Tucker Really Hopes You Like His Reviews Of Comics So Much You Guys

Looks like there's been enough meat-y think posts on here since the last time I checked in. Too bad that they all keep being on comics you cats have all read, right? I thought I'd take a look at some of the 2009 small press stuff, and I totally started on that, and then I got distracted by the fact that a ball of aluminum foil can reflect light. I keep batting it around, but since it's not really round, I never know what direction it's going to go in. Here's three though. They're all in the Upper Echelon of the Ratings Scale, if you've got your computer turned on its side.

Jan's Atomic Heart JAH_cover They're calling this one a graphic novel--it's got a spine, sure, but it's pretty short. Guy who did it is 20/21 years old? Name's Simon Roy.

It's GOOD.

One of the things I've enjoyed most in the last year or so was the opportunity to spend some serious time reading a bunch of Future Shocks stories from 2000 AD--it's a fountain of ideas, a place where guys like Moore, Morrison, Milligan and other dudes without M-names did all kinds of "get out the comics" work. While it doesn't share any visual sensibilities with the old EC Comics stuff, there's this sense of work that comes about when you're catching up on them en masse as opposed to the weekly installments, and that sense is one of the things I like about EC. 2000 AD and its sister-titles, that original EC stuff--that whiny part of my brain starts to shut down when I read them, because I can't stop thinking about how consistent they were/are with their content. It just kept coming, and in my estimation, EC had a pretty incredible Hit-To-Shit ratio.

Jan's Atomic Heart has nothing to do with EC, but it reminded me of 2000AD, Bilal's Memories, all those kinds of random one-shot tales of dirty, rusty futures. It's a science fiction story about a guy who ends up in a temporary robot body while he's waiting on his flesh-y one to recover from a car wreck. It has a great ending, which I'm not going to ruin, because it earns its great ending.

This is the first page. It's like Gipi drawing Otomo. jah_1 According to Roy's comments at CBR, he started the project as an "exercise in environment-building", and ended up turning out a story while in the midst of drawing stuff. I'd like to say it shows, because that's sort of what you want to read on a site with "Critics" in the name, correct?

Not really that dude, broseph. I hear tell that you can buy Ng Suat Tong's attentions with a box of Thin Mints, so look into that. I just liked this comic--I liked it before I found out it was a comic birthed out of screwing around with drawings of buildings and robots, and I liked it even more after that. In its fashion, it's an old school sort of story--a guy is coming out of the shock of a car wreck, upset because he can't fit his robot frame into any clothes but sweatpants, and he's starting to realize that things May Not Be As They Seem. There's a little of the old Lack of Faith on the part of Roy when it's time to draw the robot being surprised--he draws a halo of white to indicate "Hey!"--but it's made up for in the little throwaway panel where the character involuntarily rubs his eye, which, as a robot, he would have no reason to do. It's a clever, subtle reminder that the body is merely a temporary home, one that Jan wants only to understand, not be assimilated into. By the close, he's gotten all his answers, and I've got one of my own. I want to read more of this guy's comics. Hope college doesn't fuck his brain up.

Papercutter # 9 pc9web_lg There's three comics here. The first one is by Aron Nels Steinke, who also gets cover detail. From what I've read of Steinke's work, this is more of that. I don't care for it, although I think that's probably just because I find a bit too much of myself in the lazy protagonist. He gets up late and calls his significant other and promises to start going to bed earlier, since she's already gone off to work like a regular person with values. Then he starts telling her about the dream he has last night, ignores her sweet reprimand to maybe stop, since she doesn't care. And then, she firmly says "Wait! Stop. I don't want to hear about this dream anymore." And he says "Oh I know...but you have to listen. Please." After he gets off the phone, he gets scared because he thinks there might be a ghost in the house.

Like--I sort of want to kill myself now? And sure, it's a comic, and you want to know if it looks good...hell, I don't know. There's some nice looking pages, but this is one of those small press comics where they draw dots on bare legs to indicate hair. Not my thing. Go ask Alice.

The second comic is a one pager made up of four gag strips, each of which are four panels in length. It's by Elijah Brubaker, who I quite like. I'd first come across his stuff when I was trying to find a copy of Monkey Wrench, an old anthology comic that featured Ed Brubaker. See, Elijah also has a comic called Monkey Wrench, so when you buy a comic book online sight-unseen called MONKEY WRENCH BRUBAKER, you might end up with the Ed one--which also features Richard Sala & Jason Lutes doing some of those Mega-Genius Comics you hear shut-ins talk about all the time--or you might end up with the Elijah one. Either way, you're a winner, although you shouldn't mention that to any of the people involved with the Brubaker/Sala/Lutes comic, because somebody somewhere said the contributors got kinda fucked over by the publisher.

Digressions? You know it. They keep my teeth yellow.

Elijah Brubaker's contribution to Papercutter, the gag strips: it would be real Iconoclastic and Shitty Critics to say that they're the best part of the issue. It'd also be a lie, because while they're quite good, there's a real Top Dawg Draw here. That little slice of heaven would be Diamond Heights: A True Story, by Hellen Jo. It's a short, beautifully illustrated piece, ten pages long. A couple of drunk kids--does Hellen Jo draw adults?--get accosted by a couple of barefoot Asian girls in the middle of the night. That's it, really. You'll see what's coming as soon as the girls arrive on the scene, it's made abundantly clear when a gasp turns into vomiting--and then it goes down, Streets of Gotham style. (You see that recent issue? Paul Dini's putting kids in cages and pulling the trigger on-panel. I ain't crying, but jesus man. Can't Batman punch somebody that doesn't put babies blood in their milkshake?)

Diamond Heights is similar to Steinke's ghost story--it's regular people encountering weird shit--but everything about the delivery system is completely different. There's no backgrounding to who these people are, and the fact that they're both drunk puts to question whether the two girls that descend upon them are supposed to be real people or not. It's brevity makes it that much more potent a story, the sort of anthology installment that is better served by being surrounded by items it doesn't share an author with--when (and it's hard for me not to dissociate myself from thinking of this, apologies for that) Hellen's work achieves "we can make a big hardcover of this" status, Diamond Heights will probably get passed by as a solid, but brief, idea. Here, it's a fucking story, and it's a VERY GOOD one. You know how they keep saying Blackest Night is supposed to be a Horror Comic? Man, that shit ain't scary. It's dark. It's violent. But being freaked out by freaky people when you're alone, just trying to make it home after getting stupid? That's scary. That shit happens all the time.

Reich # 6 reich6coverlarge Hey, I used to date this really gorgeous cokehead that was raised in this wacky Wilhelm Reich-ian commune! I don't know that her coke/cheating-on-me problems stemmed directly from being raised there, but the participants did have a tendency towards being naked around six year olds before the local government sent the cops out to shut 'em down, so here's a stolen Abhay colon: Highly Likely? But she was a real fox, one of those kind of ladyfriends that made it fun to go to bars, because everything turned into a sarcastic beer commercial with all the bartenders doing a fist-pump and mouthing "You da man, nine-year-old!"

The first time we broke up, it was due to my insistence that she kowtow to my definition of "girlfriend", which meant someone who had at least as much sex with me as they were having with strangers, be they men/women/drug connections. That commitment was at cross purposes with her Willingness To Maintain Porous Emotional Reich-ian Body Armor, so we parted ways. When she showed up the next morning at my place, she was covered in bruises and openly weeping. Apparently, despondent over the collapse of our terrible relationship, she had gotten drunk with her father the night before--he had directed a Woody Harrelson movie and never fully recovered--and then she'd gone out into the street to drink more, only stopping to lose her purse and get in a fistfight with a cab driver. That kind of romance--it's the stuff they used to write poems about, you know, back when poets could actually get some ass by being, well, poets. While she couldn't promise to lay off the cocaine or other people, she did promise to change absolutely nothing, but remain physically attractive and crazy. Although I have no defense for the choice I made, I'll own up to being really jazzed about the fact that somebody had gone to such lengths for a relationship that neither party seemed to care that much about. Look, I'm a semi-tolerable cocksman, but when it comes down to it, my physical appearance isn't far removed from what my mother looked like when she was 14. But that's math, relationships ain't math. Somebody gets tore up and fights a cabbie after you ask them to stop jumping into bed with strangers? That's worth working on, especially when you don't work on it all. 

Oh, Reich the comic? It's GOOD. Elijah Brubaker did it, clearly he has fonder associations with Wilhelm Reich than I do.

 

And Here Are Some Things I Read Recently...

Look! I done read some new comics for a change, and here I am talking about them. It's just like old times, under the jump. ADVENTURE COMICS #2: How to sap a new series of almost all of its excitement, part 23: As soon as #2 comes out, announce that the creative team is being taken off the book before the seventh issue - while pointing out that two of the issues before then are crossovers with the latest event, by a fill-in artist - and then tell everyone that the lead strip is being also being removed so that the new writer can expand the back-up to fill the entire book. On the plus side, I'm as excited about new Levitz Legion as the next man, but on the minus, Geoff Johns' and Francis Manipaul's GOOD Superboy deserved more of a chance, especially considering the (enjoyably) slow, sentimental route it was taking.

BATMAN AND ROBIN #4: Aaaaaaahhhh, my eyes! After three issues of clear, creative playful Frank Quitely art, Philip Tan arrives and demonstrates just how not to tell a story. The art overpowers the writing entirely, and is confusing, over-rendered and just plain ugly. Good thing Cameron Stewart and Frazer Irving are taking over after the next couple of issues, because I'll need their lusciousness as an antidote to this AWFUL mess.

BEASTS OF BURDEN #1: To the lack of surprise of anyone, probably the best book of the week. Maybe it's because I'm a sap for animals - that's what living in a two dog, one cat household will do to you - but I was completely in love with this by the third page, and it just got better from there. Evan Dorkin's funny-without-being-snarky script and Jill Thompson's art (full of nice little background touches in the group shots) were ideal, and my only problem, genuinely, was that I wanted to read more immediately. EXCELLENT.

BLACKEST NIGHT #3: Oh, so that's what's going on with the Indigo Tribe. Kudos to everyone who called out the Hal As White Lantern idea that'd entirely avoided my brain originally, as Johns seems to be pointing fairly obviously in that direction here (So much so that it seems like it might be a dodge, to be honest), but at least there's some forward motion here, unlike the second issue (In particular, I liked the surprising "they're not zombies, they're recreations of the dead" angle raised here). A high GOOD, I think. And, DC? When this is done, Johns and Reis should really take over Justice League of America already, don't you think?

BLACKEST NiGHT: BATMAN #2: While I don't think Peter Tomasi necessarily has the strongest grip on the new Batman/Robin dynamic, by the time Commissioner Gordon was using a pump-action shotgun and Batman a flamethrower to take care of the Black Lanterns, I was digging this as the ridiculous superhero zombie flick it's clearly meant to be. GOOD.

CAPTAIN AMERICA REBORN #3: Am I the only one who shares Steve Rogers' sense of deja vu with this book? Cap travels through well-known moments of his history while monologing, while in the future, villains plot and superheroes fight them. This felt really like the last issue to me, and in general, the series feels slower and less... impressive, I guess, than I'd hoped it would be. OKAY, but here's hoping something new happens next issue.

GALACTICA 1980 #1: Color me surprised; for all that I've been snarkily making fun of this revival of the second Battlestar Galactica series on io9, I actually really enjoyed this first issue, particularly the cynicism/realism of the impact of the Galactica trying to make friends with humanity by appearing above the White House only (Spoiler warning!) to get nuked because the President thinks they're invading. Having a suicidal Lorne Greene-Adama was a nice touch, too. A tentative GOOD, for now.

THE LONE RANGER #18: Sticking with Dynamite, I'm again declaring my love for the slow burn of Brett Matthews and Sergio Cariello's take on the pulp Western hero; despite having issues like this - where it's much more about the foreboding hint of things to come than that much actually, y'know, happening - it's just done so stylishly that I can't resist. VERY GOOD.

MARVEL ADVENTURES SPIDER-MAN #54: I don't know where my recent rebirth of Spider-Man love has come from, but I'm glad that it's coincided with Paul Tobin and Matteo Lolli's relaunch of the "all ages" Spider-book, which mixes the high school soap opera/comedy with just enough superhero moments to come up with the perfect mix of everything I liked about Spider-Man Loves Mary-Jane and Ultimate Spider-Man. Add in Skottie Young covers that are wonderfully eye-catching, and you're one good logo away from my ideal Spidey. VERY GOOD.

ULTIMATE ARMOR WARS #1: Well, that felt slight. I don't know, maybe I've read too much Ellis/Morrison/everyotherBritishwriterwhodoesthis, but introducing new characters by having another new character say something like "The Ghost. I don't believe it. It's actually The Ghost..." just feels lazy and a sad signpost for this book that seemed a well-done collection of cliches and old ideas as much as anything worth reading. The very definition of EH.

X-MEN FOREVER #7: In which fill-in artist Steve Scott works off the new models and costumes for the characters, even though they haven't been introduced yet, leading to a "Wait, that's supposed to be Gambit?" moment, as well as a "Why has everyone switched costumes between issues?" one. Aside from that, this issue is pretty OKAY; the last couple of issues have seemed particularly directionless and jarringly so, especially considering all of the loose plot threads of the first five issues.

X-MEN LEGACY ANNUAL #1: Remember when annuals were stand-alone stories that had some kind of major event in them? Mike Carey doesn't; this is just the opening of the next Legacy storyline (and theoretically something to establish the new status quo, except that it doesn't, really), and if you've not been keeping up with the X-Books recently, you'll be completely lost here. The highpoint is definitely Daniel Acuna's art, which always makes me wonder why he's not so much more loved than he is; it's gorgeous, gorgeous stuff. There's also a Gambit back-up, which is beyond generic filler. EH, at best.

And for those awaiting Claremont's X-Men part 3: This week. Really, honestly.

Hibbs quick hits 9/16

Just a quick in and out to hit a few books from this week... after the jump!

ARCHIE #601: Wow, that's seriously weird for an Archie comic -- there's a shout-out reference to Kurtzman/Elder "Starchie" story (!); there's a titty joke ("Oh, you must be Juggie!") (!!); and there's even a hint of pre-marital sex (!!!). Don't get me wrong, it is all extremely mild, and a 8 year old girl isn't going to read it the same way I did, but still, none of that's what I would have expected in an Archie comic.

Other than that, I enjoyed this just fine -- but I thought the resolution of the Betty story was a bit... mm, shoehorned, maybe? It's extremely sweet that Archie "proposed" "Best Friendship" to Ms. Cooper, but it really should have sent her off crying even harder, IMO. All in all, though: GOOD.

ACTION COMICS #881: Man, that's one busy ass-cover "World against [superman symbol]" anchoring the top. "Second Feature: Captain Action" anchoring the bottom (which is as useful as tits on a bull, I have to say -- the bottom is "dead space" from a display perspective). And "The Hunt For Reactron: part one" also basically on the bottom. PLUS you've got the normal trade dress AND the "triangle numbering" Yeesh!

I'm generally bored with the superman books right now -- this New Krypton storyline isn't especially compelling, I'm missing the lead characters, and turning the super-characters into the X-Men ("Sworn to protect a world that hates and fears them") just doesn't work at all, even a little bit. EH.

BATMAN & ROBIN #4: While I liked the story better than #3, on each and every page I was thinking "Man, I wish Quitely was drawing this!" OK

M.O.D.O.K. DARK REIGN: Is this not the Marvel Age of M.O.D.O.K.? This book had me laughing really really hard. Funny stuff! VERY GOOD

ULTIMATE ARMOR WARS: Marvel has got to work out the color effects behind the "Ultimate" logo -- it's nearly invisible on this one. It's also probably a mistake to publish this at the same time as the kids-oriented "IRON MAN ARMOR WARS", but hey I'm not a publisher, so what do I know? If you want drunken playboy superheroes, this is probably exactly the book for you. I thought it was a pretty high OK.

What did YOU think?

-B

Some Indie Shit and Manga David Done Read

Yeah, so I haven't written about superhero comics for a while largely because - not to go all David Brothers in this piece - while I've been enjoying a lot of stuff coming out, I haven't been driven to write much about a lot of it. So instead, I've been dipping my uncultured, pervert-suit-loving self into the world of INDEPENDENT SMALL PRESS COMICS, not to mention the dangerous and exotic Orient of sequential art they call "man-ga."

Joking aside, here's some pretty great shit I read recently, and what I thought about it. (Obviously, there is more after the jump.)

Asterios Polyp by David Mazzucchelli, Pantheon Press

Yeah, I'm hardly the first person to come out and say that this is a pretty stunning artistic achievement. I've been putting off writing about it basically for that reason - after guys like Wolk and Mautner weighed in, what good is there in a schlub like me throwing his opinion horseshoe onto the post?

The thing is, I think it's easy to get lost in Polyp's shadow. The book is unmistakably a formalist masterpiece on first skim-through; Mazzucchelli's virtuosity with almost every aspect of sequential art is immediately evident. It's easy to get lost in symbolism and allusion with this book, since every single image seems weighted down with meaning, but there's a reason all of this symbolism and allusion is captivating in the first place: it's a good story, told astonishingly well. Yeah, Mazzucchelli's providing some incredibly stunning images and sometimes forcing you to read a comic in a way you're not used to, but it's all stunningly intuitive - Polyp somehow manages to be incredibly deep without being overwhelmingly challenging. It's not just this big stylistic monolith; it's also an engaging, emotional and entertaining story about two fully realized characters with dialogue that makes them easy to care about.

It's remarkable the balance Mazzucchelli was able to achieve here. It rewards each successive reading without requiring it; it can be a breezy, entertaining read if you want it to be and an annotator's dream if that's your thing too. It really is the kind of book you could hand to pretty much anybody. I've seen the comparisons to Ulysses thrown around, and considering the experimental storytelling on display combined with the penchant for alluding to Greek mythology, I can see where it comes from. But Ulysses is commonly seen as an undertaking or even a chore, while this is just a pure joy. Needless to say, utterly EXCELLENT.

I Killed Adolf Hitler by Jason, Fantagraphics Books

I grabbed this one largely due to the strength of Jason's fantastic contribution to Marvel's Strange Tales, which is probably the least hip reason ever to pick up an indie cartoonist, but hey, whatever. The result: I really enjoyed it! I'd read strong reviews of this around earlier, and I was expecting something offbeat and madcap (and certainly wasn't disappointed in that regard), but I was also surprised by just how emotional Jason was able to make a story about an Anthro-dog murder society and time travelling hitmen. Yeah, the entire thing is patently absurd on every level - self-consciously and humorously so - but it's also a story about the impermanence of rage and the importance of forgiveness, alongside what a goddamn twat Adolf Hitler can be when all you want to do is shoot the bastard. The description on the back describes the book as "deadpan," and that pretty much nails almost every aspect of its execution, from the anthropomorphic characters' frequently emotionless expressions to the unexclamatory dialogue to, well, the entire concept of the book. It's a quick read and very rewarding, and something I imagine I'll come back to from time to time for a while. Smart, funny and surprisingly poignant, this was VERY GOOD.

Pluto v.1-5 by Naoki Urasawa with Takashi Nagasaki, Viz Signature

Yeah, so I really lied when I said no superhero comics, because Pluto is basically a far more talented creative mind attempting the "maturation" of traditionally kids' comics characters exemplified by the spandex rape celebration known colloquially as Identity Crisis. What separates the two? As far as I can tell, where half of the American comics industry and Naoki Urasawa split up is the topic of sensationalism. When something terrible happens in a Brad Meltzer comic, the record stops, everyone stands around and the buckets come out for ten pages of superhero weeping. When something awful happens in a Naoki Urasawa comic, the characters react in various ways and the plot moves on without fetishized close-up spreads of a dead body or rape victim.

On top of that, Urasawa is essentially - like Grant Morrison or Alan Moore - a humanist at heart, and his stories are all about the necessity of holding the high road and respecting the sanctity of life, even when shit gets tough. They're also about the idea that redemption's always out there, and the virtue of forgiveness. It's difficult to find a pure villain in an Urasawa story; even in Monster, where he most explicitly dealt with the concept of pure, unmitigated, unexplainable evil, there was always stress placed on the importance of believing in change. This absolutely extends to Pluto, a gorgeously drawn and masterfully paced murder mystery that reinterprets "children's entertainment" through the lens of adulthood and nostalgia to create a sci-fi whodunnit bereft of moral judgments, just people (and robots) pushed to emotional extremes by unexpected events.

Every character in an Urasawa story is fully fleshed out, and Pluto is no different; seeming bit characters always have considerable background, and every action a character makes is placed into context by the life experiences that drove him or her towards it. Urasawa might be one of the tightest plotters in comics today, with a supernatural skill for creating a fully-realized character even through the broadest of strokes, without resorting to base sentimentality.

In short, everybody working on Big Two shared-universe superhero comics should have this as required reading. This is how you fucking do it. EXCELLENT.

Yotsuba&! Vol. 1 by Kiyohiko Azuma, Yen Press

I got this at the recommendation of David Brothers, and it did not disappoint: this book is basically an elaborate creation developed by research scientists to make even the most cynical person smile. The titular Yotsuba, whose exploits form the book's content, manages to be the rarest of fictional children: precocious without being obnoxious. It functions more like an episodic sitcom than any sort of continuous narrative, although the episodes (at least in this first volume) definitely follow a loose thread - a girl who behaves very strangely has moved into a new town and house with her long-suffering father, and now each episode features her "tackling" a certain subject (hence the title - Yotsuba&Moving, Yotsuba&Global Warming, etc.), usually by taking something symbolic literally or misinterpreting a piece of advice. Her antics are always amusing because they're not random; there's always a piece of logic, no matter how twisted, that justifies her behavior, so the laughs, while considerable, never seem cheap. The end result is a comic that makes me smile every time I read a chapter, no matter what kind of mood I'm in, and that's assuredly VERY GOOD.

Casanova Vol. 1 by Matt Fraction and Gabriel Ba, Image Comics

Man, I feel like a moron for not getting into this earlier, since it has pretty much everything I enjoy in a comic: parallel universes, time travel, hilarious use of the word "fuck", and the absence of the overwhelming distaste for humanity that seems to, for me, infect all the Warren Ellis stories that meet the first three criteria. Casanova manages to channel the far-out wackiness of a Nextwave and combine it with real characterization and something resembling a point, and as one of the five people on the Internet who didn't like Nextwave I'm incredibly grateful for that. Other than that: incredibly imaginative, gorgeously drawn, took me a second read to grab a lot of the basic plot structure (it's QUITE complex) but that second read was rewarding enough I can't complain too hard. I've heard that as good as this is, volume 2 is a significant improvement, and I would greatly appreciate it if Image Comics and Mr. Fraction could see to the publication of a hardcover of those issues so that I can read them without rooting through back issue bins. Is there somewhere between GOOD and VERY GOOD? Because that's where this is.

Arriving 9/16/2009

Wouldn't it have been awesome if that Pop-up Dracula book was a pop-up version of Abhay Kholsa's Bram Stoker's Dracula? I'd pay good money for that, yes.

28 DAYS LATER #2
ACTION COMICS #881
AGENTS OF ATLAS #11
AIR #13
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #605
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN PRESENTS ANTI VENOM #1 (OF 3)
ANGEL #25
AOD ASH SAVES OBAMA #2 (OF 4)
ARCHIE #601
ATHENA #1 W/ OBAMA FLIP CVR
ATOMIC ROBO SHADOW FROM BEYOND TIME #5 (OF 5)
BATGIRL #2
BATMAN AND ROBIN #4
BATMAN STREETS OF GOTHAM #4
BEASTS OF BURDEN #1 (OF 4)
BETTY & VERONICA DOUBLE DIGEST #174
BLACKEST NIGHT #3 (OF 8)
BRAVE AND THE BOLD #27
CAPTAIN AMERICA REBORN #3 (OF 5)
CAVEWOMAN RED MENACE ONE-SHOT
CITIZEN REX #3 (OF 6)
DARK AVENGERS #9
DARK REIGN LIST DAREDEVIL ONE SHOT
DARK WOLVERINE #78
DEADPOOL MERC WITH A MOUTH #3
DOMINIC FORTUNE #2 (OF 4)
EX MACHINA #45
EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT IRIS #3 BENITEZ CVR
FABLES #88
FINAL CRISIS AFTERMATH ESCAPE #5 (OF 6)
GHOSTBUSTERS DISPLACED AGGRESSION #1
GI JOE ORIGINS #7
GREEN ARROW BLACK CANARY #24
INVINCIBLE IRON MAN #18
JSA VS KOBRA #4 (OF 6)
JUGHEAD AND FRIENDS DIGEST #34
LONE RANGER #18
MARVEL SPOTLIGHT MARVEL ZOMBIES RETURN
MARVEL ZOMBIES RETURN #3
MIGHTY AVENGERS #29
MODOK REIGN DELAY
OUTSIDERS #22
POE (BOOM) #3
PUNISHER #9
PUNISHER NOIR #2 (OF 4)
REBELS #8
SCOOBY DOO #148
SIMPSONS COMICS #158
STAR TREK ROMULANS SCHISM #1
STAR WARS CLONE WARS #9
STAR WARS KNIGHTS OLD REPUBLIC #45 DESTROYER PT 1 (OF 2)
STARCRAFT #4
SULLENGREY SACRIFICE #1 (OF 2) DOUBLE-SIZED
SWORD #19
SWORDSMITH ASSASSIN #2
THOR ANNUAL #1
TINY TITANS #20
ULTIMATE COMICS ARMOR WARS #1 (OF 4)
UNCANNY X-MEN FIRST CLASS #3 (OF 8)
UNTHINKABLE #5 (OF 5)
VEIL #3
VENGEANCE OF MOON KNIGHT #1
WALKING DEAD #65
WAR MACHINE #9
WE KILL MONSTERS #3 (OF 6)
WEDNESDAY COMICS #11 (OF 12)
WORLD OF WARCRAFT #23
X-FACTOR #48
X-MEN LEGACY ANNUAL #1
ZOMBIES THAT ATE THE WORLD #5 (OF 8)

Books / Mags / Stuff
3 STORY SECRET HISTORY OT GIANT MAN
ALCOHOLIC SC
BAD GIRLS TP
BATMAN CACOPHONY HC
BIOGRAPHICAL NOVEL CHE GUEVARA GN
CAPED TP
CAPTAIN AMERICA TP MAN WITH NO FACE
DRACULA CLASSIC POP UP GN
HAUNT OF HORROR TP
HEAVY METAL NOV 2009
HULK PLANET SKAAR HC
HULK SKAAR SON OF HULK TP
INDIANA JONES ADVENTURES TP VOL 02
JOHN STANLEY LIBRARY NANCY HC VOL 01
JOHNNY BOO HC VOL 03 HAPPY APPLES
LEES TOY REVIEW #202 SEP 2009
LOCKE & KEY HEAD GAMES HC VOL 01
NEIL GAIMAN ODD AND FROST GIANTS HC ED
OISHINBO GN VOL 05 VEGETABLES
PLUTO URASAWA X TEZUKA GN VOL 05
SECRET WAR TP NEW PTG
SECRET WARRIORS PREM HC VOL 01 NICK FURY AGENT OF NOTHING
SHOWCASE PRESENTS WARLORD TP VOL 01
SIZZLE #43 (A)
SPAWN BOOK O/T DEAD TP
SPIDER-MAN NOIR GN TP
THOR BALDER BRAVE PREM HC
WASTELAND APOCALYPTIC ED HC VOL 01
WILL EISNERS SPIRIT ARCHIVES HC VOL 01 NEW ADV
WITCHBLADE ORIGINS TP VOL 03
YOTSUBA & ! GN VOL 06

What looks good to YOU?

-B

Abhay Re: Crime Novels.

COMICS: All blow. Instead, I've been reading CRIME NOVELS.

I turned my attention to the girl beside me. She was a reasonably sized, well-proportioned, dark-haired, basically sound specimen of human female, but she was doing her best to hide the fact, at least the female fact. She had a boy’s haircut, or what used to be a boy’s haircut before they all started letting it grow. She also had a boy’s pants on, complete with fly—pretty soon nothing will be safe from women’s lib, not even our jock-straps. -- from MATT HELM: THE INTRIGUERS, by Donald Hamilton.

SEVERANCE PACKAGE by Duane Swiercynski:

The back cover promised action: a group of office drones show up for a meeting at corporate headquarters, and their boss tells them (1) they’ve been working for a front organization for the CIA, (2) the CIA’s shutting down the operation, (3) they all know too much, and (4) they either immediately agree to take poison or they will be shot to death.

Except the back cover’s a bit of a bait-n-switch. That entire elaborate premise is pretty much resolved in the first 50 pages. The next 200 pages devolve rapidly into a one-joke slasher movie. It’s not BATTLE ROYALE in an office, like I hoped; it’s more JASON TAKES MANHATTAN, just set in the Nakatomi Plaza.

The SEVERANCE PACKAGE characters are all obnoxious slasher-movie characters, just an office variety instead of a teen variety: boss, secretary, dragon lady, a completely random “heroic writer” character for no reason, etc. There’s the slightest hint of a gender-based critique of corporate life, but that mostly gets drowned out in explosions.

Swiercynski almost gets by on style: single-page illustrations, text messages, layout hijinks. Simple sentences; fast-pace; everything fast, fast, fast. He almost makes up for story with verve. The giddiness is likable. If it’s not quite a book, you know, it’s at least not the worst popcorn movie. Sometimes, being able to turn pages rapidly is enough for me. Sometimes, I’m on airplane.

I suppose I wasn’t a very receptive audience because this book had the misfortune of following Will Beall’s L.A. REX. Beall’s a LAPD Homicide detective stationed in South Central; maybe I gave his splattergore more credit for that reason. Here’s a sample: They’d also jammed a tin funnel into the man’s right ear and poured drain cleaner down his ear canal. The open bottle of Draino stood on the counter next to the sink. Blood and yellowish matter had leaked from that ear down the side of his face. Packed into the guy’s eye sockets, nose and slack mouth, thousands of pale maggots, each no larger than a grain of rice, wriggled and moiled.

SEVERANCE PACKAGE was wire fu, by comparison. More action than violence.

Swiercynski writes comics, too: IRON FIST and CABLE for Marvel. That’s been a thing with Marvel lately— collecting crime novelists. Hurwitz and Gishler and Huston and whoever else. I hadn’t read any of Swiercynski’s comic work, so I looked at a random issue of CABLE after I read his novel. If I’m remembering this right: Cable was on a farm in the future, wearing overalls; he fought bugs. If you want a comic about cyborgs fighting bugs on a farm—that happened. Ariel Olivetti drew it, so if you want the farmer to have muscles painted top of his other muscles, that issue may have just gone from an A-plus to an A-plus-plus for you.

They got themselves a novelist to write that comic, though. There’s a sort of inherent perversity to hiring suspense writers to write mainstream comics; is anything less suspenseful on this Earth than a mainstream comic book?

1) The main characters all live.

2) The dead characters come back to life.

3) Every plot is announced ahead of time.

4) The plots are thoroughly debated online prior to the book being offered for sale—people argue whether or not something SHOULD be the plot of a comic they haven’t read yet.

Swiercynski the novelist tries to find graphic ways to spice up the action, to distinguish his paperback action thriller from other paperback action thrillers: Let’s put a single sentence on a page. Let’s use a page to show a piece of evidence directly to the reader rather than describe it. Let’s put speed lines in a novel. Here’s one sentence from the book, formatted as it is in the book:

“She felt like she would be falling forever.”

Not a spectacular innovation, nothing craaaaazy. But: Swiercynski the novelist came to play. Swiercynski the comic book writer? He just wrote a paper movie, same as everyone else at Marvel writes right now. (And again, I haven’t read his IRON FIST; maybe I’m wrong). Marvel’s hired novelists, independent comic writers, screenwriters, playwrights, whoever, and all to them are writing comics that look and feel identical. Can you tell a Marvel comic written by an independent comic creator apart from a Marvel comic written by a cook-book author from a Marvel comic written by a jingle writer? I don’t think I can tell the difference. Is that sad? Well, maybe that’s just the commercially best way to write comics, the best way to write comics for a mass audience. Is that sad? I don’t know; what do I care. If it weren’t like that, I’d just find something else about Marvel to complain about; I’m a guy on the internet—complaining about Marvel is how we do. Is that sad?

(I figured it’d be unfair not to read a more recent issue so I went with issue #18 of CABLE. Cable is in prison in outer space, and the X-Men character Bishop is trying to kill him for some reason. Here are two panels in sequence:

That’s two different people talking. The caption boxes in panel 1 is dialogue being spoken out loud, but the caption boxes in panel 2 is narration depicting a character’s internal monologue. And then check out this panel later in the issue:

So: caption boxes used where there’s “off-screen” dialogue, caption boxes with first-person internal-monologue, and then caption boxes with third-person exposition. In just 22 pages of comics? Really? On the other hand: people sometimes call Bishop the Archbishop and that’s pretty funny, maybe intentionally).

I made a face. “God, aren’t we mysterious! Lorna. She’s a tough one, I’ve heard. Won’t take orders from any man. Except Mac.”

“Why should she? Why should a woman have to work under a man if she’s as good as a man?”

I said, “Well, it’s the customary reproductive position, but I understand there are others.”

-- from MATT HELM: THE INTRIGUERS, by Donald Hamilton.

THE OUTFIT by DONALD WESTALKE:

I’d read Donald Westlake books when I was young, probably too young to understand his books. My favorite was his comedic murder mystery set in the world of tabloids, TRUST ME ON THIS. But: I’d never read Parker. I obviously knew about Parker, but I knew Parker had inspired some pretty terrible imitators: I’ve had the misfortune of sitting through an Andy Vachss book, say. Vachss alone was enough to scare me away from ever reading Parker.

Then, Westlake passed away. So: THE OUTFIT.

THE OUTFIT doesn’t waste your time; the first sentence is “When the woman screamed, Parker awoke and rolled off the bed.” It’s a nice sign you’re in good hands. This is the third of the Parker novels, re-released in 2008. I’ll try not to spoil the plot, but: bad guys screw with Parker; they find out that’s a bad idea. (Okay, actually, I think I just spoiled the plot. Sorry.)

Anyways, the bad guys lose because they’re soft, and Parker wins because he’s hard. And getting harder—it appears that a regular part of Parker’s schtick, I think maybe left out of the movies, is that Parker’s violent adventures sexually arouse Parker. You know those video games where the more you hit people, the more your character’s “rage meter” fills up? It’s like that. Except instead of an empty rage meter, imagine Lee Marvin’s flaccid penis.

What I liked about the OUTFIT was it felt like just the good parts: Parker murders someone, Parker solves a logistical problem of living outside of the law, there are a series of heists, and then Parker murders some more, and the end; go home. Just the good parts-- Donald Westlake’s Boner-Jamz, if you will. It’s not entirely perfect: one of the book’s subplots is left to a later book to resolve. Plus, if you like heists like I do, the book basically peaks in the middle with the heists; the book’s final action scene isn’t much fun by comparison.

But I probably prefer Westlake to “Richard Stark”; Westlake had wit. The “tough loners in suits” genre—at a certain point, it just seems like schtick. I don’t think I read crime novels for the cartoon characters—the knight errant detective, the femme fatale, the corpulent mobsters, any of that. Oh, it’s fun. But it sort of makes crime and greed and vice seem distant and remote, the sport of a different breed of cat, instead of pervasive, constant, a force of nature, a foundation stone. Parker seems apart from the world because the rest of the world is slow and dim and bovine; which has a truth to it, certainly at the time the OUTFIT was written. But: characters who are “apart from the world” are basically romantic fantasies, whether it’s Parker or Phillip Marlowe or what have you. They’re entertaining, but a more honest diagnosis would probably be grimmer.

Other nerds are likely to be flocking to this book in coming days—it’s the next book Darwyn Cooke intends to adapt as part of the 4-book adaptation series he’s created, published by IDW. The OUTFIT promises that we’ll get to see Cooke facing an interesting challenge—Parker disappears entirely for at least half of the book, the book’s best half. All of the heists? Parker ain’t there; he’s not the one pulling the heists in the OUTFIT. How will Cooke approach those heists?

There might be differing opinions how to answer that question after THE HUNTER, which has gotten a wide range of reactions. There’s bound to be—the underlying fantasy of this type of loner character is of total detachment from the world, being able to dispense with violence and sex without the messy business of the soul being involved. That sort of theme’s no problem for prose. Comics, though? “Here’s a character who doesn’t care about anything in the world except for his money and his women. I spent 5 hours drawing him by carefully dipping a Windsor-Newton brush into a well of India ink and moving the brush along a sheet of Bristol Board.” There’s a disconnect there.

Cooke’s solution seems to have rankled, though it’s actually what I liked about his adaptation more than anything: some panels are lavishly executed, but for the most part, the pages don’t feel too careful. Some of the long-shots especially nears stick-figure theatre. The line weights are inconsistent. He’s given critics plenty of ammunition.

But I think that’s what I liked about it: with Cooke laying on the book’s blue-color by hand, the pages just seem still... wet. Fresh from his drawing board. Many artists complain that some energy or power gets lost moving from thumbnails to finished pages—the HUNTER pages feel like they’re focused on retaining that thumbnail energy. Cooke doesn’t try to just adapt the surface story, but to match Westlake’s spare prose. To me, that was fun. Can I imagine a prettier comic? Sure. Would a prettier comic have better served the material? I don’t know if I necessarily agree with that.

Which isn’t to say Cooke doesn’t make some terrible choices along the way: He blows the revenge pages—the gestures hardly have any violence to them, at all. His character designs for women are deadly dull, pretty-girls from animation, Sketchbook Session jerk-off girls. Bruce Wayne: Parker isn’t too thrilling to watch. And if ever a book didn’t need Blam Krak Pow sound effects…

(I can’t say I was too persuaded by the argument that Cooke’s vision of the past was too focused on “cool” iconography. The movie POINT BLANK has a 10-minute long bongo-jam in it; there’s at least 10 minutes of a guy on the bongos with another guy going “YEAH” periodically, at least 10 minutes. Cool seems like kind of the point of the entire exercise for everyone who’s ever touched this material. You can have Dortmunder with Robert Redford in the 70’s, or you can have Dortmunder with Martin Lawrence, you know? But maybe I misunderstood the argument.).

If I had a problem with the HUNTER, though: I think any adaptation invites the question of Why this, why now? Parker’s about the lone, rugged individual facing down the organization. But: I guess I associate “rugged individualism” as the theme of, well, douche-bags. Rugged individualism sounds cute when Glen Beck’s crying about it, crying his crazy little eyes out, but you put enough rugged individualism into your coffee, next thing you know: you’re the crazy-fuck hick screaming that the President’s a liar in the middle of a speech to Congress. The rugged individual out for his own greedy advantage destroying the work of many people organized for their mutual good? We have that: it’s called Wall Street; how’s that working out for everybody? Yeah, the HUNTER is anti-corporate, but Parker’s hardly a hippie WTO-protestor; he’s just a different breed of capitalist.

So: I couldn’t really tell you why this adaptation exists other than for Cooke to wallow in that aesthetic universe. Is that enough? Is that anything?

I grinned. “There you sit, wearing a man’s zip-up-the-front pants and a man’s hairdo, giving me that poor-downtrodden-women line. Just what do you think would happen to me if I started wandering around the countryside in a woman’s skirt with my hair clear down my back? What would happen to any man who tried it? You know damn well we’d be locked up as transvestite perverts so fast it would make your head swim. Hell, we poor men can’t let our hair grow even a little without half the cops in the country trying to bash in our heads, but you ladies can cut it all off and nobody bats an eye. Which sex was it you said was being discriminated against?” She gave me another scorching look, obviously unimpressed by my argument. Well, maybe it wasn’t much of an argument.

-- from MATT HELM: THE INTRIGUERS, by Donald Hamilton.

The final book was Ian Rankin’s HIDE AND SEEK. Which…

There’s one kind of crime novel I avoid, the most common type: the recurring detective series. I think it’s all the jazz music. The serial detective novel will invariably have some detective in it that’s way into jazz. There’ll always be a scene of them, feeling lonely, putting on Miles Davis because, hey, man, they’re not modern guys, they don’t listen to rock-n-roll. Detectives in lonely-man detective novels don’t listen to Jay-Z.

Rankin from HIDE AND SEEK: “John Rebus’s flat was his castle. Once through the door, he would pull up the drawbridge and let his mind go blank, emptying himself of the world for as long as he could. He would pour himself a drink, put some tenor sax music on the cassette machine, and pick up a book.”

Tenor sax music. Because the alto sax is for communists and panty-sniffers! To be fair, the book was published in 1990. In 1990, I thought Color Me Badd was the best band of all time. And by “1990”, I mean last year. But the whole “lonely man” theme—you know, going from superhero comics to that kind of crime book, is it just exchanging one kind of No Girlz Allowed club for another? I don’t know.

This is probably the most like a “real novel” than any of the three. The characters are vivid and their actions are unpredictable; the details of subplots have themes that resonate with the main plotline’s themes; moments seem dictated by character more than plot. The mystery isn’t the focus; the mystery is an excuse to spend time exploring procedure and characters and setting. The mystery is a window into Edinburgh in the 1990’s, grappling with the early days of gentrification.

(From the perspective of a severe recession, though, the whole gentrification thing sort of loses its teeth. People used to get mad that their neighborhoods were getting TOO RICH. Oh noes! Good thing we don’t have to worry about that anymore.)

The biggest problem being: the mystery, once solved, is nothing much at all. The solution to the mystery, the dark secret that threatens to topple polite Edinburgh society? You can buy it now legally; you can find it for free on the internet. What might have become shocking in 1990 has become a consumer product by 2009. It’s 272 pages, but it builds towards nothing that sticks. Subplots, character, prose, themes—that’s all nice, but a mystery novel that doesn’t have much of a solution? Can you still call that a success? I loved the story in that porn movie.

Rankin’s mystery is “who killed a junkie”, the pathos supposedly being no one cares. Except: I don’t know that I cared either. Does that make me a bad person? Probably.

DC’s published Ian Rankin’s name across 4/5ths of the cover of DARK ENTRIES, one of the launch titles of their new Vertigo Anal-Sex line. Strike that, supposedly DARK ENTRIES is launching the Vertigo Crime line.

Funny thing: the launch book for Vertigo Crime? NOT A CRIME NOVEL. It’s a horror comic. There’s hardly any crime in it even. It’s a haunted house story, starring John Constantine. They launched Vertigo Crime with a Vertigo horror comic! Exclamation mark!

So: a year from now, if we’re unlucky and Vertigo Crime no longer exists, and some so-and-so is screeching that “None of youse fools on the internet people could have done better because we are geniuses who thought of EVERYTHING” … I would suggest that maybe one thing they could have done differently is launched their crime line with crime fiction…? Just a silly thought.

I mean, I’m rooting for Vertigo Crime because—I’m the audience for crime comics, 100%; the editors and creators announced for this line are all people I usually expect to always at least be interesting, if not always successful. And launching with DARK ENTRIES is not the worst idea: Rankin’s a name in crime fiction, so launching with the biggest name they could get makes a certain sense, even if he didn’t actually in point of fact write anything resembling a crime novel. There’s even a quote from Brian Vaughan on the back that mentions “haunted house” story, if you’re especially attentive. There’s also crime on the cover, and not in the book, though, so…

Is the book any good as a horror comic? Not really. I enjoyed Werther Dell’edra’s art, truly I did—lots of blacks, very much my kind of style. Except: he’s drawing a haunted house comic, so setting it in a very definite place with very definite background drawings has an increased importance. Dell’edra seems better with mood and suggestion than drawing definite surroundings. The geography of the house is just never precisely delineated enough to be scary.

Rankin’s story is a one-gag story about reality television. The gag didn’t make me laugh; might do something for you. Reality television is shit, but: who cares? Caring about how shitty reality television is, that’s nearly as boring as reality television. There are some fun details; the “solution” to the book’s “mystery” is at least a little clever. The ending works; the ending is a good, classic John Constantine ending (as far as I know, having not read much Constantine).

But: Rankin probably hasn’t read much Junji Ito. The DARK ENTRIES team tries to do monsters-popping-out-of-the-dark scares. Those are movie-scares, not comic-scares. The “Oh, I’m surprised and I will jump out of my movie seat because I’m surprised” scares. Those don’t work. It’s obvious those don’t work. They don’t work in books; god knows why a novelist would think they’d work in comics.

Junji Ito’s comics are scary. NIJIGAHARA HOLOGRAPH was scary. Scary because they’re comics. Comics take fucking forever to make. A comic where you’re forced to imagine a person spending fucking forever to create something where the images don't add up, something that’s wrong, that's diseased, something that doesn’t satisfy the “rules”? That can be scary. But: that’s not DARK ENTRIES. DARK ENTRIES is just another installment in the commercially successful adventures of John Constantine. What’s supposed to be scary about that?

I got angry after I read DARK ENTRIES. (I was happy how angry I got, that a comic could still get me angry, that I’m not completely apathetic about them. Ooh: I got so angry.) Monsters, spooky-creatures, everything DARK ENTRIES trucks in is bullshit. Rankin, as a crime novelist, seems to know that; as a novelist. HIDE AND SEEK doesn’t have monsters; it doesn’t need them—it has people. HIDE AND SEEK, if it has a theme—no, if crime fiction has a theme, it’s that there are no demons or devils out there causing the evils of the world, that blaming the wrongs of life on monsters from religious myths is what children do, that the evils of the world are the result of people, people being greedy, needy, evil, or, hell, just bored.

There’s a book I read a few years ago, Bernard Lefkowitz’s OUR GUYS-- it got made into an Eric Stoltz Movie of the Week. The book is about how a suburban high school football team gang-raped a retarded girl with a broom handle, and how they basically got away with it. But that’s not the bad part. Here’s the bad part: there’s a classmate of the football team named Mari, and when the football team gets charged with raping a retarded girl with a broom handle, Mari gets an idea. She befriends the retarded girl—she becomes maybe the first friend that retarded girl ever has. And she wears a wire and tape records their conversations and convinces the retarded girl to talk about how much she enjoyed having sex with the broom handle, so she can help the football team avoid prosecution.

Satan is bullshit. Satan doesn’t need to exist; Mari already does.

 

Giant-Sized Wait, What? #1 Now Available For Your Ears....

Like a time traveler arriving to warn us all from the long-forgotten bygone era of Sunday, Giant-Sized Wait, What? #1 is available for your listening pleasure. In it, Graeme and I talk, approximately a week late at the time, about the announced purchase of Marvel by Disney. (Sure. See if we do that shit again. We emailed each other just yesterday about discussing the recent DC restructuring, but decided to do so would only invite further seismic activity along Ye Olde Direct Marketplace Fault Line.)

Seriously, though, you may find some enjoyment in this--it's like, um, steampunk comic market analysis! Or...something.

It's also long (hence the name, but also to distinguish it from the other episode of Wait, What? we recorded that's still being sonically sliced, diced and pureed for eventual consumption)--like 90+ minutes long, so it's good for commutes, and mindless wage-earning drone work, and digging a deep, deep grave in which you can finally dispose of that hateful corpse that's been silently nagging you for so long...

Some notes:

1) The Hibbs open letter to Disney we mention is here.

2) Laura Hudson's article is, uh, here? Or maybe, uh, here?

3)For me, anyway, the key to understanding why Disney was hot for Marvel, even with movie deals in place, is what Heidi mentions here in her first bullet/section point.

Hope you enjoy!

And what rough beast, its hour come round at last, slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?

[ONE EDIT: 9/9/09 9:54 PM, scroll to the next brackets]

As you may have now heard, Paul Levitz is now out at DC, and DC Comics will now become "DC Entertainment", headed by Diane Nelson.

This is, I think, much bigger news than the Disney/Marvel thing from last week. Paul certainly has his shares of detractors, but I've always thought of him as the Smartest Man in Comics, and absolutely one of the key Architects and Protectors of the DM.

Rich Johnston (of all people) has probably the best "eulogy" for Paul over on Bleeding Cool.

[HERE'S THE EDIT: Kurt Busiek nails it even better than Rich]

I think Paul is a Class Act, and there's nothing more that I fear than Warners completely ruining the DM. I'm absolutely shattered by this news -- I was hoping we'd have AT LEAST another decade with Paul at the helm, and now everything -- everything -- is up in the air.

Chances are that, by 2012, nothing in comics will even remotely resemble what it does today.

You can read Paul's farewell statement over here. I appreciate the fact that Paul specifically mentions retailers. He also uses the words "comics" as a noun five times.

You can read an introduction from Diane Nelson over here. This is probably the most relevant paragraph:

DC Entertainment’s mission is to deeply integrate the DC brand and characters into all of Warner Bros.’ creative production and distribution businesses, while maintaining the integrity of the properties and DC’s longstanding commitment to and respect for writers, creators and artists. The founding of DC Entertainment is about Warner Bros. taking DC to the next level and giving DC an even greater degree of focus and prioritization in all the businesses in which we operate—films, television, home entertainment, digital, consumer products and videogames.

She doesn't use the noun "comics" even one time.

That terrifies me.

I'll probably have more later, but right about now I have to start checking in my comics shipment...

-B

STRANGEly fascinating

Wow, I really loved Marvel's STRANGE TALES #1.

If this was an attempt to "counter-program" DC's WEDNESDAY COMICS, it's a pretty solid drubbing -- there's a tremendous amount of energy and passion on display on most of the strips here that I'm finding lacking from WC (which is beautiful, and all, but I found myself suddenly stopping reading WC at around week 3, saying I'll read again when the whole thing is complete, which I guess will get me there around 9/23)

Like with most anthologies, there's not a lot here of real lasting and permanent value, but even the slightest pieces are inventive and fun -- for example, Paul Pope's "Inhumans" story is nearly an episode of Seinfeld on the nothing-happens scale; it is eight pages about trying to open a can of dog food... but what a glorius eight pages it is!

There's some seriously mental work on here: who would have ever (EVER!) thought you'd see a Junko Mizuno or Jason "Spider-Man" story? Or Dash Shaw doing "Dr. Strange"? Man, pure beauty!

There were a few bits that didn't work for me: I thought the Johnny Ryan pages weren't "Johnny Ryan enough" -- I wanted to see more feces and blood and cursing! And I was oddly cold from the Peter Bagge "Hulk" story, especially for something that was so famously "drawered" for being... too something or another. While his "Megalomaniacal Spider-Man" was pretty on-the-nose, this first third of "Hulk" almost felt too sit-com-y for my taste.

The real winner for me, however, was Nick Bertozzi's "M.O.D.O.K." story, which got me dangerously close to a tear. It was a real winner. IN fact, between that and the Pope story, it seems to me that these cartoonists are probably better off to not do the "big" Marvel characters, as there is more to be mined from the c-listers.

I don't know really how to rack this book -- it doesn't belong in the Marvel section of the store at all. Marvel's standard readership isn't going to know how to react to this book, whatsoever, and I don't think it will be all that great to "lead" Marvel readers to a wider set of styles.

Its also a book that seems to REQUIRE hand-selling -- at least three quarters of the people I pointed to it had no idea it was out (even staring them in the face), but each of them was "Holy Shit! I want!!"

Am I the only person who finds it deeply ironic that this came out the same week as the announcement of the Disney deal? I wouldn't count a lot on projects like this coming too much in the New World Order, but maybe I'll be surprised?

Overall, I thought this was an EXCELLENT comic book. What did YOU think?

-B

Arriving THURSDAY 9/10/2009

Please do not forget that, thanks to Labor Day, New Comics Day in the US is not until THURSDAY this week!

2000 AD PACK AUG 2009
2000 AD PACK JUL 2009
ADVENTURE COMICS #2
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #604
ANGEL ONLY HUMAN #2 (OF 4)
ARCHIE & FRIENDS #135
ARCHIE DIGEST #257
BLACKEST NIGHT BATMAN #2 (OF 3)
BOOSTER GOLD #24
BPRD 1947 #3 (OF 5)
CARTOON NETWORK ACTION PACK #41
COMPLETE DRACULA #3 (OF 5)
DARK AVENGERS/UNCANNY X-MEN EXODUS DAX
DARK REIGN LIST AVENGERS ONE SHOT
DARK REIGN YOUNG AVENGERS #4 (OF 5) DKR
DEAD #4 KINGDOM OF FLIES
DEAD AT 17 AFTERBIRTH #4 (OF 4)
DEAD SPACE EXTRACTION (ONE SHOT)
DESCENDANT #3 (OF 3)
DMZ #45
DOCTOR WHO ONGOING #3
DOOM PATROL #2
ELEPHANTMEN #21 (RES)
ENDERS GAME COMMAND SCHOOL #1 (OF 5)
FALLEN ANGEL REBORN #3
FARSCAPE DARGOS TRIAL #2
FINDING NEMO REEF RESCUE #3 (OF 4)
FREDDY JASON ASH NIGHTMARE WARRIORS #3 (OF 6)
G-MAN CAPE CRISIS #2 (OF 5)
GREEN LANTERN CORPS #40 (BLACKEST NIGHT)
HELLBOY WILD HUNT #6 (OF 8)
HOUSE OF MYSTERY #17
HULK TEAM-UP ONE SHOT
INCREDIBLE HERCULES #134
KICK ASS #7
LIFE AND TIMES OF SAVIOR 28 #5
LILLIM #5 (OF 5)
MARVEL ADVENTURES SUPER HEROES #15
MARVEL SUPER HERO SQUAD #1 (OF 4)
MARVEL ZOMBIES RETURN #2
MARVELS PROJECT #2 (OF 8)
MAURA #2
MODELS INC #1 (OF 4) (RES)
MUPPET ROBIN HOOD #4 (OF 4)
NOMAD GIRL WITHOUT A WORLD #1 (OF 4)
POLITICAL POWER #2 BARACK OBAMA BK MKT ED
PUNISHER FRANK CASTLE MAX #74
RED HERRING #2 (OF 6)
RED ROBIN #4
RED SONJA #48
ROTTEN #3
SECRET SIX #13
SHIELD #1
SONIC THE HEDGEHOG #204
STAR TREK NERO #2
STORMWATCH PHD #23
SUPERMAN WORLD OF NEW KRYPTON #7 (OF 12)
THICKER THAN BLOOD #3 (OF 3) (RES)
THOR TALES OF ASGARD BY LEE & KIRBY #5 (OF 6)
THUNDERBOLTS #135 DKR
TITANS #17
TYRESE GIBSONS MAYHEM #2 (OF 3)
ULTIMATE COMICS AVENGERS #2
UNWRITTEN #5
VAMPIRELLA SECOND COMING #1 SUYDAM CVR
WAR OF KINGS WHO WILL RULE ONE-SHOT
WARLORD #6
WEDNESDAY COMICS #10 (OF 12)
WITCHBLADE #130 SEJIC CVR A
X-MEN FOREVER #7

Books / Mags / Stuff
ACHEWOOD HC VOL 02 WORST SONG PLAYED
ALL & SUNDRY UNCOLLECTED WORK HC 2004-2009
ANGEL AFTER THE FALL HC VOL 05 AFTERMATH
CAPTAIN BRITAIN AND MI 13 TP VOL 03 VAMPIRE STATE
CINEFEX #119 OCT 2009
CLASSIC MARVEL FIGURINE COLL MAG #100 BANSHEE
DC SUPERHERO FIGURINE COLL MAG #17 STARFIRE
DC SUPERHERO FIGURINE COLL MAG #20 BOOSTER GOLD
EMILY THE STRANGE TP VOL 02
FANTASTIC FOUR LOST ADVENTURES BY STAN LEE TP
FULL FRONTAL NERDITY TP VOL 02 YOUVE GOT THE TOUCH
GIRAFFES IN MY HAIR A ROCK N ROLL LIFE HC
GOTHAM CENTRAL HC VOL 02 JOKERS AND MADMEN
GRIMWOODS DAUGHTER HC
GUARDIANS OF GALAXY TP VOL 02 WAR OF KINGS BOOK 01
JAMES ROBINSONS COMPLETE WILDCATS TP (RES)
JUDGE DREDD COMPLETE CASE FILES TP VOL 13
JUDGE DREDD MEGAZINE #288
LIFE & TIMES MARTHA WASHINGTON IN 21ST CENTURY HC
LITTLE LULU TP VOL 20 BAWLPLAYERS & OTHER STORIES
LOVE & ROCKETS NEW STORIES TP VOL 02
MARVEL 1602 PREM HC
MARVEL SUPERHERO TEAM UP TP
PAUL THE SAMURAI COMPLETE WORKS TP
RED MONKEY DOUBLE HAPPINESS BOOK HC
RUNAWAYS GOOD DIE YOUNG PREM HC
SAVAGE SWORD OF CONAN TP VOL 06
SQUIRREL MACHINE HC
STRONTIUM DOG TRAITOR TO HIS KIND TP
SUPER HUMAN RESOURCES TP SEASON 01
TANGENT SUPERMANS REIGN TP VOL 02
TOYFARE #147 DC DIRECT BATMAN CVR
ULTIMATUM SPIDER-MAN PREM HC
WEST COAST BLUES HC
X-MEN MISFITS GN VOL 01
YOTSUBA & ! GN VOL 01
YTHAQ PREM HC NO ESCAPE

What looks good to YOU?

-B

Abhay: "3 Jacks" by Ann Nocenti, David Aja, Matt Hollingsworth, and Chris Eliopoulos

So, “3 Jacks”—pretty much the best Marvel comic of the year so far, right? Tim O’Neil agrees; I agree; I don’t know who else has weighed in. “3 Jacks” is a 13-page back-up feature in DAREDEVIL #500, created by Ann Nocenti, David Aja, Matt Hollingsworth and Chris Eliopoulos. The rest of the comic is inert; not worth anyone’s time. But: “3 Jacks,” everybody! Where do we start? Well, let’s start with the first page.

d21y The opening panel: buildings in silhouette, with the Coney Island Parachute Jump tower above the skyline. I don’t know much about the Parachute Jump tower, but: at the angle chosen, the way Aja draws it, does it resembles a cross to you?

Our metal-crucifix is located dead center on the page, not off to the side, not one detail of many—dead center. Flanking it, we have two panels: one, a woman praying in silhouette; the other, a man yelling “Keep ‘Im Close, Damn It” to the heavens. Both characters point in direct lines towards the cross; both are talking to God in their own way.

(Maybe that's something representative of Nocenti’s run on DAREDEVIL in general-- an absurdly straight-faced religious image on one end of a teeter-totter, with an almost-corny image straight out of Will Eisner keeping it in balance? Maybe; not for me to say: a handful of issues of her DAREDEVIL run made an impression on me, but I don’t think I’ve ever read that entire run tip-to-toe. I have no claims to being an expert on the Nocenti run, and this essay will unfortunately be limited as such).

The other panels? A small set of visual jokes: (i) a panel of a bullseye but with no way of telling if it's from the villain's mask or the poster with “Live Human Target” scrawled on it; (ii) a poster for the “Human Blockhead” a panel away from Daredevil being struck in the head; (iii) my favorite is the word “Clone” cut off from the window of what we’re later told is the “Cyclone Bar”—I don’t know if that’s a joke by David Aja & Chris Eliopoulos on Aja’s appropriation of Dave Mazzucchelli’s style circa 1980-whatever, but I’d like to think Aja & Eliopoulos were being self-deprecating.

* * *

So we open with a distant steel God towering over moments solemn, and silly, and empty, and violent, with a man in a devil costume as far from God on the page as can be (his arms also akimbo though). Fine; that’s nice. How does the comic end? Does Daredevil win the spiritual battle the first page sets out? Well: let’s skip to the end! Here’s the last panel:

d22o Again, we see the Parachute Tower but the angle is different. The skyline is higher—and the man in the devil costume is now at the center of page, the city on one end of him, the crucifix on the other, restored to equilibrium, in balance with his environment … though there’s still a gap between him and that crucifix, still that gap. He’s almost a silhouette like the rest of his environment, but no, not quite—colorist Matt Hollingsworth makes sure there’s still just that tiniest hint of red. A little taint of sin that’s not washing off, a little bit of the devil costume peeking through.

Is that last panel a spoiler? No: because that panel in fact is shown on the page immediately preceding the story.

The story of 3 Jacks is there’s a fight between Bullseye and Daredevil at the Coney Island amusement park, and then that fight ends and Daredevil runs off into the night. The end.

But the way that story is structured is this: we start with the end of the fight, the story goes beyond the end of the fight as we watch Daredevil recover from the fight with two people who have witnessed the fight, Larry and Gina. Larry, Gina and Daredevil then talk about the middle of the fight which we see in flashback (we never see the beginning of the fight; the beginning of the fight doesn’t matter—Daredevil and Bullseye will always be fighting).

When we finally reach the ending? We wind up back where we started from-- like I said: the last image of the story is the same image as on the page literally preceding the story itself. It’s like a spiral.

hitch

The comic is about a character trapped in a spiral of violence, not explicitly but in the form the story is presented. Daredevil has no way out of that spiral-- the only thing his story can ever be about is the process of Daredevil picking himself up and running into battle again. Not just a spiral of violence: maybe one way to look at the story is it's about how Daredevil is in a loop of constantly being knocked out of spiritual alignment and struggling to restore his relationship with his faith.

So, wait: I'm making "3 Jacks" sound like a totally boring bummer about, like, Jesus or something, aren't I? It's not that. You get to see Daredevil use his radar powers and his lie-detecting powers. Daredevil kicks Bullseye in the face. Daredevil fights Bullseye throughout the comic. The Marvel comics goods are delivered in those 13 pages, besides everything else that’s going on. And by David Aja, Matt Hollingsworth and Chris Eliopoulos, no less. Silent pages, silhouette flashbacks, heartbeat scrawls, graphic shapes, extreme close-ups on big-wide-open eyes, etc. Aaah, comics, everybody…

Plus: I just like Larry and Gina, the two witnesss I mentioned before, the praying girl and the yelling guy from the first page. They represent aspects of Daredevil’s father and mother. But besides that? They’re just funny characters in their own right. There’s comic business with a hammer; the 10 Commandments are re-written; Larry and Gina have interesting things to say for themselves. It’s not an extraordinary amount of characterization. It’s a Daredevil comic, and Larry & Gina are stock comic book characters—“precocious schoolgirl” and “washed-up boxer” don't exactly break new ground. But, you know: they’re really not the worst company you could ask for from a Marvel comic. The lead story of the issue is about ninjas screaming at each other; I’m happy to stick with Larry and Gina instead.

* * *

The heart of the comic is Bullseye has thrown three photos into Daredevil’s chest, saying “Dead Center! You just don’t’ know it yet” as he did so.

d23a The three photos turn out to be meaningful to Daredevil—to the reader, too, if they knows their Daredevil “lore.” If they can put images into context.

Which: I mean, that’s kind of writing comics right there, isn’t it? You pick out still images, little bits of the past frozen in time, and you throw them into another person, hope they stick…? If Ann Nocenti is a character in this story, she’s not the old yelling-guy or the praying girl or the distant steel God; she’s Bullseye. She can’t kill Daredevil—all she can do is hurt him as much as she can. “Dead Center! You just don’t know it yet.” She’s sort of bragging about how good a job she’s doing in the story itself, man. Shit, I kind of dig that.

* * *

There’s more: Daredevil, Larry and Gina are all dealing with their relationships with their parents (which I’m thinking might possibly be metaphorical); Daredevil is "saved" by the prayers of a girl who “hates God” and Larry pleading to a cross to "Keep 'Im Close"; that fantastic page of Gina lying to Daredevil (if I understood the concept of grace, let alone cared, maybe I’d have something to say there); the final images of Larry with a hammer in his hands, which… carpentry? Isn’t that something? You know: from the Bible or Jesus or one of those? Or wait: maybe I’m thinking of that show HOME IMPROVEMENT? Maybe "3 JACKS" is actually a metaphor for how men are pigs HARF HARF HARF (am I right, ladies?). It’s 13 pages, but I'll be damned if it isn't a dense fucker.

Tim O'Neil concluded his review by stating "If Marvel publishes a better story this year I'll eat my hat." I'll go one better: if Marvel publishes a better story this year, Tim O'Neil will eat every article of clothing in my closet, at gunpoint. It's your move, MARVEL DIVAS. Winner takes O'Neil.

* * *

MISCELLANEOUS NOTES ABOUT THE REST OF THE ISSUE:

** Some crap about ninjas, again...?

** What’s the story with Billy Tan’s pages here? They're not professional-quality comic pages. If I had to guess, I’d guess they’d lined up a real talent for this List comic, but the real talent blew it, something came up, Ashton Kutcher's next movie needed a hovercraft designed, whatever; yaddah yaddah yaddah, some editor goes to Tan at the last minute and asked him to rush out pages. That would be my guess what happened, if I had to make a guess. That would be as nice a thing as I could say about Billy Tan's work here: maybe an editor forced him to do that. Or an alternate theory: maybe someone lost a bet. You know, like one of those TRADING PLACES bets. Maybe someone bet Don Ameche $1 that if they gave Billy Tan a real comic book artist's job, he would start to draw like a real comic book artist. Don Ameche won that one; Don Ameche's the big winner. Except... except for the being dead part. Don Ameche: no longer with us. Great in HEAVEN CAN WAIT. But very, very dead. But dead and one U.S. dollar richer, so who's laughing? Well, not Don Ameche. He's dead. I mean, it's kind of a bummer if you think about it, Don Ameche being dead, or just death in general. That's nothing to laugh about. That's sad, really. He was really great in HEAVEN CAN WAIT. It's all just so temporary. We'll never know how Don Ameche would have spent his Billy Tan dollar. You know, this all seemed like a very simple joke at first, but fucker sort of got away from me, I don't know what to tell you...

** The Brubaker DAREDEVIL run ended in the issue. For me, and this is completely unfair, but: that run was like watching air rush out of a balloon. It started so well with that prison arc, but—and this is the unfair part: Mr. Fear…? NO, THANK YOU. As soon as Mr. Fear showed up, I split. How unfair is that? I’ll read all manners of crap, just the crappiest crap that ever crapped, without complaint, happy as can be, but: “Mr. Fear? No, no: fuck you. Daredevil was better back when he fought the guy who was like an Owl, but I am not putting up with this Mr. Fear horse-shit. Fuck you, God!” What a terrible job it is to write mainstream comics. How could Ed Brubaker or anyone conceivably see that I’d draw the line super-arbitrarily at Mr. Fear? There’s no earthly way Ed Brubaker could ever guess that in a million years. And yet: I blame him anyways.

** The last Ed Brubaker comic I read was that new Captain America thing where it was all “Hey, Captain America—we have to get you back to the island using the Constant Sawyer Hurley.” Which was a nice comic, but I remember thinking, “Hey, maybe Ed Brubaker watches that show LOST.” And then Daredevil #500—was it just me or did his story have an identical flashback structure to the season finale of LOST? It was probably written before the finale—or maybe, but…? Am I just seeing things? It's probably just a coincidence. I’m probably just seeing things. Still: I hope the next issue of CRIMINAL explains what that crazy smoke monster is. Smoke monster is my favorite character.

** Or here’s a theory: maybe the night before his pages were due, Billy Tan was walking down a street when he saw a psychotic clown trying to rape a little kid. And he was like, “Get off that kid, Bozo! I’ll make you a sad clown. WITH MY BILLY TAN FISTS.” And then they fought, like bare-knuckles, all night long, man versus clown, and yeah, Billy Tan named his fists after himself, but I think that’s manly, why not. (The clown in this story symbolizes the Buddha on the road; I learned it from reading you, Ann Nocenti). And he wins in the end, Billy Tan wins and saves the kid from being clown-molested, but the price is DARK LIST pages you can look at without feeling sadness in your eyeballs. But that’s a small price to pay. Maybe we all owe Billy Tan an apology. He very well might be a hero to children everywhere, including the child inside all of us. The child inside all of us that is deathly afraid of a clown touching our peener without consent.

** Wait, wait: if Disney owns ABC, and ABC has LOST on it, does that mean Marvel comics kind of does own the Smoke Monster? Smoke Monster's my favorite character.

** Why did Lynn Varley’s colors get destroyed in the reprint? What happened there? The issue I remember seeing had these dark, moody colors. The colors in the reprint—what a bright, shiny, happy comic about Russian Roulette. “It’s the feel good Russian Roulette comic book of the year.” Is that how it looked when it was originally printed? Maybe I'm so used to seeing the old, worn-out, grey, torn-up copies that I never imagined what it looked like when it was brand new. Same exact thing happens when I look at your mom, naked. When she's having sex with Don Ameche's ghost. Dammit. Goddammit. Oh, I shouldn't have even tried; couldn't let it go. Goddammit, I really thought I could save the whole Don Ameche thing, in the eleventh hour, and it's just-- where's the goddamn Cocoon when you need it? Don Ameche Joke Cocoon, you have failed me for the last time!! This started out so earnestly, with the crucifix and the Jesus and the spirals, and ... What happened, Internet? If only keyboards came with delete keys...

Wait, What? Episode 5.1: Ultimate Expectations Are Better Than Great Ones, Apparently...

Just in time for the long weekend, Graeme and I roll out the first installment of Wait, What? Episode 5.1. While we'll probably record something to thrash out the whole Disney/Marvel situation, Episode 5 of Wait, What? was recorded the day before, so you're free from idle speculation about the state of Howard The Duck's pants (for now). Instead, Graeme and I talk about Blackest Night #2, what the hell is up with the Spectre, Ultimate Comics Spider-Man #1, Ultimate Avengers #1 (or whatever the hell it's called), that weirdo John Byrne Millennium crossover issue and much, much more.

Thanks for listening!

Arriving 9/2/2009

So, Disney buying Marvel, eh? Yeah, that's likely to be a game-changer.

No real commentary from me today on that, however -- Ben broke his arm yesterday, so I lost most of the day to the Emergency Room (and, let me tell you, if you have an injured kid in San Francisco, you'd be REALLY smart to take them to the new Pediatric Emergency Room at California Pacific Medical Center on California St., because those people were AWESOME, 100% kid-oriented [They have a staffer JUST to explain procedures to kids in kid-language!], astonishingly professional, and we didn't have that wait-to-entry that I normally associate with ERs -- we had a doctor to see in like 15 minutes. I'd never call going to an ER "pleasant", but that was pretty darn close!), and I've got to finish the order form to boot (plus, huh, first of the month tomorrow, got to pay some bills before I go today...) -- I'll think more about that tomorrow and Wednesday...

Anyway, sold looking week o' comical goodness...

AGENTS OF ATLAS #10
AUTHORITY #14
BATMAN #690
BATMAN CONFIDENTIAL #33
BETTY & VERONICA DIGEST #197
BLACK PANTHER 2 #8
BOYS #34
BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER #28 CHEN CVR
BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER #28 JEANTY CVR
CABLE #18
CARS RADIATOR SPRINGS #1
CHEW #4
CURSED PIRATE GIRL #2 (OF 3)
DARING MYSTERY COMICS #1 70TH ANNIV SPECIAL
DEAD RUN #4
DEADPOOL #15
DO ANDROIDS DREAM OF ELECTRIC SHEEP #3 (OF 24)
EXILES #6
FALL OUT TOY WORKS #1 (OF 5)
FINAL CRISIS AFTERMATH RUN #5 (OF 6)
FROM THE ASHES #4
GHOST RIDERS HEAVENS ON FIRE #2 (OF 6)
GREEK STREET #3
GRIMJACK MANX CAT #2
HERCULES KNIVES OF KUSH #2 (OF 5) A CVR MARKO
HOTWIRE #4 (OF 4) A CVR PUGH
HOUSE OF M MASTERS OF EVIL #2 (OF 4)
IMMORTAL WEAPONS #2 (OF 5)
INCOGNITO #6
INVINCIBLE IRON MAN #17
IRON MAN ARMOR WARS #2 (OF 4)
IRREDEEMABLE #6
JERSEY GODS #7
JONAH HEX #47
JUSTICE LEAGUE CRY FOR JUSTICE #3 (OF 7)
LAST RESORT #2
LOONEY TUNES #178
LUKE CAGE NOIR #2 (OF 4)
MAGOG #1
MARVEL ZOMBIES RETURN #1
MICE TEMPLAR DESTINY #3
MIGHTY #8
MYSTIC COMICS #1 70TH ANNIV SPECIAL
NORTH 40 #3 (OF 6)
NORTHLANDERS #20
OFFICIAL INDEX TO MARVEL UNIVERSE #9
RAWBONE #4 (OF 4)
RED TORNADO #1 (OF 6)
RESURRECTION VOL 2 #3
ROBERT E HOWARD THULSA DOOM #1
SAVAGE DRAGON #152
SCOURGE OF GODS FALL #3 (OF 3)
SOLOMON GRUNDY #7 (OF 7) (BLACKEST NIGHT)
STAR WARS INVASION #3 (OF 5)
STARR THE SLAYER #1 (OF 4)
STRANGE ADVENTURES #7 (OF 8)
STRANGE TALES #1 (OF 3)
SUPERGIRL ANNUAL #1
SWEET TOOTH #1
THE GOOD THE BAD & THE UGLY #3
TORCH #1 (OF 8)
ULTIMATE COMICS SPIDER-MAN #2
VERONICA #196
WEDNESDAY COMICS #9 (OF 12)
WITCHFINDER IN THE SERVICE OF ANGELS #3 (OF 5)
YOUNG LIARS #18

Books / Mags / Stuff
ABSOLUTE V FOR VENDETTA HC
AMULET SC VOL 02 STONEKEEPERS CURSE
ANGEL BLOOD AND TRENCHES TP VOL 01
BATMAN GOTHAM AFTER MIDNIGHT TP
BLEACH TP VOL 28
CLASSIC MARVEL FIGURINE COLL MAG #101 WAR MACHINE
CSI INTERNS GN VOL 01 (OF 2)
DC LIBRARY JLA BY GEORGE PEREZ HC VOL 01
DC SUPERHERO FIGURINE COLL MAG #18 M MANHUNTER
DC SUPERHERO FIGURINE COLL MAG #19 NIGHTWING
DC SUPERHERO FIGURINE COLL MAG #34 BLUE BEETLE
DC SUPERHERO FIGURINE COLL MAG #35 BIZARRO
DEAD IRONS HC
DMZ TP VOL 07 WAR POWERS
ESSENTIAL SUB-MARINER TP VOL 01
FOODBOY GN (OCT032442)
GI JOE ORIGINS TP VOL 01
GROWN UPS ARE DUMB NO OFFENSE SC
HONEY LICKERS SORORITY GN VOL 02 (A)
HULK GRAY PREM HC
INCREDIBLES FAMILY MATTERS TP
JSA HC VOL 05 BLACK ADAM AND ISIS
LORDS OF MISRULE HC
MARVEL SUPER HERO SQUAD TP HERO UP DIGEST HERO CVR
MARVEL ZOMBIES ARMY OF DARKNESS TP
NOCTURNALS HC VOL 02 DARK FOREVER AND OTHER TALES PX ED
NOCTURNALS HC VOL 02 DARK FOREVER AND OTHER TALES REG ED
PROCESS RECESS HC VOL 03 HALLOWED SEAM
REBEL GN
SAVAGE SWORD OF CONAN TP VOL 06
SILENT MOBIUS COMPLETE ED GN VOL 01
SPY VS SPY TP DANGER INTRIGUE STUPIDITY
SPY VS SPY TP MASTERS OF MAYHEM
SPY VS SPY TP MISSIONS OF MADNESS
STAR TREK ARCHIVES TP VOL 06 BEST OF ALTERNATE UNIVERSES
SUPERMAN NEW KRYPTON HC VOL 02
WOLVERINE AND POWER PACK TP WILD PACK DIGEST
WONDERFUL WIZARD OZ HC
ZOMNIBUS GN VOL 01

What looks good to YOU?

-B

Claremont's X-Men 2: How John Byrne Changed The World

More Claremont retrospective! This time, the first two years of the Byrne run, wherein everything comes together remarkably quickly, and I compare John Byrne to Joe Sinnott. Or something.

Ignoring the fill-in in UNCANNY X-MEN #106 (Although: Chris Claremont and Bill Mantlo together! There should've been much more of this), #107 starts off Claremont's third year on the title with an important milestone: The last issue before it truly becomes the X-Men we recognize. Oh, so many things are almost there, but it's as if Dave Cockrum was holding Claremont back from achieving full Claremont or something; as soon as John Byrne and Terry Austen appear in #108, everything clicks into place: The characters' speech patterns, the "giving your life force to save existence" soon-to-be-cliche makes its first appearance (including Storm saying "It is my life to give, my friend" by way of explanation), the overly elaborate soap opera - space pirate and furry Corsair is Cyclops' dad?!? - the book just suddenly becomes the X-Men through some unexplainable magic, much in the same way that Lee and Kirby's Fantastic Four suddenly makes sense when Joe Sinnott starts inking Kirby in the late #40s. By the end of that third year, Claremont has already worked in his first psychic mind-rape.

(It's possible that one of the reasons that the early Claremont/Byrne issues seems like the book makes this leap into a more pure X-Men-ness is because that run has become the touchstone for most fans, and subsequent creators, as the "best" X-Men run ever, but it's more than that; Claremont's writing suddenly becomes much clearer and more focused when Byrne appears. I don't know if there was an obvious reason behind the scenes - The editor's still Archie Goodwin throughout, so it's not that...? - but the shift is noticable and somewhat odd, when reading the issues in quick succession.)

By the book's fourth year, it's made it to monthly status in time to really start working out the kinks; oddly enough, the fourth year feels very much like the first two, in that Claremont revisits old X-Men villains and stories (Magneto, Sauron, the Savage Land, Sunfire), but at the same time, you can tell that he's also more in control of the characters and the plot than he was previously - Magneto's appearance pays off months of foreshadowing by showing Cyclops' fears about the new team "not being ready" and getting their asses handed to them, for example, leading to the first period (of many, it becomes a favored Claremont trick when he wants to switch things up) where the world believes they're dead, which allows him to show Scott and Jean outside of their relationship for pretty much the first time in their history. Unlike before, where it felt as if Claremont was using old characters and ideas because he didn't know what else to do, this time it feels as if he's comfortable and knows what he's up to.

The confidence is matched by Byrne and Austen's incredibly slick visuals. I mean that as much as an insult as a compliment, I have to admit; as revered as the art in these issues is - and as good as it is, as well - it really is very much eye candy, and at times overly glossy and soulless. Byrne's women, in particular, are almost distractingly... I don't know what the word is... vapid? glamorous, in a bad way? generic? They lack personality, despite what Claremont puts in their mouths (Now, that doesn't sound right), and occasionally the art feels so... professional, and impersonal, and "perfect," that it pulls me out of the experience and leaves me cold. Am I alone in that?

The comfort and confidence - and newfound success and acclaim - were making Claremont and Byrne more bold, though; by the end of the fourth year of Claremont's run on the book, he'd put the team back together with one exception... and that's because he was already at work laying the groundwork for the Dark Phoenix storyline, which would change superhero comics - and Uncanny X-Men in particular - in ways that he couldn't even have imagined.

Malthusian Superheroics: Chris reviews JUSTICE SOCIETY OF AMERICA

Fellow Savage David Uzumeri is at the Toronto Fan Expo and he's liveblogging Marvel and DC's panels. Friday's DC panel featured a discussion of recap pages, with Len Wein positing that "we used to work under the theory, which I don't think is true anymore, that every issue is somebody's first issue" and Didio affirming his anti-recap-page position. Earlier this year Didio said he thought "the writers should be able to introduce readers to the ongoing story within the issue itself."

Let's take a look at that then, shall we?

Bill Willingham, Matthew Sturges and Jesus Merino started a run last month in JUSTICE SOCIETY OF AMERICA #29. JSA is a book with a sprawling cast of legacy heroes a concept Willingham and Sturges embrace, keeping nearly all of former writer Geoff Johns's bloated team around for their first issue. There are thirteen Society members on the cover, fifteen on the opening page, and by the end of the first sequence twenty one members total, including two introduced in this issue. Soon, the team follows a distress beacon and are ambushed by a mysterious team of twenty one villains, who appear to be part of the "Global Ultra Society of Dread" and have "trained themselves to take on specific members of the JSA."

Fortunately, no JSAer attempts to fight someone not specifically trained for them, and the GUSoD correctly guessed which of the Society's two dozen members would show up for the fight. Meanwhile, one of the new members sneaks up on Mr. Terrific, stabbing him repeatedly in the back for some reason.

Taken as the twenty ninth (or really, the one hundred and somethingteenth, given the previous JSA series and recent annuals and Kingdom Come one-shots) issue, this book borders on coherent. A less charitable person would question why Willingham and Sturges open their run by apparently killing the Society's most prominent black member while writing out Jakeem Thunder and Amazing Man. One might also question why they turned Obsidian, the team's only LGBT member, into an inanimate black egg. But that isn't my primary concern.

Where this book utterly fails is accessiblity to that fabled reader for whom this is their first issue. Sturges and Willingham have a sizable following from their work on Vertigo's Fables family of titles, and this issue was heralded as a "New Era." It stands to follow that JSA #29 is designed to be a jumping-on point for Fables fans and curious readers alike. And yet, the first issue is crammed full of forty characters, over half of which are never identified by name.

It's one thing not to name cannon fodder villains, though by implying each one was handpicked to counteract a Society member should make them more significant. Even as a dedicated superhero nerd, I can't identify many of them, and my list of characters in this comic includes such luminaries as "Metal Dude from Flash(?)", "Luchador Guy" and "Extreme Legolas".

Even more crucially, half of the Society members aren't identified. Stargirl, one of the only characters with a plot throughline besides "stand around then get ambushed" is repeatedly addressed by friend and foe alike, but "Stargirl" -- or even "Courtney", her government name -- appear nowhere in JSA #29. Power Girl, Society chairperson and star of a new ongoing series, isn't named either. She gets two lines: "What's wrong, Alan?" and "Bring it, cupcake!"

This week's JSA #30 somewhat addresses this issue by having people refer to Stargirl by name, and someone appeals to "Pee Gee" as their leader, though the context of the panels makes it so that it appears as if "Pee Gee" is a pet name for Alan Scott. If DC's comments about being concerned about things reading better in the trade, it's possible by the end of these six issues, every JSA member will be named, and perhaps even given a distinguishing characteristic.

In this week's issue, the Global Ultra Society of Dread is dispatched with the help of Doctor Fate, who one can infer is a new Dr. Fate, I guess? I either missed or blocked out the story that introduced this new Fate, but I can only assume there's a good reason Willingham and Sturges introduced a twenty-second member to the team in this issue.

I know that this sort of questioning can be intellectually dishonest, and I don't know how much a recap page crammed with dozens of headshots and names could've helped. But at least it would allow people to Google the names of the characters. Even as a longtime DCU follower, this book is AWFUL to try and follow.

I can only imagine what some poor soul brought in by Willingham and Sturges's names must be going through.

 

Wedding Belles

ARCHIE #600: It has been a really long time since I've last read an issue of ARCHIE. Well, a proper one, at least -- I glanced through one of those "new look" issues, but threw it across the room in disgust.

So I was a little surprised as to just how much I enjoyed this first part of "Archie Marries Veronica"

Some people, I guess, might object to this being an "Elseworlds" (Archie walks one night along "Memory Lane", but decides to walk UP the path), but it seems to me that the Archie line depends on being essentially changeless (If slightly out of tune with what teems are really like), but, at the same time, moving away from that eternal formula can seemingly yield fairly alright stories.

So, yeah, it's a little strange to see Archie Andrews as a drifting post-collegial young man who makes the decision to change the way he's done thing all of these years and to make a commitment to Ronnie, but it also worked in a very strange way.

I mean, I'm certainly a "Betty Man", and that makes a lot more sense to me than Veronica, but Mike Uslan's script here is remarkably crisp, as well as filled with real drama and pathos.

I have a slightly bigger problem with the art -- I guess my eye just has a hard time with any drawing that's NOT Dan DeCarlo, but Stan Goldberg has been drawing Archie for years (Decades?), so it isn't like this looks "off model" or something. BUT...

... they made a really strange choice to not actually render most of the female character's noses in most panels.

It just looks wrong, especially on Veronica.

In fact there are several panels that, if I looked at them out of context, without a picture of Archie or Jughead, I don't know that I would necessarily have guessed it was from an Archie comic.

Not a major deal, either way, but it has knocked down my grade just a little. What's surprising to me is even with that knock, I'm still going to say this issue was VERY GOOD. Wow! Whudathunkit?

What did YOU think?

-B

Arriving 8/26/2009

Yay, Ben's first day of First Grade! You'll forgive me if I'm distracted...

Big ole week of excellent comics this time through...

28 DAYS LATER #1
ANITA BLAKE LC NECROMANCER #4 (OF 5)
AVENGERS INITIATIVE #27
BAD KIDS GO TO HELL #3 (OF 4)
BARACK THE BARBARIAN #2 (OF 4)
BART SIMPSON COMICS #49
BATMAN AND ROBIN #3
BATMAN THE BRAVE AND THE BOLD #8
BATMAN WIDENING GYRE #1 (OF 6)
BETA RAY BILL GODHUNTER #3 (OF 3)
BETTY & VERONICA #243
BILLY BATSON AND THE MAGIC OF SHAZAM #7
BLACKEST NIGHT TITANS #1 (OF 3)
BONEYARD #28 (OF 28) (RES)
BOYS HEROGASM #4 (OF 6)
BUCK ROGERS #3
CAPTAIN ACTION COMICS #5 GULACY RETRO CVR
CEREBUS ARCHIVE #3
CITIZEN REX #2 (OF 6)
DARK AVENGERS #8 DAX
DARK REIGN ELEKTRA #5 (OF 5) DKR
DARK REIGN SINISTER SPIDER-MAN #3 (OF 4) DKR
DARK TOWER THE FALL OF GILEAD #4 (OF 6)
DARK WOLVERINE #77 DKR
DARK X-MEN BEGINNING #3 (OF 3) DAX
DARKNESS PITT #1 KEOWN CVR A
DEADPOOL #14
DETECTIVE COMICS #856
DOCTOR WHO COLD-BLOODED WAR (ONE SHOT)
DYNAMO 5 #24
FANTASTIC FOUR #570
FINAL CRISIS AFTERMATH INK #4 (OF 6)
FLASH REBIRTH #4 (OF 6)
FRANK FRAZETTAS SORCERER FRAZETTA CVR A (ONE SHOT)
GOTHAM CITY SIRENS #3
GREEN LANTERN #45 (BLACKEST NIGHT)
GRIMM FAIRY TALES #41 CVR A CAMPBELL
GUARDIANS OF GALAXY #17
HALO HELLJUMPER #2 (OF 5)
HULK #14
I AM LEGION #5 (OF 6)
INCREDIBLE HERCULES #133
INCREDIBLE HULK #601
INCREDIBLES #0
JUGHEADS DOUBLE DIGEST #153
JUSTICE SOCIETY OF AMERICA #30
KILLAPALOOZA #4 (OF 6)
KING CITY #1
LAST DAYS OF ANIMAL MAN #4 (OF 6)
MADAME XANADU #14
MARVEL ADVENTURES SPIDER-MAN #54
MS MARVEL #44 DKR
MUPPET SHOW TREASURE OF PEG LEG WILSON #2 (OF 4)
NEW AVENGERS #56 DKR
NEW MUTANTS #4
NOVA #28
PHANTOM GENERATIONS #4
PREDATOR #2 (OF 4)
PROJECT SUPERPOWERS CHAPTER TWO #2
RED CIRCLE THE SHIELD #1
RED SONJA #47
REX MUNDI DH ED #19 (OF 19)
RIFTWAR #3 (OF 5)
RUNAWAYS 3 #13
SCALPED #31
SECRET WARRIORS #7
SHERLOCK HOLMES #4 (OF 5)
SKRULL KILL KREW #4 (OF 5) DKR
SON OF HULK #14
SONIC UNIVERSE #7
SPIN ANGELS #1 Of(3)
STAR WARS DARK TIMES #14 BLUE HARVEST PT 2 (OF 5)
STAR WARS LEGACY #39 TATOOINE PT 3 (OF 4)
STREET FIGHTER LEGENDS CHUN LI #4 (OF 4) A CVR DOGAN
SUPERMAN #691
SUPERMANS PAL JIMMY OLSEN SPECIAL #2
TEEN TITANS #74
TIMESTORM 2009 2099 #4 (OF 4)
UNKNOWN #4 (OF 4)
UNKNOWN SOLDIER #11
USAGI YOJIMBO #122
WEDNESDAY COMICS #8 (OF 12)
WILDCATS #14
WOLVERINE FIRST CLASS #18
WOLVERINE ORIGINS #39
WONDER WOMAN #35
X-FORCE #18
X-FORCE #18 70TH FRAME VAR
X-MEN FOREVER #6
ZERO KILLER #4 (OF 6) (RES)

Books / Mags / Stuff
AUTHORITY WORLDS END TP BOOK 01
BORDERLINE TP VOL 03
CABLE TP VOL 02 WAITING FOR THE END OF THE WORLD
GHOST RIDER TRIALS AND TRIBULATIONS TP
IMMORTAL IRON FIST PREM HC VOL 05 ESCAPE FROM EIGHTH CITY
LANTERN CORPS BLACK SYMBOL T/S LG (O/A)
LANTERN CORPS BLACK SYMBOL T/S XL (O/A)
MUPPET SHOW TP
OLD MAN WINTER & OTHER SORDID TALES GN
PREVIEWS #252 SEPTEMBER 2009 (NET)
REIGN IN HELL TP
SECRET SATURDAYS GN VOL 01
SECRET SIX UNHINGED TP
SHOWCASE PRESENTS ECLIPSO TP
SPARROW HC VOL 12 SERGIO TOPPI
TOMARTS ACTION FIGURE DIGEST #179/#180
TOON TREASURY OF CLASSIC CHILDRENS COMICS HC
TRINITY TP VOL 02
ULTIMATE X-MEN ULTIMATE COLLECTION TP VOL 03
UNCANNY X-MEN SISTERHOOD TP
WIZARD MAGAZINE #216 TRAVIS CHAREST CAPT AMERICA CVR (C: 0-1
WORLD OF WARCRAFT TP VOL 01
X-FORCE CABLE MESSIAH WAR HC
X-FORCE TP VOL 02 OLD GHOSTS

What looks good to YOU?

-B

Claremont's X-Men 1: Before They Wuz Fab

The first couple of years of Chris Claremont's UNCANNY X-MEN (#94-105 - the book was bi-monthly back then) are really weird to look back on, knowing what came later: Len Wein had introduced the All-New, All-Different team in Giant Size X-Men without Claremont's involvement, and so the first couple of years feels like the writer trying to work out what to do with the characters.

There's no real singular voice to the series, at this early point, probably because Claremont himself hadn't really worked out what we'd later come to recognize as his voice; instead, everything reads pretty much like the generic late '70s Marvel comic book that is was - Free of the expectations of what an X-Men comic should be, Claremont and Dave Cockrum pursue their own interests (space opera!), bring in characters from other books (And when you're bringing in supporting characters from The Hulk, you've got to know that you're desperate) and pick at tidbits from the original incarnation of the book, just to keep that sense of continuity going.

It's enjoyably free of the oppressive angst that the books went on to develop, the consistent sense of persecution and fear and loss that defined the franchise after the Phoenix arc, but it's also... pretty bland stuff, really. If the characters hadn't gone on to bigger and better things, there'd be nothing to really differentiate this from Marvel Team-Up or The Defenders or whatever. As it is, it's mostly worthwhile to see Claremont slowly realizing who each character was, in fits and starts (Storm's sudden claustrophobia which affects her when she's in a castle in #102, but not when she's in a sealed military base within a mountain in #95, because he hadn't thought of it, back then; or Wolverine's claws being revealed to be part of him in #98 and the way it seems to crystalize the character so that he finally feels like the Wolverine we know by #100), and also what kind of story worked for them.

There's a free-wheeling, unrestrained feeling to the series here that it lost somewhere in the mid #100s and never regained, sadly enough, but one of the side-effects of that is that there's also no real sense of weight or importance to anything, either; the closest you get is Jean Grey's transformation into Phoenix, but even that has a familiar, never-ending Mighty Marvel Soap Opera feel to it that doesn't turn into what we know it as now until much later. For now, though, these issues are Okay, but nothing more, unless you know what comes later.

While We Wait For Me To Get My Act Together...

Not an official review post - Those're coming later this week, now that I've finished writing Ono for this month - but if you're looking for some Hot Comic Reviewin' Action, go check out Chad Nevett's heroic 24-hour Blogathon effort from yesterday/this morning, taking a look at Bendis' Avengers and surrounding books. I don't always agree - and in some cases, very much disagree, with what he says, but it's well worth checking out.