Arriving 2/27/13

Looks like an awesome week of comics, with the latest issues of Hawkeye, Prophet, Young Avengers,  and the new LoEG book from Alan Moore, Nemo: Heart of Ice at the top of the pile. More after the break! ALL STAR WESTERN #17 AMALAS BLADE #0 ANGEL & FAITH #19 ANSWER #2 (OF 4) AQUAMAN #17 ARROW #4 ARTIFACTS #25 ASTONISHING X-MEN #59 AVENGERS ARENA #5 AVENGING SPIDER-MAN #17 BART SIMPSON COMICS #80 BATMAN INCORPORATED #8 BATMAN THE DARK KNIGHT #17 BEFORE WATCHMEN DR MANHATTAN #4 (OF 4) CARBON GREY VOL 2 #3 (OF 3) CASTLE A CALM BEFORE STORM #3 (OF 5) COMEBACK #4 (OF 5) COURTNEY CRUMRIN ONGOING #10 CROSSED BADLANDS #24 DEADPOOL KILLUSTRATED #2 (OF 4) DEATHMATCH #3 DOCTOR WHO VOL 3 #6 FAIRY QUEST #1 (OF 2) FF #4 FIVE WEAPONS #1 (OF 5) FLASH #17 FREELANCERS #4 FURY OF FIRESTORM THE NUCLEAR MAN #17 GAMBIT #9 GUARDIANS OF GALAXY #0.1 HAUNTED HORROR #3 HAWKEYE #8 HOT MOMS #17 I VAMPIRE #17 JENNIFER BLOOD #23 JIM BUTCHERS DRESDEN FILES GHOUL GOBLIN #2 JOE KUBERT PRESENTS #5 (OF 6) JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY #649 JUSTICE LEAGUE DARK #17 LEGEND OF LUTHER STRODE #3 (OF 6) MARVEL UNIVERSE ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN #11 MASKS #4 MASSIVE #9 PROFESSOR FRINK FANTASTIC SCIENCE FICTIONS #1 PROPHET #34 PUNISHER WAR ZONE #5 (OF 5) RED LANTERNS #17 ROCKETEER HOLLYWOOD HORROR #1 SAVAGE HAWKMAN #17 STAR TREK NEXT GENERATION HIVE #4 STAR WARS AGENT O/T EMPIRE HARD TARGETS #5 (OF 5) STAR WARS DAWN O/T JEDI PRISONER OF BOGAN #3 (OF 5) STEED AND MRS PEEL ONGOING #5 TALON #5 TEEN TITANS #17 THE LONE RANGER #13 THUNDERBOLTS #5 TMNT SECRET FOOT CLAN #3 (OF 4) ULTIMATE COMICS X-MEN #23 UNCANNY AVENGERS #4 UNCANNY SKULLKICKERS #1 UNCANNY X-FORCE #2 UNCANNY X-MEN #2 UNWRITTEN #46 WARLORD OF MARS #23 WITCH DOCTOR MALPRACTICE #4 (OF 6) X-MEN LEGACY #6 X-TREME X-MEN #11 YOUNG AVENGERS #2

Books/Mags/Other 2000 AD PACK JAN 2013 ADVENTURE TIME TP VOL 02 ASTONISHING X-MEN TP VOL 10 NORTHSTAR BABBLE GN BATMAN THE BLACK MIRROR TP BATTLE ANGEL ALITA LAST ORDER TP VOL 17 BLAKE & MORTIMER GN VOL 08 VORONOV PLOT BLOODSHOT (ONGOING) TP VOL 01 CATWOMAN TP VOL 02 DOLLHOUSE (N52) DAREDEVIL BY MARK WAID PREM HC VOL 04 DISTRICT 14 HC HEAVY METAL #261 JUDGE ANDERSON PSI FILES TP VOL 03 LORNA BLACK CASTLE SC MARVEL NOIR WOLVERINE AND X-MEN TP MARVEL SUPER HEROES #7 MMW CAPTAIN MARVEL TP VOL 01 NEMO HEART OF ICE HC NEW AVENGERS BY BRIAN MICHAEL BENDIS PREM HC VOL 05 NEW TEEN TITANS GAMES TP ORBITAL GN VOL 03 NOMADS PREVIEWS #294 MARCH 2013 RAVINE TP VOL 01 SEE ME AFTER CLASS GN VOL 01 SHOWCASE PRESENTS JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA TP VOL 06 SPIDER-MAN DEATH OF JEAN DEWOLFF TP NEW PTG SUPERMAN VS SHAZAM TP TENDER HEARTS GN WALLY WOODS LUNAR TUNES SC WORLD WAR 3 ILLUSTRATED #44 X-MEN WOLVERINE GAMBIT TP

As always, what do YOU think?

"Running With The Bulls At Pamplona?" MOVIES! Sometimes I Treat This Place Like I Own It!

So, yeah, to help us through the content drought I one finger typed a few words about a couple of movies I watched. I hear people like the movies, popular amongst the younger crowd so I hear. So maybe you'll like this? I don't know but I know this - it's FREE! People sure like FREE! stuff. Anyway, this... Photobucket

THE GUARD (2011) Directed by John Michael McDonagh Screenplay by John Michael McDonagh Starring: Brendan Gleeson, Don Cheadle, Liam Cunningham, Mark Strong, David Wilmot, Katarina Cas et al.

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Did you like In Bruges? Firstly let me compliment you on your impeccable taste and, secondly, let me assure you you’ll like The Guard. That was easy. Cheers. Piece of piss this reviewing lark. I’ll have a Guinness, if you’re asking. What? Time to kill have you, okay then. Stand us a scotch and we're off. That's the ticket, cheers. Now then, like In Bruges The Guard is a blunt consideration of mortality smuggled in under the cover of comforting genre clichés. Here though the clichés are more tightly adhered to and, as most of them belong to the mismatched buddy cop comedy genre, this movie has a far more affable surface. You can’t get much more affable than lovely Brendan Gleeson can you now? Even though the grand lad himself is playing a man whose lust for life has found itself stunted by the life he has lead, and who now finds sour solace in baiting those around him, magical Brendan Gleeson still charms like nobody’s business.

Smashing Brendan Gleeson is of course one of those rare actors who makes whatever he’s in worthwhile at least while he’s onscreen. This is a problem in awful shite like that there Mission Impossible movie where, when the grand fella isn't on screen, they might as well just turn it off and everybody involved, everybody who isn't sweet Brendan Gleeson, should come out and apologise to you personally for the remainder of the running time. Fret not, this isn’t a problem in The Guard as everyone else in the movie is just grand too. Just not as grand as the grand lad himself, Mr. Brendan Gleeson. Even that there Don Cheadle fellow acquits himself well as the FBI man sent over to help the delightful Brendan Gleeson put a stop to some rum doings with drugs. In fact I'm pleased to report that having checked with everyone we, the peoples of the United Kingdom, have now decided to let Mr. Cheadle off for the debacle of his accent in those Ocean’s films.

It may well be the lesser role but Cheadle doesn't bring any less to bear on his endearing performance as an essentially decent man hampered by his solipsism; a man silently and increasingly angry that everyone he meets is disappointed he isn't from The Behavioural Sciences Unit (like in the movies, you know). The rotten sod role is split between three fine actors so (rather than In Bruges’ towering evocation of evil turdery as personified by Mr. Ralph Fiennes) here the evil is diffused across three equally strong performances which makes it a little more palatable as befits the (slightly) more comedic tone. Because, as I have probably failed to get across, this movie is very, very funny. Early on in the movie Gleeson dryly teases an overexcited rookie with, “So what you’re saying is, this could be the work of…a serial killer.” he’s having fun, but serious fun. And yes, serious fun can be done as it is here in The Guard (which is VERY GOOD!).

THE WOLFMAN (2010) Directed by Joe Johnston Screenplay by Andrew Kevin Walker and David Self (Inspired by the 1941 Curt Siodmak screenplay) Starring: Benicio Del Toro, Anthony Hopkins, Emily Blunt and Hugo Weaving etc.

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Sometimes I take time out from being a fussy prick and just watch stuff like this. This is the kind of film where a doctor bellows “This man could no more turn into a wolf than I could grow wings and fly through that window!!!” and you know exactly what’s going to happen in the next three minutes. How you react to this knowledge will, I predict, be an accurate measure of how you react to this film. This film being about lycanthropy in Victorian England. It’s OKAY! Nothing special really but nothing terrible either and there are, fair’s fair, some really nice bits. On a couple of occasions there are werewolf attacks and, man, these are pretty tasty coming across like shark attacks on dry land. Actually, that suggests the wolfman just lays there wheezily expiring while crusty villagers insolently kick him around a bit. That’s because I’m a bad writer.

In actual fact there’s people running and screaming while a furry blur swoops and loops around lopping off limbs and spilling intestines like egg noodles from a clumsy waiter’s tray. They are a bit over the top the werewolf attacks are, is what I’m saying there. And all the better for it. If there’s one thing this film would have benefited from (besides a bit of script polishing. The “My father told me…” scene in the pub just sits there like a daft lad waiting for his tea. That should have been a slam-dunk.) it’s a bit more gusto. GUSTO!

The only person having anywhere near enough fun with this stuff isn't even a person, it’s a pair of sideburns which are wearing Hugo Weaving. Bafflingly Anthony “Hammy Horror” Hopkins declines to chew the scenery until the end when he is required to do so quite literally. For most of the film though the sneaky imp contents himself with tinkering and fiddling with stuff so as to draw attention from whoever else is in the scene with him. Emily Blunt has the most thankless role in the film (well, she is a Victorian lady) and works the minor miracle of making her nothing of a character appear somewhat independent and self-possessed without it coming across as anachronistic as wearing a miniskirt and body popping. Del Toro’s a bit disappointing and comes off as just being really, really tired or something like he’s really missing his dog back in L.A. Distracted, he seems distracted. His finest moment occurs on seeing the corpse of his dead brother, where he unleashes a Full On Frankie Howerd OOOoooooOOOOOO! of a look if ever there was one. I wouldn't seek this one out then, but if I was sat there when it came on I’d stay where I was. Which is exactly what happened. Another glimpse into my rock’n’roll roller-coaster life there. You’re welcome.

(Any quotes are approximate but hopefully retain the spirit of the original. After all I hardly sit there with a notepad and pen whule I watch stuff. Expecting a bit much that is.)

And like Don Cheadle's guilt - I'm gone!

That's right! Those were movies - not COMICS!!!

"Nothing To Hold Onto." COMICS!!! Sometimes They Swarm With Awesome!

I know, I know, it’s the worst kind of week of all! It’s Skip Week! No Graeme McMillion$! No Gentle Jeff! No podcast! While our very own Donny and Marie are off removing shopping trolleys from canals (or whatever it is they are up to) it’s left to us poor schmucks to wonder how things can possibly get worse. Well, things just got worse and it happened like this: I've put some words down about a book by Charles Burns. Look at me! Can you see that? It’s my serious face! I have my serious face on because I am a serious man about a serious business! I’m on about a serious comic, seriously! You can stop looking at me now it’s freaking me out. Anyway, this… Photobucket

THE HIVE by Charles Burns Jonathan Cape, £12.99 (2012)

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THE HIVE is the (curiously neglected by the comics buzz world) second volume in Charles Burns’ enormously satisfying reconfiguring of comics genres to his own unsettling narrative ends. In Vol.1 (X-ED OUT) it was Tin-Tin’s sterile milieu which got a grubby makeover while here Burns’ dark adapted eye falls on romance comics. As ever the friction created by the innocent originals and Burns’ grimy concerns rubbing feverishly up against each other results in all kinds of frisky fun. While weirdness abounds on every page (even the normal stuff looks weird) the real oddity is how Burns’ clean and precise delineations manage to so successfully convey the soiled sense of having licked an ashtray with your mind.

Turns out if you draw a pickled pig foetus in a jar the unsettling material trumps the distanced style. Heck, the distanced style might even amplify the nastiness. I just read the book I didn't do any research or any of that professional shit so I don’t really know where Burns is coming from, but for me his work is evocative of that whole Immaculate Consumptive thang from the ‘80s. That fantastically fiery yet slyly funny Thirwell/Lunch/Almond/Cave aesthetic where you take the fight right to the darkness armed only with the straight razor of your intelligence and a scream that might actually be a laugh cranked too high. I realise from the haircuts and checked shirts that it’s probably more evocative of that whole Sub Pop scene but that wasn't my scene so I guess since this old man gets to play too the work’s concerns are quite supple (universal might be pushing it, though).

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Could be David Lynch needs mentioning as well. Not with the aim of suggesting any cheap imitation on Burns’ part, no, rather to indicate just how good Burns is at harmonising the humdrum and the horrific as his multiple narratives blur and cross pollinate in a fashion which obfuscates meaning without obliterating it. If that sounds a bit dry and dull be assured it’s anything but. Reading this book (which I forgot to mention is a book about young love gone bad, sour and black with rot, oh, and memory too and other stuff. It's a busy little book.) I experienced a kind of carbonated tingle in my brain much like that occasioned in my fingertips every time they brushed the volume's almost subliminally tactile spine.

Look, I don’t really like to bang on about the aesthetic experience of physical comics because it quite quickly starts sounding creepy; like I’m the kind of guy who loves his comics so much that not only is my cock scarred by paper cuts but I can tell you which comics put them there (oh, the one just near the hem of the prepuce? POLICE ACTION FEATURING LOMAX #2. ) but…there’s just no denying this is a really nice volume in physical terms. Ayup, THE HIVE is a physically appealing package containing cerebral, sophisticated and very funny comics. That'd make it VERY GOOD!

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There you go! It was short too! Because I love you, that’s why and that means I don’t need reasons. Except when I kill. I do, however, still need COMICS!!!

Ta-ta for the nonce!

Arriving 2/20/13

Another stellar week of comics! ACTION COMICS #17 ADVENTURE TIME #13 ALAN ROBERT KILLOGY #3 (OF 4) ALPHA BIG TIME #1 (OF 5) AVENGERS #6 NOW2 BALTIMORE WIDOW & THE TANK ONE SHOT BATMAN BEYOND UNLIMITED #13 BATWOMAN #17 BIRDS OF PREY #17 BLACK BEETLE #2 (OF 4) BPRD 1948 #5 (OF 5) CAPTAIN AMERICA #4 CAPTAIN MARVEL #10 CATWOMAN #17 CONAN THE BARBARIAN #13 CROSSED ANNUAL 2013 #1 DAREDEVIL #23 DARK AVENGERS #187 DARK HORSE PRESENTS #21 DC UNIVERSE PRESENTS #17 DEADPOOL #5 NOW DEJAH THORIS & GREEN MEN OF MARS #1 (OF 8) FABLES #126 FEVER RIDGE MACARTHUR JUNGLE WAR #1 (OF 8) GARTH ENNIS JENNIFER BLOOD #22 GI JOE #1 GODZILLA ONGOING #10 GREEN LANTERN #17 GREEN LANTERN CORPS #17 GREEN LANTERN NEW GUARDIANS #17 HAPPY #4 (OF 4) HARBINGER #9 HELLBLAZER #300 HELLRAISER DARK WATCH #1 HOLLOWS #3 (OF 4) INDESTRUCTIBLE HULK #4 IT GIRL & THE ATOMICS #7 JERICHO SEASON 4 #2 (OF 5) JINNRISE #2 (OF 6) JSA LIBERTY FILES THE WHISTLING SKULL #3 (OF 6) JUDGE DREDD #4 JUSTICE LEAGUE #17 JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #1 JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #1 COMPLETE PACK JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICAS VIBE #1 KILL SHAKESPEARE TIDE OF BLOOD #1 (OF 5) KNIGHTS OF THE DINNER TABLE #195 LEGION OF SUPER HEROES #17 LIFE WITH ARCHIE #27 LOCKE & KEY OMEGA #3 (OF 7) LORD OF THE JUNGLE #13 MIND MGMT #8 MORBIUS LIVING VAMPIRE #2 MY LITTLE PONY MICRO SERIES #1 (OF 6) TWILIGHT SPARKLE NIGHTWING #17 NOVA #1 NUMBER 13 #3 PLUME #2 (OF 5) POPEYE CLASSICS ONGOING #7 RED HOOD AND THE OUTLAWS #17 REVIVAL #7 SAGA #10 SAVAGE WOLVERINE #2 SHADOW YEAR ONE #1 (OF 8) SHERLOCK HOLMES LIVERPOOL DEMON #2 (OF 5) SIMPSONS COMICS #199 SIXTH GUN #29 SIXTH GUN SONS O/T GUN #1 (OF 5) SONIC SUPER DIGEST #2 SONIC UNIVERSE #49 SPAWN #228 STAR TREK COUNTDOWN TO DARKNESS #2 STAR TREK ONGOING #18 SUPERGIRL #17 SUPERIOR SPIDER-MAN #4 SWORD OF SORCERY #5 THE SPIDER #9 THIEF OF THIEVES #12 THOR GOD OF THUNDER #5 TMNT ONGOING #19 ULTIMATE COMICS ULTIMATES #21 VITRIOL THE HUNTER #1 (OF 6) WOLVERINE MAX #4 WOMANTHOLOGY SPACE #5 WONDER WOMAN #17 X-FACTOR #252 X-O MANOWAR #10 YOUNG JUSTICE #25

Books / Mags/ Stuff ALTER EGO #115 SPECIAL 3D ISSUE ANIMAL MAN TP VOL 04 BORN TO BE WILD AVENGERS BY BRIAN MICHAEL BENDIS PREM HC VOL 05 AVENGERS VS THANOS TP BATMAN DEATHBLOW DELUXE EDITION HC BENJAMIN BEAR IN FUZZY THINKING TP DEATH OF SUPERMAN TP NEW ED FABLES DELUXE EDITION HC VOL 06 GOON TP VOL 12 THEM THAT RAISED US LAMENT MAD MAGAZINE #520 MERMIN HC VOL 01 MY CUTE CROSSDRESSER GN MY GOOD BOY GN RESIDENT ALIEN WELCOME TO EARTH TP VOL 01 SUPER DINOSAUR TP VOL 03 SUSCEPTIBLE HC TALES FROM BEYOND SCIENCE TP TEEN TITANS OMNIBUS BY GEOFF JOHNS HC UNCANNY X-MEN COMPLETE COLL BY FRACTION TP VOL 01 WOLVERINE AND X-MEN BY JASON AARON TP VOL 02 X-FACTOR TP VOL 18 BREAKING POINTS

As always, what do YOU think?

"Rodeo Ain't Over Yet!" COMICS! Sometimes I Don't Have A Title!

Hello! Here are some words about some comics. The sales figures analysis is just below this. Very good it is too! To clarify, the Hibbs' stuff is good, not this stuff. Anyway, this... Photobucket

ALL STAR WESTERN#16 Jonah Hex: Art by Moritat, written by Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti, coloured by Mike Atiyeh and lettered by Rob Leigh. Tomahawk!: Art and colour by Phil Winslade, written by Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti and lettered by Rob Leigh. DC Comics, $3.99 (2012) Jonah Hex created by Tony DeZuniga and John Albano Tomahawk created by Edmund Good and Joe Samachson

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I finally realised that it isn't the sticklebricking of DC Continuity and the basic desperate casting about for stunt elements that are hamstringing my enjoyment of this book. No, it's the joylessness of it. Its total and wholehearted acceptance of the current DC mode of storytelling which puts a premium on prevarication and encourages emptiness. Look, this book would be great if Bob Haney was writing it. Bob Haney isn't writing it though so it isn't great. If I'm hankering after Bob Haney in 2013 it's a fair guess your book isn't up to snuff. On the up side this issue doesn't contain the dismayingly frequent page filling device of having that Oriental lass fighting for five pages. In fact she doesn't appear once which means that any entertainment can be rightly said to be just like the cast - purely occidental. You want better jokes, make better comics.

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In the Tomahawk back up the most startling aspect as ever is Phil Winslade's bizarre digital watercolours job which I find enjoyable without actually knowing why. In other news, the English turn out to be the villains! I guess that's how Germans feel when they read DC war comics. A taste of my own medicine there. And it is bitter, bitter, bitter. This book, however, is only EH!

DJANGO UNCHAINED #1 Art by R M Guera with Jason Latour Adapted by Reginald Hudlin Coloured by Giulia Brusco Lettered by Sal Cipriano Adapted from the original screenplay by Quentin Tarantino Vertigo/DC Comics, $3.99

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I can’t speak as to how good an adaptation this is because I haven’t seen the movie. I’m old and the wild and outrageous young rebel Quentin Tarantino scares me with his outrageously youthful rebelliousness and his youthfully rebellious outrageous movies. Luckily my much younger sister had seen this very movie so I asked her how she found it. She said, and I quote so the record may be deemed complete, “It was entertaining, Johnny, but it wasn’t good.” There you go then. Me, I fear I invite your youthful ire as I just don’t think Tarantino is all that. Oh, it isn't his childishly inflammatory use of the “N” word, after all I’m sure should our paths cross the edgy auteur would be equally forgiving were I to pepper him with the “C” word like it was going out of fashion. No, but some of it is the fact that he uses the word “cool” too much. The only men his age who should use “cool” that much are Grateful dead fans who live in San Franciscan dumpsters. Mostly though it’s that he reacts to proper questions like THIS. Yeah, I'll let that speak for itself I think. On the plus side the iconoclastic Quentin Tarantino does seem to have exhausted his celluloid fetish for Uma “Man Hands” Thurman.

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The stated aim of this comic is to illustrate the original script. Every golden word. I guess it does that. It certainly seems like a Tarantino script. The dialogue is surely as self-satisfied and in need of tightening as ever and it retains all the usual rhythm and musicality (i.e. all the rhythm and musicality of a tune played on an arse flute); scenes outstay their welcome or outstay their welcome while also leading up to a totally predictable reveal and the characters haven’t any. Usually it would take hundreds of talented people and millions of dollars to make this stuff at least enjoyable if not actually good. All this comic has is R M Guera. All this comic needs is R M Guera. It’s an amazingly savvy choice since for the last 5 years and change R M Guera has been tasked with tricking everyone into thinking that a tour through Jason Aaron’s 70’s movie memories constitutes something with anything more to say than, hey, wasn't cinema in the 70’s just grand? Or SCALPED as it is known. Elevating the mundane to the magical is just what R M Guera does I guess. He does it bloody well though. Jason Latour throws down a few flashback panels and his art is excellent every time it appears but the shining star here is R M Guera. R M Guera with his ambulatory toby jugs and smooth storytelling once again showing everyone else up. Hey, the poor old writer doesn't even get a credit except here: Reginald Hudlin. I don't know why he doesn't get a credit but it's not a trend I want to encourage. Anyway, thanks largely to RM Guera this was GOOD!

SUPREME #68 Written and Drawn by Erik Larsen Coloured by Steve Oliff Lettered by Chris Eliopoulos Supreme created by Rob Liefeld Image Comics, $3.99

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In this pulse pounding issue Erik Larsen basically says that he enjoyed illustrating Alan Moore’s script but since then he’s been noodling about and it’s been just super, thanks, but he’s off now. Apparently someone else will be taking over, no idea who but, yeah, someone at some point. Of all the moves to steal from the DC playbook that’s a pretty strange choice. At least he didn't steal DC’s signature move which is now apparently making comics nobody likes but lots of them. Larsen’s departure is a bit of a shame because I found his Kirby with a split nib art quite charming and in this issue it’s particularly so because, for no readily apparent reason, Larsen suddenly starts drawing this thing like it’s Kyle Baker’s RONIN. (Yes, I know it was Frank Miller's RONIN but this looks like Kyle Baker's RONIN).

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I quite enjoyed this book. It had enjoyably stupid characters like Lion headed Supreme and Darius Duck, people flew around, punching occurred and Larsen always respectfully drew Supreme in that scratchy Liefeld mode without actually ever being as shitty as Liefeld. Sure, it was pretty basic stuff but it was basically pretty stuff. Sometimes I don’t actually want all that much from a comic and this certainly delivered that. I wouldn't recommend that Erik Larsen make a habit of just dumping books as people might start referring to a failure to commit as having committed Larsen-y. Unlike that joke this was OKAY!

FATALE#9,10 Art by Sean Phillips Written by Ed Brubaker Coloured by Dave Stewart Fatale created by Sean Phillips and Ed Brubaker Image Comics, $3.50

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Everyone can relax because I’m done here. I’ve had my doubts about this one all the way. For starters the horror elements have been inexplicably dusty and dull (cassocks! tentacles!). I don't need my own pet Jess Nevins to know that horror in the '70s was actually engaging with real world events and offering up savage and innovative treats which were leaving Corman's Poe adaptations for dead. Then there's the inescapable drab narration which mistakes deadpan for just plain dead on the page and is written in a fabulous new tense even more inactive than the passive; the comatose tense perhaps. The only sign of life in this one-note stuff is that it works the word “but” like it yearns to be a Salt’n’Pepa track.Then there's stuff like this:

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That pivotal oh, go away moment occurred in issue 9 but due to the caprices of my comic dispersal system I still had issue 10 to go. Yes, one more chance! A chance which was immediately crushed when the central character (who thus far has been less like Fatale and more like Docile) just suddenly remembered she had special magic powers and plain killed everyone in a climax as rewarding as being inadvertently brought off by the motion of your train seat. Look, there’s no mystery about why men will act like complete tools for a pretty face, certainly not a supernatural mystery. Unless you think the contents of your pants are supernatural and mysterious. In which case your Pope just resigned. I didn't know Popes could do that! This series always seemed less James Ellroy and H P Lovecraft and more Quinn Martin and Donald P Bellisario. An impression strengthened by future covers which indicate the series is just going to stick a new genre on top of the usual stuff. Now she's a witch, now she's a space man, now she's a turtle, dis-integrating! Like my interest. Mr Ben with a magical woo-woo may well be a new direction but not one I’ll be pursuing. So, I’ll be missing future essays on The Scarecrow And Mrs King and, more importantly, the fine work of Sean Phillips and Dave Stewart which deserves better than to be yoked to work this EH!

SHADOW SPECIAL #1 Art by Ronan Cliquet Written by Scott Beatty Coloured by Mat Lopes Lettered by Rob Steen The Shadow created by Walter B. Gibson Dynamite, $4.99 (HOLY MOTHER OF GOD!!!! FOUR DOLLARS AND NINETY NINE CENTS!!!! THAT'S INSANE!!!!)

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In the main title The Shadow is currently palling about with George Orwell. George Orwell is the author of a couple of books on how shit being poor is and how we will all willingly participate in a system designed to crush our common humanity. He was right about both of those things and remains right, although he missed a trick in not realising that the main way The System would ensure our complicity would be by making nice things for us to buy. But then there weren’t many nice things to buy back then so we’ll let him off. Rip The System! You don’t bring Orwell to the party unless you want that party to get political! Orwell also did a book about animals on a farm. I can’t remember what it was called but it was about animals on a farm. It was a metaphor or an analogy or some clever shit like that about some animals on a farm. Oh yeah, I remember now, the one about the animals on the farm? It was called BEFORE WATCHMEN.

Anyway, this isn’t the main series so George Orwell isn’t in it. No, this is a “special” but it isn't very, possibly even at all. Except for the price. That’s pretty fucking special right there. There’s the core of a fun and pulpy tale here but something’s gone awry on the pacing front. When there’s more pages devoted to The Shadow moaning about going shoe shopping (yes, really) than there is to his fight in a minefield with a man who has courageously chosen to sport only a bouquet of barbed wire around his nuddy bod (Oooch! Owch!) then, yes, I’d have to disagree strongly with the storytelling emphases.

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Ronan Cliquet has a good go at being Alan Davis but he seems to have jumped ahead a bit; Alan Davis didn’t get to be Alan Davis until he’d got the basics right, son. I’m guessing he’s just some wee snip learning his trade but the best I can give him is – promising. The most special thing about this comic is the paper it’s printed on. Paper so much like catalogue pages from your youth that there’s a constant urge to riffle through them to the Hot Wheels section or the sports bra section depending on which age your development is currently arrested at. No, it wasn't special unless special is EH!

And like The Pope - I'm gone! But there's still COMICS!!!

BookScan 2012: important addendum

It was observed to me by a third party that for a good part of 2012 Barnes & Noble was not stocking the "top 100" DC Comics, which I entirely forgot about in my BookScan 2012 report. There are published reports that say that this ended at the end of June 2012, but there's also reports from everyone's favorite muckraker, Rich Johnston, that some/much of the books were returning to some B&N locations before 2011 even ended.

What does this actually do to the charts?  I have no real idea. Typically 4th quarter is the strongest sales quarter, so, in theory, this should have impacted DC's 2011 numbers much stronger than 2012, but even that's uncertain -- how much demand was simply delayed until the books returned to stock, how much was shunted over to Amazon or indy book stores? How much unmet demand yielded no sale for DC? I have no frickin' idea, but at the very least it should have been NOTED in the column, and that's a lousy mistake for me to have made.

There was just 12k difference (701k vs 689k) in sales between DC and Image this year, so it's possible, mayyybe even likely that DC actually "would have" been the #1 western publisher, but I can only analyze the numbers that are there, rather than the ones that aren't. Still.... asterisk that analysis, I think, to be safe.

Thanks!

-B

 

Wait, What? Ep. 115: Less Than Greek

Photobucket"It's funny! It says 'I choo-choo-choose you' and then there's a picture of Aquaman."

Well, on the plus side? It is a Monday and we have a new Wait, What? for you--almost an entire day early!

On the minus side, we won't be recording this week due to Valentine's Day, so there won't be a recording next week, I am totally behind the eight ball on my other projects, and I couldn't get Graeme to draw a Don-Wan Kihotay for us.

After the jump, this week's episode and some super-speedy show notes!

0:00-3:18:  Odd greeting! Neurotic confession! Bizarre Love Triangle! Can you tell which one of these is a description of our opening, and which one is a New Order single? 3:18-12:34:  Strange Press Release!  (Another unsung New Order single.)  Graeme and Jeff  discuss the recent press release announcing the Rogue and She-Hulk novels for female readers. 12:34-20:17: From arguing about mythologies in tie-in products, we move on discussing whether Disney is getting too crazy with their Star Wars movie plans or not. 20:17-31:37: Jeff isn't sure how to he made the jump between Star Wars films and the twin legacies of Sylvester Stallone and Walter Hill. (The term "twin legacy" is used, and Luke and Leia are twins with a legacy?)  Nonetheless, if you were hoping to have a healthy dose of "Hey, you kids, stop misunderstanding the historical legacy of my lawn!"  YOU ARE IN LUCK.  (Please note: when Jeff says "Lawrence Silver" in his triade, he really means "Joel Silver." 31:37-1:07:48:  And from a topic of nostalgia and misunderstood legacies, Jeff tries to look at Marvel's Jack Kirby Captain America Omnibus and the hardcover collection of Neal Adams' Batman Odyssey. 1:07:48-1:08:24: Intermission the First! 1:08:24-1:12:54: And we're back.  Most of you probably know about my beard, but not many of us know about Graeme's secret sideburns…or about his even more secret interview with SKY NEWS. 1:12:54-1:22:28: The battle for New Comics begins!  Graeme has read Young Romance: New52 Valentine's Day Special and the first Jeff Lemire-scripted issue of Green Arrow.  Graeme didn't like them much. Jeff saw the preview trailer for Injustice: Gods Among Us. Arguably, he liked that even less.  And then came…the dreaded tech problems.  We liked those least of all. 1:22:28-1:22:52: Intermission the Second! 1:22:52-1:36:05:  We are back, to continue with a bit of grousing about DC.  Graeme has read the huge DC: 75th Anniversary book by Paul Levitz, leading to a conversation about what made DC great in the past.  We are excited about the new digital Superman book, maybe not so much (or at all) about Orson Scott Card, but we are very excited about Jeff Parker, Chris Samnee, and others.  Graeme has also got a sneak peek at Superman: The Unauthorized Biography by Glen Weldon. 1:36:05-1:45:22:  Jeff talks a little about the fourth issue of Multiple Warheads, in a "I would really rather talk about it when we've both read it, but Graeme keeps asking me questions" sort of way.  Also, Jeff doesn't wants anyone to think he's super-high but he decides to compare Multiple Warheads to Zero Dark Thirty for some reason?  Graeme gives the low-down on the Netflix remake of House of Cards. 1:45:22-2:11:25: Questions! We do manage to answer some questions (honestly, we were supposed to answer more and once again we got distracted).  Here we are speeding questions from four Whatnauts: Jesse M. on December 6th, 2012 at 7:08 pm asked: No way you’ll have time to answer all of these, choose one!  1) What’s the single issue of a comic that you love best?  2) I’ve been loving Journey Into Mystery From Gillen and Immonen. Once Immonen’s Sif run is finished, what team should tackle the Warriors Three? 3) Are there any current comics that would benefit from a JiM/BPRD style spinoff? Ben Lipman on December 6th, 2012 at 7:22 pm asked:  Should Marvel bother with covers?  They print them on the same stock as the pages, the books are ordered months in advance and sell to an audience that actively seeks them out. Why not save the price of more pages/art and just have the title sit above the first page?  Is FATALE becoming an ongoing series a good thing?  I enjoy it though it’s not their best, but was looking forward to Bru and Phillips moving on to something else.  What was the best and what was the worst comic you read for each decade you have read comics? Zomboner on December 6th, 2012 at 8:03 pm said:  What happens to Ross’ moustache when he turns into the red-hulk? mateor on December 6th, 2012 at 9:28 pm said:  How about…  A) Has anyone, ever, done more for a comic than Eddie Campbell did for From Hell?  B) Could we expect a modern reader to get anything out of the big 2 comics “masterpieces” of our youth? I am thinking of in continuity stuff here, something like Simonson’s Thor here, a book that pretty much ruled my world growing up, yet something I will ever be able to properly explain to my son, even if he had the issues in front of him. I don’t have the same doubts about Romita’s Amazing or other earlier runs, there is just something about those eighties books that seem stuck in time.  C) If you gave 100 people on the subway issues of Bill Sienkeiwicz’s New Mutants (with the lovely painted covers removed) how many would tell you it was the worst looking comic they have ever seen? and D) What would happen if Robert Kirkman decided to spend his next month’s income and buy the publishing arm of Marvel? Not the IP, just the right to publish Marvel comics the way he wanted…which characters would die each month and by which blunt instrument? How sad would the Punisher be while he used his slowly diminishing appendages to get the rest of the Marvel U killed, one 100 issue spectacular at a time?  Who would he think was calling him while he cried into a disconnected telephone and would he still have the beard? Would Aunt May be the big bad? 2:11:25-end:  Closing comments! Many apologies! Graeme tells you something that would make him laugh! Nothing but exclamation points! Or…are there?

And...there you have it...if by "it," you mean "the show notes."  If by "it," you mean "the show," then in fact, you do not have it...unless you look below, and then you will indeed have that, too:

Wait, What? Ep. 115: Less Than Greek

We hope you enjoy, thanks for listening, and we hope you have a grand Valentine's Day.

Shipping 2/13/13

Looks like another week of great comics  

AGE OF APOCALYPSE #12 AMERICAS GOT POWERS #5 (OF 6) ARCHER & ARMSTRONG #7 ARCHIE & FRIENDS DOUBLE DIGEST #24 AVENGERS ARENA #4 AVENGERS ASSEMBLE #12 BATGIRL #17 BATMAN #17 BATMAN AND ROBIN #17 BEDLAM #4 BEFORE WATCHMEN COMEDIAN #5 (OF 6) BIONIC MAN VS BIONIC WOMAN #2 BLOODSHOT #8 BPRD HELL ON EARTH #104 ABYSS TIME #2 (OF 2) BRAVEST WARRIORS #5 BTVS SEASON 9 FREEFALL #18 CABLE AND X-FORCE #4 NOW CHANGE #3 (OF 4) CLONE #4 CREEPY COMICS #11 CROSSED BADLANDS #23 DARK TOWER GUNSLINGER SHEEMIES TALE #2 (OF 2) DEMON KNIGHTS #17 DJANGO UNCHAINED #2 (OF 6) ELEPHANTMEN #46 END TIMES OF BRAM & BEN #2 (OF 4) EVIL ERNIE #4 EX SANGUINE #5 (OF 5) FANTASTIC FOUR #4 FATALE #12 FURY MAX #9 GARFIELD #10 GARTH ENNIS BATTLEFIELDS #4 (OF 6) FALL & RISE PT 1 GHOSTBUSTERS #1 GREEN LANTERN THE ANIMATED SERIES #11 HIGH WAYS #2 (OF 4) JIM BUTCHERS DRESDEN FILES GHOUL GOBLIN #2 KATANA #1 LAST ZOMBIE BEFORE THE AFTER #4 MANHATTAN PROJECTS #9 MARS ATTACKS #7 MARVEL UNIVERSE AVENGERS EARTHS HEROES #11 MEGA MAN #22 MORNING GLORIES #24 MOUSE GUARD BLACK AXE #6 (OF 6) MYLO XYLOTO #1 PATHFINDER #5 PLANET O/T APES SPECIAL #1 POPEYE #10 POWERS BUREAU #1 RAVAGERS #9 RED SONJA #73 RED SONJA UNCHAINED #1 (OF 4) SAUCER COUNTRY #12 SCARLET SPIDER #14 SECRET AVENGERS #1 SPONGEBOB COMICS #17 STAR WARS #2 STORM DOGS #3 (OF 6) STRAIN #11 (OF 12) STUFF OF LEGEND TOY COLLECTOR #3 (OF 5) SUICIDE SQUAD #17 SUPERBOY #17 SUPURBIA ONGOING #4 TEAM 7 #5 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES ONGOING #18 THRESHOLD #2 TO HELL YOU RIDE #3 (OF 5) TODD THE UGLIEST KID ON EARTH #2 (OF 4) TRUE BLOOD ONGOING #9 ULTIMATE COMICS X-MEN #22 UNCANNY X-MEN #1 NOW WALKING DEAD #107 WALKING DEAD THE GOVERNOR SPECIAL WARLORD OF MARS DEJAH THORIS #22 WOLVERINE AND X-MEN #25 X-MEN #41 X-TREME X-MEN #10

Books/ Mags/ Stuff ADVENTURES OF SUPERHERO GIRL HC ALABASTER WOLVES HC ASSASSINS CREED THE CHAIN GN ATOMIC ROBO TP VOL 07 BATMAN AND ROBIN WHITE KNIGHT DARK KNIGHT TP BATMAN HC THE NIGHT OF THE OWLS (N52) CHRONICLES OF KING CONAN TP VOL 04 PRINCE IS DEAD COMICS JOURNAL #302 CURSE OF DRACULA HC DAREDEVIL BY MARK WAID HC VOL 01 DC SUPERHERO CHESS FIG COLL MAG #24 MAN BAT BLACK ROOK DC SUPERHERO CHESS FIG COLL MAG #25 BLACK MASK BLACK PAWN DRAW #24 ESSENTIAL MARVEL TEAM UP TP VOL 04 FAIRIES MAGAZINE #12 FAMOUS MONSTERS OF FILMLAND #266 GENIUS ILLUSTRATED LIFE & ART ALEX TOTH HC VOL 02 HYPERNATURALS TP VOL 01 JUDGE DREDD MEGAZINE #332 LOUVRE COLLECTION HC ENCHANTMENT MANARA LIBRARY HC VOL 04 MARS ATTACKS TP VOL 01 ATTACK FROM SPACE MARVEL FIRSTS TP WWII SUPER HEROES MARVEL UNIVERSE ULT SPIDER-MAN DIGEST TP VOL 02 SIZZLE #56 STAR TREK TNG DOCTOR WHO ASSIMILATION TP VOL 02 STORMWATCH TP VOL 02 ENEMIES OF THE EARTH (N52) SUICIDE SQUAD TP VOL 02 BASILISK RISING (N52) TORPEDO TP VOL 02 UNCANNY X-FORCE PREM HC BOOK 02 FINAL EXECUTION YOUNG JUSTICE TP VOL 03 CREATURE FEATURES

As always, what do YOU think?

An Apology

I've been very quiet the last couple of weeks. I started a new thing, which I'll formally tell you about soonish, and that's soaked a bunch of time; then I got the BookScan numbers which soaked a bunch of other time; and then 2 weeks ago I cracked a tooth, which lead inexorably to "Oh, you need a root canal, ha!", and so I've been in blinding pain for most of the time.

Yeah, whine whine, just telling you why I've been quiet, and will be for a little while yet to come. (Like, the root canal's second appointment is in a week, then the crown the week after that, then it's off to ComicsPRO, and.....)

 

-B

Wait, What? Ep. 114: Everything We Could Stand

PhotobucketJaxxon drawing by our very own renaissance man, Graeme McMillan...

Skip week is over so we are back for another episode or two (we will probably skip Valentine's Day, I am betting that right now). Before we get into it, though: look at that Jaxxon! What a great drawing of a very old, obscure Star Wars character that I dearly love! Well done, Mr. Graeme McMillan, well done.  Please email me if you want to be part of the crew that tries to peer pressure Graeme into drawing more comics...

After the jump: Love! Links! Show notes!

So, yes.  Links first, eh?  Long-time listeners should be not at all surprised that we are fans of ol' Jaxxon (the space bunny portrayed above).  And, similarly, you may remember that we both have much love for Mike Russell's Sabretooth Vampire.  So imagine my delight to come across the link for "Jaxxon's 11," a Star Wars fan comic by Russell and David Stroup--it's currently incomplete but, hey!  68 pages of old-school Star Wars nerdery.  For free!

All right.  Let's get our show notes on, shall we?

0:00-3:03: "Previously on Wait, What?"  An introduction/apologia/master plan/what have you with a super-brief discussion of our skip week time off and then moving right into… 3:03-25:33:  issues of Green Lantern's Rise of the Third Army crossover that Graeme has read, and our befuddlement about Geoff Johns and the current state of the Green Lantern franchise generally. 25:33-32:31: Graeme also received a copy of the Batman & Robin Annual and quite liked it! Jeff read Batman Inc. #7 and was squirrelly about it!  Also, thanks to the continuing recommendations of Martin Gray over at Too Dangerous for a Girl, Jeff also read Superman Family Adventures issues #8 and 9 and greatly enjoyed those! Yep, you should think about picking those up. 32:31-38:59:  Speaking of cute, Graeme points out that the Comixology collection of Superboy has gotten up to issue #50 of the '90s run, which means Karl Kesel and Tom Grummett's "Last Boy on Earth" storyline is now easily available for Kirby fans like me who'd missed it the first time around!  Also, currently on sale (at least by the time I initially post this) and verrrry tempting at .99 an issue:  Green Lantern Mosaic. 38:59-39:34: Soulful Intermission #1 39:34-51:48: And we're back: with more Green Lantern talk (for a moment or two).  And with more personal chit-chat, as Jeff tells how he and Edi survived their first sleepover with their three year old niece.  Somewhat longish, very little comic book talk is involved (although there is some chit-chat about Dora The Explorer) and obviously should be considered optional and bonus material.  Will not be covered on the final exam. 51:48-54:34:  Comic book news! There's…not much.  Although we do discuss the terrifying process of WTF certification DC Comics is putting forward. 54:34-59:22: Wonder Woman #16!  Jeff has some words about it. 59:22-1:06:57: By contrast, Jeff has other words that he has to use about the other comic, Flash #16.  Some other chit-chat ensues about the DC New 52 books (specifically, Action).  On a similar-but-different note, Graeme picked up the trade of New Deadwardians after hearing Jeff singing its praises and also quite liked it. That means New Deadwardians is two-for-two on the Wait, What? Approval Meter and you should considering picking it up. 1:06:57-1:14:29: We're just about ready to get to questions (no, really) but we thought it perhaps prudent to talk about Uncanny Avengers #3 first. 1:14:29-1:32:11: Oh, and Avengers issues #3 and #4. Yeah, a lot of talk about Avengers #3 and #4. 1:32:11-1:36:59:  And then there were….Questions!  Kid Showbusiness on December 6th, 2012 at 1:48 pm asked:  What’s your take on this Jonathan Hickman quote: “Most of the talent creating books at Marvel are fairly progressive, so generally we all want diversity in the abstract,” he said. “The problem comes from the fact that the catalog of Marvel (and DC) characters are predominantly straight white male because of the era they were conceived in — and it’s the basic building blocks of what we have to work with. Which begets the question: Well Jonathan, if this is really one of the root causes of the problem, if you really feel that way — if you’re not a fraud — why don’t you just go create some new, more diverse characters? “Which is where things get tricky,” he continued. “In light of numerous historical examples, contractual realities, and the shelf life of creators, is it really in a creator’s best interest to be making brand new IP for the big companies on the cheap? I mean, we still do it sometimes, because, frankly, we can’t not…it’s in our DNA as storytellers and problem solvers — but is it the ‘right’ thing to do? Would it be right for people to ‘expect me’ to do that? I don’t think so. But that’s just one example — There are others (some even more negative, plenty positive).” 1:36:59-1:48:49:  George T on December 6th, 2012 at 1:54 pm asked: 1) I have never read an Avengers comic. If I were to read one issue of the Avengers what should it be? 2) I have never watched or read any Dr Who. What is a good place to pick it up? Other than 1966… 1:48:49-2:06:33:  Mike Loughlin on December 6th, 2012 at 4:41 pm said: 1) Which Marvel and DC characters that headline their own books or are members of a team should be put aside for a year or two? Which Marvel and DC characters have been poorly-written the longest? 2) If the Big 2 super-hero comics were redesigned to be more all-ages- and woman-friendly, do you think sales would increase? Has the new readers ship already sailed? Also mentioned in there somewhere, is Chad Nevett's amazing blog-a-thon over at Graphic Content   and Comics Should Be Good, where you can catch Graeme and Chad talking Peter David's Star Wars books, Chad and I swapping thought on Jim Starlin's Dreadstar, Tucker Stone bringing the pain, and much, much more. 2:06:33-end: Closing comments! Natalie Imbruglia! Our first podcast without any discussion of Misfits in almost a month. And only twenty some-odd questions to go. Wow!

Amazing, eh?  Yes, Graeme and I thought so too, undoubtedly.  As you know, we've got ourselves a little ranch out on the iTunes/RSS frontier, you can stop by any time you like.  But you can also kick up your boots and sample our wares below, if preferred:

Wait, What? Ep. 114: Everything We Could Stand

As always, we hope you enjoy and stop by next week for the next one!

Arriving 2/06/13

A lot of great comics out this week!ADVENTURE TIME FIONNA & CAKE #2 (OF 6) ALL NEW X-MEN #7 ANIMAL MAN #17 AVENGERS #5 NOW2 AVENGERS ASSEMBLE ANNUAL #1 BATWING #17 BLACKACRE #3 BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER WILLOW WONDERLAND #4 (OF 5) CALIGULA HEART OF ROME #3 (OF 6) COLDER #4 (OF 5) CROW SKINNING THE WOLVES #3 (OF 3) DAN THE UNHARMABLE #10 DAREDEVIL END OF DAYS #5 (OF 8) DETECTIVE COMICS #17 DIA DE LOS MUERTOS #1 (OF 3) DIAL H #9 DOCTOR WHO VOL 3 #5 EARTH 2 #9 EPIC KILL #8 FAIREST #12 FAIRY QUEST #1 (OF 2) FASHION BEAST #6 FEARLESS DEFENDERS #1 GARTH ENNIS JENNIFER BLOOD #22 GARTH ENNIS RED TEAM #1 GREAT PACIFIC #4 GREEN ARROW #17 GRIMM FAIRY TALES #82 GUARDING THE GLOBE #6 HARBINGER #0 HELLBOY IN HELL #3 HIT-GIRL #5 (OF 5) HUMAN BOMB #3 (OF 4) HYPERNATURALS #8 I LOVE TROUBLE #3 INSURGENT #2 (OF 6) IRON MAN #6 JOE PALOOKA #3 (OF 6) JUGHEADS DOUBLE DIGEST #189 KEVIN KELLER #7 LAST ZOMBIE BEFORE THE AFTER #3 LEGENDS OF THE DARK KNIGHT #5 LOONEY TUNES #211 MARVELS IRON MAN 3 PRELUDE #2 (OF 2) MUDMAN #6 MULTIPLE WARHEADS ALPHABET TO INFINITY #4 (OF 4) MY LITTLE PONY FRIENDSHIP IS MAGIC #3 NEW AVENGERS #3 PHANTOM STRANGER #5 PLANET O/T APES CATACLYSM #6 RACHEL RISING #14 RED SHE-HULK #62 REPOSSESSED #2 (OF 4) ROAD TO OZ #5 (OF 6) SCARLET #6 SCOOBY DOO WHERE ARE YOU #30 SECRET AVENGERS #37 SHADOWMAN (NEW) #4 SMALLVILLE SEASON 11 #10 SNAPSHOT #1 (OF 4) SON OF MERLIN #1 SONIC THE HEDGEHOG #245 STAR TREK ONGOING #17 STAR WARS DARK TIMES FIRE CARRIER #1 STORMWATCH #17 SUPER DINOSAUR #17 SUPERIOR SPIDER-MAN #3 SWAMP THING #17 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES COLOR CLASSICS #9 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES ONGOING #18 THINK TANK #5 THUNDERBOLTS #4 NOW ULTIMATE COMICS SPIDER-MAN #20 VENOM #31 WASTELAND #43 WINTER SOLDIER #15 WORLDS FINEST #9 X-FACTOR #251 YOUNG ROMANCE NEW 52 VALENTINES DAY SPECIAL #1

Books / Mags / Stuff 7 MILES A SECOND HC ALICE IN WONDERLAND HC BATGIRL HC VOL 02 KNIGHTFALL DESCENDS BATGIRL TP VOL 01 THE DARKEST REFLECTION CAPTAIN AMERICA DOCA ULT COLLECTION TP DAVE STEVENS ROCKETEER ARTIST ED DEBRIS TP DISNEY PRINCESS MAGAZINE #11 G FAN #102 KING CONAN PHOENIX ON THE SWORD TP LORELEI SECTS & CITY TP MONSTERS INC HUMANWEEN PARTY #1 NARUTO 3-IN-1 ED TP VOL 04 NARUTO TP VOL 60 NEW DEADWARDIANS TP POKEMON ADVENTURES PLATINUM GN VOL 07 REX MUNDI OMNIBUS TP VOL 02 SUPERMAN FOR TOMORROW TP SUPERMAN THE MAN OF STEEL TP VOL 07 TALES DESIGNED TO THRIZZLE HC VOL 02 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES ONGOING TP VOL 04 TOWER CHRONICLES GN VOL 03 (OF 4) GEISTHAWK UNCANNY X-MEN BY KIERON GILLEN TP VOL 03 AVX UNSPEAKABLE VAULT OF DOOM TP WEAPONS OF THE METABARON HC WONDER WOMAN ODYSSEY TP VOL 02 X-MEN FALL OF MUTANTS TP VOL 01 ZED A COSMIC TALE TP

As always, what do YOU think?

"...Primitive Lyricism..." PEOPLE! Sometimes Gil's Gone!

Gil Kane died on 31 January in the year 2000 A.D. Photobucket

Time enough has now passed that although I still feel the loss of his gargantuan talents I am past the garment rending and hair pulling stage. I will never be beyond the celebrating his work stage though. So what follows is a brief visual burst of Gil Kane's genius from the '80s. After all ACTIONs speak louder than words and Gil was a man of great experience...

"So I know the one quality that I'm always trying to push through in my work is grace and power. Sort of primitive lyricism that I've been capable of. I thought that that's the one quality that sort of saved me and permeated my work and gave me any kind of legitimate status...the thing that I had going for me was that the only thing I wanted to express essentially was the sentimental fall with grace and power, and I try to do that with every drawing I ever did." Gil Kane Gil Kane: Art And Interviews by Daniel Herman (Hermes Press, 2002)

Superman was created by Jerry Siegel & Joe Shuster

 

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KANE: I liked those stories. Gil Kane on the GilWolf™’ Superman comics Gil Kane: Art And Interviews by Daniel Herman (Hermes Press, 2002)

Gil Kane (1926 - 2000)

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Hopefully, this being the anniversary of Gil Kane's passing, The Internet is alive with chat about this man with élan. After all last time on I Will Make You Care About Gil Kane Before Death Claims Me I was more than likely getting all teary-eyed about the fact no one seemed to talk about Gentleman Gil much these days.  Serendipitously I had read Charles Nicholl's Guardian review of  Andrew Hadfield's Edmund Spenser: A Life. Said review began:

"There is a rather deadly kind of literary fame which TS Eliot neatly defined as a "conspiracy of approval". It condemns a writer" to be universally accepted; to be damned by the praise that quenches all desire to read the book; to be afflicted by the imputation of virtues which excite the least pleasure; and to be read only by historians and antiquaries". (Fairy Singer, Colonial Apparatchik by Charles Nicholl, The Guardian, 21/07/2012)

Although I can feel my face fair sodden by your salivations at the prospect of me going on about TS Eliot or Edmund Spenser I am, in fact, going to stop there because I think the point has been made. It's a good point;  one all the better for not being mine. Is that's what has happened to Gentleman Gil? Is he a victim of the "conspiracy of approval"? I don't want that to happen here; in my series of wholly unbiased and never (never!) hyperbolic pieces on Gil Kane the idea will be be to arouse you to such a state that you might go and try some of his stuff. If you go, "Well, Gil Kane sure sounds good. Now, how about I dip my eyes in  some sweet, sweet Tony Daniel magic!" then I have failed.

Or as Johnny Cash put it somewhat more succinctly:

"Did you forget the folk singer so soon? And did you forget my song?"

We are in fact a couple of posts into "Gil Happy!" already so we have avoided the whole here's what I'll be doing oh no I won't rigmarole this time out.

There'll be other stuff too but there will definitely be more Gil Kane and always, always more COMICS!!!

Arriving 1/29/13

Looks like a great week of new comics! ADVENTURE TIME #12 ALL STAR WESTERN #16 ANGEL & FAITH #18 AQUAMAN #16 ARCHIE DOUBLE DIGEST #237 ARROW #3 AVENGERS #4 NOW2 BATMAN AND ROBIN ANNUAL #1 BATMAN BEYOND UNLIMITED #12 BATMAN INCORPORATED #7 BATMAN THE DARK KNIGHT #16 BEFORE WATCHMEN DOLLAR BILL #1 BEFORE WATCHMEN OZYMANDIAS #5 (OF 6) COURTNEY CRUMRIN ONGOING #9 CRIMINAL MACABRE FINAL NIGHT 30 DAYS XOVER #2 (OF 4) CROSSED BADLANDS #22 DAMSELS #5 DARK AVENGERS #186 DARK SHADOWS #13 DARKNESS #110 DEATHMATCH #2 DOCTOR WHO PRISONERS OF TIME #1 (OF 12) EMILY & THE STRANGERS #1 (OF 3) FLASH #16 FLASH GORDON ZEITGEIST #9 FURY OF FIRESTORM THE NUCLEAR MEN #16 FUTURAMA COMICS #65 GREEN HORNET #33 GREEN LANTERN CORPS ANNUAL #1 HAWKEYE #7 HE MAN AND THE MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE #6 (OF 6) I VAMPIRE #16 INVINCIBLE #100 JOE KUBERT PRESENTS #4 (OF 6) JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY #648 JUSTICE LEAGUE DARK #16 LOT 13 #4 (OF 5) MARA #2 (OF 6) MARS ATTACKS ZOMBIES VS ROBOTS (ONE SHOT) MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE ORIGIN OF HE MAN #1 NOWHERE MEN #3 ORCHID #12 PUNISHER NIGHTMARE #5 (OF 5) PUNISHER WAR ZONE #4 (OF 5) RED LANTERNS #16 RIPD CITY O/T DAMNED #3 (OF 4) ROBERT JORDAN WHEEL OF TIME EYE O/T WORLD #32 SAVAGE HAWKMAN #16 SHADOW #9 SIMPSONS ILLUSTRATED #5 SIXTH GUN #28 SPAWN #227 SUPERIOR SPIDER-MAN #2 SUPERMAN #16 SUPERMAN FAMILY ADVENTURES #9 TALON #4 TAROT WITCH OF THE BLACK ROSE #78 TEEN TITANS #16 UNWRITTEN #45 X-MEN LEGACY #5 NOW X-TREME X-MEN #9

Books/ Mags/ Stuff ARCHIE THE MARRIED LIFE TP VOL 03 AVENGERS VS X-MEN TP CONSEQUENCES BATMAN THE DARK KNIGHT GOLDEN DAWN TP CAPE 1969 HC COMPLETE CRUMB COMICS TP VOL 03 FRITZ CAT DARK AVENGERS END IS BEGINNING TP DRAW #24 FRANK R PAUL DEAN OF SCI FI ILLUSTRATION HC DEAR BELOVED STRANGER GN GLOBAL FREQUENCY TP HELLRAISERS GRAPHIC BIOGRAPHIES GN HOUSEWIVES AT PLAY HANKY SPANKY GN JACK KIRBY COLLECTOR #60 JIHAD HC JUSTICE LEAGUE HC VOL 02 THE VILLAINS JOURNEY JUSTICE LEAGUE TP VOL 01 ORIGIN LEGEND OF ZELDA HYRULE HISTORIA HC NEVER ENDING SUMMER GN PRINCE VALIANT HC VOL 06 1947-1948 PREVIEWS #293 FEBRUARY 2013 ROGER LANGRIDGES SNARKED TP VOL 03 SILVER SURFER BY STAN LEE AND MOEBIUS #1 STAR WARS OMNIBUS INFINITIES TP SUPER STREET FIGHTER GN VOL 01 X-MEN BLANK GENERATION TP X-MEN MUTANT MASSACRE TP NEW PTG X-WOMEN TP

As always, what do YOU think?

"Your Uniform Makes You An Erotic SHADOW.." COMICS! Sometimes It's A Family Matter!

Firstly, fans of Jog's fine writing on the works of Howard Victor Chaykin are directed HERE. Everyone else gets this. No, there are no refunds. Stop asking me that. Anyway, this...

Photobucket "Mrs Eisenmann, you're trying to seduce me."

FLYER Plot and art by Gentleman Gil Kane Script by Howling Howard Victor Chaykin Coloured by Steely Steve Oliff Lettered by Worried Willie Schubert Originally appeared in LEGENDS OF THE DARK KNIGHT #24,25 and 26 Batman created by Bob Kane DC Comics, 1991-92 ($1.75 each)

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Originally appearing in LEGENDS OF THE DARK KNIGHT in 1991/92 Flyer proves that The Past is another country and that continuity is tighter there. Let it suffice to say that the care and attention to detail in the Nu52 continuity is so desultory that it only makes sense when considered as a vile and cowardly attack directed solely at the sanity of Rascally Roy Thomas. Other than a sadistic assault on everything a fragile old man holds dear it makes no sense. Anyway, I don’t want to get into that whole continuity custard pie fight I’m just pointing out that continuity is at the heart of this comic series and although Chayky Kane© get to produce their own tale it is set as firmly and flagrantly in the then DC continuity as the Cullinan I is set in the head of the Sceptre with the Cross. I may be overstating things there, maybe, but be assured that with LOTDK a great deal of editorial effort was expended ensuring the continuity canvas was so tight you could bounce rice off it.

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Gil Kane (after David Mazzucchelli)

At this point in the DCU the sine qua non of Bat continuity was Mazzucchelli and Miller’s monumental BATMAN: YEAR ONE (B: YO). Maybe it still is (who the Hell knows!?!) Using B: YO as the root of all sequels worked out okay back then what with it being recognised as being one of the few examples of genre comics perfection. On a more dismaying note it is also one of the even fewer examples of a genre comic’s success being matched by its quality. While the caped crusader’s adventures continued in their usual manner in the usual monthlies LOTDK featured short arcs by high toned creators. Each discrete story focused on a period prior to the then current Batus-quo with a view to filling in the gaps with contradictions being actively discouraged. A commitment to continuity and also to quality; apparently it is possible. Certainly in Flyer both quality and continuity are present. It’s a Chayky Kane© Joint so the quality is self evident to all with the nous to recognise it Actually so is the continuity, so much so it can seem a little stifling. In the end though Chayky Kane© manage to create something uniquely theirs. It’s a very odd thing but it’s recognisably a Chayky Kane© thing.

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Flyer answered the prayers of everyone who had read B: Y1 and wondered about the fate of the chopper pilot. Yes, the one whose craft was engulfed by the bats Batman summoned to cover his escape shortly after he punched a cat-hating man through a wall. No doubt crippling the cop from the waist down and leading to the disintegration of his marriage and an empty bedsit life with only a hot plate and tear stained photos of his estranged son as solace. Until that is he was run over in front of some orphans by The Joker (having now cut his own cock off and stapled it to his face like a wee fake nose) in a clown car powered by the blood of Mother Theresa. That’s not this story. That’s a Scott Snyder story and it’s about family. Flyer, however, is about the chopper pilot we were all worried about at the beginning of this paragraph.

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Predictably enough he (the flyer!) suffered catastrophic physical ruin and was only saved by virtue of the fact that his Mum was working on a government weapons programme based on advances by Nazi scientists with said advances being brought to bear to build him a jaw, a lower leg and a flying suit or two. As usual in these stories his mother turns out to be an unrepentant Nazi driven insane by her own (hopefully. Jesus, Howard!) unrequited lust for her own father resulting in a mind-soilingly twisted love-hate relationship with her own son. Naturally she uses her own tech-enhanced son to lure Batman into her randy grasp; his physical and mental perfection having made Bats the ideal candidate for helping her turn her well-maintained womb into an Ubermensch dispenser. Babies, there. I’m talking about Bat-babies. Weirdly, Batman declines her kind offer. There’s a fight and it all ends in tears. Mostly hers. And it actually is about family. A lot of HVC’s stuff is about family but a lot more of it is about the monied elite mucking the hoi polloi about as they are charmingly wont to do. Because they can, see. So that’s okay.

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Flyer is, in fact, the first Batman tale written by HVC. He would go on to write many others but here we can see the first shaky steps towards laying out the issues he would use the character to explore. Because HVC has a very particular take on Batman, or more precisely HVC has a very particular take on Bruce Wayne. Bruce Wayne is of course rich and being rich he is powerful. HVC’s work is very concerned with the rich and powerful and the effect they have on the world. I may have mentioned that before. In all likelihood I will mention it again. I'm set in my ways, okay? While HVC usually assigns the monied elite the villainous role Bruce Wayne forces him to stretch a bit and try to find a sympathetic approach to the privileged. This doesn’t come easy to him but he makes this work to his advantage by shunting his concerns onto the Bruce Wayne character. This gives Bruce something to mull over while he isn’t being punched, punching back or being mauled by a bawdy cougar. He doesn’t really come to any real conclusions but it’s enough that Batman doesn’t just accept he should punch people in the face, because. Underneath all the raunchy nonsense and pulp trappings HVC always remembers to provide something to engage the brain. The balance is a bit off here though, largely due to Mrs Eisenmann who steals every scene she’s in and having stolen it probably tries to force it to make Aryan babies.

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Gil Kane helps here with a fabulous level of artistry where the demented NILF is concerned. Obviously using Graduate era Anne Bancroft as his cue Kane builds a character whose body language fully plays into the turbo raunch and psychotic mind mess she embodies. Whenever the menopausal supremacist appears with Batman Kane depicts her with eyes glazed with lust and sporting a dirty smirk like a haus frau on a hen do when the boy dancers break out the baby oil. HVC’s overheated and fantastically deranged dialogue is turbid with erotic fervour and in combination with Kane’s body language brilliance result in one of the great lunatics of comics.

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This is ‘90s Kane so it isn’t as much to my tastes as ‘80s Kane, but it is Gil Kane and any Gil Kane is good Gil Kane but any Gil Kane after the ‘60s is pretty great at the very least. By the ‘90s though the world is changing and Kane’s art hasn’t kept up in certain areas, particularly the area of technology. So while his architecture, anatomy and action are all as flabbergasting and flowing as ever it’s hard not to agree with the text when it describes the Flyer suit as looking like a “cheap Japanese robot”. HVC hisownself might be having an impish dig here. This strikes me as something he added on seeing the pages rather than an explicit request for Kane’s art to fulfil. After a dense and confident opening chapter Flyer starts to resemble Kane and Wolfman’s (GilWolf©!) Superman work in ACTION comics. Upon reading those delightful comics recently it was hard not to get the impression that Marv Wolfman was being dragged behind the runaway horses of Kane’s art desperately trying to regain the seat and steer the whole shebang in the general direction of sense. Yes, I imagine Marv Wolfman got more than a few new grey hairs trying to explain after the fact how, because Superman had spun around very quickly indeed (for the umpteenth gorgeously illustrated time), everything was okay now. I get the impression here that HVC was a bit on the back foot when the pages came in and had to vamp more than a little. He does it well, I'll give him that. Nifty footwork all round.

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A dead giveaway that HVC’s script is not King is present in Kane’s breaking of HVC’s Golden Rule on more than one occasion. No, calm down, this Golden Rule is not something mucky from a ‘70s bath house but rather HVC’s repeatedly stated belief that a scene should only change on the page turn rather than within the body of the page itself. It’s a simple rule and a good rule and it’s hard not to imagine Kane’s flouting of it as his cocking a snook in HVC’s direction. It’s possible (pure conjecture this) that Kane was gently asserting his authority. HVC had been his assistant in the past on two occasions so there might have been a playful little power game being enacted. A cheeky little reminder. Mischief seems to be present, but good natured mischief rather than its sour cousin malice. Two old friends pissing each other about a bit.

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One of the best things about Flyer is a thing that appears on none of its pages but is apparent in every page since none of them would exist without it; HVC and Gil Kane’s shared history. Yes, it appears not only comics have continuity but people too. Before Flyer Kane and HVC had had a parting of the ways. Why is none of our beeswax, what counts is they healed the rift before it was too late. Which is kinda heartwarming, aw yeah. And on that note here's the popular singer and terrible dresser Mr. Elvis Aaron Presley to play us out ....

A word of thanks now to Mr. Charlie Hodge, who brings me muh towels an' mah wattah. And mah COMICS!!!

Have a good weekend y'all!

What's wrong this this picture?

I tlooks like a logo designer threw up on this cover!

So, what would you, fairly reasonable person, say is the TITLE of this comic? book?

*BuuuuuuRP!!*

 

 

 

 

 

Of the 18 people I asked last week, 16 of them said "The Hunted?"

But, no, it's actually "Threshold", according to my order form.

With just two or three more logos, the cover could have been all text! Or, as Jeff Lester put it: "It appears as if that pair is under attack by the logos!"

This is such a poorly designed cover that I'm fairly certain that's why it cratered utterly at my store, selling just two rack copies, the lowest-selling first issue of a New 52 comic that I've ever had yet.

The insides were fairly OK, however, with the lead story being sort of kind of a Hunger Games thing in space with the DC Space characters (or reimagined versions of several of them, at least), though I'd like a better understanding of what these characters can't just get on a ship and leave.... space is kinda big and all.   Giffen's a competent writer, and the story moves along pretty well, even if I don't have any real earned affection for any character on display.

I was less impressed with the back-up story of the "Orange Lantern", Larfleeze -- honestly, he's just a one-note joke character, and not a particularly funny one at that. But, overall, the comic was OK.

 

THE HIGH WAYS #1: I know there are a few people who find Byrne infinitely dated, but I think it's more that it's apparent when he doesn't really give a shit about the story he's telling, and when he does. This felt to me like something that he cared about. It's a reasonably "hard" science-fiction comic about space truckers. It's also got African-American leads, and, best thing, makes no big deal about it whatsoever. I thought this was pretty darn GOOD, and I think you should pop into our digital store and give it a shot.

 

BLEEDING COOL MAGAZINE #2: It's the "all ages comics special", and, actually, it has some pretty deep and comprehensive coverage about kids comics -- even the price guide is kids comics! I would totally put that on my kids rack... except....

...for the interview with Alan Moore, about HP Lovecraft, smack in the middle of the issue. Or the "worst industry feuds" section. Jinkies, that's not what we want to present to kids as our best face, is it?

*sigh*, got to watch crossing those editorial streams there, guys....

 

OK, the truck is arriving WAY early today, so that's all I have time for... what did YOU think?

-B

 

"Thrill Someone You Love..." COMICS! Sometimes It's The Other Stuff That Catches The Eye!

Well, I finally got The Haunted Scanner working so naturally I diddled and faffed around with it a bit. Put it through its paces and all that. Rather than have that time be classed as wasted I thought I'd share with you, the peoples of the World, some of the neglected visual delights within a bunch of 1971/1972 Marvel Comics. Adverts, I'm talking about adverts there. Look, it's probably better than you fear but not as good as you hope. I can't say fairer than that. So let's skip back to the dawn of the 1970s via a scanner and some stapled and browning paper. In a way, it's a kind of time machine. Maybe. Oh, it's not making it any better is it? Anyway, this... Photobucket "The Frightened Man" by Jack Kirby & Stan Lee (?)

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From "Only One Is Human" (by Don Heck & Stan Lee ( I don't know, maybe?))

And like any pretence as to a point or purpose of any kind - I'm gone!

Next time there might even be something about COMICS!!!

Wait, What? Ep. 113: Technically Difficult

Uploaded from the Photobucket iPhone AppA page from Shotaro Ishinomori's Kikaider, which we didn't even discuss this week but which I kinda adore, nonetheless...

ATTENTION, ATTENTION, NEXT WEEK WILL BE A SKIP WEEK FOR THE PODCAST.  NEXT WAIT IS A WEEK, WHAT? SKIPCAST!

You may not care.  In fact, you may be relieved but either way, Graeme and I will not be talking one another's ear off this week so there won't be anything for you to listen to from us next week.  Maybe you can get out of the house for a bit?  Go for a walk?  Realize that although it's probably too late to do that "52 books  in 52 weeks" you promised, you can maybe still get in 48 in 48 weeks?

Either way, we are here today, gone tomorrow (by which we mean: next week).

As for that "here today" part--show notes after the jump!

Yeah, we had all kinds of technical problems again...sorry about that.  Maybe one day soon, we will try tech solution Omega...but I'm not looking forward to that too much, to be honest.  I'm hoping we can come up something a little bit better than using an atomic bomb we worship as a god to blow up the planet...

0:00-8:49: Hello! 113 is apparently an unlucky number?  Graeme reports on the bounce houses in the sky, and also a story about a prison break that seems very Beagle Boy-esque. 8:49-27:47: 'Comic news' is a great term because most people would say it's neither.  Nonetheless, we discuss the new column by Bob Harras and Bobbie Chase (which they call B&B, but I sort of wish they'd titled "Two Bobs and a Weave"), the news of writers getting pulled off their books before their first issues are even out, etc., etc. Sadly, we have a dose of  our infuriatingly intermittent tech problems plaguing us a bit during this conversation (that eventually builds to a somewhat hilarious obsession on Jeff's part about whether or not he's rocking in his chair too much, or at all).  Our apologies.  Poor DC--once we're done with that, we grouse about their really bad covers, lately.  Also, Jeff has a metaphor for the New DC that probably reveals a bit too much about his family past, maybe. 27:47-41:17:  And because Marvel doesn't get a free pass (except when they do), we also discuss the upcoming Thanos Rising miniseries and compare/contrast with DC's Birds of Prey debacle.  Also, Jeff tries to start an urban legend where if you look in a mirror and say "Mark Badger, Mark Badger, Mark Badger" three times, a Batman miniseries appears. A discussion of how much "there" needs to be there for a comics news story to be a news story... 41:17-41:38: Intermission (Jaunty)! 41:38-53:30:  Comic books!  Graeme and Jeff discuss New Avengers #2 by Jonathan Hickman and Steve Epting; and Jeff talks about how Marvel is creeping him out a little bit. 53:30-1:00:09: Captain America #3!  Graeme isn't reading it; Jeff is, but is somewhat troubled by Cap being less of a Kirbyesque Cap than a Milleresque Cap, and later, while editing the podcast, is a little horrified that this is a complaint he actually made with his face. 1:00:09-1:05:53: Graeme has read the latest issue of Daredevil and then an advance ARC of Paul Pope's The One Trick Rip-Off.  After more techie problems, we decided to jump just a bit early and come back with a different (and more reliable) mic. 1:05:53-1:06:15: Intermission (Jazzy)! 1:06:15-1:08:17:  Round Three!  Graeme has noticed something about the latest Marvel solicitations that suggests they're not reading them especially closely.  He also has good news about Avengers Assemble #14? 1:08:17-1:14:57:  Batman #16 and Batman and Robin #16!  The Death of the Family stuff is just intensely, baroquely fucked up in a way that reminds Jeff of another Batman book that may not be what Scott Snyder and the Bat-team had in mind… 1:14:57-1:23:42:  Issues #5 and #6 of Black Kiss 2!  It's the grand wrap-up of a this mighty odd sequel from Howard Chaykin. 1:23:42-1:42:13:  Questions, finally!   Al Ewing asked: Where do you stand on: 1) Vodka And Coke; 2) Christmas Crackers; 3) Dennis The Menace vs Dennis The Menace And Gnasher; 4) Big sacks with ‘SWAG’ on them vs Big sacks with ‘$’ on them; 5) The ‘aggro style’ UK comics of the late seventies; 6) Hi-style design-heaviness in US superhero work – could the design sensibility of a David Aja or a Johnathan Hickman replace the hem-hem ‘design’ sensibility of bendy spines and porn poses and upskirt angles if we all wish really really hard? 7) Bad Machinery/Girls With Slingshots/Dinosaur Comics 1:42:13-1:56:19: Mo Walker asked: 1). If you could put together an Avengers/Justice League style team comprised of Kirby characters, who would make the cut? 2). What are your thoughts on series 4 of Misfits? 1:56:19-1:59:40: JohnK (UK) asked: 1) A revival of Quality’s BIG BEN – The Man With No Time For Crime by Al Ewing and J Bone – Yes or No? QUICKLY! Yes or No? 2) Biggest Loss to Comics’ archive: ROM, ATARI FORCE or MICRONAUTS(original runs, natch!) 3) Who really owns Marvelman (in less than 10 words)? 4) a) Was “Jimmy Broxton” the artist on KNIGHT & SQUIRE a pseudonym? b)If so, who for? 1:59:40-end:  Closing comments.  Extra apologies.  A notice is made (as it was above) that next week is a skip week and so we will not be around but shall return the week after that.

If all of this sets your glands a-salivatin', then feel free to pull up a stool and being listening now!

Wait, What? Ep. 113: Technically Difficult

As always, we hope you enjoy and thanks for listening!

Arriving 1/23/13

Why are there three "Green Lantern" comics in a single week? And.... other questions!

A PLUS X #4 NOW ANSWER #1 (OF 4) ASTONISHING X-MEN #58 AVENGERS #3 NOW BART SIMPSON COMICS #79 BATWOMAN #16 BEDLAM #3 BEFORE WATCHMEN MINUTEMEN #6 (OF 6) BIRDS OF PREY #16 BLUE BEETLE #16 BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER SPIKE #5 (OF 5) CASTLE A CALM BEFORE STORM #2 (OF 5) CATWOMAN #16 CHEW #31 DAN THE UNHARMABLE #9 DARK HORSE PRESENTS #20 DC UNIVERSE PRESENTS #16 DEADPOOL #4 NOW DEADPOOL KILLUSTRATED #1 (OF 4) FABLES #125 FF #3 NOW GAMBIT #8 GARTH ENNIS BATTLEFIELDS #3 (OF 6) GREEN FIELDS PT 3 GODZILLA ONGOING #9 GREEN LANTERN #16 (RISE) GREEN LANTERN CORPS #16 (RISE) GREEN LANTERN NEW GUARDIANS #16 (RISE) HARBINGER (ONGOING) #8 HELL YEAH #6 (RES) HELLBLAZER #299 HELLRAISER ROAD BELOW #4 (OF 4) IT GIRL & THE ATOMICS #6 JENNIFER BLOOD FIRST BLOOD #3 JSA LIBERTY FILES THE WHISTLING SKULL #2 (OF 6) JUDGE DREDD #3 JUSTICE LEAGUE #16 KNIGHTS OF THE DINNER TABLE #194 LADY DEATH (ONGOING) #25 LEGION OF SUPER HEROES #16 LIFE WITH ARCHIE #26 LORD OF THE JUNGLE #12 MARS ATTACKS TRANSFORMERS (ONE SHOT) MARVEL UNIVERSE ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN #10 MASKS #3 MASSIVE #8 MIND MGMT #7 NIGHTWING #16 (DOTF) NUMBER 13 #2 PEANUTS VOL 2 #5 PROPHET #33 PUNISHER NIGHTMARE #4 (OF 5) RED HOOD AND THE OUTLAWS #16 (DOTF) REVIVAL #6 SAUCER COUNTRY #11 SONIC UNIVERSE #48 STAR TREK COUNTDOWN TO DARKNESS #1 STEED AND MRS PEEL ONGOING #4 STUMPTOWN V2 #5 SUPERBOY ANNUAL #1 SUPERGIRL #16 SWORD OF SORCERY #4 THE LONE RANGER #12 THE SPIDER #8 TMNT SECRET FOOT CLAN #2 (OF 4) ULTIMATE COMICS ULTIMATES #20 UNCANNY AVENGERS #3 NOW UNCANNY X-FORCE #1 NOW WAR GODDESS #12 WINTER SOLDIER #14 WITCH DOCTOR MALPRACTICE #3 (OF 6) WITCHBLADE #163 WOLVERINE AND X-MEN #24 WONDER WOMAN #16 X-O MANOWAR (ONGOING) #9 YOUNG AVENGERS #1 NOW YOUNG JUSTICE #24

Books / Mags / Stuff BATMAN DARK KNIGHT ARCHIVES HC VOL 08 BOOKS OF MAGIC DELUXE EDITION HC CONAN TP VOL 12 THRONE OF AQUILONIA DAN THE UNHARMABLE TP VOL 01 FRANK CHO WOMEN HC BOOK 02 HOT AND STEAMY GN VOL 01 (A) MAD ARTIST ED HC (NET) MMW DOCTOR STRANGE TP VOL 02 MR MURDER IS DEAD HC PHINEAS AND FERB MAGAZINE #15 SECRET AVENGERS BY RICK REMENDER TP VOL 01 SONIC UNIVERSE TP VOL 04 JOURNEY TO THE EAST STAR WARS BLOOD TIES TP VOL 02 BOBA FETT IS DEAD THE SPIDER TP VOL 01 TERROR O/T ZOMBIE QUEEN ULTIMATE COMICS ULTIMATES BY HICKMAN TP VOL 02 ULTIMATE COMICS X-MEN BY NICK SPENCER TP VOL 02 WOLVERINE AND X-MEN TP ALPHA AND OMEGA WOLVERINE SABRETOOTH REBORN PREM HC

 

What looks good to YOU?

-B

"I'm A STUART, Grandpa." COMICS! Sometimes The Weird Porous Kid Walks It!

Here at Savage Towers the UK contingent is experiencing problems with The Haunted Scanner. So, just the covers this time out I'm afraid. Apparently my brain is no longer under warranty so I can't help the words that accompany the pictures. So here's a shoddy make-shift Sunday look at some comics. Or you could go outside and play in the snow! Photobucket

G.I. COMBAT Featuring The Haunted Tank #7 Haunted Tank by Howard Victor Chaykin (a), Peter J Tomasi (w), Jesus Arbutov (c) and Rob Leigh (l) Unknown Soldier by Staz Johnson (a), Justin Gray & Jimmy Palmiotti (w), Rob Schwager (c) and Rob Leigh (l) DC Comics $3.99 (2011) Haunted Tank created by Russ Heath & Robert Kanigher Unknown Soldier created by Joe Kubert & Robert Kanigher

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The lead story here, a lead story about a Haunted Tank we should bear in mind, is a consumate exercise in capturing the gleeful idiocy of DC war comics of yesteryear; that is way back when to the time when Mommy would roll them up and beat me with them. Yes, the day I wrestled that rolled up copy of ALARMING BULLSHIT #235 off her was the day I became a man (i.e. 10 March 2007). Tomasi doesn't blink once as he recounts the tale of a Haunted Tank crewed by a gipper in a string vest and his endearingly credulous Grandson as they go up against a revamped War Wheel piloted by Rommel's grandson and powered by the slack corpus of The Desert Fox himself. It's barmy and all the better for it. HVC seems to have found the perfect home for his clip-art pasting mania with this hardware heavy tale although he doesn't fare as well on the flesh he hardly fails as such, giving The Fox himself a pleasingly senile cast to his confounded features.

Gray and Palmiotti manage the not inconsiderable feat of removing anything of interest from the Unknown Soldier concept, leaving us with some pages where a man falls out of a window and then goes and has sad thoughts in  someone else's garden. They even waste the nonsensical fun of having a diamond laced skeleton. As a result it's purely down to Tomasi and Chaykin's unflinching grasping of the nettle of nonsense that this book is GOOD!

INDESTRUCTIBLE HULK #1 Art by Lenil Francis Yu Written by Mark Waid Coloured by Sunny Gho Lettered by Chris Eliopoulos Marvel, 3.99 (2011) The Hulk created by Jack Kirby and Stan Lee

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INDESTRUCTIBLE HULK #2 Art by Lenil Francis Yu & Gerry Alanguilan Written by Mark Waid Coloured by Sunny Gho Lettered by Chris Eliopoulos Marvel, 3.99 (2011) The Hulk created by Jack Kirby and Stan Lee

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Yes, I know I shouldn't have this comic due to THE KIRBY IMPERATIVE but my Retailer forgot and so he wanted to share what he thought was a book I might like with me. Which is okay, because I don't actually expect my Retailer to remember all my mad demands and crazy caveats all the time. Most of the time will do. I'm not an animal. So, I ended up with this comic but because of Marvel's double-shipping and the lag in my deliveries I actually ended up with issues 1 & 2. Thus (thus, yet! Oh yes, thus! Smell my formal indignation!) a simple error sparked by generous intentions ended up costing me £5.98 and taking up space in my package that two comics I actually wanted might have occupied. This is the hidden damage of Marvel's double-shipping! I now want even less to do with Marvel than ever and I wasn't exactly mad-keen on them at this stage anyway.

But stupid English dude, double-shipping is just giving you more of what you like, I hear the less polite mutter. No, not really. Even if it was DAREDEVIL which I do like. For a start you aren't giving me anything. I'm paying for it. Secondly, I've seen Theatre of Blood and I do not want to be in the Robert Morley role while Marvel acts like Vincent Price and bakes my beloved (dogs/comics) in a pie and forces them down my throat with a plunger until I suffocate. Some of the classier of you might want to recast that thought in terms of Titus Andronicus, but I'm okay with Theatre of Blood.

This book was OKAY! Mark Waid is a reliable writing guy and Leinil Yu is still okay even if I think he needs to step back from the fussiness into the alcove of clarity. But it was $3.99 and even without THE KIRBY IMPERATIVE that's too much a month and with double shipping it would be $7.98 a month, maybe more. That's just nuts.

FURY MAX #7 Art by Goran Parlov Written by Garth Ennis Coloured by Lee Loughridge Lettered by Rob Steen Marvel, $3.99 (2011) Nick Fury created by Jack Kirby and Stan Lee Frank Castle (The Punisher)created by John romita Snr, Ross Andru & Gerry Conway

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Originally I was overriding the KIRBY DIRECTIVE as this was such a VERY GOOD! comic and, more importantly, I am a weak creature always on the lookout for an out. As if to rub my smug face in my own moral doo-doo the quality of the comic seems to have taken a sudden lurch from Ellroy-lite into those issues of THE 'NAM where Frank Castle got introduced to boost sales. Quite a few people fondly recall THE 'NAM (i.e. the comic not the land war in South East Asia. Although I suppose it might have its fans too, human nature being what it is.) but I have never read anyone fondly recall the issues of THE 'NAM where Frank Castle started popping up. Also, I have decided to send the CBLDF the equivalent total monies this comic will end up costing me. Hopefully this combination of unmet expectations and financial excess will encourage me to actually be a man of my word. Then I will really get my Smug on, you betcha!

Goran Parlov's art is still staggering this time out with even the talking heads sections being just as entertaining as the slobberknockers in most other comics. There's an absolutely fantastic panel where Fury is giving Ms DeFabio a Cage-ing. It isn't fantastic for the contents but it is fantastic in that it has clearly been enlarged to make the occurrences within less, ahem, overt. This is a series that clearly, frequently and savagely depicts the effects of violence on large numbers of people, but apparently it still has trouble with a bit of bum fun. Marvel MAX comics - where there are no limits, except when there are! Despite all this it's still a VERY GOOD! comic.

 

SPONGEBOB COMICS #13 Art by Rick Altergott, Vince DePorter, Nate Neal, James Kochalka, Derek Drymon, Stephen R. Bissette, Rementer, Tony Millionaire, Jacob Chabot, Al Jaffee Written by Chris Duffy, David Lewman, Maris Wicks, James Kochalka, Derek Drymon, Roman, Robert Leighton, Chris Yambar Coloured by Molly Dolben, Cat Garza, Monica Kubina, James Campbell, HiFi Lettered by Comicraft United Plankton Pictures, $2.99 (2011) Spongebob Squarepants created by Stephen Hillenburg

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The Kid recently discovered Spongebob Squarepants on that televisual device that's sweeping the nation by storm and so I ordered this. Mostly to make up for all the parenting mistakes I make on a daily basis. Yes, he may end up hating me but he'll hate me less because I bought him a comic, I reasoned. And reasoned well. Being familiar with kid's spin off comics I braced myself for a tie-in comic which was so lacking in care or effort it would probably not even have the creators credited, it might even just consist of screen captures like that shitty Marvel digest of the ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN show, whatever it was it would probably not be worth a second thought by anyone over the age of 7.

Once again proving how right I always am it turned out to be VERY GOOD!

I mean, look at that roster up there! I'm not listing all the names again (it's cold here and I'm a martyr to The Arthritis) but right here on these pages we've got the guys who did Doofus, Tyrant!, Sock Monkey, SuperF*ckers and all those crazy MAD fold-in things. Other people too, but I'm not familiar with them but they don't disappoint either. I guess the highlight is the Mermaid Man strip in which Steve Bissette basically draws a Nick Cardy era Aquaman strip and Derek Drymon has Spongebob draw himself into it. Like many a bored child has done in reality. It's sweet and clever and is surrounded by strips of equal or only slightly lesser worth. It's a crazy good line up producing crazy good comics and I wish The Haunted Scanner was working because then I could show you. But then again, maybe it's better if you just go and buy an issue of SPONGEBOB COMICS. You might be disappointed but with all the talent and invention on show here that's probably going to be all your own fault.

And I'm gone like Fury's eye but there remain  - COMICS!!!