Saturday, September 20, 2008

Tiny Titans gets an A+

This week's issue of Art Baltazar and Franco's Tiny Titans was just as fun, funny and incredbily cute as all of those issues that have preceded it.

The opening story was about the various Titans going to the principal's office with their guardians to get their report cards. All it consists of is a sequence of the same panel composition over and over, with different characters in each one, and a different obvious joke in each panel.

Here's the last page of the story, featuring the Tiny Titans debut of the Terror Titans:


I used to think that Wildebeest or Kid Devil was the cutest Tiny Titan, but man, how do you compete with Li'l Barda?




It was interesting to see what adult superhero (or villain) accompanied each tiny Titan, as many of them aren't sidekicks like Robin or Aqualad and thus don't have an obvious mentor.

Who, for example, is raising Blue Beetle? Ted Kord? Dan Garrett?

Even better:



I was really skeptical of this title when it was originally announced, as its stars are starring concurrently in such adult-oriented books as Titans and Teen Titans, but eight issues in, I think Baltazar and Franco have each earned an A+.

Friday, September 19, 2008

My name's Sentry and it may be a sin/ But I'll take your bet and you're gonna regret/ I'm the best there's ever been

There was a lot to like about this week's Age of The Sentry #1 by Jeff Parker, Paul Tobin, Nick Dragotta, Ramon Rosanas and Gary Martin, but my very favorite part was this single detail from the backround of a single panel. The Parker/Dragotta/Martin story features a sequence during which The Sentry's supporting cast are traveling back through time and witnessing some of his adventures on their way to his origin, and we see this:


Applying the power of a million exploding suns to fiddle-playing, the Golden Guaridan of Good totally owned the devil in a good old-fashioned fiddle-off, no doubt saving his own soul and winning a golden fiddle in the process.

And look how sad poor Satan looks about it...

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Links!

—Three DC books set to ship last Wednesday didn’t actually show up on the shelves; bumped from the schedule at the last minute. All-Star Batman and Robin, the Boy Wonder had that problem with improperly printing the black bars over the swear words, Action Comics had Superman drinking a beverage out of a bottle that could conceivably have been beer (straining my eyes on the scans, the label looked like “Crow Root Beer” to me, but maybe it was “Crow Lite Beer,” I dunno), and DC Universe: Decisions…wait, why did DC Universe: Decisions fail to ship last week?

If you’ve forgotten, that’s the stupid-sounding book about DC’s Justice League heroes trying to defend presidential candidates from an assassin and getting pulled into politics. But for maximum irrelevance, they’re totally fake, fantasy candidates, not Barack Obama and John McCain, because who would be interested in reading about real politicians in their funny books? (Besides everyone who picked up the Barack Obama issue of Savage Dragon and is looking forward to the IDW bios, of course).

DC’s impulse to keep real-world politics out of their funny books is understandable, since I imagine a surprising number of their readers are probably Republican and pretty much all of their superheroes are all moderate to extremely super-liberal Democrats (except Hal Jordan, Hawkman and Guy Gardner). Of course, that being the case, why on earth even bother doing a story about superheroes and the presidential election?

No word on why this is a week late yet. I had hoped it was because DC noticed at the last minute that “Hey, this is a horrible idea for a comic book…and look, this Judd Winick guy is a rotten writer! We can’t publish this crap!”

But it was on shelves this week, so it was merely delayed. What was changed during that delay? I don’t know, but I wish I did.

On Monday, Comic Book Resources gossip columnist Rich Johnston wondered aloud if it had something to do with one of the candidates looking a little bit too much like Condoleeza Rice, but that couldn’t have been it, as the final issue still had a Condoleeza Rice lookalike in it. Retailer and Savage Critic Brian Hibbs noted that the cover was apparently changed slightly, in a minor (and weird) way that I can’t even begin to make sense out of a possible motivation for.


—Instead of blacking out the swear words in All-Star Batman and Robin, the Boy Wonder, maybe they should just print this exhortation from Captain Marvel on the covers of DC comics with R-rated language?


—Remember when it was announced that those charming rascals Mark Millar and Bryan Hitch would be taking over the monthly Fantastic Four comic for some reason, and there was no way it was going to be late because Hitch was seriously already one million issues ahead and even though they totally lied all those other times about being so far ahead that lateness wouldn’t be an issue this time they really, really mean it baby so just give them one more chance please?

Well guess what?

Retailer, blogger and tireless swamp monster advocate Mike Sterling noticed that Fantastic Four finally missed a month in July.

I don’t find that really all that remarkable—who believes anything Mark Millar ever says about anything at this point anyway?—but I did find it kind of remarkable that there wasn’t the sort of fanbase freak out about this creative team’s failure to deliver on time after such strong assurances that they would.

I remember during Ultimates and Ultimates 2 this was A Really Big Deal, but now I either don’t read as much industry hype news as I did back then, or readers just don’t really care any more.

Are Millar and Hitch not the white-hot creative team they once were? Is there just too much Millar product out there at the moment? (FF is one of four Marvel series he’s currently scripting) Are Marvel fans just much less interested in the FF than in The Ultimates? Or is a one month delay just not even really worth noticing in today’s industry, with books like Spider-Man/Black Cat, All-Star Batman and Robin, the Boy Wonder, Allan Heinberg’s Wonder Woman and Ultimate Wolverine Vs. Hulk having set the bar for timeliness so low that a Millar/Hitch FF book missing a month is beneath most readers’ notice?

I imagine it has something to do with all of those factors, as the sales for this creative team’s FF have been much lower than I would have expected, which seems to indicate a general lack of interest in the book relative to other Millar/Hitch or Millar/Any Other Artist projects.


—I will totally cry if Kirsten Dunst doesn’t return as Mary Jane in the next Spider-Man movie. They will be manly tears, but tears nonetheless.


Speed Racer was released on DVD this week, which is tremendous news. To hell with Iron Man and The Dark Knight; for all their virtues, I think Speed Racer is still the best comic book-based movie of the year and, in fact, one of the best movies I’ve seen this year (By virtue of being a film that did things previous films haven’t, and thus showing viewers things they haven’t seen before).

Kevin Church posted a highlight-filled video featuring the theme that played over the end credits under the post headline “I am SO obsessed with this.”

His obsession is contagious.

I’ve watched that video like eight times since he posted it so far. And as awesome as it is—featuring Speed’s flying scissor lock and Pops’ overhead ninja-spinning among all the car acrobatics—it doesn’t even include some of the best parts of the film (like Racer X punching a Viking racecar driver in the face while both of their race cars are airborne).

God, I love that movie.


—After a few brief sentences on it in yesterday’s weekly review-o-rama, I thought I’d come back to comment on All-Star Superman #12 more thoughtfully at some point in the near future.

But then I read Savage Critic and Jog the Blog blogger Joe McCulloch’s review, and now don’t feel any real need to. McCulloch just plain nailed it, and all I can think to add is “What he said.”


—The last image of Superman in All-Star Superman, industriously working to rebuild the heart of the sun from within, toiling at a lever while we see some vague-looking machinery in the background, made me think immediately of Guy Maddin’s 2000 short film, The Heart of the World.

If you haven’t seen it and have six minutes to spare, check it out:



It’s a silent(-ish) film about a beautiful young scientist named Anna who discovers the heart of the word is dying and who is being wooed by a mortician, an actor playing Jesus in a passion play and an industrialist. So obviously the plot is very different from Morrison and Quitely’s Superman story.

But like All-Star Superman, it ends with the principal character deciding to save the world by becoming the new center of a heavenly body, and, also like All-Star Superman, it’s a passionate love letter to its own medium.

Proceed with caution though. The score may be stuck in your head for the rest of your life; it’s been in mine for about eight years now.


—Did you read any DC comics that were released this week? If so, you probably saw this week’s DC Nation column. Hey look, it’s former Best Shots @ Newsarama.com contributor Janelle Siegel between two of her fellow new assistant editors! Congrats again Janelle; now I’ll feel (a tiny bit) bad when I complain about the terrible, terrible Batman books…


Tom Bondurant notices that Final Crisis, despite being a story Grant Morrison has supposedly had written before Countdown, despite the assurances from creators and editors that there would be no delays, despite having a skip-month built in and despite additional pencillers being brought in to speed J.G. Jones along, is going to be late after all.

Huh. Maybe Jones shouldn’t have been going to quite so many conventions and doing quite so many interviews over the last few months, or maybe DC should have simply hired an artist who can draw a book a month for their latest big crossover.


It’s Joe Kubert’s birthday and oh my God Joe Kubert is old! I knew he had to be getting up there, but I didn’t realize he was already in his early eighties. It’s hard to believe he’s still just as good as he ever was, and that he’s still as productive as he is, pumping out far more pages in the last two years than either of his sons.

I think I’ll go re-read some Showcase Presents: Enemy Ace stories to celebrate…


—Uh-oh. Speaking of Enemy Ace, Dan DiDio mentioned the most bad-ass pilot of all time in explaining this “Faces of Evil” theme month DC’s doing in January. I think such theme-months are pretty great ideas, particularly if the individual issues are all approached as done-in-one jumping on points (as was the case with “Big Head” month and Eisner-like logo month and, to a lesser extent, the post-Zero Hour #0 issues and “The One Year Later” issues).

I’m a little worried to see Anarky’s name pop up again, and extremely perplexed by Enemy Ace’s inclusion. Unless he’s popping up in the pages of Booster Gold (awesome!) or in a special issue of Jonah Hex in which a very old Hex fights him (with guest art by Joe Kubert?…Please…?), I can’t imagine which of DC’s books the Hammer of Hell would fit into without it sucking too badly.

Of course, if the Justice League found him frozen in a block of ice Captain America-style and made them their new leader, that might be pretty cool…

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Weekly Haul: September 17th

Action Comics #869 (DC Comics) Oh my God! Does Superman/Clark Kent, the grown man who’s invulnerable to everything except magic, red solar radiation and Kryptonite, actually drink beer, a popular adult beverage which can lead to inebriation and the death of brain cells in frail, mortal human beings, of which Superman is definitely not?

No, no he does not. He drinks “Soda Pop” brand soda pop out of old-fashioned brown bottles, just like his pa. I know this because it is right on the cover of this week’s Action Comics, which was supposed to come out last week, but was actually delayed while the original printing was pulped because it looks like Gary Frank drew Superman and Pa holding bottles that could conceivably be construed as beer bottles.

At least, that’s what gossip columnist Rich Johnston says, and he has an image of the original cover image in this week’s Lying In The Gutters.

Hey, remember when known teenagers Supergirl and Wonder Girl snuck into a bachelorette party being held in a strip club and got sick on alcohol in the pages of Countdown?

The cover controversy is probably the most exciting thing about this particular issue, in which the one, true Brainiac attempts to do to Metropolis and Earth what he did to Kandor and Krypton. The Gary Frank and Jon Sibal art team continues to do incredible work, and Geoff John’s scripts are as solid as any of his others (if not a little more so), but this reads very much like a chapter of a graphic novel rather than something that can be read all on its own.

Of course, I did have to make an effort not to think about what I’m reading, as it seems to be messing pretty hard with Superman continuity, even the Superman continuity that was established after the Superboy punch period and the formation of New Earth. For example, this seems to be Superman’s first encounter with the bottle city of Kandor, despite the fact that Kandor played a pretty prominent role in 52.



The Age of The Sentry #1 (Marvel Comics) I’ve never liked The Sentry. The publicity stunt roll-out of the character, in which Paul Jenkins and Marvel pretended to have found a “lost” Stan Lee creation which they proceeded to then integrate into the Marvel Universe with a Triumph-like schtick and Marvelman/Miracleman-like conflicts, threw him into readers’ laps with a bad smell already emanating from him.

I skipped his solo outings (save for a single JRJR-illustrated issue I found in a bargain bin that wasn’t half-bad), and his inclusion in Brian Michhael Bendis’Avengers series and the last few Marvel crossover events made him an easy character to not simply not like, but to actively hate. A barely-veiled Superman-analogue, his presence was always a constant reminder of why Superman doesn’t really fit in with the Marvel characters and the Marvel Universe, with the vast majority of Sentry appearances falling into one of two categories: 1) Explaining why The Sentry can’t participate in a particular conflict or 2) Having The Sentry completely fail to do anything more than what Luke Cage or Wonder Man could do just as easily (i.e. punch out a couple of doombots, trade a couple of punches with superheroes, etc).

I’m not saying the character’s inherently flawed or that none of his appearances have been any good (I’ve heard his original series was good, actually), just that I’ve never personally read a Sentry appearance that didn’t seem completely pointless to me.

But then, I’ve never read any Sentry stories by EDILW favorites Jeff Parker, Paul Tobin and Nick Dragotta, beneath a cover by animator and way-too occasional comics artist David Bullock (the man responsible for about a half dozen spectacular Action Comics covers during 2003).

The conceit for this miniseries seems to be the telling stories set during the Sentry’s Silver Age, if such a thing had ever really existed. What that means is we get to see Parker, Tobin and the artists they’re working with tell lighthearted, Silver Age Superman stories with occasional knowing winks to modern readers. And that suits me just fine.

After a one-page prologue (drawn by Bullock?), we plunge into the first of two short stories by two different creative teams.

In the first, by Parker, penciler Nick Dragotta and inker Gary Martin, The Sentry is killed by a goofy looking villain, and it’s up to his sidekick, his super-dog and his nosy would-be girlfriend to travel back in time to The Sentry’s origin to bring him back to life.

In the second story, by Tobin and artist Ramon Rosanas, The Sentry falls victim to a plot by The Mad Thinker and the Terrible Tinkerer (while taking time to take out classic Marvel monster Torr).

Extending the period piece gag as much as possible, the second story kicks off with a cover for 12-cent Adventures Into Weird Worlds which kind of vaguely hints at the actual story, but is actually pretty off, plus “continued after next page” notes on pages facing ads and even an old-school Marvel Bullpen Bulletin.

Part celebration and part parody of the comics of yesteryear, particularly Silver Age Superman and the presentation of Marvel Comics during their 1960s heyday, this is a Sentry comic for people who like superhero comics, regardless of their feelings about the modern day Golden Guardian of Good and whatever Bendis has him crying about this month.

Warning: While time travel is involved in one of the stories, at no point does The Sentry kiss Cleopatra or punch out a chimpanzee in a necktie, despite what Bullock drew on the cover.


All-Star Superman #12 (DC) And so ends the best Superman story ever told in any of the many media that the original comic book superhero has conquered over the decades. Although, to be fair to all the other great Superman stories over the years, Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely did have the advantage of taking what worked best in each of them and forging into their own story. I’m sorely sorry to see this series end, despite the sequel promise of the last panel (which seems more along the lines of Jesus or King Arthur promising to return some day rather than the set-up for All-Star Superman Returns), but am glad Morrison and Quitely were able to end it so well.


Amazing Spider-Man #572 (Marvel) Norman Osborn puts on his old costume, the one with the darling little eye-lashes! Harry’s girlfriend is all rubbing on Peter Parker! Spider-Man totally gets shot a whole bunch with machineguns but somehow doesn’t die at all! Norman uses some vivisected super-guy with a dumb name to produce anti-anti-venom! Mac Gargan puts his old costume on over his new costume! Did Spider-Man just totally kill the hell out of Bullseye?! (Because having a guy shot in the chest repeatedly with machine guns is kind of a deathblow type of move, isn’t it?)

The Dan Slott-written, John Romita Jr. and Klaus Janson-drawn action and super-heroics and super-villainy is all pretty well done, but some of the drama falls awfully flat.

Harry’s father nearly killing him and destroying his business, with Harry rushing off to finally confront him man to man would probably have a bit more resonance if this was a conflict years in the making and not some murky bit of retconned continuity unclear to readers who aren’t currently producing Amazing Spider-Man comics themselves and thus don’t understand the rebooted fictional histories of the characters.


Billy Batson and the Magic of Shazam #2 (DC) Okay, yes, Mike Kunkel’s all-ages take on Captain Marvel, building on Jeff Smith’s miniseries, is cute, charming and maybe even a little heart-warming. But that doesn’t mean Kunkel’s credits should read “Pictures, Words, & Heart.” Do you want me to get sick to my stomach here?

Like the first issue, this is pretty fun and very well-drawn, with Perez-plus amounts of panels on every page, and a very interesting approach to sequential art storytelling, employing a whole series of borderless panels here and there.

Given how much time has passed since the first issue, though, those who haven’t already given it a try might want to just wait for the trade at this point.


Captain Britain and MI13 #5 (Marvel) With Secret Invasion over (at least in England), writer Paul Cornell spends an issue on team-building: Who’s in, what their powers are, how the team will be structured, that sort of thing. Nothing we haven’t seen dozens of times before, certainly, but there’s something quite appealing about a whole team of such relatively obscure-ish characters like Spitfire and Pete Wisdom, and Cornell’s decision to place just as much emphasis on young doctor Faiza Hussain bringing The Black Knight home to meet her parents and help her get their blessing to be on a superhero team as on any of the normal super-business.

There’s also a truly surprising last-page cliffhanger, surprising enough to shake me free of my cynicism and get me actually curious about how it will play out. Guest-stars include Union Jack and Blade, the latter of whom at least seems to be joining the team.


The Family Dynamic #2 (DC) The Copybook Tales creative team of J. Torres and Tim Levins steam ahead with the second and penultimate issue of their abbreviated miniseries about a family dynasty of superheroes, with this issue focusing mainly on some female Batman and Robin analogues fighting a rather inspired supervillain. DC’s decision to cut this six-part mini in half before even releasing the first issue is a little bewildering, as this is actually pretty good stuff (if unlikely to sell well; all Johnny DC books do relatively poorly in the direct market, and, unlike other books with name-brand, cartoon-supported heroes, this one’s less likely to do gangbusters in the book market). While the first issue seemed oddly paced and way too overcrowded, presumably as a result of the series suddenly shrinking, this one flowed just fine. DC should really sign Levin and inker Dan Davis up for Teen Titans, Robin or one of their books that could benefit from such clear, crisp, Wieringo-esque artwork.


The Guardians of the Galaxy #5 (Marvel) Writers Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning seem to have finally dropped the reality show-like debriefing device, in which the characters talk at the reader, revealing info about the story while it’s going on. I’m glad; it was really starting to wear thin. This is the second part of a kinda sorta Secret Invasion tie-in (in that it involves Skrulls, and says Secret Invasion on the cover), and Abnett and Lanning play up the paranoia angle inherent in shape-shifting alien infiltrators (not unlike Brian Michael Bendis was doing in the Avengers books in the lead-up to the actual event miniseries), with the characters bickering about their trust issues and pre-existent conflict. Drax The Destroyer comes up with a unique solution to the Skrull problem: Since they revert to their original form upon death, he can discover who’s a Skrull simply by killing every living thing on the space-station the team’s based out of. Why didn’t Reed Richards ever think of that?



The Incredible Hercules #121 (Marvel) This is already my favorite Marvel Comic, so I didn’t think Greg Pak and Fred Van Lente could actually do anything to make me like it more, but they have.

With the Secret Invasion tie-in story arc “Sacred Invasion” over, Hercules and his God Squad having already won the war for everyone (Seriously; Herc killed the Skrull god and forced their holy book to self-destruct—why are they still bothering with their holy war?), our Grecian good guy and his not-eromenos Amadeus Cho kick back to relax on a tropical island.

For Cho, this means reading Namor comics on the beach; for Hercules and The Agents of Atlas’ Namora, it means doing it so hard they cause earthquakes and set off volcanoes. Then both Atlantis and the Amazons attack (and Ares and Atlas probably won’t be too far behind), and Pak and Van Lente return to playing with Greek mythology, as seen through a Marvel-ized lens.

We’ve got more crazy sound effects, Hippolyta with a bazooka, Hercules riding a shell someone shot at his stomach out to sea, The Avenging Son, The Avenging Daughter, and a cliffhanger that promises this next issue.

Clayton Henry provides smooth, bright artwork (somewhat dragged down by the over-elaborate coloring, at least in my personal aesthetic opinion), and Aruthur Suydam provides the cover art, proving he can draw things that aren’t zombies. For example, he can also draw bras really well. Seriously, look at the detail on that underwire.


Marvel Adventures Avengers #28 (Marvel) Hey, it’s another Parker/Tobin comic! Like the previous issue of MAA, the writers tell two separate but connected stories, each with a different artist. In the lead story, by Parker and artist Rodney Buchemi, we’re introduced to the Marvel Adventures version of Luke Cage, as Spidey and Ant-Man try to recruit him. The look he’s given here is a pretty good one, a nice compromise between his shaven head and street clothes from New Avengers with his original yellow shirt and chain belt look. The tale guest-stars Cage’s mom and Dr. Doom, who calls the Avengers wretched curs. I don’t know why exactly, but Dr. Doom calling people wretched curs is still funny.

In the Tobin-written back up, drawn by Ig Guara and Sandro Ribeiro, Spider-Man, Captain America, Storm and Bruce Banner try to get a cat out of a tree—and intangible cat from a different dimension, stuck in an intangible, extra-dimensional tree. Also, Hammerhead threatens to blog.

Confidential to Stephen Wacker: Why on earth isn’t Jeff Parker or Paul Tobin writing Amazing Spider-Man yet?


Tiny Titans #8 (DC)You know, I think Art Baltazar draws the single best Alfred Pennyworth I’ve ever seen.


Trinity #16 (DC) The fighting continues, with a couple of suspenseful surprises thrown in, like Despero maybe not being Despero after all, and Hawkman getting all Zero Hour-ed up again. A decent dose of beter-than-average, old-school superheroics.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Marvel's December previews reviewed

So this month Marvel’s doing that annoying little thing they seem to do after their big crossovers these days, in which they temporarily redact their previews, so as not to “spoil” the ending of their current rotten storyline.

I personally find it kind of amusing that Marvel does this, that they think the ending of Secret Invasion is so important that no one should even be teased about what it might be, and that no one bothers to write something totally generic, like, I don’t know, “The Invasion is over, but its ultimate ramifications are just beginningg to be felt. It’s a shocking new status quo for Iron Man and the whole Marvel Universe in this can’t-miss issue” or whatever for Invincible Iron Man But then, maybe that’s the point: By simply saying that they can’t say anything, they advertise the big-ness of these issues.

I can see how this would be awfully annoying to a retailer, however, as they have to order these silly things, and that usually means a degree of gauging and guestimating the interest of their readers, based on what they know about the market they serve and what they know about the products they’re selling. Should Secret Invasion: Dark Reign be ordered as if it were Secret Invasion #9, or Secret Invasion: Who Do You Trust #2? And for retailers who factor in readers with pull-lists into their ordering, these info is also unavailable to the readers.

From where I sit, this seems like a pretty shitty business practice on Marvel’s part, but I’m not a retailer or a Marvel exec, so I’m just really shooting my uninformed mouth off (If these “classified” books are returnable, unlike the majority of Marvel and DC releases, then maybe it’s not so bad, for example).

And if retailers really do get upset about this practice, it doesn’t seem to have been upset enough to capture Marvel’s attention, as they did the same thing after Civil War and, to a smaller degree, after the Spider-Man franchise re-boot and World War Hulk.

You can see what I’m talking about (and the rest of the Marvel solicits for December) by clicking here. It looks like there are eight books with the “These solicits are classified until the release of Secret Invasion #8” in place of the normal solicitation, so all retailers and readers have to go on are the titles and the creators (although in the case of one listing, Secret Invasion: Requiem, that title is followed by a note reading that the title itself isn’t final, and no creators are listed).

Given some of those titles, Secret Invasion: Dark Reign and Dark Reign: New Nation, it sounds like the war doesn’t actually end, and that a Skrull presence remains on earth afterwards, whether secretly or not. The regular titles affected are the Avengers related ones (The two Bendis-written books, Initiative, Ms. Marvel, Iron Man).

Anyway, here are the best and worst-looking Marvel books that aren’t top-secret…



AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #579 Written by MARK WAID. Pencils & Cover by MARCOS MARTIN. Villain Variant by TBA. We have excess of extra “M”s so: This month starts with a mountain of massively malevolent mayhem from the minds of Mark Waid (52, CAPTAIN AMERICA) and Marcos Martin (DR. STRANGE: THE OATH). With Spidey trapped underground, the Web-Head learns more about the surprising new cast-member who promises to cause trouble for him and his old pall JJJ.

Marcos Martin returns! I’m excited to see him doing another issue on a high-profile Marvel book, and will probably get this, but I kinda wish they could find something more important for him to do beyond illustrate chapters of the almost-weekly Spider-Man soap opera.

Oh, and note the phrase “Villain Variant” above. Apparently that’s the new monkey variant, which was itself the new zombie variant.



The downside of Ross’ photorealistic painting style is that when it’s applied to characters whose costumes don’t really make sense outside of a 2D, cartoony drawing, it underscores how silly said costumes really are.

For example, bare-assed Ms. Marvel.



Wow, Hulk only had to shoulder four letters, but Cable’s doing five. Does this mean that, contrary to Hulk’s assertion, it’s actually Cable who is the strongest one there is?



FANTASTIC FOUR COSMIC SPECIAL Cover by MATT. To be revealed at a later date. Check back to Marvel.com, the Marvel Mailer & Diamond Daily for more information. 64 PGS./Rated A ...$4.99

Hmm…this one’s curious. No creators attached, and no information given, but it’s not given in a different way than the info not given in the Avengers/Secret Invasion books. BUT! Could this be because it does tie-in to the the end of Secret Invasion so strongly that Marvel is afraid to even group it with the other titles? The name of the jpg for the cover is "ffinvcov.jpg"..."inv" for Invasion? Is this a clue?

It’s a pretty big book—page count and price—to be solicited with no info like that, though…


MARVEL ADVENTURES THE AVENGERS #31 Written by PAUL TOBIN. Penciled by DAVID HAHN. Cover by CLAYTON HENRY. Good Things Come to Those Who Bait! With the Avengers vacationing on the sunny California beaches, Tigra hopes to finally conquer her fear of water, but things go sour when Iron Man challenges Luke Cage to a deep sea fishing contest and the two of them, ahem, bend the rules a bit. Iron Man sends a sonar pulse to stir up the really big fish, unfortunately rousing not only a monster from the deep, but also one seriously angry Prince of Atlantis...Namor, the Sub-Mariner! Lucky the Avengers brought the Hulk along! It's the slugfest to end all slugfests, and it does nothing to help Tigra's fear of water!

David Hahn draws the Avengers? The debut of Marvel Adventures Luke Cage? And Namor vs. Hulk?! All in the same comic book?! Sounds like December’s issue of Incredible Hercules, the Ant-Man spotlight issue of Marvel Adventures Hero and the Machine Man vs. the Marvel Zombies mayhem of Marvel Zombies 3 will have some serious competition for best book of the month…


PUNISHER: WAR ZONE #1-4 (of 6) Written by GARTH ENNIS. Pencils & Cover by STEVE DILLON. Variant Cover by JOHN ROMITA JR. “THE RESURRECTION OF MA GNUCCI,” PART 1. The latest offering from the red-hot Marvel Knights line reunites the seminal creative team of Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon for a special, weekly-shipping 6-part limited sequel to their legendary story arc, “Welcome Back, Frank.” It all starts when two mobsters take a trip to the zoo and piss off the wrong monkey. Limbs are lost (the kind you can’t easily replace), vultures are fed (with said appendages), and then things get, like, really crazy. Like back-from-the-dead crazy. That’s right -- she’s back and she wants payback. Ma Gnucci. Eighty-five pounds of hairless, armless, legless evil.

Well, Ennis’ break from Frank Castle sure didn’t last long.

I may be in the minority, but I always preferred Ennis’ funny Punisher to his serious one, so I’m really looking forward to this—as well as to the weekly schedule. I’m curious to see how that goes. DC’s made me a fan of the weekly comic format in general, and I’d really like to see it expanded into other iterations (i.e. something other than an annual, 52-part story).


WHAT IF? HOUSE OF M Written by BRIAN REED, JIM MCCANN & C.B. CEBULSKI. Penciled by PAOLO PANTALENA & PATRICK SPAZIANTE. Cover by JIM CHEUNG & MARKO DJURDJEVIC. We all remember when the Scarlet Witch uttered the three words that would change the landscape of the Marvel Universe: “No More Mutants!” But what if she said something different? And what of the consequences...? In a world without great power, who bears the burden of responsibility? Who will stand up to an enemy who fills the vacuum of power and whose hatred is unparalleled? Brian Reed (SECRET INVASION: FRONT LINE) with Marvel's own Jim McCann and brand-spankin’ new artist Paolo Pantalena answer the question: "What if Scarlet Witch had ended the HOUSE OF M by saying "NO MORE POWERS!" Also featuring Part 1 of a special five part back-up story in all the What Ifs this year, in which we see Iron Lad take a different path that leads him to recruit a different set of future Avengers. Join C.B. Cebulski (X-MEN: DIVIDED WE STAND, LONERS) and Patrick Spaziante (MUTIES, Sonic The Hedgehog) as they ask, 'What if the Runaways Became the Young Avengers?'

The question is, "What if Scarlet Witch had ended the HOUSE OF M by saying "NO MORE POWERS!” ? Um, well if it’s anything like what happened in the original version when she said “No more mutants,” then all of the superheroes who aren’t currently featured in a comic book will lose their superpowers, while the popular characters with books of their own will carry on as normal.

Of this year’s batch of What If? specials, the only one I’m really interested in is the one that’s been split up into five parts and is running as the back-up in each of the specials, “What If The Runaways Became the Young Avengers?”

Maybe they’ll collect that as a stand-alone reprint at some point…?


WOLVERINE: ORIGINS VOL. 5 - DEADPOOL TPB Written by DANIEL WAY. Penciled by STEVE DILLON & STEPHEN SEGOVIA. Cover by SIMONE BIANCHI. Marvel’s two deadliest fighters go head-to-head in a battle to the finish! Two men, both products of the Weapon X program, both highly trained killers. One claims to be the best he is at what he does, though what he does isn’t very nice — but the other is the Merc with a Mouth, and he might just have something to say about that claim! It’s Deadpool vs. Wolverine, no quarter asked or given! But when both men can regenerate virtually any wound in a matter of moments, just how does either man expect to finish off his foe? And whoever wins will have to face down Daken, Wolverine’s murderous son, who has a healing factor and aptitude for killing to match them both! Collecting WOLVERINE: ORIGINS #21-27.

Has anyone out there read this? I remember seeing a lot of pretty positive reviews as it was coming out, and Tucker Stone spoke kinda highly of it this week, so I’m curious about it.

Maybe even more curious than I am eager to avoid anything containing “Daken, Wolverine’s murderous son.”


X-INFERNUS #1 (of 4) Written by C.B. CEBULSKI. Penciled by GIUSEPPI CAMUNCOLI. Cover by DAVID FINCH. Variant Cover by J. SCOTT CAMPBELL. The X-Men promise to make this one of the hottest winters ever! When last we saw Darkchylde, she had claimed the throne of Limbo as her own. And now she’s determined to get her soul back, even if she has to conquer Earth in the process. Can the combined forces of the X-Men stop her rampage? They’ll have to fight through every demon in Limbo to try.

I’m sorry, I can’t even attempt a joke that would be as funny as that cover actually already is. Kevin Church, who is apparently more familiar with the X-Men than I, made one though, and it really kinda freaks me out, since he identifies the devil woman above as Illyana Rasputina.

That’s Illyana up there? Colossus’ little sister Illyana? Whom he used to bellow about half the time in the old, crappy ‘90s X-Men cartoon? Now she’s a grown-up naked lady with devil horns and shins and a tail that doesn’t seem attached quite right? And is her name “Darkchylde” spelled funny? Am I understanding all this correctly? Please tell me I’m mistaken!

Monday, September 15, 2008

DC's December previews reviewed

What are some of the comics we'll be complaining about in just three month's time? I don't know just yet, but this is the time of the month when we find out! Tonight we'll take a look at DC's offerings for the last month of '08, and tomorrow we'll look at Marvel's. You can see all of them here, and you can see all the ones I think look horrible, look awesome or look like something I can make a dumb joke about here:



Darwyn Cooke provides the cover for the last issue of Ambush Bug. Wait, I punctuated that wrong. Let me try again.

Darwyn Cooke provides the cover for the last issue of Ambush Bug!!

That’s better.



So in this issue of Batman, a bat sees the Bat-signal, follows it to its source and is like, “Excuse me, I saw your signal; are you looking for a bat? Because Im a bat.” And Commissioner Gordon’s like, “Oh no, we’re actually looking for Batman. Sorry.” And the bat’s like, “Oh, okay” and flies away.

At least, that’s what I assume from the Alex Ross cover. The actual solicit mentions a script by Denny O’Neil, art by someone other than Tony Daniel (Woohoo!) and a plot description that sounds like it could have come from any month of the last 20 years or so, but apparently has something to do with the earth-shaking changes of whatever Grant Morrison is up to these days.



It’s been days and days since I’ve mentioned that Kelley Jones kicks ass, hasn’t it? Well, this just in: Kelley Jones still kicks ass. Note the mouse stirring on that cover. Nice.



Hey, David Caine started dying his hair. And he got a new orange suit. And a pocket-filled utility bicep band. Presumably from Rob Liefeld’s closet.


FINAL CRISIS: SECRET FILES #1
Written by Grant Morrison & Peter J. Tomasi
Art by Frank Quitely & various
Covers by Frank Quitely and Jim Lee & Scott Williams
Finally, the secrets of this year's most talked about event can be revealed! Witness how Darkseid's death shattered the Multiverse, creating continuity ripples throughout the DC Universe! Submit to Darkseid and read the full Anti-Life Equation! This is a book you cannot resist to buy!


Actually, a 40-page book full of nothing but "secret files"—i.e. pin-ups and brief prose pieces—for $3.99 will probably be pretty easy to resist. And it looks like they're really going to go ahead with the "Darkseid's-death-created-continuity-ripples" explanation for why Countdown to Final Crisis doesn't square with Final Crisis? This is the new Superboy punch then? For real?

Sigh...


THE FLASH: EMERGENCY STOP TP Written by Grant Morrison & Mark Millar. Art by Paul Ryan & John Nyberg. Cover by Steve Lightle. At last, DC collects the fast-paced 1990s epic by Grant Morrison (FINAL CRISIS) and Mark Millar (Civil War) from THE FLASH #130-135! Confined to a wheelchair after a run-in with the mystery villain known only as The Suit, how can The Flash protect Keystone City from evil run amok?

Well it’s about goddam time. You wouldn’t think it would take DC this long to republish something written by Grant freaking Morrison and Mark freaking Millar (or that DC would publish the pair's Aztek run before their Flash run).

I really liked this run quite a bit, particularly the day-in-the-life of Jay Garrick issue, the Flash-through-the-prism-creating-a-rainbow-Flashes and even the bit with the Black Flash. Morrison and Millar seemed to strike a nice balance between the crazy, zaniness of the Silver Age Flash stories and the modern DCU version, not unlike Morrison was doing in JLA at the time. The art is pretty nice too.


HAUNTED TANK #1
Written by Frank Marraffino
Art by Henry Flint
Cover A by Joe Kubert
Cover B by Henry Flint
The Haunted Tank is back in action, but this time it's an M1 Abrams in modern-day Iraq! African American tank commander Jamal Stuart has his 21st century war ride in full battle rattle and is ready for anything – anything except the whistling-Dixie combat guru ghost who shows up uninvited! Of course, this isn't the first time the spirit of Confederate Civil War General J.E.B. Stuart has helped guide a tank. In times of war he makes himself available to assist his descendants in battle. Jamal Stuart, meet your forefather! It's the newest chapter in the legacy of a long-time DC icon from writer Frank Marraffino (The Dark Goodbye) and artist Henry Flint (OMEGA MEN).
Retailers please note: This issue will ship with two covers that can be ordered separately. Cover A is by Joe Kubert. Cover B is by Henry Flint. Please see the Previews Order Form for more information.


Hey Vertigo, get your damn hands off this DCU character!

I think the original Haunted Tank is one of the craziest comics concepts ever ("icon" sure is pushing it, though), and love reading about the ghost of General Stuart, so I imagine I'll read this at some point--probably in trade if I can resist the singles long enough.

Maybe this will sell a billion comics and convince DC to collect the Garth Ennis/John McCrea Demon story arc that was also about the ghost of Stuart teamed up with a new descendent of his.

Question: If both Jamal Stuart and the tank itself aren't named after General J.E.B. Stuart, what the hell's he doing haunting it?


RANN/THANAGAR: HOLY WAR #8 Written by Jim Starlin. Art by Ron Lim. Cover by Jim Starlin. The exciting conclusion of this epic space story draws to a dramatic conclusion, and everyone in the universe shows up to see who will stand victorious.

Not to be redundant or anything.

I hope the Columbus library orders this, because I’m mildly curious about how Bizarro fits into the latest Jim Starlin exploration of DC’s space characters, even if I’m not curious enough to pay to find out.



Inspired placement for the tip of the spear there, Justiniano.



ROBIN #181 Written by Fabian Nicieza. Art and cover by Freddie E. Williams II. Red Robin is revealed, and Anarky is unleashed in Gotham City! A daring jailhouse rescue rips the GCPD apart, forcing the Spoiler to live up to her name! Plus, Oracle and Jason Bard team up again! And while all this is going on, where is Robin? Maybe he's M.I.A.... or is it R.I.P.?

Nooooooooooooo! Not Anarky! Not here! Not now! Along with Ragman, that’s two of my favorite former Gothamites appearing in this awful story arc. I’ve long liked Alan Grant and Norm Breyfogle’s Anarky character, particularly his presentation as the anti-Robin, and I always thought he was a villain Robin’s creative teams never made proper use of (See also: The Obeah Man), but man, DC would have to pay me to keep reading this story arc. And I’d want harzard pay too, seeing as this story also features Jason fucking Todd.

Confidential to Anarky: Dude, what are you wearing?



TEEN TITANS #66
Written by Sean McKeever
Art and cover by Eddy Barrows & Ruy Jose
Teen guest stars galore! With only four members left, it's time for the Teen Titans to hold a recruitment drive! Who will make the cut, and who will be sent packing? Who will refuse to even show up, and who will bring a boatload of trouble with them?


I sighed when I saw this cover, because while normally a Teen Titans line-up full of personal favorites like Traci-13, The Ray, Shining Knight II and Klarion The Witchboy would be something I'd be really excited about, given the state of the title—i.e. Not Very Good At All—I find myself in that weird position where I worry about the welfare of characters who aren't even real. "Oh Shining Knight II, Morrsion wrote such a nice set-up for you at the end of Seven Soldiers, don't let it go to waste in the poorly drawn grim and gritty adventures of a bunch of unlikable jerks..." And like that.

Reading the solicit though, it just sounds like this will be one of those occassional try-out issues DC super-teams have been having since the people who read Legion growing up grew up and started writing comics themselves. So maybe only a couple of those characters will get sullied by the experience. Hopefully Klarion and Spoiler, as they're already so sulllied...


TOKYO DAYS, BANGKOK NIGHTS TP Written by Jonathan Vankin_Art by Seth Fisher and Giuseppe Camuncoli & Shawn Martinbrough. Cover by Seth Fisher and Giuseppe Camuncoli. Two tragicomic tales of cultures in collision. When Americans venture abroad, they find that their assumptions about everyday life don't fit in a backpack. Collecting eight issues of the critically heralded VERTIGO POP!, written by Jonathan Vankin and featuring Eisner-nominated art by Seth Fisher (GREEN LANTERN: WILLWORLD) as well as Giuseppe Camuncoli and Shawn Martinbrough (BANGKOK), TOKYO DAYS, BANGKOK NIGHTS presents a journey to the far side of the world where Americans learn that they may be neither ugly nor innocent, but they still have everything to lose.

I don’t have anything snarky to say here, I just wanted to recommend this to anyone who missed the two mini-series it collects. They were both standalone, unconnected minis about a particular city (there was also a London one, which wasn’t quite as good as either of these). The Tokyo one, featuring eye-popping art by the late, great Seth Fish is especially worth a look.



Dimetrodons are criminally under used in comics.



THE DARK KNIGHT: 1:6 SCALE BANK ROBBER THE JOKER BY HOT TOYS Under special arrangement with Hong Kong toymaker Hot Toys, DC Direct is proud to offer this 1:6 scale figure of The Joker dressed as a bank robber, just as he appears in the smash hit The Dark Knight! Dressed in the shirt, suit, belt and shoes the character wears for the bank robbery scene in the movie, the figure stands approximately 12 inches tall and features more than 32 points of articulation. An interchangeable head, clown mask, handgun, MK760 rifle, and a luggage bag filled with grenades are also included. The figure comes with a display stand and is packaged in a 4-color box. Limited Edition! Advance-solicited; on sale December 17, 2008 * Collector figure * $175 US

Bank Robber The Joker? Where the hell’s Nurse The Joker?

Confidential to anyone who pays $175 for a collector figure: You have too much goddam money.

Nathan Hale on Rapunzel's Revenge

Having just heard from Rapunzel's Revenge authors Shannon and Dean Hale, let's now turn our attention to Rapunzel's Revenge artist, Nathan Hale.


(Above: The first sketch Nathan Hale did of Rapunzel, after discussing the project with Shannon and Dean Hale. Copyright Nathan Hale, of course; appropriated from here).

Nathan Hale is an artist and illustrator who has two children’s books that he’s both written and illustrated under his belt, The Devil You Know and Yellowbelly and Plum Go to School.

While his resume is full of illustration work and children’s books, this Hale also has an interest in comics, and some experience with creating sequential art. I was really interested in talking to him because, as long-time readers are no doubt aware, I spend a lot of time wondering about the space between children’s books and comics, and what gets defined as what. Hale’s now worked on both, as well as on a children’s book that’s something in between.

While a lot of his discussion of transferring from one medium to the other, and the process of creating the art didn’t fit in the final interview that ran at Newsarama last week, I wanted to share it here. So here’s the transcript of that…



Caleb: I was wondering if you could tell us a little bit about your relationship with comics in general. Did you grow up reading them, or
did you get turned on to them more recently? How avid a reader are you?

Nathan Hale: You're going to laugh at this, but the first comic I ever purchased was ACME Novelty Library #1 by Chris Ware. That was the issue with the little potato man (wait, no, that's #3, #1 is the first Jimmy Corrigan.) That was in '95, when Chris Ware was just rolling out his first Fantagraphics issues.

I didn't grow up reading comics. I hit prime comic book reading age in 1985, the same year the original Nintendo Entertainment System came out. I took the game route instead of the comics route. As a kid, I never drew superheroes, instead I drew Mega Man, Samus from Metroid, Simon Belmont from Castlevania, all the 8-bit era video game characters. I totally missed the boat on comics.

My girlfriend in high school loved Tank Girl. So I read and reread the paperback collections. A kid I knew had a Batman paperback called Arkham Asylum that had phenomenal painted artwork. I remember a panel where Batman plunges a shard of glass through his hand—totally blew my mind. I wanted to borrow the book, but he wouldn't let me. He brought it to our shared Biology class every day, so I'd just look at it over and over in class, I didn't read it, just stared at the pictures.

In high school I moved away from drawing game characters and moved onto my own drawing style, kind of a blend of Michael Whelan, the book cover illustrator, Storm Thorgerson, the Hipgnosis album cover photographer (the guy who did all the Pink Floyd photo covers, the man on fire on Wish You Were Here et cetera) and maybe a dash of Edward Gorey. But still no comics.

I went to school at Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle. The first week there, I went to the Bumbershoot Festival by myself. There was a big basement area set up with kiosks for local publishers, and Fantagraphics had a table. The ACMEs caught my eye right away. I bought four, the first four in the series. That night, I was so blown away, I went back and bought multiple copies (to mail home to my girlfriend) and a bunch of other comics. Eightball (this was in the early Ghost World issues) Land of Nod, and the first two (and only) issues of Al Columbia's Biologic Show. I was hooked.

A few blocks from the school was a comix store called Fallout. I went in there two or three times a week. Got into Jason Lutes, Peter Kuper, Charles Burnes (Blackhole #1 came out that year,) Adriane Tomine's Optic Nerve issues for D & Q started in '95, I went crazy for those. I also found out about Little Nemo in Slumberland. I ended up spending all of my income on comics (I was an art student, so it wasn't much.) I started doing short panel comics for the school paper, and paneling my illustrations for assignments. Did a bunch of Chris Ware rip-offs, before Chris Ware rip-offs became a cottage industry.

I moved to Montreal after a few years in Seattle and discovered French comics. Wow. I got really into the Dargaud and Casterman lines; Enki Bilal, Moebius, Sergio Garcia, Francois Bouc, Luc and Francois Schuiten. The drawing was sooo good. So much better than anything I'd seen before. The drawing was gorgeous! And the coloring was gorgeous! But they were way, way too expensive to collect, each hardcover issue running well over $20. I bought used a lot, and I still pick up French hardcovers when I can. I've since read back into Tintin and Asterix, if I had to say what I patterned Rapunzel after, it would beTintin. No whacked out panel bursts. Just clean, simple, story-based layouts.

Amazon keeps me in comics now. I don't have to plan my vacations around hitting underground comix stores anymore. I still collect Chris Ware, Daniel Clowes and the D&Q/Fantagraphics crowd, I'm collecting the Krazy Kat reprints and still tracking down Little Nemo hardcovers, as well as any french imports that look good. I'm also slowly getting into mainstream american comics. Hellboy and Walking Dead—Shannon and Dean got me into Invincible which has a great, super dramatic, but simple line style I really enjoy.
The only manga I've read are Akira and Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind which are both so unbelievably amazing that I don't want to read any other manga for fear of being let down.

And that's my complete history with comics.


Caleb: Part of the reason I ask is that Rapunzel's Revenge doesn't at all
read like the work of people new to comics; you've never done any kind of comics work before this, have you?

Nathan: I've done panel-based projects here and there. I worked for a natural history display company in Missouri for several years doing murals and scientific illustration. And while I was there I ended up doing a lot of science comics. "Carbon 14 Dating! How Does It Work?" That kind of thing. My first picture book, The Devil You Know, is actually laid out in panels. But Rapunzel is my first straight-up comic.


Caleb: How did you become involved with the project? Did Shannon and Dean
come to you, or did the publisher pair you guys together?

Nathan: I had just moved to Utah and joined the same online writers group as Shannon. I had one picture book out, and another on the way. Shannon was asking for donations for a Christmas book give away, so I sent her a copy of my book, The Devil You Know. She saw the panel layouts and asked if I had any interest in graphic novels. We got to talking and found out that we shared a publisher (Walker and Bloomsbury were under the same roof.) When she mentioned her Western-themed Rapunzel, I begged her to let me submit sample art to be considered along side the manuscript and they took them both.


Caleb: Was the fact that they were also named "Hale" factor in at all?

Nathan: Nope. Well, maybe the publisher thought it was cute and kept us together.


Caleb: Can you tell us a little bit about moving from children's books to a graphic novel? Children's picture books seem to fall somewhere between prose and comics, in terms of a picture-to-word ratio. Was it a big adjustment to drawing every single action instead of a picture per page or so?

Nathan: I loved having so many pages to deal with in Rapunzel. I've never done a picture book over 32 pages. Storytelling real estate gets really tight in a picture book. You do get a bigger area to work on, and you can focus more on the illustrations in a picture book—really work them over. But I don't mind switching back and forth between picture books and comics. When you get tired of one, the other is a lot of fun.


Caleb: I've only read one of your previous works (Yellowbelly and Plum Go To
School
), and that was fully painted, and done in a rather photo-realistic style (well, the children; the monsters still looked like monsters). Can you tell us a bit about the process for creating the art for Rapunzel's Revenge? Did you use pencil and ink? How did you arrive at the more stripped down style?

Nathan: I hope one day I'll get to do a painted graphic novel. But right now, and for Rapunzel, time was a major factor. It's a little funny, when we signed up for Rapunzel, Shannon and Dean had never written a graphic novel, I'd never illustrated a graphic novel, and Bloomsbury had never published a graphic novel. We were babes in the woods. I honestly thought I could bang out the whole book in four months. I really did. It ended up taking closer to sixteen months and absolutely destroyed my ongoing freelance work schedule. Yellowbelly was actually done during Rapunzel. It was a wild time.

Aside from time, again it was the Tintin approach. I knew we were doing something that would be read primarily by first time comic readers. I wanted it to be very clear. Didn't want any illustration showboating or paneling tricks popping the reader out of the story. I've talked to librarians and women in their seventies who say it's the first time they've ever read a comic book—"And it was so easy!" they say. Gateway drug. Creating a gateway drug.

I used pencil and ink—colored it in Photoshop. The stripped down style wasn't too hard to do. I have a lot of styles I use in my portfolio—in fact every project I do tends to have a different style than the last. Drives art directors nuts.


Caleb: How closely did Shannon and Dean work with you on character design? Were they very involved with the details of each character's look, or did you have pretty free reign in terms of what they looked like?

Nathan: When we were putting together the submission packet I did tons of character studies and location sketches. Brute came from a sketch I did for the Sheriff character. We did a lot of work on the main characters. I did several Jacks. He started as a curly haired blonde guy. A lot of the minor characters I just made up as I went.

Caleb: Do you have any characters that you particularly enjoyed drawing, or were there any that were a particular challenge?

Nathan: Brute was probably my favorite outside of Rapunzel herself. Mother Gothel I kind of wish I could go back and redraw. She's a little too obviously evil. When Rapunzel finds out her step-mom is evil it's, er, not really a surprise.


Caleb: I understand you're already working on the sequel. What can you tell us about it at this point?

Nathan: Okay, here's the main thing about the sequel. I drew Rapunzel at 100% finished size. Those panels are 1/1. I didn't know that most comics were drawn at a much larger size than the final print. With Calamity Jack I'm working at 200% which is making an enormous difference in drawing quality. So Jack’s going to look way better than Rapunzel—I'm kicking myself for drawing Rapunzel at such a tiny, hand-cramping size.

The sequel takes place in the city, and I'm having a lot of fun doing all of the cityscape/industrial scenery. It'll have a very different look from Rapunzel's sandstone world.


Caleb: In the future, do you foresee splitting your time between picture books and graphic novels?

Nathan: Yes. The picture book market has been in a huge slump for the last decade, really dragging along. Graphic novels, on the other hand are totally swallowing kid lit whole right now. That said, I've always loved picture books, I'm contracted to do two when Jack's finished (hopefully in December.) And I'm going to watch those two books closely—if they don't do well, I'm going to give picture books a little break. And focus entirely on graphic novels. I've got four graphic novel manuscripts in various stages of completion, ready to launch at publishers as soon as Jack is finished (Again, hopefully in December. Tick tick tick...)

Shannon and Dean Hale on Rapunzel's Revenge

A couple weeks back I read a knock-out graphic novel by a bunch of people all named Hale whose work I was unfamiliar with, Rapunzel's Revenge, which I reviewed here. I've since learned quite a bit about all of these Hales, and their work, and interviewed them for Newsarama.com. You can read the piece here.

Now, all three of the creators—writers Shannon Hale and Dean Hale, and artist Nathan Hale—are actually writers, which makes them the easiest people in the world to interview, especially when they're talking about something they want to talk about, and especially-especially for these sorts of "Q and A"-style interviews.

So I ended up with around 4,000 words total, and, even trimming what little fat was there, that was still a lot of words to have to cut out to fit in a 1,200-word space or so. Since the magic of the Internet gives us infinite space to fill with infinite words, I thought I'd post the transrcipts here on EDILW. If you've already read the Newsarama interview, you might want to just skim this, but here is far greater detail about the process of creating Rapunzel's Revenge. I'll post the transcript from writers Shannon and Dean Hale here, and then post that from artist Nathan Hale later this evening.

While Dean and Shannon Hale's names might sound new to a lot of us in the comics world, Shannon Hale is a pretty well-known name the world of young adult literature. She's written Newbery award winner The Princess Academy (juvenile fiction's version of the Eisner), The Book of a Thousand Days, and the "Books of Bayern" series, which began with The Goose Girl (which I'm told by a youth librarian of my acquaintance is the best book ever). She recently wrote her first book for adults, Austenland and then teamed up with her husband and life-time comics reader Dean on the script for Rapunzel's Revenge, and its already in progresss sequel Calamity Jack.

Here are Shannon and Dean Hale on comics, collaborating, their Marvel and DC pitches and why Rapunzel's a red-head...



Caleb: I was wondering if you guys could tell us a little about your interest in and relationship with comics prior to writing a graphic novel: Did you guys grow up with them, or get turned on to graphic novels later? How avid are you as readers or fans?

Shannon: I grew up unaware of comics except as a boy thing. As a teenager, I stumbled across a friend's brother's collection of X-Men and devoured them, but didn't know how to get anymore. Eventually I became a comics fan by marriage and now read about 3-4 graphic novels or trades a month.

Dean: I'm a longtime addict—I think comics were like 35-cents when I started. I distinctly remember convincing myself the switch to 50 cents was okay because the math involved in figuring out how much three to six books would cost was easier. I mostly buy trades now, though.


Caleb: Shannon, you’ve certainly had quite a bit of success with prose fiction. Why did you decide to do a graphic novel at this point in your career?

Shannon: A few reasons—First, I wanted to collaborate with my husband Dean, who has always been a part of my writing behind the scenes (acting as an in-house editor, brainstorming with me during outlining phases, et cetera). As he's a life long comics fan, doing a book in this medium seemed the obvious choice.

Second, as I traveled around doing book events, I kept meeting those kids who weren't readers. Their sister would eat books for breakfast, but a 300-page tome of words was too intimidating or uninteresting to capture their interest. I longed to have a book I could give those readers, one they could get hooked into quickly, feel their confidence as a reader swell, and go on to keep reading. Graphic novels are so good at that. We've ignored the needs of visual learners too long. It makes me very happy to see more graphic novels for young readers out there.

Third, I get bored easily. I like to challenge myself as a writer to try new genres and storytelling styles. I was intimidated and terrified of writing a graphic novel, and that was the only reason I allowed myself to try.


Caleb: Dean, what’s been your personal experience with writing before? This is the first book you’ve published, isn’t it?

Dean: It is my first book, unless you count the short story I contributed to the Young Adult romance anthology, First Kiss, Then Tell. Seriously. I've always wanted to tell existential horror stories, and that was my first published work. Though...now that I think about it, I may actually have been on track with the existential horror....


Caleb: Can you guys tell us a little about the genesis of the project? Where did the idea for a story about Rapunzel set in an Old West kind of environment come from?

Dean: Really, it started with "hair-as-weapon," I think. That idea may have even briefly predated the identification with Rapunzel specifically.

Shannon: I don't think so. That's funny, the true origin may be lost in the perling gray mists of time...

Dean: So it was Rapunzel first, hair second. I can believe that.

Shannon: I think it started with us wanting to collaborate, combining our passions and strengths—mine, fairy tales, yours, superhero comic books.

Dean: Right. I always wanted to write comics, but never had any excuse to believe anyone would let me.

Shannon: And it turned out, I would let you!

Dean: Woohoo!

Shannon: I'm such an indulgent wife. Really, Dean is so smart and talented, I knew if we collaborated we'd come up with something fun and different. We started to brainstorm fairy tale characters we could turn into comic book superheroes.

Dean: Right. And my instinct, first, was to go dark. Do something about the woodsman in little red riding hood. Something bloody and disturbing.

Shannon: Of course it was. You should go read his blog at dreadcrumbs.com to get a peek into his wonderfully, absurdly morbid little mind. But I'd been writing for young readers and loved the fans and wanted to stay here. There are lots of great comics writers for adults—but I wasn't seeing a lot of great comics for kids.

Dean: And I thought that writing something that was kid-friendly didn't have to be adult-unfriendly. A lot of the comics I read as a kid were that way.

Shannon: True! Really, my goal was the same as it is with my young adult prose novels—write a book that would please me now and please my younger self as well. My internal reader feels 12 half the time anyway. Hmm...we could really go on forever, couldn't we?

Dean: Yes...let's see...um...Old West! Right. I don't think we originally set out to do a western, but it seemed like a fitting place for someone with whip/lasso

Shannon: I love the archetypes of the Old West, the real Hollywood-style storytelling. I didn't want to write a story that could be a prose novel—I wanted to write a story that could only be a graphic novel, otherwise why use this medium? The majestic landscapes, the big-as-life scenarios, the people from all different lands, the journeying, the action, it all feels so visual, so colorful. This was the place I wanted to set our new Rapunzel loose, this was a place worthy of a graphic novel.


Caleb: Shannon, you just sort of addressed this, but I was wondering if there was something that lent this character or this story toward the comics medium versus prose in your mind; could this have been another novel, or did it need to be a comic?

Shannon: I never want to write a comic that could have been a novel (or vice versa). It's so much more fun to see Rapunzel whip those braids and lasso those bad guys than to describe it. And I think the setting deserved to be visual.


Caleb: Also, I was curious if collaborating with another writer is somewhat easier with a graphic novel, where you’re dealing with fewer words, than a prose novel?

Shannon: I've never collaborated with a prose novel. The paucity of words probably makes it easier, just because there's less to have to rewrite. Because I would say it's always more work to collaborate than to work alone. It takes longer, the going back and forth. The payoff is the fun of working with someone you love and how the synchronicity creates a story that wouldn't have been born otherwise.


Caleb: How was it working not only with another writer, but with another writer you happen to be married to? Does knowing each other so well make it very easy to write together, or does it actually present challenges?

Shannon: We're still happily married. That's the true test. I don't think I could collaborate with someone I don't know well. I'd be cautious and anxious about stepping on their toes, afraid to say I didn't like the direction they were going. With my husband, we've already gone through the polite stages and moved on to reckless honesty. That's one reason why I like to be with him more than anyone else in the world.

Dean: Though really this question is more of a Shannon one, I do have to say that if I had tried to do this all by myself, it never would have happened. Not because of Shannon's "connections," but simply because I would never have gotten off my butt to do any work.


Caleb: This was also sort of addressed already, but why the Old West setting? Was it a matter of Rapunzel’s weapon-ized hair suggesting the environment, or did your hometown/home state lend some inspiration?

Shannon: It definitely started with the hair. I think originally I was set on Rapunzel and Dean wasn't so sure. I said, "She'd be in a fairy tale version of the Old West—a vigilante hero!" And that's what swayed him to my side. I think living in the west definitely helped. We know the landscape, the sagebrush and tumbleweeds, the spectacular red rock country of southern Utah. It was home turf for us and for the artist, and so easy to channel.

Dean: It's odd—I've never really been a western fan, in comics or otherwise, but it certainly felt right for this story. I think we wanted to do that Stranger-Comes-Into-Town-And-Helps-The-Oppressed thing from the beginning, and westerns seem to do that best. Which is to say, Shannon didn't go for my after-the-bomb Rapunzel as The Road Warrior pitch.


Caleb: How involved were you guys in the visual look of the characters and the character design? Did you guys give Nathan very specific details on each character, or just broad strokes?

Shannon: We gave broad strokes, I think. Nate's a true team player, and we talked often, but the visuals were all up to him. We only interfered or requested changes in the pencilling stage if the direction he was going seemed to compromise the story, which was rare. Nate caught our vision of the story from the beginning and amped it up, making it better.

Dean: I remember we had a pretty specific idea about the kind of world this was taking place in, even through we don't really see much of it beyond the western area the story takes place in. It was important to us that the landscape of characters not be overly homogenous.


Caleb: This Rapunzel’s a redhead. I never much gave thought to Rapunzel’s hair color until I saw this comic, and realized that every cartoon or coloring book I’ve seen with her before had a blonde Rapunzel. Given how important hair is to the historical character and your version of her, was the color of the hair important too?

Shannon: Well, I'm a redhead... I always feel a little sheepish about having redheaded characters, so I called her "strawberry blonde" just to give her a little more spice than the traditional blonde Rapunzel. But then talking with Nate, we all realized, why hold back? Why not go deep red? With that much hair in all those panels, the red was so beautiful.


Caleb: How did you guys choose Nathan Hale as the artist? I understand you started by compiling a list of comics artists you really liked, and trying to find someone with similar qualities. Who are some of those artists?…And did Nathan Hale being named “Hale” as well factor in?

Shannon: We intended to write up a list of artists to propose to our editor, because the selection was her call. But once Nate sent us some sample drawings, we didn't want anyone else. And neither did our editor. He was dead-on from go.


Caleb:I noticed on your website that you guys had originally thought about doing a graphic novel with either DC or Marvel, and had even selected a young DC heroine to work up and submit a proposal for. I don’t suppose you’d let us know which character if we asked? Is it someone your average person on the street might recognize, or a more obscure character?

Shannon: When we first wanted to collaborate, traditional childrens book publishers weren't doing graphic novels, so we looked to Marvel or DC. This was where Dean's massive knowledge of comics came in handy. Tell it, baby.

Dean: First I wanted to reboot Power Pack, making that horsey guy that gives them their powers turn out to be a skrull. And then, yes, they were going to turn out to be skrulls. Or half-skrull. It never went that far. It all seemed too complicated in terms of continuity (as we can see now in Secret Invasion), so we went with Amethyst, Princess of Gemworld. It seemed more clearly to piggy-back on Shannon's rep with girly stuff, anyway. I had most of the original 12 issues from the 80s in my boxes, so we re-read them, wrote a pitch for a new six issue series and a script for the first. We had an artist we knew sketch the first couple pages, and then sent it all into Oblivion at 1700 Broadway. Needless to say, nothing came of it.


Caleb: What can you tell us about the sequel you’ve mentioned, Calamity Jack? Is this the same Jack? Will it pick up where Rapunzel’s Revenge left off, or deal with his colorful-sounding background as glimpsed in this book?

Shannon: Yes, he is the same Jack. The story is split into four parts: Part 1 tells Jack's story from childhood to when he left the big city to go Out West. Part 2 starts after the end of Rapunzel and tells...well, I hate to spoil it. But it's an urban story, and more caper than Western. And it just might be bigger, badder, and more fun than Rapunzel. We've seen a few scans of Nate's art and it's AMAZING. I'm so excited about it.


Caleb: Shannon, I take it the fact that you’re doing another one means you enjoyed doing a graphic novel. In the future, where do you see your writing going? Are you going to split your time between prose and comics? Do you plan to do more books for an adult audience, like Austenland, or focus on young adult readers?

Shannon: I loved writing these graphic novels and would definitely do another, if we thought of the right story. I don't want to force it. And I don't think I want to do it alone. I have a lot of respect for this medium and I don't feel well read enough to jump in solo. Dean keeps me honest. Right now I'm writing a young adult fantasy (the fourth in my Bayern series) and another book for adults ala Austenland. Next up is a science fiction trilogy. There's that whole easily-bored thing I battle...

Saturday, September 13, 2008

The coming of Skrullactus

So, you know this Secret Invasion story going on in Marvel Comics at the moment? It's a story about a group of shape-shifting aliens called Skrulls who are trying to take over the world by secretly replacing various heroes, villains, babies and butlers over a period of years until they're practically running the world before anyone even knows they're here.

Two issues ago, Reed Richards invented some kind of deus ex maguffinica that shoots a beam at the ground and reveals all disguised Skrulls as Skrulls. In the latest issue, Reed turns it on the bulk of the Skrull army (who, fighting a 21st century interplanetary war, have decided to emulate the 18th century style of formal warfare, and amass all of their soldiers in one place to fight all of their enemy's soldier).

Once Reed's Skrull Revealer is activated, the Skrulls all go green, and their wrinkly chins and pointy ears appear, although most are still wearing superhero or supervillain costumes, so either they're wearing real costumes (instead of just shapeshifting them on) or the Skrull-shower only affects the area between the chin and ears.

The sixth issue ends with a double-page spread of all the real superheroes and supervillains fighting all the Skrulls (which might have been an exciting last panel, if it weren't immediately preceded by another double-page spread). In the background, we see this Skrull: Apparently, there was a Skrull disguised as Galactus, I guess. That has got to be the absolute worst Skrull disguise. Galactus is, of course, a god-like being who travels the universe looking for planets to eat and, when he usually visits Earth, it's to destroy it. So, not a very good person to dress up as when trying to secretly infiltrate Earth; chances are, all the heroes are going to confront you as soon as they see you anyway. It would be a little like if someone were trying to infiltrate Britain in the mid-1940s and decided to disguise themselve as Hitler. A giant Hitler.

Anyway, that Skrull got screwed when they were doling out disguise assignments.

More on Bendis' goofy-@#$ swearing in Secret Invasion

As he did in the previous issue of Secret Invasion, writer Brian Michael Bendis included self-censored swear words, represented by caps-locked number keys (i.e. "@#$%!"), in Secret Invasion #6. And, as he also did in the previous issue, he included such self-censored swear words with odd-numbered characters, so that if we assume a one-random-SHIFT + number-key-to-one-letter-in-a-swear-word ratio, there were a couple instances of highly idiosyncratic swearing in this issue as well.

For example, when New York City super-crime kingpin The Hood gathers his syndicate of super-criminals on a rooftop to watch the melee between the Nick Fury lead superheroes and the Skrull invaders, one of them responds to the action by saying, "@#$, are you guys seein' this?"

A three-letter swear word? That can only mean the random villain said one of the following:

"Ass, are you guys seein' this?"

"Fag, are you guys seein' this?"

"Tit, are you guys seein' this?"

Those are the only possibilities I can think of, anyway. I'm not up on NYC criminal slang, but all three of those sound rather unnatural to me. But hell, maybe they just swear funny in the Marvel Universe.

Here, a New York policeman asks some demonstraters with signs welcoming The Skrulls what's up, and the one of them sees some actual Skrulls approaching, and says "@#$, look!"

Again, what did he remark?

"Ass, look!"

"Fag, look!"

"Tit, look!"

Maybe "ass" is the new "damn" in New York swearing style..?