Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Weekly Haul: February 18th

Battlefields Vol. 1: The Night Witches (Dynamite Entertainment) I’ll probably give this a more formal review at Blog@ this weekend, so all I’ll review here is that I didn’t much care for Dynamite’s trade design. It reminded me of the standard Marvel trade designs, which I don’t at all car for. The spine is all black with the company’s logo on the top, the inside front cover has an ad for other Garth Ennis-written Dynamite trades, the inside back cover looks a bit like a catalog, there’s an ad for the next Battlefields miniseries included, and the covers are all reprinted with explanations that they are covers and who did them and what number they are and if they’re variants across them. I liked the comic itself, but this was my first Dynamite trade, and I’m not too crazy about their trade design is all.


Black Lightning: Year One #4 (DC Comics) Hey, get out of Black Lightning’s origin story and fuck off back to the Batman comics, huh Talia al Ghul? Jen Can Meter and Cully Hamner’s six-issue story entered the unnecessary phase last issue, and it looks like that’s where it will stay for the rest of the run. It’s not bad though; it’s still pretty well-written and nicely illustrated, and hits the competently created name-brand super-comic spot perfectly. This issue is narrated by that really tall monster guy from last issue, and includes a lot of back-story on The 100 delivered by Talia al Ghul, daughter of the super-villain I’m most sick of seeing in DC comics at the moment.


Marvel Adventures Avengers #33 (Marvel Comics) Paul Tobin, Ig Guara and Sandro Ribeiro divide this issue between a plot by Stegron to conquer the world with reanimated dinosaurs and the Avengers taking turns trying to teach Ka-Zar how to drive. In New York City! It is, naturally, awesome—in fact, it’s probably Caleb’s ideal of the Platonic ideal of a Marvel comic. (Well, some of Tobin’s dialogue jokes fall a tad flat, but just, like, two out of the 50 jokes in here). My favorite part is probably a background gag, where we see a hotdog street cart vendor scratching his chin thoughtfully and regarding the passed out dinosaurs all around and, a few panels later, happily carries one of the smaller ones. I’m sure a 100% dinosaur meat hotdog will be less gross than whatever’s currently in hotdogs.


Mysterious The Unfathomable #2 (WildStorm/DC) In my review of the first issue of this, I expressed something I found rather unfathomable about the book—why it was being published on DC’s WildStorm imprint, which is mostly dedicated to TV/movie/videogame tie-ins and superhero universe books, as opposed to Vertigo or DC. Writer Jeff Parker explained why in this post.

Tucker Stone attended the WildStorm panel at NYCC, and offered this column about it. Pretty interesting reading for anyone perplexed by WildStorm’s line, which I assume is me and everyone else that doesn’t work for WildStorm and maybe DC Comics.

As for the actual issue? It’s pretty good. It reads like a Law and Order type of TV show, only with magic being investigated instead of crime, and all of the actors either have pot bellies or wide hips. I like Law and Order, and I like this too.



Super Friends #12 (DC) Yes, this came out last week, but I forgot to get it, as I usually forget to pick up at least one book each trip to the comic shop.

Like the last issue of Super Friends I bought, the J. Bone-drawn cover was my favorite part, and nothing quite like the scene depicted on it occurred within.

To be fair to creative team Sholly Fisch, Stewart McKenny and Dan Davis, it’s kind of hard to top a picture of Pirate Starro vs. The Justice League. I particularly like the fact that he’s got a hook hand and a peg leg, since starfish—as we’re reminded within—can re-grow their arms/legs/tentacles/points/whatever those things are called. Also, I love Superman’s expression on that cover. He’s seems angry but not furious, just kind of mildly unhappy; pissed, but somewhat stoically so.

Starro is in the story of course, as are pirates and, in a one-panel flashback or fantasy scene, he has some pirate gear on and says “Yarr!”

As for the story, it’s about pirates scaring people away from a certain spot, Scooby-Doo-style, and when the ‘Friends investigate, they discover a nefarious scheme by Starro to cause global warming to warm the globe faster to make Earth more suitable for him to rule. McKenny and Davis’ art is clean, smooth and easy to read, punctuated by a lot of neat sea life designs and depictions (I especially enjoyed all the little Starros’ expressions throughout), and they transition from straight lines on the panel borders during surface scenes, to curved, slightly pitching ones for underwater scenes. I like when comics do that.

Included within is this horrifying make-your-own Aquaman mask:

Which I’m not going to try out as I have other Super Friends craft projects, on account of it scaring me too much to look at long enough to cut out.

Question: Would Bone’s cover image have been funnier or less funny if Starro was wearing an eye-patch? I can’t decide.


Tiny Titans #13 (DC) In this issue, Raven recruits two more members for the Bird Scouts, The Pet Club meets at Stately Wayne Manor and Alfred foolishly leaves the kids alone to go to the store, Art Baltazaar draws a panel with every Brainiac ever in it and we get more of the best sound effects this side of Incredible Hercules.


Trinity #38 (DC) In the lead story, Supergirl, Dick Grayson and the others free associate the trinity back to reality, and in the back-up, penciled this time by a rather rushed-looking Mike Norton, The Justice Arcana prepares for their last stand against the Dark Arcana. Another decent issue.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Marvel and DC's May previews reviewed

DC’s solicitations for their May titles didn’t hit Newsarama until today, the same day that Marvel’s were posted. I believe this was on account of President’s Day, and the people who usually email them to Newsarama HQ were out taking advantage of President’s Day sales.

So, for whatever reason, they all came out on the same day, and instead of posting two separate posts examining them for things to make fun of and/or get excited about reading three months from now, I’ve combined them all into one, super-long Marvel ane DC previews review posts. In-SANE, huh?

Let’s see how it works out…



THE LAST DAYS OF ANIMAL MAN #1
Written by Gerry Conway
Art by Chris Batista & Dave Meikis
Cover by Brian Bolland

Is Buddy Baker losing it all? Everyman hero Buddy Baker has fought hard for our world, and for his family. But by the year 2024, the Earth has seen better days: The heroes are growing tired, the villains have grown nastier and Buddy’s own hometown of San Diego has struggled for years to recover from a cataclysmic typhoon. His children have grown and his marriage has gotten colder... and now, as San Diego faces the most vicious Super-Villain it’s seen in years, his powers are starting to fail him! Without his powers, without his family – who is Buddy Baker? Can he still be a husband? Can he still be a father? Can he still be Animal Man? And more importantly, can he even survive the bloodthirsty plan his arch-rival’s progeny has in store for him? Comics legend Gerry Conway (TV’s Law and Order) makes his return to DC with this can’t-miss miniseries!



I like how the solicit goes right from calling Conway a comics legend to citing as his only credit “TV’s Law and Order.”

I’m not convinced the world needs any more Animal Man stories after Grant Morrison, Peter Milligan and Jamie Delano took their swings at him, but I’ll probably at least give the first issue a shot. I like the character a whole lot—there aren’t that many vegan superheroes to look up to, you know?—and I like Batista’s art okay and hey, that sure is a nice Brian Bolland cover (not that there are bad Brian Bolland covers, of course).





Aquaman and Mera his and her tentacle rape busts…?



BALLAD OF A SHINIGAMI VOL. 1
Illustrated by Asuka Izumi
Original story by K-Ske Hasegawa
CMX.

Shinigamis are usually thought of as dark and scary, but not Momo. She’s the beautiful and sympathetic messenger of death who helps people transition to the other side, prevents others from ending their own lives, and carries messages from the dead to the living.

Based on the Japanese light novel series that later became an anime, BALLAD OF A SHINIGAMI is a collection of stories about people coming to terms with death that are alternately sad, funny, and heartwarming.

Advance-solicited; on sale June 3 • 5” x 7.375” • 184 pg, B&W, $9.99 US • TEEN +



Is that legal? Are they allowed to make manga about Shinigami?



Help me out here…is Batgirl wearing a tight dress with an open front and gold lacing, or black chaps with gold lacing around each leg…? Also, what the fuck is this thing and why does it even exist? It depresses the hell out of me that this Batgirl can barely move twenty thousand comic books a month, and yet an audience apparently exists for weird-ass expensive statuary of her.



BATMAN: THE BLACK CASEBOOK TP
Written by Bill Finger, Edmond Hamilton and others
Art by Sheldon Moldoff, Dick Sprang and others
Cover by Alex Ross

Discover the stories that inspired recent events in the Batman universe with this new collection! Featuring stories from BATMAN #65, 86, 112, 113, 134, 156 and 162, DETECTIVE COMICS #215, 235, 247 and 267, and WORLD’S FINEST COMICS #89. With an intro by Grant Morrison.

Advance-solicited; on sale June 17 • 144 pg, FC, $17.99 US



Lame.

Not only did DC wait way, way, way too long to put this together—back when fan’s were still trying to figure out who The Black Glove was and might have had extra incentive to sift through these old stories form clues would have probably been a better time to release this—but the presentation isn’t anywhere as cool as it should be.

First, they’re just slapping one of Alex Ross’ lame-ass random iconic covers on it. They should have at least made him paint the Club of Heroes or The Batman of Planet-X.

Me, if I were in charge of putting-DC-trade-collections together, I would have given it a faux black leather pattern cover, with just the title on it, and lead each story off with a fake entry in Batman’s journal written by Morrison in the character of Batman. If Morrison would have done it. That would have been awesome.

This will still likely be a damn good read, as all of these stories are pretty great and all of them should make Tony Daniel feel like a real asshole when Batman readers are more easily able to compare the highly-imaginative and well-constructed zany imagery of Sheldon Moldoff to the tired, half-scribbled crap Daniel came up with when covering the very same panels.

And it’s nice Morrison at least wrote an intro, but still, this could have been soooo much better.




Hmm, who’s that vaguely insect-like character supposed to be? Black Spider IV? Is that even the right roman numeral for which legacy Black Spider we're on at this point?



Gah! What the hell Ladronn…? What is up with Batirl’s gigantic breasts in this picture…? Jeez man, we all know you can do better than this. This is the cover for Batman: Battle for the Cowl—The Network #1, which can and should be skipped, since it has two punctuation marks in the title. Any comic needing a second piece of punctuation beyond a colon can’t possibly be any good. It’s a fact.


BATMAN: WHATEVER HAPPENED TO THE CAPED CRUSADER? DELUXE EDITION HC

Written by Neil Gaiman
Art by Andy Kubert & Scott Williams, Mark Buckingham, Bernie Mireault & Matt Wagner and Simon Bisley
Cover by Andy Kubert & Scott Williams

Best-selling author Neil Gaiman (THE SANDMAN) joins a murderer’s row of talented artists in lending his unique touch to the Batman mythos for this Deluxe Edition hardcover! Spotlighting the story “Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?” from BATMAN #685 and DETECTIVE COMICS #852 in which Gaiman joins artist Andy Kubert and inker Scott Williams for a story that shines a new light on the Batman mythos. Also collects Gaiman stories from SECRET ORIGINS #36, SECRET ORIGINS SPECIAL #1 and BATMAN BLACK AND WHITE #2. This collection is not to be missed!

Advance-solicited; on sale July 22 • 7 1/16" x 10 7/8", 128 pg, FC, $24.99 US



Either filling out Gaiman’s two-issue “Whatever Happened…” story arc with the other short Batman comics stories he’s done in the past was an extremely obvious move, or I’m totally psychic.

It doesn’t look like the Two-Face and Penguin portions of Secret Origins Special #1, which weren’t written by Gaiman, are making it into this collection, which is only odd in that Gaiman wrote the frame story that included a short Riddler piece by him and the Two-Face and Penguin stories. I imagine it will read extra-choppy with two-thirds of the middle edited out, but we’ll see.



Oh man, who is that guy Wolverine's fighting? I love that guy! He's like...Wolverine made out of knives...? That's awesome. Is that the Stryfe-with-a-y character mentioned in the solicits for X-Force?


FINAL CRISIS AFTERMATH: RUN! #1

Written by Matthew Sturges
Art by Freddie E. Williams II
Cover by Kako

The Human Flame is a dead man. Literally just waking up after the events of FINAL CRISIS, he realizes all the heroes in the DC Universe target him as the lowlife who taped the murder of the Martian Manhunter with his cell phone. On top of that, all the villains in the world want to kill him for selling them out to Libra. He's powerless and penniless, and his only chance for survival is to run! This 6-issue miniseries examines the underbelly of the DCU and what happens when the wrong choices catch up with you. Nothing can prepare you for this chase.



Six issues?! That's almost as many issues as long as Final Crisis itself. There's something kind of appealing about the idea of a loser villain like The Human Flame—it can't be easy being The Martian Manhunter's Silver Age villain; surely even Aquaman's villains like The Fisherman look down on him—but another miniseries that "Examines the underbelly of the DCU" sounds an awful lot like the pitch for Villains United, the Piper/Trickster thread of Countdown, Salvation Run and Gotham Underground. The whole villain on the run from fellow villains and superheroes is the exact same plot as the Piper/Trickster stuff, isn't it? And those were characters that DC readers knew and liked. I can't imagine The Human Flame will be much of a draw...even the Final Crisis branding seems dubious. Wouldn't a better time to explore the aftermath of FC have been soon after FC, rather than five months later?

Props for using an exclamation mark in the title though.


FINAL CRISIS AFTERMATH: ESCAPE #1

Written by Ivan Brandon
Art by Marco Rudi
Cover by Scott Hampton

In this all-new 6-issue miniseries, Nemesis awakens to find himself held captive by the Global Peace Agency inside the walls of the mysterious Electric City. His fellow prisoners are all members of the superhuman intelligence community, and they're subjected to systematic torture in an attempt to siphon the secrets of the DC Universe heroes in an effort to destroy them. As Nemesis works to escape, he finds few people he can truly trust. But nothing could prepare him for the hideous truth behind his situation!



Okay, here's another six-issues series tying into Final Crisis, this one starring someone who wasn't even in Final Crisis (at least The Human Flame and The Super Young Team and Tatooed Man II, who also get their own six-issue miniseries, appeared in Final Crisis at some point). This one has torture right there in the solicit, and is the one DC pitched at NYCC as a cross between The Prisoner and Saw. Considering how dark, gory and violent many of the DC books that don't make a point of boasting about it ahead of time end up, this one is probably going to be pretty gross.



FIN FANG FOUR RETURN! #1

Written by SCOTT GRAY & ROGER LANGRIDGE
Pencils & Cover by ROGER LANGRIDGE

There was a time when giants walked the Earth! Monstrous creatures! Products of science gone mad!!! FIN FANG FOOM! ELEKTRO! GOOGAM! GORGILLA! Once they were great and terrible, and all trembled in their wake! Now, reduced to human size, they must live in the modern world and earn a buck. So what happens when the freakish foursome tries to play nice? Find out in this one-shot from the depraved minds of acclaimed comedy maestros Scott Gray and Roger Langridge!
48 PGS./One-Shot/Rated A ...$3.99



Okay, I'll take one of these, please.


FLASH: THE HUMAN RACE TP

Written by Grant Morrison and Mark Millar
Art by Mike Parobeck, Paul Ryan, Pop Mhan, Steve Lightle and others
Cover by Steve Lightle

Grant Morrison and Mark Millar’s run with the Fastest Man Alive continues here! Collects THE FLASH #136-141 as well as a story from SECRET ORIGINS #50.

Advance-solicited; on sale June 10 • 160 pg, FC, $14.99 US



Cool, they’re continuing their collection of this run. I really, really liked this “Human Race” story.



THE FLASH: REBIRTH #2

Written by Geoff Johns
Art by Ethan Van Sciver
Covers by Ethan Van Sciver

What's happened to the Speed Force? One of the world's most powerful speedsters is dead, and Barry Allen must discover who – or what – is responsible! But the reborn Barry is a man haunted by a dark secret in his past. A secret that drives him to push far beyond his limits. A burden that, if he's not careful, could send him right back into oblivion! Geoff Johns and Ethan Van Sciver's reinvention of the Scarlet Speedster picks up the pace – we dare you to keep up!



Gasp! "One of the world's most powerful speedsters is dead, and Barry Allen must discover who – or what – is responsible!" That sure sounds like an exciting plot point, in a comic book about one of the world’s most powerful speedsters whose been dead for 20 years coming back to life!


HITMAN VOL. 1: A RAGE IN ARKHAM NEW PRINTING TP

Written by Garth Ennis
Art and cover by John McCrea

The cult hit from writer Garth Ennis (PREACHER) returns! Rediscover the story of Tommy Monaghan, an ex-military operative who has set himself up as a hired gun on the back streets of Gotham City. Collects THE DEMON ANNUAL #2, THE BATMAN CHRONICLES #4 and HITMAN #1-3!
Advance-solicited; on sale June 17 • 144 pg, FC, $14.99 US



If you haven’t already read Hitman, you really should; this is one of my favorite comic books of all time, and I can’t recommend it highly enough. Unfortunately, they’re still not collecting the Demon story arcs guest-starring Tommy Monaghan (which would actually get me to buy this new printing), but fortunately, they won’t be collecting the letters pages either, which would include plenty of gushing letters form young J. Caleb Mozzocco.

I wrote a one billion word post about Hitman and how I thought DC should re-collect it here, if you haven’t seen it and don’t have any more productive ways to waste twenty minutes.



Paul Gulacy sure draws a scary Jonah Hex…! He provides the interior art in May’s issue of DC’s ongoing Western/awesome artist showcase Jonah Hex as well.




JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #33

Written by Dwayne McDuffie
Art by Rags Morales
Cover by Ed Benes

It's Dharma vs. Starbreaker for control of the greatest source of power in the
DC Universe. No matter the victor, the Justice League loses!


Hey, ditch that shitty cover artist, and JLoA would have a great creative team for the first time in...what, three years? I imagine Morales is just temporary though, as Benes, in addition to being terrible, has regularly needed fill-in artists every couple of issues. Even if it is just for one issue, maybe I'll give it a try...I do try to get everything Morales draws...

Now, regarding that cover, is it just me, or does it seem like the cover of almost every issue of JLoA has involved a bunch of Justice Leaguers lying prone on a pile of rubble?



LOCKJAW AND THE PET AVENGERS #1 (of 4)

Written by CHRIS ELIOPOULOS
Penciled by IG GUARA
Cover by KARL KERSCHL
Variant Cover by NIKO HENRICHON

And there came a day, a day unlike any other, when Earth's mightiest heroes were unaware of a threat greater than all of them could handle. And on that day, a teleporting puppy scoured the world to assemble a team of animals to fight the foes no single beast could withstand! Strap on your collar and hop on-board the adventures of LOCKJAW, LOCKHEED, REDWING, HAIRBALL, and an all-new FROG THOR! Written by Eisner-nominee CHRIS ELIOPOULOS with art by fan-favorite IG GUARA, color by INCREDIBLE HULK colorist CHRIS SOTOMAYOR and variant covers by PRIDE OF BAGHDAD artist NIKO HENRICHON!
32 PGS./All Ages ...$2.99



Yes.

If I rubbed a brass lamp and a bare-chested Dan DiDio made out of blue smoke wearing a vest, a fez and hoop earrings appeared and asked me if he could magically grant me permission to write any DC comics I wanted, it would have been a modern day Legion of Super-Pets, where the various current, in-continuity animals of the DCU unite to fight an enemy that has felled every single humanoid hero in their attempt to conquer earth, but overlooked the meta-animals, who rally to save the day.

Oh well...

This should be pretty good. I haven't read much of anything from this Chris Eliopoulos character, but if he thought to assemble Redwing, Lockjaw and company into a superteam, he's obviously a genius.

I don't know if the word "fan-favorite" fits Ig Guara, but he draws the Marvel Adventures Avengers, and that's a favorite series of mine, so maybe it does apply after all.

Nice Frog Thor cover, too... and hey, only $2.99, rather than the inflated $3.99 Marvel's been charging for miniseries lI want to read like Marvel Zombies 3 and Marvel Apes lately. Huzzah!


MARVEL MYSTERY COMICS #1 70TH ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL
Written by TOM DEFALCO
Penciled by CHRIS BURNHAM
Cover by PAOLO RIVERA
Variant Cover by MARCOS MARTIN
The original Human Torch, Toro, the Sub-Mariner, the Angel and the Ferret team up to prevent Nazi saboteurs and one of the Torch's earliest foes from creating the ultimate weapon of mass destruction in this all-new 22 page story. Plus another 10 page classic vintage tale from Marvel's Golden Age!



I have no idea who The Ferret might be, but I can't wait to find out. (Dara, you really need to pitch Marvel a Ferret series!) I'm pretty excited about all of these _________ Comics #1 70th Anniversary Specials Marvel's putting out this spring. They're unfortunately all at the $3.99 price point, but at least they have reprint back-ups to maybe sorta kinda justify the extra $1. I guess I'll have to wait and see.



THE OUTSIDERS #18

Written by Peter J. Tomasi
Art and cover by Lee Garbett & Trevor Scott

“The Deep” part 4 of 6. The Outsiders finally discover what The Insiders are searching for thanks to the help of a long lost being known only as “The Outkast.” And the ensuing battle may take them to the very center of the earth itself!



You know, I’m almost certain there’s no “k” in the word “Outcast”…


R.E.B.E.L.S. #4

Written by Tony Bedard
Art by Claude St. Aubin & Scott Hanna
Cover by Ed Benes & Rob Hunter

The stakes grow higher as the galaxy’s new would-be conqueror stands revealed. Dox and the Omega Men each plot their next steps while the alien Khunds and Dominators get involved against the rising mysterious threat to their galaxies. Believe us, the last page of this issue will blow even Dox’s mind!


Still not cancelled!



RUNAWAYS #10

Written by CHRISTOPHER YOST & JAMES ASMUS
Pencils by SARA PICHELLI & EMMA RIOS
Cover by DAVID LAFUENTE

When Runaway Molly Hayes responds to the X-Men's psychic invitation welcoming all mutants to a new home in San Francisco, she declares it "Moll-ifest Destiny" and heads to the Headlands to investigate! But when she finds herself back-to-back with Wolverine, cornered by a villain with a vendetta, she might find being an X-Man isn't just secret clubhouses and cool-looking costumes...
40 PGS./Rated T+ ...$3.99



So did I miss an announcement about a new creative team, or is this just a fill-in, or....what, exactly? I dropped Runaways on account of not really liking what the current creative team is doing, so I'll probably check this out. It's certainly hard to pass up a book called "Moll-ifest Destiny," and I really enjoyed the first Molly and Wolvie encounter. Cover by David LaFuente, who rules.



SPIDER-MAN J VOL. 2: JAPANESE DAZE DIGEST

Story and Art by YAMANAKA AKIRA
Translation by YUKO FUKAMI
English Adaptation by MARC SUMERAK
Cover by YAMANAKA AKIRA

Fresh from Japan...SPIDER-MAN J! Originally published only in that country, SPIDER-MAN J enjoyed a large following of loyal readers. Now, fans here can enjoy Spider-Man J's manga-styled adventures, as well – collected for the first time in America and translated for your reading pleasure! Reprinting stories from SPIDER-MAN FAMILY #7-9.
128 PGS./All Ages ...$9.99
ISBN: 978-0-7851-3718-4
SPIDER-MAN J: JAPANESE KNIGHTS DIGEST STILL AVAILABLE!
$9.99



I didn't even know there was a volume one of this. Did anyone in the reading audience read this? Should I have read it? It sure looks potentially fun...


SPIDER-MAN: THE SHORT HALLOWEEN
Written by BILL HADER & SETH MEYERS
Pencils & Cover by KEVIN MAGUIRE
Two stars of Saturday Night Live make their Marvel debut with an all-new story set right on the bustling, hot dog juice covered streets of New York City. Halloween is coming early this year as Spidey is knocked out during the Greenwich Village costume parade and an intoxicated reveler in a Spidey costume takes his place. Really, we don't want to say more than that. Trust us, with comic book legend Kevin Maguire (JUSTICE LEAGUE INTERNATIONAL) along for the ride, this'll be more exciting than putting a president on a comic book cover!
48 PGS./One-Shot/Rated T+ ...$3.99



That's a pretty inside comics joke for a book written by two SNL writers. Still, it's almost impossible to go wrong with Kevin Maguire pencils.



I liked the first issue of Supergirl: Cosmic Adventures in the Eight Grade okay, but not so much that I bought the second one. I’ll probably pick this last one up though, as that’s a great cover, and I do so like a good Superhorse story.


TIMESTORM 2009/2099 #2 (of 4)
Written by BRIAN REED
Penciled by ERIC BATTLE
Cover by SALVADOR LARROCA
It's the heroes and villains of 2099—as you've never seen them before! Washington, D.C. overrun by Hulks! New York City controlled by massive corporations that know your every thought and desire! A man from 2099 in the present day, killing our heroes! Brian Reed (SECRET INVASION: CAPTAIN MARVEL) and Eric Battle (Batman) bring you the world of tomorrow as it collides with the world of today!
32 PGS./Rated T+ ...$3.99


Eric Battle drew Batman? Really? Why don' t I have any memory of that at all?



ULTIMATE WOLVERINE VS. HULK #6 (of 6)
Written by DAMON LINDELOF
Pencils & Cover by LEINIL FRANCIS YU
Had enough yet? Neither have we!!!
Red-hot writer Damon Lindelof (LOST) and superstar artist Leinil Francis Yu (Secret Invasion) conclude the slobberknocker of the century! With his mission a wreck and Fury hot on his trail, can Wolverine pull himself together (literally & figuratively!!) to do what he does best before Hulk pounds him into oblivion first? Don't miss this explosive final chapter as the battle between Berserker and Behemoth goes to ELEVEN!!

ULTIMATUM #5 (of 5)
Written by JEPH LOEB
Pencils & Cover by DAVID FINCH
Variant Cover by ED MCGUINNESS
Sketch Variant by ED MCGUINNESS
Gatefold Variant by DAVID FINCH
Fallen Heroes Variant by OLIVIER COIPEL
Is this what the end of the world looks like? You better believe it!!
As only Emmy & Eisner award-winning writer Jeph Loeb and superstar artist David Finch can deliver, it's an apocalyptic conclusion where every, and we mean EVERY, score is settled! The Ultimate heroes have faced their final judgment...and when the dust settles will they be found wanting? If you can handle the growing body count, stick around as ALL is answered in this explosive series finale that will shock fans for years to come!


Whew, it looks like they'll manage to get Ultimate Wolvie Vs. Hulk completed just as they were finishing off the Ultimate Universe. That was a pretty close one, wasn’t it?




Two covers, 800 characters on each one and no feet. Not unless you count Lockheed's. I really like the artist Jim Lee's become in the past decade or so, but his popularity sure had a negative effect on comics art via the people who he influenced during this period.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Review: Jin & Jam #1

Hellen Jo’s Jin & Jam #1 (Sparkplug Books) is something a little better and a lot more rare than a good comic book—it’s a cool one. If it were a girl, I’d want it to like me, and if it were a boy, I’d want to be friends with it. If it were a garment, I’d want to wear it, and if it were a song I’d want to play it loud enough that other people could hear me listening to it.

I’m pretty sure I wore a goofy grin while reading it, and I’m certain I exhaled exclamation points as my eyes fell on certain panels. And, when it was over, I felt kind of like I did after finishing the first volume of Scott Pilgrim or the first issue of Street Angel—like I wanted to recommend it to people, not merely in the form of a comics review, which I’ll get serious about doing in the next paragraph, but, like, just stopping people on the street and saying, “Hey, you should check this comic out.” (Which would be a terrible idea, really; stopping people on the street to say anything is usually a pretty bad idea).

So, this comic Jin & Jam—it’s a pretty cool one. Jam is a scruffy little teenage girl eating McDonald’s on a curb in front of a church with her friend Hank, who is smoking cigarettes. Jin is a much girlier-looking girl, suffering through the sermon inside, who comes outside and happens to meet Jam there.

Is it a match made in heaven? Well, they sure seem to think alike:

Later, Jam and Hank are drawn to a parking lot when they hear the call “FFFFFFIGHT,” and there they find Jin, out of her church clothes and about to fight Ting and Terng, “a conjoined bitch and a retard” (In Jin’s words).

The fight is brutal. Ting and Terng smash Jin into a brick wall, and one of their fists cave it in. Jin hits them with a garbage can, and this is the page that follows:


Before a clear victor emerges, a cop shows up, fully prepared to brutally enforce a law I wish existed:

Oh man, if it were illegal for teens to be fucking annoying…

Jam rescues Ting, Terng and Jin, and when she hears that Jin has “never seen a band perform live before,” they try to go see a show, but they can’t because, duh, they’re just a bunch of stupid fucking kids, after all, and kids aren’t allowed in bars.

The end.

The book begins with a quote from Taiyo Matsumoto’s Black & White (which is perhaps more widely known as Tekkonkinkreet now): “We can beat ‘em…just you ‘n me!” I suppose the spirit of that quote, the two friends against the world theme of Tekkonkinkreet is what Jo was specifically evoking, and while the beginnings of that sort of story are certainly present, it’s also a preemptive declaration of influence.

The flatness of the art that sacrifices the illusion of depth (but not enough to hurt the images), the bold black and white art with little gradation, the character design, the weird angles, the violent fighting, the mentally challenged character whose head is always leaking liquids—there are a lot of bits and pieces that here that evoke Tekkonkinkreet, although the world it occurs in is more immediate and less fantastic than Matsumoto’s, while the violence and action are sillier and more fantastic.

While the art’s great, the swearing amusing and the fighting fun, what pushes this to the next level is how strongly Jo is able to render the characterizations—every bit as strongly as she renders them physically in the lines—and evokes the feelings of teenagerhood. The injustice of being denied into a club to see a band and being forced to loiter in a playground instead, not old enough to do grown-up stuff, but too old for kids stuff? Caught in between like that, and just hanging around, being angry and cool and destructive, hating and loving each other? Man, that’s exactly what it was like, isn’t it? And Jo’s caught it and put it all on paper, didn’t she?



RELATED: I really liked this detail. Jin, who doesn’t smoke, apparently takes all the cigarettes that are offered to her, and apparently makes some kind of necklace out of them:

That’s awesome. I’ve never smoked, but I remember handing out with bad kids who did and being offered cigarettes all the time. I was attracted to how cool smoking was, yet repelled by how it’s, you know, really fucking expensive and deadly and all (I was something of an old man even as a teenager). I like how Jin doesn’t smoke cigarettes, but is still approaching them as trophies—are these the first few she’s been offered? Is the offer of a cigarette still so fresh and new an experience that it’s something to be savored and celebrated, even if you don’t actually want to smoke the terrible things?

Sunday, February 15, 2009

This clipping of an Apartment 3-G Sunday strip has been on my refrigerator for years but is now all yellowed, so I'm going to post it here

Because you're all waiting with bated breath for a Salvation Run review...

In Thursday night's post about my, um, shelving, I mentioned that I was in the process of avoiding writing reviews of any of the books in my To Be Reviewed pile at the moment, because I am a lazy, terrible person, and instead chose to simply to take some terrible photos of my bookshelves and ramble on about each of them for hundreds and hundreds of words.

One of those reviews I mentioned not writing was of the trade collection of Salvation Run. I did end up writing it, but I posted it on Blog@ instead of here because the comic I was planning on reviewing over at Blog@ this weekend has such fantastic art that I wanted to run some scans of it with the review, and I have an infinitely easier time posting art here on my home blog than at Blog@. So since I was going to run that review here, I needed to run another review there, which is why I will never review Salvation Run on EDILW as I might have sort of implied on Thursday night.

So: If any readers were, like, on the edge of their seat, waiting for 2,000 words about Salvation Run, you'll have to go on over to Blog@ to read them.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

A holiday greeting

Hey, the guy who unknowingly helped name my blog has a new album coming out. Here's a single from it:

Replace "Paris" with "Comics" and "stone and steel" with "paper and ink," and it makes for a perfect love song, doesn't it?

What...?

Don't you rewrite Morrissey songs in your head to make them apply to comic books? No...? It's just me then...? Huh.

Well, happy today anyway.

Friday, February 13, 2009

The secret origin of Hal Jordan (and The Guardians):

In Fred Van Lente and Ryan Dunlavey's Comic Book Comics #3, they cover the dawning of the Silver Age of superheroes, and devote a panel to the source of Gil Kane's designs for Hal Jordan and the little blue aliens the GL worked for.

Check it out:

I did not know that. Comics really are educational!

To learn more about Julius Schwartz's DC hero revival, the fall of EC and the rise of Mad, Dr. Wertham and 1960s pop art's relationship with comics while enjoying sight gags, Dunlavey's Stan Lee and Jack Kirby caricatures and even a few dick jokes, be sure to check out the latest issue of Comic Book Comics. It's 100% Every Day Is Like Wednesday approve!

Is Jerry reading manga?


Or did the cartoonist simply write the word "COMIX" on what would be the back cover of an English comic book so that the reader wouldn't suspect from the context that Jerry was reading one of the old porn magazines Hi keeps stored in his immaculately clean attic...?

Thursday, February 12, 2009

A major turning point is coming in my life, and I don't know if I have the courage to face it

The other day I was straightening my living room, which hosts a half dozen piles of books and graphic novels, arranged in little piles according to which library they were borrowed from, which library they're going to be returned to, what's a review copy that needs to be reviewed by a particular date, what's a review copy that can be reviewed whenever, what has already been reviewed and can be put away at any moment and so on. I gathered up three or four Rebellion collections of 2000 A.D. strips to file them away in the Rebellion/2000 A.D. section of my book shelf, and found that there was no room left...that section butted right up against the Fantagraphics section, with no room for any more books.

A few days later, I went to put Miss Don't Touch Me next to the other NBM graphic novels, but couldn't fit it in, and simply laid it atop the trades on that shelf, where there were already a few other graphic novels from small publishers that I couldn't fit on the small-sized miscellaneous trades shelves.

It is with horror that I then realized I have reached and exceeded capacity on my book shelves, meaning a brand new shelf arrangement would be needed soon, one that would likely necessitate finding room for another bookshelf in my apartment, and then rearranging all of my graphic novels to somehow fit them all onto shelves correctly.

This task horrifies me with its complexity and scope, and I immediately placed it at the bottom of my Things I Must One Day Do Even Though I'd Rather Not Do Them Today list, below doing my 2008 taxes, get ready for the switch to digital cable and finish lettering Self-Published Comic Project #1.

Let's take a look at the current arrangement of my book shelves, because I wrote over 4,000 words of comics reviews yesterday and have no desire to write a few hundred more about JLA: Salvation Run or American Elf Book Three or any of the other books in my To Be Reviewed Before The Disappear Completely Beneath Cobwebs pile tonight (although I do spend a few paragraphs on the James and Amy Kochalka in a post about my favorite comics couples over at Blog@).

So, terrible pictures taken with the tiny digital camera embedded in the top of my laptop! That will be an easy enough post for tonight! And some people actually kind of like that thing, don't they? Some terrible perverts who like to masturbate to images of graphic novel spines they find on the Internet? That's why I sometimes see the words "shelf porn" on blogs on posts about book shelves, isn't it...? Come, follow me around my apartment as I show you my bookshelves, and kindly don't masturbate as I do so or, if you must, at least don't tell me what you're doing, deal?



Here we have my hexagon-shaped end table/cabinet thing. It is super-heavy and a horrible object to move in and out of pick-up trucks and apartments. Upon it is where I keep my Drawn and Quarterly books, bookended by the books too large to fit on any of my bookshelves, like Lost Girls, a Little Nemo collection, Tiger! Tiger! Tiger! and some others. As you can see, there isn't much room left on it, which is extremely problematic, as Drawn and Quarterly has a lot of awesome books on the horizon. Soon I will have to rethink where to keep them, if not next to one another in one place.

I did not clean my apartment prior to this photo session, as that would be even more tiresome than writing about Salvation Run, so you'll note random, non-graphic novel objects all around. For example, here we see my penny jar and some rolls of pennies, which I have been rolling to turn in to the bank for dollar bills, because I am poor. Also, my glasses. Did you know I wore glasses? Ha ha, you probably didn't! That's because, although I post drawings of myself all the time, I never draw myself with glasses, as I don't wear glasses while I'm drawing (I'm nearsighted...or farsighted...? I wear them when I have to see far away, like when I'm driving or at my day job [look out on a pirate ship]). Also, I can't draw glasses very well. But I'm practicing doing so all the time! I think I might just need to buy easier to draw frames...



Here is some kind of hope chest I inherited from a roommate when he moved out and left most of his stuff that was heavy. I can't remember if I'm storing something inside it or not. On top of it is where I keep my Showcase Presents and Essential volumes, because I love to look at them. Especially the Showcases. I love the rainbow their spines form! This also presents a problem, as I'm just about out of room on the chest. I have six volumes that need added, and I'm sure I will add as many more as DC and Marvel choose to print.

On the right is a stack of Millennium comics, which have been there since I started reviewing each issue of Millennium. Which was... Jesus, April of last year!




Right next to that is a miscellaneous book shelf, where I keep a lot of smaller-sized graphic novels from various publishers. The top shelf is manga—Akira Toriyama, Kiyohiko Azuma and a handful of other manga, mostly of one or two-volume series. I cannot resume buying Dr. Slump or get the next volume of Yotsuba& until reorganizing.

The middle shelf is pretty random. Spine out are AdHouse books, Firs Second Books, a few Viper books, Persepolis, Chiggers and so on. DC, Vertigo and Minx digests are stacked vertically there, with a dusty Can't Get No at the top; they will be put with the DC books when I get the appropriate bookends.

The bottom shelf has WildStorm trades, NBM books and otherwise it's completely random—I see some Villard publications, a hardcover of the first volume of Bone, some Twisted Toy Fare collections (Shut up, don't judge me!), Colonia and so on.



I had to get all avant garde to get this shelf in the frame. This is my biggest bookshelf, which I would be lost without. It was part of a pair, given to me by an ex-roomate's girlfriends' friends who were moving back to Japan and gave her two bookshelves and a couch, which she gave to him and he gave to me. The second bookshelf was destroyed in the moving into my apartment process, sadly, or I wouldn't even be facing this looming shelving crisis.

The top shelf has Dark Horse books on one side, and Oni and Image books on the other. They are both full at the moment, which is problematic, as I have many, many Little Lulu books yet to collect.

The next shelf down is the one where the Rebellion trades and the Fantagraphics books are encroaching on one another. Below that is the Top Shelf/Alternative Comics/SLG/random trade shelf, with some Oni digests stacked vertically in the middle, beneath a wooden carving of a cat dressed up like Batman.

The shelf below that is full of...real books! Half the shelf are books about comics though, and the other half is mostly books full of art reference. The bottom shelf is children's books and collections of comic strips. Goddess of War is in a cardboard envelope between this shelf and the wall, as I have yet to figure out what to do with it.


This is a cheap little shelving unit I inherited from my college girlfriend. It is awesome because it spins, although I currently have it in a corner which makes spinning difficult.

This is all manga—Astro Boy, Red River (which I'm waaaayyyy behind on), Fushigi Yugi (ditto) and a bunch of series I started but didn't get very far with (Kare Kano, Et Cetera, Fruits Basket, etc). On the back is where I keep the manga series I really didn't like at all (Duck Prince, By The Sword, Reborn! pretty much the first volume of every CMX release from their first few rounds) and/or am ashamed to have anyone know I even own any volumes of (Battle Vixens, DearS, Instant Teen) and/or I simply don't care for the spine design of (Neon Genesis Evangelion, Fairies Landing, etc).

You can't see form here, as my bill-holder obscures them, but there's a pile of all the little Jeffrey Brown books I have on top of this thing, awaiting the arrival of little bookends to hold them up.



The bottom shelf of my TV car thing houses more manga. This is almost all Rumiko Takahashi, most of it Ranma 1/2. I love the rainbow of Ranma 1/2 spines...right up until Viz started publishing the smaller, cheaper trades with the uniform blue spines. I've yet to finish this series, although I really ought to.




More manga, and little trades with colorful spines or just really nice spine designs. On the top shelf are a couple of Peanuts collections, a couple of Dennis the Menace collections, The Clouds Above and Jimmy Corrigan; then we've got some Bumper Boy and some more AdHouse books, The Cute Manifesto and The Mourning Star, and two more shelves of manga, including Sgt. Frog and the Kingdom Hearts and other Disney manga. That takes care of the living room. Now let's head to the other end of my apartment, to the bedroom, which isn't used as a bedroom at all, as there is no bed in it...


Here we have my DC trades. The top shelf is real, actual, prose book-books, the middle shelf is Vertigo trades, and the bottom shelf is all DC superhero stuff, which is all rather random, as I've read so many DC comics in singles format. I think Starman is all there in trade, but otherwise it's just a Green Lantern trade here, five Batman trades here, a couple Perez Wonder Woman trades there, and like that.


The top of this book case has singles piled atop it, and the top shelf is mostly book-books, although I've started putting some trades with them too, as I've run out of room elsewhere. The middle shelf is all manga. Ken Akamatsu's harem comedies Love Hina and Negima!, which I've fallen hopelessly behind on, and the first volume of A.I. Love You, which I didn't care for. Also, Iron Wok Jan and Kill Me, Kiss Me, one of my favorites. I'm really enamored of stories about Asian high school students getting crushes on each other and beating each other up for some reason, and this is a good manhwa series with a couple of different couples involved.


And finally, here's my Marvel gns, which are few and far between. The series I read in trade—Captain America, Daredevil and Garth Ennis'later Max Punisher—I'm pretty far behind on, and the series of trades I was most avidly followin, G.I. Joe, Marvel quite randomly stopped publishing after five volumes. Most of the modern Marvel stuff I'm interested in I've been reading in singles, and most of the old Marvel stuff I'm interested in comes out in Essentials. I don't have much interest in most of what they published in the '80s and '90s, I guess. Anyway, plenty of room to grow here yet.

And that's my shelving situation. A pretty enlightening, thrill-packed post, huh? Come back tomorrow night, and I will show you how my kitchen cupboards and drawers are organized.

Weekly Haul: February 11th

Action Comics #874 (DC Comics) Hmm, apparently the “New Krypton” goings-on have already started to jumble up the Super-books in unexpected ways. For example, this is the Geoff Johns-written monthly, but it’s scripted instead by Superman writer James Robinson. Where will the madness end?!

This particular issue is a not terribly eventful or innovative move-the-plots-a-few-steps-forward sort of issue, as Superman argues with his fellow Kryptonians and they invite him to move to New Krypton, Steve Lombard helps Jimmy Olsen with his cryptography (Psst, Jimmy! Steve didn’t mention it, but try 58,008! It’s the best one!), and Superman pulls Mon-El out of the Phantom Zone, where Superman has forced him to live while he works on a cure for his fatal lead-poisoning with the same speed and urgency that Reed Richards has been working on a cure for Ben Grimm’s mutation into The Thing, which is mysteriously evaporating. The Phantom Zone that is, not the cure.

The art this issue comes from penciller/inker Pablo Raimondi and co-inker Walden Wong, and they do a very nice job on it. Hooray for art that doesn’t make me sad just to look at!

If the proceedings seem a little breezy this issue, I suppose that’s because the story is only 18-pages long, to help make room for a six-page “Origins & Omens” back-up (Which adds up to 24 pages! That’s two extra pages…free! Marvel would have charged $6.99 for this very book).

This back up is by Robinson and artists Renato Guedes and Jose Wilson Magalhaes, and it couches the entirely unnecessary origin recap of the new Guardian (whose origin story was just told a couple of months ago) in a story about his day at work today.

And that sequence is framed by the Guardian of the Galaxy who has taken the name Scar crying black tears onto the blank pages of something called The Black Book, which I believe is actually just a copy of Kramer’s Ergot 7.


Avengers/Invaders #8 (Marvel Comics) About midway through, this book gets so wrapped up in Marvel continuity that it completely loses me: Something about the original Vision (whom I know nothing about other than that his costume design is 1,000 less terrible looking than the crying android version I’m more familiar with) getting somehow swallowed whole by the despair-driven demon thing with the stupid name of D’Spayre (Who once fought Man-Thing, I recently learned—thanks Essential Man-Thing Vol. 2!) on his way to watch over the Cosmic Cube, which is apparently something Vision’s people do, whoever they are. It was basically a pile-up of like six things I didn’t understand in the space of a few pages.

It doesn’t really matter.

Sure, Spider-Man’s Gollum impression is terrible, the events don’t really line-up with the rest of the Marvel Universe’s goings on (Luke Cage and Hawkeye/Ronin make a Secret Invasion joke, although this is well before Secret Invasion), Dr. Strange’s voice seems off and some of the dialogue is downright laughable. I don’t care.

This is still a comic book where the original Human Torch’s android blood is being siphoned off by Ultrons like vampires, until he realizes that Ultron is basically just a robot Hitler and rallies—robot vampires are one thing, but robot Nazis? Not on the Human Torch’s watch!

Also, Namor’s in it.

Only four more issues to go, at which point I will cry manfully at the loss of this limited series from my pull list.



Batman #686 (DC) This is the fourth two-part epilogue of Grant Morrison’s “Batman R.I.P.” story in a row, following Morrison’s own “R.I.P” to Final Crisis bridge story, Denny O'Neil's Nightwing filling-in on a case story and Paul Dini’s Hush vs. Catwoman story. This is certainly the most special of the three, being written by Neil Gaiman, whose comic work is increasingly welcome as it gets increasingly rare.

Entitled “Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?”, it’s a very conscious evocation of Alan Moore’s “Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?” story, which served as a fake last Superman story to finish up the pre-Crisis Superman story. The title is the main similarity; this isn’t a possible last Batman story along the lines of The Dark Knight Returns (and heck, even that last Batman story got a sequel) so much as a very Neil Gaiman-y story about the possible death of Batman as a fictional character, and various other fictional characters coming to his wake (including, interestingly, Batman himself).

In fact, it seems to have a lot more to do with Morrison’s own “everything really happened” take on Batman comics that Morrison explored throughout his run and Morrison’s never-ending metafictional meditations in Final Crisis than it does Moore’s old Superman story. (Whether this is a coincidence or if Morrison and Gaiman talked about their stories is unclear; certainly Gaiman’s comics work has similarly dealt with characters as embodiments of fiction just as strongly as Morrison’s has, albeit in mystical rather than science-fiction terms).

So: Batman is dead. His body is in a coffin in the back room of the Dew Drop Inn in Gotham’s Crime Alley, and guests arrive to view his body, talk to one another, and tell the story of how he died. Conflicting stories, naturally.

It may remind you of Gaiman’s “The Wake” story in The Sandman, which is understandable, as both feature wakes for the title characters of their comics, attended by the supporting casts. It may also remind you of Sandman's “World’s End” arc, but only in so much as it deals with characters coming together to tell stories, which isn’t a Gaiman thing so much as a Canterbury Tales and the fifteen thousand works it inspired thing.

The attendees don’t seem to come from any set continuity. The Catwoman who arrives looks to be the Silver Age Catwoman, but the one who tells her story looks like Earth-2 Catwoman (and is wearing a completely different dress than the first one we see), and in the story entitled “The Cat-Woman’s Tale”, she begins as the Golden Age, first appearance Catwoman and moves through several different incarnations. The original Joker pulls up in his Joker mobile, yet inside it’s the Batman: The Animated Series Joker.

It doesn’t seem right, as Batman himself remarks. He’s present throughout, as a voice talking to someone, and, finally, as a shadow in the story, talking to a female shadow, who may or may not be a familiar Gaiman character.

The conceit is cute, and it’s interesting that while Catwoman’s story is built from “real” stories, Alfred’s is a completely different one than we’ve ever been told (at least, than one I’ve ever heard), and has the makings of an interesting Elseworlds sort of story. But those are the only stories, which seems a little odd—that leaves space for only two, possibly three more, and, well, there are a lot of Batman characters, aren’t there?

The art is by pencil artist Andy Kubert and inker Scott Williams and it’s extremely frustrating. Not because of any inadequacy—a weird figure of Damian al Ghul is the only real deficiency in the whole book I noticed—but precisely because it is so good.

Kubert, you’ll recall, was at one time the regular, “monthly” artist on Batman, partnered with Morrison, but he only managed about two story arcs before falling hopelessly behind, even with fill-ins by other artists—and at least two months worth of issues by an entirely different creative team—built in to the schedule.

He’s a really quite skilled artist and, unlike the pencil artist hired to follow him, he can actually keep up with Morrison. Not only was his art nice looking, but it was full of the sorts of things that his replacement’s Tony Daniel’s was missing, he managed to pull off some nice scenes I can’t imagine Daniel even attempting (the fight in the art gallery during the pop art exhibit, for example).

It’s somewhat frustrating then to see his work here, as Gaiman’s story, like the one Morrison was telling throughout his Batman run, is full of call backs to the work of past Batman artists, only Kubert is actually able to pull off art work that looks like Bob Kane’s or Dick Sprang’s or Neal Adams’ or Jim Aparo’s or Bruce Timm’s or Jack Burnley’s or David Mazzucchelli’s. Imagine what he would have been able to do on “Batman R.I.P.”…if only he could draw on a monthly schedule (Which he can’t; even given all the lead time he had on this two 32-page issue project, he’s apparently already behind schedule on the second installment) .

Ah well. This is a very nice project, and he does a great job. Easy to read lay out with more than four panels per page, logical mis en scene, backgrounds, feet, facial expressions, variation in character design…it’s like there’s a real comic book artist drawing Batman again, just like in the good old days!

I suppose in the grand scheme of things, this is more of a pretty damn good Batman story than The Greatest Batman Story Ever Told, and I wonder if it will ever even become a classic comparable to “Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?” But I was just as impressed with Gaiman’s work as I was with Kubert’s. He has a very naturalistic, very novelistic way of telling a story in comic book form; not by writing comics like novels shoved into panels, but by simply telling a story through dialogue. You don’t need things explained to you in a Gaiman comic; exposition, info dumping, an intrusive narrator…no need for any of that. The characters simply talking to one another is what tells the story. That is, Gaiman shows rather than tells, which make his comics such a pleasure to read.

Great script, great art, great comic book. It’s so simple really, that it’s amazing reading experiences like this are as rare as they are.



Batman Confidential #26 (DC) In a rather odd synchronicity, I just reread a twenty-year-old Batman story that Neil Gaiman wrote to prepare a post about Gaiman’s previous Batman comics, and in one of those stories he has The Riddler lamenting the bygone days of the ‘60s, as epitomized by the Adam West-starring TV show.

“And there were these guys you never see anymore…” Riddler says, before rattling off a list: “Book Worm. King Tut. Marsha, Queen of Diamonds. Egg Head.”

And yet the cover of this issue, the first in a story arc introducing the TV show villain King Tut into the comics, bears the tag “First Time Ever In Gotham!”

Which is it DC?!

Okay, so it doesn’t really matter. I think it’s kind of (well, mildly) exciting that they’re introducing a TV show villain into the comics, and am surprised it took so long. In general, such pre-existing characters tend to fit in pretty well with the comics their home medium adapted them from. Some do so perfectly (Batman: The Animated Series’ Harley Quinn), others find a way to make something exciting and interesting out of them (Isis in 52), but even those that are just sort of there (Superfriends’s Wonder Twins and Wendy and Marvin in Extreme Justice and Teen Titans, Superman: The Animated Series’s Livewire in the Superman comics) don’t exactly not work either, you know?

So shipping in some villains from the Batman live action show? Why not? They’ll be fresh and new to the comics and will likely at least feel like appropriate Bat-villains, whereas creating new rogues from scratch can be a much dicier proposal (Whatever the relative virtues of, say, Bane or Hush, they’re not exactly The Joker and Catwoman, you know?).

The writing team of Nunzio DeFilippis and Chrstina Weir are the ones writing this new story arc, “A New Dawn,” and their King Tut is a lot different than the one on the TV show. For one thing, he’s definitely not tubby—he’s actually super-buff—and his skin is dark. He’s a mysterious presence throughout the issue, we only seem him appearing before folks connected to a museum, reciting a riddle, and then murdering them in a fashion that evokes the answer to the riddle.

He has only one conversation with Batman, in which he talks about the arrival of the sun god in Gotham and that sort of crazy talk.

So there’s nothing exactly revolutionary going on here. Thematic psycho villain shows up, starts killing folks. Batman immediately expects The Riddler is involved since, you know, riddles, and while The Riddler doesn’t appear to be, he seems miffed that someone else is stealing his schtick, so he joins the hunt. I’m almost positive I’ve seen this exact same thing happen between The Riddler and Cluemaster at least once before, but now I can’t think of where exactly.

If the scripting isn’t great, it’s not at all bad either—it’s pretty much your mean average Batman comic. The art, however, is head and shoulders above a majority of your mean average Batman comics (particularly of late), as it’s penciled by Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez and inked by Kevin Nowlan. Even David Baron’s coloring is pretty nice, depicting the dawn and dusk times of the killings very well.


Black Lightning: Year One #3 (DC) When I started contributing to Blog@, I started doing a weekly run-down of new releases that look good/bad/somehow funny to me (basically, a more superhero-focused version of Jog and Brady’s superior versions, with bad jokes and drawings). That means a couple times a week now, I pore over the Diamond shipping lists, Amazon.com listings and publisher websites, thinking intently about what comics and graphic novels are coming out that week. You would think that would mean I’m less likely to completely forget about what comics are coming out that week when I got to the store the next morning—or at least I would think that—but no dice: I still inevitably forget a book or so each week.

Last week it was this issue of BL:Y1, which was perfectly fine. Jen Van Meter has gone past the necessary part of the story—it only took two issues to tell us who Jefferson Pierce is and how and why he came to be Black Lightning—and she’s now moved into the less necessary two-thirds of the series, which will revolve around his fight with Tobias Whale and The 100. That makes it slightly less interesting to me, as I was most interested in how this 1970s character would be updated to the 21st century, but its all done pretty well.

This week I forgot to get Super Friends #12, which is the one with Pirate Starro on the cover. Man, I suck


Booster Gold #17 (DC) Speaking of unnecessary origin retellings in the backs of DC Comics—as I was, er, a couple hundred words ago—the “O&O” back-up in this issue is a longer, less efficient version of the two-page version Mark Waid did with Dan Jurgens for 52, updated to include what’s gone on in the title, clumsily revealed in forced dialogue between Booster and Rip Tyler (“I’m proud of you, Booster. You’ve done well. Your turnaround began when you faked your death, masqueraded as Supernova—and ended up saving the Multiverse”) and a couple pictures of Scar and KE7. As Jurgens draws it, Scar seems to be shooting the ink/black tears out of her left eye in projectile fashion, rather than crying them. I’m not sure about the mechanics of the whole eye liquid/image-creation process, to tell the truth.

There is a panel of Booster unmasking Black Beetle in either prehistoric times or the Batcave, and an image of the Wolfman/Perez Titans, which I assume are the “Omens” part of the “Origins & Omens” feature. Those might be kind of exciting.



Captain Britain and MI13 #10 (Marvel) There’s a scene in this issue wherein Dracula enters his secret vampire laboratory staffed with vampire scientists on the moon, and then launches a secret weapon, which shoots super-vampires like torpedoes out of moon craters in geysers of blood at his enemies on earth that made me think of Mike Mignola’s zanier elements in his Hellboy-iverse books. And it was really just a scene, one part of several well done ones that take advantage of the rich texture of the Marvel Universe—locales, characters, past story lines—to tell something that feels fresh and exciting by the way it synthesizes all these elements.

So Dr. Doom and Dracula hammer out a non-aggression treaty, The Black Knight and Faiza visit Storm in Wakanda to pick up the Ebony Blade that got left there in the first arc of Hudlin’s Black Pantehr run and flirt with one another on the trip back, Pete Wisdom and Captain Britain meet some girls in a bar, Blade and Spitfire go on a date, and bloody Nosferatu-looking vampire rockets rain down on Britain, which Dracula seeks to conquer to found a vampire nation, from which he promises to fight Islam for Dr. Doom. (Like Dracula’s recent appearance in the Buffy comics, this Dracula is a racist Dracula).

That’s…that’s just a whole lot of good stuff for 22 pages, and it’s just the broad strokes. It’s all the little details that really make the book fun.



Comic Book Comics #3 (Evil Twin Comics) So does the fact that this issue features an “Approved By The Comics Code Authority” stamp with arms and legs threatening Roy Lichtenstein and Fredrick Wertham with a red hot CCA brand mean that it is approved by the Comics Code Authority or not…?

In the third issue of Fred “Writes Incredible Hercules” Van Lente and Ryan Dunlavey’s comic book about the history of comics, they cover Frederic Wertham (kinda like Ten-Cent Plague, but with pictures!) and the rise of pop artists and their affection for comics (Warhol, Lichtenstein and the Batman TV show) and what these things meant for comic books as an industry. Starring Wertham, Julius Schwartz, Harvey Kurtzman, William Gaines, Jack Kirby, Stan Lee and the Crumb Brothers.

I learned a lot, some of which I wish I didn’t (Particularly that Adam West and Frank Gorshin once attended a Hollywood orgy), I laughed out loud a couple of times and I found myself filled with a desire for Van Lente and Dunlavey to someday do a comic book about Stan Lee and Jack Kirby being forced to share an apartment or being assigned as partners on the police force.



The Darkness #75 (Top Cow/Image Comics) This is the $4.99, 11th/“75th overall” anniversary jam issue of The Darkness, written by Phil Hester and drawn by a platoon of different artists of various sill levels (Joe Benitez, Michael Broussard, Lee Carter, Jorge Lucas, Marc Silvestri, Frazer Irving, Ryan Sook etc).

I would not and did not buy it, but my local comic shop gave it to me for free. Not because I’m so special or because they like me so much; they gave it to everyone for free, at Top Cow’s request. Apparently different shops are giving away different Top Cow comics for free, as part of a promotion plan of the company’s. I don’t know much about it really, I just know that they offered me a copy of this extra-length, $5 comic that shipped with five different covers, one of which is called “The All Beef Edition” for some reason. (Oh wait, hold up; I guess there are actually six covers if you count the “New York Comic-Con 2009 Variant Cover” by Broussard). Mine was Cover D, one of the three versions drawn by Broussard. It’s just a picture of The Darkness posing so that you can’t see his feet atop a fountain of scary monster faces that drool lava.

I probably would have turned them down, as I have no interest at all in The Darkness, one of those characters who, like Witchblade, I can’t even look at the design of. I don’t mean that in a This Character Is Awful and You Should Be Punched If You Like Him kinda way, just that I’ve always found the character design so repellent to my own personal aesthetics that I’ve never been the least bit attracted to the thought of reading a story about the character. (Not even one in which he fights Batman, and generally anyone vs. Batman is at least worth a glance, right?) But this was meant as a good jumping on point, and I knew I liked at least some of the artists involved (Irving, Sook) and you can’t beat the price.

So, I accepted it, read it and now I am going to tell you about it.

It was a good jumping on point, which is why I’m sure Top Cow thought this one would be a good one to try promoting with some complimentary copies. Between the text paragraph on the title page, the coda scene set in the present, and the bulk of the issue, which seems to be set in a post-apocalyptic future, I felt like I got a pretty good grasp of who Jackie Estacado was, what his powers are, how good or bad a guy he is, and the types of conflicts he’d have to deal with. Despite some call backs to other characters, it also functioned well enough as a standalone unit, with a beginning, middle and end.

If you’re at all curious about The Darkness, this does seem like an okay place to start.

As for that story, it’s sometime in the future, and the world is enshrouded in lower-case-d darkness, and haunted by purple narration boxes (“And the clever animals that built them—the humans—scurry through the ruins like the vermin they once reviled. Dying beasts on a dying world. Whatever made them human spilled out of them and into the cracked earth long ago.” And like that).

The ruined streets are patrolled by warrior nuns, most of whom are built like superheroes (Joe Benitez draws these pages), and are trying to usher a boy prophet to one of their headquarters, while The Darkness (with a capital D) and his darkling demons try to stop them. In the future, The Darkness’ hair will be white, and it will vary in length from very long to mane-like to cape-like, depending on the artists. Sometimes he will have strange facial musculature, too.

There are allusions to past struggles between these nuns and The Darkness, and dissension in D.’s ranks of demons, who are all aspects of him, and there will be a lot of fighting and then the world will end, and we learn this was just a possible future, and future issues presumably take place back in the past, our present.

The specifics of the nun vs. Darkness war seemed overly familiar to me, as the warrior nuns are of the order of Magdalena, who apparently had a prophecy at one point, and it reminded me of Chrono Crusade, which also had warrior nuns of the order of Magdalena who fought demons and lived according to Maggie’s prophecies. That, in turn, reminded me how superior Chrono Crusade was. Thirty-seven pages of that, all with consistent art that is better than the best art here, offers a reader a flurry of interesting designs, a more unique setting, more developed characters and extremely well executed action.

So if you would like to read a good comic about warrior nuns fighting demons, well, you could certainly do better.

The artwork isn’t too terrible, and the artists change frequently enough to make the patchwork line-up seem more like the intentional celebration it is, rather than a we-need-37-pages-of-art-at-the-end-of-the-month!!!! kind of thing. Some of its really good, some of it really plain and ordinary, but none of it offensive to the eyes or anything—even Benitez, who drew probably the worst issue of a Justice League comic ever printed, is on sure footing here. The only part that bugged me is the sequence where Estacado tells a follower to hold out his hands (plural) repeatedly, and yet the art shows the follower holding out a single hand.

Maybe I will look for that Batman crossover now, or that totally nutty crossover with Witchblade, Predator and Aliens.


Trinity #37 (DC) So, have you been wondering where The Joker has been, and what his life would be like in a DCU where there was never a Batman? Me neither, but the back-up in this week’s issue of Trinity, penciled by Scott McDaniel, deals with that, as the Bad Trinity recruits The Joker, whom they first glimpse sitting upon a pile of dead puppies (“Happiness is a warmp puppy! If only they’d stop cooling off!”). That would probably be pretty gross, if it weren’t drawn in McDaniel’s elastic, abstract style.

The front half of the book continues (and hopefully concludes?) the Trinity’s flashback to their war on Egg World. The three of them have a big, huge fight that lays waste to much of this world, a fight so fierce that it costs Wonder Woman and Superman their loincloths. The half-man, half-bat version of Batman, a big scary furry, sees his friends turned foes’ unclothed genitals, and the fighting stops, the trio of gods deciding that they should all be married in a three-way, two-grooms-and-one-bride ceremony (Or, as writer Kurt Busiek puts it, “They were bound together in a great ceremony. As the three who had been three became the three who were one”) and all live happily together in the same apartment. At least, that was my reading.

I may have mentioned this about 30 other times, but I haven’t been crazy about the covers on this series, which has been a series of twelve different triptychs so far, which has gotten a little old over time. This one, by Jesus Merino, is yet another, but at least it’s on a black cover instead of a mostly white one, differentiating it rather strongly from the ones that came before.