It's the cute little skull belt-buckle I think that makes Teen Titans: Earth One's Slade Wilson the best Slade Wilson (Well, that, and I like how different he is from the other ultra-bad-ass versions of the character. He's like a super-assassin gone to seed here, and a poor schmuck in over his head trying to be a good dad. That's obviously a pretty different take). You can read my review of the book here, if you're so inclined.
As with the previous books in the line, it doesn't make sense on, like, an existential level--for example, I'm not sure why this wasn't The New 52 Titans relaunch, save for the fact that Cyborg and Starfire were already assigned roles in Justice League and Red Hood and The Outlaws, I guess--but, unlike those books, it's actually quite good.
Friday, November 21, 2014
Wednesday, November 19, 2014
Comic shop comics: November 19
Batman Etenral #33 (DC Comics) Jason Fabok draws and Kyle Higgins scripts while Julie Pennyworth and Batman run around Gotham City, manually turning on the sprinkler systems in the 17 remaining Bat-Bunkers before Hush can explode them all. The sprinkler systems rain down hydrocholric acid, not water, you see, so doing so removes the threat posed by the bunkers, which Batman has crammed full of plastic explosives and grenades for some reason, even though he seems to do 99% of his fighting via bat-shaped projectiles.
I was a little unclear as to why Batman reluctantly accepts Julia's help—and doesn't even give her a domino mask!—and why he doesn't call in any one else to help. Even if Red Hood left town and Batwing is all banged-up, Red Robin and Batgirl should still be hanging around somewhere, right?
Not a terribly eventful issue, really, but then, this being a weekly series, it doesn't really have to be all that eventful every issue.
Batman '66 Meets The Green Hornet #6 (DC) Well, I'm glad that's finally over. Don't get me wrong, it wasn't a bad comic by any stretch of the imagination, and artist Ty Templeton's work was always a pleasure to see, but six issues—that's 120 pages—is a little excessive for a story simply trying to hit the beats of an hour-long television show. This read a lot like a four-issue arc stretched into six-issues...and something the regular Batman '66 title could have handled in a single issue.
Lumberjanes #8 (Boom Studios) I kind of want to call bullshit on The Lumberjanes using a fastball special at the climax of this, the concluding chapter of the now ongoing series' first story arc, but I think the fact that Ripley screams "I'm a fastbaaaaaaaall!" while being thrown sufficiently differentiates it from Colossus and Wolverine's version.
I laughed out loud four times this issue, which is a pretty good number of times to laugh out loud during a single comic book these days.
The Multiversity: Pax Americana #1 (DC) There's nothing too terribly surprising about writer Grant Morrison going out of his way to tweak fellow comics writer Alan Moore. By his own admission in his kinda sorta biography Super Gods, Morrison made a habit out of attacking Moore early in his own career, although he never really explained why he did so, beyond the cultivation of some sort of "bad boy" image. And it has apparently never been very difficult to get Morrison to say something negative about Moore in an interview, based on all the negative quotes one can find in Morrison interviews.
Therefore it shouldn't be too surprising to see Morrison devoting an entire chapter of his The Multiversity project—a solid 40-pages—to what amounts to a conversation with Moore and artist Dave Gibbons' seminal 1986-1987 work Watchmen. Morrison had the good sense to decline—or good luck to avoid—doing one of DC's risible, reprehensible Before Watchmen comics, but then, if he already had Pax Americana in the works, he didn't really need to—this is as much a pastiche of Watchmen as it is an engagement with it.
And yet, it is still surprising, to a degree, that when approaching the source material for some of the surface details of Moore and David Gibbons' Watchmen, Morrison didn't do something new and original (something the fiercely, volcanically creative writer has never shown any problem doing), or even slightly remix and represent that source material in a way that honors its original form (something else Morrison is fond of doing in his superhero work). Rather, he looks to Moore and Gibbons' take, and extrapolates from that, as if he simply couldn't resist the temptation of taking on Watchmen rather than re-creating the setting and characters that inspired Watchmen into something all his own.
It will certainly make reviews of Pax Americana more interesting to read, it may even garner some more attention than past or future issues of Multiversity did (but I don't know; we may have already spent all our outrage on the subject during DC's announcement and roll out of the now practically forgotten Before Watchmen comics), but it also seems unfortunate in several ways. First, it threatens to warp Multiversity, with this chapter's critic-baiting premise drawing all the focus that should be distributed a little more evenly upon the series as a whole, and, second, it's a pretty huge wasted opportunity, since Morrison isn't re-creating "Earth-4" and The Charlton Comics heroes, but using analogues of Moore and Gibbons' analogues.
In essence, Morrison and his frequent (and best) artistic collaborator Frank Quitely are just deconstructing a deconstructed comic book, using the original characters that the super-people of Watchmen were analogues of as analogues of those analogues. The symbol repeated most often throughout the comic is the sideways "8" of infinity, but it might as well be an ouroboros.
So DC Comics acquired most of the superhero characters originally published by Charlton Comics in 1983, an acquisition no doubt helped along by the fact that former Charlton editor Dick Giordano was at that time a managing editor at DC. The characters—including Blue Beetle, The Question, Captain Atom and so on—debuted in Crisis On Infinite Earths, and, like other groups of heroes acquired from other publishers in the past (Those from Fawcett and Quality, for example), the Charlton heroes were assigned their own parallel Earth, Earth-4.
Alan Moore originally planned to use the Charlton heroes in Watchmen, been when DC nixed that idea, he and Gibbons instead created their own heroes, all of whom had only the most superficial of resemblances to the characters that inspired them (Costuming and powers/skills, for the most part). As for the heroes of Earth-4, they were all folded into the DC Universe proper when The Multiverse was smooshed into a single shared universe at the conclusion of Crisis.
This issue of Multiversity, the series exploring the new, restored Multiverse, is the one focused on Earth-4, and Morrison's Earth-4 bears an incredible, uncomfortable resemblance to that of Watchmen. It's not just the surface details, from the title's allusion to ancient Rome, the close-up image of an innocuous symbol being marred into unrecognizability on the cover, the repeated visual references of drops of blood in the corners of symbols or the alternate real-world history (look, it's President Bush!).
No, Morrison even goes with the same characterizations. So Captain Atom, like Dr. Manhattan, is blue and has an atomic symbol in the middle of his forehead (Dr. Manhattan imagery applied to Captain Atom, despite the fact that the latter is the supposed source of the former), and also a remote, disinterested and dangerous super-god (who talks about reality here in the same way Morrison's 5D creatures talked about it in his "Crisis Times Five" JLA arc almost 20 years ago).
The Question dresses more like Rorshach than The Question, takes Rorshach's vocal ticks and plays the role of the unstable, overly-violent outsider among the heroes, even putting a villain in a pretty shitty set of circumstances in much the same way Rorshach did a villain in Watchmen (though the stakes here aren't as terrifyingly dramatic).
Nightshade is, like Silk Spectre, the second-generation legacy version of the original, a fairly disturbed woman (albeit for different reasons). And Blue Beetle, like Nite-Owl, has problems getting it up.
The comic is, also like Watchmen, relentlessly formal, although it varies a great deal in panel layouts. It is, as you might expect from any Quitely comic, let alone one as interested in the formal ways in which comics work, gorgeous, with characters walking, fighting, flying and falling through panels, which are sometimes read right to left and up to down, as per usual, or in reverse, or all the way across a two-page spread in a series of extra-long tiers, or moving back and forth as if the page lay-out was long, winding staircase (on a page depicting an actual stair case), and, in a few cases, even seemingly atomizing into countless tiny images that offer a semi-cubist POV, only without the cubist style that defined actual cubism (Which is, of course, unnecessary, when you can freeze multiple points of view in different, distinct, individual 2D squares).
The Watchmen allusions really get in the way of a comic book story that is, otherwise, fascinating in the way it reads (although that too, I suspect, is a response to Watchmen; like the graphic novel its obsessed with, Pax Americana is all about how its read, but it reads much more wildly and with greater variance.
My favorite part was the confrontation between Blue Beetle Ted Kord and The Question (although Quitely's action scenes, as when The Question and Nightshade fight, or when The Peacemaker storms the White House to rescue Prsident Bush from terrorists, are both pretty spectacular). And that's mostly because of how awesome Quitely's redesign of Blue Beetle's bug ship, given a rounder shape and bigger eyes to make it more owl-like, I'm guessing, is:
It is so...so...so cute, I love it.
I finished this issue and immediately wanted to spend more time on Quitely's Earth-4, if only to see him drawing these characters, and that ship, in action.
New 52: Futures End #29 (DC) That thing you've been expecting to happen for months now involving Firestorm? It finally happens in this issue, as Tim Drake, Ronnie Raymond and Jason Rusch all try to save Madison Payne from an experimental teleportation tube in evil Dr. Yamazake's lab. The cover spoils which two characters make-up this new iteration of Firestorm; you can tell whose body it is at a glance, but the faces in the yellow streaks of light reveal the other half of Firestorm.
This issue, drawn by Patrick Zircher, was a rather rare one in that it was entirely devoted to a single sequence, without any digressions to check in on any of the other sub-plots.
Sensation Comics #4 (DC) Last month retailer, industry advocate and Savage Critic Brian Hibbs noted how horribly the cover of Sensation Comics matched its relatively delightful interiors, the former and the latter apparently aimed at two entirely different audiences, each of which would be repulsed by one or the other.
To paraphrase a great American philosopher, Oops, they did it again.
This time the fairly generic Wonder Woman pose image on the cover isn't as violent as last month's Reis image, which showed a close-up of a roaring Wonder Woman charging through a cloud of blood while throttling a orc-like opponent with her golden noose of strangulation. Instead, the uncredited image shows Wonder Woman flying above rose-colored clouds, being lit dramatically by the rising (or is it setting?) sun. The problem? It's not that the cut of her underoos is so high that they seem to be disappearing into her, or that the shape of her nipple is clearly visible through her painted-on costume.
No, it's the fact that you can see both her entire ass and both of her breasts at the same time, making this pose a clear-cut, unequivocal case of a "broke-back" pose. If there's one comic book character that should never be posed that way, it's probably Wonder Woman, and the fact that she's posed that way on the paper, hard-copy edition of the digital-first series Sensation Comics only compounds the wrongness. Sensation Comics is a comic for the Internet, right? Surely its makers should know better than to avoid problems routinely pointed out by the Internet!
(If I had to guess, I'd guess this was an Adam Hughes image, based on the lighting, the figure work and the baggy boots, the latter of which is a sort of Hughes trademark, but try as I might, I can't find the familiar "AH!" signature anywhere on the cover.)
Compounding it further? This issue has the remaining 14-pages of the 20-page Gilbert Hernandez story "No Chains Can Hold Her!", which began in Sensation #3. So that's two issues in a row where they went with something dumb and not a Gilbert Hernandez drawing when they had Giblert Hernandez comics on the inside to sell. Ideally, this issue would have been a $2.99/20-page issue, consisting solely of Hernandez's story in its entirety, and with a Hernandez drawn image on the cover.
I'm pretty sure a Gilbert Hernandez comic book-comic would sell a lot of issues. And gain a lot of attention. To and from people beyond those that normally read DC Comics.
So this issue kicks off with pages 7-20 of Hernandez's Silver Age Wonder Woman vs. Silver Age Supergirl story, with the force of their collisions in the battle being such that they open a portal to a different dimension through which comes Mary Marvel. And now there's three super-ladies slugging it out for the amusement of Kanjar Ro and Sayyar.
It's pretty fucking awesome.
If there's anything better than that page, I don't know what it could possibly be. (Maybe if they were throwing Hal Jordan at each other...?)
Dr. Sivana, Captain Marvel and Captain Marvel Jr. also make a one-panel cameo.
Too bad colorist John Rauch miscolors Supergirl's hair on the last page she appears in...unless the implication is that Wonder Woman and Mary Marvel hit her so hard they knocked the blond right off her hair...?
That's followed by a ten-pager written by Rob Williams and drawn by Tom "Hey, where's he been?" Lyle, an artist I've always had enormous affection for on account of him being one of the first dozen or so comics artists whose work I encountered (On the first Robin miniseries).
This story has the inevitable title of "Attack of the 500-Foot Wonder Woman" (No one has used that particular riff before?), which sees Wonder Woman teaming up with The Atom and Hawkman and Hawkgirl to taken on shape-changing Thanagarian criminal Byth, taking the monstrous form he did upon his original Silver Age appearance—only bigger.
We join the battle en medias res, with Wonder Woman grown to Godzilla proportions by some sort of growth field The Atom concocted. The action is set in Gateway City, which would seem to suggest that its set in the Byrne era, but everyone's costumes seem to place the story somewhere between the late Silver Age and so-called Bronze Age. Definitely Satellite Era, in terms of JLA history.
Lyle's art, which he inks himself, is a real treat, although I have to say he seems to draw the other characters even better than he does Wonder Woman—not that there's anything wrong with his Wonder Woman, of course.
I liked Williams' portrayal of the character, too. She fights, and wins the fight, but shows mercy on her enemy, solving the problem at the root of Byth's attack and, one imagines, changing him into a better person through her actions. That sounds a lot more like the Wonder Woman I know than the one that appeared in this week's other two Wonder Woman comics, Wonder Woman and Superman/Wonder Woman.
The final story in the issue teams Wonder Woman and Etta Candy—appearing in a modified, taller version of her Golden Age design—with Deadman, as they attempt to wrest a stolen purple healing ray away from Batman villain Ra's al Ghul (Sensation #4 really reads an awful lot like a Wonder Woman team-up title). Writer Neil Kleid and artist Dean Haspiel pack a hell of a lot of story into a ten-page story, including tons of surface action, the rather fun comedy of Deadman trying to convince Wonder Woman he's real despite the fact that she can't see him, and can only hear him when he's possessing soemone else, and Wonder Woman learning a lesson about respecting the beliefs of others, even if those beliefs are not her own. Like, for example, she doesn't believe in ghosts, which no doubt makes Deadman's attempts to convince her of his presence all the more difficult.
The script is a fine one, but the greatest pleasure here is seeing Haspiel get his pencil and pen on so many characters. In addition to the those mentioned, there's also a neat little sequence in which we get to see what Haspiel's Hawks, Spectre and Ragman all look like.
If you guessed "awesome," you guessed right.
I was a little unclear as to why Batman reluctantly accepts Julia's help—and doesn't even give her a domino mask!—and why he doesn't call in any one else to help. Even if Red Hood left town and Batwing is all banged-up, Red Robin and Batgirl should still be hanging around somewhere, right?
Not a terribly eventful issue, really, but then, this being a weekly series, it doesn't really have to be all that eventful every issue.
Batman '66 Meets The Green Hornet #6 (DC) Well, I'm glad that's finally over. Don't get me wrong, it wasn't a bad comic by any stretch of the imagination, and artist Ty Templeton's work was always a pleasure to see, but six issues—that's 120 pages—is a little excessive for a story simply trying to hit the beats of an hour-long television show. This read a lot like a four-issue arc stretched into six-issues...and something the regular Batman '66 title could have handled in a single issue.
Lumberjanes #8 (Boom Studios) I kind of want to call bullshit on The Lumberjanes using a fastball special at the climax of this, the concluding chapter of the now ongoing series' first story arc, but I think the fact that Ripley screams "I'm a fastbaaaaaaaall!" while being thrown sufficiently differentiates it from Colossus and Wolverine's version.
I laughed out loud four times this issue, which is a pretty good number of times to laugh out loud during a single comic book these days.
The Multiversity: Pax Americana #1 (DC) There's nothing too terribly surprising about writer Grant Morrison going out of his way to tweak fellow comics writer Alan Moore. By his own admission in his kinda sorta biography Super Gods, Morrison made a habit out of attacking Moore early in his own career, although he never really explained why he did so, beyond the cultivation of some sort of "bad boy" image. And it has apparently never been very difficult to get Morrison to say something negative about Moore in an interview, based on all the negative quotes one can find in Morrison interviews.
Therefore it shouldn't be too surprising to see Morrison devoting an entire chapter of his The Multiversity project—a solid 40-pages—to what amounts to a conversation with Moore and artist Dave Gibbons' seminal 1986-1987 work Watchmen. Morrison had the good sense to decline—or good luck to avoid—doing one of DC's risible, reprehensible Before Watchmen comics, but then, if he already had Pax Americana in the works, he didn't really need to—this is as much a pastiche of Watchmen as it is an engagement with it.
And yet, it is still surprising, to a degree, that when approaching the source material for some of the surface details of Moore and David Gibbons' Watchmen, Morrison didn't do something new and original (something the fiercely, volcanically creative writer has never shown any problem doing), or even slightly remix and represent that source material in a way that honors its original form (something else Morrison is fond of doing in his superhero work). Rather, he looks to Moore and Gibbons' take, and extrapolates from that, as if he simply couldn't resist the temptation of taking on Watchmen rather than re-creating the setting and characters that inspired Watchmen into something all his own.
It will certainly make reviews of Pax Americana more interesting to read, it may even garner some more attention than past or future issues of Multiversity did (but I don't know; we may have already spent all our outrage on the subject during DC's announcement and roll out of the now practically forgotten Before Watchmen comics), but it also seems unfortunate in several ways. First, it threatens to warp Multiversity, with this chapter's critic-baiting premise drawing all the focus that should be distributed a little more evenly upon the series as a whole, and, second, it's a pretty huge wasted opportunity, since Morrison isn't re-creating "Earth-4" and The Charlton Comics heroes, but using analogues of Moore and Gibbons' analogues.
In essence, Morrison and his frequent (and best) artistic collaborator Frank Quitely are just deconstructing a deconstructed comic book, using the original characters that the super-people of Watchmen were analogues of as analogues of those analogues. The symbol repeated most often throughout the comic is the sideways "8" of infinity, but it might as well be an ouroboros.
So DC Comics acquired most of the superhero characters originally published by Charlton Comics in 1983, an acquisition no doubt helped along by the fact that former Charlton editor Dick Giordano was at that time a managing editor at DC. The characters—including Blue Beetle, The Question, Captain Atom and so on—debuted in Crisis On Infinite Earths, and, like other groups of heroes acquired from other publishers in the past (Those from Fawcett and Quality, for example), the Charlton heroes were assigned their own parallel Earth, Earth-4.
Alan Moore originally planned to use the Charlton heroes in Watchmen, been when DC nixed that idea, he and Gibbons instead created their own heroes, all of whom had only the most superficial of resemblances to the characters that inspired them (Costuming and powers/skills, for the most part). As for the heroes of Earth-4, they were all folded into the DC Universe proper when The Multiverse was smooshed into a single shared universe at the conclusion of Crisis.
This issue of Multiversity, the series exploring the new, restored Multiverse, is the one focused on Earth-4, and Morrison's Earth-4 bears an incredible, uncomfortable resemblance to that of Watchmen. It's not just the surface details, from the title's allusion to ancient Rome, the close-up image of an innocuous symbol being marred into unrecognizability on the cover, the repeated visual references of drops of blood in the corners of symbols or the alternate real-world history (look, it's President Bush!).
No, Morrison even goes with the same characterizations. So Captain Atom, like Dr. Manhattan, is blue and has an atomic symbol in the middle of his forehead (Dr. Manhattan imagery applied to Captain Atom, despite the fact that the latter is the supposed source of the former), and also a remote, disinterested and dangerous super-god (who talks about reality here in the same way Morrison's 5D creatures talked about it in his "Crisis Times Five" JLA arc almost 20 years ago).
The Question dresses more like Rorshach than The Question, takes Rorshach's vocal ticks and plays the role of the unstable, overly-violent outsider among the heroes, even putting a villain in a pretty shitty set of circumstances in much the same way Rorshach did a villain in Watchmen (though the stakes here aren't as terrifyingly dramatic).
Nightshade is, like Silk Spectre, the second-generation legacy version of the original, a fairly disturbed woman (albeit for different reasons). And Blue Beetle, like Nite-Owl, has problems getting it up.
The comic is, also like Watchmen, relentlessly formal, although it varies a great deal in panel layouts. It is, as you might expect from any Quitely comic, let alone one as interested in the formal ways in which comics work, gorgeous, with characters walking, fighting, flying and falling through panels, which are sometimes read right to left and up to down, as per usual, or in reverse, or all the way across a two-page spread in a series of extra-long tiers, or moving back and forth as if the page lay-out was long, winding staircase (on a page depicting an actual stair case), and, in a few cases, even seemingly atomizing into countless tiny images that offer a semi-cubist POV, only without the cubist style that defined actual cubism (Which is, of course, unnecessary, when you can freeze multiple points of view in different, distinct, individual 2D squares).
The Watchmen allusions really get in the way of a comic book story that is, otherwise, fascinating in the way it reads (although that too, I suspect, is a response to Watchmen; like the graphic novel its obsessed with, Pax Americana is all about how its read, but it reads much more wildly and with greater variance.
My favorite part was the confrontation between Blue Beetle Ted Kord and The Question (although Quitely's action scenes, as when The Question and Nightshade fight, or when The Peacemaker storms the White House to rescue Prsident Bush from terrorists, are both pretty spectacular). And that's mostly because of how awesome Quitely's redesign of Blue Beetle's bug ship, given a rounder shape and bigger eyes to make it more owl-like, I'm guessing, is:
It is so...so...so cute, I love it.
I finished this issue and immediately wanted to spend more time on Quitely's Earth-4, if only to see him drawing these characters, and that ship, in action.
New 52: Futures End #29 (DC) That thing you've been expecting to happen for months now involving Firestorm? It finally happens in this issue, as Tim Drake, Ronnie Raymond and Jason Rusch all try to save Madison Payne from an experimental teleportation tube in evil Dr. Yamazake's lab. The cover spoils which two characters make-up this new iteration of Firestorm; you can tell whose body it is at a glance, but the faces in the yellow streaks of light reveal the other half of Firestorm.
This issue, drawn by Patrick Zircher, was a rather rare one in that it was entirely devoted to a single sequence, without any digressions to check in on any of the other sub-plots.
Sensation Comics #4 (DC) Last month retailer, industry advocate and Savage Critic Brian Hibbs noted how horribly the cover of Sensation Comics matched its relatively delightful interiors, the former and the latter apparently aimed at two entirely different audiences, each of which would be repulsed by one or the other.
To paraphrase a great American philosopher, Oops, they did it again.
This time the fairly generic Wonder Woman pose image on the cover isn't as violent as last month's Reis image, which showed a close-up of a roaring Wonder Woman charging through a cloud of blood while throttling a orc-like opponent with her golden noose of strangulation. Instead, the uncredited image shows Wonder Woman flying above rose-colored clouds, being lit dramatically by the rising (or is it setting?) sun. The problem? It's not that the cut of her underoos is so high that they seem to be disappearing into her, or that the shape of her nipple is clearly visible through her painted-on costume.
No, it's the fact that you can see both her entire ass and both of her breasts at the same time, making this pose a clear-cut, unequivocal case of a "broke-back" pose. If there's one comic book character that should never be posed that way, it's probably Wonder Woman, and the fact that she's posed that way on the paper, hard-copy edition of the digital-first series Sensation Comics only compounds the wrongness. Sensation Comics is a comic for the Internet, right? Surely its makers should know better than to avoid problems routinely pointed out by the Internet!
(If I had to guess, I'd guess this was an Adam Hughes image, based on the lighting, the figure work and the baggy boots, the latter of which is a sort of Hughes trademark, but try as I might, I can't find the familiar "AH!" signature anywhere on the cover.)
Compounding it further? This issue has the remaining 14-pages of the 20-page Gilbert Hernandez story "No Chains Can Hold Her!", which began in Sensation #3. So that's two issues in a row where they went with something dumb and not a Gilbert Hernandez drawing when they had Giblert Hernandez comics on the inside to sell. Ideally, this issue would have been a $2.99/20-page issue, consisting solely of Hernandez's story in its entirety, and with a Hernandez drawn image on the cover.
I'm pretty sure a Gilbert Hernandez comic book-comic would sell a lot of issues. And gain a lot of attention. To and from people beyond those that normally read DC Comics.
So this issue kicks off with pages 7-20 of Hernandez's Silver Age Wonder Woman vs. Silver Age Supergirl story, with the force of their collisions in the battle being such that they open a portal to a different dimension through which comes Mary Marvel. And now there's three super-ladies slugging it out for the amusement of Kanjar Ro and Sayyar.
It's pretty fucking awesome.
If there's anything better than that page, I don't know what it could possibly be. (Maybe if they were throwing Hal Jordan at each other...?)
Dr. Sivana, Captain Marvel and Captain Marvel Jr. also make a one-panel cameo.
Too bad colorist John Rauch miscolors Supergirl's hair on the last page she appears in...unless the implication is that Wonder Woman and Mary Marvel hit her so hard they knocked the blond right off her hair...?
That's followed by a ten-pager written by Rob Williams and drawn by Tom "Hey, where's he been?" Lyle, an artist I've always had enormous affection for on account of him being one of the first dozen or so comics artists whose work I encountered (On the first Robin miniseries).
This story has the inevitable title of "Attack of the 500-Foot Wonder Woman" (No one has used that particular riff before?), which sees Wonder Woman teaming up with The Atom and Hawkman and Hawkgirl to taken on shape-changing Thanagarian criminal Byth, taking the monstrous form he did upon his original Silver Age appearance—only bigger.
We join the battle en medias res, with Wonder Woman grown to Godzilla proportions by some sort of growth field The Atom concocted. The action is set in Gateway City, which would seem to suggest that its set in the Byrne era, but everyone's costumes seem to place the story somewhere between the late Silver Age and so-called Bronze Age. Definitely Satellite Era, in terms of JLA history.
Lyle's art, which he inks himself, is a real treat, although I have to say he seems to draw the other characters even better than he does Wonder Woman—not that there's anything wrong with his Wonder Woman, of course.
I liked Williams' portrayal of the character, too. She fights, and wins the fight, but shows mercy on her enemy, solving the problem at the root of Byth's attack and, one imagines, changing him into a better person through her actions. That sounds a lot more like the Wonder Woman I know than the one that appeared in this week's other two Wonder Woman comics, Wonder Woman and Superman/Wonder Woman.
The final story in the issue teams Wonder Woman and Etta Candy—appearing in a modified, taller version of her Golden Age design—with Deadman, as they attempt to wrest a stolen purple healing ray away from Batman villain Ra's al Ghul (Sensation #4 really reads an awful lot like a Wonder Woman team-up title). Writer Neil Kleid and artist Dean Haspiel pack a hell of a lot of story into a ten-page story, including tons of surface action, the rather fun comedy of Deadman trying to convince Wonder Woman he's real despite the fact that she can't see him, and can only hear him when he's possessing soemone else, and Wonder Woman learning a lesson about respecting the beliefs of others, even if those beliefs are not her own. Like, for example, she doesn't believe in ghosts, which no doubt makes Deadman's attempts to convince her of his presence all the more difficult.
The script is a fine one, but the greatest pleasure here is seeing Haspiel get his pencil and pen on so many characters. In addition to the those mentioned, there's also a neat little sequence in which we get to see what Haspiel's Hawks, Spectre and Ragman all look like.
If you guessed "awesome," you guessed right.
Marvel's February previews reviewed
What's Marvel got planned for February of next year? Star Wars variant covers, mostly. And a few comics. Not as many comics as Star Wars variant covers, of course, but then, there aren't as many stars in the sky as there are Star Wars variant covers in this round of Marvel solicitations. You can, of course, read the full solicitations here, and get my usual sterling analysis below...
ALL-NEW CAPTAIN AMERICA #4
RICK REMENDER (W) • STUART IMMONEN (A/C)
VARIANT COVER BY PHIL NOTO
• Hydra initiates the next step in their scheme, millions of innocent souls hang in the balance.
• Cap is broken and nearly dead from the gauntlet of the new Hydra, so how can he take down the combined might of Cobra and the Armadillo in time to stop the great leveling?
• A mysterious woman from the past returns!
32 PGS./Rated T …$3.99
Is it weird that a supervillain named The Armadillo is so damn huge, when armadillos aren't really all that large? I mean, The Armadillo looks to be about twice the size of The Rhino and four times as large as Man-Elephant....
AVENGERS #41
JONATHAN HICKMAN (W) • STEFANO CASELLI (A)
Cover by BRYAN HITCH
VARIANT COVER BY PHIL NOTO
IN 3 MONTHS…TIME RUNS OUT!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$3.99
That can't possibly be the right cover, can it...?
DAREDEVIL #13
MARK WAID (W) • CHRIS SAMNEE (A/C)
VARIANT COVER BY PHIL NOTO
THE END BEGINS HERE!
• Mark Waid and Chis Samnee begin the climactic final chapter of their beloved, Eisner Award Winning run with the return of one of Matt Murdock’s oldest and (now) scariest enemies.
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$3.99
I can't help but think how much bigger a deal this solicitation copy's screaming of "THE END BEGINS HERE!" if this were issue #50—that is, if Marvel hadn't relaunched the book after the first 36 issues for no reason—than it it does when there's a #13 attached.
As for the "oldest and (now) scariest" enemy, I'm going to guess it's The Owl, on account of the fact that there's an owl on the cover.
DARTH VADER #1 & 2
KIERON GILLEN (w) • SALVADOR LARROCA (A)
CoverS by ADI GRANOV
ISSUE #1 - Teaser Variant by JOHN CASSADAY
CONNECTING VARIANT COVER B BY J. SCOTT CAMPBELL
VARIANT COVER BY ALEX ROSS
SKETCH VARIANT COVER BY ALEX ROSS
VARIANT COVER BY MICHAEL GOLDEN
VARIANT COVER BY MIKE DEL MUNDO
YOUNG VARIANT BY SKOTTIE YOUNG
ACTION FIGURE VARIANT BY JOHN TYLER CHRISTOPHER
MOVIE VARIANT COVER ALSO AVAILABLE
BLANK VARIANT COVER ALSO AVAILABLE
ISSUE #2 - VARIANT COVER BY WHILCE PORTACIO
VARIANT COVER BY TBA
The original Dark Lord of the Sith stars in his first ongoing series!
Ever since Darth Vader made his first on-screen appearance, he became the one of the most popular villains to ever haunt an audience’s dreams! Now, follow Vader straight from the ending of A NEW HOPE (and the pages of the new STAR WARS comic book) into his own series, showing the Empire’s war with the Rebel Alliance from the other side! Writer Kieron Gillen (Uncanny X-Men, Journey Into Mystery, Iron Man) and artist Salvador Larroca (Invincible Iron Man, X-Men: No More Humans) bring us a peek behind the mask of evil!
ISSUE #1 - 48 PGS./Rated T …$4.99
ISSUE #2 - 32 PGS./Rated T …$3.99
I was just about to call bullshit on the first sentence of the solicitation copy, when I realized it qualifies the statement with "ongoing;" okay, yes, that's true. While there have been a bunch of Darth Vader comics from Dark Horse, they have been in the format of a series of miniseries, rather than an ongoing.
I will call bullshit on the number of variant covers though. Jeez, just look at those things!
Oh come on Ed McGuinness; I thought you were a better artist than that! What's with the full broke-back posing of Magik, featuring both her entire butt and both boobs...? That's the cover of the first issue Guardians of the Galaxy & X-Men: The Black Vortex, which has almost as many characters in it as it has words in its title, based on that cover.
GUARDIANS TEAM-UP #1 & 2
BRIAN BENDIS (W) • ISSUE #1 - ART ADAMS (A/C)
...
• Launching directly out of Guardians of the Galaxy comes the new ongoing series bringing the Guardians to the Marvel Universe’s grandest stage for an opening arc of out-of-this-world adventures with some of the biggest hitters Marvel has to offer.
• Kicking off with a cosmic threat so massive, it’ll take more than just the Guardians of the Galaxy to stop it! Assembled side by side with the mighty Avengers, prepare for two titanic teams to unite like you’ve never seen before!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$3.99
ISSUE #2 - GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY and THE AVENGERS!
• Follow part two of this story as the Guardians of the Galaxy slam their way into the world of the Avengers – and only working together as a team will help them save the galaxy!
• Tension runs high when survival is at stake, and when the likes of Gamora, Black Widow, Hawkeye and Rocket are forced to problem solve together, it can mean only one thing is guaranteed – destruction!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$3.99
So what have we got now? Guardians of The Galaxy, Rocket Raccoon, Legendary Star-Lord, Guardians 3000 and now Guardians Team-Up. Marvel continues to search for the exact number of straws it will take to break this particular camel's back.
MS. MARVEL #12
G. WILLOW WILSON (W) • Takeshi Miyazawa (A)
Cover by KRIS ANKA
• Love is in Jersey City as Valentine’s Day arrives!
• Kamala Khan may not be allowed to go to the dance, but Ms. Marvel is!
• Well sort of – by crashing it attempting to capture Asgard’s most annoying trickster!
• Yup, it’s a special Valentine’s Day issue featuring Marvel’s favorite charlatan, Loki!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$2.99
Hmm...I'm feeling pretty torn here. On the one hand, after having just read the first trade paperback collection of the series, I don't really have any desire to see anyone other than Adrian Alphona drawing Ms. Marvel. On the other hand, I'm always happy to see Takeshi Miyazawa draw anything.
STAR WARS #2
JASON AARON (W) • JOHN CASSADAY (A/C)
SKETCH VARIANT COVER BY JOHN CASSADAY
ACTION FIGURE VARIANT BY JOHN TYLER CHRISTOPHER
VARIANT COVER BY Berkeley Breathed, PULITZER-PRIZE WINNING CREATOR OF BLOOM COUNTY
VARIANT COVER BY LEINIL YU
VARIANT COVER BY HOWARD CHAYKIN
THE GREATEST SPACE ADVENTURE OF ALL TIME CONTINUES!
• The Rebel assault on Cymoon 1 continues!
• Luke Skywalker – cornered by Darth Vader!
• Han, Leia, and the others – trapped!
32 PGS./Rated T …$3.99
Star Wars © Lucasfilm Ltd. & TM. All rights reserved. Used under authorization. Text and illustrations for Star Wars are © 2015 Lucasfilm Ltd.
So. Many. Variants. But the most interesting one of them all? "VARIANT COVER BY Berkeley Breathed, PULITZER-PRIZE WINNING CREATOR OF BLOOM COUNTY." What's that all about, I wonder, and why is he listed like that in the solicitation copy credits...?
OPERATION: S.I.N. #2 (of 5)
Kathryn Immonen (w)
Rich Ellis (A)
Cover by Michael Komarck
• When a UFO fires on Moscow because Howard can’t keep his finger off the button, Peggy and the team go underground but which one of them is already undercover?
• Woodrow McCord fights a bear!
• Peggy punches Howard in the face!
• The firecracker team of Kathryn Immonen and Rich Ellis turn up the heat and tear up the joint in the continuing adventures of AGENT CARTER!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$3.99
If you replaced the surname "McCord" with "Wilson," I'd be totally down.
THOR ANNUAL #1
JASON AARON, CM PUNK, NOELLE STEVENSON (w)
ROB GUILLORY, MARGUERITE SAUVAGE (A)
Cover by RAFAEL ALBUQUERQUE
VARIANT Cover by ROB GUILLORY
VARIANT COVER BY MARGUERITE SAUVAGE
• Three stories featuring three Thors!
• Wrestling superstar CM Punk and Rob Guillory (Chew) on Young Thor’s idea for how to prove himself worthy of Mjolnir: a drinking competition!
• Noelle Stevenson (Lumberjanes) and Marguerite Sauvage tell a tale of the new Thor!
• And Jason Aaron on the Girls of Thunder’s quest to find the perfect birthday present for their grandfather, King Thor! How about a new Garden of Eden?
40 PGS./ONE SHOT/Rated T+ …$4.99
Oh come on now Mr. Punk, a drinking contest? The deck is totally stacked. How could Thor not beat Mjolnir in a drinking contest? Mjolnir doesn't even have a mouth!
(By the way, there's another way to get into writing comics. Step one: Become a successful and popular professional wrestler.)
In no particular order, here are three of my favorite covers...
...by Tradd Moore, Mike Allred and Kaare Andrews. The Ghost Rider and Black Widow covers are pretty alright this month, too.
THE UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL #2
RYAN NORTH (W) • ERICA HENDERSON (A/C)
Variant cover by JOE QUINONES
• Starting college is hard enough, but now Squirrel Girl has to deal with Galactus too?
• The fate of the entire planet hangs in the balance, and only Squirrel Girl can save it!
• Also, her squirrel friend Tippy Toe. She can help too.
• Iron Man might show up too! Kinda, at least!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$3.99
Tippy Toe is a female?! I always assumed Tippy Toe was male.
I like Squirrel Girl's earrings.
WOLVERINES #5
CHARLES SOULE & RAY FAWKES (w)
JONATHAN MARKS (A)
Cover by NICK BRADSHAW
• The team from Paradise and the Wolverines team up for the Assault on Mr. Sinister and his snowy fortress but what surprises lay in store when they figure out the front door is actually the easiest way in?
• Sinister has more than plans for Logan’s body in his lair...but how are the Amazing X-Men involved in his plans for destruction and perfection?
• Special appearance by Fing Fang Boom!
32 PGS./Parental Advisory …$3.99
I have no idea who "The Wolverines" are—I'm guessing X-23 is one of 'em though, based on that cover image—but the name "Fing Fang Boom" excites me. I do hope that's not a typo...
ALL-NEW CAPTAIN AMERICA #4
RICK REMENDER (W) • STUART IMMONEN (A/C)
VARIANT COVER BY PHIL NOTO
• Hydra initiates the next step in their scheme, millions of innocent souls hang in the balance.
• Cap is broken and nearly dead from the gauntlet of the new Hydra, so how can he take down the combined might of Cobra and the Armadillo in time to stop the great leveling?
• A mysterious woman from the past returns!
32 PGS./Rated T …$3.99
Is it weird that a supervillain named The Armadillo is so damn huge, when armadillos aren't really all that large? I mean, The Armadillo looks to be about twice the size of The Rhino and four times as large as Man-Elephant....
AVENGERS #41
JONATHAN HICKMAN (W) • STEFANO CASELLI (A)
Cover by BRYAN HITCH
VARIANT COVER BY PHIL NOTO
IN 3 MONTHS…TIME RUNS OUT!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$3.99
That can't possibly be the right cover, can it...?
DAREDEVIL #13
MARK WAID (W) • CHRIS SAMNEE (A/C)
VARIANT COVER BY PHIL NOTO
THE END BEGINS HERE!
• Mark Waid and Chis Samnee begin the climactic final chapter of their beloved, Eisner Award Winning run with the return of one of Matt Murdock’s oldest and (now) scariest enemies.
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$3.99
I can't help but think how much bigger a deal this solicitation copy's screaming of "THE END BEGINS HERE!" if this were issue #50—that is, if Marvel hadn't relaunched the book after the first 36 issues for no reason—than it it does when there's a #13 attached.
As for the "oldest and (now) scariest" enemy, I'm going to guess it's The Owl, on account of the fact that there's an owl on the cover.
DARTH VADER #1 & 2
KIERON GILLEN (w) • SALVADOR LARROCA (A)
CoverS by ADI GRANOV
ISSUE #1 - Teaser Variant by JOHN CASSADAY
CONNECTING VARIANT COVER B BY J. SCOTT CAMPBELL
VARIANT COVER BY ALEX ROSS
SKETCH VARIANT COVER BY ALEX ROSS
VARIANT COVER BY MICHAEL GOLDEN
VARIANT COVER BY MIKE DEL MUNDO
YOUNG VARIANT BY SKOTTIE YOUNG
ACTION FIGURE VARIANT BY JOHN TYLER CHRISTOPHER
MOVIE VARIANT COVER ALSO AVAILABLE
BLANK VARIANT COVER ALSO AVAILABLE
ISSUE #2 - VARIANT COVER BY WHILCE PORTACIO
VARIANT COVER BY TBA
The original Dark Lord of the Sith stars in his first ongoing series!
Ever since Darth Vader made his first on-screen appearance, he became the one of the most popular villains to ever haunt an audience’s dreams! Now, follow Vader straight from the ending of A NEW HOPE (and the pages of the new STAR WARS comic book) into his own series, showing the Empire’s war with the Rebel Alliance from the other side! Writer Kieron Gillen (Uncanny X-Men, Journey Into Mystery, Iron Man) and artist Salvador Larroca (Invincible Iron Man, X-Men: No More Humans) bring us a peek behind the mask of evil!
ISSUE #1 - 48 PGS./Rated T …$4.99
ISSUE #2 - 32 PGS./Rated T …$3.99
I was just about to call bullshit on the first sentence of the solicitation copy, when I realized it qualifies the statement with "ongoing;" okay, yes, that's true. While there have been a bunch of Darth Vader comics from Dark Horse, they have been in the format of a series of miniseries, rather than an ongoing.
I will call bullshit on the number of variant covers though. Jeez, just look at those things!
Oh come on Ed McGuinness; I thought you were a better artist than that! What's with the full broke-back posing of Magik, featuring both her entire butt and both boobs...? That's the cover of the first issue Guardians of the Galaxy & X-Men: The Black Vortex, which has almost as many characters in it as it has words in its title, based on that cover.
GUARDIANS TEAM-UP #1 & 2
BRIAN BENDIS (W) • ISSUE #1 - ART ADAMS (A/C)
...
• Launching directly out of Guardians of the Galaxy comes the new ongoing series bringing the Guardians to the Marvel Universe’s grandest stage for an opening arc of out-of-this-world adventures with some of the biggest hitters Marvel has to offer.
• Kicking off with a cosmic threat so massive, it’ll take more than just the Guardians of the Galaxy to stop it! Assembled side by side with the mighty Avengers, prepare for two titanic teams to unite like you’ve never seen before!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$3.99
ISSUE #2 - GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY and THE AVENGERS!
• Follow part two of this story as the Guardians of the Galaxy slam their way into the world of the Avengers – and only working together as a team will help them save the galaxy!
• Tension runs high when survival is at stake, and when the likes of Gamora, Black Widow, Hawkeye and Rocket are forced to problem solve together, it can mean only one thing is guaranteed – destruction!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$3.99
So what have we got now? Guardians of The Galaxy, Rocket Raccoon, Legendary Star-Lord, Guardians 3000 and now Guardians Team-Up. Marvel continues to search for the exact number of straws it will take to break this particular camel's back.
MS. MARVEL #12
G. WILLOW WILSON (W) • Takeshi Miyazawa (A)
Cover by KRIS ANKA
• Love is in Jersey City as Valentine’s Day arrives!
• Kamala Khan may not be allowed to go to the dance, but Ms. Marvel is!
• Well sort of – by crashing it attempting to capture Asgard’s most annoying trickster!
• Yup, it’s a special Valentine’s Day issue featuring Marvel’s favorite charlatan, Loki!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$2.99
Hmm...I'm feeling pretty torn here. On the one hand, after having just read the first trade paperback collection of the series, I don't really have any desire to see anyone other than Adrian Alphona drawing Ms. Marvel. On the other hand, I'm always happy to see Takeshi Miyazawa draw anything.
STAR WARS #2
JASON AARON (W) • JOHN CASSADAY (A/C)
SKETCH VARIANT COVER BY JOHN CASSADAY
ACTION FIGURE VARIANT BY JOHN TYLER CHRISTOPHER
VARIANT COVER BY Berkeley Breathed, PULITZER-PRIZE WINNING CREATOR OF BLOOM COUNTY
VARIANT COVER BY LEINIL YU
VARIANT COVER BY HOWARD CHAYKIN
THE GREATEST SPACE ADVENTURE OF ALL TIME CONTINUES!
• The Rebel assault on Cymoon 1 continues!
• Luke Skywalker – cornered by Darth Vader!
• Han, Leia, and the others – trapped!
32 PGS./Rated T …$3.99
Star Wars © Lucasfilm Ltd. & TM. All rights reserved. Used under authorization. Text and illustrations for Star Wars are © 2015 Lucasfilm Ltd.
So. Many. Variants. But the most interesting one of them all? "VARIANT COVER BY Berkeley Breathed, PULITZER-PRIZE WINNING CREATOR OF BLOOM COUNTY." What's that all about, I wonder, and why is he listed like that in the solicitation copy credits...?
OPERATION: S.I.N. #2 (of 5)
Kathryn Immonen (w)
Rich Ellis (A)
Cover by Michael Komarck
• When a UFO fires on Moscow because Howard can’t keep his finger off the button, Peggy and the team go underground but which one of them is already undercover?
• Woodrow McCord fights a bear!
• Peggy punches Howard in the face!
• The firecracker team of Kathryn Immonen and Rich Ellis turn up the heat and tear up the joint in the continuing adventures of AGENT CARTER!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$3.99
If you replaced the surname "McCord" with "Wilson," I'd be totally down.
THOR ANNUAL #1
JASON AARON, CM PUNK, NOELLE STEVENSON (w)
ROB GUILLORY, MARGUERITE SAUVAGE (A)
Cover by RAFAEL ALBUQUERQUE
VARIANT Cover by ROB GUILLORY
VARIANT COVER BY MARGUERITE SAUVAGE
• Three stories featuring three Thors!
• Wrestling superstar CM Punk and Rob Guillory (Chew) on Young Thor’s idea for how to prove himself worthy of Mjolnir: a drinking competition!
• Noelle Stevenson (Lumberjanes) and Marguerite Sauvage tell a tale of the new Thor!
• And Jason Aaron on the Girls of Thunder’s quest to find the perfect birthday present for their grandfather, King Thor! How about a new Garden of Eden?
40 PGS./ONE SHOT/Rated T+ …$4.99
Oh come on now Mr. Punk, a drinking contest? The deck is totally stacked. How could Thor not beat Mjolnir in a drinking contest? Mjolnir doesn't even have a mouth!
(By the way, there's another way to get into writing comics. Step one: Become a successful and popular professional wrestler.)
In no particular order, here are three of my favorite covers...
...by Tradd Moore, Mike Allred and Kaare Andrews. The Ghost Rider and Black Widow covers are pretty alright this month, too.
THE UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL #2
RYAN NORTH (W) • ERICA HENDERSON (A/C)
Variant cover by JOE QUINONES
• Starting college is hard enough, but now Squirrel Girl has to deal with Galactus too?
• The fate of the entire planet hangs in the balance, and only Squirrel Girl can save it!
• Also, her squirrel friend Tippy Toe. She can help too.
• Iron Man might show up too! Kinda, at least!
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$3.99
Tippy Toe is a female?! I always assumed Tippy Toe was male.
I like Squirrel Girl's earrings.
WOLVERINES #5
CHARLES SOULE & RAY FAWKES (w)
JONATHAN MARKS (A)
Cover by NICK BRADSHAW
• The team from Paradise and the Wolverines team up for the Assault on Mr. Sinister and his snowy fortress but what surprises lay in store when they figure out the front door is actually the easiest way in?
• Sinister has more than plans for Logan’s body in his lair...but how are the Amazing X-Men involved in his plans for destruction and perfection?
• Special appearance by Fing Fang Boom!
32 PGS./Parental Advisory …$3.99
I have no idea who "The Wolverines" are—I'm guessing X-23 is one of 'em though, based on that cover image—but the name "Fing Fang Boom" excites me. I do hope that's not a typo...
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
DC's February previews reviewed
Further cementing her role as DC's answer to Deadpool, the new, New 52 version of Harley Quinn is the theme around which the publisher's February variants are organized around. Each of the "Harley Quinn Variants" will feature the suddenly surprisingly popular character—whose comics suddenly started selling like hotcakes after Jimmy Palmiotti, Amanda Conner and Chad Hardin relaunched Harley Quinn as title playing up the character's comedy and cheesecake potential.
Conner provides three of the covers herself, including the above Superman one, as well as covers for Aquaman and The Flash. As with several of the last few rounds of variant programs—The Flash variants, the Darwyn Cooke-draws-all-the-variants and the Michael Allred-draws-all-the-variants—the Harley Quinn variants are quite striking in that they are in almost every case better, funnier, more fun and more lighthearted than the comics they are appearing atop of...at least when comparing them to the regular covers provided, and the solicitation copy.
I mean, wouldn't you rather read an issue of The Flash where Harley Quinn volunteers to fill-in for Superman when he fails to show up at the annual Flash/Superman race for charity...because Harley tricked him into answering a signal watch on the wrist of a lead robot Jimmy Olsen with a Kryptonite heart than, let's see, what's going on in the flash in February...?
Well, at any rate, here's what DC Comics intends to publish in February of next year, and here are my thoughts on the matter...
I really love co-writer Cameron Stewart's cover for Batgirl #39; the Harley variant is kinda cute too, and by Cliff Chiang, but not as striking an image.
It's worth noting that February's issue of the still-not-canceled Secret Origins will feature a Batgirl origin story by regular series writers Stewart and Brenden Fletcher, but with art by the amazing Irene Koh rather than regular series artist Babs Tarr, whose work is Batgirl's main selling point. Will this be the first appearance of the new Batgirl costume drawn in-story by someone other than Tarr...?
Batgirl's on the cover of that issue of Secret Origins too, in case you want to see what Bryan Hitch's version of the new Batgirl get-up looks like (Warning: It looks like another re-tread of The Killing Joke which, well, it will be interesting to see if and how Stewart and Fletcher filter that through the tone and sensibilities of their Batgirl).
Cute Jill Thompson cover for Batman #39. I know Greg Capullo never needs fill-ins, and he's a pretty great Batman artist, but imagine how cool a whole issue of a Batman comic by Thompson would look...?
BATMAN AND ROBIN #39
Written by PETER J. TOMASI
Art and cover by PATRICK GLEASON and MICK GRAY
...
On sale FEBRUARY 18 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T
...
Has Damian Wayne become something more than human? And how do you control a reckless child who now has super powers?
I have no idea how or why Damian's resurrection has apparently given him Superman powers (last month's cover showed him tearing open his shirt to reveal his Robin costume underneath it while bullets bounced off him), but that cover is fantastic. High five, Patrick Gleason and Mick Gray!
BATMAN ’66 #20
Written by ROB WILLIAMS
Art by RUBEN PROCOPIO
Cover by MICHAEL ALLRED
On sale FEBRUARY 25 • 40 pg, FC, $3.99 US • RATED E • DIGITAL FIRST
Gotham City has a new hero in town: Joker Man! Can it be? Has the Clown Prince of Crime now become a comedic crimefighter? This new Joker seems to be sincere about lassoing the lawless by rounding up all the criminals, including some of his former allies! In fact, he’s so good at it that the citizenry wonders if they still need Batman and Robin at all!
Speaking of fantastic covers...
I hope Procopio's interiors are half as awesome as Allred's cover, and that Williams' script is as much fun as it sounds.
CATWOMAN #39
Written by GENEVIEVE VALENTINE
Art by GARRY BROWN
Cover by JAE LEE
HARLEY QUINN Variant cover by JIM BALENT
On sale FEBRUARY 25 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T+
...
Will Selina save Gotham City? Or will she burn it to the ground?
I really rather liked the first issue of the new Catwoman direction by Genevieve Valentine and Garry Brown, which, like Batgirl, seems like it probably should have been the New 52 relaunch of the character, based on what a 180 it was from the previous issues (although that might have been difficult, given Catwoman's ascension to the top of organized crime in Gotham City was so dependent on the circumstances of Batman Eternal.
But let's just look at that variant cover, shall we? I was at first puzzled by what the holy hell was even going on in it, it's so awkwardly staged (apparently, Catwoman is kicking apart Harley's hammer), and my eyes were next drawn to Harley's breasts, which seem stuffed into a too-small top in a way that is, well, surprisingly realistic-looking, a detail that stands out given that the image in general isn't exactly photorealistic.
I was generally shocked to see who was responsible for the cover—Jim Balent. The somewhat notorious talent that drew scores of issues of DC's first Catwoman monthly series, he and a handful of different writers—Jo Duffy, Chuck Dixon, Doug Moench, Devin Grayson—transformed her from a villain into a vigilante crime-fighter who dabbled in jewel thievery as a sort of hobby following the events of "Knightfall."
His Barbie doll proportioned Selina Kyle, and her not-exactly-practical costume lead pretty directly into Darwyn Cooke's revamp of the costume; the Cooke-driven relaunch of Catwoman seemed to be in large part a reaction to the Balent-drawn volume of Catwoman comics that preceded it.
Balent went on to do whatever the hell he likes with his own, self-published Tarot, Witch of the Black Rose comic, which I have never read an issue of, but he's been at it so long I assume he's happy doing it, and successful enough that he can keep doing it.
So I was a little surprised to see him drawing anything for DC, even if just a single variant cover. But also delighted. I liked Balent's work back in the day; his style in those old Catwoman comics didn't age necessarily well, but I liked the way he drew all the characters, especially his Batman (and Scarecrow!).
Here his art isn't even recognizable (to me) as that of the same guy, but I guess it has been 20 years or so. I'm guessing it's largely the coloring, which gives the figures a sickly, wax dummy-like appearance. The way Catwoman's kicking though, that's definitely a Balent pose. And, looking closely, they've definitely got Balent proportions...although, like I said, Harley's breasts look remarkably realistic, at least in the way they get smooshed like real breasts when wearing a super-tight corset (Also, that's a really nice background and, if you look closely, you'll find a cat shape hidden in it, something Balent used to do with his covers for the Catwoman).
Given his long tenure on the character, I've always been kind of curious as to what Balent's version of the "new" Catwoman costume would look like and, if nothing else, I guess this variant answers that question.
Is it odd that in a month in which various artists draw the scantily clad Harley Quinn, and one of those artists is Jim Balent, that it's someone other than Balent who draws the most scantily-clad Harley?
Here the always excellent Fan Panosian has reduced Harley's shorts to panties for the variant cover of Grayson.
Joe Quinones provides the Harley variant for this month's Justice League Dark, and it may be the best of 'em all.
Scooby-Doo, Where Are You? does not have a Harley variant cover, but they could have used a pretty similar scheme on theirs is they did.
THE MULTIVERSITY: MASTERMEN #1
Written by GRANT MORRISON
Art and cover by JIM LEE and SCOTT WILLIAMS
...
On sale FEBRUARY 18 • 48 pg, FC, $4.99 US • RATED T
....
Superstar writer Grant Morrison joins legendary artist Jim Lee on Earth-10 for one of the most dynamic, action-packed issues of this entire world-shattering series – THE MULTIVERSITY: MASTERMEN!
Imagine a world where the Nazis not only won World War II but went on to direct world culture for the next 60 years with the help of an orphaned, alien super-weapon known as Overman! But hope is not lost! Rising from the ashes of oppression are a diverse band of heroes raging against the fascist regime – a band of heroes known as THE FREEDOM FIGHTERS!
What nightmarish parallel worlds haunt the dreams of Overman? Who is the mysterious figure called Uncle Sam? And when the dust settles, will the actions of Phantom Lady, Black Condor, Human Bomb, Doll Man and The Ray be enough to stop Leatherwing, Blitzen and the other “heroes” of Earth-X?
Learn all this and more in this exciting issue that acts as chapter seven of the critically acclaimed MULTIVERSITY storyline.
Well, the most interesting issue of Morrison's Multiversity series is the one that's to be released this week, Pax Americana, as it's the one dealing with Earth-4/The Charlton Comics characters...or, in other words, The Watchmen issue (I never really understood why DC bothered with Before Watchmen instead of just doing something like this, using the Watchmen-inspiration characters that they could use without pissing off anyone or alienating anyone).
This one will present Morrison's re-worked version of Earth-X, home of the (most) of the Quality Comics characters, introduced into the pre-Crisis Multiverse as a place where the Nazi's won world World War II (I believe it was originally intended to be designated Earth-(swastika), but they had to trim the edges down to an X).
The comics Internet seems sort of excited that Jim Lee will be drawing this issue, and while I would be interested to see a Morrison/Lee collaboration just to see how it works out, I'm guessing the answer will be "not that well." I'm additionally concerned that it may result in the issue shipping late, and it's been a great pleasure getting one of these Multiverse books on a regular, monthly basis. I wouldn't mind at all if Morrison kept doing these forever, really.
Another point of interest here is that the post-52 relaunch of The Freedom Fighters, the team name given to the characters mentioned in the solicitation, was based on Morrison's notes, and that failed pretty spectacularly...I think more because of the terrible artists assigned than the writing team of Jimmy Palmiotti and Justin Gray, but then, Palmiotti and Gray aren't exactly a writing team I would expect to be able to take a hand-off from Morrison and run all the way to the end zone with it, either.
Here Morrison doesn't really need to re-create the characters to fit into the shared, only-mildly-rejiggered DCU "New Earth" that followed Infinite Crisis and 52, so, as I said, I'm curious to see Morrison writing his own version of the characters, ones without the sorts of restrictions smashing them into the DCU might require.
Also, I'm curious to see if we get other Quality Comics characters like Plastic Man, The Red Bee, Lady Luck or The Spirit (or Spirit analogue) showing up at all among the regular Freedom Fighters line-up, and what sounds like a Nazi JLA (Justice League of Aryans, maybe...?).
ROBIN, THE BOY WONDER: A CELEBRATION OF 75 YEARS HC
Written by BILL FINGER, DON CAMERON, CHUCK DIXON and others
Art by BOB KANE, JERRY ROBINSON, DICK SPRANG and others
Cover by JIM LEE and SCOTT WILLIAMS
On sale APRIL 1 • 400 pg, FC, $39.99 US
2015 marks the 75th anniversary of Robin, the Boy Wonder! DC Comics is proud to present this new hardcover anthology collecting some of Robin’s greatest stories, featuring his adventures with Batman, the Teen Titans and more!
So far DC has published books like these on Superman, Lois Lane, Batman and The Joker, and they've all been pretty fascinating. Not simply because of the cross-section of stories they include, but also because of the editorial choices that went in deciding what to include and what to exclude. They serve as interesting snapshots as to where and how the publisher—or at least the folks putting these together—see the characters and who they consider their better creators (And, of course, there's the added difficulty of having to limit themselves to short stories—not hard in the Golden and Silver Age, but very hard after that—that stand on their own well enough to fit in a large but not that large anthology.
At this point, what I'm most interested in seeing in this book is whether they regard Robin as a character—Dick Grayson, the guy who appeared 75 years ago—or an office or title, held collectively by five characters throughout DC's mega-continuity (that is, the continuity that includes the continuity-altering events; whenever DC reboots, they do so in-story). There aren't any clues offered in this; even Dixon, who wrote probably the most Robin III Tim Drake stories, also wrote several featuring the original Robin.
Daphne in beach-wear! Oh, how Young Caleb would have been drawn to this cover!
Sadly, while cover artist Dario Brizuela does put her in a two-piece, he over-covers her in what looks more like a jog bra than a traditional bathing suit top. She is not, sadly, wearing a bikini. Also, someone seems to have stolen her belly button. Perhaps that's the mystery in this issue? (Man, I know these characters exist on a sliding timeline that keeps them forever teenagers, but it still seems wrong to me to see Daphne using an iPod and Beats instead of listening to a transistor radio).
Velma, meanwhile, is much more conservatively dressed in a one-piece suit...although she is remarkably svelte. I don't think I'll ever get used to the 21st century, hot Velma...
Ian Bertham should draw everything.
SUPERMAN/WONDER WOMAN #16
Written by PETER J. TOMASI
Art and cover by DOUG MAHNKE and JAIME MENDOZA
HARLEY QUINN Variant cover by FRANCIS MANAPUL
...
Superman and Wonder Woman come face-to-face with the newest arrival to The New 52: MAGOG!
This issue is also offered as a combo pack edition with a redemption code for a digital download of this issue.
I'm kind of looking forward to seeing what Tomasi and Mahnke can do on this title (their run officially begins with an issue shipping tomorrow), but I have to admit, the debut of New 52 Magog throws a bit of cold water on that enthusiasm.
And isn't "New 52 Magog" kind of redundant? Magog was the living embodiment of The New 52 something like 20 years before there even was a New 52.
Here are the two covers for Teen Titans #7, the Harley variant by Sean Galloway followed by the regular cover by "Bengal."
Galloway tries his damnedest to make the Titans—one of the two Power Girls in the New 52-iverse, Red Robin, Wonder Girl and Raven—look adorable as chibi-esque video game sprites, but not even making them into chibi sprites can save those costumes. Even rendered as cutely as possible, Raven still looks like someone who has been half-devoured by Giger monster.
But contrast it with the regular cover, of a burnt skeletal arm buried in an dark, ash-choked city.
Yeesh. Talk about contrast...
WONDER WOMAN #39
Written by MEREDITH FINCH
Art and cover by DAVID FINCH and BATT
HARLEY QUINN Variant cover by PHIL JIMENEZ
...
On sale FEBRUARY 18 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T
...
Wonder Woman returns to Paradise Island, and she’s in for a surprise: The Amazons have chosen a new queen to lead them! The identity of this new queen will send shock waves through the entire DC Universe! Guest-starring the Justice League and featuring the introduction of Diana’s craziest new cast member in, well, ever!
Here's another sharp contrast between the fun of the variants and the dark despair of the regular covers. Phil "Ideal Wonder Woman Artist" Jimenez draws a fairly serious variant cover, it's only real joke being Harley's presence in it, but compared to Wonder Woman on Finch's regular cover? At least, I think that's a Wonder Woman cover. Maybe it's actually for an upcoming issue of Psychology Today, with a cover feature on depression...?
As for the solicit, "Diana's craziest new cast member in, well, ever," huh? I find that hard to believe, considering the fact that Wonder Woman used to team up with herself as a toddler on a fairly regular basis.
Conner provides three of the covers herself, including the above Superman one, as well as covers for Aquaman and The Flash. As with several of the last few rounds of variant programs—The Flash variants, the Darwyn Cooke-draws-all-the-variants and the Michael Allred-draws-all-the-variants—the Harley Quinn variants are quite striking in that they are in almost every case better, funnier, more fun and more lighthearted than the comics they are appearing atop of...at least when comparing them to the regular covers provided, and the solicitation copy.
I mean, wouldn't you rather read an issue of The Flash where Harley Quinn volunteers to fill-in for Superman when he fails to show up at the annual Flash/Superman race for charity...because Harley tricked him into answering a signal watch on the wrist of a lead robot Jimmy Olsen with a Kryptonite heart than, let's see, what's going on in the flash in February...?
Barry Allen is trapped in the Speed Force while an impostor wreaks havoc at home! Can The Fastest Man Alive make it back in time to put things right?Yeah, that sounds hella-boring, and it's drawn by Brett Booth, not Amanda Conner.
Well, at any rate, here's what DC Comics intends to publish in February of next year, and here are my thoughts on the matter...
I really love co-writer Cameron Stewart's cover for Batgirl #39; the Harley variant is kinda cute too, and by Cliff Chiang, but not as striking an image.
It's worth noting that February's issue of the still-not-canceled Secret Origins will feature a Batgirl origin story by regular series writers Stewart and Brenden Fletcher, but with art by the amazing Irene Koh rather than regular series artist Babs Tarr, whose work is Batgirl's main selling point. Will this be the first appearance of the new Batgirl costume drawn in-story by someone other than Tarr...?
Batgirl's on the cover of that issue of Secret Origins too, in case you want to see what Bryan Hitch's version of the new Batgirl get-up looks like (Warning: It looks like another re-tread of The Killing Joke which, well, it will be interesting to see if and how Stewart and Fletcher filter that through the tone and sensibilities of their Batgirl).
Cute Jill Thompson cover for Batman #39. I know Greg Capullo never needs fill-ins, and he's a pretty great Batman artist, but imagine how cool a whole issue of a Batman comic by Thompson would look...?
BATMAN AND ROBIN #39
Written by PETER J. TOMASI
Art and cover by PATRICK GLEASON and MICK GRAY
...
On sale FEBRUARY 18 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T
...
Has Damian Wayne become something more than human? And how do you control a reckless child who now has super powers?
I have no idea how or why Damian's resurrection has apparently given him Superman powers (last month's cover showed him tearing open his shirt to reveal his Robin costume underneath it while bullets bounced off him), but that cover is fantastic. High five, Patrick Gleason and Mick Gray!
BATMAN ’66 #20
Written by ROB WILLIAMS
Art by RUBEN PROCOPIO
Cover by MICHAEL ALLRED
On sale FEBRUARY 25 • 40 pg, FC, $3.99 US • RATED E • DIGITAL FIRST
Gotham City has a new hero in town: Joker Man! Can it be? Has the Clown Prince of Crime now become a comedic crimefighter? This new Joker seems to be sincere about lassoing the lawless by rounding up all the criminals, including some of his former allies! In fact, he’s so good at it that the citizenry wonders if they still need Batman and Robin at all!
Speaking of fantastic covers...
I hope Procopio's interiors are half as awesome as Allred's cover, and that Williams' script is as much fun as it sounds.
CATWOMAN #39
Written by GENEVIEVE VALENTINE
Art by GARRY BROWN
Cover by JAE LEE
HARLEY QUINN Variant cover by JIM BALENT
On sale FEBRUARY 25 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T+
...
Will Selina save Gotham City? Or will she burn it to the ground?
I really rather liked the first issue of the new Catwoman direction by Genevieve Valentine and Garry Brown, which, like Batgirl, seems like it probably should have been the New 52 relaunch of the character, based on what a 180 it was from the previous issues (although that might have been difficult, given Catwoman's ascension to the top of organized crime in Gotham City was so dependent on the circumstances of Batman Eternal.
But let's just look at that variant cover, shall we? I was at first puzzled by what the holy hell was even going on in it, it's so awkwardly staged (apparently, Catwoman is kicking apart Harley's hammer), and my eyes were next drawn to Harley's breasts, which seem stuffed into a too-small top in a way that is, well, surprisingly realistic-looking, a detail that stands out given that the image in general isn't exactly photorealistic.
I was generally shocked to see who was responsible for the cover—Jim Balent. The somewhat notorious talent that drew scores of issues of DC's first Catwoman monthly series, he and a handful of different writers—Jo Duffy, Chuck Dixon, Doug Moench, Devin Grayson—transformed her from a villain into a vigilante crime-fighter who dabbled in jewel thievery as a sort of hobby following the events of "Knightfall."
His Barbie doll proportioned Selina Kyle, and her not-exactly-practical costume lead pretty directly into Darwyn Cooke's revamp of the costume; the Cooke-driven relaunch of Catwoman seemed to be in large part a reaction to the Balent-drawn volume of Catwoman comics that preceded it.
Balent went on to do whatever the hell he likes with his own, self-published Tarot, Witch of the Black Rose comic, which I have never read an issue of, but he's been at it so long I assume he's happy doing it, and successful enough that he can keep doing it.
So I was a little surprised to see him drawing anything for DC, even if just a single variant cover. But also delighted. I liked Balent's work back in the day; his style in those old Catwoman comics didn't age necessarily well, but I liked the way he drew all the characters, especially his Batman (and Scarecrow!).
Here his art isn't even recognizable (to me) as that of the same guy, but I guess it has been 20 years or so. I'm guessing it's largely the coloring, which gives the figures a sickly, wax dummy-like appearance. The way Catwoman's kicking though, that's definitely a Balent pose. And, looking closely, they've definitely got Balent proportions...although, like I said, Harley's breasts look remarkably realistic, at least in the way they get smooshed like real breasts when wearing a super-tight corset (Also, that's a really nice background and, if you look closely, you'll find a cat shape hidden in it, something Balent used to do with his covers for the Catwoman).
Given his long tenure on the character, I've always been kind of curious as to what Balent's version of the "new" Catwoman costume would look like and, if nothing else, I guess this variant answers that question.
Is it odd that in a month in which various artists draw the scantily clad Harley Quinn, and one of those artists is Jim Balent, that it's someone other than Balent who draws the most scantily-clad Harley?
Here the always excellent Fan Panosian has reduced Harley's shorts to panties for the variant cover of Grayson.
Joe Quinones provides the Harley variant for this month's Justice League Dark, and it may be the best of 'em all.
Scooby-Doo, Where Are You? does not have a Harley variant cover, but they could have used a pretty similar scheme on theirs is they did.
THE MULTIVERSITY: MASTERMEN #1
Written by GRANT MORRISON
Art and cover by JIM LEE and SCOTT WILLIAMS
...
On sale FEBRUARY 18 • 48 pg, FC, $4.99 US • RATED T
....
Superstar writer Grant Morrison joins legendary artist Jim Lee on Earth-10 for one of the most dynamic, action-packed issues of this entire world-shattering series – THE MULTIVERSITY: MASTERMEN!
Imagine a world where the Nazis not only won World War II but went on to direct world culture for the next 60 years with the help of an orphaned, alien super-weapon known as Overman! But hope is not lost! Rising from the ashes of oppression are a diverse band of heroes raging against the fascist regime – a band of heroes known as THE FREEDOM FIGHTERS!
What nightmarish parallel worlds haunt the dreams of Overman? Who is the mysterious figure called Uncle Sam? And when the dust settles, will the actions of Phantom Lady, Black Condor, Human Bomb, Doll Man and The Ray be enough to stop Leatherwing, Blitzen and the other “heroes” of Earth-X?
Learn all this and more in this exciting issue that acts as chapter seven of the critically acclaimed MULTIVERSITY storyline.
Well, the most interesting issue of Morrison's Multiversity series is the one that's to be released this week, Pax Americana, as it's the one dealing with Earth-4/The Charlton Comics characters...or, in other words, The Watchmen issue (I never really understood why DC bothered with Before Watchmen instead of just doing something like this, using the Watchmen-inspiration characters that they could use without pissing off anyone or alienating anyone).
This one will present Morrison's re-worked version of Earth-X, home of the (most) of the Quality Comics characters, introduced into the pre-Crisis Multiverse as a place where the Nazi's won world World War II (I believe it was originally intended to be designated Earth-(swastika), but they had to trim the edges down to an X).
The comics Internet seems sort of excited that Jim Lee will be drawing this issue, and while I would be interested to see a Morrison/Lee collaboration just to see how it works out, I'm guessing the answer will be "not that well." I'm additionally concerned that it may result in the issue shipping late, and it's been a great pleasure getting one of these Multiverse books on a regular, monthly basis. I wouldn't mind at all if Morrison kept doing these forever, really.
Another point of interest here is that the post-52 relaunch of The Freedom Fighters, the team name given to the characters mentioned in the solicitation, was based on Morrison's notes, and that failed pretty spectacularly...I think more because of the terrible artists assigned than the writing team of Jimmy Palmiotti and Justin Gray, but then, Palmiotti and Gray aren't exactly a writing team I would expect to be able to take a hand-off from Morrison and run all the way to the end zone with it, either.
Here Morrison doesn't really need to re-create the characters to fit into the shared, only-mildly-rejiggered DCU "New Earth" that followed Infinite Crisis and 52, so, as I said, I'm curious to see Morrison writing his own version of the characters, ones without the sorts of restrictions smashing them into the DCU might require.
Also, I'm curious to see if we get other Quality Comics characters like Plastic Man, The Red Bee, Lady Luck or The Spirit (or Spirit analogue) showing up at all among the regular Freedom Fighters line-up, and what sounds like a Nazi JLA (Justice League of Aryans, maybe...?).
ROBIN, THE BOY WONDER: A CELEBRATION OF 75 YEARS HC
Written by BILL FINGER, DON CAMERON, CHUCK DIXON and others
Art by BOB KANE, JERRY ROBINSON, DICK SPRANG and others
Cover by JIM LEE and SCOTT WILLIAMS
On sale APRIL 1 • 400 pg, FC, $39.99 US
2015 marks the 75th anniversary of Robin, the Boy Wonder! DC Comics is proud to present this new hardcover anthology collecting some of Robin’s greatest stories, featuring his adventures with Batman, the Teen Titans and more!
So far DC has published books like these on Superman, Lois Lane, Batman and The Joker, and they've all been pretty fascinating. Not simply because of the cross-section of stories they include, but also because of the editorial choices that went in deciding what to include and what to exclude. They serve as interesting snapshots as to where and how the publisher—or at least the folks putting these together—see the characters and who they consider their better creators (And, of course, there's the added difficulty of having to limit themselves to short stories—not hard in the Golden and Silver Age, but very hard after that—that stand on their own well enough to fit in a large but not that large anthology.
At this point, what I'm most interested in seeing in this book is whether they regard Robin as a character—Dick Grayson, the guy who appeared 75 years ago—or an office or title, held collectively by five characters throughout DC's mega-continuity (that is, the continuity that includes the continuity-altering events; whenever DC reboots, they do so in-story). There aren't any clues offered in this; even Dixon, who wrote probably the most Robin III Tim Drake stories, also wrote several featuring the original Robin.
Daphne in beach-wear! Oh, how Young Caleb would have been drawn to this cover!
Sadly, while cover artist Dario Brizuela does put her in a two-piece, he over-covers her in what looks more like a jog bra than a traditional bathing suit top. She is not, sadly, wearing a bikini. Also, someone seems to have stolen her belly button. Perhaps that's the mystery in this issue? (Man, I know these characters exist on a sliding timeline that keeps them forever teenagers, but it still seems wrong to me to see Daphne using an iPod and Beats instead of listening to a transistor radio).
Velma, meanwhile, is much more conservatively dressed in a one-piece suit...although she is remarkably svelte. I don't think I'll ever get used to the 21st century, hot Velma...
Ian Bertham should draw everything.
SUPERMAN/WONDER WOMAN #16
Written by PETER J. TOMASI
Art and cover by DOUG MAHNKE and JAIME MENDOZA
HARLEY QUINN Variant cover by FRANCIS MANAPUL
...
Superman and Wonder Woman come face-to-face with the newest arrival to The New 52: MAGOG!
This issue is also offered as a combo pack edition with a redemption code for a digital download of this issue.
I'm kind of looking forward to seeing what Tomasi and Mahnke can do on this title (their run officially begins with an issue shipping tomorrow), but I have to admit, the debut of New 52 Magog throws a bit of cold water on that enthusiasm.
And isn't "New 52 Magog" kind of redundant? Magog was the living embodiment of The New 52 something like 20 years before there even was a New 52.
Here are the two covers for Teen Titans #7, the Harley variant by Sean Galloway followed by the regular cover by "Bengal."
Galloway tries his damnedest to make the Titans—one of the two Power Girls in the New 52-iverse, Red Robin, Wonder Girl and Raven—look adorable as chibi-esque video game sprites, but not even making them into chibi sprites can save those costumes. Even rendered as cutely as possible, Raven still looks like someone who has been half-devoured by Giger monster.
But contrast it with the regular cover, of a burnt skeletal arm buried in an dark, ash-choked city.
Yeesh. Talk about contrast...
WONDER WOMAN #39
Written by MEREDITH FINCH
Art and cover by DAVID FINCH and BATT
HARLEY QUINN Variant cover by PHIL JIMENEZ
...
On sale FEBRUARY 18 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T
...
Wonder Woman returns to Paradise Island, and she’s in for a surprise: The Amazons have chosen a new queen to lead them! The identity of this new queen will send shock waves through the entire DC Universe! Guest-starring the Justice League and featuring the introduction of Diana’s craziest new cast member in, well, ever!
Here's another sharp contrast between the fun of the variants and the dark despair of the regular covers. Phil "Ideal Wonder Woman Artist" Jimenez draws a fairly serious variant cover, it's only real joke being Harley's presence in it, but compared to Wonder Woman on Finch's regular cover? At least, I think that's a Wonder Woman cover. Maybe it's actually for an upcoming issue of Psychology Today, with a cover feature on depression...?
As for the solicit, "Diana's craziest new cast member in, well, ever," huh? I find that hard to believe, considering the fact that Wonder Woman used to team up with herself as a toddler on a fairly regular basis.
Sunday, November 16, 2014
Review: Ms. Marvel Vol. 1: No Normal
I found myself a little nervous, almost reluctant, to open the cover of this trade paperback collecting the first five issues of the hit new series Ms. Marvel. In the time since the first issue was released, the book has become very popular, it has come to be regarded as very important by a large group of fans and it has been almost universally praised online (a lot like Hawkeye before it, actually). All of which added up to my being a little wary of the book. Naturally cynical and suspicious, I worried it couldn't possibly be that good and, if it didn't live up to expectations, I didn't want to be in the position of having to be the contrarian talking smack on the Internet darling book (not to mention arguing with my friends in real life who love it, one of whom told me the above panel is her favorite panel from any comic ever, which is why I put it up top there).
Well, it turns out that I was worried over nothing: G. Willow Wilson and Adrian Alphona's Ms. Marvel is every bit as good as I heard it was, and a good deal better than I was expecting it to be.
Much has been made over the other-ness of the character, the handful of things that make her different from your average super-comic star: Not only is she a she, and a teenager at that, she's also Pakistani-American and Muslim. As conceived by Wilson and Alphona, however, Kamala Khan is more similar to her many readers (or, at least, the person many of us used to be), than she is different. She feels out-of-place in her own world, she wishes she were more accepted and more popular, she feels misunderstood by her own family and by society at large. The specificity of some of those conflicts might be a bit, well, foreign, but the conflicts themselves are universal. More than anything, she reminded me of maybe the most classic Marvel Comics character template.
Someone once said—okay, it was Chris Sims, and he's said it more than once, like here, for example—that Marvel has attempted to re-create Spider-Man each decade since they birth of their flagship charter in the 1960s. In the 1970s, there was Nova; in the the '80s, Speedball; in the '90s, Darkhawk and, in the '00s, Ultimate Spider-Man. Well, despite taking her codename from an entirely different pre-existing Marvel superhero, I think Ms. Marvel could well be the Spider-Man of this particular decade, the character having the same basic array of problems, the same super powers-as-puberty metaphors, the same basic cluelessness and desire to do good with her strange gift, she even has a pretty similar outlook, one that extends to the entire book. Kamala is funny, and her book is funny; at the risk of alienating any readers adverse to any genre that isn't superheroes, Ms. Marvel is a comedy first, and a superhero adventure serial second.
The characters origins are tied directly to The Inhumans (again, despite the fact that she's named for another character with nothing to do with The Inhumans), and, specifically, the events of Infinity, I guess, although one need not have read or even known anything about that series to follow this one: "Caught in the Terrigen Mist Bomb set off in Infinity" or just "caught in some strange, superpower-granting mist" read the same here.
After the bulk of the first issue spent introducing us to put-upon Kamala, her best friends Nakia and Bruno, her family and schoolmate Zoe Zimmerman (an inadvertent foil the characters refer to as a "concern troll," her existence kind of bothers Kamala and her friends to different degrees, but she's not a queen bee, mean girl or female version of Peter Parker's Flash Thompson; rather, she just represents the ideal of all-American teenage girlhood in a way that irritates them each in different ways), Kamala sneaks out to attend a party and, being in a place she wasn't supposed to be, she is exposed to the mist and has a weird hallucinatory reaction, being visited by Iron Man, Captain America and former-Ms. Marvel, current Captain Marvel Carol Danvers (Kamala writes Avengers fan fiction in her spare time).
During the conversation, she tells Carol that she wants to be her, "Except I would wear the classic, politically incorrect costume and kick but in giant wedge heels."
When she wakes up, she is, right down to the paler white skin and long, blonde hair.
The mist gave Kamala powers, but they're not Carol Danvers' ill-defined powers; instead they're basically Plastic Man's powers. Wilson doesn't pound it home in this volume, but apparently Kamala keeps the Ms. Marvel name just because she admires Carol Danvers so much and, well, Carol's not using it at the moment. As for her actual powers, they are just as visually fun and, well, comic book-y as they've been in various Plastic Man comics before. The ability to change one's identity, to shrink or grow, and to have various body parts change and grow as if they had a mind of their own make for pretty potent teenage metaphors; visually, Kamala's identity can be pretty fluid, even chaotic, especially when she's not entirely in control.
The following four issues involve Kamala's trying to deal with her weird new powers, trying to keep them secret, trying to decide who to keep them secret from and who to tell about them, and facing her first trials by fire. These are very teenage appropriate, particularly for a character basically just stumbling into superheroics: She saves Zoe from drowning, rescues Bruno from a stick-up (sorta), and makes repeated attempts to rescue Bruno's brother from the clutches of the teenage minions of a new villain (failing once, and then succeeding after a training montage).
I've found Wilson's DC Comics writing to be somewhat uneven in the past—she's responsible for excellent original graphic novel Cairo, short-lived Vertigo series Air, a Vixen miniseries and an Aquaman one-shot tied into one of the many Outsiders re-relaunches—but this is by far the best comics writing I've read from her. Hell, it's some of the better super-comics writing from anyone I've read lately, and it reminded me quite a bit of Brian K. Vaughan's Runaways—there's something quite Molly-ish about Kamala—which is probably as appropriate as it is inevitable, given the fact that her artist is Runaways co-creator Adrian Alphona, who has been away from Marvel Comics for far too long.
While his artwork, here colored by Ian Herring, is undoubtedly the work of the guy who used to draw Runaways, it's quite remarkable how much he's changed and grown since then, particularly if you've got a Runaways trade handy to flip-through.
His character designs are perfect, from the fashion to the faces; Kamala looks every bit as distinct as Kamala as she does when she's wearing her Ms. Marvel get-up. His artwork has gotten a lot looser, a lot more busy and he seems to be really enjoying himself, filling up the panels with playful, often silly details, from the labeling of the products at the Circle Q corner shop Bruno works at to the signage in the backgrounds to a surprised cartoon squirrel falling out of the tree by Kamala's window when she attempts to sneak in.
Alphona straddles the line between cartoony and over-the-top, drawing various adults at very large sizes, often with oversized, Muppet-like heads and/or hands, which may not be the best choice in a comic book about a superhero whose power is generally demonstrated via hand-"embiggening." Ms. Marvel has been blessed with some pretty great cover artists—Sara Pichelli, whose homage to Supergirl #1 got some attention, Jamie McKelvie and, for a variant at least, Arthur Adams. And all of the covers are nice, but they don't seem to fit the comic very well; if you just looked at the covers, this would look like an awfully serious series, starring a much more straightforward, even generic super-character than the one who's actually starring in it. Hopefully Alphona will get to draw his own covers as the series goes on.
I have some other, equally minor concerns about the series, like linking the character so strongly to The Inhumans, Infinity and Carol Danvers/Marvel's Marvel characters. After I finished reading, I thought back to DC's 1993 "Bloodlines" event, which introduced "New Blood" superheroes to the DCU, among them Garth Ennis and John McCrea's Tommy Monaghan, star of Hitman. Apparently created before "Bloodlines" and just sort of squeezed into the DCU through it, that became a bit of baggage regarding a character that proved more popular and more successful than the event DC meant o serve as a springboard for him.
Wilson and Alphona's work here, and the characters they've created, are obviously strong enough to stand on their own, and I can't help but wonder to what degree the connections to the wider Marvel Universe might prove a help or a hinderance in the long run. As for Ms. Marvel, my complete disinterest in Carol Danvers and Ms. Marvel/Captain Marvel was at least one factor in keeping me from reading this series when it was originally released, and I forsee those talking about the book always having to distinguish between Kamala and Carol, with a "Not that Ms. Marvel, the new one," in the same way that, say, talking about Blue Beetle or Robin or Batgirl is never as easy as talking about, say, Wonder Woman or Batman or Spider-Man. I have to admit though, I do like the legacy-carrying-as-act-of-fandom presented here. Outside of a hallucination, there's no scene where Captain Marvel Carol Danvers appears and gives Kamala her blessing to use her old name, or passes on her costume or anything—Kamala just digs Ms. Marvel, and decides to become her, despite not even having powers anything like hers. There's just something extra-relevant about this kind of legacy character in 2014, I guess.
Well, it turns out that I was worried over nothing: G. Willow Wilson and Adrian Alphona's Ms. Marvel is every bit as good as I heard it was, and a good deal better than I was expecting it to be.
Much has been made over the other-ness of the character, the handful of things that make her different from your average super-comic star: Not only is she a she, and a teenager at that, she's also Pakistani-American and Muslim. As conceived by Wilson and Alphona, however, Kamala Khan is more similar to her many readers (or, at least, the person many of us used to be), than she is different. She feels out-of-place in her own world, she wishes she were more accepted and more popular, she feels misunderstood by her own family and by society at large. The specificity of some of those conflicts might be a bit, well, foreign, but the conflicts themselves are universal. More than anything, she reminded me of maybe the most classic Marvel Comics character template.
Someone once said—okay, it was Chris Sims, and he's said it more than once, like here, for example—that Marvel has attempted to re-create Spider-Man each decade since they birth of their flagship charter in the 1960s. In the 1970s, there was Nova; in the the '80s, Speedball; in the '90s, Darkhawk and, in the '00s, Ultimate Spider-Man. Well, despite taking her codename from an entirely different pre-existing Marvel superhero, I think Ms. Marvel could well be the Spider-Man of this particular decade, the character having the same basic array of problems, the same super powers-as-puberty metaphors, the same basic cluelessness and desire to do good with her strange gift, she even has a pretty similar outlook, one that extends to the entire book. Kamala is funny, and her book is funny; at the risk of alienating any readers adverse to any genre that isn't superheroes, Ms. Marvel is a comedy first, and a superhero adventure serial second.
The characters origins are tied directly to The Inhumans (again, despite the fact that she's named for another character with nothing to do with The Inhumans), and, specifically, the events of Infinity, I guess, although one need not have read or even known anything about that series to follow this one: "Caught in the Terrigen Mist Bomb set off in Infinity" or just "caught in some strange, superpower-granting mist" read the same here.
After the bulk of the first issue spent introducing us to put-upon Kamala, her best friends Nakia and Bruno, her family and schoolmate Zoe Zimmerman (an inadvertent foil the characters refer to as a "concern troll," her existence kind of bothers Kamala and her friends to different degrees, but she's not a queen bee, mean girl or female version of Peter Parker's Flash Thompson; rather, she just represents the ideal of all-American teenage girlhood in a way that irritates them each in different ways), Kamala sneaks out to attend a party and, being in a place she wasn't supposed to be, she is exposed to the mist and has a weird hallucinatory reaction, being visited by Iron Man, Captain America and former-Ms. Marvel, current Captain Marvel Carol Danvers (Kamala writes Avengers fan fiction in her spare time).
During the conversation, she tells Carol that she wants to be her, "Except I would wear the classic, politically incorrect costume and kick but in giant wedge heels."
When she wakes up, she is, right down to the paler white skin and long, blonde hair.
The mist gave Kamala powers, but they're not Carol Danvers' ill-defined powers; instead they're basically Plastic Man's powers. Wilson doesn't pound it home in this volume, but apparently Kamala keeps the Ms. Marvel name just because she admires Carol Danvers so much and, well, Carol's not using it at the moment. As for her actual powers, they are just as visually fun and, well, comic book-y as they've been in various Plastic Man comics before. The ability to change one's identity, to shrink or grow, and to have various body parts change and grow as if they had a mind of their own make for pretty potent teenage metaphors; visually, Kamala's identity can be pretty fluid, even chaotic, especially when she's not entirely in control.
The following four issues involve Kamala's trying to deal with her weird new powers, trying to keep them secret, trying to decide who to keep them secret from and who to tell about them, and facing her first trials by fire. These are very teenage appropriate, particularly for a character basically just stumbling into superheroics: She saves Zoe from drowning, rescues Bruno from a stick-up (sorta), and makes repeated attempts to rescue Bruno's brother from the clutches of the teenage minions of a new villain (failing once, and then succeeding after a training montage).
I've found Wilson's DC Comics writing to be somewhat uneven in the past—she's responsible for excellent original graphic novel Cairo, short-lived Vertigo series Air, a Vixen miniseries and an Aquaman one-shot tied into one of the many Outsiders re-relaunches—but this is by far the best comics writing I've read from her. Hell, it's some of the better super-comics writing from anyone I've read lately, and it reminded me quite a bit of Brian K. Vaughan's Runaways—there's something quite Molly-ish about Kamala—which is probably as appropriate as it is inevitable, given the fact that her artist is Runaways co-creator Adrian Alphona, who has been away from Marvel Comics for far too long.
While his artwork, here colored by Ian Herring, is undoubtedly the work of the guy who used to draw Runaways, it's quite remarkable how much he's changed and grown since then, particularly if you've got a Runaways trade handy to flip-through.
His character designs are perfect, from the fashion to the faces; Kamala looks every bit as distinct as Kamala as she does when she's wearing her Ms. Marvel get-up. His artwork has gotten a lot looser, a lot more busy and he seems to be really enjoying himself, filling up the panels with playful, often silly details, from the labeling of the products at the Circle Q corner shop Bruno works at to the signage in the backgrounds to a surprised cartoon squirrel falling out of the tree by Kamala's window when she attempts to sneak in.
Alphona straddles the line between cartoony and over-the-top, drawing various adults at very large sizes, often with oversized, Muppet-like heads and/or hands, which may not be the best choice in a comic book about a superhero whose power is generally demonstrated via hand-"embiggening." Ms. Marvel has been blessed with some pretty great cover artists—Sara Pichelli, whose homage to Supergirl #1 got some attention, Jamie McKelvie and, for a variant at least, Arthur Adams. And all of the covers are nice, but they don't seem to fit the comic very well; if you just looked at the covers, this would look like an awfully serious series, starring a much more straightforward, even generic super-character than the one who's actually starring in it. Hopefully Alphona will get to draw his own covers as the series goes on.
I have some other, equally minor concerns about the series, like linking the character so strongly to The Inhumans, Infinity and Carol Danvers/Marvel's Marvel characters. After I finished reading, I thought back to DC's 1993 "Bloodlines" event, which introduced "New Blood" superheroes to the DCU, among them Garth Ennis and John McCrea's Tommy Monaghan, star of Hitman. Apparently created before "Bloodlines" and just sort of squeezed into the DCU through it, that became a bit of baggage regarding a character that proved more popular and more successful than the event DC meant o serve as a springboard for him.
Wilson and Alphona's work here, and the characters they've created, are obviously strong enough to stand on their own, and I can't help but wonder to what degree the connections to the wider Marvel Universe might prove a help or a hinderance in the long run. As for Ms. Marvel, my complete disinterest in Carol Danvers and Ms. Marvel/Captain Marvel was at least one factor in keeping me from reading this series when it was originally released, and I forsee those talking about the book always having to distinguish between Kamala and Carol, with a "Not that Ms. Marvel, the new one," in the same way that, say, talking about Blue Beetle or Robin or Batgirl is never as easy as talking about, say, Wonder Woman or Batman or Spider-Man. I have to admit though, I do like the legacy-carrying-as-act-of-fandom presented here. Outside of a hallucination, there's no scene where Captain Marvel Carol Danvers appears and gives Kamala her blessing to use her old name, or passes on her costume or anything—Kamala just digs Ms. Marvel, and decides to become her, despite not even having powers anything like hers. There's just something extra-relevant about this kind of legacy character in 2014, I guess.
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