Thursday, May 23, 2013

Comic shop comics: May 8-22

Daredevil #26 (Marvel Entertainment) Something seems like it went a little funny somewhere in the scheduling of this book, as the double-sized climax of writer Mark Waid's entire run on the series up until this point, in which the mastermind between all of DD's woes up until this point is revealed, comes not in issue #25, as tradition might dictate, but in issue #26. That's unusual, right?

But whatever. I love Chris Samnee's cover for this, with it's somewhat reserved Eisner homage, and, something I just now notice while I'm looking at this pile of Marvel, DC and Dark Horse Comics, I really rather like how Marvel's covers are currently designed, with all the visual clutter nonsense—UPC symbol, ad for a cartoon, credits, price, etc—all cordoned off in a red stripe along the bottom.

What makes this issue double-sized is a regular Daredevil issue, with a Foggy Nelson story at the back, both by Waid and Samnee. In the DD story, the mastermind is finally revealed (It wasn't my last guess, Mister Fear, but I did guess who it was before it was revealed...but only ten pages early). The Foggy story is a bit on the sappy side, involving a cancer patient, a bunch of little kid who are all cancer patients and the power of comics and heroes to instill hope, but well-made nonetheless (Iron Man appears in a few panels of it. Have any of you guys been reading Iron Man since the Marvel "NOW!" relaunch? How come he's wearing yellow and black now? Is that something they explained, or is it merely an aesthetic thing).


FF #7 (Marvel) I haven't read every single run on the Fantastic Four before, but I'm pretty sure there's a rule written somewhere saying that each new iteration of the team must fight an iteration of the Frightful Four at some point. In this issue, the Faux-tastic Four and the kids of the Future Foundation battle a new version of the Frightful Four consisting of The Wizard, Blastaar and reluctant recruits Medusa and The Wizard's own clone (and FF member) Bentley-23.

Also, it's written by Matt Fraction, drawn by Mike Allred and colored by Laura Allred, so it's pretty awesome.

I liked the Moleoid kids' battle-suit:

And I'm always up for some Lockjaw:


Green Lantern #20 (DC Comics) As Mark Antony once wrote on his blog about Julius Caesar, I've come here to bid farewell to Geoff Johns' run on Green Lantern, not to praise it.

I've read every single issue of Johns' Green Lantern run, from Green Lantern: Rebirth through this issue, and while I haven't loved every single page of it, I never dropped it, no matter how much more picky I've been in my comics purchases over the course of the last nine years. Sure, I've complained about it an awful lot—mainly regarding the violence and the over-usage of splash pages once the book became 20 rather than 22 pages for $2.99—but I never stopped reading.

And while I don't think Geoff Johns is the best mainstream comics writer, he is one of my favorite writers.

So I'm not going to bother with an overall assessment or appraisal of Johns' run in this space; clearly it's been incredibly successful by pretty much any definition. I've liked it well enough to pay attention to it. All of it.

This particular issue is a $7.99 behemoth, bearing a wrap-around cover and a spine, making it more trade paperback than comic book-comic. There are 66-story pages, by my count, although many of those story pages are simply splash spreads, including one massive, four-page fold-out at the end of the book. It's almost ad-free, with the only non-GL ads being an inside front cover ad for something Man of Steel and Walmart related, and an inside back cover ad for one of those direct-to-DVD cartoons DC occasionally releases. The rest of the ads are all house ads for the upcoming five-book Lantern franchise (Green Lantern, GL Corps, GL: New Guardians, Red Lanterns and Larfleeze. Then there's an editorial of sorts by Johns, and a multi-page ad listing all of the books collecting Johns' run on the title, rather more thorough than usual summaries of their events, and even the covers of past books whose continuity they draw on.

Then there's this weird thing they do, where every few pages or so there's a full-page ad-like "Congratulations Geoff Johns" featuring about a half-dozen quotes and blurbs from Johns' co-workers, collaborators, celebrity fans, "celebrity" fans, and even a few family members. It's nice, but it's so...much. I can't remember ever seeing anything remotely this...big done to celebrate any creator by either of the Big Two, even upon their deaths, let alone when they simply stop writing a series they've been writing for a long time (Not to dismiss the achievement of Johns' run; his stick-to-it-iveness is extremely admirable, although I suppose it must come in large part from it also being successful enough that DC never saw fit to kick him off the title either). The closest I can think of was that special collection of Brian Michael Bendis stories Marvel put out a few years ago to commemorate his 10th anniversary with the publisher, and that DC Comics Presents series of one-shots DC published in honor of Julius Schwartz.

Anyway, it's a nice thing DC did for Geoff Johns. I'm just standing back and whistling at it, as all.

My only real quibbles are these. First, the story is framed as a story being told by an older, wiser, veteran Green Lantern opening up a gigantic green book to share "the story every young Lantern comes to the archive hall to hear....the story of Hal Jordan." Near the end of that story, the elder Lantern refers to Jordan as "the spark" that started it all, which glosses over the fact that Hal Jordan was the second Green Lantern, a rebooted version of the old Golden Age hero in a way that, if not awkward, at least made me think, "Oh, hey, what about the actual spark, Alan Scott?" (I imagine Scott and probably Jade would have had some small role in this story, were it not for The New 52-boot).

Second, and related, in Johns' little editorial, he gives special thanks to Julius Schwartz, John Broome and Gil Kane "for creating such an incredible foundation to build on wiht Hal Jordan and the Green Lantern Corps."

"Without them," Johns writes, "there would be no Green Lantern."

Except for Green Lantern Alan Scott of course, the character Schwartz and company re-created into Hal Jordan. While their overhaul was fairly extensive, they did have the name Green Lantern, the magic ring and magic lantern, the green constructs and an oath to work with already, thanks to Green Lantern creators Martin Nodell and Bill Finger, who probably deserved a shout-out similar to the one Broome and company received.

I did say they were quibbles, right?

As for the story, I was a little more lost than I would have liked to have been, due largely to the last two story arcs having played out like "War of The Green Lanterns" had, with chapters of the story appearing in each of the books (of which I only read one of the three or four involved series). It resets the franchise to about where it was prior to the New 52 reboot, with only a few tweaks—Kyle Rayner is apparently still a White Lantern for some reason, Simon Baz exists. Most of the characters who played some role in in Johns' GL run make some appearance, including each Corps and the principals from each, and the climactic battle with First Lantern Volthoom plays out like most of the climactic battles in the series up until this point, with sudden transformations, unexpected players arriving and unusual power-ups.

Johns resolves the relationship between Hal and Sinestro (and Sinestro and the Corps, and Sinestro and the Guardians) quite nicely, as well as Hal's relationship with his father's death, a plot point Johns would keep coming back to in various ways throughout his years on the franchise. Johns even provides little glimpses of the various characters' far-flung futures, so each of the Earth Lanterns, for example, gets a sort of happy ending, even though their adventures will actually continue next month in the five Lantern books, the four pre-exising ones all with brand-new writers.

It sure looks like those books are going to continue the cosmic space opera approach Johns went in during most of hir run, but I kind of hope Green Lantern at least gets a little more earth-centric, and has Hal dealing with old rogues like The Shark, Goldface, The Invisible Destroyer and whoever—poor incoming GL writer Robert Venditti has to follow this after all, and the further he can take Green Lantern into a far different, un-Geoff Johnsian direction, the better for him. (Personally, I'm dropping the book; I dont' have strong feelings for Venditti one way or the other, but I do not care for the work of incoming artist Billy Tan one jot).

As for the art in this, it is surprisingly good and surprisingly consistent, despite the many hands involved. Doug Mahnke handles the bulk of it, and does his regular superlative job, and he's got six guys inking his work along with him, but that's not unusual for Green Lantern. Even the 20-page issues have that many inkers, sometimes.

There's guest art by Ethan Van Sciver, Patrick Gleason, Cully Hamner, Aaron Kuder, Ivan Reis and Jerry Ordway, but it's all pretty smoothly integrated, so shifts in style are usually rather logically signaled.


Green Team #1 (DC Comics) This is Art Baltazar, Franco and Ig Guara's New 52 revival of the least-likely-to-be-revived premise in the DC Comics reservoir of premises, one of those guaranteed pre-canceled comics they occasionally throw out into the market just to watch die. I believe it's currently racing The Movement to cancellation, which, in both cases, I assume will happen around issue #8.

I've reviewed this elsewhere this afternoon, but am noting it here as per the self-imposed rules of this column (That is, it was released on one of the dates in the post title, and I bought it at the comic shop). It wasn't the best comic I read today, but it wasn't the worst either. If I were ranking them all, I'd put it at #5.


Star Wars #5 (Dark Horse Comics) Maybe it's just the similarity in style of comic cover artist Alex Ross and movie poster artist Drew Struzan, but I kinda dug Ross' covers for the first four issues of this new series, while Rodolfo Migliari's cover for this issue just kinda creeps me out: It looks like wax statues of Han Solo and Chewbacca photographed and dropped into a painting of a still from one of the movies (Spoiler: The action depicted on the cover does not occur in this book at all).

I was similarly less enchanted with the contents. I found the first issue (and those that immediately followed) quite enjoyable to read (on top of being well-made), but like the next comic discussed in this post, the pacing is slow enough that the narrative's grown dull taken chunk-by-chunk on a monthly basis.

Han and Chewie are still doing whatever they're meant to be doing on Coruscant, and here they've ventured into a bar that happens to contain either many of the exact same characters as the ones that hung out in the Mos Eisley cantina, or else representatives of the same races that hung out there (Artist Carlos D'Anda draws nice versions of them all, though). Boba Fett and Bossk are even there, and while I like Boba Fett (who doesn't?), it's sorta weird to see him on-screen (well, on-panel) this early in the Star Wars story (just as seeing so much Yoda in the prequels drains the import and surprise out of his appearance in Empire).

The first half of the book is devoted to a dogfight between some of Leia's X-Wing pilots and some TIE fighters that read an awful lot like a more sober and reserved take on the fight scenes from the old Robotech cartoon that I used to watch before school as a child, only without the action packed pay-offs (anime does space dogfights better than comics, really).

I don't know; maybe this book isn't really for me after all. I thought a Star Wars comics set between installments of original trilogy, starring the characters I knew and liked best, by high-quality creators, would be the Star Wars comics for me, but maybe I'm just not a more Star Wars kinda reader after all, despite how much I enjoyed the Force Unleashed and Darth Vader comics I read recently, and how much I dig Dark Horse's repints of the old Marvel series (I'm currently on the third volume of those).


Wonder Woman #20 (DC Comics) In this issue various factions of Olympian gods have ominous conversations with one another and maneuver to get their hands on the baby of Zola and Zeus, who was prophesied to one day destroy the ruler of Olympus, while Wonder Woman and her running crew try to protect the baby. You know, the same thing that's been happening in the book for close to two years now. Brian Azzarello's plot does move forward, but very slowly, and on a circular path, as if he were walking it up a spiral staircase with far too many steps. In this issue, for example, Wonder Woman fights Moon. Again.

My hopes were raised when Orion and a DCU analogue of Wesley Willis showed up a few issues ago, as I thought maybe Azzarello was bringing the New Gods mythology into this story of the Old Gods, but, if he is, he's doing so as gradually and slowly as he's done everything else in this book (Orion's MIA in this ish, for example).

I'm pretty sure I'm going to drop the book. It's slow and repetitive, but I think it's probably still worth reading—but I don't see any reason to read it in 20-page installments once a month, which only accentuates the slow pace and glacial plotting. I don't see any reason to keep reading it as its serially published instead of borrowing a trade of it from a library every six months or so.

Even the main reason I was interested n the book—Cliff Chiang's artwork—has been less and less of an incentive, as he's been increasingly less of a presence. In this issue, for example, he provides breakdowns and draws six pages, while Goran Sudzuka, the second of the fill-in artists, draws the bulk of the issue.


Young Avengers #5 (Marvel) Great cover, huh?

The art in this issue, as in the previous four issues, is excellent, and among the best I can find in any superhero comics on the shelves at the moment. I found the script somewhat disappointing this time around, perhaps in large part because this is the conclusion of the first arc, and rather than winning, these half-dozen heroes fight their foes to a standstill, and then decide on a course of action that will keep them together as a superhero team for the forseeable future. In other words, with this issue it becomes clear that these first five issues were about why this is the Young Avengers line-up and that they are gong to be starring in this comic book series, which is something I knew before picking up the first issue. It felt a bit artificial, and therefore hollow, at least in its plotting and pacing, if not in the characterization, which writer Kieron Gillen continues to do a rather fine job of.

But man, this art's so nice even if the writing were terrible I'd probably still be picking this series up every month.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Review: Wolverine: Goodbye, Chinatown

Last night I talked a little bit about how difficult it can be to catch up on some series in trade when the publisher publishes particular stories in multiple titles, collects them under different names or does something weird with the number, like having two consecutive collections of Batman Inc both labeled "Volume 1."

Here's another series I've had trouble following: Writer Jason Aaron's Wolverine comics. He wrote an arc of a comic called Wolverine (Collected as Wolverine: Get Mystique. Then he got his own Wolverine series, a new book entitled Wolverine: Weapon X. That lasted 16 issues, and I want to say it generated about three trade collections. Then, after Weapon X was canceled, he wrote a brand-new volume of a series simply entitled Wolverine.

Figuring out what titles Jason Aaron wrote and what order to read them in can be a bit tricky; certainly more tricky than figuring out the reading order of, say, Eiichiro Oda's One Piece, which are all entitled One Piece and assigned volume numbers on the spine. I was trying to read Aaron's Wolverine comics in trade for a while, but eventually gave up, occasionally coming across one in a library and picking it up if it looks unfamiliar to me.

Like Wolverine: Goodbye, Chinatown, the small print of which tells me includes issues #17-#20 of the rebooted Wolverine series which, come to think of it, was just recently rebooted again.

As difficult as it may be to figure these books out—despite this being part of a run of story arcs written by Jason Aaron and despite the fact that it continues sub-plots from previous issues and leaves other unresolved for future issues, there is no volume number—I enjoyed this. Like most of the Wolverine comics by Aaron I've read, like most of the Marvel comics by Aaron I've read, it was fast-paced, quick-witted, snappily-dialogued and plotted on the ridiculous side, with Wolverine playing straight man to the lunatic world of the Marvel Universe.

It probably didn't hurt any that the title story, which accounts for three-fourths of the contents of this book, prominently featured characters and concepts familiar from Jeff Parker's Agents of Atlas comics.

Here's where I really started enjoying the trade:
That's the second panel on the very first page.

Wolvie is preparing to leave San Francisco, where he and the other X-Men have been based for a few years, to head back East and found a school (So this takes place after the events of Schism, but before the launch of Aaron's Wolverine and The X-Men series), and wants to bid farewell to his girlfriend and collect the money he has saved up.

But that money has been stolen, and to get it back he has to live up to his responsibilities as The Black Dragon, the secret kingpin of the Chinatown underworld ("Did I forget to mention that I'm secretly the kingpin of the Chinatown underworld?"), and that means investigating the kung fu crime wave that the local turf war has engendered.
Wolverine, a vaguely <a href = "http://indianajones.wikia.com/wiki/Short_Round">Short Round</a>-like kid and a white eyebrow master follow a trail that leads them to a dragon-carved tunnel that leads from San Francisco to China, The Jade Claw and a particularly silly section of Wolverine's rather silly rogue's gallery. Wolvie and his friend's aren't the only ones in the literal underworld beneath the figurative underworld though; Gorilla Man (seen most prominently in Parker's various Agents of Atlas comics) and Fat Cobra (from Ed Brubaker, Matt Fraction and David Aja's Immortal Iron Fist run) are also knocking around and ally themselves with Wolvie (Gorilla Man does so only after the traditional Marvel fight and then team-up ritual).

It is, like so much of Aaron's Marvel writing, pretty insane, but it's also a lot of fun and very funny. Gorilla Man may be one of the last characters one would think to pair Wolverine up with, but Aaron finds an awful lot of similarities between the two so that they play off one another nicely, and artist Ron Garney even hammers those parallels home in his posing of the two hairy, teeth-gritting brawlers.


Garney's work is, as always, superb, and he does a pretty incredible job of marrying the wildly different characters and concepts—created in different eras by different artists—into something seemingly seamless. Chinese dragons, guy from '70s kung fu movie, Wolverine, a talking gorilla in a pair of pants and a white button-down shirt, Razorfist—all appear in the space of three panels, and all look perfectly natural doing so.

Garney doesn't draw the one issue that appears in this trade that isn't part of the title story. That's drawn by Renato Guedes, and finds Wolverine in New York City just in time to catch a whiff (literally; he smells it) of a meeting between a Japanese yakuza boss and Wilson "The Kingpin" Fisk, a meeting interrupted by some amusingly weird bounty hunter characters that apparently appeared in another Wolverine story I haven't run across yet (And who reminded me of the two guys who look sorta like Yosemite Sam in the old Looney Tunes short Along Came Daffy; it's watchable here, for the time being).
Guedes' art is fine, but it's so different from Garney's that it takes some getting used to, and is sort of a shock to see. His Wolvie is shorter, hairier and uglier, his hair more clown-like. There's a great deal more detail and texture to all of his art, so the more realistic style clashes with the flatter, more abstracted, more comic book-y look of Garney's art.

This particular story is a little straighter to, as it's more plot-driven and involves more familiar plot elements for Wolverine comics...and modern Marvel comics in general.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Some thoughts on Batman Incorporated Vol. 1: Demon Star

I've already discussed what may be the craziest aspect of this book, that it's entitled Batman Incorporated Vol. 1, even though it's actually the second volume of Batman Inc, and the previous volume was also labeled Batman Incorporated Vol. 1.

The reason for this is that Batman Inc existed prior to DC's September 2011 reboot of their DCU shared setting into The New 52, so the entire eight-issue series and its over-sized special are all collected in Batman Incorporated Vol. 1, while issues #0 through #7 of the second, New 52 version of the series are collected in this collection.

I don't think publishers realize how difficult it is to follow these books in trade if you don't stay on top of them, probably because the people assembling and marketing the trades are so deeply involved in the month-to-month world of comics they haven't tried catching up on a series in trade before.

I like to think I'm pretty engaged, but I got lost trying to follow the Greg Pak and Greg Van Lente Hercules storyline, which jumped form title to title, when I switched from reading the singles to trade-waiting it, and other multi-book storylines like Jeff Parker's Hulk comics have proven prohibitively confusing for me to catch up on. I can and will figure it out with a few minutes of online research and the help of Wikipedia, probably, but generally before I sit down to order some trades from an online retailer, I'll see something involving less research that I want to read just as badly, and will buy that instead (The most recent example I personally have is trying to read all of Matt Fraction's run on Invincible Iron Man in trades borrowed from various Ohio libraries through inter-library loan programs; there are about a dozen or so volumes, all of the labeled with a volume number, except for the Fear Itself tie-in arc, which not only has no volume number, but also isn't entitled Invincible Iron Man but, rather, Fear Itself: Invincible Iron Man.

So if in a few years someone wants to read Grant Morrison's Batman run, they're going to have to buy trades collecting arcs from Batman (which, if I remember correctly, don't have volume numbers, only sub-titles naming the story arcs collected), Batman and Robin, Final Crisis, the Return of Bruce Wayne miniseries, and then Batman Inc Vol. 1, another Batman Inc Vol. 1 and then maybe one or two more volumes.

I guess it's a good thing DC has an official Chronology now.


—This second volume of Batman Inc wasn't a first-wave New 52 book, but came along near the start of DC's second year's worth of New 52 releases.

The reading experience of the trade is much different than that of the way the books were originally published, as the trade begins with issue #0. When they were released as serially-published issues, the series began with issue #1 and was followed by issues #2 and #3 and then #0 was released, with #4 following it.

I thought Morrison did a pretty great job on the script for that #0 issue, as it essentially re-told the story of Batman Inc, recapping the events without repeating anything readers saw the first time around.

If any readers did start with this trade, they would probably be okay-ish, but they'd be missing a lot of rather fun-stuff.

The premise for the #0 issue, and thus the first chapter of the collection, is essentially that of showing Batman Bruce Wayne going around and recruiting his Batmen of Many Nations: Knight and Squire, Dark Ranger, The Batman of Russia seen in Batman and Robin Vol. 1: Born to Kill, Nightrunner (who gets an okay from previous Batman of France, the retiring Cavalier), Chief Man-of-Bats and Red Raven, The Batman of Japan and El Guacho. There's also a scene of Batman and Bruce Wayne explaining the concept, and a splash of his Batman robots being built.

It's a rather elegantly-constructed crash course in Morrison's Batman Inc concept, and having read it this way, I'm finding it hard to imagine how it might have read as originally released.

I don't think #1 offers anywhere near as clear an introduction of the concept, and now I wonder how many new readers decided to sit out the first volume of Batman Inc but pick up Batman Inc (volume 2) #1 and found themselves lost.


—While Chris Burnham draws almost all of issues #1-#7 (save a few pages toward the end, where deadlines apparently got the better of him), Frazier Irving drew the #0 issue.

I don't care for Frazier Irving's art here. I've enjoyed it immensely in the past, but I find the texture of it somewhat sickly, and the faces look overly photo-referenced in this story, with some of the masks not really seeming to quite fit the characters wearing them.


—The continuity on this volume is pretty wonky—mainly in that, like the main, Geoff Johns-written Green Lantern title, so little has changed that what has changed during the reboot stands out as glaring.

Basically, everything Morrison wrote in any of his Bat-titles is expressly still in play and referred back to, all the way back to Talia al Ghul's Man-Bat ninjas and Damian's origin in "Batman and Son."

And a great deal of that continuity isn't really explained at all. One will read it and discover Damian complaining that Grayson was a better partner than Batman (without detailing the fact that Grayson was Batman) or that Bruce Wayne returned from the dead after an absence, without explaining the circumstances of Batman's death and return, and so on.

All that really seems to have changed are Tim Drake's costume—he gets almost no lines, and is a barely-there presence—and no Batgirls are even mentioned.

Batgirl III Stephanie Brown was featured rather prominently in one story from the previous volume of Batman Inc, Batgirl II Cassandra Cain had a small role in her new identity as The Black Bat, and original Batgirl Barbara Gordon had a one-issue spotlight in her Oracle persona, which included a new Batgirl avatar for fighting crime online. None of them are even mentioned here, perhaps because those first two have been wiped out of continuity and Gordon has been de-aged and de-Oracled (Actually, Barbara Gordon does appear in a possible-future storyline, where she's in a wheelchair and is the acting police commissioner of the screwed up future where Damian is Batman, previously glimpsed in Batman #666).

Even more conspicuously absent is Batwoman, whose story doesn't seem to have changed much at all on account of the reboot.

Catwoman, who co-starred in the first issue of the previous volume of Batman Inc is also MIA without explanation.

The Outsiders appear in here too (odd, since DC's new five-year timeline and streamlined JLA history likely excised the bit where Batman quit to form his own team with The Outsiders), but only Freight Train and Halo and Looker (Metamorpho is name-checked, though).


—Speaking of The Outsiders, when Metamorpho is mentioned, it's in a reference to Morrison's first arc of JLA, a storyline which John's Justice League comics make clear never "happened." This is a book best-enjoyed without thinking much at all about the New 52 or the various continuity reboots, as it is quite clearly set in the old DCU, with nothing but minor cosmetic changes and casting choices alleging that it's set after Flashpoint at all.


—That said, this book at least acknowledges the existence of Peter Tomasi and Patrick Gleason's Batman and Robin title, as the Batman of Russia is included, the events of that book (in which Damian is forced into killing another villain after swearing to never do so again) are mentioned and the dog Damian acquires in it shows up in the Batcave. (I haven't read any other New 52 Bat-books yet, so I don't know how well it lines up with Batman, TEC or any of the secondary titles).


—It's hard for me to wrap my head around a DC Universe in which Wally West and Donna Troy do not exist, but Freight Train does.


—Chris Burnham is awesome.

There's a touch of Frank Quitely in his work, and he's given to flights of structural fancy, leading to many extremely inventive panels and lay-outs. Sometimes that invention doesn't really add anything and can look a bit show off-y, but I suppose when you're that good, there's nothing wrong with showing off. He's got all the basics mastered, and this works just like it's supposed to.

The image above is an extremely poorly cropped part of one of his pages. Look at the detail in that panel; it's a panel one can linger over if one wants to, sussing out each detail. Kids don't really buy comics from grocery stores with their allowances or anything anymore, but this is the kind of comic that would reward such a purchase by someone with a severely limited comics-buying budget, as there's so much more value in a panel like that then, you know, most panels in most other comic books.

I am now curious what Burnham will be up to when Morrison leaves and Batman Inc ends, but I sure hope it involves drawing Batman, and drawing good Batman comics by a good writer that I want to read.

I see that Burnham is writing as well as drawing one of the short stories in August's Batman Incorporated special, which Tom Bonudrant recently theorized might be a trail balloon to gauge interest in a Morrison-less iteration of Batman Inc. Maybe if Burnham writes as well as he draws—or even half as good as he draws—his next assignment might be continuing the Morrison-recreated Club of Heroes in some manner...?


—I have to call bullshit on a few instances of Batman disguises though.

Apparently this big-ass Batman, seen in this panel...
...somehow fit into that little old lady costume he's clutching in his right fist, and, when he was wearing it, he looked like this:
And, in another issue, while Batman's in his Matches Malone disguise/identity, Dick Grayson dresses up as Batman so Bats and Matches can appear in the same place at the same time, and Dick's Batman is this much bigger than Bruce's Matches?
Bullshit. Beautifully, beautifully drawn bullshit.


—I like the robot bat thing—a robat?—that the future Damian Batman had. I wish I had a copy of Dark Knight Returns here in my apartment with me at the moment, because it looks awfully similar to something I remember—or imagine—appeared in either DKR or maybe Dark Knight Strikes Again, but now I'm not sure. Morrison and Burnham do use Frank Miller's mutants as a group of street thugs that Batman and Robin beat up in one scene.


—The cliffhanger ending of this volume was a very powerful argument against trade-waiting. It ended with one of my favorite members of Batman Inc seemingly dying and, in the very last panel, a mysterious antagonist apparently throwing Batman to his death.

Now obviously Batman isn't going to die, and I'm pretty sure the guy they show actually dying really will die (cover solicitations for future issues seem to promise that he will), but I still want to see how Batman doesn't die, and learn who exactly this mysterious servant of Talia's actually is and how he got to be so bad-ass.

But, instead of having to wait 30 days or so, I now have to wait, like, six to eight months until the next volume of the comic comes out in collected form.

As frustrating as it is from a fan perspective, I suppose it served as a nice reminder that the single best way a publisher can combat trade-waiting and promote serial issue purchasing is to make really, really good comics that a reader can't wait for.

This is probably the only superhero comic book I currently feel that way about.

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Some thoughts on DC's 25 most essential graphic novels list

If there were a thought bubble over Batman's head in that image, I imagine it would read, "Nice hoodie, Clark."

Part of me thinks I probably should have looked into getting my hands on one of those DC Entertainment Essential Graphic Novels and Chronology 2013 things, as it seems like the publication would make for a great source of blog-post subject matter (Another part of me thinks it better that I don't have one laying around the house, as everyone but me would likely get bored with EDILW becoming a daily analysis of the DCEEGNnC2013).

Tom Bondurant talked a bit about Wonder Woman's short-shrifting in the book last week, which prompted me to think about the most accessible and introductory Wonder Woman stories, and this week The Beat started a relatively interesting discussion of the publisher's top 25 "essential" graphic novels, a list that, intentionally or not, reveals a bit about the publisher, how they see themselves, how they want others to see them and where, in general, they're at right now.

I started to join that discussion, until I remembered I had my own blog, and that it probably makes for a better place for me to babble about comics than the comments section of someone else's blog. Before I commence with the babbling, though, here's that list:

WATCHMEN

BATMAN: The Dark Knight Returns

THE SANDMAN Vol. 1: Preludes and Nocturnes

BATMAN: Year One

V FOR VENDETTA

SAGA OF THE SWAMP THING: Book One

FABLES Vol. 1: Legends in Exile

BATMAN: The Killing Joke (the Deluxe Edition)

Y: THE LAST MAN Vol. 1: Unmanned

ALL STAR SUPERMAN

KINGDOM COME

BATMAN: The Long Halloween

THE LEAGUE OF EXTRAORDINARY GENTLEMEN: Vol.1

BATMAN: Earth One

GREEN LANTERN: Rebirth

AMERICAN VAMPIRE Vol. 1

BLACKEST NIGHT

FINAL CRISIS

JLA Vol. 1

IDENTITY CRISIS

BATMAN: Hush

JOKER

THE FLASH: Rebirth

SUPERMAN: Earth One Vol. 1

PLANETARY Vol. 1: All over the World and Other Stories


What I found most interesting—and genuinely surprising—about that list is that in 2013, the year after DC burned down the bridge between themselves and Alan Moore (granted, after he has repeatedly stated his lack of interest in walking back across it) with their risible Before Watchmen project and after DC's company people said some deferential, defensive and slightly ignorant things about Moore and Watchmen (and some of the creators, like J. Michael Straczynski and Darwyn Cooke said some extremely broad, ignorant and depressing things about Moore, Watchmen and the natural state of the comics industry), Alan Moore is the most essential creative force at DC Entertainment (at least in terms of their graphic novel program, as they themselves see it).

A full 40% of that list are books written by Alan Moore. Several are based on characters and concepts he created out of whole cloth with his artist collaborators (Watchmen, V For Vendetta), another features public domain characters he re-created in unique ways (LOEG), another features a pre-existing DC character he so thoroughly re-invented that decades later his version is still the dominant one (Swamp Thing) and another features pre-existing DC characters (Killing Joke). (And if you want to get cute, you could also make an argument that Alex Ross and Mark Waid's Kingdom Come was at least heavily inspired by Moore's Twilight pitch, and the Geoff Johns-written Blackest Night and Green Lantern run in general owes quite a debt to minor work Moore did on the Green Lantern franchise long ago).

That Moore's work is so prominent in that list is remarkable not only of the apparent mutual enmity between he and the company, but also because of how much Moore dwarfs the other writers whose work appears on that list. Geoff Johns, DC's Chief Creative Officer and long-time most popular writer, has four titles on the list (and if one wants to evaluate comics based on the amount of creation that went in to them, it's probably well worth noting that Johns' books are all dependent on pre-existing characters).

Grant Morrison, DC's next most popular writer, has three books on the list (and, again, DC chose only Morrison-scripted stories of their superheroes). Frank Miller and Jeph Loeb have two books apiece, and all of the other writers represented—Brian Azzarello, Neil Gaiman, Warren Ellis, Brad Meltzer, Scott Snyder, J. Michael Straczynski, Brian K. Vaughan, Mark Waid, Bill Willingham have one book a piece.

DC's essential graphic novels, as DC sees it, are clearly writer-driven, rather than artist driven. While there are a couple of writers with more than one book on that list, there is only one artist who has more than one book on the list. Ethan Van Sciver is apparently DC's most essential artist, based on the fact that both his Flash: Rebirth and Green Lantern: Rebirth appear on the list.

All the other artists, for all their talent and popularity and influence over DC and comics in general, have one book apiece, even DC's current co-publisher Jim Lee.
Lee's Superman: For Tomorrow, All-Star Batman and Robin, The Boy Wonder and Justice League Vol. 1: Origin are actually rather odd omissions. The former two have bad reputations, and the latter is just awful, but still, they are all Jim Lee-drawn books, and thus popular books.

The All-Star book features a holy trinity of graphic novel sales generators—Frank Miller, Jim Lee and Batman—and the Justice League book is the publisher's flagship one, and the keystone of their current "New 52" publishing strategy.
Looking at the list, it seems apparent that it is mostly a list of what DC regards as its best-sellers, and the books they plan to keep in print and continue to push above other books. I think it's telling that so many of their recent original graphic novels make the list—Joker, the two Earth One books—and the only ones that don't make the list are easily excusable for having Batman in them (Batman: Noel, The Judas Coin and Batman: Death By Design). That may be the only reason the Grant Morrison-written Arkham Asylum original graphic novel, which has proven so influential, particularly in the video game adaptations of DC Comics, isn't on the list (That, or simply because it's so dated compared to the more time-less Batman trades on this list).

Is it worth noting that there are no "New 52" books on the list at all, and that the dominant source of DC's most "essential" graphic novels are set in the Crisis On Infinite Earths to Flashpoint continuity that the publisher recently discarded?

Of that list of 25 books, 12 of them are set in the old, post-Crisis DCU continuity, and an additional two are alternate future storylines that departed from specific points in that continuity (The Dark Knight Returns is set in a future after the death of Jason Todd in the "A Death in the Family" storyline; Kingdom Come includes a Flashback to the 1990s Daily Planet newsroom, when post-"Reign of the Supermen" Superman and Clark Kent had long hair; I of course am counting Sandman and Swamp Thing books as DC books, as they were both set in the DCU, quite heavily in these particular volumes).

There are two "Earth One" branded books (I'm not sure if it's been made clear whether those two books are set on the same world, or if "Earth One" is merely the way DC is branding the line of books), one from the All-Star line (of which there only ever ended up being two books anyway) and the remaining books all occur in their own "universes."

The emphasis on the old DCU continuity is somewhat curious in that DC has rather loudly trumpeted the irrelevance of these books: JLA, Identity Crisis, Final Crisis, the two Rebirths, these are books that are now well outside of DC continuity, featuring characters who never even existed and relationships that have been wiped out. Some of them apparently still "count", but only in altered, non-existent versions (I'm thinking of Blackest Night for example, and I suppose the jury is still out on Batman: Year One and Long Halloween, which the upcoming "Zero Year" storyline may or may not overwrite).

Of everything on the list, then, I find the Flash: Rebirth collection to be the most curious inclusion. That is, after all, the story of how the dead Flash II Barry Allen, who gave his life during the war against The Anti-Monitor in Crisis On Infinite Earths, came back to life, reclaiming the mantle of the main flash from his own successor, Flash III Wally West.

As of right now, there's only ever been one Flash in the New 52 DCU, with Flash I Barry Allen his entire generation of super-heroes now re-relegated to an alternate Earth and West apparently never having existed. Like GL: Rebirth, it was and is a very complicated—but fun, and well-crafted!—continuity patch of a story. But that continuity doesn't exist anymore, so who cares? Why is DC pushing that book instead of, I don't know, Preacher or Astro City or 100 Bullets or Superman: For Tomorrow or one of those Paul Dini/Alex Ross Justice League books or Starman or Wednesday Comics or anything featuring Wonder Woman or anything at all from The New 52...?

It may or may not be worth noting that much of this list includes some very old comics, which, in one light, doesn't speak well of DC's success in publishing great comics in recent years, but, in another, could simply be reflective of the list being comprised of best- or simply better-sellers.

But Watchmen, Dark Knight, Sandman, Swamp Thing, V For Vendetta, Killing Joke, Year One—these are comics from the 1980s. Kingdom Come, Long Halloween, Planetary, LOEG, JLA—'90s comics.

The rest of the list is of more recent vintage, so it's maybe half-classics, half-stuff from the current Dan DiDio era of DC Comics. Do keep in mind, however, that the most recent books on the list are among the absolute worst books DC has published—the two Earth Ones (but are probably there simply because DC plans to publish more of them, and because they were specifically commissioned as continuity-lite, outreach/gateway books).

Let's see...what else, what else...
Is it worth pointing out that none of the books are written by a woman, and, in fact, there's only one female artist who has work on that list—Y: The Last Man's Pia Guerra—although Lynn Varley's Dark Knight colors and Karen Berger's editing of some of the best books on that list are a good reminder that this list isn't quite as male as it may appear simply by looking at the writers, pencil artists and inkers (Any suggestions for something written or drawn by a woman that DC has done that belongs on this list? The down side of not hiring many women to write or draw for you means that few classic or essential comics have been generated by them in the past. The few women in DC's employ at the moment—Christie Marx, Gail Simone, Nicola Scott—are just working on continuity-heavy, unexceptional work).

Oh, and I was also struck by how...adult this list is. There's little to nothing in the list that is truly "all-ages" (JLA, I suppose; Kingdom Come, the Loeb-written Batman comics, All-Star Superman).

Most of it is probably teen appropriate, but these are certainly among the more adult of DC's backlist, including foundational adult-comics imprint titles like Swamp Thing and Sandman, sophisticated titles like those two and Planetary (I think you have to be an adult just to have read and watched enough popular culture to "get" that book's many allusions), Fables and Y.

The Geoff Johns stuff is, naturally, super-gory, especially Blackest Night, which is all about heart-eating zombies. American Vampire is a horror comic, like Sandman and Swamp Thing were at their outset. Watchmen, Killing Joke, LOEG, Joker and Identity Crisis have on-panel rape scenes; Final Crisis has repeated references made to rape (here's one).

If this can be looked at as a document of where DC needs to go as a publisher, then I'd say a) hire more women, b) give Wonder Woman a classic, Year One-like story (maybe Morrison's in-the-works Earth One will fulfill that gap), c) make more all-ages or at least less rapey and/or ultra-violent comics, d) either do away with The New 52 or start making those comics good enough to replace all the "old" DCU stuff on this list and e) either have Johns step up his game or get Morrison to stick around or find the next Alan Moore to start cranking out classics to replace some of the less-essential Moore on the list so DC don't look like such yutzes when they want to slag off Moore either in words or deeds despite being so dependent on his bibliography.

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Hey, if this is a subject you're at all interested in, be sure to check out the very thorough review of DC's DCEEGNnC2013 at Collected Editions.

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Marvel's August previews reviewed

It looks like Marvel's big, tent-pole crossover/event series have increased in frequency to the point that they are now over-lapping. For example, in August of this year, the Age of Ultron follow-ups and spin-offs will be in their first or second months, while the movie-inspired Infinity event is going on, and an X-Men family event (or will it be wider than that, given how many X-People are on all the Avengers teams now?)Battle of the Atom will be ramping up.

For a better idea of what Marvel's August will hold, you can check out their complete solicitations at Comics Book Resources. For some second-guessing and smart remarks, read on!


AVENGERS A.I. #2
SAM HUMPHRIES (W) • ANDRE LIMA ARAUJO (A)
Cover by DAVE MARQUEZ
ARTIST VARIANT BY ED MCGUINNESS
• The return of the Sentient Iron Man armor!
• Dimitrios -- a powerful super-intelligence with an axe to grind against humanity -- strikes...!
• What secrets does the powerful Alexis hold for the Marvel Universe? Is it your bank account balance, your email password, your secret journal entries?
• There’s nothing about your life that artificial intelligence cannot use against you! BEWARE!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$2.99


As I probably said last month, I really like the idea of this book, that Marvel's now at the point where they can take a half-dozen or so characters with one thing in common, put them in the same book and slap "Avengers" in the title and it will sell. This one is a bunch of random robot characters. I hope it does well enough that we can get a Cat Avengers (Black Panther! Hellcat! Zabu! White Tiger! Sabretooth! That One Guy From Omega The Unknown Who Was Totally Rad!) or an Infernal Avengers (Daredevil! Devil Dinosaur! Son of Satan! Satanna! Ghost Rider!) or an Original Defenders Avengers.

I like this cover a whole lot, too. I think it's by Marquez, but I can't be sure it's not McGuinness. By the way, what the hell's an "Artist Variant"...? Sure the artists who draw the covers that aren't artist variants are also artists, aren't they...?


ENDER’S GAME GRAPHIC NOVEL TPB
Written by CHRIS YOST
Penciled by PASQUAL FERRY
Andrew “Ender” Wiggin is 6 years old, bullied, resented and alone. And he might be humanity’s only hope. Ender is recruited to the International Fleet’s child warriors in training, to fight in defense of the planet. His promise is high, and his teachers are sure he will rise to the test — if Battle School doesn’t kill him first! As young Ender rises through the ranks, he struggles to find tranquility, humanity and a connection with something greater than the brutal mechanics of war and strategy. But when he is thrust into Command School at a vastly accelerated pace, will he crack up on the road to becoming the hero that the human race so desperately needs? Sci-fi legend Orson Scott Card’s award-winning classic is brought to life! Collecting ENDER’S GAME: BATTLE SCHOOL #1-5 and ENDER’S GAME: COMMAND SCHOOL #1-5.


I believe this is a collection of the previously published adaptations, collected into a new package in time for the upcoming movie.

After the backlash sent DC's way for hiring the now notoriously homophobic Orson Scott Card to write a Superman story for them, I suppose it will be interesting to see if similar heat is directed to Marvel for this book, and if Marvel or Yost or Ferry feel the need to distance themselves from Card's beliefs.

If not, it may be worth asking why not. Was it really just something special about Superman, and the idea of a writer who doesn't believe in justice and the American way getting to write the character that rankled so many readers and retailers...? (Personally, I think Card's a odious enough individual that I wouldn't wanna read anything he wrote for any publisher, involving any character).


Hey, is that a new costume for Valkyrie? I liked her old one, and didn't really think anything was wrong with it, but I really like this one too.


GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY #6
BRIAN MICHAEL BENDIS & NEIL GAIMAN (W) • SARA PICHELLI (A/C)
...
• The blockbuster new series hits hard as Marvel’s newest superstar Angela comes right for the Guardians!
• Round one is Gamora versus Angela…with an entire universe at stake!
• All that and comics legend Neil Gaiman joins the award-winning Ultimate Spider-Man team of Bendis and Pichelli in this one-of-a-kind comic book event!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$3.99


Well, my theory was that Marvel was announcing the use of Gaiman's Angela character as cover for their introduction of the Marvel Man character into the Marvel Universe, because, for the life of me, I can't figure out why anyone at all would be interested in the Angela character (who is really only of interest as a footnote in a clash of two huge comics industry personalities), why Neil Gaiman would be interested in co-writing a Marvel space opera comic with Brian Michael Bendis and why the Frazetta-inspired, Medieval fantasy character is appearing in a sci-fi comic (i.e. she's not, but Marvel Man will be instead).

If that is Marvel's super-sneaky plan, however, they're going awfully afar with it, releasing fake solicitation info and cover images and everything.

I don't know; this doesn't annoy, anger or depress me like so many of the Big Two's more bizarre publishing decisions—it just confuses me. Seriously, the whole Angela and Gaiman at Marvel and in Guardians of the Galaxy thing just boggles my mind.

Ah well.

It is nice to see a great artist like Pichelli get such a great gig, working with one of the industry's most popular writers and the always-popular-when-he-returns Gaiman on a book that Marvel is pushing this hard.

Angela's Frazetta-ness looks even more apparent on this cover than usual, doesn't it...?

Oh, and hey, I'm not fashionista or anything, but isn't there some sort of rule about how your belt can't be bigger than your pants...?


HAWKEYE #14
MATT FRACTION (W) • Annie Wu (A)
Cover by DAVID AJA
• THAT THING THAT HAPPENED TO KATE IN THE ANNUAL IS TOTALLY FOLLOWED UP ON!
• This one has it all! Characters! Plot! Story! Dialogue! Theme! Meaning! Message! Action! A little exposition! Fire! Arrows! Criminals! Neighbors! Large bodies of water! Clients! Cops who don’t care! A system that victimizes the victims! The dog!
• In a broken town where cynicism and apathy has its claws around the throat of the good and decent, LADY HAWKEYE is the only hero you can trust!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$2.99


I like the writing on this solicitation. Sounds promising!

Just wanted to note that here's yet another David Aja-less issue of Matt Fraction and David Aja's Hawkeye (Slow down, Marvel!), but the artist drawing it is Annie Wu, who is a) a lady (Marvel's got a coupla comics drawn by people of the female persuasion this month; I think Nicola Scott is the only female artist currently in the Distinguished Competition's employ, and who knows, that may be changing for the worse soon, as her creative partner on Earth 2 just announced his departure from the title and the publisher).

Wu previously contributed nice-looking splash pages to Hawkeye #8, each of which was meant to evoke an old-timey romance comic or paperback cover.



HUNGER #2 (of 4)
JOSHUA HALE FIALKOV (W) • LEONARD KIRK (A)
Cover by ADI GRANOV
• The fallout from AGE OF ULTRON rips open a dangerous rift in the universe!
• Prepare for a hunger so strong, that no universe is safe.
• Is this the beginning of the end?
• All the details will be revealed when Age of Ultron #10 hits stands everywhere!
• PREVIOUSLY SOLICITED UNDER THE CLASSIFIED NAME OF AGE OF ULTRON #10 UC
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$3.99


This one I just find odd. "Previously solicited under the classified name of Age of Ultron #10 UC"...? That's—that's—Well, that's just weird. Like, not only is the title classified, but it went under an assumed name for a while to protect...what? That Galacuts maybe shows up at the end of Age of Ultron or something, but even though Age of Ultron #10 is still a few issues away, Hunger is now safe to reveal it's true name to the comics-ordering public...?

This one confuses me almost as much as Neil Gaiman and Angela guest-starring in Guardians of the Galaxy...


INDESTRUCTIBLE HULK #12
MARK WAID (W) • MATTEO SCALERA (A)
Cover by MUKESH SINGH
TIME TRAVEL VARIANT BY MIKE DEL MUNDO
“AGENT OF T.I.M.E.” PART 2!
• The team-up you’ve been waiting for: HULK and...BRUCE BANNER?
• In the last hours before the extinction of the dinosaurs, it’s Hulk vs. the CHRONARCHISTS!
• And who is the true TOMORROW MAN?
• Guest starring KID COLT, TWO GUN KID and RAWHIDE KID!!!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$3.99


Well shit, this sure looks promising: Hulk, dinosaurs, Marvel's cowboy heroes and Mark Waid. And Hulk as Mona Lisa on one of the variants? Awesome. This is the one Marvel title I most wish was $3 instead of $4, and the one I'm looking forward to reading in trade the most at the moment (Although I still think the armor looks dub, no matter what its function!)


INFINITY #1 (of 6)
JONATHAN HICKMAN (W) • JIM CHEUNG (A)
Cover by ADAM KUBERT
Blank Variant Also Available
Design Variant by JEROME OPEÑA
Generals Variant by IN-HYUK LEE
Hero Variant by ARTHUR ADAMS
Hero Sketch Variant by ARTHUR ADAMS
Variant by MARKO DJURDJEVIC
Variant by SKOTTIE YOUNG
The oversized kickoff to the year’s most anticipate Blockbuster summer event, changing the way you view the Marvel Universe!
• The outbreak of war on two fronts: Earth and Space, with our heroes torn between them.
• The world-shattering return of Thanos!
• Includes material from FREE COMIC BOOK DAY: INFINITY
56 PGS./Rated T+ …$4.99
Retailers: Check the Marvel Mailer for news on Infinity Launch Parties


I just wanted to call attention to this one because good God in heaven, look at all those variants! And mention of launch parties! And Marvel promoted this one on Free Comic Book Day! That's an awful lot of marketing muscles being employed to move issues of this comic (and I've gotta say, a 56 page comic for only $1 more than they charge for the 22-page Indestructible Hulk makes this sound like an incredible value, as well, although they also launched Age of Ultron with a $3 first issue before pumping the price up to $4 for the second issue).

Good for Jonathan Hickman...but the sheer number of those variant covers makes this look not only like Marvel is really getting behind this particular comic with all their might, but also like they're desperate to sell as many copies as possible...


NEW AVENGERS: BREAKOUT PROSE NOVEL MASS MARKET PAPERBACK
Written by ALISA KWITNEY
Cover by DAVID FINCH
Fantasy/romantic fiction/comics author Alisa Kwitney (A Flight of Angels, Moonburn) reveals the secret backstory of Avengers couple Hawkeye and the Black Widow! Under secret orders to assassinate the Widow, the rough-edged marksman finds himself caught up in a violent prison break that releases some of the world’s most vicious and powerful criminals. Defying his superiors, Hawkeye joins forces with the sultry Russian spy — and with a mismatched group of personalities that includes Spider-Man, Spider-Woman, Luke Cage, Captain America and Iron Man. Unexpected betrayals and shocking revelations lead the team from Manhattan’s top-security Raft prison to the untamed jungle of the Savage Land in dramatically different take on Brian Michael Bendis and David Finch’s first blockbuster NEW AVENGERS arc. Learn the sizzling backstory of your favorite big-screen heroes in this adaptation, inspired by the best of page and screen!
272 PGS./No Rating …$7.99


And here's Marvel confusing me once again. This seems like a terrible waste of Alisa Kwitney, who I would hope Marvel would either employ in the writing of comics scripts or, if she was going to spend time writing a trashy prose superhero novel, would probably be better off writing something original, or something original featuring Marvel characters, rather than novelizing one of Bendis many shitty New Avengers story arcs.

I like the bit that says it's a "dramatically different take on Brian Michael Bendis and David Finch's first blockbuster NEW AVENGERS arc." I suppose that means it will have a plot, be self-contained, have a beginning, middle and end and the character's won't all talk in the same voice...?

Because that would be cool.


S.H.I.E.L.D. BY STERANKO: THE COMPLETE COLLECTION TPB
Written by STERANKO with STAN LEE & ROY THOMAS
Penciled by STERANKO with JACK KIRBY
Cover by STERANKO
Rarely before and rarely since has comics seen a talent as innovative as Steranko. Blending together influences from Pop art to Salvador Dali and Will Eisner to Wally Wood, Steranko’s boundary-breaking style is an incomparable visual language that continues to influence and inspire storytellers decades later. Now, for the first time ever, Marvel is proud to offer the complete Steranko NICK FURY, AGENT OF S.H.I.E.L.D. in one volume! Collecting NICK FURY, AGENT OF S.H.I.E.L.D. (1968) #1-3 and #5, and material from STRANGE TALES (1951) #151-168.
352 PGS./Rated T …$34.99


I'm glad to see that this is a book that exists, as Steranko's work on this book from that era is one of those runs that is always mentioned in histories of comics, but I think is also one of those runs that everyone knows about without ever actually having had the opportunity to read it (That is, Steranko's SHIELD comics have long been easier to read about than to just read).

I'm pretty sure that Marvel could probably compile a book of comparable size simply by collecting all of the Steranako/SHIELD homage covers they've published in the last 40 years, too...

YOUNG AVENGERS #9
KIERON GILLEN (W)
JAMIE MCKELVIE (A/C)
• We wanted to just write “Screaming! Screaming! Screaming!” for this solicit, but we’re told we need boring old facts. :(
• Anyway! The Young Avengers road trip across the multiverse goes proper crazy as it reaches it’s destination. It’s destination is mainly EXCITEMENT and HEARTBREAK.
• Several Young Avengers decide what to do next. The question is, whether what they do next is to be Young Avengers...
• Honestly, screaming.
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$2.99


At first glance, I thought this was another issue of Hawkeye, because of the purple logo. Hands off, Young Avengers–purple belongs to Hawkeye! (Although the Young Avengers have a Hawkeye on their team too, so maye it's cool).

Friday, May 17, 2013

I'm afraid I won't be comics-blogging tonight.

But I have the best possible excuse for not blogging about comics—I'm busy reading comics.

Specifically, these comics:


(This volume featuring a back-cover blurb from Joe "Jog" McCulloch!)

(Cyril! No!)

Regular service will return tomorrow night.

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Meanwhile...

Today at Robot 6 I have a review of Nothing Can Possibly Go Wrong, a YA original graphic novel by newcomer Prudence Shen and already-here-er Faith Erin Hicks. It's really good.

The above page is probably my favorite of the book, in which head cheerleader Holly's hatred for Nate is so powerful that he can feel it emanating out of her head and reaching over and touching him. I'm fairly certain the project began its life as a prose novel, and its scenes like the one above that make me curious about how exactly they would have been written, given how well they work in the purely visual narrative structure that comics allow.

This is maybe my second favorite page, featuring Charlie and Nate:

In other Caleb-writing-about-comics links, this week at Good Comics For Kids I reviewed the latest of Papercutz' Smurfs reprints, The Smurflings, and their first volume of a new series reprinting another of Peyo's comics, Benny Breakiron: The Red Taxis. They're both good; the latter a bit more interesting just because it's Peyo doing non-Smurf work, and it's fun to see his style applied to human and automobiles and modern buildings and so on.

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Let's talk at far too great length about Suicide Squad #1 (2011), and what its characters look like

Have you read Suicide Squad #1, the first issue of the 2011, New 52 relaunch of the DC series about a group of villains press-ganged by the United States government's "Task Force X" into being a force for good?

It was the publisher's first attempt at a new volume of the title since the quickly-canceled 2001 attempt to revive the enormously popular, and fondly remembered, original 1987-1992 series (The concept was last resurrected during Gail Simone and J. Calafiore's run on Secret Six, which I recently read and thus wanted to check out what DC did next with those characters).

Writer Adam Glass, whose background is in television writing and production, was responsible for the script of Suicide Squad #1, while pencil artists Federico Dallocchio and Ransom Getty drew different sections of it, and Dallocchio, Getty and Scott Hanna are credited with inking the issue.

If you haven't read it, I am going to describe the entirety of the 20-page story to you.

A brown-haired man with a strange metal mask, identified in dialogue as a sniper named Deadshot, is laying on his back and screaming, while another man wearing The Scarecrow mask from Batman Begins is holding a blowtorch to a metal bin containing a pair of live rats against Deadshot's naked flesh: The bin heats up, the rats eat Deadshot's flesh.

The second and third pages are a double-page splash, in which the narrating Deadshot tells readers he's a member of Suicide Squad and we see he and six other people in various costumes being tortured, all within a few feet of one another, by men in Scarecrow masks. The Scarecrows are trying to torture the name of whoever sent the Suicide Squad, and Deadhsot is trying to resist. Deadshot flashes back to what landed him in prison, an aborted assassination attempt thwarted by Batman.

A bald, heavily tattooed man named Chato or El Diablo has salt poured on his wounds, is thrown to the floor, and kicked into unconsciousness; he flashes back to the time when he used his fire powers to burn down the house of rival gang bangers, only to find to his dismay that "The bangers had family there. Shorties. Babies."

A white skinned-woman wearing all red-and-black, identified as Harley Quinn, hangs from shackles presumably attached to the ceiling, and calls the Scarecrows out on their attire: "Scarecrow called. He wants his laundry back." Her torturer clamps jumper cables to her cheeks; she flashes back to the time Black Canary arrested her; she was in the middle of dancing with a dead lawyer, one of those involved with prosecuting The Joker.

A character stripped to his underwear laying on the floor and covered in water is referred to as "Voltiac." He only gets the one panel. No flashback origin for him.

A character who looks human save for a half-great white, half-hammerhead shark head is chained beneath a heat lamp. The torturers identify him as King Shark and, when they suspect he might be dead, they get close enough for King Shark to bite off ones arm, at which he laughs, "Ha Ha! Meat! Meat! Meat!"

A blond man wearing a hockey mask and covered in bugs as various as ants, wasps, a scorpion, a praying mantis and a butterfly finally cracks: He tells his torturers about Task Force X, AKA Suicide Squad, how they are all deadly criminals with micro bombs injected into their necks who run secret operations for their masters. Their first mission was a trap, and when they woke up, they were being tortured by these guys.

A torturer thanks Savant, and then drags him off into the dark, where he screams for help until he's cut off mid-shriek, apparently killed.

The torturees are all knocked unconscious again, and awoken with bags on their heads. With guns to their heads, they are once again asked to give up their bosses, and they all refuse to comply. At that point, they are congratulated and told that of 37 candidates, they are the only six that never broke. This has all been a test, conducted by Amanda Waller, who is shown in the second to last panel clutching one of the Scarecrow bag masks; apparently, she not only ordered the torture of 37 recruits, including the seven we watched get tortured, she was doing some of that torturing herself.

In the very last panel, the six members of Suicide Squad are dropped out of an airplane bound in chairs, and told "Your mission is to wipe out the entire stadium. Sixty thousand people. You have six hours."

That is a probably overly detailed summary. Here's another stab at a description of the contents of this issue: The title characters are brutally tortured for 18 pages, the scene interrupted only by flashbacks showing mostly horrible crimes they have committed, before a climactic reveal in which readers learn that the torturers were agents of United States government testing the mettle of their new recruits, and the team is given its first assignment: Kill 60,000 people.

This was the first issue of a new series purportedly geared toward new readers, featuring pre-existing characters rebooted, redesigned and re-characterized so that even though some of them have been around for decades, this was being treated as their very first appearances ever.

For the life of me I can't imagine who read this issue, found the premise intriguing (or, for that matter, the writing or sloppy, inconsistent, badly muddled artwork appealing) and decided they wanted to read another 20 pages of it next month (Actually, I imagine pre-existing fans of the characters and/or concept might have stuck around out of curiosity, but then, they weren't the target audience, were they?).

I made it five pages into the second issue (I was reading that first issue in Suicide Squad Vol. 1: Kicked in the Teeth, borrowed from a library out of curiosity to see what happened to Deadshot and King Shark after the conclusion of Secret Six at the end of the "old" DC Universe) before I couldn't take anymore. The fact that the title of that second issue—"When The Levee Breaks"—and the setting of a stadium full of civilians awaiting a government rescue so deliberately called to mind the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina didn't help much.

I set it down to wait until I finished all these other library-borrowed trades I've been working my way through (By the way, the second issue has a third pencil artist; so DC had to employ three different pencil artists within the first 30 pages of a brand-new series; they are all varying degrees of bad, and none of them have a similar enough style to mask the hodge-podge, deadline-daring production schedule their work was produced on).

Before I go any further with the book, I wanted to stop and take note of the design aspects of it. As with most of The New 52 designs (Or should I say "all"...? Did any character get a better costume in the New 52 then the one they wore prior to the last issue of Flashpoint...?), the designs are horrible. Extremely busy, ugly, indistinct and full of changes made simply at random; this book suffers a little more than most in the rather negative things two of its redesigns have to say about women and the publisher's valuation of them.

I assume the credit/blame for these particular redesigns belongs to Jim Lee; there are four design sketches in the back of the trade—Deadshot, Harley Quinn, Black Spider and King Shark—and all of those are by Lee.

Let's look at the looks of the Suicide Squad characters one-by-one, shall we?

DEADSHOT:
Deadshot, AKA Floyd Lawton, began as a minor Batman villain way back in 1950's Batman #59. He was created by Bob Kane, David Vern Reed and Lew Schwartz and, as you can see, he was originally a fairly generic gunslinger-looking character, perhaps dandier in dress than your average cowboy, with a smart mustache and a domino mask (I'll direct you to this post by Gavok on 4thletter! for more on Deadshot's first appearance; that's the post I swiped the above image from).

The character came into much greater prominence in the 1980s, when his original story is somewhat rewritten, and he is fairly completely redesigned, given a red costume, a metallic face-mask with a monocle-like red scope over where his right eye, a fate-tempting target icon on his chest and little wrist-mounted machine guns.
That's what he'd wear for most of his career, which included membership in just about every incarnation of the Suicide Squad and the version of The Secret Six that emerged in the run-up to Infinite Crisis.

While he mostly appeared in Suicide Squad and Secret Six, Deadshot earned his own miniseries on a couple of occassions. In a 2005 series, he got a new costume:
It was essentially a more stripped-down, realistic version of his most popular costume, although he would abandon it shortly after the change.

Whatever mask he wore, Deadshot always rocked a mustache beneath it.
In The New 52, Deadshot still wears a red costume with yellow and metal flourishes, and he still wears a metallic mask that covers his whole head, a red scoping-mechanism over his right eye. Like most of his New 52 designs, however, Lee's Deadshot's costume looks more like something from a Hollywood costume department than the pencil of a comics artist, bristling with unnecessary detail and too many little lines.
Whether it was Lee's intention, or just a quirk of the (too) many different artists drawing the new Deadshot costume, all of the little lines on the red bodysuit sometimes give Deadshot the look of a flayed man, the red suit suggesting the musculature of the human body (Personally, he reminds me of Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers heavy Lord Zedd).

Even more striking, however, may be what Lawton looks like under his mask.
Not only is his hair now a light brown rather than black, but he doesn't have a mustache!

Lee re-desgined away the most significant visual identifier of Floyd Lawton. That would be like, I don't know, taking away Green Arrow's goatee. (Oh. Yeah.)


HARLEY QUINN:
Created by Paul Dini and Bruce Timm for the early '90s Batman: The Animated Series television show, the character quickly evolved from a minor role as The Joker's moll into a strong and compelling character in her own right, eventually jumping into the DC Universe proper with the 1999 Batman: Harley Quinn special. From there, she even owned her own 38-issue ongoing series from 2000-2004 (Which, it's perhaps worth noting, outlived the 1975 Joker monthly series by 29 issues).

In both her comics and cartoon appearances, the character has been pretty consistent in her depiction, wearing the same red and black harlequin jester costume she wore in her first cartoon appearance (with some minor tweaks here and there).

She got an awfully dramatic redesign for this series:
She's stripped off the jester's costume and replaced it with hot-pants and a half-laced bustier in the same color scheme. Her hair is now half red and half black, worn in pigtails to suggest the jester's hat she used to wear. Rather than a domino mask, she now has eye make-up applied raccoon style.

It's much closer in style to her look in the two Batman: Arkham video games, and, paired with the Batman redesign, is probably the most evocative clue as to what audience The Jim Lee redesigns of The New 52 were focused on attracting: The folks buying and playing Batman: Arkham Asylum and ...City.
It's probably worth noting that the New 52 Harley Quinn has a much skimpier costume than either of the videogame Harleys, and even the Ame-Comi statue Harley Quinn.

I don't really care for it, particularly as it appears throughout the interiors first half-dozen issues of Suicide Squad, but it doesn't looks too bad as drawn by Ryan Benjamin, who provided the covers for the first two issues of the series (see the top of the post for #1). I suppose it's in keeping with Glass's characterization of the character in the early issues of the series: Harley Quinn, but much, much sluttier.


KING SHARK:
Created by writer/artist Karl Kesel during his run on the post-Reign of the Supermen Superboy series starring the teenaged clone of Superman, King Shark was a humanoid shark/killer who used his mouth more for biting than talking. His exact origins were mysterious, with some believing him to be the son of a mythological shark god.

He originally wore a rather old-school supervillain outfit, and looked as human as he was shark, save for the gigantic fin sticking out of his back.

He received his first major visual revamp in Kurt Busiek and Butch Guice Aquaman-less Aquaman series, 2006's Aquaman: Sword of Atlantis series, in which a new Aquaman character partnered with King Shark for a series of undersea fantasy adventures.
Guice's King Shark looked much more shark-like, from the neck up at least, and shed his spandex in favor of a seaweed hula skirt (reflective of his Hawaiian origins, I suppose) and jewelry. Rather than an almost mindless eating machine, he was now pretty eloquent, and explained the gap in intelligence by saying his ability to reason and speak was dependent on how wet he was (Sword of Atlantis was set almost entirely underwater).
When he eventually reappeared in the Gail Simone-written Secret Six series, which he'd eventually join as one of the ensemble cast, she split the difference between the two takes: Now he could talk and think, but he wasn't all that bright, and mostly talked about eating and being a shark. They played the character mostly for laughs, and he apparently left the skirt underwater and went back to spandex.

For Suicide Squad, Lee decided to change Shark's species from a fairly generic, pointy-nosed shark or gray shark or great white shark to a hammerhead. Sort of.
He looks more like a gray shark or great white with eyestalks similar to that of a hammerhead. It's a weird and random change, and one that the series' many artists seemed to struggle with nailing down, as the shape of the character's head and face and his size vary from page to page and artist to artist (Of course, the same goes for all the characters in the first few issues of this series).

In terms of his wardrobe, King Shark now wears a loincloth, native-looking gauntlets and, depending on the artist, a necklace of shark teeth, which are sometimes miscolored gray, so they look like a beard of pointy things.

This is the redesign that perplexes me the most, as it seems to consist of change for change's sake. I'm not sure why one would want to use the pre-existing King Shark character, only to render him as a completely new character. Why not just create a new character with a head like a hammerhead shark?)

The character is basically the same from Secret Six, behaving rather similarly but not for laughs, and he hasn't been given any history to define him within the first collection of the series.

By the way, this movie sucks.


BLACK SPIDER:
Gerry Conway and Ernie Chan created The Black Spider for a 1976 Batman story in Detective Comics (Black Spider didn't wear black, but was a black guy, and thus went with the Every Black Super-Person Must Have A Codename Beginning With The Word "Black" naming convention of the time). He was essentially a twisted-mirror version of Batman, a man motivated by personal trauma to put on a costume and fight crime, although he fought it a bit more lethally (killing his opponents) and he was focused on the illegal drug trade exclusively. Adam Grant and Norm Breyfogle killed him off in a rather moving issue of Batman: The Shadow of The Bat.

He reappeared in Identity Crisis though, which you may recall was written by Brad Meltzer, who didn't bother consulting Wikipedia to see which characters were alive or dead or what was in or out of continuity when he wrote that, and the series was apparently completely un-edited. The Needham Black Spider thus reappeared here and there in minor, mostly cameo roles after IC.

As you can see from the image above, the Black Spider's original costume was sorta Spider-Mannish; sort of a Spider-Man cblended with The Tarantula's costumes.
A second Black Spider, a hitman, was created by my second favorite Batman creative team of Doug Moench and Kelley Jones during their run on Batman in the mid-nineties. This Black Spider's costume was a little closer to what one might expect a person named "Black Spider" to wear. His costume was black, with goggle-like Spider-Man eyes over a skin-tight full body suit. It basically looked like Spider-Man's black costume with all of the white highlights stripped from it. The only spider element is a big spider icon across the face. Which, isn't black, but red.

He too died, and had a villainous successor, but the costume remained the same.
For Suicide Squad, DC apparently went with a new version of the original Black Spider, a vigilante who kills his prey, and is alternately regarded as a villain or a hero, depending on who you ask.

His costume is now black and purple (Lee's sketch, included in the back of the book, has him in red, however)
His mask has lost all resemblance to that of Spider-Man's, and it now has a handful of green lenses where the eyes would be, giving it a vaguely arachnid-like look. He fights with some ninja-looking sickle-things, and is repeatedly referred to as a ninja.


EL DIABLO:
Okay, there are alot of El Diablos (or Los Diablos, maybe), each of which has a pretty different design. The original was Robert Kanigher and Gray Morrow's cowboy character Lazarus Lane. He was a colorful vigilante, who was retroactively given a supernatural origin, making him akin to Marvel's Ghost Rider character (spirit of vengeance bonded to a guy who rides around on things).
Gerard Jones and Mike Parobeck created a modern version during a short-lived 1989-1990 series. He was named Rafael Sandoval and fought crime around his Western town, eventually serving with the Jones-written version of the Justice League of America that immediately preceded the Morrison/Porter/Dell JLA.
In 2008, DC introduced a third El Diablo, in a miniseries written by Jai Nitz and drawn by Phil Hester and Ande Parks. This El Diablo was Chato Santana, a Hispanic criminal who meets a comatose Lazarus Lane in a hospital he's being treated at. During that meeting, the demon of vengeance that inhabited Lane is passed to Santanna. This latest El Diablo had fire-based powers and was designed to resemble a Mexican, Day of The Dead-like skeleton.
This is the version that appears in Suicide Squad, and he's probably the least redesigned of all the characters. Primary Squad artist Dallocchio's style is so realistic in comparison to Hester's though, he seems like an entirely different character: Essentially, he's just a bald, shirtless guy with tattoos that come and go, depending on what he and fire get up to together.


SAVANT:
Created as a villain by Gail Simone and Ed Benes for their Birds of Prey series in the early 00s, Savant was a genius-level planner and fighter who considered a career in superheroics, took a detour into blackmail and, after butting heads with Oracle and the Birds, became an ally of theirs.

His design was costume-free, and he seemingly dressed off-the-rack. Benes gave him the same body-builder physique he gives all his male characters (although Savant's habit of dressing in long coats instead of spandex meant we didn't see his muscles and veins as prominently as the spandex-wearing heroes of Benes' JLoA run), and long, blond hair.
His role in the first issue of Suicide Squad is small (Spoiler: He was just faking; he returns in issue #6 as part of the team), but he was redesigned with a costume that resembles almost exactly that of the re-designed Mad Dog, and a body-armor and mask costume that isn't too dissimilar from that of Black Spider and Deadshot.


AMANDA WALLER:
The most dramatic change was that of Amanda "The Wall" Waller, a character who first appeared in John Ostrander, John Byrne and Len Wein's 1986 Legends miniseries before her prominent role in the original Suicide Squad. A tough-as-nails, take-no-prisoners bureaucrat and administrator, she generally functions as the boss of the Squad, and her exact role or portrayal tends to slide along a scale between villain and good guy, the needle most regularly stopping as anti-hero. Or, like the rest of the Squad, a bad person fighting worse people.

She has no superpowers or no costume, but even more unusually for a character in a superhero comic, she was short and full-figured, usually drawn somewhere between zaftig and obese, depending on the artist.

So of course, her first appearance in the New 52 turned some heads, arched some eyebrows and raised some blood pressure:
(Late, great ComicsAlliance, can you share your reaction again?)

If there's a defense for DC, and I don't really think there is (Like demoting Barbara "Oracle" Gordon to Batgirl in the New 52 lost the publisher it's only prominent hero in a wheelchair, this move lost the publisher one of their most prominent full-figured characters), the idea may have been to make the New 52 Waller more closely resemble Angela Bassett and Pam Grier, the actresses who played the character in the 2010 Green Lantern film and the Smallville TV show, respectively.

That doesn't explain why Waller's drawn so sexily in her panel (That panel, by the way, is the best-drawn panel in the entire first issue, maybe the only panel that looks like the artist took the time to draw it with care and passion, with her ample cleavage on display and the shape of her nipple visible through her blouse. The focus of that panel is, as drawn, Waller's breasts, but probably should be the thing in her hand, which visually demonstrated that Waller was behind the torture of the Squad, and was conducting that torture personally.

In the next few issues, Waller buttons up and puts on a blazer, wearing the sort of blouse and suit coat she most usually wears, but she doesn't get any shorter, wider or age ten to twenty years.

I'll return to the trade for a review-review later in the week, but it's not very good comics.