Shipping 1/26/05

100 GIRLS #3 2000 AD #1420

30 DAYS OF BLOODSUCKERS TALES #4

AMAZING JOY BUZZARDS #1

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #516

ARANA HEART OF THE SPIDER #1

ARMY OF DARKNESS SHOP TIL YOUDROP DEAD #1

AVENGERS EARTHS MIGHTIEST HEROES #6

BATGIRL #60

BATMAN #636

BETTY #144

BEYOND AVALON #1

BLACK WIDOW #5

CARTOON NETWORK BLOCK PARTY #5

CONAN #12

DEADPAN #2

DETONATOR #2

DOOM PATROL #8

EVENFALL #7

FANTASTIC FOUR #522

FLASH #218

FUTURAMA SIMPSONS CROSSOVER CRISIS PART 2 #1

GI JOE #39

HELLBLAZER #204

JLA CLASSIFIED #3

JSA STRANGE ADVENTURES #6

KNIGHTS OF THE DINNER TABLE #99

LEGION OF SUPER HEROES #2

LOSERS #20

LUBA #10

MARVEL AGE FANTASTIC FOUR #12

MINIBURGER DIRTY DOZEN AND LUCKY 13TH BOXED SET

MYSTIQUE #23

NEW X-MEN #9

NIGHTWING #102

OFFICIAL HANDBOOK MARVEL UNIVERSE WOMEN OF MARVEL 2005

PLANETARY #22

RICHARD DRAGON #9

ROBIN #134

SLEEPER SEASON TWO #8

SONIC THE HEDGEHOG #145

SOULFIRE #3

SPAWN #142 (RES)

SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN #24

STOKERS DRACULA #3

SUPERPATRIOT WAR ON TERROR #2

TAROT WITCH OF THE BLACK ROSE #30

TEEN TITANS GO #15

TRUE STORY SWEAR TO GOD #12

ULTIMATE FANTASTIC FOUR #15

ULTIMATE X-MEN #55

UNCANNY X-MEN #454

USAGI YOJIMBO #81

WE 3 #3

WITCHBLADE #82

WITCHING #8

X-23 #2

Y THE LAST MAN #30

Books / Mags / Stuff

2000 AD EXTREME ED #7

ABC WARRIORS THE MEKNIFICENT SEVEN TP

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN VOL 8 SINSPAST TP

ASCEND GN

AVENGERS DISASSEMBLED TP

BACK ISSUE #8

BERSERK VOL 6 TP

BLOOD STAINED SWORD #1

BLUESMAN #1

BONE VOL 1 OUT OF BONEVILLE COLOR ED SC

CHALAND ANTHOLOGY VOL 2 FREDDY LOMBARD TP

CINEFANTASTIQUE VOL 37 #1

EIGHTBALL LIKE A VELVET GLOVECAST IN IRON TP NEW PTG

EPILEPTIC VOL 1 TP

GAME INFORMER FEB05

GRIN AND BARE IT MAGAZINE #15

HOUSEWIVES AT PLAY ALL ACCESSGN

HULK VOL 1 INCREDIBLE DIGEST TP

JADE SCREEN VOL 3 #1

KING COLLECTED ED TP

KODT BUNDLE OF TROUBLE VOL 11TP

LABYRINTH TAROT HC

LOKI HC

MIGHTY LOVE SC

NEGIMA VOL 4 GN

NOBLE CAUSES VOL 3 DISTANT RELATIVES TP

PHANTOM GRAHAM NOLAN SUNDAY VOL 1 GN

POPBOT COLLECTION VOL 2 SC

PREVIEWS VOL XV #2

R CRUMBS KAFKA GN

SAMURAI EXECUTIONER VOL 3 TP

SCREEN POWER OFF JACKIE CHAN MAG VOL 6 #3

SFX #126

SHADOW STAR VOL 6 WHAT CAN I DO FOR YOU NOW TP

SINGULARITY 7 TP

TOMARTS ACTION FIGURE DIGEST #130

TSUBASA VOL 4 GN

VIVID GIRLS VOL 1 GN

WET MOON VOL 1 WANDERING COMPANIONLESS GN

WILDGUARD VOL 1 CASTING CALL TP

WIZARD COMICS MAGAZINE SPIDER-MAN & WOMAN CVR #161

XXXHOLIC VOL 4 GN

Reviews for 1/19/05 Comics

My schizophrenic approach to reading comics (read the ones I don't buy while working Fridays, read the ones I do buy over the weekend) and my slapdash approach in ordering comics has left me looking at the new release list and going: "Hmmm, why didn't I read that? And why didn't I *buy* it?" So that particularly incisive review of Eric Red's Containment #1 is going to have to wait, dammit. But here's a quick take on some stuff I did read:

ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #636: I'm still shocked that Rucka's work on this just isn't doing the trick for me. The story is so cautiously doled out, it feels frugal: once Superman called in Batman and Wonder Woman, it was hard for me to imagine why he wouldn't have done so immediately, whereas at least, say, Jeph Loeb would have thrown them into a full-page spread halfway through the second issue of the arc. I actually prefer the trainwreck of Action to this. How sad. Eh.

EXILES #58: Enjoying the economy of the plotting on this--I think most teams would have dragged out the Evil-God-Controlling-The-Team angle for at least a couple of issues, but nope, they wrapped it up right after it was introduced. I'm not sure about the insistently comical tone that keeps popping up in the book, but it may be because the execution isn't just living up to the potential. Definitely a high OK, but I think the creative team's got some kinks to work out before it'll get higher than that from me.

FREEDOM FORCE #1: I was really amped for this, not only because I enjoyed the game so much but because the people who worked on it seemed like such big Kirby fans. So this was a mighty disappointment: nothing more than a retelling of the events in the game and, apart from an occasional thick ink line and a dynamic close-up or two, having almsot none of the Jack Kirby dynamism I would have hoped for. Between this and the similarly unimaginative Metal Gear Solid comic, my cool-comics-about-cool-video-games dreams have been thoroughly crushed. Awful.

NIGHTCRAWLER #5: Aguirre-Sacasa, bless his heart, strikes me as someone who stopped reading comics around 1962 or so, or else is modelling a lot of his Marvel work on Scooby-Doo episodes. I mean: the nine scary ghosts of the subway? I was kinda surprised there was no scene of Kurt running with Logan, Ororo and Kurt's date stacked on top of his head. The art is lovely, but really: the nine scary ghosts of the subway? Eh.

PLASTIC MAN #14: I think it's great Kyle Baker is doing a comic that'll make his kids laugh, but I don't think I want to pay to read it, particularly. Eh.

SIMPSONS COMICS #102: Too in-jokey, or too much of a "tribute" issue, I guess, because I saw most of the jokes coming from a mile away. And there are a few shticks Boothby does (like the faux-dramatic splash page) he might want to consider retiring. Again, just an Eh.

TEEN TITANS #20: Worked for me as a very solid bit of characterization, and, weirdly, I'm always happy to see that ugly ol' Luthorsuit. Good.

ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN #71: Think I'm done with this title-it's just seemed very sloppy since that bungled ending to the "Ultimate Carnage" storyline. Kind of a drag because I remember when this used to be the most consistent book on the stands.

WANTED #6: Probably the dumbest last page I've seen in quite some time. And Millar seems genuinely unaware how much his "nah, I'm fucking with ya" scene undercuts any emotional resonance in the climax (because, you know, emotional resonance is for pussies and shit)--or, more than likely, he doesn't care. I started this title wanting nothing more than a good story; I finished it wanting Eminem and Chuck Palahniuk to team up and beat Millar's lazy stealing ass. The art gives it an Eh it doesn't really deserve otherwise. Bleah.

WOLVERINE #24: Millar's take on Daredevil (basically, if Daredevil=Ben Affleck, then Daredevil=widely loathed himbo of the Marvel Universe) was sorta funny but annoyingly lazy. It seemed to serve no real point to the story other than to help fill up all those little colored caption boxes, and also made this one of those issues where I figured out the last page from about page four. It was still entertaining enough, although even the John Romita, Jr. art felt kinda phoned in this time around. OK.

WOLVERINE THE END #6: How long did this take? A year? A year plus? And to top it off, Wolverine doesn't even "end," which is a real testament to how impressively Jenkins flaked off on this project. Crap.

X-MEN #166: This was so awful I wondered if Peter Milligan licensed his name for Chuck Austen to use--and the art looked surprisingly rushed and inept to boot, making me wonder if the script on this was not only lousy but late. Playing "The Naked Time" card with the X-Men is not exactly rocket science, so you'd think this would have been no worse than mediocre, but it was, in fact, full-blown Awful.

Wow. A whole lot of cranky, huh? Let's hope Bri will appear and show me the error of my curmudgeonly ways...or at least point out some gems I might have missed.

Some reviews of 1/12 comics

Like el Jefe said, it was Tzipora's birthday this weekend, so I'm drowning for time -- gonna try to cover the items Jeff didn't.... HERO SQUARED XTRA SIZED SP #1: It's wordy, yes, and the middle sequence kinda dragged on, but, overall I thought this was a terrific start, and I hope they continue it. Parallel universes and slackers and comedy ahoy. GOOD.

WARREN ELLIS SIMON SPECTOR #1: And Ellis' "5th week event" (hahaha) comes to an end. Might have been nice if it all had shipped in the same week, though. Shouldn't these be returnable, really? I thought SIMON SPECTOR was probably the least of the 4 books, but that might be because "The Man" is the least compelling of the four concepts -- when heroes are perfect and unstoppable, there's not too much drama there, is there? Still, nothing worse than an OK from me.

WARREN ELLIS ANGEL STOMP FUTURE #1: Easially my favorite of the 4 "Apparat" titles, perhaps because it has the most cleanly "Ellisian" voice -- Warren does "Turn to the camera and think about technology out loud" bettrer than almost anyone. This "felt" like TRANSMETROPOLITAN, and the earlier issues, at that. Ryp's artwork is bloody fucking lovely and insane, but suffers a bit, I think, from not being colored. On most pages there isn't much of an "anchor" for your eye to fix on TO check out the insane little details everywhere. When Ryp does, say, porno, it works fine because there's usually lots of naughty bits to center your eye on, but in a dense SF-driven world like this, there's a lot of blurring going on. However, one really wonders how he has gone all of these years without being snapped up by a more... respectable publisher -- he's got all of the density and sight-gaggery of Darrow, but, apparantly, he's twice as fast at LEAST. Either way, perfect art choice for the voice of the book, and I thought this was two great creators at the top of thier form. VERY GOOD, and, all things considered, my PICK OF THE WEEK.

NIGHTWING #101: Rather than "Nightwing: Year One" it's more like "Robin: Year last". Nice to look at, competently written, my only problem was I kinda felt I had read this issue like 99 times before. Yes, yes, Dick and Bruce fight, we KNOW that one already. So, let's go with a very very high OK.

ULTIMATES 2 #2: A very solid issue, and I like the way it confounded my expectations by NOT having the fight scene where it might otherwise, and seeming to be serious about executing the Hulk. I really think they should, too. An easy VERY GOOD.

MAJESTIC #1: Well, I don't see the point of the book, or really the audience either ("modernly told silver age superman stories without superman" I guess.. and that's, what, 79 people in America?), and I really can't see it lasting more than 12 issues, but, having said THAT, it was pretty solid, with very nice art, and well-written "big ideas". I'm even going to give it a low GOOD. But it probably won't have a #13.

X 23 #1: Well, so she's not Wolverine's clone, but his "genetic duplicate", and, the script really really seemed to think this was some kind of big difference, and it just felt, dunno, kinda defensive or something. But, god, why? Why do we need a She-verine any way? With a belly ring? Jeff deeply disturbed me on Friday by saying something like "They were probably thinking, 'A character as cool as Wolvie, except we can fuck her! Woo!'" which immediately made me want to get very very drunk and curse humanity forever. I don't think this character adds anything, and it seems... oh, I dunno, cynical? or calculated, maybe. I also really felt I'd pretty much read THIS before, too -- "scientists create unstoppable killing machine then are surprised when said machine, y'know, is unstoppable and kills everyone" Really, as an individual comic, it was probably OK, but the underlying concept and lack of imagination on display here drops me way down to an AWFUL.

In terms of the PICK OF THE WEAK, I'll go with something Jeff handled: CAPTAIN AMERICA AND THE FALCON #11. It hurt my little head trying to follow all of the permutations of characters and I think Priest should stop trying to be SO clever, darn it.

Only place I really disagreed with Jeff's assessments was on MARVEL TEAM-UP #4. I thought it was a god damn good DC comic. I can't even defend that statement really, but that's how it felt to me. GOOD.

For the BOOK/TP OF THE WEEK, I'll go with Andi Watson's LOVE FIGHTS VOL 2 TP it's charming stuff.

OK, now back to sorting through BookScan numbers for NEXT month's TILTING...

-B

Comics shipping 1/19

Reviews within the hour, here's this week's list of comics. Although there's a "monday holiday" this week, comics are shipping ON TIME for Wednesday....

2000 AD #1419

2000 AD PROG 2005

ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #636

ARCHIE #554

AUTHORITY REVOLUTION #4 (OF 12)

BATMAN GOTHAM KNIGHTS #61

BIRDS OF PREY #78

BLADE OF THE IMMORTAL #97

BLOODRAYNE SKIES AFIRE

BOOKS OF MAGICK LIFE DURING WARTIME #7

BPRD THE DEAD #3 (OF 5)

BRODIES LAW #4

BULLSEYE GREATEST HITS #5 (OF5)

CABLE DEADPOOL #11

CASEFILES SAM & TWITCH #12

CATWOMAN #39

CHUBBY #1 (A)

COCOPIAZO #2

DAREDEVIL #69

DESPERADOES BANNERS OF GOLD #2 (OF 5)

DOGWITCH #15

DONALD DUCK AND FRIENDS #324

EL GATO NEGRO LEGACY #1 (Of 4)

ERIC REDS CONTAINMENT #1 (OF 4)

EXILES #58

FIREBREATHER IRON SAINT ONE SHOT

FLUFFY #1 (Of 4)

FLUFFY #2 (Of 4)

FREAKSHOW #2

FREEDOM FORCE #1 (OF 6)

HAWKMAN #36

HUMAN TARGET #18

INVINCIBLE #19

JANES WORLD #17

JUDGE DREDD MEGAZINE #227

LUCIFER #58

MADROX #5 (OF 5)

MANGA DARKCHYLDE #0 FREE SAMPLE

MANHUNTER #6

MICKEY MOUSE AND FRIENDS #273

NEW INVADERS #6

NEXT EXIT #2

NIGHTCRAWLER #5

ODD TALES SNOW PRINCE #4

OUTSIDERS #19

PIGTALE #1

PIGTALE #1 OVERSHIP COPIES

PLASTIC MAN #14

POWERPUFF GIRLS #58

POWERS #8

ROB HANES ADVENTURES #7

ROGUE #7

SAMURAI HEAVEN & EARTH #2 (OF5)

SIMPSONS COMICS #102

SMALL GODS #6

SPACE GHOST #3 (OF 6)

SPIDER-MAN INDIA #3 (OF 4)

SUPER MANGA BLAST #48

TEEN TITANS #20

TERRA OBSCURA VOL 2 #5 (OF 6)

TRIGGER #2

ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN #71

ULTRA #6 (OF 8)

WANTED #6 (Of 6)

WATERLOO SUNSET #3 (Of 4)

WOLVERINE #24

WOLVERINE THE END #6 (OF 6)

WONDER WOMAN #212

X-MEN #166

BAD COMPANY GOODBYE KROOL WORLD TP

BEST OF DRAW MAGAZINE VOL 1

CHAOS EFFECT TP

CLASSIC 40 OZ TALES FROM THE BROWN BAG TP

CLIVE BARKERS THIEF OF ALWAYSVOL 1 TP

COMIC BOOK DIGEST #4

COMIC BOOK MARKETPLACE #118

COMICS BUYERS GUIDE MAR05 #1602

COMICS JOURNAL #265

ELRIC OF MELNIBONE GN (O/A)

EMMA FROST VOL 2 MIND GAMES DIGEST TP

ESCALATOR GN

ESSENTIAL PETER PARKER SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN VOL 1 TP

EX MACHINA THE FIRST HUNDRED DAYS TP

FORTEAN TIMES #192

FROM EROICA WITH LOVE VOL 2 TP

GREEN LANTERN ARCHIVES VOL 5 HC

HANGING OUT WITH THE DREAM KING SC

HELLBLAZER ALL HIS ENGINES HC

HULK VISIONARIES PETER DAVID VOL 1 TP

JUXTAPOZ MAR APR 2005 VOL 13 #4

LAND OF THE BLINDFOLDED VOL 2TP

MARVEL KNIGHTS SPIDER-MAN VOL2 VENOMOUS TP

MIGHTY MAN #1

NEIL GAIMAN A SHORT FILM ABOUT JOHN BOLTON DVD

OH MY GODDESS SORA UNCHAINED VOL 19 TP

OUTLOOK GRIM VOL 1 DEAD NASTIES TP

REX STEELE NAZI SMASHER GN

RUROUNI KENSHIN VOL 10 TP

SPOOKHOUSE VOL 2 TP

STAR TREK COMMUNICATOR FEB MAR 05 #154

STICKLEBACK GN

WAR VOL 1 TP

A Quick Look at 01/12/05 Comics

So, you may notice Hibbs never showed last week. Not surprising, I guess, since he was working on a Tilting at Windmills that just got published over at Newsarama (and I should really remind him to pop in here and post links to this stuff like I just did--what's the point of a blog, after all, if you don't remember to contintually self-promote?), but, still, he might want to show up for his blog at least once in a while. Of course, yesterday at the store, he swore he was going to be on top of reviewing books this week and then added, "Although it's Tzipora's birthday on Saturday so we'll see. It depends on what she wants to do." Now, Tzipora is an incredibly great wife but I can't see her saying, "Well, Brian, for my birthday, what I'd really like to do is read your review of New Thunderbolts #4." Just. Can't. See it.

So, just in case:

100 BULLETS #57: I thought the two conversations jumping back and forth in time read surprisingly well--gave Azzarello more to do with his predilection for wordplay than just craft puns--but I've hopped off the 100 Bullets train, I've realized. I stopped caring I don't know how long ago, and so couldn't tell you if the emotional resolutions here were properly set up and paid off from previous issues: I haven't bothered to remember what happened in any previous issue enough to know. Seeing Eduardo Risso's art every month for only $2.50 is a thrill, but I'm either waiting for the trade from here on out or dropping out entirely. Maybe better than OK but I just couldn't tell ya.

ACTION COMICS #823: Imagine if Jerry Bruckheimer got Neil LaBute to write the next Superman movie and then got Michael Bay to direct it. That was this issue of Action, kinda--lots and lots of splodey with a few quick scenes centered specifically around sexual jealousy. Sadly, that sounds more interesting than it reads (cuz it reads, frankly, pretty damn crappy) but I wish Austen had the time or talent to flesh out his ideas: all we've got here currently is a pretty looking train wreck. Even though this is awful, I admit I eagerly pick up each issue of Action to see how awful it's gonna be and that counts for something.

AQUAMAN #26: A lifetime of evil twin stories leads me to believe this is the "Mirror, Mirror" of the current Aquaman setting but, interestingly, there's no particularly clear indicators this is so. It'd be great if someone picked this issue up cold and thought the first twenty-five issues had been about this bastard Aquaman sinking a city and subjugating humanity, wouldn't it? Eh.

BLOODHOUND #7: It's not that anything here is particularly original (I groaned aloud at the impending "child traumatized by death of pet" scene), it's just that Jolley and Kirk really do it well: all the blood flying on the last page was shocking, but it's the close up of Clevenger's upset face that sells it. Bloodhound's officially a dead man walking and I can't say I'm surprised, but I'm frustrated nonetheless. Good.

CAPTAIN AMERICA & THE FALCON #11: A very pretty looking issue, but I think they screwed things up by only having two Captain Americas and two MODOKs in this storyline--as it was, I could almost maybe understand it. If Priest had worked just a little bit harder, he could have put in two Falcons, two Nick Furys, and maybe a set of six or seven Sharon Carters...kind of a shame when a writer slacks and lets his story approach coherence, isn't it? Eh.

DEADSHOT #2: Not sure I liked the last page (although, really, where else could it go?) but I really enjoyed the rest of this--for us urban types, the idea of one unstoppable bad-ass with no scruples cleaning up a neighborhood is an attractive one. I doubt the last two issues are going to meaningfully examine the dangers and fallacies in that kind of thinking, but as a little slice of nasty darkly comic noir, I'll bump this up to Very Good in its own right.

HARD TIME #12: Some sort of lesson in supercompression here as Gerber jams almost all his plotlines into one speedy wrap-up. It's not as satisfying as things resolving at the established pace, but still a Good read. Again, another book I'll miss. And yet, when I read a blurb on the back page promising a "Season Two," I weirdly found myself almost hoping it won't come back. Sometimes it's just better for a book to end (particularly when you get as poignant a final page as here) and let the creators get a chance to try something different.

JLA #110: There's always a good scene or two in each of these issues but, uh, why hasn't anything happened yet? And by anything, I mean, you know, socking and punching and giant green power ring head noogies and stuff. I may come off like a philistine here, but one would think the appeal of having the JLA fight a team of evil counterparts is obvious: you don't need five issues to set it up. May read great in a trade but on its own very much an Eh.

JSA #69: It's kinda interesting that Geoff Johns just finished a Teen Titans story where the Titans meet their future selves (or counterparts) and here he's just starting a JSA where the Society meet their past selves (or counterparts). These types of stories used to be a staple of DC Comics and, as always, Johns seems very aware of that. Unfortunately for me, unless someone ends up as their own grandfather I get kinda bored. Clearly Good, but I guess my biases currently leave me blase about the whole thing.

MARVEL TEAM-UP #4: Donnie may hate Scott Kolins' work but I'm actually enjoying it more and more all the time (and I think the colorist does a great job keeping all that thin line work from flattening out on the page). So I like this just as nice art at a nice price and will leave the whole Iron Doom/Golden Child storyline to more discerning critics. From here, it doesn't seem particularly interesting but I'll watch Kolins draw Iron Man any day. OK.

THE PUNISHER #16: The Punisher getting his ass kicked by a combat-trained short person hidden in a corpse's backpack? Hell, yes! But everything else remained remarkably dull apart from that. Eh.

Finally, gotta mention TOYFARE #91: after several very lame and flat Twisted Toyfare Theaters, they bust out one of the funniest things I've read in months as Daredevil decides to sue Ben Affleck for the lousy Daredevil movie. Absolutely hilarious dumb fanboy humor and the closest a $4.99 price tage may ever come to being justified by a mere eight pages. Really great.

Comics of 01/05/05

Ah, the joys of comics: it wasn't exactly an inspiring week of new comics, I thought, but there was plenty of good stuff I had missed through a combination of the holidays, poor fiscal planning, general dumb-assedness, etc. So before getting to any current savaging, allow me to express much favor and enthusiasm for such not-new items as the latest issue of Ariel Schrag's Likewise, the Brubaker cover issue of The Comics Journal, and particularly Bryan Lee O'Malley's Scott Pilgrim's Precious Little Life, which someone recommended to Hibbs. O'Malley's book is such a warm and witty mash-up of autobio comix, manga, videogame conventions and "rawk" (as Kolchaka would put it), it's a big-time charmer. My PICK OF THE WEEK, though it didn't come out this week. Bug your store or Oni Press directly for a copy. As for this week's stuff:

CAPTAIN AMERICA #2: The art on this was very, very strong, although the Lark flashbacks felt a little more tacked on here than they did last issue. Epting's action scene was impressive, all the more so since it's basically Cap 101, and I liked Cap's suspicion about the Skull being dead. I've got some reservation somewhere about the whole thing I can't quite place, but it's still Good work.

DETECTIVE COMICS #802: David Lapham is still working his butt off on this story: it's big, jammed with characters, and looks like it might be trying to be a Bat-noir version of a Tom Wolfe novel, where all the strata of society are shown colliding and colluding to produce a crooked town (pretty much the Batman story I've always wanted to read). But it's gummed up by a few items, not the least of which is the appearance of Mr. Freeze at the end--pretty much more or less the end of last week's Batman, giving this an utterly unnecessary feeling of warmed-up leftovers. I'm sure managing the Bat-titles is an utter nightmare, but the editors really have got to pay more attention to the storyline management--the books keep tripping each other up. Should be better than OK, but still not.

FANTASTIC FOUR: FOES #1 (OF 6): Did not like this at all: if there's one thing we never ever need to see again in a FF book, it's the "Reed, stop working and spend time with your son" scene, but I wasn't particularly crazy about the non-autopilot scenes either (Sue's not shoving people aside because of the alarm, it's because there's a sale on! See, it's funny because she's rude and clothing obsessed! You know, like all women! Wa-ha-ha!) Throw in some lackluster art, an existence predicated only on having a trade out for the movie, and you've got an Awful book.

FIRESTORM #9: Coming in late on this since I haven't bothered with the book in three or four issues. Interestingly, Killer Frost was so one-dimensional compared to the level of characterization I'm used to from this book, I found it distracting and annoying. (That's not a left-handed compliment, so I guess it's a right-handed complaint?) Not really a Firestorm fan old or new, so this book really can't seem to get more than an Eh from me either way. Which I guess is why I usually don't bother...

FLAMING CARROT #1: Says something about this week of comics that this felt kinda stale and sketchy and still seemed more vital than most of the other books out this week: is there anyone who still gripes about having to be politically correct other than lonely old guys who listen to too much talk radio? I still enjoy the loping storytelling of Burden's stories, though, so more of a high OK than a low one.

THE GIFT #9: I found the art on this appallingly bad--at almost every point in the story, the artist's choices (usually for a sketchy panel lacking detail) screwed up a later storytelling point. The writer isn't exactly innocent either, mind you, but there seemed to be a certain effort made to give each character type a distinct voice that showed some potential--or at least more effort--than what I saw from the art. Still, pretty damned Awful.

INCREDIBLE HULK #77: Liked that Lee Weeks art, but the story felt like Peter David aping Bruce Jones. In fact, a lot of the elements (random opening, weird flashbacks, strange island, monsters) seemed straight out of Wolverine: Xisle. Done a million times more competently, but still very much a low Eh at best. Prognosis not good.

NEW AVENGERS #2: Finally, after five or so straight issues of big team fights, Bendis and Finch seem to have developed some sort of competency with the conventions of it, although it's now become the superhero equivalent of bad disco music: all highs, no lows, and instilling an annoyed mindlessness in the audience. (Who would have thought Spider-Man being unmasked and having his arm broken would seem so perfunctory?) Oddly, it made me think of what Loeb and Sale--the equivalent of good disco music, I guess--could have done with it: dramatic moments that would have held a moment of resonance, big bright splashes highlighting the seemingly endless army of villains, and even tiny bits of characterization. Sure, it would have still been stupid (might have seemed even more stupid, in fact), but it might have actually been enjoyable. Eh.

SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN #23: I think they changed the cover for this, but I guess they couldn't do the same with the insides. Even if I had really somehow loved JMS's "Sins Past" storyline, I think I would have disliked this: it reads like really bad soap opera crossed with somebody's attempt to get their trip to Paris written off on their taxes. Could get better but I doubt it. Awful.

SUPERMAN: STRENGTH #1 (OF 3): Hmmm, the art was very Keiron Dwyerish, which didn't strike me as particularly right for a Superman story (particularly following an Alex Ross cover) but I liked a lot of Scott McCloud's story even if I wasn't as enamored of the whacky twist at the end as Hibbs was. But I couldn't help but wonder: why this price point? It's a good story, sure, but $5.95 good? Not with that art, I'm afraid. What would have been a high Good at $2.50 or $2.95 (I enjoyed it more than any of the regular Super-titles) becomes an Eh at $5.95.

SWAMP THING #11: Probably someone is appreciating the Cliver Barkerish ultra-gore approach to this title, but that's not me. In fact, seeing an animated corpse that talks from a barely-connected dangling head somehow breaks any suspension of disbelief: how can it talk through the dangling head if there's no air to push past the vocal chords? The more explicit the gore, the more those sorts of questions get pushed to the fore, I think. I liked the page where Arcane addresses Abby about his previously failed redemption (addressing some prior continuity I don't know about, I imagine) but other than that, really found it Awful.

TOE TAGS FEATURING GEORGE ROMERO #4: What's kind of a shame about this book is Romero finally has the space to develop some of his ideas as actual ideas (the nature of good and evil, a pessimistic belief in the power of the individual in modern culture, catastrophic change as being more than just a catalyst for horror) but he can't seem to do more than bring them up before cutting to scenes of head shots and zombie-stomping elephants. I guess it's a old dog/new tricks thing, but it's still kinda frustrating: this could have been better than just an Eh.

WILD GIRL #3 (OF 6): Liked this issue the best of all of them, although part of that is just some seriously ass-kicking art: the story is still too circumspect for my liking, as if the author expects us to connect all the dots because we've read lots of Alan Moore--which may not be an incorrect assumption, admittedly, but still keeps the story feeling stilted. OK.

So to sum up: Scott Pilgrim and Likewise? Yes. Loeb & Sale? Good disco music. Most of this week's comics? Not too inspiring. Hopefully, Hibbs will chime in with his .02 soon.

Some comics from 12/28/04

OK, sub setup is done, and Ben and Tzipi are sleeping, so let's see what, if anything, I can address before I need to go off and do family stuff.... CONCRETE HUMAN DILEMMA #1: I'm a long-time Concrete fan, and I usually really like it's usual brew of heady politics and realistic environmentalism. However, this one kinda thudded for me -- stories need conflict and there's really none here except internal monologue. Further, it wasn't so much a moral or ideological choice as much of a practical one, dampening much of the drama. Given Chadwick's track record, there's no way I won't give him the benefit of the doubt for the long haul, but as a single issue entertainment experience... this was merely OK.

DESPERADOES BANNERS OF GOLD #1: Very solid return to this Horror/Western hybrid, though that $4 cover price is hard to swallow. It's one thing on a licensed title, where they have to pay a rights holder over and above creation costs, or on an artsy experimental book like almost anything Ashley Wood or Ben Templesmith do, but it feels way too expensive on something like this which is so... well, I don't mean this prejoratively, but "middle of the road". The script was good fun, the plot moving, the art solid... basically everything I want in a comic book, but, be that as it may, it "feels" too expensive. That knocks a grade offa it, bringing us, sadly, down to OK.

LEGION OF SUPER HEROES #1: Yes, that worked. It felt new, but nicely retro too. This may be a LSH reboot that "works" -- maybe the "DCU book for people who don't like DCU books". VERY GOOD.

STRANGE #3: Dude, I already saw THE MATRIX! What the fuck? As Lester mentioned in the store on Friday, this totally undercuts Strange's origin, which was originally a tale of redemption. But if they just outright tell him, "You are The One, Neo", then where is the redemption there? Foo! You can't look at this, or AMAZING SPIDEY and tell me the man doesn't need an editor for the shared universe toys. AWFUL.

SUPREME POWER #14: Meanwhile, he doesn't seem to need an editor at all here -- this is firing on all points, almost certainly because it doesn't MATTER if he changes something totally -- in fact, that probably makes it better. VERY GOOD.

WARLOCK #4: What Jeff said, but let me amplify it, and say that the twist made me go "whoa, that's fucking clever!" out loud and everything. I really do wonder if this was meant to go on from here, or if this ending was planned for later, or just what the "path not taken" was, but I thought this was VERY GOOD, and while I didn't like it the BEST this week, I was caught by surprise enough to give this one the PICK OF THE WEEK.

WHAT IF...? 5th week event: From the interviews, at least, one might think that Bendis was a big fan of WHAT IF...?, which shocks the fuck out of me considering how badly he got every little thing about the execution wrong. I mean, first off, you can't consume nearly half of your page count doing the recap! Then it was all Tell-Tell-Tell and some more Tell. Barely a page of "show" in either issue. Either ...KAREN PAGE HADN'T DIED or ...JESSICA JONES JOINED THE AVENGERS were the PICK OF THE WEAK, so let's jointly bestow that honor, shall we? Both were CRAP.

PAD's ...GENERAL ROSS BECAME THE HULK worked as a proper WHAT IF...? story, but it and the Kesel/Smith ...DOCTOR DOOM WAS THE THING suffered a lot from not having any space to breath. It's easy to forget that series 1 of WHAT IF...? were 48 pagers. The Paul Smith art on the latter was really really something to behold. OK for the former, VERY GOOD for the latter on the strength of the art.

Brube's ...AUNT MAY HAD DIED was OK (I thought the conciet of it being a comic book store conversation was pretty funny), but it depended more on WHAT IF PETER PARKER WAS A NORMAL TEENAGER? than the bounds of the concept.

The whole event gets an AWFUL, sorry.

For the BOOK/GN OF THE WEEK we don't have a ton of choices, it is either BLOOD A TALE NEW PTG, finally back in print,or FANTASTIC FOUR VISIONARIES JOHN BYRNE VOL 3 TP, showing us that, yes, once Byrne was a major talent, and a follower of the grand traditions of the Marvel Universe. I'm feeling nostalgic this second, so the award goes to BYRNE'S FF.

I had more to say (like about QUIT CITY's aviator comic without airplanes?!?!), but they woke up 20 minutes ago, and I must jet...

What did you think?

-B

Last Year's Comics!

Actually, some of the comics from last week...which was last year, right? When I left the store on Friday, Hibbs kept saying, "So, write a few reviews okay? Just one or two? And then I'll riff off 'em!" I, of course, promised I would, then became too damn entranced with setting up my new computer to review anything. But I do feel a little guilty, so let's see what I remember about: ADAM STRANGE #4 (of 8): I initially felt a bit gypped by the opening escape by Adam, but realized the whole guy-rescued-from-certain-death-by-hot-chick trope is what powers most of the original Flash Gordon, and so is considered fair game in a book like this. I'm not thrilled about it, mind you, but I can accept it. Overall, a Good read although, man, The Omega Men still suck, don't they?

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #515: Another JMS continuity implant and while less alarming than "Gwen Did The Goblin," a potentially bad sign of things to come: goober scientist guy could've been a distant friend of Pete's, some kid who he bonded with at a science fair, rather than going to the same school at the same time. Again, this seems done to maximize the drama of the storyline but violently undercuts the believability of the mythos. ("Oh, hey, it's that kid I went to school with! Boy, I felt so guilty about him I never thought about him even once in the last _________ years!") Plus, all that continuity retconning, and the story spins first on Tony and Peter being teammates in Avengers and then on them never discussing the seed money Tony goes on to give? Very, very sloppy and pretty close to Awful.

AVENGERS: EARTH'S MIGHTIEST HEROES #4 (of 8): Apart from the very unexplained panels of Rick Jones apparently locking himself in the Avengers' Cosmic Clothes Dryer, I liked this. The Cap storyline and the Avengers security storyline synched up and progressed nicely. Not a big fan of that last page (if there's one plot thread that should be retired for a few years, it's the "will the hero kill?" which has been done, pardon the pun, to death...) but still, a qualified Good.

BATMAN #635: Me likes the Mahnke--that opening fight scene just seemed kick-ass even as it got more and more absurd (guy sticking a knife in a building to slow his fall? Not in a Batman book, I think...). But every arc on this title keeps swinging for the fences and feeling more and more overplayed each time: the first half tried to out-hush "Hush" and the second tried to out-game "War Games," which, considering those are very, very recent Batman arcs, leaves me uninspired to run out and get next issue. Purty, though. OK.

EXILES #57: Pretty nonplussed by the conclusion to this, and I wasn't even expecting that much from the arc. It's kinda like the creative team went, "Oh, wait! The Kulan Garath setting sucks! Let's move on to something else, quick!" Eh.

IRON MAN #2: Interestingly, I don't think Warren Ellis understands decompression. He just doesn't have the patience or something. So when he writes a decompressed storyline, he just writes the same issue twice. I would've really liked this...if I hadn't read it just last month. Eh.

LEGION OF SUPERHEROES #1: I hope Hibbs will get off the stick and write about this, since he's the DC guy. Me, I liked it--a lot. It seems to have everything one would want in a Legion title, plus it's easy to follow. If the team stays this inspired, I'll have a new book joining my list of favorites in pretty short order. Very Good.

SUPERMAN #212: Too bad we don't have "Huh?" as a rating because that would be my rating for this issue. Oh, what the hell: Huh?

SUPERMAN BATMAN #16: Loeb knows how to make a Kirby fanboy like me cry with joy: not just a Kamandi cameo, but a Kamandi cameo that properly references that bizarre Superman tie-in story in Kamandi? Not just Darkseid and Metreon, but Darkseid keeping Etrigan on a leash like a pet? Batman punching it out with Jonah Hex? Kryptonite buckshot? It's a big goddamn beautiful mess and I'm enjoying it tremendously. Very Good.

TEEN TITANS #19: Felt a little rushed, particularly if you've read Alan Moore's Twilight proposal which Johns pillages for this arc (I can't really fault him for that, since it seems nearly everyone, Alan Moore included, has ripped ideas from that proposal--it's the damn Gnostic text of mainstream comics). I don't know if I would have gone for a full six issues on this, but maybe four or five? I dunno. OK.

ULTIMATE FANTASTIC FOUR #14: I thought about retyping my exact comments from Iron Man here as a metatextual joke but you deserve better. On the one hand, there's no reason why the end of this couldn't have been the end of issue #13. On the other hand, Ellis, like Bendis, writes very funny dialogue when he's got the room and I'm used to leisurely storytelling in the Ultimate 'verse. Still, it could be much better than just a grudging OK, I think.

ULTIMATE NIGHTMARE #4 (of 5): I liked Ultimate Unicorn from issue #3, by the way, but Ultimate Red Guardian, not so much. Also, because audiences tend to root for the underdog, I think the Lethal Weapon gambit almost never works. Remember the end of Lethal Weapon where Mel Gibson and Gary Busey are kick-boxing each other to death on a lawn with 37,000 police officers surrounding them? It's not dramatic because Busey is going to go down either way. Similarly, the Captain America/Guardian throw-down with three other Ultimates standing around with machine guns really doesn't get me too excited. Unless Ellis miraculously grabs the Ultimate Brass Ring next ish, I think this is gonna be a sludgy failure. Eh.

WALKING DEAD #14: Someone else, maybe Evan Dorkin, pointed out how bad the visual-verbal blend on this book has gotten--there's just balloon after balloon after ballon of explaining. Wayyy tooo much text. And yet, as a card-carrying member of the Post-Apocalypse Fan Club (I think everyone who grew up in the late '70s, early '80s is a member) and a guy who's read King's The Stand at least four times, I still like this quite a bit. Just start trimming that text a bit, Kirkman! Good.

WARLOCK #4: An amazingly nice wrap-up. I'd been enjoying the series despite some serious reservations, and I really, really like how this turned out. My guess is Pak had his last issue written in his head, figuring he'd break it out in another year or so, but man it worked like a charm. Sorry to see this book go, and worth hunting up in bargain bins and back issues if you didn't read this. Good.

WHAT IF DR. DOOM HAD BECOME THE THING?: Pretty dumb, but like the Hulk's What If?, gets right to the meat of the matter. And the Paul Smith art, particularly in that Thing/Hulk punch-up was so dreamy, I had to give this at least a high OK.

WHAT IF GENERAL ROSS HAD BECOME THE HULK?: A bigger misfire, just because there's nowhere, really, for it to go and the art was pretty uninspired. This made me realize those old What If's were double-sized because they needed to be: without the extra pagecount, the story has no space once everything's in place. So, really, there's just no way any of these could have worked, I think. Eh.

WHAT IF KAREN PAGE HAD LIVED?: Out of alpha order because it was the first Bendis title I read and the biggest failure. Sure, sure, he took over for Kevin Smith when Smith bowed out or something, but still: ten pages to recap the storyline? Ten pages before you even get to the "What If?" There was no space for anything but tell, tell, tell, tell, making it all incredibly dull, dull, dull. An honest to God postcard ("Dear Jeff: Karen Page lived, so I killed the Kingpin. Visiting hours are ten to five on Saturday. Love, Matt Murdock") would held more drama. Flat-out Crap.

WHAT IF JESSICA JONES HAD JOINED THE AVENGERS?: May be the biggest piece of professionally produced fanfic I've ever read, with Jessica finally revealing herself as Brian Bendis' Mary Sue par excellence. Because even though Jessica Jones is a fucked-up mess, she marries Captain America and they have millions of beautiful babies! Again, so long spent bringing the reader to the "What If?" point, there was no space for any drama to develop. Also Crap.

So, that's what I got. Now, let's see if Hibbs will chime in.

Comics Shipping 1/5/05

I have every intnetion of writing up a few reviews today, but I HAVE to get my January sub setup done today, or people won't get comics on Wednesday... I can't beleive the decade is half over... that's just wrong.

Anyway, hopefully I'll get this done fast, and there will be more content later this afternoon....

ALPHA FLIGHT #11

ARCHIE & FRIENDS #88

ARMY OF DARKNESS ASHES 2 ASHES #4

BELLY BUTTON #2

BLACK TIGER LEGACY OF FURY #4(Of 4)

BLOODSTREAM #4 (Of 4)

BREACH #1

CAPTAIN AMERICA #2

CAPTAIN GRAVITY AND POWER OF VRIL #2

CONSTANTINE MOVIE ADAPTATION

CSI DOMINOS #5 (Of 5)

DEADSHOT #2 (OF 5)

DETECTIVE COMICS #802

FANTASTIC FOUR FOES #1 (OF 6)

FIRESTORM #9

FLAMING CARROT #1

FLASH #217

GIRL + GIRL #1

GRENDEL DEVILS REIGN #7 (Of 7)

INCREDIBLE HULK #77 (NOTE PRICE)

INTIMATES #3

JUBILEE #5 (OF 6)

JUSTICE LEAGUE ELITE #7 (OF 12)

JUSTICE LEAGUE UNLIMITED #5

LOONEY TUNES #122

LORE #5

MAD MAGAZINE #450

MARVEL AGE SPIDER-MAN #19

NEW AVENGERS #2

NOBLE CAUSES #6

PLASTIC FARM #8

PVP #13

QUESTION #3 (OF 6)

SIN CITY ANGELS #1

SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN #23

SPIDER-GIRL #82

SPIDER-MAN UNLIMITED #7

SPUNKY KNIGHT EXTREME #4

STICKY #1

STRANGERS IN PARADISE #70

SUPERMAN STRENGTH #1 (OF 3)

SWAMP THING #11

TALES OF TELLOS #3 (Of 3)

THE GIFT #9

TOE TAGS FEATURING GEORGE ROMERO #4

TOMB OF DRACULA #4

ULTIMATE X-MEN #54

WILD GIRL #3 (OF 6)

X-MEN FANTASTIC FOUR #2 (OF 5)

X-MEN PHOENIX ENDSONG #1 (OF 5)

YOUNGBLOOD IMPERIAL #1

Books / Mags / Stuff

AUTHORITY FRACTURED WORLDS TP

BATTLE ANGEL ALITA VOL 7 2ND ED TP

BLUE SPRING VOL 1 GN

BOMBABY TP

CATWOMAN RELENTLESS TP

CONSTANTINE THE HELLBLAZER COLLECTION TP

DOCTOR SOLAR MAN OF THE ATOM VOLUME 1 HC

ELEKTRA MOVIE TP

ELEKTRA THE HAND TP

G FAN #70

GHOST IN THE SHELL VOL 2 MAN MACHINE INTERFACE TP

KINGDOM OF THE WICKED HC

LEES TOY REVIEW JAN 2005 #147

LIBERTY MEADOWS CREATURE COMFORTS VOL 2 TP

MADARA VOL 2 TP

POGEYBAIT DAN CLOWES EIGHTBALL VINYL FIG

POUNDCAKE VOLUME 1 TP

POWERLESS TP

SUPERMAN UNCONVENTIONAL WARFARE TP

ULTIMATE ELEKTRA DEVILS DUE TP

VALKYRIE GOLDEN AGE COLLECTION VOL 1 TP

What looks good to you?

-B

Comics Shipping 12/27

I had a terrific Christmas, thanks! Visited my mom in the 'burbs, had a pair of wonderful meals and fun times with everyone doting on Ben, and all was right int he world. As you can notice from the 2 posts preceeding this one, I also had to get the order form done this weekend (*sigh*), so no reviews this week. No time for love, Dr. Jones!

Anyway, as always, here's what we're getting, your local store may or may not be recivieng this same list of stuff on this same date, and, anyway, this is just stuff from Diamond which isn't 100% of it in any case.

Big ball-breaker of a week, though, huh?

What are you getting, what are you regretting?

2000 AD #1417

2000 AD #1418

30 DAYS OF BLOODSUCKERS TALES #3

ADAM STRANGE #4 (Of 8)

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #515

ARCHIE DIGEST #213

ARSENIC LULLABY #17

AVENGERS EARTHS MIGHTIEST HEROES #4 (Of 8)

BANANA TAIL #1

BATGIRL #59

BATMAN #635

BATMAN DANGER GIRL

BETTY & VERONICA #205

CITY OF HEROES #8

CONCRETE HUMAN DILEMMA #1

COSMIC GUARD #5

CVO COVERT VAMPIRIC OPERATIONS ROGUE STATE #2

DAISY KUTTER #4 (Of 4)

DESPERADOES BANNERS OF GOLD #1

DILDO #7 (A)

DOOM PATROL #7

DOROTHY #1

ELEKTRA THE HAND #5 (Of 5)

ELRIC MAKING OF A SORCERER #2(Of 4) (RES)

EXILES #57

FANTASTIC & PRACTICALLY TRUE ADV OF CAPT GREEDY #1

FIERCE #4 (Of 4)

FREAKSHOW #1

GAMBIT #5

GARTH ENNIS 303 #2 WRAPAROUNDCOVER

HELLBLAZER #203

HUMANKIND #4 (Of 5)

INVINCIBLE #18

IRON MAN #2 (Note Price)

JONAS TALES OF AN IRONSTAR #2

JSA STRANGE ADVENTURES #5 (Of6)

KABUKI #3

LEGION OF SUPER HEROES #1

LURKERS #3

MANGA CALIENTE #3 (A)

MARVEL AGE FANTASTIC FOUR #10

MARVEL AGE SPIDER-MAN TEAM UP #4

METAL GEAR SOLID #4

MONOLITH #11

MYSTERY OF WOLVERINE WOO-BAIT

NIGHT O/T LIVING DEAD BARBARAS ZOMBIE CHRON #3 (Of 3)

RAZORS EDGE WARBLADE #3

SAVAGE DRAGON #119

SKYSCRAPERS OF THE MIDWEST #1

SONIC THE HEDGEHOG #144

SPAWN #141 (RES)

STAR WARS EMPIRE #28

STAR WARS OBSESSION #2

STAR WARS REPUBLIC #72

STRANGE #3

STREET FIGHTER CVR A #12

SUPERMAN #212

SUPERMAN BATMAN #16

SUPREME POWER #14

TEEN TITANS #19

THE INCREDIBLES #2

TOM STRONG #30

ULTIMATE FANTASTIC FOUR #14

ULTIMATE NIGHTMARE #4 (Of 5)

WALKING DEAD #14

WARLOCK #4

WARREN ELLIS QUIT CITY #1

WESTERN TALES OF TERROR #2

WHAT IF AUNT MAY HAD DIED INSTEAD OF UNCLE BEN

WHAT IF DR DOOM HAD BECOME THE THING

WHAT IF GENERAL ROSS HAD BECOME THE HULK

WHAT IF JESSICA JONES HAD JOINED THE AVENGERS

WHAT IF KAREN PAGE HAD LIVED

WHAT IF MAGNETO HAD FORMED THE X-MEN WITH PROFESSOR X

WILDGUARD FIRE POWER CVR A NAUCK #1

Books / Mags / Stuff

BARNUM SC

BLOOD A TALE TP NEW PTG

BOUNCER RAISING CANE TP

CHARLEYS WAR VOL 1 HC

CHRONICLES OF LUCKY ELLO GN

COMIC BOOK ARTIST VOL 2 #5

COURAGEOUS PRINCESS TP

DORK TOWER COLL TP VOL 7 DORKSIDE OF THE GOON

FANTASTIC FOUR VISIONARIES JOHN BYRNE VOL 3 TP

FEMME FATALES JAN FEB 05 VOL 13 #10

GIRL GENIUS VOL 3 TP

HELL HOUSE VOL 1 TP

HELLBOY BABA YAGA Y OTROS RELATOS CHAINED COFFIN SPANISH ED

HELLBOY DESPIERTA AL DEMONIO WAKE THE DEVIL SPANISH TP

HELLBOY SEMILLA DE DESTRUCCION SEED OF DESTRUCTION SPANISH T

IDENTITY DISC TP

INU YASHA VOL 20 TP

MONON STREET POWER COLLECTIVEVOL 1 TP

PASSENGER GN

ROMAN DIRGE PIRATE WALLET

SFX #125

SHIMURA TP

STACKS GN

TALES OF THE REALM TP

TEEN TITANS RAVEN MAQUETTE

TOKYO KNIGHTS GN

TRANSGENESIS 2009 VOL 1 FIDESTP

VERY BIG MONSTER SHOW GN

VIDEO WATCHDOG #115

CE's Top 100 for Feb '05 by Dollars

Same thing again, just this time sorted by retail cover price. This changes the chart pretty drastically, and is, I think, the better indication of "what's selling" than pieces. "follow the money" Again, these placements will probably change -- for example, since it is limited to 1000 pieces, I don't think I'm going to get my full order on the $50 PROMETHEA poster thingy.

1 PROMETHEA VARIANT EDITION #32

2 PROMETHEA #32

3 ULTIMATES 2 #3

4 SOLO #3

5 CHRONICLES OF CONAN VOL 7 DWELLER IN THE POOL TP #7

6 SUPREME POWER #15

7 GREEN LANTERN REBIRTH #5

8 SEVEN SOLDIERS

9 SUPERMAN BATMAN #18

10 VIMANARAMA #1

11 OVERSTREET COMIC BOOK PG VOL 35 IRON MAN SC #35

12 JSA VOL 6 PRINCE OF DARKNESS TP

13 ELRIC MAKING OF A SORCERER #3

14 SUPERMAN #214

15 NEW AVENGERS #4

16 LUCIFER VOL 7 EXODUS TP

17 POWERS #9

18 BLACK PANTHER BY JACK KIRBY VOL 1 TP

19 BATMAN THE MAN WHO LAUGHED

20 PROJECT SUPERIOR SC

21 TEENAGERS FROM MARS TP

22 CONAN VOL 1 FROST GIANTS DAUGHTER & STORIES TP #1

23 USAGI YOJIMBO VOL 19 FATHERS AND SONS TP #19

24 OCEAN #4

25 ALL STAR ARCHIVES VOL 11 HC

26 TOM STRONG BOOK THREE TP

27 ITS A BIRD SC

28 DAREDEVIL #70

29 ESSENTIAL LUKE CAGE VOL 1 TP

30 ULTIMATE FANTASTIC FOUR #16

31 CATWOMAN WHEN IN ROME #5

32 JLA CLASSIFIED #4

33 LEGION OF SUPER HEROES #3

34 TEEN TITANS #21

35 Y THE LAST MAN #31

36 CONCRETE HUMAN DILEMMA #3

37 SHANNA THE SHE DEVIL #1

38 STRANGE #4

39 WIZARD COMICS MAGAZINE SPIDER-MAN & WOMAN CVR #161

40 STRAY BULLETS VOL 1 INNOCENCE OF NIHILISM 10TH ANN TP

41 BLACK PANTHER #1

42 COMICS JOURNAL #266

43 EX MACHINA #8

44 UNCANNY X-MEN #455

45 UNCANNY X-MEN #456

46 ARTBABE PRESENTS LA PERDIDA #5

47 YOUNG AVENGERS #1

48 INCREDIBLE HULK #78

49 TOM STRONG #31

50 BPRD THE DEAD #4

51 FABLES #34

52 CONAN #13

53 MARVEL KNIGHTS SPIDER-MAN #11

54 ULTIMATE X-MEN #56

55 HELLBLAZER #205

56 X-MEN #167

57 TERRA OBSCURA VOL 2 #6

58 JLA #111

59 WOLVERINE #25

60 JSA #70

61 MAXX BOOK FOUR TP

62 SUPERMAN STRENGTH #2

63 JOHN CONSTANTINE HELLBLAZER SPECIAL PAPA MIDNITE #1

64 LUCIFER #59

65 FLASH #219

66 FRANK MILLER SIN CITY BIG FAT KILL 2ND ED TP

67 FRANK MILLER SIN CITY THAT YELLOW BASTARD 2ND TP

68 CLOUDS ABOVE GN

69 CAPTAIN AMERICA #4

70 DOCTOR SPECTRUM #6

71 THE PUNISHER #17

72 KABUKI #4

73 AUTHORITY REVOLUTION #5

74 BOOKS OF MAGICK LIFE DURING WARTIME #8

75 SUPERMAN BATMAN SUPERGIRL HC

76 DETECTIVE COMICS #803

77 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #517

78 100 BULLETS #58

79 BLACK WIDOW #6

80 NEW THUNDERBOLTS #5

81 SHE HULK #12

82 CARAVAN HC

83 ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN #72

84 GRIMJACK KILLER INSTINCT #2

85 ADAM STRANGE #6

86 OUTSIDERS #21

87 X-MEN FANTASTIC FOUR #3

88 COMICS JOURNAL 2005 SPECIAL

89 X-MEN PHOENIX ENDSONG #3

90 BATMAN #637

91 KNIGHTS OF THE DINNER TABLE #100

92 WONDER WOMAN #213

93 HUNTER KILLER SILVESTRI CVR #1

94 FANTASTIC FOUR #523

95 EXCALIBUR #10

96 QUESTION #4

97 SWAMP THING #12

98 WITCHING #9

99 CATWOMAN #40

100 BIRDS OF PREY #79

CE's Top 100 for Feb '05 by Quantity

Here's the list of what we're ordering for February '05, sorted by quantity. Before these books arrive, changes are often made in rankings -- sometimes books get hefty "advance reorders", and in some cases (like Marvel titles) books can be decreased as I get more current information on current sales patterns.

I'd be happy to answer any questions anyone might have on relative placings in the commentary section...

1 ULTIMATES 2 #3

2 GREEN LANTERN REBIRTH #5

3 SEVEN SOLDIERS

4 PROMETHEA #32

5 SUPREME POWER #15

6 SUPERMAN BATMAN #18

7 VIMANARAMA #1

8 NEW AVENGERS #4

9 SUPERMAN #214

10 ULTIMATE FANTASTIC FOUR #16

11 POWERS #9

12 OCEAN #4

13 UNCANNY X-MEN #455

14 UNCANNY X-MEN #456

15 SOLO #3

16 TEEN TITANS #21

17 DAREDEVIL #70

18 JLA CLASSIFIED #4

19 LEGION OF SUPER HEROES #3

20 ULTIMATE X-MEN #56

21 Y THE LAST MAN #31

22 X-MEN #167

23 JLA #111

24 EX MACHINA #8

25 FABLES #34

26 BLACK PANTHER #1

27 WOLVERINE #25

28 CATWOMAN WHEN IN ROME #5

29 FLASH #219

30 JSA #70

31 CONCRETE HUMAN DILEMMA #3

32 TOM STRONG #31

33 HELLBLAZER #205

34 LUCIFER #59

35 YOUNG AVENGERS #1

36 SHANNA THE SHE DEVIL #1

37 STRANGE #4

38 INCREDIBLE HULK #78

39 BPRD THE DEAD #4

40 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #517

41 CONAN #13

42 ELRIC MAKING OF A SORCERER #3

43 BOOKS OF MAGICK LIFE DURING WARTIME #8

44 ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN #72

45 MARVEL KNIGHTS SPIDER-MAN #11

46 TERRA OBSCURA VOL 2 #6

47 BATMAN #637

48 100 BULLETS #58

49 JOHN CONSTANTINE HELLBLAZER SPECIAL PAPA MIDNITE #1

50 OUTSIDERS #21

51 WONDER WOMAN #213

52 AUTHORITY REVOLUTION #5

53 CAPTAIN AMERICA #4

54 DOCTOR SPECTRUM #6

55 THE PUNISHER #17

56 KABUKI #4

57 DETECTIVE COMICS #803

58 BLACK WIDOW #6

59 NEW THUNDERBOLTS #5

60 SHE HULK #12

61 CATWOMAN #40

62 ADAM STRANGE #6

63 BIRDS OF PREY #79

64 WIZARD COMICS MAGAZINE SPIDER-MAN & WOMAN CVR #161

65 BATMAN THE MAN WHO LAUGHED

66 X-MEN PHOENIX ENDSONG #3

67 GOTHAM CENTRAL #28

68 QUESTION #4

69 SWAMP THING #12

70 WITCHING #9

71 HUNTER KILLER SILVESTRI CVR #1

72 FANTASTIC FOUR #523

73 EXCALIBUR #10

74 USAGI YOJIMBO #82

75 GREEN ARROW #47

76 SLEEPER SEASON TWO #9

77 HUMAN TARGET #19

78 LIVEWIRES #1

79 RUNAWAYS #1

80 DAREDEVIL REDEMPTION #1

81 X-MEN FANTASTIC FOUR #3

82 NEW X-MEN #10

83 ED THE HAPPY CLOWN #1

84 JUSTICE LEAGUE ELITE #8

85 DOOM PATROL #9

86 TRIGGER #3

87 DAREDEVIL REDEMPTION #2

88 EXILES #59

89 ARTBABE PRESENTS LA PERDIDA #5

90 GRIMJACK KILLER INSTINCT #2

91 NIGHTWING #103

92 NIGHTWING #104

93 ACTION COMICS #824

94 ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #637

95 PREVIEWS VOL XV #2

96 HAWKMAN #37

97 LOSERS #21

98 WALKING DEAD #17

99 MARVEL KNIGHTS 4 #15

100 CHRONICLES OF CONAN VOL 7 DWELLER IN THE POOL TP #7

Comics Shipping 12/22

In typical comics industry fashion, 2 weeks of famine are followed by this week's feast. Hooray! Also: If you in the SF Bay Area, and you're not doing anything better on Friday, Comix Experience is having it's annual xmas party. From 5-7 or so, come by and have a beer or some eggnog, or even a glass of water with us. Merry merry!

ASTONISHING X-MEN #7

AUTHORITY REVOLUTION #3 (Of 12)

BART SIMPSON COMICS #21

BETTY & VERONICA DIGEST #153

BIPOLAR #5

BLACK HOLE #12 (OF 12)

BLACK WIDOW #4 (Of 6)

BOOKS OF MAGICK LIFE DURING WARTIME #6

CARTOON NETWORK BLOCK PARTY #4

CATWOMAN WHEN IN ROME #3 (Of 6)

CONAN #11

DEAD AT 17 REVOLUTION #2 (Of 4)

DONT EAT THE ELECTRIC SHEEP #1

EXCALIBUR #8

FRANKENSTEIN MOBSTER CVR A WHEATLEY #7

GI JOE #38

GI JOE RELOADED #11

GLOOMCOOKIE #22

GOON DH ED #10

GREEN ARROW #45

GREEN LANTERN REBIRTH #3 (Of 6)

HARDY BOYS #2

JINGLE BELLE #2

JLA CLASSIFIED #2

JOE LANSDALES BY BIZARRE HANDS #6 (Of 6)

JUGHEAD #162

JUGHEADS DOUBLE DIGEST #109

KNIGHTS OF THE DINNER TABLE #98

LIKEWISE #3

LIVING WITH ZOMBIES #1

LOSERS #19

LUNCH HOUR COMIX #1

MANHUNTER #5

MARVEL AGE SPIDER-MAN #18

MYSTIQUE #22

NEW THUNDERBOLTS #3

NIGHTCRAWLER #4

OJO #4

PUNISHER RED XMAS

QUEEN & COUNTRY #28

RICHARD DRAGON #8

ROGUE #6

SECRET SKULL #4

SLEEPER SEASON TWO #7 (Of 12)

SOLO #2

SPACE GHOST #2 (Of 6)

STARGATE SG1 FALL OF ROME REGCVR #3 (Of 3)

STOKERS DRACULA #2 (Of 4)

TEEN TITANS GO #14

TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES #19

ULTIMATE ELEKTRA #5 (Of 5)

UNCLE SCROOGE #337

WALT DISNEYS COMICS & STORIES #652

WITCHING #7

WOLVERINE #23

WONDER WOMAN #211

X-FORCE #5

X-MEN #165

Books / Mags / Stuff

ALEX RAYMONDS FLASH GORDON VOL 2 HC

ANIMATION MAGAZINE JAN 2005

ART OF USAGI YOJIMBO HC

ASIAN CULT CINEMA #45

AWAKENING GN

CINEFEX #100

CREATURES OF THE NIGHT HC

DC THE NEW FRONTIER VOL 1 TP

ELFQUEST THE GRAND QUEST VOL 6 TP

FOLLOWING CEREBUS #2

GAME INFORMER JAN05

HELLBOY TALKING BOARD

KILLER PRINCESSES TP

KIRBY UNLEASHED

KONG KING OF SKULL ISLAND HC

LUCIFERS GARDEN OF VERSES VOL1 DEVIL ON FEVER STREET GN (C:

MAJOR DAMAGE VOL 1 GN

MATRIX COMICS VOL 2 TP

MIDNIGHT NATION TP NEW PRTG

MYSTIQUE VOL 3 UNNATURAL TP

NEW X-MEN ACADEMY X VOL 1 CHOOSING SIDES TP

PREVIEWS VOL XV #1

SAMURAI EXECUTIONER VOL 2 TP

SERAPHIC FEATHER VOL 5 WAR CRIMES TP

SPIDER-MAN MAXIMUM CARNAGE TP

THIEVES & KINGS TP VOL 5 WINTER BOOK

TOMARTS ACTION FIGURE DIGEST #129

VENOM VS CARNAGE TP

WIZARD COMICS MAGAZINE #160

What're you getting this week?

-B

My Identity Crisis Follow-Up

I think there's a lot more interesting stuff said by Hibbs and in our comments (I thought Donnie's comment about Jean hatching some utterly insane plan rather than just saying she wanted Ray back was hilariously dead-on. ("Meltzer's way seems so...Minnesotan.")) but I'll sort of tack on my two cents by way of responding to Hibbs and some of the comments developing in his entry. IDENTITY CRISIS #7: Unlike ADD, I bought the first issue of IC and thought it was decently written, which is really why I had hopes for this mini. It wasn't unearned hope or me buying into the hype--that first issue was well-written enough that I cared about Ralph & Sue, and Sue's murder carried a lot more weight than if it had just been exploitational junk. Even when it veered into over-the-top melodrama (that damn pregnancy test!), it was done with with an eye toward maximum emotional punch. This wasn't Armageddon 2001 or Knightfall or The Death of Superman: this seemed like the work of a small tightly focused team that was both very talented and very focused on the craft.

And, I dunno, perhaps that was the problem with Identity Crisis right there: if that first issue had been more inept, or seemed a little more hackish, maybe I wouldn't have had my hopes set so high for the story. I mean, honestly, Crisis on Infinite Earths is, I think, a very lovely-looking pile of inept junk. Even when I first read it as a kid, I thought it was flimsy as a story. But I don't know if Crisis ever promised to be more than a spectacle, an event that would change the DC Universe, promises which it delivered on very well. Looking at all the stuff jammed into Identity Crisis, from the re-invention of the Calculator to the Justice League mindwipe thing to, uh, wasn't there some guy who could run really, really fast and that wasn't particularly explained?--all of it reads like a typical DC event: a bunch of twists on the DC Mythos, some new stuff thrown into the mix for creators to play with, and a certain amount of sensationalism to sell some comic books.

For me, a lot of the problem is that this book started high and got a little bit crappier issue by issue until, by issue #7, we had some really junky, poorly done scenes (that whole ending with Ralph talking to Sue is supposed to be heartwarming, I know, but frankly the guy came off like a nutjob. When Ollie told him to talk to Sue, I don't think Ollie meant to pretend Sue was still responding--and that's just one of a dozen examples). And I certainly didn't expect such a big ol' cheating pile of nonsense as Hibbs points out in his review. I'd like to think a good editor would have been able to point out all the stuff that didn't work...and even take the time to hold the last issue if rewrites were necessary. One good scene in issue #5 or #6 between Ray and Jean, crafted with the same care as those opening scenes with Ralph and Sue, for example, would have gone a long way to making the mystery side of the finale more palatable for me.

Finally, it seems to me the title of the series, Identity Crisis, works on several levels with the story--obviously, since it's about the problems of being a superhero with a public identity, and the JLA mindwipe angle is a different type of Identity Crisis--but maybe more importantly on the meta-level: what does DC want the DCU to be? High-profile, quality comics? Grim and gritty realistic books? Uplifting tales of heroes and icons? The fast buck? By trying to be all of these things at once, an event book like Identity Crisis points to an identity crisis at work at DC itself--one that it would do well to resolve before it alienates everyone by promising everything and satisfactorily delivering nothing.

Hibbs' Reviews for 12/15

Hooray! Jeff did a bunch of reviews, so I can safely ignore... well, virtually everything this week. Which is good, because the closing-days-of-holiday-shipping have kicked my ass but good, in addition to the 20 box collection we just bought (how in god's name can you have a 20 box collection and not have ANY of them alphabetized?!?!?!) I've also got this mildly sick stack of DVDs and videos I need to watch (STILL haven't watched THE APPRENTICE finale, but thanks to the SF CHRONICLE for spoiling the results ON PAGE TWO OF THE PAPER, sheesh!) -- including some year-old things from the library like the LED ZEPPELIN LIVE 2 disk set (*orgasmic shudder*) and I also get LotR on Wednesday, plus I'm itching to play some CITY OF HEROES (been 3 days, man... I've gotten to level 43 though!) and I'm just generally drowning in stuff to do.

SO... 3 whole reviews this week!

Hm, let's go with reverse-alpha this week....

TRIGGER #1: I thought this was a terrific start, though the cynical bastard in me wonders how long this can really go. The best Vertigo titles have always revolved around personal responsibility, and this is structured (it seems) to be against the Man. John Watkiss is a fucking great artist, I don't care what you think! VERY GOOD.

SHAOLIN COWBOY #1: Boi-yoi-yoi-yoing! That's the sound of a giant woodie erupting from my pants over this! Holy crap, was this fine shit or what? Sure, the plot is barely a sentence long, but it's not like HARDBOILED was a masterpiece of plot or writing, either. That "360 degree" sequence was simply the coolest thing I saw this week, and I loved how it felt like, dunno, "480" or something. My only quibble? This shoulda been printed at 11x17, darn it! Like Jeff mentioned, this is 2 weeks in a row where Burlyman spanked DC and Marvel in the quality entertainment department, and, there's no doubt this is both EXCELLENT and the PICK OF THE WEEK. Selling like a glass pipe on Free Crack Day, too. Hooray!

IDENTITY CRISIS #7: Here's the short version of the review: Fuck you. Sincerely. In the neck. With a rusty nail. Fuckers.

Ah, but you want the longer version, don't you?

There are several ways in which this doesn't work, at all.

(oh, and hey, there will be spoilers here, in case you haven't read it -- so go away now, if you don't want to be spoiled)

First, and primarily, as the denouement to a murder mystery, there's nothing to call this but shit. There weren't enough clues to put this together. Even a game of CLUE is much less random than this. ("Jean Loring. In the Apartment. With a Flamethrower"), and what IS there doesn't hold up to scrutiny for more than a few seconds. "It was an accident, and I just happened to be packing a flamethrower" The fuck you say? There are far too many improbable things to string together to make this work. Like a) Jean knows how to use the atom suit? b) Ray just leaves them laying around? Really? c) Why the fuck was she packing a flamethrower? Carrying a "weapon" I can conceptually understand, but a FLAMETHROWER? d) um, the world's greatest detectives (Bruce, J'onn, Ralph) with access to god-like forensics tools (Literally in Scott Free's case, metaphorically with the Metal Men et. al.) and Jean didn't leave a single hair, or flake of skin or footprint or anything? I mean, yes, I can buy that she could sneak in microscopically, sorta, I guess, but once she grew, all bets were off. e) I'm no expert, but I kinda thought that flamethrowers would put out a pretty damn distinctive scent? Is that enough? No? Well then, how about f) How did Jean learn to tie that plot-point specific knot? g) Why wouldn't Calculator have called the JLA and tried to sell them the information about the ATOM'S WIFE hiring what seemed to be a random assassination? Seriously, what's the benefit to him to keep that information quiet? If anything, he has more future leverage by playing ball. Also h) by involving him in the plot, shouldn't that mean the Calculator can pretty damn easily figure out that Tim Drake is Robin? And, thus, Bruce, Batman?

There were other non-mystery things too that bugged me. Why was Jean put into ARKHAM of all places? Under her own name? A dank pit of despair and horror, where's there's basically no chance of her ever getting better, and every chance of her getting gang-raped by the Joker, Two-Face and Killer Croc? The fuck? There's even a background "national inquirer" cover that says it happened, if the whole thing wasn't depressing enough for you.

Plus the entire seven issues was basically one big red herring that didn't bear upon the actual events in ANY WAY SHAPE OR FORM. Think about it: Jean went nuts. Not because of the brainwashing thing though -- that had nothing to do with it. She coulda gone nuts 3 months ago, or 5 years from now, and it didn't have any bearing upon the story Meltzer apparently really wanted to tell.

What this means is that the HORROR of the story, the slaughters of Sue and her unborn child, the orphaning of Robin (which dramatically works against Tim -- HE became Robin out of belief of the mantle, not rage at loss like Bruce or Dick or even Cassandra), the absolutely bewilderingly so out-of-character destruction of Jean (and thus functionally Ray, the single most shat upon of all of DC's "icons"), not one of those things had to have happened in order to tell the MAIN story, the brainwashing plot. And that to me, is repugnant.

Morally so. Ethically so.

I don't blame Meltzer, per se. He might read this "review" and think I hate him or something. On the contrary, I think he's a good writer. Certainly he got into the characters heads, and I think the dialogue for the entire series was largely crisp and on the money. Where I really lay the blame is on DC's management for approving, or perhaps even encouraging, the horrific and cynical events here. This darkens the DCU, again. And this trend makes me sick.

Where is the heroism here? Did anything "heroic" occur in IDENTITY CRISIS? No, we've seen rapes, and murders, and insanity and horror, and self-delusion, and secrets and lies. And I don't think any of these characters are anything other than worse for it. Where's the damn heroism?

Coming out on the cover of the next PREVIEWS Batman's holding someone else as a corpse. Just in time for Christmas, have some more cynicism and horror.

Well, no, fuck you. I don't want that. No one does, not really.

I could go on with the rant, but I'm just sick of it. On the Savage Critic Scale, it gets a CRAP, as well as the PICK OF THE WEAK for this week. In fact, though we have 2 more ship weeks to go, I think I can safely take the position that IDENTITY CRISIS was the worst comic of the entire year. Despite the level of craft being extremely high. It's well scripted, it is be-yootifully drawn, but the level of unnecessary damage it did... just ugh. And, dig, there were a lot of really really really bad comics this year.

* * * * * *

On a lighter note, let's look at the books for the week. My first round pick (that is: what *I* took home) looks like this:

AMERICAN SPLENDOR OUR MOVIE YEAR GN

ASTONISHING X-MEN VOL 1 GIFTED TP

KRAZY & IGNATZ 1933-34 NECROMANCY BY THE BLUE BEAN BUSH

MARGES LITTLE LULU VOL 1 TP

P CRAIG RUSSELL VOL 3 LIBRARYOF OPERA TP

POWERS VOL 7 FOREVER TP

I recommend each and every one for your bookshelf, but I'm going to go with Joss Whedon and John Cassaday's ASTONIGHING X-MEN v1 TP as my BOOK OF THE WEEK. That's how you do super-heroes -- funny and brave and bright even when serious. Hooray for it!

What did you think?

(and now Lester can post something about IDENTITY CRISIS, huh?)

-B

Reviews (Such As They Are) for Comics of 12/15/04 (Such as They Are)

Man. Yesterday at the story was psychotically busy (holiday shoppers, putting together the newsletter, Hibbs sorting through a just-purchased collection), and I left early for a company Christmas Party at the other job, so I didn’t get very far into this week’s books. Still, operating under the idea that something’s better than nothing: AVENGERS: EARTH'S MIGHTIEST HEROES #3: Scott Kolins draws a kick-ass Iron Man but I'm not down with this pacing. There's no reason we couldn't have had the "Zemoooo!" scene at the end of #2; Cap's not any better developed at the end of this issue than last issue. This story is either padded or flat-out inert, I can't quite figure out which. OK for the art, but that $3.50 price point stings.

CATWOMAN #38: I appreciate a crazy-ass new villain as much as the next guy, but Wooden Nickel? (Or whatever he’s called?) Splinters aside, I'm just not that scared or intimidated by...wood. In fact, thanks to the Paul Gulacy artwork, it seemed less like a story and more like an outtake from Will Smith’s Wild, Wild West starring Robert Mitchum and Trinity from The Matrix. An anachronism filled Eh.

EXILES #56: I’ve never liked the Kulan Garath fantasy setting: it always feels more like a high-concept D&D campaign my little brother would come up with, rather than something with any real thought behind it. Nonetheless, I’m such a big old Marvel fanboy (emphasis on old) that I’m enjoying the supernatural twist with Ghost Rider and Morbius and Werewolf By Night. (I really like how Jack Russell looks straight out of Ploog's art, in fact). So, you know, if you get all starry-eyed when someone starts talking about It, The Living Colossus, you’ll probably also find this OK.

FANTASTIC FOUR #521: Sums up my whole take on the Waid/Wieringo FF: despite all my objections to it (and I’ve got a lot), I have to admit it works. The process by which a herald of Galactus is created was well-dramatized and seems well thought out. So, Good.

IDENTITY CRISIS #7: I started to write this and realized that, although I don't really wanna, I need to give this another read-through before reviewing. In the few brief minutes Hibbs and I had to talk about it, it was apparent we had taken from it some dramatically different plotpoints. And, in fact, Hibbs tried to re-read it to clear up them up, got about ten pages in, and then threw it aside, mumbling: "To hell with it." You should hear from one or both of us about the damn thing in the next day or two.

INVADERS #5: A big ol' train wreck, I thought. I can't tell the characters apart, the fight scenes lack drama (showing vampires burst into flame by having them be colored yellow and adding a "FWOOSH" sound effect seems very Ed Wood-ish for a comic book), but the writing isn't any better than the art: a lot of sloppy nonsense used to wrap up the fight, and a story that might have worked better in Year Two when the characters are more familiar is just a big old mess here in issue #5. I thought we'd get widescreen global adventure from this book, not inbred British vampire hijinks. Awful.

MARVEL TEAM-UP #3: Again, love that Kolins art (and, at $2.50, much easier on the pocketbook than the Avengers), but I felt like the White Queen in Alice: there were just too many impossible things to believe before breakfast in this one. Pretty pictures, though. Eh.

OCEAN #3: Too soon to tell if this mini is going to be anything more than a very smart dressing up of 2001 (the HAL/"spreadsheet people" comparison seemed pretty obvious) but it was another strong issue that moved the story along. Good.

RETURN OF SHADOWHAWK #1: Man, has a patently silly character ever had so much self-important backstory ladled on them as Shadowhawk? (Hmmmm... in the realm of superheroes, that's probably best left as a rhetorical question.) It was kind of nice to read the back and find out that the stuff that read like warmed-over Alan Moore actually came from Alan Moore, and there were at least three or four good story hooks, but it was all very ineptly done--it was like reading an old Charlton comic, and not in a good way. Eh.

SHAOLIN COWBOY #1: This is the second straight week a Burlyman comic has kicked Marvel and DC's ass--slightly troubling considering neither book was particularly deep: this is nothing more than Geoff Darrow taking a joke and a fight scene and expanding both past the point of deliriousness. This book makes the first part of Kill Bill seem like Howards End by comparison, and Darrow deserves some special award for taking over-the-top medium like comics and going even higher over-the-top that you might expect. Really amazing stuff. Very Good.

SIMPSONS COMICS #101: Feels like the "B" Story overwhelmed the "A" story and it took a bit too long to get to that twist on the set-up. I think a passive-aggressive inert magician showdown between Homer and David Blaine would've been funnier than what we got. Still, some decent laffs; Boothby; etc. OK.

TRIGGER #1: The art was a little too murky for me--I think Seaguy, with all the bright colors right on the edge of spoiling, actually conveyed a better sense of how a citizenry is lulled into accepting a corporate dictatorship--and the story a little too pat (those corporate assassins must be using Saturday Night Specials if The Long Goodbye can stop their bullets). But some clever transitions, a certain ambition in the sweep, and a possible subtext about how violent escapism enables a fascist culture have me kind of interested to see what might be coming next. Not quite OK, really, but not a total Eh, either. Let's see where it goes.

ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN #70: The TV special on the Ultimate Dr. Strange seems like a bad mistake: I have enough faith in Bendis (still) to chalk this up as part of the revamp of the concept (a "hiding in plain sight" approach to the character) rather than a really, really lazy form of info-dumping but I don't like it, nonetheless. I also don't like the father-and-son gimick either, which I think really undermines the essential premise of Doc's origin (a Sorceror Supreme isn't about a bloodline or worldly power, it's about talent...which is why a washed-up bastard, not Baron Mordo or some Ancient One, Jr., gets to be picked). But even though I didn't really like, um, technically any of this except maybe Ultimate Deathlok, it's not terribly done or anything. And I kinda admire how Bendis is clearly trying to figure out how to tell action-packed stories in a shorter space that can still fit together into a thematically unified trade. And yet: Eh.

WORLDWATCH #3: Yes, I read this--right after Identity Crisis #7, in fact, which together made for a nice little bit of psychic mind-rape, I must say. Speaking of which...I've read comic book fight scenes for over thirty years and at no point have I ever wondered: gee, why didn't the villain ever try to rape the attractive heroine in the middle of a fight? Between that and the back pages with the naked chicks and their airbrushed "costumes," I found this uncomfortably skeevy. I'm a much bigger perv than Bri, but I still grimace thinking back on this issue. Very creepy Crap.

So that's thirteen reviews and a pathetic excuse. I have a few books at home I haven't read (to say nothing of that IC#7 re-read) so you'll probably hear from me again before the ened of the weekend. And hopefully Hibbs will weigh on IC #7 at the very least; even in the few minutes we spoke, it was clear he had a far better handle on Identity Crisis than I did.

Comics SHipping 11/15

Whoops, forgot to post this earlier. I suck. ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #635

AVENGERS EARTHS MIGHTIEST HEROES #3 (Of 8)

BATMAN GOTHAM KNIGHTS #60

BETTY #143

BIRDS OF PREY #77

BLADE OF THE IMMORTAL #96

CABLE DEADPOOL #10

CAPTAIN GRAVITY AND POWER OF VRIL #1

CATWOMAN #38

CSI DOMINOS #4

DAREDEVIL #68

DEEP FRIED VOL 2 #1

DONALD DUCK AND FRIENDS #323

ENGINEHEAD #6 (Of 8)

EX MACHINA #7

EXILES #56

EYES OF ASIA #2 (Of 4)

FANTASTIC FOUR #521

GIRL GENIUS #13

HAWKMAN #35

HEROES ANONYMOUS #6 (Of 6)

HUMAN TARGET #17

IDENTITY CRISIS #7 (Of 7)

INVADERS #5

JUSTICE LEAGUE ELITE #6 (Of 12)

KNIGHTS OF THE DINNER TABLE ILLUSTRATED #41

LADY DEATH 10TH ANNIV ED PAINTED CVR #1

LITTLE SCROWLIE #8

LUCIFER #57

MADROX #4 (Of 5)

MARVEL AGE FANTASTIC FOUR #9

MARVEL TEAM-UP #3

METAL HURLANT #14

MICKEY MOUSE AND FRIENDS #272

OCEAN #3 (Of 6)

OFFICIAL HANDBOOK MARVEL UNIVERSE GOLDEN AGE MARVEL 2004

PLASTIC MAN #13

POWERPUFF GIRLS #57

RETURN OF SHADOWHAWK ONE SHOT #1

ROBIN #133

SERENITY ROSE #5

SHAOLIN COWBOY #1

SILVER COMICS #3

SIMPSONS COMICS #101

SPIDER-MAN DOCTOR OCTOPUS YEAR ONE #5 (Of 5)

SPIDER-MAN INDIA #2

STAR WARS EMPIRE #27

TALES OF SUSPENSE CAPTAIN AMERICA & IRON MAN COMM ED #1

TOMB RAIDER CVR A HUGHES #48

TRIGGER #1

ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN #70

ULTRA #5 (Of 8)

WITCHBLADE #81

WORLDWATCH #3

Books / Mags / Stuff

ALTER EGO #43

AMERICAN SPLENDOR OUR MOVIE YEAR GN

ASTONISHING X-MEN VOL 1 GIFTED TP

ASTRONAUTS OF THE FUTURE TP

CINEFANTASTIQUE 36 #6

COMIC BOOK MARKETPLACE #117

COMICS BUYERS GUIDE FEB 05 #1601

DC COMICS RARITIES ARCHIVES VOL 1 HC

FANTASTIC FOUR VOL 5 DISASSEMBLED TP

HELLSING VOL 5 TP

HUTCH OWEN UNMARKETABLE GN

ILLUSTRATION MAGAZINE #12

JACK KIRBY COLLECTOR #41

KRAZY & IGNATZ 1933-34 NECROMANCY BY THE BLUE BEAN BUSH

LEES TOY REVIEW DECEMBER 2004 #146

MARGES LITTLE LULU VOL 1 TP

MODERN MASTERS VOLUME 4 KEVINNOWLAN TP

P CRAIG RUSSELL VOL 3 LIBRARYOF OPERA TP

PC GAMER MAGAZINE WITH CDROM JANUARY 2005 #2

POWERS VOL 7 FOREVER TP

PROBABILITY BROACH GN

ROBO HUNTER VERDUS TP

SAGA OF THE SEVEN SUNS VEILEDALLIANCES SC

SCI FI ENTERTAINMENT FEB05

SWAMP THING BAD SEED TP

WHAT IF CLASSIC VOL 1 TP

WHITE LAMA VOL 2 ROAD TO REDEMPTION TP

WIZARD KING TRILOGY BOOK 1 SCKING OF THE WORLD

X-MEN DREAMS END TP

ZIPPY FROM HERE TO ABSURDITY TP

What did you get/are you getting?

-B

A Few More 12/8 Comics Reviews from Jeff

Hey, all. I swore I'd keep my nose out of the SavCrit blog for a couple months after October, where even I got a little sick of myself. But since Brian's on a deadline (I am too; I should be working on the CE newsletter but I left the blackline at home) and I'm stuck at the day job with nothing really cooking, I thought I'd throw in a few quick shots in case you haven't gotten to a store yet... AQUAMAN #25: I'm shocked Hibbs didn't review it since his great contribution to my day at the shop Friday was throwing it at me and hollering, "Check it out!" It's a real education on how execution can either save or damn a book. You've got great art and an idea that's thoughtful and a little daring--the people of Sub Diego are so miserable they're turning to drugs as a way of escaping their "washed up" existence--and the suck suckiest execution that ever sucked a suck. The villains trafficking in Heroin was one thing, but then with all the little cocaine vials, you really wondered what the writer was thinking. (Or as Hibbs so eloquently put it, "Yeah, let's do a rail of cocaine! Underwater!") Then, to add some kind of menace to the issue, you've got coke fiends sharpening their teeth...and then attacking Aquaman and his sidekick..and biting them...you know, as coke fiends are wont to do (Or as Hibbs so eloquently put it, "Wha? Fuckin' huh?") Makes the O'Neil/Adams relevance issues seem like Drugstore Cowboy. A can't-miss AWFUL.

BLOODHOUND #6: I'll second Hibbs on this--they did a perfectly good gloss on the prison side of things in the first issue, I don't really see much of a reason to return to it in this much depth. I think the last thing you want to give the readers is a sense the book's running in place, particularly in the first year, and that was the feeling I took (reluctantly, since I liked the first arc so much) from this issue. Not good. EH.

BULLSEYE'S GREATEST HITS #4: Gah. Getting Steve Dillon to draw this is like getting Gordon Willis to do the cinematography on a 'Little Rascals' short. I love the art and the colors add an extra layer of crispness, but the story's conceit--guys working against the clock to get Bullseye to tell them a life-saving fact--is undercut by all the pointless flashbacks, and all the flashbacks are undercut by all the time spent on the story's conceit. Did Bullseye really think he was in love with Elektra? Was he just blowing smoke up the feds' butts? Or is the writer blowing smoke up ours? Just a big lovely-looking waste of time. AWFUL.

DOC FRANKENSTEIN #1: Great looking book and a clever conceit (connecting the common points between the origins of the Frankenstein Monster and Doc Savage--not to mention Jesus--is pretty savvy) but the book confirmed what Matrix:Re and Matrix:Re-Re taught us: The Wachowski Brothers need a good editor to make them hone their ideas, or things feel draggy and bloated. But that doesn't mean you should pass this up. Quite the contrary; this was still lovely apeshit stuff. GOOD.

GOTHAM CENTRAL #26: I think part of the reason writers stick to cliched work--apart from the ease with which you can crank it out--is that once you start trying to create something a little more true to life, the stuff that's still cliched sticks out like the proverbial sore thumb. I mean, there's a perfectly fine start here with well-defined characters having a meal then catching a case, but the rest of the story spins around the idea that Josie talks to her parent's graves for three pages, Catwoman overhears and uses what's she's heard to blackmail Josie into helping her. Maybe in a regular comic I could buy that, but after all the very realistic and believable set-up, that old "character talks out loud to the grave of a loved one" trick stinks like the dead fish that it is. (Has anyone in real life ever done this?) Having Catwoman then use that info just compounds the problem, I think, and left me pretty disapointed. EH.

INTIMATES #2: I didn't finish reading this at the shop because business picked up, but I kinda liked that "hyper-compressed" storytelling with the constant commentary bands at the bottom, the quick cut-aways to character's interior fantasies, etc.--it reminded me of what Alan Moore was doing with the TEXTure panels in Promethea, but I think it has a chance of actually working better here; I felt like there was a full universe here that I was being dropped in the middle of. I can't say if there's any there there, but I think as a way to immerse the reader it's got a lot of potential, and I'm curious to pick the book up to see if it ends up being developed or what.

JLA #109: Bri says he wants a little more plot, and I utterly disagree. The problem is there's too much plot--I want somebody to sock something. You bring back the Crime Syndicate and then spend four issues showing their subtle machinations, contrasted with the political turmoil of Qward? No. Get with the socking, please. Thank you. EH.

JSA #68: Suffers from Identity Crisis syndrome, in that Johns does such a good job making you feel for the family that when they get so brutally slaughtered, you just feel turned off. Having children shotgunned (just barely off-panel) is the sort of thing exploitation filmmakers and writers do when they don't have the time or the talent to make you care about the characters. That said, I liked the rest of it even though time travel stuff almost always makes my tiny brain hurt. OK.

MARVEL KNIGHTS SPIDER-MAN #9: I was really glad the villain didn't turn out to be Uncle Ben's diseased zombie corpse, but that's about all I liked about this issue. Weirdly, Millar's "people-behind-the-people" conspiracy for supervillains seems both dated and somehow wrong for the Marvel Universe in a way I'm finding difficult to put my finger on. I think the Marvel Universe as conceived of and developed by Stan and Jack (and Steve, and Roy, and etc.,) is an insanely chaotic place which is the source of its power, delight and terror: Atom bombs dropping all over the place; people getting irradiated; Venusians dropping from the skies and keys to Asgardian kingdoms lying around in caves. In that universe, a guy somehow wiring enough crap together to turn himself into the Leap-Frog makes more sense than the idea that Galactus got ten grand in unmarked bills to show up in New York and make a pest of himself. I'm usually a fan of cynicism where the government's concerned, but it just doesn't seem like the right fit here. The rest of it being generally terrible doesn't help much, either. AWFUL.

NIGHTCRAWLER #3: Again, gorgeous art but a bafflingly bad story. Do I care whether the kid is another demon or not? Is the kid anything but an emotional cipher (although thanks to Robertson, an expressively drawn cipher)? Between that and the usual problems where a magical system is in place but it's only explained as it goes along, this is a pretty slack read. EH.

NIGHTWING #100: Hibbs thought the ending of this was plot-hammered, I actually thought it was the opposite. It read like Grayson was shooting for an ending in which Dick ends up serving time (which would make for a pretty cool arc or two) but looked at her set-up with his ex-partner and went, "Nope, that's not gonna work." A shame, because that seems to have a lot more potential than the "Oh no! There's a streaker in the Bat-Cave!" ending. (Although what a great Infantino-era cover that would make). EH.

Hmm. That may be enough to chew on for a little bit. Unless some repressed traumatic memory regarding She-Hulk or The Punisher comes back to me (and sadly, despite nice art and Furioso2012's comments about issue #1, Wild Girl isn't coming together like I'd hoped it would) the ball is back in Hibbs' court.

Reviews for 12/8

There was very very little this week that fired my imagination enough to write about, plus I have to write TILTING AT WINDMILLS so it will run on Friday, but, damn it, I feel like I owe SOME sort of a quick weekly update, so here's at least 7 comics that I have soemthing to say about.... BLOODHOUND #6: Glowing quote from Ellis on the cover, which is cool, but here we are 6 issues in and I don't know where this book is going at all. The first arc was pretty terrific, but now we seem to be "back to jail" with no easy path out -- and DC already has a "powers in jail" book -- HARD TIME -- which does that much better. I'll go with an OK, but if I was paying cash money for this, I don;t think I'd be back for #7.

DOC FRANKENSTEIN #1: Wow, Burlyman's first comic book is a winner. Nice art, strong dialogue -- it may end up just being, y'know, a HEAVY METAL level story (nice to look at, but doesn't add up to much), but I really did dig this first one, and I'll go with both VERY GOOD and PICK OF THE WEEK here.

JLA #109: How long is this arc? We're at part 3 and, still, nothing has really happened. I didn't DISlike it, but I kinda want more plot. OK

JSA #68: Grimm came by on Saturday, and opined that the DCU is like a pendulum, swinging back to grim-n-gritty every once in a while to remind us that, no, that's not what we actually want. I think the difference in this latest swing is too much towards the "realistic" -- like this issue's sequence where Stargirl's family gets slaughtered in front of her eyes. Slaughtered in graphic detail. Man, I so much didn't need to see that, and it really marred an otherwise fine issue (I dug the Rip Hunter shit), dragging it down to an EH.

MARVEL KNIGHTS SPIDER-MAN #9: I am just dumbfounded by this. It fails the logic test on so many levels, I can't even bring my self to enunciate all of the ways. Really, nothing about this series has made any sense whatsoever, and not in a good SUPERMAN/BATMAN, I-want-some-of-those-drugs way. No, this is bad drugs. Bad bad bad drugs. Is the right hand even aware of what the left hand is doing up at Marvel? I mean, what idiot accepted the "sewed eyelids and scapels" add running in a lot of Marvel books this month? Is this something you really want to run the risk of some hard-ass parent seeing little Jimmy reading? It's all symptomatic to me, man. I know I've read something worse this year, but at this moment, I can't think of what that might be -- so, AWFUL and PICK OF THE WEAK from this quarter.

SAMURAI HEAVEN & EARTH #1: It may not actually be, but this sure feels like a recycled CrossGen pitch -- absolutely competant in all ways (though there's prolly enough skin and arterial spray here that it shoulda been a Mature Readers book), but not really feeling deep enough to get me to come back for more. a very solid OK in other words.

SHE-HULK #10: Wait, where's the funny? And where's the nice art? *cry* EH.

X-MEN FANTASTIC FOUR #1: Some one needs to explain to me the appeal of Pat Lee. I don't get it. Ugly, blocky art on a pedestrian story (they actually have a multi page fight scene over a dumb misunderstanding), and this is just here to get some more of your money. Feh, I say AWFUL.

There.

On the Book side, I see a few credible candidates:

ADVENTURES IN THE RIFLE BRIGADE TP -- Minor, but funny, Garth Ennis work... not sure, but I think that this makes every single thing he's done for DC is now collected.

ARKHAM ASYLUM ANNIVERSARY EDITION HC: If you haven't read it, nows probably the time. It's mostly gobbledegook, as I remember it, but the McKean art is scrumdidiliumptious!

ASTRO CITY LOCAL HEROES HC: Even at its weakest, never less than good, and at it's best, it's some of the best recent comics. Plus, damn, that's a fine looking package, ain't it?

GLOBAL FREQUENCY DETONATION RADIO TP: Uneven, but with moments of clever brilliance in most every story.

I am, however, going to go with ASTRO CITY LOCAL HEROES HC as my TP/GN OF THE WEEK.

What about you?

-B

Comics for 12/8

Here's what we're getting this week... yet another meh week for funnybooks it seems As usual, YOUR LCS might be recieving a wholly different list of things, so don't take this list as anything other than "this week, at Divis and Page in SF"

100 BULLETS #56

2000 AD #1415

2000 AD #1416

ACTION COMICS #822

ALONG THE CANADIAN #5

ANGELTOWN #2

AQUAMAN #25

ARCHIE #553

BATMAN LEGENDS OF THE DARK KNIGHT #186

BATMAN STRIKES #4

BLOODHOUND #6

BPRD THE DEAD #2

BRIAN PULIDOS BELLADONNA REG CVR #2

BULLSEYE GREATEST HITS #4

DEMO #12

DISTRICT X #8

DOC FRANKENSTEIN #1

DOCTOR SPECTRUM #4

EMMA FROST #18

FABLES #32

FATHOM DAWN OF WAR #3

FIRESTORM #8

FULL FRONTAL NERDITY ANNUAL #1

GI JOE RELOADED #10

G-MAN ONE SHOT

GOD THE DYSLEXIC DOG

GOTHAM CENTRAL #26

HULK AND THING HARD KNOCKS #4

INTIMATES #2

JLA #109

JSA #68

JUDGE DREDD MEGAZINE #226

MAD MAGAZINE #449

MARVEL AGE HULK #4

MARVEL KNIGHTS 4 #13

MARVEL KNIGHTS SPIDER-MAN #9

MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE VOL 3 #8

NEOTOPIA VOL 4 #4

NIGHTCRAWLER #3

NIGHTMARES AND FAIRY TALES #11

NIGHTWING #100

NOBLE CAUSES #5

NOBLE CAUSES CVR A BUENO #4

POWERS #7

PS238 #9

RISING STARS #23

SAMURAI HEAVEN & EARTH #1

SCOOBY DOO #91

SEX WARRIOR ISANE XXX #1

SHE HULK #10

SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN #22

STAR WARS REPUBLIC #71

TEMPORARY CUBES AND LADDERS #1

THE PUNISHER #15

THOR SON OF ASGARD #11

TRANSFORMERS ENERGON #30

VIDEO #4

WILD GIRL #2

X-MEN FANTASTIC FOUR #1

X-MEN THE END BOOK ONE DREAMERS AND DEMONS #6

X-MEN UNLIMITED #6

Books / Mags / Stuff

2000 AD EXTREME ED #6

ADVENTURES IN THE RIFLE BRIGADE TP

ARKHAM ASYLUM ANNIVERSARY EDITION HC

ASTRO CITY LOCAL HEROES HC

BATMAN HUSH 2 ACTION FIGURES MASTER CASE ASST

BIG FUN COMICS #2

COMIC BOOK DIGEST #3

FORTEAN TIMES #191

GIANT ROBOT #35

GLOBAL FREQUENCY DETONATION RADIO TP

HEAVY METAL JAN 2005

INTERNATIONAL STUDIO #3

JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA ARCHIVES VOL 9 HC

JUXTAPOZ JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2005

LOYOLA CHIN AND THE SAN PELIGRAN ORDER TP

MAC TIN TAC GN

MAD XL #31

MARVEL HOLIDAY SPECIAL TP

MEMORIES OF PARADISE GN

RUROUNI KENSHIN VOL 9 TP

SHONEN JUMP VOL 3 JANUARY 2005 #1

SPECTRUM 11 TP

STAR TREK COMMUNICATOR #153

STAR TREK KEY COLLECTION VOL 2 TP

THE AGENTS POCKET MANGA TP

TOYFARE JUSTICE LEAGUE UNLIMITED FIGURES CVR #90

ULTIMATE FANTASTIC FOUR VOL 2DOOM TP