. In fact, he uses baseball images to guide the entire process! It's good stuff. If this special guides readers to any of the featured titles, would think they would undoubtedly be Adventure Time and Peanuts, unless readers don't like imaginative storytelling.
Star Wars/Captain Midnight/Avatar: The Last Airbender (Dark Horse)
This one's a grab bag, too, features three different spotlights, two of which are featured on the flipbook format's covers (the first and last I've listed). I'm mostly familiar with Last Airbender thanks to the M. Night Shyamalan movie (which I loved). The story in this issue is a tad like the Phil Hester comic I talked about in Part 1 of this FCBD series. The Captain Midnight episode, meanwhile, is part of the company's periodic effort to enter the superhero game, mostly using characters they tried in the '90s as well. A lot of these smaller publishers seem to equate prior publishing history as a built-in legacy that will compete with those of DC and Marvel. I think they're slightly mistaken. Captain Midnight is very much a pulp hero, which is something Dark Horse is going for this time (and so did DC when it did the Doc Savage comics a few years ago, in a line that also revived Will Eisner's The Spirit, while some other publishers are doing every unsigned Golden Age hero). Anyway, the final one is Brian Wood on Star Wars. Dark Horse has done thousands of Star Wars comics at this point, as much the definition of the expanded saga as any of the books. "Expanded" means mostly noncanonical, but that doesn't seem to bother the publisher. Wood is an indy star, and has recently burnished that reputation with Dark Horse as writer of The Massive (which reminded me of an earlier and superior series from the same publisher known as Zero Killer). He seems to think it's just as well as anyone else who has written Star Wars in comics or books to pretty much play fast and loose with logic in order to have "kewl" moments. In fact, that's what his whole story with Darth Vader, set just before the events of A New Hope, is all about, and yes, Boba Fett (as is often the case with these comics) is shoehorned into the story. Although Dark Horse does score some points from me for the soon-to-launch comics based on George Lucas's original notes for The Star Wars.
The Walking Dead (Image)
The extremely clever thing that Robert Kirkman did for this special issue was to include new material. Most of it is reprinted from origins of characters like Michonne and the Governor (both of whom were heavily featured in the latest season of the TV series), but one of the more obscure characters (as far as my experience goes) also gets some significant love. Tyreese appeared pretty early in the comics, but has really only just popped in the series. He's the one who gets the exclusive material. Apparently he was envisioned as the replacement Shane, who in my mind not only completely stole the second season but was also the best reason to watch both the season and series as a whole, emblematic of what I think is the true strength of the series, not the sensationalism but the very human foibles on display, whether in extreme circumstances or otherwise (although yes, Darryl was an immediate standout for me, too). I've read the comic sporadically (although pretty regularly for a few months), but I think the series does it more justice. Kirkman, especially in this special spotlighting reactions to a suddenly apocalyptic setting, does a good job of being thought-provoking, but I'm not sure if he's just incredibly cynical (although not as much as Cormac McCarthy was in The Road, and certainly not as redemptive as Stephen King in The Stand) or taking an extremely long time to explore his story (he says he envisions two hundred [or maybe it was three?] issues), and that just seems excessive and leaves most of it seem unfocused rather than methodical.
There are a surprising number of comic book stores in Colorado Springs. As of this year there are even two shops for Escape Velocity, formerly known as Bargain Comics, which should be considered the godfather of them all. There's also Heroes & Dragons, which was my entry point in the city when I moved here in 2007. Ed's Cards and Comics is the third of these, rounding out the shops carrying new releases on a regular basis. Yesterday I didn't go to any of these. Instead I felt like making a trip to CK Comics in Manitou Springs, just to visit it for the first time.
After some initial scouring I wasn't terribly impressed. It seemed like much more of a comics novelty shop than anything, and doesn't even overtly display new releases. Yet it had been advertised by the FCBD site as participating in the event. I already knew that Heroes & Dragons doesn't participate. Escape Velocity is usually good to have some extra copies after the day itself, but doubtfully the main ones. So CK it was...hopefully. I looked and I looked. Eventually I found one of those comic book boxes on the floor, and it contains oodles of FCBD comics. Not all of them, but at this point I'm far more of a beggar than a chooser, right?
Still, this was a bountiful offering. Here's what I got and what I thought of them:
Bongo Free-for-All (Bongo)
This publisher almost exclusively deals with Simpsons comics (with Futurama tossed in every now and again). I've read some of it, strictly on a sporadic basis. I love the cartoon, have for years (but mostly must abstain from the ever-persistent is-it-worse-than-before? debate as I don't get to watch on a regular basis these days, although every time I've watched new episodes I've still been amused), and the comics do a good job of capturing its spirit in a different format. The characters do in fact translate well even without their distinctive voices. There are several stories in the issue. The first involves Bart behaving atypically well, which itself isn't the apocalyptic development everyone takes t for, but merely the result of a bet he made with Milhouse, his best friend. It's the lead and best story. Another one features L'il Homer concerning his reluctance to take a bath and his father (known as Grampa or Abe) trying to tell him a cautionary tale that is welcomed much differently than intended. The art takes subtle liberties from the Matt Groening archetypes, which is always nice to see.
Chakra the Invincible (Graphic India)
The most notable thing about this one is that it's the latest of the latter-day Stan Lee creations. What's different about this one is that it's very much from the basic '60s archetype (I guess that's the word of the day) he established at Marvel, set in India. I don't know if there's a wide American audience for this, but seems much more natural and capable of sustaining more than just a novelty act than just about anything he's done for years. He's credited for concept and story, but he's not a writer. The other thing of note is the "Invincible" subtitle. Invincible is also a long-running Robert Kirkman series over at Image (a hundred issues and counting!), so it's a little funny to see this word (also frequently used in association with Iron Man) in use again.
Grimm #0 (Dynamite)
Dynamite is one of many smaller publishers that lives and breathes on licensed comics and established properties. Grimm is also a TV series, one that seems to be amassing a cult audience that grows over time. It's pretty clever, and this issue explains the whole concept, how the main character is a descendant of the famous brothers who helped codify fairy tales. He alone is capable of seeing the true faces of the monsters who have integrated themselves into modern society. The issue also includes a preview for the upcoming Damsels, which is a lot like what Bill Willingham has been doing in Vertigo's Fables, or the TV series Once Upon a Time, or even the cheesecakey comics of Zenescope. The writers, Leah Moore and John Reppion, have been Dynamite's in-house literary classics/adaptation experts since their work with Alice in Wonderland and Dracula. With the success of this spring's Oz the Great and Powerful in movie theaters, it may very well prove that fairy tale characters are due to succeed vampires and zombies as the new obsession.
Infinity (Marvel)
A preview for an upcoming event book, Infinity is also a canny bid to capitalize on the appearance of Thanos in the credits of last summer's blockbuster Avengers flick. The company is making a concerted effort to shift its space-based properties to greater prominence, and this is a huge art of that. The writer is Jonathan Hickman, who continues to try and elevate his name in the comics pantheon (Thanos was previously the baby of legend Jim Starlin). The title is a nod to the classic Infinity Gauntlet (and its various sequels), which is also one of the odd bit of convergences between Marvel and DC, which bases a lot of its legacy on Crisis on Infinite Earths (and its various sequels). Most of this preview with weird alien creatures and a mythology that only in its final pages points to Thanos, thereby making the whole thing exactly like Avengers. (Marvel tends to repeat itself a lot.) The artist is Jim Cheung, whom I still associate with the original Young Avengers. He's got a playful yet serious style, which looks quite different in this altered context. There's also a reprint of a vintage Thanos appearance. For the record, Thanos has my vote as undisputed best Marvel villain.
KaBoom! Summer Blast! (Boom!)
KaBoom is the young readers imprint of Boom!, a company that at this point might as well admit that it has all but been driven into irrelevance by the licensed properties on display here. Adventure Time is a crudely animated cartoon series that captures the spirit of the way children play (when they're playing something other than video games). Amusingly (and confusingly), the story of Finn and Jake featured here takes the form of the classic Choose Your Own Adventure books. There are a lot of crazy arrows directing how to read it, but it's almost as much fun (and appropriate) to read all of the possible directions at the same time. There are a few other such segments (including one based on te Ice Age movies), and there are also ones based on Peanuts and Garfield, two classic comic strips. Peanuts creator Charles Schulz has been dead for more than a decade, and newspapers have continued to rerun the old strips, plus the regular airing of the Christmas TV special, but it's good that these characters live on in new adventures. Amusingly, this one is all about Charlie Brown teaching the reader how to draw Linus, all while obsessing over baseball. In fact, he uses baseball images to guide the entire process! It's good stuff. If this special guides readers to any of the featured titles, would think they would undoubtedly be Adventure Time and Peanuts, unless readers don't like imaginative storytelling.
Star Wars/Captain Midnight/Avatar: The Last Airbender (Dark Horse)
This one's a grab bag, too, features three different spotlights, two of which are featured on the flipbook format's covers (the first and last I've listed). I'm mostly familiar with Last Airbender thanks to the M. Night Shyamalan movie (which I loved). The story in this issue is a tad like the Phil Hester comic I talked about in Part 1 of this FCBD series. The Captain Midnight episode, meanwhile, is part of the company's periodic effort to enter the superhero game, mostly using characters they tried in the '90s as well. A lot of these smaller publishers seem to equate prior publishing history as a built-in legacy that will compete with those of DC and Marvel. I think they're slightly mistaken. Captain Midnight is very much a pulp hero, which is something Dark Horse is going for this time (and so did DC when it did the Doc Savage comics a few years ago, in a line that also revived Will Eisner's The Spirit, while some other publishers are doing every unsigned Golden Age hero). Anyway, the final one is Brian Wood on Star Wars. Dark Horse has done thousands of Star Wars comics at this point, as much the definition of the expanded saga as any of the books. "Expanded" means mostly noncanonical, but that doesn't seem to bother the publisher. Wood is an indy star, and has recently burnished that reputation with Dark Horse as writer of The Massive (which reminded me of an earlier and superior series from the same publisher known as Zero Killer). He seems to think it's just as well as anyone else who has written Star Wars in comics or books to pretty much play fast and loose with logic in order to have "kewl" moments. In fact, that's what his whole story with Darth Vader, set just before the events of A New Hope, is all about, and yes, Boba Fett (as is often the case with these comics) is shoehorned into the story. Although Dark Horse does score some points from me for the soon-to-launch comics based on George Lucas's original notes for The Star Wars.
The Walking Dead (Image)
The extremely clever thing that Robert Kirkman did for this special issue was to include new material. Most of it is reprinted from origins of characters like Michonne and the Governor (both of whom were heavily featured in the latest season of the TV series), but one of the more obscure characters (as far as my experience goes) also gets some significant love. Tyreese appeared pretty early in the comics, but has really only just popped in the series. He's the one who gets the exclusive material. Apparently he was envisioned as the replacement Shane, who in my mind not only completely stole the second season but was also the best reason to watch both the season and series as a whole, emblematic of what I think is the true strength of the series, not the sensationalism but the very human foibles on display, whether in extreme circumstances or otherwise (although yes, Darryl was an immediate standout for me, too). I've read the comic sporadically (although pretty regularly for a few months), but I think the series does it more justice. Kirkman, especially in this special spotlighting reactions to a suddenly apocalyptic setting, does a good job of being thought-provoking, but I'm not sure if he's just incredibly cynical (although not as much as Cormac McCarthy was in The Road, and certainly not as redemptive as Stephen King in The Stand) or taking an extremely long time to explore his story (he says he envisions two hundred [or maybe it was three?] issues), and that just seems excessive and leaves most of it seem unfocused rather than methodical.
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