Friday, August 31, 2007

Friday Night Fights: Autobio Cartoonist Grudge Match!

James Kochalka is probably best known for his black and white autobio comics, which usually fall under the American Elf title. This Wednesday, he had a new book out, and it was quite a departure from that work—it's a full-color all-ages book about a squirrel entitled Squirrelly Gray.

Jeffrey Brown is probably best known for his black and white autobio comics, like Unlikely and Clumsy. This Wednesday, he had a new book out, and it was quite a departure from that work—it's a full-color book about a race of warring robots that can transform into vehicles entitled The Incredible Change-Bots.

Seeing these two works from these two artists arrive on comic shop shelves in the same week raises an interesting question: If Kochalka fought Brown, who would win?




It looks like Kochalka would win.






Yeah, definitely Kochalka.

If you would like to hear more of their artsy-fartsy discussion of the creation of comics, you'll probably want to check out their 2005 collaboration Conversation #2, available from Top Shelf Productions.

If you would like to see more panels of people punching each other in the face, you'll probably want to check in with Bahlactus.

And don't worry about Kochalka and Brown, they ultimately worked everything out just fine:

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Okay, four things

1.) In this week’s Las Vegas Weekly column, I take a look at





and




I mentioned it yesterday, but if you find the two hundred and fifty words or so about Mice Templar there insufficient, and would like to read 650 more words or so about the comic written by me, I pinch hit a “Best Shots Extra” review of it for Best Shots' fearless leader Troy Brownfield over at Newsarama.com earlier this week.

The best of the three is by far Varon’s Robot Dreams. How good is it you ask? So good that if I meet you and you’re like, “Yeah, I never got around to reading Varon’s Robot Dreams book,” I’ll punch you in the face.*


2.) While I’m linking to things, I wanted to point out a couple of neat pieces that Tim O’Neil posted this week. O’Neil’s one of those comics bloggers who pretty much always has something pretty smart to say on the subject of comics, and I was just thinking, “Damn, I wish he posted every single day” after reading a post he did about the difficulties in capturing martial arts in comics form, when up went a very smart piece about the seemingly doomed Spider-Man/Mary Jane marriage.

O’Neil’s comments on it were among the most cogent I’ve encountered on the subject (of course, most of the comments on the Spider-marriage I’ve encountered were on the Newsarama message boards following Joe Quesada’s last 4,057 broachings of the topic there), which Tom “Comics Reporter” Spurgeon rather elegantly framed as Marvel’s necessary process of “letting the character change and then scaling things back to the status quo in a demented cycle of innovation and aphasia.”

I appreciated O’Neil’s argument because it wasn’t really framed as that of a fan—he seemed to like the Spider-marriage and not react to it with the repulsion Quesada seemingly does—but simply as someone who could see Quesada’s argument, maybe a little more clearly than Quesada has been able to articulate. (And Quesada’s been talking about the damn thing since he was finishing up Sword of Azrael, I believe).

Quesada and Marvel are certainly going to face backlash when “One More Day” finally drops. After hinting and hyping it so long (long before the story even had a title, back when it was just a twinkle in Quesada’s eye), the story is either going to do away with the marriage in some sort of magic/cosmic continuity reset of the sort Marvel as always eschewed and DC’s always embraced** (An educated guess? A wizard will literally do it), and people will scrutinize the hell out of the execution, while coming down along the love-it or hate-it line, depending on how they feel about the Spider-marriage now, before the story’s first chapter even ships, OR the story is going to not be about the Spider-marriage at all and MJ and Peter will still be married at the end, and people will be disappointed that Marvel failed to deliver on the subject they’ve been hyping for 24 years or so now (Best guess in this case? Maybe Aunt May finally dies for real this time).

It really seems lose/lose to me at this point, no matter what happens afterwards in Spider-Man’s fictional life.

The point that Quesada either misses or simply has never addressed publicly is that even if every single point he (and O’Neil) have made about the negative aspects of the marriage are true, the many imprints and “continuitiverses” Marvel’s introduced since Quesada ascended to Editor-in-Chief have rendered the point moot.

Marvel has at least three distinct widely read Spider-Mans at the moment: The Marvel Universe one who stars in the Spider-Man books, New Avengers and guest-stars all over the place constantly; the Ultimate Universe Spidey who appears in Ultimate Spider-Man; and the Marvel Adventures Spidey who appears in the kid-friendly Marvel Adventures Spider-Man title and Marvel Adventures Avengers (There’s also the Spideys of Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane and The Amazing Spider-Girl; in both cases, their sales in the direct market are so small as to be negligible, although in the bookstore market they might have a bigger following—at least in the case of SMLMJ, but I’m really just guessing here).

Of those three Spideys, two are single and one is married (and SMLMJ Spidey is single; ASG Spidey is married, but no longer Spider-Man, just Peter Parker). If there is more story potential in the single Spider-Man, well, there are imprints to capitalize on that potential. To make the Marvel Universe one single too simply eliminates whatever potential there is in married Spider-Man stories.

If the argument isn’t simply about creative potential, but instead about a single Spider-Man being more appealing to young and new readers, being an easier archetype to plug into comics stories and their adaptations and merchandise, then I think Quesada is seriously misunderstanding what the gateway Spider-Man comic is these days, and who reads his various books.

Kids aren’t as likely to pick up Amazing Spider-Man as they are the Ultimate or Marvel Adventures version, and they’re less likely to even be able to choose the Marvel Universe Spidey, given those books relative scarcity outside of the direct market.

Put simply, the Ultimate line and the Marvel Adventures line, or at least the collections, are geared for and consumed by a mass market who don’t necessarily buy them in comic shops, or even ever go to comic shops, but buy them online or in big box bookstores. The Marvel Universe Spider-Man books, those featuring “616” Spidey, are bought by people who know what “616” means; that is, direct market consumers.

I don’t see the wisdom in even potentially alienating the shrinking “616” consumers by doing away with one of the few actual changes to have occurred in the life of a character they’ve followed faithfully for years (if not, in many cases, decades) simply to make him more appealing to readers who already have a few other Spider-Men geared specifically toward them.

The people who are most likely to enjoy the adventures of a (slightly) older Spider-Man, and we’re really talking about a Spidey who’s in his late ‘20s or early ‘30s instead of early or mid ‘20s, are the ones who are already reading the married Spider-Man, and have been for years. Most of them are also married themselves, or certainly of the age where they can relate to a married Spider-Man instead of a swinging bachelor one, or a young one experiencing girl troubles. And if and when we want to read about a young, single Spidey, well, nothing’s stopping us from reading books from those other imprints either (As someone who reads Spidey stories spread across the different continuitiverses, I think the Ultimate one has long been the one starring in the highest quality stories, and those are accessible and appealing to cranky old hardcore fans and relative newcomers to Spidey and comics in general).

But enough about Quesda and the Parkers. Back to O'Neil, he follows that post with a brilliant graphic explanation of EDILW favorite Jack Cole's brilliance. Check it all out.


3.) So, hey, did you see the Darwyn Cooke cover for an upcoming issue of The Comics Journal that Dirk Deppey posted at Journalista the other day?

No? Well, here it is, followed by several other cover portraits of Power Girl. All of them were created for DC Comics publications except Cooke’s.









Discuss.


4.) Finally, something related to the EDILW. I’ve been unhappy with the layout of the Wednesday night “Weekly Haul” posts for pretty much the entire time I’ve been doing them, and I switch it up every couple of months in an attempt to improve upon it. Having recently discovered there’s a way to keep text from wrapping around images weirdly in blogger (I’m seriously like a freaking caveman on this here computer thing), for example, I went back to the smaller-images-to-the-right-of-the-text arrangement, but I don’t think I like that any better than the big-pictures-above-each-review arrangement of the last few months.

Anyway, this is just a call for opinions. Do any of you feel strongly about what looks best, or what you’d prefer to read? Should I include the cover images of the books at all? (Since you’re here, you all obviously go to comics shops and spend time online looking up info about comics, so presumably you already know what all the covers look like). Should they be big images above the reviews? Smaller ones embedded into the reviews? To the right, or to the left?

Just curious.

Now, I know most of the comics blogosphere goes into low-content mode on weekends, on account of most comics bloggers having real lives, but that’s not a concern here at EDILW. So I just wanted to give a general heads-up that not only are we going to have new content on Saturday and Sunday, but it’s going to be pretty exciting content. Or, at least, it’s content that I’m really excited about, because it’s two posts I’ve been working on forever and am ecstatic to finally be done working on.



*No, I won’t hit you. Not really. I’ll probably just say, “Oh, you should really check it out; it’s very good.” While I imagine punching you in the face.


**Is it just me, or, over the last few years, does it seem that DC is learning all the wrong lessons from Marvel, embracing negative aspects of the Marvel Universe and its management, while Marvel has been learning all the wrong lessons from DC, and embracing the negative aspects of the DCU and its management?

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Weekly Haul: August 29th


52 Aftermath: The Four Horseman #1 (DC Comics) On the spectrum established by previous 52 follow-ups, this series falls much closer to Booster Gold than Metal Men and Black Adam in that it involves creators who worked on 52 (layout artist Keith Giffen writing, occasional penciler Pat Olliffe on pencil art) and picks up plotlines left over from 52 (what happened to Oolong Island, Veronica Cale and the Science Squad, what's become of Bialya). It does seem closer to Black Adam in its attempts to un-write parts of 52 however. After all, the Four Horsemen were all killed in the last act of DC's good weekly, so a series starring them seems kind of, um, impossible, doesn't it?

Well, it turns out, they're not dead! While the bodies the Science Squad created for them were destroyed, they are ideas that can and will return, first in human form. Also somewhat contradicting 52 is the situation in Bialya. According to this issue, there were survivors after all, so that Black Adam didn't kill every single man, woman and child there...just most of 'em. Whatever Adam's ultimate toll (whether it was millions or even more millions), picking up the story thread at all, and in particular involving the "Trinity" of Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman, brings up uncomfortable questions probably better left unexplored. Like why they didn't do anything to stop a man from murdering millions. Superman was powerless, yeah, but couldn't he have sent in a few Superman robots? Put on some kinda robot suit? Shown up in a Superman ship with some Kryptonian gadgets? (It's not like we haven’t seen Supes fight without his powers before). Batman and Wonder Woman have even less of an excuse—they were simply on vacation. Batman may have been a bit around the bend at the time, judging from what we've seen of his year off, but Wondy was essentially indulging in some me time while another divinely powered super-person was killing kids.

All that said, this is a perfectly fine issue. It's very much a matter of manufacturing a story where there need not actually be one, but Giffen gets the members of the Trinity quite well, and writes wonderful dialogue for them...I particularly enjoyed his portrayal of Batman and Superman. Rather than going the mutual man-crush route of Brad Meltzer or the adversarial route of the post-Dark Knight writers, he writes them like real people who are really friends, despite the fact that they have somewhat different outlooks on life. (Wondy has yet to join them; she has a pretty standard superhero/supervillain conversation, which stage-sets what's to follow). Olliffe's art is fine at communicating information, but really nothing terribly interesting or special, a relative weakness that becomes apparent now that he’s not operating under the grinding deadline of a weekly. Part of me kind of wishes Giffen could have handled the art chores himself.



Action Comics #855 (DC)
The self-destruction of the Action Comics team of Richard Donner, Geoff Johns and Adam Kubert has been sort of hilarious in an incredibly depressing way, like a “Ha ha, I can’t believe one of the comics industry’s leaders doesn’t have its shit together at all” kind of way. Ditto for the fact that the much-ballyhooed “regular” pencil artist Adam Kubert is apparently so awful at deadlines that DC eventually just gave up on him and his storyline, saying they’ll finish it in an annual or something sometime maybe. And it wasn’t the only storyline featuring one of their biggest character properties they had to give up on like that this year. Jesus.

Now, the plus side of Kubert and company’s screw-ups is that it gave Kurt Busiek and Fabian Nicieza the opportunity to pen a string of fill-in stories that have ranged from pretty good to really good. Also, it meant that Donner and Johns would need an artist who could draw on some kind of schedule for their second story arc, which kicks off here.

And boy, do they get an artist. Eric freaking’ Powell, of Goon fame, comes aboard to illustrate “Escape From Bizarro World,” and it is beautiful, beautiful stuff. I honestly couldn’t imagine this story working quite as well with Kubert’s art anyway. Powell’s character design style and his deep, self-inked shadows are perfect for a character like Bizarro, who is both kind of silly and kind of scary (particularly Johns’ take on him). The story is a pretty simple one. Bizarro abducts Pa Kent and takes him to new cube-shaped Bizarro world, something we haven’t really seen in DCU continuity since before Crisis on Infinite Earths. Superman goes there to rescue him, and finds a world full of Bizarros, which Bizarro himself seems to have created using a new vision power granted him by the rays of a blue sun (a star glimpsed in the last Action Comics annual, in a super-short sequence drawn by Joe “The Deadline Keeping One” Kubert).

Bizarro is one of my favorite comic book characters, and this is a pretty fun story because of it—I was a little worried, given the fact that the last few times Johns has written Bizarro it involved the twisted Superman killing a bunch of folks. There’s a darkness to the story, but it’s more a sense of confusion and menace then, I don’t know, a monster killing a school bus full of kids. It’s somewhat unfortunate (for these creators) that this follows so close on the heels of Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely’s visit to Bizarro World. The stories are very, very different, yet they riff on the same source material, and the simple fact that this came afterwards makes it seem more derivative than the All-Star Superman story. There’s even a mention of a bizarro Bizarro, but it’s merely in reference to Superman himself and not Zibarro.




Avengers: The Initiative #5 (Marvel Comics) A "World War Hulk" tie-in pretty much in banner logo only, this issue introduces a new black ops team answerable only to Henry Gyrich and sends them to rescue the fallen Initiative kids from the Warbound's clutches. It's essentially a tightly constructed character sketch of Gyrich, concluding with a neat little punchline ending, but writer Dan Slott moves many of his half-dozen plot pieces a step ahead during the process, while still managing to work the Hulk business in as naturally as possible. Another predictably solid effort from the predictably solid Slott and artist Stefano Caselli.




Black Panther #30 (Marvel)
With Marvel bound and determined to wring every cent out of the suprise popularity of the "Marvel Zombies" concept—constant hardcover reprints, an Army of Darkness crossover, a prequel, a sequel and plenty of merch—it's not like they needed any help from Reginald Hudlin's non-stop tie-in Black Panther to run the emerging franchise into the ground, but Hudlin insists on doing his part anyway. This is the third issue of the story arc pitting the new Fantastic Four against the Marvel Zombies on the Skrull homeworld, and that's probably two issues too many, although it's worth noting the zombie-fighting in this issue is more fun than in the last two (I think because our FF is fighting the zombified Skrull versions of the FF, and a zombie with stretchy powers like Mr. Fantastic's still qualifies as sorta fresh compared to so much of the zombie business). Penciller Francis Portela's art continues to impress the hell out of me—I don't know how much lead time he's had on either title, but I'm amazed that BP and Super-Villain Team-Up/MODOK's 11 have both been out on schedule and have both looked absolutely great—and I find it ironic that now that the book's artistically in the best shape it's been in years, I'm starting to weary of the plot direction.




Fantastic Four #549 (Marvel)
I'm starting to feel a little bad about mentioning how bad Michael Turner's cover work is, like he's rather quickly become the new Rob Liefeld, an easy punchline that everyone's always making fun of. Like, when it's this obvious, one can't help but feel a little bad about the whole process. And yet Marvel keeps forcing Michael Turner art into my home by slapping his covers on books whose insides I want to read.

So here goes: This Michael Turner cover? Not very good at all. Nothing like this scene occurs in the issue, and it would therefore have maybe been more appropriate for #548, when the Frightful Four did actually have the Fantastic Four on the ropes. But in this issue, not only is Titania nothing as wispy as Turner's version, nor the Wizard wearing a costume like that, but The Trapster doesn't even appear. The background is, again, all the colorist, and the principle around which the image was constructed seems to be the avoidance of drawing feet. How else to explain Titania—what's she standing on, there? But what really boggles my mind is Storm. What's she lying on? An invisible love seat? Is she supposed to be knocked out, like her teammates? Or is she doing one-armed push-ups in front of her foes? That is just an awful, awful, awful cover, bad even by Turner's awful standards (the only worse one I can think of off the top of my head is the infamous Power Girl cover to JLoA #10), and I do hope he's ashamed for creating it. And that Marvel's ashamed for paying him to create it. And each and every one of you feel ashamed for buying it. Share in my shame for financially supporting these crimes against aesthetics!

Okay, so that's the cover. As for pages 1-22, it's another go round of old school superhero fighting, with the Fantastic Five becoming the so-much-less-alliterative Fantastic Six and handing the now-explained Klaw and the Frightful Four their spandex-clad asses. Plus, once she's freed, Sue acts so incredibly bad-ass it seems like she could give Wolverine and the Punisher lessons in bad-assery. Nothing special or revolutionary, but Dwayne McDuffie's action is all exciting and his jokes are all funny, and penciler Paul Pelletier's work looks even better this week than it did last issue, and that issue looked better than the issue before that—always a good sign. I just wish I knew why Marvel insisted on putting its worst foot imaginable—a twisted, deformed, gangrenous, cloven hoof of a foot—forward on this title, burying one of it's most reliable solid superhero soaps under Turner's increasingly awful covers.




The Last Fantastic Four Story #1 (Marvel)
Wow, there are a lot of FF stories out this week. There were three in my haul alone, and I'm pretty sure I saw some more on the shelves. I lost count of how many times I was told that the big hand was on the twelve and the little hand on the clobber. Maybe a half-dozen? If that strikes you as too many declarations of "It's clobberin' time!" or too many Fantastic Four stories for a single week, don't worry. This is the last one. Ever. That Mark Millar and Bryan Hitch run they made a big deal out of? Not going to happen anymore. They're probably just going to have to recycle Hitch's pencil art.

Okay, no, not really. This seems to kinda sorta be along the lines of those The End stories Marvel has been doing at random intervals, only one of which I've actually read (The Punisher: The End by Garth Ennis and Richard Corben, and it was awesome). Only since they already did a Fantastic Four: The End series, they decided to call it The Last Fantastic Four Story, and then go ahead and add a "#1" to it, just to imply that there will be others and that it therefore needs to be designated by a number.

What makes this one kind of special is that it's scripted by Stan Lee, co-creator of the FF. Lee's writing can be hard to read, particularly straight, and I can usually take about ten pages of it before my eyes start to cross—the last time I really read much of his work was in those delightful Stan Lee Meets... stories, and those were all short and played for laughs, so it worked beautifully. This story is played perfectly straight, though, and can thus be a little tiresome.

It was nevertheless fascinating.

I admit I didn't really approach it as escapist entertainment, having never really given myself over to the story. Instead, I approached as a "let's see how this living legend from an era long past can manage to write for today's audience" kind of thing. In that respect, it was an interesting read, although it's perhaps worth noting that I would have completely passed on this if it weren't for the artist, John Romita Jr., whom I'll buy pretty much anything from (Need an example of why? Flip thorough your own copy until you get to The Adjucator straddling over Manhattan. Holy crap! Is that an original design? A tweak of an old Kirby one? Because it is just gorgeous...the missing pieces of its body lending it an air of otherworldliness which separates it from the many dozens of Kirby and Kirby-esque giants we've seen over the years).

It was odd to see a Lee version of decompression, in which information he could have put in two panels if he wanted is spread across two whole pages, giving the book an oddly cinematic feel (Odd for something with Lee's name on it, anyway). Likewise, the dialogue the characters spout is perfect—if silly and a tad dated—no one writes Thing, Dr. Doom or Silver Surfer dialogue as well as Lee. Sure, other, much better writers have filled their mouths with good, more realistic dialogue, but it never sounded as right as it does here. One tic from his era of comics writing that Lee retains is having the characters explain what's happening to the readers, making the words convey the same information as the images, and thus proving redundant (I noticed this happening a lot in Showcase Presents volumes). For example, JRJR will draw a panel of terrorists with their guns exploding into flames in their hands, and one of them will shout something like, "Our guns—exploding to flames in our hands!" or whatever). I'm also pretty interested in the process, which we get a peek into at the end, in which the outline and parts of the script (or is that the whole script?) is repritned, complete with notes from the editor, suggesting changes (How daunting must that be, to edit a friggin' Stan Lee FF story and say things like, "You know, that scene doesn't really work, why don't we try this instead?”).

Lee doesn't do much to take advantage of the "Last" in the title—nobody really dies, gets maimed, changes from the way they were initially conceived or does anything any differently than they might in a story that wasn't their last. This is a pretty freeing set-up for a story—Lee could do anything with the characters, really—but it's more or less just one more FF story. And that's more of an observation than a criticism. These are Lee's babies, he can do whatever he wanted with them in this story for all I care. I just wanted to see what he'd do and how he'd do it and, even more so, see JRJR drawing the hell out of the FF, and the many, many Marvel Universe guest stars that appear.




Mice Templar #1 (Image Comics) I didn't buy this comic this week, because I'd read a pdf of it to review it for Best Shots @ Newsarama.com . But I would have bought it otherwise. You can read me gas on about it for 900 words or so here if you like; if you don't have that kind of time but am curious what I thought, you could check out this week's Las Vegas Weekly comics col tomorrow night, which will have a couple hundred words on it. Or I guess I could just tell you right now that it's a pretty good read, it's very little like that other book it might strongly remind you of, and that it features the best Oeming art I've ever seen (And Oeming's stuff is pretty much always pretty good anyway, isn't it?).




Teen Titans #50 (DC)
Hey, it’s finally here! After a few months of meandering from crossover to crossover under the careless guidance of Adam Beechen, who’s first solo issue on the title was probably the worst DC comic book ever published (I’m exaggerating…a little), Beechen’s fellow Countdowner Sean McKeever metaphorically rides in on a white horse to return the series to readability. McKeever, you’ll recall, has built his rep writing good teenage characters for an SLG series, before graduating to writing very good teenaged super-characters for Marvel. So McKeever onTeen Titans, a book all about teenaged superheroes? Pretty much a guaranteed hit (creatively, if not financially).

This issue is extra-special in that not only is it McKeever’s first, but he’s joined by former Titans writers Geoff Johns and Marv Wolfman and former Titans artists George Perez and Mike McKone, plus Impulse writer Todd Dezago and Young Justice artists Todd Nauck and Larry Stucker (and Young Justice was basically just Teen Titans in all but name, for those of you who might have missed that consistently entertaining title).

To put it mildly, I was pretty excited about this issue. But then, I was excited about McKeever on Countdown too and, well, that book didn’t turn out so hot (Not that it was all his fault; from the issues I read, his wasn’t any suckier than anyone else’s, and most of the problems seemed to revolve around the fact that the plot made absolutely no sense at all, rather than the skills of the scripters).

So, are my hopes to be met, exceeded or dashed?

Well, I’ll tell you. But I’m going to do so as lazily as possible, because I have rather a lot to say about Teen Titans #50, and due to real life intruding, I’m now rapidly running out of Wednesday hours. So I’m bulletpointing this. Ready? Okay then, here are Seven Thoughts On Teen Titans #50:

1.) The cover sucks. And it sucks really, really, really badly. It’s by Ale Garza and Scott Williams, “with Reis,” whatever that means (Seems like a lot of artists for one terrible image, doesn’t it?). It’s of what I take to be the new line-up, and they’re all posing superheroically. That in and of itself would be fine, I guess. Even despite the complete lack of any and all background. (At least with that awful Turner FF cover, and the awful Turner FF covers that preceded it, the colorist usually tries to make it look like the heroes are in space or in a cloud of smoke or a fire or something more active than a mildly gradated field of green). I’ve seen Garza art that I’ve liked quite a bit before, but I don’t see it here. These are universally bad designs of the characters, and pretty bad drawings of these bad designs (You know you’re in trouble when Supergirl is the best looking, best rendered character on a cover). He seems to go out of his way to make the new Kid Devil and Blue Beetle III designs look completely repellent, which is actually kind of hard, as that Blue Beetle costume design is fantastic. And yet here Jaime has the facial structure of a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle, and Eddie seems to have the face of the Tim Curry in Legend. Yeesh.

Worse still, let’s look at where the composition of this thing, shall we? Garza gets the Turner Award for foot drawing avoidance (seven characters, but only one whole foot!), but, beyond that, the characters are all just kind of floating, with no real relation to one another. That’s fine for the ones who can fly, but what’s Robin doing? A jumping jack? Is he floating? How long is Ravager’s right arm, and is her sword between Robin and his cape? Where are Wonder Girl’s legs? They just fade away like ghost legs. And why is the whole focus of the picture Robin’s crotch? These are minors for God’s sake!

Anyway, the cover? It sucks. It sucks hard. The longer I look at it, the more I die inside. And making it especially sucky is the fact that the issue is jam-packed with great artists. It’s a crime against nature to put something like this over Perez interiors, isn’t it? Why can’t we have him doing the cover? I bet he could have fit every Titan in the book, if not every Titan ever, on that page. Or how about Todd Nauck, who only draws a single page inside—surely he had time in his schedule for a cover that doesn’t completely suck?

And while I’m going on too long about the cover, I’d also just like to add that I hate, have always hated, and will likely continue to hate the current Titans logo. It looks like something a middle-aged ad exec would have thought teenagers in 2001 would have thought was cool. Please note that it’s now 2007, and the series launched in 2003. And our hypothetical middle-aged ad exec would have been wrong in 2001, anyway.

2.) Note the chest of the Superboy statue on the first page. I like how penciler Randy Green obviously drew the S-shield there, and then later down the line they covered it up with a brilliantly bright flash of sunlight off of Superboy’s chest. See, DC’s currently involved in a lawsuit over the ownership of Superboy. I guess the name Superboy, not this particular iteration, who is a completely different character who simply has the same name as the disputed Superboy. While DC’s been less than subtle about erasing the character from existence in their fictional universe—no character can utter the word “Superboy” when discussing this guy or Superboy-Prime, for example—apparently DC can’t feature an unnamed Superboy character with the Superman S-shield on his chest either, despite the fact that no one thinks the S-sheild is in dispute (But the concept of a teenaged boy with it on his chest is, I guess?). So that explains the dumb-ass cover to the previously mentioned godawful issue of Teen Titans in which Superboy clone Match has his S-shield obscured by a random flash of light (at the time I just assumed it was a poor creative choice, like pretty much every other creative choice made in that issue).

You know, there are easier ways around this, ones that don’t involve calling attention to the fact that you’re trying to not call attention to Superboy’s lack of an S-shield. Like not including a giant golden Superboy statue in the scene, for example. Or using an angle that doesn’t require us to see his chest. Apparently, the embargo on the symbol has been in effect for months now. That cover which hides Match’s S-shied is at least four months old, and Karl Kershcl was apparently asked to take Superboy out of the Teen Titans back-up origin he did for 52. So someone could have probably just asked Green not to draw attention to the statue of Superboy’s chest.


3.) McKeever’s dialogue is, as always, spot on. He shows a pretty good understanding of the characters’ various histories, their relationships and the way they speak to one another. Page 2’s Robin eulogy is nicely worded, for example, and does what DC has seemed kind of reluctant to do—acknowledge that Bart Allen was ever Impulse (A move which seems especially unfortunate now that Impulse’s co-creator has died tragically early; a pity his major contribution to the DCU didn’t outlive him). In addition to the Titans on the cover, McKeever writes a few scenes featuring Flash, Cyborg, Starfire, Beast Boy and Raven, plus Superman, Wonder Woman, Batman and Martian Manhunter. And they all sound like themselves. Whew.

4.) The Johns/McKone contribution is another version of a part of the story they told in Teen Titans #9, in which Robin and some Titans let Bart drive a Batmobile. It was a rare fun and light moment in Johns’ Titans run, so it’s nice to see it repeated even if it still reads like something of a—well, of a repeat. Here it’s a Batplane. Bonus points for mentioning Challengers Mountain.

5.) McKeever makes only one real continuity error, and it’s not too terribly big a deal, but I’m going to point it out anyway because that’s the kind of anal retentive, nitpicking asshole I am.

On the plane ride away from the tower, Wally says “When Bart said he wanted to join the Titans, I remember thinking, No way. Impusle is not Titans material. Young Justice was one thing, but the Titans…? That was serious business. Then, sure enough, he’s a Titan for less than a day and he gets his kneecap blown off by Deathstroke.”

Yeah Wally, as you’re no doubt well aware, that was actually Bart’s second tour of duty on the Titans. His first day was actually some time ago, right after Zero Hour. Impulse was on the Arsenal-led version of the team that existed between Zero Hour and the launch of the Dan Jurgens volume of Teen Titans. (He joined in New Titans #0 and New Titans #115, and was on the team through at least “The Siege of the ZiCharam” in #124. After that I’m not so sure…the series ended with #130, and I have a lot of holes in my longbox during those last few arcs).

This time on the team, in which he befriended and developed a crush on Rose Wilson, also seems ignored by Rose, who blows off all the Bart memorial stuff, although that could just as easily be intentional, her being in denial or some such.

The bit about Bart trying to see Kory and Raven naked seemed a little off too, seeing as Bart was always pretty uninterested in naked ladies, particularly for a teen boy, but I suppose that could have been after Johns started characterizing him as a typical teen instead of a younger kid. At any rate, if Kory lets minors stare at her naked, she probably shouldn’t be working with kids.


6.) The Wolfman/Perez story is only four pages long. And it has 36 panels! It’s always really well written and really well drawn. Wolfman’s dialogue seems a bit dated but, well, it’s a flashback, so it works.


7.) The Dezago/Nauck/Stucker page is perfect, and makes me wish they got more than a page. Cassie recaps a few reasons why she didn’t take Bart all that seriously, and the creators show flashbacks to four Young Justice adventures that didn’t actually happen, but are all silly in the sort of way that Peter David’s YJ stories were. And the silent Impulse with the quizzical look on his face, even thinking a giant question mark in a thought cloud at one point, was such a refreshing sight. That’s the Bart Allen I remember, the one Waid and Ringo created, and the one DC has slowly been killing since at least Teen Titans #1. And it was nice to see him back again. Just as it was nice to see Nauck and Stucker drawing these characters again (I hope they’re at the top of fill-in/guest artist lists for this series).

Monday, August 27, 2007

Satellite Era Spotlight: Justice League of America #156


Justice League of America #156 (1978); "The Fiend With Five Faces," by Gerry Conway, Dick Dillin and Frank McLaughlin

Dateline: Honolulu, Hawaii

An exhasted, weakened Aquaman stumbles out of the ocean and heads for downtown Honolulu. He hails a cab, and takes it to The Bristol Building.



Hey, have you ever wondered what movie star Aquaman looks like?


Wow.

We never learn why the cabbie continues to assume the soaking wet guy wearing Aquman's costume and talking about teleporters and the Justice League is Steve McQueen, nor do we learn why Aquaman volunteered the location of a secret teleporter tube to this total stranger, or why the Justice League didn't put one of them in Atlantis or the ol' Aquacave. No time for any of that, because there's an emergency brewing.

Once on the satellite headquarters of the JLoA, Aquaman asks Ralph Dibny to summon the other Leaguers. The call goes out, finding many of the other heroes right in the middle of somethin.

Black Canary, for example, is in Star City, battling The Boxer Bandits…



…and her mortal enemy, math:



Ray "The Atom" Palmer, meanwhile, is hanging out in a park with his finacee, Jean Loring, with quite a lot on his mind:


Uh, yes. If you’re going to marry someone, you should probably let them know pretty much everything about you. Or, at the very least, the broad strokes. Like whether you have any superpowers, for example, or have a costumed alter ego and have to attend meetings in orbiting space satellites once a week.

The only Leaguers who are unaccounted for are Flash and Green Lantern, who are busy investigating some weird plant growth, and find an even weirder culprit behind it—


Yikes! Dude, if you’re going to wear a leaf loincloth to cover yourself, you might want to avoid standing in the treetops and talking to people who are below you like that.

He gets the drop on them both using his crazy plant powers, capturing them both in vines.

Meanwhile, the Joker tries to steal a painting, seeking to distract the guards with clowns and Hostess Fruit Pies, but he apparently took his sweet time stealing the painting, as they had time to enjoy the real fruit filling and the light, tender crust and catch up to him.



Now, couple things here. First, this story seems to deviate from the pattern of all other scenes of DC supervillains being undone by Hostess Fruit Pies. See, usually the pies distract the villains from their perfidy with their real fruit filling and light, tender crust. But here, the Joker uses the pies on the crowds and police to distract them while he commits a crime, right? But the pies obviously don't really work, because the cops still catch him. Did he just take his sweet time stealing the painting? Did he overestimate how long it would take the cops to eat Hostess Fruit Pies and continue with their patrol of the museum? Or was it all part of his plan, all along? Were those pies all fille not with real fruit filling, but deadly Joker venom? I assume we'll return to the subplot later.

The other thing worth noting is that the last panel in this scene contradicts clearly established continuity regarding the Joker's feelings about Hostess Fruit Pies. In JLoA #147 he flatly turned down an offer of delicious Hostess Fruit Pies, thus revealing himself to be insane and thus, in all likelihood, the Joker. So which is it DC—does the Joker like delicious Hostess Fruit Pies or does he not like delicious Hostess Fruit Pies?

Anyway, back to the Justice League. Once assembled around the table, Aquaman relates his tale. It seems he was swimming along, minding his own business, when a volcanic island with a crazy living statue atop of it straight up rose out of the sea


The statue focused its ten pairs of eyes on him and unleashed a volley of eye beams. There was a flash of light and a thunderous "Zzzzzarom!" and then he lost consciousness. He lay on the ocean floor for two weeks, tended to by his sea subjects, who were responding to subconscious commands to keep him alive.

I don’t know if that’s cute or gross. Maybe a little of both.

When he awoke, he swam straight to the nearest teleporter tube, conveniently placed on top of a very tall building on land, and went to alert the League of the powerful five-faced fiend he had encountered.

Suddenly NATO calls and is all like, “Justice League! Halp! Some of our guys are fighting some Warsaw Pact guys, and we’re using ancient weapons and they’re using super-futuristic spaceships and lasers! You’ve gotta help us sort out this temporal crisis, or at least switch it so our guys have the good stuff!”

Recognizing some kind of time anamoly and/or magic hoodoo, the League responds to these multiple threats by doing what it does best—splitting into smaller teams!

This shit is so serious that The Phantom Stranger, who was then a member of the team whenever he felt like it, finally decided to deign the other Leaguers with his presence.


He joined Batman, Red Tornado and The Atom to investigate the island that Aquaman told them about. On the way, Phantom Stranger shows off his super wing-walking powers.

Once they arrive, Batman warns Red Tornado to stick with the others,


but the android is intent on setting destiny up for a punchline: “No way could a column ever collapse on me while my back was turned!”

Inside the temple, the heroes encounter some sort of intangible guardian demon, which the Atom takes care of by punching its molecules. How does taht work? I don't know, but he says it's simply physics, and since he's a physics teacher and I'm not, I'm in no position to challenge him.

On another front, The Elongated Man, Black Canary and Superman have traveled to Eastern Europe, and just as they arrive, Supes’ acid really starts to kicks in…


Sure dude. A black unicorn. Whatever.

Oh no wait, no there really is a black unicorn! And astride it is a dude who appears to be Gehngis Khan wearing a power-suit designed by Jack Kirby. He says his name “may be Ku, War-God of Ancient Oceania,” and using his magic sword, he kicks the crap out of Superman! Ssshham!

Meanwhile, the other two Leaguers encounter another, even weirder-looking guy—

Canary’s flesh crawls at the mere sight of his costume. And considering the fact that she looks at Red Tornado's costume every single day, that's really saying something.

This strange figure is Rongo, Jester of Oceania, one of five gods of that ancient civilization who was trapped in the five-faced statue, as he exposits to Canary:

Tangora the Wise, the guy who looks a little like Oliver Queesn, is the one who imprisoned them in the statue, and he himself is currently imprisoned in the temple while the other four run amok. Or other three, anyway. I'm not sure where Mauri the Love-Goddess is at.

Meanwhile, Superman uses his super-brain to outwit and defeat Ku, the Stranger uses his magic to free Tangora, Hal Jordan outwints Tane the Nature-God (no, seriously!).

But what of Rongo, well, Black Canary uses her feminine wiles to seduce him and, then, when he's guard's down, to hit him at point blank range in the face with her sonic blast:

Dirty pool, Canary, dirty pool.

Freed by the Stranger, the head god puts them all back in their temple and sinks the island.

Back on the satellite, Ray realizes that this adventure wasn’t just about Earth being jeopardized by ancient gods, it was really all about him:

When he asks his fellow Leaguers whether he should keep such a big, huge important secret like his being The Atom from his wife or not, they all say different things.

Batman advises keeping it secret…because if there’s one thing Batman knows, it’s how to sustain a relationship. Flash tried going the whole lying-to-his-own-wife route, but ended up telling her in his sleep. Hal says to go ahead and tell her: “Trust Jean! She may be the only person you ever can trust completely," he says.

Adding, “Hell, don’t just tell her your identity, tell her all of ours too! And the identity of Batman’s current sidekick, and the identities of any and all future sidekicks he might someday have! What harm could possibly ever come of it?”

What does Ralph Dibny have to say of the matter?

Oh really Steve McQu—I mean, Aquaman. You don't think Ralph would have it any other way? Well, let's check back with him in 27 years or so, huh?

So what's it going to be, Ray?

Aw man, this issue leaves us hanging. It's to be continued in “’Till Doom Do Us Part,” the next issue, which I don’t have.

Well, whatever happened, I’m sure the Palmers ended up living happily ever after…

Saturday, August 25, 2007

The Greatest Five Panels in Kurt Busiek's Career

I've been writing a lot of pretty nice things about Kurt Busiek lately. Not only is he currently writing Superman, but thanks to the M.I.A. Action Comics creative team, he's pretty much writing that title too. The result? The Super-books are currently better-written then they've been in...well, at least since I've been reading comic books.

Busiek's comics career is long and storied, and he's done a lot of great comics (and, yeah, a couple of not-so-great ones too). Recently he attempted to do the impossible and successfully relaunch Aquaman without the book's title character, with some pretty mixed results (which is a win, considering the doomed nature of such an endeavor). And, before that, he made Conan totally awesome again.

His signature work, Astro City deserves all the accolades it's racked up over the years, and belongs on the bookshelves of anyone who loves superheroes.

Teamed with George Perez, he penned the superlative JLA/Avengers and had a stellar run on The Avengers (probably my favorite Avengers run, for what that's worth).

His Marvels collaboration with Alex Ross is one of the most essential Marvel Universe comics ever published, and his Superman: Secret Identity is mandatory reading for any and all DC super-fans.

Untold Tales of Spider-Man? Shockrockets? Arrowsmith? Thunderbolts? Great stuff.

With that much good stuff on his resume, it might seem like it would be difficult to select a single work and confidently hold it above all the others and say, "This, this is the single greatest acheivement of Kurt Busiek! This is his masterwork! This is the very best work of a very good writer!"

It might seem like it would be difficult to do that, but it's really not. That's because one of Busiek's works is so far superior to all of his others that it's on a whole other plane. Marvels and Astro City wish they were a tenth of the comic book that this series was.

And what book is this that represents the zenith of a modern master of super-scripts?




Yes, 2001's The Defenders, which Busiek co-wrote with penciler Erik Larsen. The greatest comic book ever published by human beings, Busiek and Larsen's Defenders immediately surpassed the works of all of Marvel's classic creative teams, even the Stan Lee/Jack Kirby and Lee/Ditko teams, and would ascend to a level of quality that no Marvel book since has been able to touch. The very best issues of New X-Men or Garth Ennis' Punisher comics or Ultimate Spider-Man were almost as good as the lesser issues of The Defenders (the ones featuring guest-artists instead of Larsen and his inker Klaus Janson), but they couldn't possibly compare to even the mediocre issues of Defenders.

Larsen's brilliant badness featured a primitive, primal energy that only Kirby could have hoped to achieve, only with a rough terrible-ness that Kirby couldn't have achieved no matter how fast he drew or how many corners he cut. Larsen's pencil art was a mixture of awful superhero art and great cartooning, creating a style completely unknown to Marvel readers.

Larsen and Busiek were able to find an ingenious way to reunite the original anti-team into a cohesive unit that could team up every single month, while keeping their reluctance to do so completely intact, even slowly ratcheting that reluctance up issue by issue. They also managed to distill the characters into their most iconic, mythic essences.

The Hulk was a big, stupid baby who talked like a caveman and was always breaking things. Namor was a pompous ass who hated everyone. Dr. Strange was a remote, distant, pompous ass. Silver Surfer was a remote, distant, pompous ass...on a surfboard. The other Defenders were a bunch of self-conscious losers who were just glad to be in the same comic book as Hulk and Namor.

Together they faced Red Raven and the Bi-Beast, an alliance of all of Marvel's stupidest underwater villains, the fearsome Orrgo and MODOK and his team of Headmen, and remember, this was back before the Internet told you how cool MODOK was.

The series only lasted 12 issues, ending in a completely silent "'Nuff Said" special issue that ranks up their with "The Anatomy Lesson" as one of the best and most influential single issue comics stories in history. But that was simply because it was caviar for the masses. It would take fans a few years to realize that what they had failed to buy in droves was actually the greatest thing they could ever have the chance to read in their entire lives.

But I can narrow the zenith of Busiek's writing career down even further than a single series. We can narrow it down to a single issue of this series, Defenders #2, co-written by Larsen and illustrated by Larsen and Janson. And from there we can narrow it down even further, to a single scene.

Here then, are the greatest five panels in Kurt Busiek's career:








Genius!

Friday, August 24, 2007

Friday Night Fights: Batman abhors killing.

But then, zombies aren't technically alive. Click on the images below to better see how Batman takes advantage of a technicality.





(All that talk of Kelley Jones during Monday's preview reviews made me want to revisit 2000's Batman: Haunted Gotham #2 by Doug Moench, Kelley Jones and John Beatty)

Thursday, August 23, 2007

August 23rd's Meanwhile, in Las Vegas...

In this week's LVW column, I cover





and



A little something for everyone.