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52 Reviews 52 (Part Four)

WEEK FOUR

 

12134157286?profile=originalALL-STAR WESTERN #1

Written by JUSTIN GRAY and JIMMY PALMIOTTI

Art and cover by MORITAT

40 pg, FC, $3.99 US • RATED T+

 

I loved Gray & Palmiotti’s Jonah Hex. This was even better.

 

Plot: Someone is butchering prostitutes, Jack the Ripper style, in 19th century Gotham City, and Dr. Amadeus Arkham hires the famous Western bounty hunter to catch him.

 

Do I really need to go any farther than that before you run out and buy this book? OK, I’ll tease out a bit more:

 

* The art is fantastic. Moritat really captures the grime and filth of a post-industrial, late 1800s city.

 

* Gray & Palmiotti wisely do not play Jonah as a fish out of water. Instead, he is a shark dropped among minnows.

 

* Arkham attempts to psychoanalyze Hex in a voiceover, and he’s right and he’s wrong and he’s puzzled. Gray & Palmiotti appear to be having fun with this, as well as doing the requisite first issue introduction.

 

* Hex, as we know, is no dummy. So he comes to many of the conclusions a later Gotham detective does about how evil really operates in this city, and at what level, and reveals it to us at the end – making me want issue #2 right now.

 

I don’t have enough superlatives for this book. If you think you won’t enjoy a Western, think again. This is the genre cleaned of all its clichés and barnacles and distilled to the essence of what made it popular in the first place. Think of it as crime noir in a Stetson, and get ready for a doggone good book.

 

12134110874?profile=originalAQUAMAN #1

Written by GEOFF JOHNS

Art and cover by IVAN REIS and JOE PRADO

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

Geoff Johns takes the jokes about Aquaman by the horns, and sets up a new status quo to discredit them.

 

Plot: A creepy new race rises from the very bottom of the Atlantic, discovering “the above” for the first time. Given their teeth, it does not bode well for us. On the surface, Aquaman stops a stolen payroll truck by exhibiting early Superman powers – he leaps to the crime like the Hulk, tosses the truck around easily, and bullets bounce off him. He puts up with fish jokes from the cops, and goes to a seafood diner where his dad used to take him (seen in brief flashback), and puts up with more fish jokes. Eventually an irritating blogger asks “how does it feel to be nobody’s favorite superhero?” and it’s too much; the Sea King leaves without eating (but gives his waitress a couple of doubloons worth enough to put her kids through college). He goes to his dad’s lighthouse and meets with Mera, describing his decision to become a surface superhero, and she vows to join him. The issue ends with a cliff-hanger, as that new race reaches the surface and puts those ghastly teeth to work.

 

I think this is a very good start. I’ve said since I was a child reading 1960s Aquaman comics – where the titular character was overshadowed by his vastly more powerful wife, and wondered why she wasn’t the star – that Aquaman needs a serious power upgrade to be a viable character. Here Johns takes the idea introduced way back in Justice League of America #111 (first series) that a guy accustomed to the crushing pressures of the depths would be incredibly super-strong and dense on the surface. (One wonders – and doubts – if this applies to Mera, but let’s hope it does.) Do we need another strong, tough guy who takes second or third place to the other powerhouses on the JLA? Maybe not, but it’s better than a guy who swims fast and talks to fish, which is the kind of guy you leave on monitor duty. So a cautious thumbs up, and let’s hope Johns’s brief description of “talking to fish” – that isn’t what Aquaman does – leads to a broader power there, and possibly one more useful on the surface.

 

Speaking of which what about that surface mission? Doesn’t that obviate the cool aspects of Atlantis as well as the dull, boring over-used ones? Yeah, but Atlantis isn’t going anywhere, so Johns can still his toe into it when he wants to. And thinking back, I don’t think Aquaman’s ever been a surface hero full-time, so this is a new road to explore. And the  various flashbacks to his childhood with the lighthouse keeper add nostalgic resonance for the decision.

 

But the best part? Mera. Ever since I was that child in the 1960s I’ve loved Mera. Not in a lustful way (although, when Nick Cardy drew her, occasionally), but because she was a calm, accomplished, powerful partner for Aquaman. Silver Age DC used to have a lot of those kinds of strong, capable women – Hawkgirl, Iris West, even Carol Ferris to a degree – and those were women easy to admire. (They had losers, too, like pesky Lois Lane and self-centered Jean Loring, but nobody’s perfect.) It was when DC decided to turn Mera into a lunatic (literally, although she got better) that I pretty much lost interest in Aquaman and never got it back.

 

Until now. If a confident, competent, powerful Mera is part of the package, then I’m aboard.

 

12134158073?profile=originalBATMAN: THE DARK KNIGHT #1

Written by DAVID FINCH

Art by DAVID FINCH and RICHARD FRIEND

Cover by DAVID FINCH

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

If you liked the old Batman: the Dark Knight, you’ll like this one.

 

Plot: The book opens with Batman racing somewhere, in the process showing us some of his familiar toys (and thereby reassuring returning readers that nothing has changed, while showing those toys to the theoretical new readers). Where he’s going appears to be a social function where Bruce Wayne announces the Gotham Revitalization Plan, an ambitious project to correct problems that beset most cities these days. Two new supporting characters are introduced, a GCPD internal affairs officer determined to find out who in the department is helping Wayne with Batman, and a young, hot, rich chick, who is aggressively flirtatious with Bruce. Wayne is called away due to a riot at Arkham, and he leads Arkham security into the conflict to rescue trapped officers, but he is also looking for Two-Face for undisclosed reasons. He finds him, but there have been some changes.

 

Let me say up front that I love David Finch’s art. He could draw Spongebob Squarepants and I’d buy it, so Finch doing a Batman book makes me very happy. I think it’s that he comes from the Neal Adams photo-realism school, where everything looks functional and normal, only prettier than in real life. (Or grittier, if it’s a bad thing.) His Batman is large, powerful and dangerous-looking.

 

And that’s good, because the story isn’t much. For some reason, Paul Jenkins has been shoehorned into the credits after the ones above were provided in the solicitations, as writer and co-plotter. (Finch is demoted to artist/co-plotter). Is this to improve dialogue? Help Finch stay on deadline? Maybe neither, maybe both. It doesn’t seem to have made the story better. My complaints:

 

1) The internal affairs officer wants to find out who in the department is helping Wayne fund The Batman. That’s a threat to Gordon, so that’s a cool plot twist, but it raises the obvious question about Wayne himself not being arrested. Wouldn’t the more obvious move be to arrest the guy who has publicly admitted to funding an illegal vigilante? Until that’s given an excuse, no matter how flimsy, I’m going to keep wondering why this cop isn’t putting the bracelets on Wayne instead of hanging around grimacing. By the way, is it too much to ask to have a cop character who isn’t a snarling, threatening “I’ll get you some day” type? How about one with the same agenda but smiles a lot? That’d leave you wondering what he’s really after, plus add some fresh air to this cliché. (And, yes, he’s wearing a trenchcoat. How’d you know?)

 

2) Wait, another hot, young, heiress in Gotham? How many are there? Fewer than before, I’d guess, because they all end up dead in the dozens of stories over the years that have started exactly like this. But that’s "Old 52," so let’s leave that aside. Instead, let’s focus on what this new character provides: Let’s see, what could it be … Oh, yeah! Eye candy and sexual availability! Wow, that’s a new twist! [/sarcasm off]

 

OK, maybe I’m just hyper-sensitive after last week’s Starfire debacle, but … no, no I’m not. This girl isn’t a character in the first issue, she’s a 13-year-old male fantasy: zaftig and sexually aggressive. Virtually all of her dialogue is sexual innuendo or double entendre, and her parting comment literally invites Wayne to follow her sashaying caboose. Grant Morrison made great use of this unfortunate cliché in that his hot, young, heiress who sexually pursues Wayne turned out to be (SPOILER!) the bad guy. Would that other writers did the same, and maybe what’s-her-name here will prove to be. Right now all she is a sex doll in revealing clothes. (Wife: "Wow, that's a really short dress.") I hope so, but DC’s track record has me feeling a little pessimistic.

 

3) Batman fights everybody in Arkham again? Didn’t he just do that over in Batman #1 last week? 

 

OK, there is some good news. One is that if the last page is a permanent thing and not a temporary one for the surprise ending, maybe Two-Face (one of Batman’s most boring villains) will become more than an ugly guy with a dumb gimmick. Also, it was refreshing to see the Arkham guards fall in line behind Batman’s lead – regardless of Batman’s official status, those guys would see him as their best chance, and they do. (Another tedious “It’s Batman! Arrest him!” scene would have seriously derailed any forward plot momentum, and also been another clichéd scene in a book with too many already.)

 

And there’s the Finch art. You know, I’d buy this book just to look at the pictures and not read a word of dialogue. Let’s hope issue #2 improves so that I don’t have to.

 

12134158666?profile=originalBLACKHAWKS #1

Written by MIKE COSTA

Art and cover by KEN LASHLEY

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

This book has potential, but that potential is buried under clichés.

 

Plot: The Blackhawks are evidently a U.N.-sponsored black ops group that goes after hostage situations, terrorists, that sort of thing. We see them breaking up a terrorist operation in Kazakhstan, and in the process meet a few of them, especially the hot-dogging Kunoichi (who, among all the agents, is the only one without a nickname). They succeed although “Attila” is injured and Kunoichi gets bitten. A U.N. delegate comes to “The Eyrie” to tell Blackhawks leader Andrew Lincoln that someone took a picture of the Blackhawks logo in Kazakhstan, and posted it on the Internet, which is a problem. Meanwhile, a faceless female bad guy in armor contacts one of the terrorists captured in Kazakhstan through microscopic machines called nanocites and uses them to blow him up. Scarlett – um, sorry, I meant Kunoichi – discovers she has been infected with them too, through the bite, and it is causing some physical changes akin to super-powers.

 

So our adrenaline-junkie showoff – every covert team has one, right? – is a female in this series. Sorry, still a cliché! And, oh, she’s sexually aggressive! Where have we seen that before? Attention, DCnU, that’s a trend in your new books, and the Starfire thing is going to infect every one of them. That's just the way it is, so please do better with women in the future, OK? OK.

 

Aside from the usual G.I. Joe clichés, this series had three specific problems that jumped out at me:

 

* First, Kunoichi complained about being bitten two panels before she was. I can write that off as miscommunication between writer and artist, but where’s the editor? And this sort of thing simply shouldn’t happen at a professional comics company, especially a first issue where you’re trying to put your best foot forward.

 

* Second, Kunoichi bails from a plane at 300 mph above a lake, and someone on the radio helpfully informs her (and us, in case we didn’t know) that hitting water at 300 mph is like hitting concrete. Her solution? SHE SHOOTS HER GUN AT THE WATER TO SOFTEN IT UP. Oh, sure, that should work. Firearms are magic, aren’t they? The laws of physics are no match for Kunoichi’s magic guns! Look, when you’re talking about Kryptonians, I can buy a few impossible things. When you’re talking about ordinary people and inertia, I cannot.

 

* Evidently Blackhawks are covert, so an accidental photo of their logo is a serious problem. Then how come ALL THE AGENTS AND THEIR PLANES HAVE THE LOGO ON THEM? You don’t see the Navy SEALs with “NAVY” stenciled on their backs! This is … well, unless there’s a good explanation next issue, this is really quite stupid.

 

There’s nothing here that I haven’t read in a mediocre issue of G.I. Joe, and frankly I prefer the latter – at least that book isn’t pretending to be something it’s not.

 

12134103093?profile=originalTHE FLASH #1

Written by FRANCIS MANAPUL and BRIAN BUCCELLATO

Art and cover by FRANCIS MANAPUL

Variant cover by IVAN REIS and TIM TOWNSEND

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

As you’d expect, this book moves pretty fast.

 

Manapul doesn’t stray very far from the set-up Geoff Johns constructed in the last Flash series, which is fine. One update is that Barry Allen is dating a co-worker, while reporter Iris West is making that girl (Patty something) uncomfortable with how strong she comes on to Barry to get a story. Meanwhile, the requisite conflict is a robbery of a high-tech device, which The Flash stops, and one of the thieves falls dead, and it turns out to be a childhood friend of Barry’s named Manuel. He investigates, and another, identical Manuel shows up, which proves to be the tip of the iceberg.

 

It’s a good book. It plays out in a professional manner at a pretty good clip, and I have no complaints. I'm not sure it will convert any Wally West fans, but at least Barry's not entirely dull. Manapul does a nice visual bit with the costume being formed out of Speed Force, and, amazingly, the two main females actually look different (Patty is more petite than Iris, for example). The Manuel mystery doesn’t seem very interesting, but we’ll see.

 

No complaints.

 

12134158886?profile=originalTHE FURY OF FIRESTORM #1

Written by ETHAN VAN SCIVER and GAIL SIMONE

Art by YILDIRAY CINAR

Cover by ETHAN VAN SCIVER

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

Well, I sure didn’t see that coming!

 

Plot: Jason Rusch (Firestorm II) and Ronnie Raymond (Firestorm I) are both in this book, and they’re contemporaries in high school – Raymond is the football team quarterback, Rusch is a smart kid who writes for the high school newspaper. Rusch interviews Raymond for the paper and their differences are displayed and it gets ugly. Meanwhile, an extremely murderous group are killing a lot of people to attain some magnetic bottles. They torture a scientist at the Hadron Super-Collider and he gives up what these magnetic bottles mean (they are the legacy of the deceased Dr. Martin Stein, a genius who discovered the secret to transmutation at the quantum level), and where the fourth and last one is (guess). Sure enough, it turns out that Rusch has the fourth, because he’s a super-genius (who spends his time writing for a high school newspaper??!?) who’s been in touch with Stein, but when the bad guys attack, Rusch says Shazam "Firestorm!" and both he and Raymond become Firestorms. (Meanwhile, one of the terrorists, a female, becomes something very cold, hint, hint.). Raymond’s confused, the Firestorms fight, then something completely unexpected happens and we learn that “Fury” in the title isn’t hyperbole.

 

I’ve never been a big Firestorm fan, so it takes a lot to get me interested in the character. But I’ve always been a big Gail Simone fan (who is credited as writer and co-plotter, despite the solicitation info above), and that has done it.

 

This book has all her trademark elements, including natural dialogue that reveals character (especially Rusch and Raymond), Really Bad Guys with memorable (if gag-inducing) personalities and the juxtaposition of horror and humor. Oh, and a surprise ending that is really a surprise. In short, lots of fun.

 

12134159466?profile=originalGREEN LANTERN: NEW GUARDIANS #1

Written by TONY BEDARD

Art and cover by TYLER KIRKHAM and BATT

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

This is only half a first issue, but I like what I see.

 

Bedard spends seven pages repeating Kyle’s original origin as “the last Green Lantern,” given a ring while he’s relieving himself in an alley behind a bar by “the last Guardian,” Ganthet. Fast forward to the present, where most of that is kinda undone because Kyle himself notes there are many Green Lanterns. Meanwhile, across the universe one ring from each of the various corps abandons its owner, in most cases leaving them to die. A major member from each corps (Fatality for the Star Sapphires, for example) follows the errant rings, all of which converge on Kyle Rayner on Earth.

 

I thought the first seven pages were an odd choice; the parts that are still valid could have been mentioned in dialogue, and there’s a lot of it that isn’t valid any more (“the last Green Lantern”), even in The New 52. So why bring it up? And why waste the pages? And why remind us that Kyle's origin involves urination? Perhaps something will come of it later.

 

The rest of it is just set-up, and I can’t wait to find out what’s going to happen when the seven representatives of the emotional/light spectrum get together. Given the title, they’ll have to work together, but it’s hard to imagine how. I kinda wish I’d had more of a hint of that in THE FIRST ISSUE OF A NEW SERIES, but I trust Bedard enough to give him another issue. Also, the art is from the Green Lantern sci-fi school, and is very nice.

 

12134159698?profile=originalI, VAMPIRE #1

Written by JOSHUA HALE FIALKOV

Art by ANDREA SORRENTINO

Cover by JENNY FRISON

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T+

 

This was a very, very good book.

 

Plot: “For hundreds of years, vampire Andrew Stanton kept mankind safe from the horrors of the supernatural world, thanks to a truce he made with his ex-lover Mary, the Queen of the Damned. But now that truce has reached a bloody end and Andrew must do everything in his power to stop Mary and her dark forces from going on a killing spree – and she plans to start with the heroes of the DCU!”

 

You know, when you listen to Mary explain why she doesn’t want to spend eternity drinking cow’s blood and working menial night jobs, you begin to understand why she wants refers to her vampire uprising as a “freeing” of her people – in many ways, she’s right. This is driven home when she transforms into a scullery maid for Andrew and offers to clean the latrines or be sold for some pigs. “Oh, don’t refuse me, m’lord!” she says sarcastically. “Without you to tell me who I am, I’m nothing --!”

 

The point is made. Mary lived when women were property or second-class citizens, and now in her un-life, she is unwilling to go back that status. Fialkov’s good – I was feeling sympathy for Mary, and thinking of Andrew as an old-world style male oppressor … until the killings started. Whatever sympathy I had for Mary kinda evaporated when her minions wiped out an entire subway car and filled the street with corpses.

 

And I haven’t yet mentiond Sorrentino’s artwork, which is extremely evocative and nuanced. A book like this needs something other than the usual superhero bombast, and Sorrentino delivers in spades. She depicts this dark, shadowy world in precisely the stylish way it deserves, yet never surrenders clarity or storytelling. Remarkable, and a joy.

 

I, Vampire is horrible, and in a good way. At her core, Mary has a valid point. But like Malcolm X, or Magneto, she’s going about it all wrong. That makes for a terrific villain, and makes my sympathies for Andrew somewhat mixed. My conscience tells me what to think, but Fialkov confuses me on what to feel.

 

Which make this a very, very good book.

 

12134160457?profile=originalJUSTICE LEAGUE DARK #1

Written by PETER MILLIGAN

Art by MIKEL JANIN

Cover by RYAN SOOK

On sale SEPTEMBER 28 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

Creepy, in a good way.

 

Plot (straight from the solicitation): “The witch known as The Enchantress has gone mad, unleashing forces that not even the combined powers of Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman and Cyborg can stop. And if those heroes can’t handle the job, who will stand against this mystical madness? Shade the Changing Man, Madame Xanadu, Deadman, Zatanna and John Constantine may be our only hope – but how can we put our trust in beings whose very presence makes ordinary people break out in a cold sweat?”

 

Yeah, it’s a basic “putting the band together” issue, but there’s lots of cool exposition about our heroes, described by Shade as “half insane or … damaged goods. Most of them are a danger to themselves.” And he ought to know: Shade is in the habit of using the M-vest to create simulacrums of his dead girlfriend Kathy to sleep with. Batman describes Zatanna as unstable. Xanadu keeps seeing horrific visions of the future that have her panicked. Enchantress, as noted, is insane, and her insanity is spreading from where she is (trapped in an enveloped on the floor of a remote farm) and forcing people to do terrible things. Meanwhile, there’s the nice mystery of her alter ego, June Moone – or Moones, I should say, since there are hundreds of them, and one is searching for Deadman. (We don't see much of him, but he's got his own book, so who cares.) Plot-wise they’ve gotten the Spandex out of the way early, and now it’s the “damaged goods” who will have to save the day.

 

This is excellent, creepy fun.

 

12134160286?profile=originalTHE SAVAGE HAWKMAN #1

Written by TONY S. DANIEL

Art and cover by PHILIP TAN

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

Oh, thank God, they’re dumping most Hawk-history. But does the helmet have to be so stupid-looking?

 

Carter Hall wants to stop being Hawkman, so he burns his suit. The suit has other ideas, however, as the Nth metal kinda absorbs him, and he wakes up at home with no idea how he got there. An emissary from some colleague conscripts Carter to come decipher some writing on an alien ship found by this colleague in the ocean, because Carter is apparently really good at deciphering things. Black things come out of the ship and kill people, and Carter discovers the Nth metal is inside him, and manifests his hawk suit. The main black thing kinda sucks that out of Carter, which is the cliff-hanger.

 

Obviously, Daniel is going to beef up Hawkman – who needs beefing up – by using the Nth metal as a deus ex machina. That’s good, if done well, and Daniel has a good track record. And, as I said, thank God they’re taking the opportunity to dump a lot of contradictory and headache-inducing Hawk history – all we know is that Carter Hall has been Hawkman, but is tired of being Hawkman. Not a lot else happens – we don’t know much about the black things, except that they’re extra-terrestrial and hostile, although my continuity-sense expects they are this reality’s version of the Shadow Thief – but maybe next issue will be forthcoming. I’m not dying for that next issue, and this was really on the beginning of a set-up, not the whole enchilada. It's not much of bite, but it's chewy enough.

 

Still, did the helmet have to be so stupid-looking? "Dear Hawkman: Aztek called, and he wants his hat back."

 

12134135491?profile=originalSUPERMAN #1

Written by GEORGE PEREZ

Breakdowns and cover by GEORGE PEREZ

Art by JESUS MERINO

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

Maybe I’m spoiled by Action Comics #1, but I was bored by this.

 

The main action is that Superman fights a mysterious fire monster. During the course of it, we see references to his new status quo. The Planet (and WGBS) has been bought out by a Rupert Murdoch type figure, and Lois is making the best of it, aided by her promotion to Executive Producer of Nightly News Division and Executive Vice-president of New Media. Clark Kent objects to the paper answering to this scalawag, and everyone knows it, but he keeps his job because he’s so “lucky” as a reporter. We see Perry White still in charge of the Planet and Jimmy Olsen a loyal friend to Clark and Superman and has chops as a reporter. Lois shows shows her chops running the coverage of the fire monster, and Clark gets “lucky” with an exclusive with Superman. He goes to Lois’s apartment to patch things up, but she is already celebrating doing the sexy-sex with her boyfriend. Lois and boyfriend don’t realize it, but we readers realize Clark is pining for Lois.

 

This could have been a standard Superman story from the early 1980s, with the added bits of exposition explaining the new status quo, most of which we already knew from interviews and other books. To be honest, I found it pedestrian, and I wanted more from a first issue.

 

12134161254?profile=originalTEEN TITANS #1

Written by SCOTT LOBDELL

Art and cover by BRETT BOOTH and NORM RAPMUND

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

Cliches are us.

 

Plot: A speedster in a home-made costume calling himself Kid Flash botches helping out at a fire by hot-dogging it. The media says rude things about him, while helpfully informing us he is not connected to The Flash. Switch to Tim Drake, who calls himself Red Robin, and is secretly investigating the disappearance of super-powered teens around the world. He is attacked by agents of N.O.W.H.E.R.E. (meaning undisclosed) but is ready for them and escapes (using functioning wings that are also bullet-proof). He attempts to recruit rich, beautiful heiress Cassie Sandsmark, because he has deduced that she is the character the media is calling Wonder Girl since she has evidently picked up super-powers after a visit to Greece, and figures N.O.W.H.E.R.E.  has figured it out, too. She resists, but N.O.W.H.E.R.E. attacks and she realizes she has no choice but to go with Red Robin. A final page reveal repeats the last couple of pages of Superboy #1, so we learn nothing new, except confirmation that he will be a cast member. The other three Titans that appear on the cover do not appear on the inside.

 

I appreciate that Lobdell is starting over from scratch here, and I don’t mind that. What I do mind is that I saw nothing here I haven’t seen a thousand times before, not only in various iterations of Teen Titans, but also Runaways, Cloak & Dagger, Harbinger, Next Men, New Warriors, on and on. They’re teens on the run! They’re snarky and rebellious! They’re being chased by a mysterious organization! Yawwwwn.

 

(And N.O.W.H.E.R.E.? Really? Is it the 1960s, by G.E.O.R.G.E.? T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents can get away with it, but otherwise the whole acronym thing is mostly used for parody in Archie Comics. And, come on, if you’re going to have an acronym, you should explain it. If you don’t care enough to do that, it’s not likely we will care much, either.)

 

Maybe the second issue will give me a reason to care, but I doubt it.

 

12134160894?profile=originalVOODOO #1

Written by RON MARZ

Art and cover by SAMI BASRI

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T+

 

Ron Marz tweeted once that if the readers aren’t shocked by the second issue, he’s not doing it right. He’s doing it right, and he’s ahead of schedule.

 

Plot: Our title character is a stripper, and a good one, given the honorary name “Voodoo” at the Voodoo Lounge. Two people in the audience (male and female) are arguing – they’re not here by chance, as they’re two agents assigned to keep an eye on the stripper (from an unnamed agency, and we’re led to believe it’s extra-governmental) and the male wants to do it as a customer, because he’s kind of a lech. The female gets disgusted and storms out – only to be attacked by several men on the street whom she handily dispatches, demonstrating she is not to be trifled with. The guy pays the stripper – Priscilla “Voodoo” Kitaen – for a private dance, where he reveals that he thinks she’s an alien, probably a shapechanger, that she’s spying on our superheroes and our military, and that he wants her to turn herself in or he’ll turn her over to the military for experiments. She takes this revelation … poorly. A second surprise ending promises things aren’t going to go well for the female agent, either, who will likely prove to be the book’s POV character.

 

OK, you’d think after all the grousing I’ve done about Starfire that I’d have nothing good to say about a character whose book opens with the protagonist as a stripper. And, to tell you the truth, I was having a little trouble holding my dinner down at first, even though (IIRC) Voodoo was a stripper in her previous incarnation. But by the end I’d forgotten all that. There was a good point to all this, and if nothing else, the final pages turns cheesecake into horror, titillation into terror. Marz gets you to let your guard down, and BAM!

 

That’s good writing. And I’ll be here next issue to find out who – or what – Voodoo really is.

Read more…

12134027688?profile=originalThere were only two qualifications.

 

1.  Be an acknowledged leading expert in an adventurous field.

 

2.  Walk away from a certain-death disaster.

 

That’s how the original Challengers did it, ‘way back in Showcase # 6 (Jan.-Feb., 1957).  “The Secrets of the Sorcerer’s Box” began with the conclusion of the radio programme, Heroes, announcing the upcoming appearance of four men who had earned the title. 

 

Rocky Davis, “Olympic wrestling champion.”  Prof Haley, “master skin diver.”  Red Ryan, “circus daredevil.”  Ace Morgan, “fearless jet pilot.”

 

12134146472?profile=originalMorgan himself was flying the other three to their scheduled appearance when the ship’s controls jammed while heading through a terrible storm.  The plane spun in and ploughed through a forest, the trees ripping the craft to shreds.  It should have meant sure death for them.  It would have been remarkable if any of the men on board had survived.  But, miraculously, all four crawled out of the wreckage with nothing more than torn clothing and some cuts and bruises to show for their experience.

 

“We should be dead---but we’re not!” said Ryan.  “My watch should be smashed---yet, it’s unharmed---keeping time!”

 

Morgan was the first to grasp the metaphor.

 

“Borrowed time, Red!  We’re living on borrowed time!”

 

 

 

That was the way they all saw it.  Since they were already ahead of the game, so to speak, the four men decided to continue taking deadly risks as a group.  They called themselves the Challengers of the Unknown.

 

12134147059?profile=originalA single-panel montage displayed their first forays into cheating death, thus, establishing their reputation when the story proper began on page four, with a million-dollar offer to open an ancient box of sorcery.

 

That’s the way it began.  After three more Showcase try-outs, the group graduated to its own title, with Challengers of the Unknown # 1 (Apr.-May, 1958).

 

As with all series, there were some growing pains, as the format settled into place.  Some of them had their talents expanded.  Rocky added boxing and weightlifting to his strongman exploits.  Prof moved from simply being a master diver to an oceanographer, and then to being a leading scientific mind in general.  Red Ryan probably made the biggest shift in professional skills; he was touted as being an expert mountain climber, in addition to having performed as a circus acrobat.  And, later---as the writers would have it---he found time to add a study of electronics to his résumé.

 

Initially, there wasn’t much, outside of their hair colour, to distinguish the four of them, but eventually individual personalities blossomed.  Ace turned into a no-nonsense, all business kind of guy, while Prof started to sound like an egghead from time to time.  Rocky’s dialogue and character became as rough-hewn as his nickname.

 

And there were some cosmetic adjustments, too.  They changed uniforms a couple of times.  They operated out of three different home bases over the years.  And, for awhile, they zoomed around in a stylised modular aircraft they called the Gallopin’ Gizmo.

 

12134149859?profile=originalBut with all that, the basic premise remained in place:  four supremely skilled, but normal men who, believing they were living on borrowed time, sought out great dangers.  (The business of their million-dollar fees fell by the wayside, though, when it was established that the team was financed by the wealth Prof had inherited from his father and his Uncle Cyrus.)

 

The nature of the Unknown faced by the Challs varied over time, too.  Originally, they were adventurers, taking on anything the writers could think of.  Ancient death-devices, giant creatures, alien invasions, travelers from future eras, renegade scientists and their fantastic inventions.  Then, with the dawn of the 1960’s, the team assumed more of a status as crime-fighters, tackling super-villains with gusto.  Finally, as the decade drew to a close, they found themselves embroiled in occult menaces, complete with witches and voodoo and stuff out of Lovecraft.

 

It was that very versatility that kept the title going for a healthy run Silver-Age run.  The series finally closed up shop in 1970, with its last original issue, # 75 (Aug.-Sep., 1970).  And it was an original issue on a technicality---only the first page was new; the rest of the mag contained a reprint.

 

 

 

Now, you’d think that joining a team that specialised in facing death just for the fun of it wouldn’t be high on anybody’s to-do list.  But, there were a few folks who had obviously been kicked in the head just enough times to actually want to become a member of “the champ Challs”.  And there was one who wasn’t looking for a place on the team and had sense enough to turn it down when it was offered.

 

 

12134150289?profile=originalJune Robbins

 

 

The Challengers got their first groupie almost right out of the chute.  In their second adventure, “Ultivac is Loose!”, from  Showcase # 7 (Mar.-Apr., 1957), the team goes up against a giant, sentient, mobile robot.  They seek help in tracking the thing down from a top-secret government laboratory, where they meet its director of operations, Doctor June Robbins.  (The series never stated outright that June had a Ph.D., but it stands to reason that “the greatest authority on robots and calculating machines” would have one, so I’m giving it to her.)

 

June’s technical expertise enables the Challs to locate and ultimately capture Ultivac.  However, in a last-ditch attack, Rocky is shot and dies on the operating table.  Even as they’re pulling the sheet over Rocky’s face, June offers to take his place on the team.  In this moment of shock and grief, the reaction of the other Challengers is “Sure, why not?”  But before they can teach June the secret handshake, the doors of the operating room burst open and the surgeon announces that Rocky is alive, resuscitated by heart massage.  He’s going to make it.

 

There are only two panels left in the tale, and they drop the matter of Dr. Robbins’ membership.  Later, the character herself seems to be forgotten; she doesn’t appear in the last two Challengers Showcase issues.  And then she returns, in the second story in Challengers of the Unknown # 1, with the status of the team’s honorary member.

 

12134151476?profile=originalIt seems to be the old “the group needs a female” attitude at work here, but to be fair, in the Ultivac adventure, June did a great deal more than just push buttons and stare at the Challs admiringly.  She threw herself into the thick of the action and helped bring Ultivac down.  One of the more intriguing aspects of this tale is that the robot’s defeat didn’t come at the end, but only three-quarters of the way through.

 

The last chapter shows June gaining Ultivac’s trust and persuading it to work with humanity, rather than against it.  In a surprisingly mature sub-plot, the scientist-creators of Ultivac argue that the robot is their property, and they insist that they be paid for whatever services it renders man.  In a dramatic scene set on the Capitol floor, June takes the lead in arguing that Ultivac should be considered a sentient being, working in government service.  Ultivac’s creators don’t see it that way, and that’s what screws everything up and gets Rocky shot.

 

 

 

 

When the Challengers’ series was revived in late 1976, the attitude of “We have to have a female on the team!  Harrumph! Harrumph!” was evident.  In the new books, June was put in a Challenger uniform and was right there, going on missions and acting like a full-fledged member.  Apparently, writer Steve Skeates, and later, Gerry Conway, never bothered to actually read any old issues of Challengers first.

 

June Robbins didn’t do any of that stuff in the Silver-Age series.  Well, almost never.  She never wore a Challengers outfit and she didn’t routinely go on missions as a member of the team.  But, she was certainly present quite a bit in the early days.  She appeared in at least one story, usually the back-up tale, in almost every issue of Challengers through # 30 (Feb.-Mar., 1963).

 

June’s rôle in the team’s cases tended to be that of a catalyst.  She either brought a problem to Our Heroes’ attention, or they got involved because she encountered some sort of menace while working at her job, whatever it was that month.  [See sidebar.]  And sometimes, she was just hanging out with the boys and there wasn’t any chance to get her out of the way before things started hitting the fan.

 

That’s not to say she was always inactive.  When the situation put her in the middle of trouble, she did alright for herself, and on a couple of occasions, even bailed the Challs out of their predicament.

 

 

12134154060?profile=original 

Mid-1961 to the beginning of 1963 marked the salad days for June’s involvement with the team.   The ten or so Challengers issues published during that time marked her high point in the series.  This was the period when she was most prominent and participated most like an unofficial “fifth” member.

 

And then, just like a cast member of a television series who develops “creative differences” with the producer, June abruptly got shoved into the back row.  With a nearly perfect attendance record through issue # 30, after that, she showed up in only three more stories, and two of them barely counted.

 

In issue # 33’s “The Challengers Meet Their Master”, June was seen in only five panels and had only one line of dialogue.  She didn’t do much better in “Sons of the Challengers”, from issue # 35.  That was a semi-imaginary tale about the Challs’ offspring and June’s only purpose was to set up the telling of the story.

 

Then, almost two years went by before we saw Dr. June Robbins, again.  “The Best Challenger Wins”, from Challengers of the Unknown # 46 (Oct.-Nov., 1965), was her Silver-Age swan song, but at least she went out making one last significant contribution to the team.

 

 

 

 

12134155262?profile=originalUp to this point, the Challengers had never picked an official leader.   Though there had been an occasional squabble on the best way to proceed on a case, for the most part the foursome had worked together well enough to not need a formal guy-in-charge.  The opening pages of “The Best Challenger Wins” showed that informality had its drawbacks.

 

The tale was, actually, a continuation of the issue’s first story, in which the Challs had come up against a costumed criminal called the Gargoyle.  Though they thwarted the Gargoyle’s nefarious scheme, the villain himself had escaped.  The good news was Our Heroes did manage to learn the location of his secret hideout.

 

June Robbins, with her new bob cut, makes her first appearance in two years, when she drops by Challenger Mountain and finds the boys deadlocked in argument over the best way to invade the Gargoyle’s fortress retreat and capture him.  Exasperated, June cuts off their bickering and forces them to compromise.  Each Challenger, it is decided, will assault the Gargoyle’s stronghold separately, according to his own specialty.

 

Before they depart, June hands each of the Death-Cheaters a small everyday item to take with him on the mission.

 

Later, in their individual attacks on the villain’s hideout, each Chall is ensnared a deadly trap and in every instance, by using his gift from June resourcefully, manages to free himself.  Ace is the only Challenger, however, to go on to nab the Gargoyle.  Prof and Red and Rocky still find themselves knee-deep in peril---until Morgan arrives to bail them out.

 

12134156074?profile=originalIn the wrap-up back at their headquarters, the fellows demand to know how June was able to predict just what each of them would need to escape their traps. 

 

She didn’t, she says, but she figured that they would be ingenious enough to find a use for their objects, if they ran into trouble.  As to why she did it, June tells them:

 

“You guys squabbled so much about who should give orders, it seemed to me whoever had the know-how to use his gift best should automatically be declared the leader.”

 

The others agree, and Ace Morgan is officially declared the head man of the Challengers.

 

 

 

Next time out, we’ll take a look at the other Challenger wanna-bes, and one didn’t-wanna-be.

Read more…

Famous Failures

12134142654?profile=originalDC’s new 52 is one of the most ambitious endeavors in comic book history.  While I wish them all of the success in the world, the launch has also got me thinking about the other side of the coin.  Namely, failure.  So here, for your reading pleasure, is a short overview of some of the famous failures in comic books.

 

1953

 

Superman was already a multi-media star by the early ‘50s, wowing audiences through comic books, radio shows and movie serials.  He added a fourth feather to his cap with “The Adventures of Superman” television show.  The show’s success convinced comic book publishers that the time was right for a superhero comeback.  Marvel brought back the Human Torch in December of 1953.  Sub-Mariner followed in April and Captain America in May.  Other publishers followed Marvel into the breach.  Simon and Kirby returned to superheroes with the Fighting American.  DC debuted Superman’s Pal Jimmy Olsen, their first new superhero title in several years.  Older characters made encore performances, like Blue Beetle and Black Cat.  New publishers Charlton and Sterling attempted to find superhero success with Nature Boy and Captain Flash (with John Buscema and Mike Sekowsky respectively on art).  At the beginning of 1955, there were nearly a dozen new superhero titles.  By the end of 1955, there were none.  The Black Cat came back for only three issues.  Blue Beetle for four.  The superhero wave receded, leaving only a minimal impression behind.  Some of the characters have cult followings (Tony Isabella wrote about Captain Flash in a recent Comics Buyer’s Guide) but most are little more than historical curiosities. 

 

12134142888?profile=originalAtlas

 

For decades, fans have been arguing about who was more instrumental to Marvel’s success- artist Jack Kirby or writer Stan Lee.  Publisher Martin Goodman had his own answer.  He thought he was the mastermind behind Marvel and he set out to prove it by launching a new company in 1975.  Goodman’s new Atlas Comics courted big-name creators like Neal Adams and Steve Ditko by offering some of the best rates in the business.  They also gave opportunities to rising stars like Rich Buckler and Howard Chaykin.  They had quite the impressive line-up of talent.  Atlas also dabbled in almost every imaginable genre.  You could find superheroes, anti-heroes and barbarians.  You could read science fiction, horror or science fiction/horror hybrids.  There were police stories and kung fu comics inspired by Dirty Harry and Bruce Lee.  There were even war stories and westerns trying to recapture interest in fading genres.  However, the ambitious line-up and the exorbitant pay rates proved to be too much.  Atlas collapsed in less than a year and no title lasted for more than four issues.

 

12134143080?profile=originalThe Implosion

 

The house ads said it all: The DC Explosion is on its way!  Responding to a loss of market share to Marvel and soft sales during 1977, DC planned a major expansion of their line in 1978.  They announced numerous new titles and they ran ads promoting new characters like The Vixen.  But their enthusiasm couldn’t overcome the economic realities of the late ‘70s.  The ongoing recession scuttled their plans.  Instead of expanding, DC abruptly canceled approximately 20 titles.  New series like Black Lightning, Firestorm, Shade the Changing Man and Steel took the fall.  Even older series like Aquaman, House of Secrets, Kamandi and Showcase were caught up in the devastation.  A few titles failed to even make their debuts, like the Deserter and the aforementioned Vixen.  Some of the series were merged with others (such as Batman Family and Detective Comics).  Others managed to be repackaged as back-up strips (such as Firestorm in the pages of Flash).  A few completed individual issues saw the light of day in other titles (such as a Black Lightning feature in World’s Finest).  And most were collected for an in-house special called the Canceled Comics Cavalcade. 

 

12134144256?profile=originalThe New Universe

 

Jim Shooter had a big plan for celebrating the 25th anniversary of the Marvel Universe.  He would create a new universe.  The new universe would be a little more grounded than the current Marvel.  Superpowers would be new and rare.  It was supposed to feel a bit more like the real world.  However, a little more grounded also meant a little less fantastic.  Compared to the Marvel Universe, the real world is kind of boring.  Internal struggles at Marvel also prevented Shooter from putting together the creative line-up he wanted.  A few big names were lent to the project such as the Star Brand art team of John Romita Jr. and Art Williamson.  However, most of the comics were handed over to lesser lights and journeymen.  The New Universe crashed spectacularly.  Returns were so high that the Marvel offices were crowded with unsold comics.  Marvel tried to keep things going for a couple of years, allowing Peter David to completely revamp Justice and giving John Byrne a shot at Star Brand.  But they eventually folded up the new universe after only 3 years.

 

 

12134144456?profile=originalComics’ Greatest World

 

Comics’ Greatest World wasn’t.  In 1994, Dark Horse published a 16-issue weekly event called Comics’ Greatest World.  The event introduced a fictional world, featuring three major cities (Arcadia, Golden City and Steel Harbor) and a fourth anomalous area (an inter-dimensional rift called the Vortex).  Each issue also starred a different hero or team.  The series was derided as an attempt to follow Valiant, Image and the Ultraverse onto the superhero bandwagon although Dark Horse claimed that the line had been in development for four years.  However, the problem wasn’t so much that Dark Horse was late into the game as it was that the CGW titles just weren’t very good.  Only a few characters were capable of headlining their own comic.  X lasted for 25 issues.  Barbwire surprisingly inspired a movie even though her own title was canceled after 9 issues.  And those were some of the biggest successes.  Only Ghost managed to make it to the 21st century. 

 

12134144666?profile=originalCrossGen

 

CrossGen wasn’t the only company to go into bankruptcy.  At the height of their success, CrossGen rescued Lady Death from Chaos Comics when that company went bankrupt.  A few years later, Dreamwave would run into similar problems paying creators.  But CrossGen stands out because, for a brief moment in time, they also stood tallest.  CrossGen debuted in June of 2000.  They started with industry cast-offs and unknowns but they eventually added major players to the company.  Chuck Dixon, Butch Guice, Greg Land, George Perez and Mark Waid all worked for CrossGen.  Steve McNiven got his start and Jimmy Cheung made his name there.  CrossGen concentrated on genres outside of the superhero standard.  They specialized in sci-fi and fantasy but also produced mystery, martial arts, horror and pirate comics.  They quickly became the fifth biggest publisher in the US and even challenged Image and Dark Horse for third.  But their ambition outstripped their ability to keep up.  In 2003, they were besieged by rumors of non-payment to artists like inker Robin Riggs.  They missed a payment to printer Quebecor which caused them to lose their perfect record of on-time shipping.  They tried to re-invigorate their flagging line with new titles like El Cazador and Kiss Kiss Bang Bang.  But it all came to an end by the summer of 2004, making the short-lived CrossGen a genuine comic book tragedy.

 

 

Read more…

52 Reviews 52 (Part Three)

WEEK THREE

 

12134136695?profile=originalBATMAN #1

Written by SCOTT SNYDER

Art by GREG CAPULLO and JONATHAN GLAPION

Cover by GREG CAPULLO

Variant cover by ETHAN VAN SCIVER

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

This was just plain awesome.

 

The story opens with Batman essentially fighting everyone in Arkham, then there’s a wonderful twist I didn’t see coming. Very quickly Snyder touches all the bases to let us know nothing has changed – Alfred, Commissioner Gordon, all the Robins (Dick, Tim, Damian), the Batcave – then kicks off a mystery with a grisly murder, a rich Gothamite who will clearly be trouble, and a direct threat to Bruce Wayne’s life – with Dick Grayson the prime suspect.

 

Perfect! Beautiful! Bat-tastic! Throw in Capullo’s art, from the Tony Daniel/Jim Lee school, and this is a Bat-book that hits every cylinder and roars out of the cave. There's not a wasted panel, but enough to get us ready for more.

 

12134137085?profile=originalBIRDS OF PREY #1

Written by DUANE SWIERCZYNSKI

Art and cover by JESUS SAIZ

On sale SEPTEMBER 21 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

Something about this series feels ad hoc.

 

Here’s the description: “One is wanted for a murder she didn’t commit. The other is on the run because she knows too much. They are Dinah Laurel Lance and Ev Crawford – a.k.a. Black Canary and Starling – and together, as Gotham City’s covert ops team, they’re taking down the villains other heroes can’t touch. But now they’ve attracted the attention of a grizzled newspaper reporter who wants to expose them, as well as a creepy, chameleon-like strike team that’s out to kill them.”

 

That’s pretty much what we get out of the first issue. Black Canary and Starling (new character) are a team (no explanation), and they are outlaws, and they save a reporter hired to find them from the people who hired him because they want to kill BC and Starling (no explanation). One of the strike team somehow kisses BC in the middle of a battle and says that will kill her (and she’s feeling sick by the end of the issue). Babs Gordon shows up and things are tense with her and BC, but she recommends Katana. There’s an explosive finale.

 

OK, it’s a pretty nice actioner, but it’s depending on us to know who most of these characters are, although they are not the characters they used to be. If Black Canary is a former leader of the Justice League, how long could she remain an outlaw before one of the big guns came to clear her or arrest her? (And they’re in Gotham City, for Pete’s sake.) Who is Starling? No, scratch that. Let’s ask instead, if you’re going to start the show with Starling already a Bird, why not also start with Katana, and explain both of them later? Because this issue feels undermanned, and why drag out the “we’re putting the band back together” scene any longer than you have to?

 

The art is nice. The action is nice. But the writer depends too much on our affection/familiarity for these people, and not enough time getting us to like them or care about their story.

 

12134138052?profile=originalBLUE BEETLE #1

Written by TONY BEDARD

Art by IG GUARA and RUY JOSE

Cover by TYLER KIRKHAM and SAL REGLA

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

I was never a big fan of the old Jaime Reyes Blue Beetle title, but this version threatens to make me a believer.

 

Our story opens “long, long ago” on an alien planet that The Reach has seeded with a scarab. The scarab has taken over a local, and he is annihilating the planet’s population single-handedly. Afterward, one of his supervisors – for lack of a better word – shows up to congratulate Khaji-Kai (his “scarab name” – he no longer remembers his original one) and to drop a little expository dialogue on us to explain what we just saw. The Reach sends out a bunch of new scarabs to conquer more planets, one of which goes to our solar system, but is fortunately intercepted by the Green Lantern of this sector (apparently one before Abin Sur), who damages it. It escapes, lands on Earth, and goes into hibernation. The scene shifts to El Paso in the present, where we meet Jaime, Brenda and Paco, pretty much the same way we knew them before, except Paco is now a dropout and possible gangbanger. Also, we discover right away that Brenda’s aunt is a crimelord (it took us a while in the old series) and she wants the scarab, which is hijacked by three member of the Fearsome Five (Phobia, Warp and Plasmus), who are now members of the Brotherhood of Evil (The Brain and M’Sieu Mallah are mentioned, but not shown). Paco and Jaime blunder into the hijack on the way to Brenda’s birthday party, and by accident the scarab is activated and it bonds to Jaime. The first thing he says is his scarab name, Khadji-Da.

 

This set-up is pretty much like the old series, except that we meet everyone much faster, and almost everything is thought through much better. For example, all the adults know something’s up with Brenda’s tia, when in the old series some were clueless that she was AN INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LIVING IN A HEAVILY FORTIFIED AND GUARDED MULTI-MILLION DOLLAR FORTRESS. So I appreciate that Jaime’s parents aren’t complete morons this time. Also, we learn the relationship between the Green Lanterns and The Reach, which I always wondered about before. Also, there’s a lot more Spanish in this series, and although I don’t speak Spanish, I have lived in Texas, and I appreciate the verisimilitude (and I trust I won’t miss any truly important info). Plus, the dropout thing with Paco – some might not like it, but, again, I think it adds verisimilitude (and adds a more interesting subplot). Further, Brenda – who seemed too smart for Paco in the last series – doesn’t seem to view him romantically in this series, but both Jaime and Paco seem interested in her (which makes more sense). Also, a text piece informs us that Jaime will have a lot more trouble controlling the scarab, so he’ll be less Static and more Damage, which is good, because we already have Static. And Spider-Man. And the Teen Titans. And a jillion other smart-mouthed teen heroes.

 

Overall, thumbs up for a story that keeps all the good parts of the old Blue Beetle while upgrading the coherence and plausibility of Jaime’s world.

 

12134138292?profile=originalCAPTAIN ATOM #1

Written by J.T. KRUL

Art by FREDDIE WILLIAMS II

Cover by STANLEY “ARTGERM” LAU

On sale SEPTEMBER 21 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

This wasn’t bad, but it read like half a first issue.

 

We open with a rat in an alley, with a pretentious Captain Atom voiceover about how we’re all really animals and stuff. The rat’s eyes glow, and then we shift to the Captain himself fighting an armored villain (new character), which he defeats, but his hand starts to lose cohesion. He goes “home” and we learn he is working with a brain trust in Chicago, led by a Stephen Hawking stand-in (complete with chair and voice modulator), who informs him that he needs to stop using his power or his brain could lose cohesion. However, just then, a volcano erupts in New York City (yes, New York City), and Captain Atom has no choice but to use his powers full out. In the middle of Nate vs. the volcano, we cut to the rat, which becomes a big monster and eats a homeless guy, then we cut back to Atom, who turns red and appears to be losing cohesion.

 

All right, class, how many mysteries were introduced in this first issue? How many were solved, or even gave us a clue? The first answer isn’t important, but the second answer – zero – is. I simply don’t have enough information to know whether I care about this series or not. I sure don’t meet anyone other than Captain Atom long enough to know if I like them, and DC’s version of Captain Atom has never been a show-stopper. So I’m going to have to read a second issue to know if the story in the first one A) makes sense and B) is interesting. That’s not a very good idea for a first issue.


Still, the story’s title is “Evolution of a Species,” so I imagine Cap’n Atom will go through some changes next issue, so maybe one of them will make him more interesting.

 

12134139252?profile=originalCATWOMAN #1

Written by JUDD WINICK

Art and cover by GUILLEM MARCH

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T+

 

Most of this issue is typical – and typically fun – Catwoman caper stuff, and the issue ends with, ahem, a bang.

 

As with most Bat-books, this issue reassures us that very little has changed. Catwoman is still a thief with a heart of gold and she loves to live on the edge. (Also, she appears to own nothing except kittens and brassieres.) We meet her fence (new character), who seems to have a little personality, which is good, since she’s the only supporting character we meet. Then a situation occurs at the end which appears to have the Internet BROKEN. IN. HALF. But I’m not sure why – it just reinforces something we’ve known since Brubaker’s run several years back, but were never shown in detail. Now we have been, and I think it’s a good idea (for its humanizing effect on another character).

 

However, I think Winick should have realized the possible implications of the phrase “It doesn’t take long” and made more clear what he meant to avoid the sniggers. Otherwise this was a swell issue that even my wife enjoyed.

 

12134139091?profile=originalDC UNIVERSE PRESENTS #1

Written by PAUL JENKINS

Art by BERNARD CHANG

Cover by RYAN SOOK

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

Deadman needs to break out of the prison of his original conception, and I’m not sure this story gets us there.

 

Everything you ever knew about Deadman? Still true. But add that he’s now working toward balancing the scales, in that he has to be a better man in death than he was in life, and when he achieves karmic balance, he can move on. Plus, shades of those he’s possessed are hanging around, and he doesn’t know why. He gets Rama Kushna’s attention to ask her about this development in a pretty dramatic way.

 

I don’t have much more to say, because not a lot happened here. Boston does try to get in touch with the psychic (“Rose”) at his old circus, but only succeeds in freaking her out. (Try Madame Xanadu, Boston. I hear she’s got a place in the Village. Or Dr. Fate. Or Zatanna. Or any one of the many legitimate wizards, psychics, sorcerers and whatnot in the DCU. A carny palm-reader? Riiiiight. So, since she’s pretty, I guess this is just a clumsy set-up to make her the love interest.) Other than that, it’s a 22-page voiceover pretty much explaining the above. Boston does “possess” a guy, as he usually does, but there’s no telling if he’s a temporary player or potential supporting cast. Maybe he and Rose will become an item.

 

So, it was OK. But given how often Deadman has failed to hold a series, it really needed to be better than OK. He is by definition a pretty limited character, so he’s definitely a writer’s challenge. I’ll need to see more before I know if Jenkins rises to that challenge or not.

 

Incidentally, there were some Carmine Infantino swipes/homage in the first couple of pages, which I guess is kinda neat. But if you’re going to swipe, why not swipe from Neal Adams? Just sayin’.

 

12134103060?profile=originalGREEN LANTERN CORPS #1

Written by PETER J. TOMASI

Art by FERNANDO PASARIN and SCOTT HANNA

Cover by DOUG MAHNKE and CHRISTIAN ALAMY

On sale SEPTEMBER 21 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

This issue felt like marking time.

 

The series opens with an invisible villain or villains literally cutting one Green Lantern in half and beheading another in the Sciencells on Oa. (Pretty graphically.) Then we shift to Earth, where both Guy Gardner and John Stewart learn that they can’t go back to their old jobs (high school gym coach and architect, respectively) because Guy would be too big a liability for a school (as a target for supervillains) and John has been changed too much by being a Lantern. They both return to Oa, learn about the first two deaths (which has now risen to four) and volunteer to take a squad of Lanterns to investigate.

 

Here’s another book where we learn that virtually nothing has changed. As to the meat of the story – Guy and John learning they can’t return to their civilian jobs – that seems so blindingly obvious on the front end that I was bored hearing all the reasons why they can’t (even though I was aware this was exposition/history for newbies). But I feel like that could have been covered in a couple word ballons and we could have skipped from Page 4 to Page 15 and not lost a thing. And that’s not good.

 

12134139680?profile=originalLEGION OF SUPER-HEROES #1

Written by PAUL LEVITZ

Art by FRANCIS PORTELA

Cover by KARL KERSCHL

On sale SEPTEMBER 21 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

It’s not often I complain about too much going on in a book, but this one feels a bit cluttered. But knowing Levitz, this will shake out to be epic.

 

Legion of Super-Heroes #1 opens with five Legionnaires (Chameleon Boy, Chemical Kid, Dragonwing, Phantom Girl and Ultra Boy) investigating a Dominator-monitoring station which has gone silent. In the course of the dialogue, we learn something terrible has happened, and that everyone believes that the Legionnaires in Legion Lost are dead.  Then we check back on other Legionnaires to discover A) Colossal Boy has resigned and joined the Science Police after the “death” of his wife, Chameleon Girl, B) Earthman is dead, C) a whole bunch of Academy recruits have been promoted to Legionnaire status, D) Mon-El is no longer a Green Lantern, E) Brainiac 5 wants his job as Legion leader, F) Glorith is a Legionnaire, G) Star Boy is a paraplegic, and maybe some more but it was a lot take in and remember. Anyway, we switch back to the original mission, which goes pear-shaped and then a Daxamite attacks.

 

I find it interesting that Levitz didn’t bother to re-introduce everybody, and I’m rather glad he didn’t – he’s probably as tired of writing introductory Legion issues as I am of reading them. Instead he jumps right in with massive repercussions from an event we don’t know about yet (unless it happened in the final Legion/Adventure issues, which I haven’t read yet), and it’s enough to make your head explode. That’s good, because with a cast that big it doesn’t make sense to pussy-foot around. On the other hand, as I said in my intro, it’s an awful lot to cram into one issue, especially since all of these plot threads seem to be pulling in different directions. Still, I’m definitely coming back for the next issue, when I imagine Levitz wills start to pull it together in ways I don't foresee.

 

12134140279?profile=originalNIGHTWING #1

Written by KYLE HIGGINS

Art and cover by EDDY BARROWS and JP MAYER

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

This is fine.

 

We follow Dick Grayson through a night patrol where we learn where he lives now (a loft in the bad part of town), that he thinks he’s better for having been Batman for a year and then he goes on a visit to Haly’s Circus (where he grew up), which just happens to be in town. Then he’s attacked by a hired killer, escapes to change into Nightwing, but the killer beats him as Nightwing anyway – and says that Grayson (he doesn’t realize Nightwing is Grayson) is a murderer. Could this be related to what’s happening over in Batman?

 

I said this is fine, and that’s what it is – and all that it is. I’ve never been a big Nightwing fan, because I think a glorified acrobat needs more going for him than a clever name. (All the other glorified acrobats -- Batman, Green Arrow, Mr. Terrific -- have some kind of gimmick to explain why they're still alive.)

 

I understand that in the first issue we’re going to have a lot of voiceovers and references to the past so newbies can learn who this guy is. (Former Batman! Former Robin! Former Circus Acrobat! Parents killed by crooks!) But I wish we didn’t have to. Or if we did, more would happen, so that it’s not just an encyclopedia entry.

 

I also find it laughable that the hired killer, who sees his prey somersault away, is then attacked by an acrobat who looks JUST LIKE DICK GRAYSON ONLY IN A TINY DOMINO MASK and doesn’t realize they’re the same guy. Must be really dark in Gotham.

 

Boring. I do like the new threads though. As I teach in my color theory class, warm colors leap out at you, while cool colors recede. So the red is jazzier.

 


12134140492?profile=originalRED HOOD AND THE OUTLAWS #1

Written by SCOTT LOBDELL

Art and cover by KENNETH ROCAFORT

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

When I read the description of this book, I thought I wouldn’t like it. Turns out I have a gift for understatement.

 

Roy Harper is in a Quraci jail (with no explanation), but is rescued by Red Hood, for whom he has been working (again, no explanation). They escape with the help of Starfire, who is hanging out because … oh, wait, no explanation. They go to Martinique, where it turns out that because Starfire is Tamaranean, she apparently has no long-term memory and can only sense us humans by smell, so she’ll sleep with either of the boys, and does. A mysterious woman called The Essence (who looks like a refugee from an Image comic) shows up and says some stuff about the All Caste that apparently she and Jason used to belong to (no explanation), only now she’s banned, and she shows Jason some magic picture of a dead girl in “The Well of the All Caste” so Jason goes to this Well to, uh … avenge her death? Not sure. (And, of course, there’s no explanation.) Anyway, turns out this Well is in the Himalayas, where he finds the dead girl (whom he used to know) and gets jumped by some bad guys.

 

So, explain again how Koraind’r can’t remember the Titans, with whom she’s spent the last 31 years? I bring this up because Lobdell did, despite this being a potential fresh start. He decided to address and dispense with Koriand'r's long association with the Titans and her sexual history with Dick Grayson, and his method was to make her a brain-damaged blow-up doll -- and play it for laughs. As Rich Lane said below, this makes it impossible for Starfire to have any character growth, and "turns her into a sex toy for anyone who wants to take advantage of that fact." Well said. The misogyny is stunning.

 

I'd be more outraged, except that I don't plan to read any more. I'm going to take Lobdell's loathsome treatment of a female character and toss it on the stack of the other stupid stuff in this book, which features a bunch of characters I don’t care about.

 

12134141073?profile=originalSUPERGIRL #1

Written by MICHAEL GREEN and MIKE JOHNSON

Art and cover by MAHMUD ASRAR

On sale SEPTEMBER 21 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

Nothing happens.

 

OK, Supergirl’s ship arrives on Earth (and plows through to Siberia). Unseen observers make reference to “the Kansas event” and send out a team in big armor to retrieve her and her ship, and make it clear that they can do this despite it being in Russia. Kara gets out of her spaceship, disoriented, and is surrounded by men in armor speaking a language she doesn’t know. They attack, there’s a fight, she discovers her powers and wins. She believes she might be dreaming. Superman arrives and stops the fight.

 

OK, there’s some good super-action here, but it eats up the whole book and we learn absolutely nothing. We already knew Supergirl was from Krypton, that she’s Superman’s cousin, and that she arrives here as a teen. And when I say "we" I mean new readers and old readers alike, since even non-readers know that much about a character called "Supergirl." If those three things weren't true, they'd have to call her something else -- Hypergirl, or Tip-Top Girl, or Red Hoodgirl and the In-Laws.

 

So all readers coming to this book already know those three things. Which is all that this book tells us. (Actually less – we don’t actually learn that Supergirl is Superman’s cousin, since they won’t interact until next issue.) Man, that’s not much for my $2.99.

 

Oh, and Supergirl’s outfit is one of the lamest I’ve ever seen – and Supergirl’s had some pretty lame outfits.

 

12134141500?profile=originalWONDER WOMAN #1

Written by BRIAN AZZARELLO

Art and cover by CLIFF CHIANG

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

With apologies to George Perez fans, this is the best Wonder Woman I have ever read.

 

A Greek god does something terrible to three girls. A girl named Zola is on the run from mythological creatures. A woman named Diana rises to her defense in a brutal, bloody battle. A god is impaled. A golden key proves to be key. Warnings and implied threats abound. Someone is pregnant with Zeus’s child, and many divine eyes are turning to notice. The god at the beginning closes the book with dire, cryptic muttering. Everything has a price, and the gods are only too eager for others to pay.

 

This. Is. GREAT! Brian Azzarello calls the Greco-Roman gods the “original crime family,” and we know from 100 Bullets that we’re in for a treat.  Wonder Woman as crime noir? With centaurs? Sign me up!

Read more…

By Andrew A. Smith

Scripps Howard News Service

 

Sept. 20, 2011 -- DC Comics is in the third week of re-launching all 52 of its superhero titles in a single month, and it’s reportedly going big guns. But DC editor-in-chief Bob Harras is already thinking long term.

 

12134134893?profile=original“I think the [52] first issues really are setting the groundwork but we’re building from there with every issue,” Harras said in an interview. “The goal is definitely to keep readers excited and really kind of getting back to that sense of ‘What’s gonna happen next?’ … We’re really just building the base of excitement.”

 

Not that he’s got his eye so fixed on the big picture that he hasn’t noticed how big September has been.

 

“Am I happy that the numbers are good?” he said. “Yes, of course. But I really, really – again, not to sound corny – I’m excited more about the sense of excitement about what [the creators] are doing.”

 

Initial sales reports on The New 52 are huge, with Action Comics #1 alone already hovering around 200,000 before re-orders and foreign sales have come in. Bob Wayne, DC Comics Senior Vice President of Sales, told ICv2.com Sept. 12 “we have sold out of everything that has gone on sale so far, and everything that is going to go on sale next week.” And major titles like Batman #1, Superman #1 and Wonder Woman #1 are still in the pipeline.

 

Meanwhile, DC’s efforts to reach new readers have Harras excited as well.

 

 “Readers anywhere interested in comics … can have access to our product on their iPads, on their phones,” he said. Some potential readers don’t live near comic shops, so “that they have the ability to get a comic in their home in the middle of the night is just incredibly important. It’s offering a wider audience the chance to come aboard and read our material and see our characters.”

 

12134135491?profile=originalAnd when that potential new reader buys that first comic book, online or in print, he won’t have to have a degree in comics already. “We’re looking at our books and making sure as best as we can that when a reader does read it the first time, there’s enough information there they won’t be confused,” Harras said.

 

Something else Harras thinks is important is bringing long-running character back to what made them popular in the first place – a back-to-basics approach that dovetails with what the general populace knows about them.

 


One such instance is Batgirl, a surprise hit written by fan favorite Gail Simone. The original Barbara Gordon (the Gotham Police commissioner’s daughter) is back under the cowl, after having been sidelined by an injury since 1988. Since then, at least two other women have served as Batgirl, whose fates have not yet been revealed.

 

 “It’s going back to the core of who Batgirl should be,” Harras said. “I think people are reacting to that … I think Gail reacted to that, you get something really great out of that. … It’s part of the mythos. It’s part of our job to keep that mythos fresh.”

 

12134135887?profile=originalAnother restoration work is Superman, whose early days are being re-told in Action by Scottish writer Grant Morrison – whose recent book Supergods shows he has probably thought harder and deeper about American pop culture than most Americans. 

 

I think Grant always wanted to go back to a sense of what Superman was initially,” Harras said. “He was a little bit of a scrapper back in the day. …  I kinda like what Grant has done, where you get this sense of, you know, Clark has rough edges. Clark is a little angry. He’s … finding his way in the world.  … Clark’s in his early 20s, and in your early 20s you’re going through a lot, and if you’re Clark Kent and you have these powers, you’re going through even more than normal, and what would your reaction be?”

 

But as editor-in-chief, Harras’s brief is the big picture. Where does he want to be in six months?

 

“Aruba,” he laughs. “Where I want us to be, I still want to still have that sense of excitement out there. I want fans and readers in general to be coming back every month saying, ‘Tell me another story about these characters.’ We want to actually show people out there that DC Comics and the characters here are amazing characters and we will be telling you compelling and amazing stories about them. It’s all about excitement and entertainment, and that’s what we want to be doing, and that’s what we are going to be doing.” 

 

Contact Andrew A. Smith of the Memphis Commercial Appeal at capncomics@aol.com.

 

 

Read more…

Comics for 28 September 2011

ABE SAPIEN DEVIL DOES NOT JEST #1 ALL NEW BATMAN BRAVE AND THE BOLD TP ALL STAR WESTERN #1 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #668 2ND PTG AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #670 SPI AMERICAN VAMPIRE #19 (MR) ANGEL & FAITH #2 ANNIHILATORS EARTHFALL #1 (OF 4) AQUAMAN #1 ARCHIE #625 ARTIFACTS #10 (OF 13) ASTONISHING X-MEN #42 AVENGELYNE #3 AVENGERS ACADEMY #19 FEAR AVENGERS PRIME TP BATMAN THE DARK KNIGHT #1 BATMAN THE WIDENING GYRE TP BETTY #194 BLACK PANTHER MOST DANGEROUS MAN ALIVE #523 POINT BLACKHAWKS #1 BOMB QUEEN GANG BANG TP (MR) BREED III #5 (OF 6) (MR) BRILLIANT #1 (MR) CAPTAIN AMERICA AND BUCKY #622 CAPTAIN BRITAIN HC VOL 02 SIEGE OF CAMELOT CARTOON NETWORK ACTION PACK #64 CASTLE PREM HC RICHARD CASTLES DEADLY STORM CHARMED #14 COVER STORY DC COMICS ART OF BRIAN BOLLAND HC CRAWL TO ME #3 (OF 4) DAOMU #7 (MR) DARK SHADOWS ORIGINAL SERIES STORY DIGEST TP DEADPOOLMAX #12 (OF 12) (MR) DOCTOR WHO ONGOING VOL 2 #9 DOROTHY AND WIZARD IN OZ #1 (OF 8) DUKE NUKEM GLORIOUS BASTARD #3 (OF 4) DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS #11 EAGLE ORIGINAL ADVENTURES TP VOL 01 ELEPHANTMEN #35 (MR) ELEPHANTMEN TP VOL 04 QUESTIONABLE THINGS (MR) EPOCH #2 (OF 5) (MR) ESSENTIAL DEFENDERS TP VOL 06 EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT VIOLET #3 (OF 3) FEAR ITSELF #5 (OF 7) 2ND PTG FEAR ITSELF DEEP #4 (OF 4) FEAR FEAR ITSELF HULK VS DRACULA #2 (OF 3) FEAR FF #9 FF 50 FANTASTIC YEARS #1 FINDER LIBRARY TP VOL 02 FLASH #1 FURY OF FIRESTORM THE NUCLEAR MEN #1 FUTURAMA COMICS #57 GHOSTBUSTERS ONGOING #1 GI JOE VOL 2 ONGOING #5 GODZILLA KINGDOM OF MONSTERS #7 GREEN LANTERN CORPS THE WEAPONER HC GREEN LANTERN NEW GUARDIANS #1 HABIBI GN (MR) HACK SLASH #8 HERC #8 SPI HIP POCKET SLEAZE VINTAGE ADULT PAPERBACKS SC HOLY TERROR HC (MR) I VAMPIRE #1 INCORRUPTIBLE #22 IRON MAN 2.0 #9 IRON MAN 2.0 TP VOL 01 PALMER ADDLEY IS DEAD IRREDEEMABLE TP VOL 07 JAMES JEAN REBUS HC JENNY FINN DOOM MESSIAH TP JLA TP VOL 01 JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY #628 FEAR JUSTICE LEAGUE #1 3RD PTG JUSTICE LEAGUE DARK #1 JUSTICE SOCIETY OF AMERICA SUPER TOWN TP KAMANDI OMNIBUS HC VOL 01 LAST BOY ON EARTH KATO #13 KENT WILLIAMS EKLEKTIKOS HC KICK-ASS 2 #4 (MR) KINKY AND COSY HC (MR) LAST PHANTOM #9 LOCUS #608 LOVE AND ROCKETS NEW STORIES TP VOL 04 LOVESTRUCK GN (MR) MAGDALENA #8 MIGHTY THOR #6 MMW GOLDEN AGE MARVEL COMICS HC VOL 06 MUPPETS PRESENTS FAMILY REUNION NEW AVENGERS #16 POINT ONE NEW MUTANTS #31 FEAR OFF HANDBOOK OF MARVEL UNIVERSE A TO Z TP VOL 01 QUEEN SONJA #20 RACHEL RISING #2 ROBERT JORDAN WHEEL OF TIME EYE O/T WORLD #13 SAVAGE HAWKMAN #1 SECRET AVENGERS #16 2ND PTG SECRET AVENGERS #17 SIGIL TP OUT OF TIME SIXTH GUN #15 SNAKE EYES ONGOING (IDW) #5 SPAWN ORIGINS TP VOL 12 SPELL CHECKERS GN VOL 02 SONS OF PREACHER MAN SPIDER-ISLAND DEADLY HANDS OF KUNG FU #2 (OF 3) SP SPIDER-MAN #18 STEAMPUNK FAIRY TALES ONE SHOT STRANGE TALES II TP SUICIDE GIRLS TP VOL 01 SUPERMAN #1 TAROT WITCH OF THE BLACK ROSE #70 (MR) TEEN TITANS #1 TERMINATOR ROBOCOP KILL HUMAN #3 (OF 4) THAT MAN FLINT #0 TOM STRONGS TERRIFIC TALES TP BOOK 02 TRUE BLOOD FRENCH QUARTER #2 (OF 6) TRUE BLOOD HC VOL 02 TAINTED LOVE ULTIMATE AVENGERS VS NEW ULTIMATES DOSM PREM HC ULTIMATE COMICS NEW ULTIMATES THOR REBORN TP ULTIMATE COMICS SPIDER-MAN #2 ULTIMATE COMICS ULTIMATES #2 UNCANNY X-FORCE #13 2ND PTG VAR UNCANNY X-FORCE #14 2ND PTG VAR UNDYING LOVE TP (MR) VENOM #5 2ND PTG VENOM #7 SPI VOODOO #1 WARLORD OF MARS #10 WITCHBLADE #148 WOLVERINE #16 WOLVERINE BEST THERE IS #10 WRITINGS IN BRONZE SC WULF #3 X-MEN #16 2ND PTG MOLINA VAR X-MEN LEGACY #256 X-MEN SCHISM #1 (OF 5) 3RD PTG CHO VAR X-MEN SCHISM #2 (OF 5) 2ND PTG CHO VAR X-MEN SCHISM #3 (OF 5) 2ND PTG VAR X-MEN SENTINEL STEAL CHARCOAL PX T/S This list is a copy of the list posted on Facebook by Comics & Collectibles, Memphis. Arrivals at your LCS may vary.
Read more…

52 Reviews 52 (Part Two)

 52 REVIEWS 52

WEEK TWO

 

12134128868?profile=originalBATMAN AND ROBIN #1

Written by PETER J. TOMASI

Art and cover by PATRICK GLEASON and MICK GRAY

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

If this version of Batman and Robin had simply continued the quality of the last, I’d have been happy. It’s close, but there’s one drawback.

 

[WARNING: SERIOUS SPOILERS HERE.] The story opens in Moscow, where a Russian “ally of the Bat” (presumably part of Batman, Inc.) is interrupted bagging a perp and kidnapped by an invisible man calling himself NoBody. Switch to Gotham, where Bruce Wayne takes Damian Wayne to the sewer beneath Crime Alley. Batman is ending his annual observance of his parents’ death; now he plans to celebrate their wedding anniversary instead. (Evidently becoming a father has made him less morbid.) Damian doesn’t think any of it is significant and is snarky (understandable when you consider that the only grandparent he’s ever known is Ra’s al Ghul). A call comes in from Gotham University, where the research reactor is being sabotaged by three criminals (and I really didn’t understand what they were trying to do). They’re interrupted by the Dynamic Duo, but Robin goes in too soon and gives away the element of surprise. The three escape in a ball-shaped “gyro” vehicle while Batman is busy preventing a meltdown (by breaking the ceiling, where a convenient swimming pool dumps its contents on the reactor). Robin defies orders and follows the vehicle, disrupting something and it promptly catches fire and (presumably) kills everyone inside, far enough away that B&R can’t see what happened. (Whether it was Robin’s actions that killed the men isn’t clear.) Batman sternly lectures Damian, who rejects the criticism. Back to Moscow, and NoBody is dipping the Russian Batman in some sort of green fluid (it appears to be acid), saying “I’m erasing you. It will be like you never existed at all.” Then he threatens to end Batman’s “global circus act” and a bat is revealed on NoBody’s chest.

 

This is an excellent plot. The pacing is terrific. The art by Patrick Gleason is excellent. This is a darn good book.

 

My only complaint is the repartee between Damian and Bruce. I understand that this relationship has to start from the ground up, and it was rough between Damian and Dick for a while. That’s part of the plot, I think, and that’s fine. But in the old Batman and Robin, Damian’s nastiness somehow betrayed an underlying vulnerability, an insecurity, a need to be accepted (with too much ego to ask for it). The Damian in this book – well, he’s just a vile little snot.

 

Again, maybe that’s part of the plot. And Tomasi’s run in the Green Lantern franchise was impressive. I’ll give him some time, and hope this uncomfortable dialogue either straightens itself out or proves to be a plot point. Hey, maybe Robin’s a clone.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/batman-and-robin-1-spoilers

 

 

12134129101?profile=originalBATWOMAN #1

Written by J.H. WILLIAMS III and W. HADEN BLACKMAN

Art and cover by J.H. WILLIAMS III

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

Lord, this comic book is beautiful.

 

A ghost-like “Weeping Woman” is kidnapping children for unknown reasons. Kate Kane’s on the case, as is Maggie Sawyer of the GCPD (and the flirting between the two has progressed to an actual date). There’s progress on the Bette Kane front as well – Batwoman is training the former Flamebird, but isn’t sure she has what it takes, and has her dress in a drab uniform and take the name “Plebe” (like in the military, where Kane used to be) until told otherwise. And there’s more: One page indicates that Director Bones of the DEO has assigned Agent Chase (remember her?) to find out who Batwoman is. Another page expounds a bit on the falling out between Kane and her father. There’s also a cliff-hanger involving a certain Dark Knight!

 

You know, in retrospect, Williams covered a lot of ground and delivered a lot of exposition in this issue … and I didn’t even notice. Not because it wasn’t well done – it was – but because Williams’s design is so impeccable, and his layouts are so dynamic, in addition to him simply being an excellent artist. I find my eyes lingering on pages, following design imperatives, absorbing detail and color, until sometimes I forget I’m reading a story! Anyway, the story was well done. The vignettes progressing C and D plots were brief and powerful; the dialogue, especially between Kane and Sawyer, was convincing; the Weeping Woman was appropriately terrifying. This is just a damned good book.

 

One last thought: I absorbed tangentially that there was a lot of cheesecake in the book, which I thought nothing of, since that’s fairly common in superhero books, especially those featuring gorgeous women. But I realized on second reading that all of it – all of it – was of Bette Kane. That’s probably just coincidence. Or does Williams think fanboys only lust after heterosexual girls? Or is he protecting Kate Kane from our lurid male gaze? Probably not. But those thoughts flitted across my frontal lobe, and I thought I’d share.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/batwoman-1-initial-reaction

 

 

DEATHSTROKE #1

Written by KYLE HIGGINS

Art by JOE BENNETT and ART THIBERT

Cover by SIMON BISLEY

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T+

 

I don’t like books where villains are presented as heroes. Fortunately, this isn’t one of those. Slade Wilson is really, really, really bad news.

 

The story is pretty straightforward. We see Slade finish some job in Russia where he kills a lot of people. His “agent” – I guess that’s what you call it – gets him a difficult assassination gig, but saddles him with three up-and-coming assassins in support (against his wishes). They perform the job in mid-air, but it turns out the guy Wilson is to kill (“Jeffrey Bode,” who looks like Klaus Kinski in Nosferatu) has actually arranged the job to get him on the plane to give him a briefcase. (Wilson sees what’s in it, but we do not.) There’s a particularly violent ending, and we’re off to the races.

 

I liked it. A little mystery, a lot of violence, noir atmosphere, plenty of tough-guy dialogue. There is no question that Wilson is an awful man, but he is awfully good at what he does. So I can marvel at the graphics without rooting for him. I’ll be along for the ride until they try to make a hero of him.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

 

12134129892?profile=originalDEMON KNIGHTS #1

Written by PAUL CORNELL

Art by DIOGENES NEVES and OCLAIR ALBERT

Cover by TONY S. DANIEL

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

I love the premise, but be warned that these characters are not the ones we knew.

 

Demon Knights opens at the fall of Camelot, where Percival is throwing Excalibur into the lake, and Arthur is being borne to Albion. Xanadu is one of those doing the bearing, but abandons Arthur’s boat to get Excalibur (she fails). Meanwhile, we see the origin of The Demon, as Merlin imprisons him in Jason of Norwich (Jason Blood). Fast forward to the Middle Ages, where someone called the Questing Queen is – well, I guess she’s questing for something, but she’s killing lots of folks in the meantime, along with her consort, Mordru. (Yes, Mordru!) Riding the crest of the refugee wave puts Xanadu and her now-lover Jason Blood in an inn, where they meet Sir Ystin (the cross-dressing Shining Knight from Grant Morrison’s Seven Soldiers), a Muslim machine-maker named Al Jabr (from whence we get “algebra”), a convivial Vandal Savage and a big woman named Exoristos, who might well be an Amazon. Evidently they will be our team, as a bar fight breaks out, followed by an attack by the Queen. Involving dinosaurs.

 

This book has been described as DC’s answer to Game of Thrones. I like fantasy just fine, thank you, and I’m prepared to like this book. There are some interesting wrinkles worth mention; for one thing, the Queen and Mordru use babies as skrying machines, who then promptly explode, which makes them terrifically evil. And we’re not sure exactly who Xanadu’s boyfriend is: Jason … or The Demon. (Since all three are immortal, it puts a different slant on “eternal triangle.”) And, then, y’know: dinosaurs. This could be a fun romp.

 

The downside, as noted above, is that many of these characters are ones we knew from the Old 52, and they have changed -- and not always, IMHO, for the better. For example:

  • The Mordru we know would never take a back seat to anyone, Questing Queen or not -- and has a really complicated history that didn't start on Earth. I actually sort of approve of this change, in that Mordru is a major DC villain, but difficult to describe in a sentence. I mean, he first appeared as a 30th century foe of the Legion of Super-Heroes from the planet Zerox (Adventure Comics/Legion of Super-Heroes), but was retconned in later stories as having come from Gemworld (Ametheyst) and again as a Lord of Chaos (various Justice League-JSA stories). Which is he? Final Crisis restored the Lord of Chaos origin, but it doesn't matter -- it's just too confusing. Here Cornell makes him part of Earth's past, streamlining his resume for newbies. And his second banana role is probably temporary anyway (and could prove to be a plot point, if he displaces the Questing Queen down the road as the TRUE Big Bad of the story).
  • Vandal Savage is a jovial fellow here, and expresses an appreciation for the example of Camelot, despite being a murderous thug in every other story he’s ever been in, including his origin story set in caveman days. I'm not too crazy about this change, but I can see why it was done: The Vandal Savage of old wouldn't work in a team situation, and this one will. Some on this board have pointed out that maybe an immortal like Savage may have had different “moods” in different eras; perhaps he was a hero in one decade and a villain in the next. Or this is an entirely different Savage than we've known before. *Shrug* Either works for me.
  • We know quite a bit about Madame Xanadu’s history from her own series, and this jaunt with Jason/Etrigan doesn’t fit into it anywhere – especially since she’s been mostly into women for most of her immortal life. However, the "mood theory" invented for Vandal Savage can for work Xanadu as well, and even in her old series she was likely bisexual – she had a thing for the Phantom Stranger – so maybe she was just in the mood for male company in the Dark Ages. Or, again, maybe we should just throw out her old history. However, this version is really chipper and chirpy, something she never was before, and i rather enjoyed her air of gloomy mystery. Ah, well. I guess "cryptic" and "gloomy" wouldn't work in a fantasy romp, so it's gone.
  • There has rarely been sufficient explanation in most Demon stories for why he acts in a heroic manner. (One exception being Alan Moore’s Swamp Thing story about The Monkey King,where he does. But that was a rarity.) So I guess I can't fault Cornell for not trying to explain it here, either. But maybe he's on his best behavior to score points with Xanadu, or maybe this Demon is simply different than the old one in temperament. Still, in this story he's shown to still be a literal demon from Hell, so I want an explanation for why he's not slaughtering everyone around him, and I want it now.
  • Exoristos appears to be an Amazon, and says she's from an island -- so she could be from Themyscira. If so, then it's a different one from the one we know, in that she says men are castrated there, and there were never any men on the old "Paradise Island." So either she's NOT from Themyscira, or the rules are different for that island in The New 52 (we haven't seen Wonder Woman #1 yet), or The New 52's Themyscira changed over time. I guess we'll have to wait and see.

 

I'm pretty sure I'll enjoy this fantasy romp no matter what explanations fall into place, but I think I’ll probably enjoy it more if I pretend I've never seen these characters before. I dislike some of the changes, but that's horse races.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/demon-knights-spoilers

 

 

FRANKENSTEIN, AGENT OF S.H.A.D.E. #1

Written by JEFF LEMIRE

Art by ALBERTO PONTICELLI

Cover by J.G. JONES

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

I’m on the fence on this one.

 

Monsters invade a small town, and S.H.A.D.E. summons Frankenstein to go inside their defensive perimeter and rescue the first agent they sent in – Frankenstein’s estranged wife. This assignment is given by Father Time, who no longer looks like an old man, but instead like a little girl, because he “randomly generates new bodies” every so often. But Frankenstein doesn’t go in alone; S.H.A.D.E. gives him a new Creature Commandos as his team. The Baron quickly identified these as the vampire and wolfman from the old Creature Commandos, a mummy from the Walt Simonson Dr. Fate mini-series, and a new character, a female Creature from the Black Lagoon. They invade, there are complications, there is a cliff-hanger.

 

If they keep this book tongue-in-cheek (or capture the Grant Morrison “vibe” from the Seven Soldiers series) I’ll probably enjoy it, but if it gets heavy it’s going to compare unfavorably to Dark Horse’s B.P.R.D., which has been doing this bit for a long while, and doing it better. But even if they do avoid the B.P.R.D. comparisons, it’s going to be hard to enjoy because I simply don’t care for the art. There’s nothing wrong or unprofessional about it; I just don’t care for this style, which is sketchy and seems messy and there are lots of lines everywhere and everything seems to have the same texture and I sometimes have trouble figuring what’s what. But other (or younger) eyes might like it better.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/frankenstein-agent-of-s-h-a-d-e-spoilers

 

 

GREEN LANTERN #1

Written by GEOFF JOHNS

Art by DOUG MAHNKE and CHRISTIAN ALAMY

Cover by IVAN REIS and JOE PRADO

Variant cover by GREG CAPULLO

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

This continues from the previous Green Lantern series with literally no changes; it has the same writer, same artist and continues the same story. I liked what I was getting before, so I like this now.

 

The “War of the Green Lanterns” ended with Sinestro as the new Green Lantern of Sector 2814, completely against his wishes, and Hal Jordan cashiered from service. (The Air Force, Ferris Aircraft, the Corps -- geez, Jordan must be accustomed to getting fired by now.) That’s how Green Lantern #1 begins. Sinestro fights to no avail to rid himself of the ring, uses the ring to spy wistfully at Korugar and has to defend himself from Sinestro Corps members he runs across who try to kill him – and he knows it’s only the beginning. Meanwhile, Jordan is adapting poorly to post-GL life, especially since he had virtually no life on Earth (no job, he’s been evicted, etc.). Complications with Carol Ferris ensue. Then a surprise ending suggests more fun in the future.

 

This is a solid tale, as you’d expect from Geoff Johns. Surprisingly funny, too. It’s almost unfair to the other #1s, but Johns has a great set-up from the previous series and is already roaring into his story, which promises to be a good one.

 

12134104095?profile=originalGRIFTER #1

Written by NATHAN EDMONDSON

Art by CAFU

Cover by CAFU and BIT

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

As I said about Stormwatch, why bother to bring WildStorm characters into the DCU if you’re going to change everything about them?

 

Cole Cash is NOT the Grifter we know; he’s an actual grifter getting by on con games and charm. Then he becomes Roddy Rowdy Piper from They Live, a guy who can see aliens no one else can see. Complications ensue.

 

Yawn. Seen the premise before. Cash is a whiner. This better pick up fast.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/grifter-1-initial-reaction

 

12134131075?profile=originalLEGION LOST #1

Written by FABIAN NICIEZA

Art and cover by PETE WOODS

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

Haven’t we seen this before?

 

Seven Legionnaires – Chameleon Girl, Dawnstar, Gates, Tellus, Timber Wolf, Tyroc and Wildfire – arrive in the 21st century in pursuit of Alastor of Dathor (new character, AFAIK), who is going to release a pathogen into Earth’s atsmosphere for revenge (revenge for what, we don’t know yet). However, the “Flashpoint Effect” damages their time bubble – permanently, as it turns out – and their 31st century tech (flight rings, transuits, etc.) no longer works. They capture this Alastor too late (the pathogen has been released) who then blows up, and not all Legionnaires appear to survive.

 

Yes, we have seen this before. Not only a specific title called Legion Lost, but in various stories where Legionnaires are stranded (or choose to live) in Superboy’s time, or Superman’s time. I love me some Legion, but is there some reason for this title? Couldn’t this story have been told in Legion of Super-Heroes or a revived Adventure? The latter title would have the benefit not ending when these Legionnaires get found (because you know they’re going home sometime). I like the book fine, but it doesn’t really pass my “why does this exist” test.

 

12134131671?profile=originalMISTER TERRIFIC #1

Written by ERIC WALLACE

Art by ROGER ROBINSON

Cover by J.G. JONES

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

Another book that fails the above test.

 

Mr. Terrific opens with the titular character in combat with a high-tech bad guy in London. He wins by being really smart. We get a flashback re-telling his origin – the death of his wife, the potential suicide, and the “don’t give up” message (this time from a future son, not The Spectre). He is summoned by the LAPD because an ordinary guy has suddently become a genius, one with the ability to affect the emotional state of those around him (especially inducing rage). Mr. Terrific goes to a party with Karen Starr (evidently the non-powered version of Power Girl on this Earth, who is a multi-millionaire), although they say they are just friends. The rage effect sweeps through the party, affecting Michael Holt as well, and the issue ends with him about to do something reallllly bad.

 

OK, it’s a pretty decent story. It moves nicely, it fills in the blanks painlessly, the art is pretty good. But why? Why does this exist? What is unique about Mr. Terrific, or what unique stories can be told about him, that can’t be told using Batman or some other character as a vehicle? What is the target audience that is different than a Batman book? What niche does this character fill that isn’t already filled to capacity?

 

He's a rich, smart guy who uses tech to beat bad guys. Seen it. So I just don’t know why Mr. Terrific exists. Maybe a second issue will tell me, but the first issue should have.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/mister-terrific-spoilers

 

 

12134132469?profile=originalRED LANTERNS #1

Written by PETER MILLIGAN

Art and cover by ED BENES and ROB HUNTER

On sale SEPTEMBER 14 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T+

 

I must say, this wasn’t nearly as rage-filled as I expected. But it was still OK.

 

Rex-Starr is attacked by some hunters, but is overpowered until rescued by Atrocitus. However, Big Red is concerned because he feels his rage waning. With Krona dead, he’s got nothing left to be mad at. He does some sort of Red Lantern hoodoo and gets a vision, in which he will do a sort of Spectre turn – he will wreak vengeance on those who deserve it. However, the other Red Lanterns think he’s getting soft, and an insurrection begins to form.

 

I guess I was just expecting more of the "Hulk smash" and hissing and blood vomiting from Atrocitus & Co. that they usually do, but now that I think about it, you can’t really have a series about mindless rage-a-matons throwing up on everything in their way. So I suppose it was necessary for Atrocitus to find some sort of raison d’etre for his crew, and for them to get smarter (so there can be dialogue).

 

And this book achieves that; it remains to be seen if that’s a strong enough premise to hold readers’ interest long term, but Milligan usually delivers so I’m not concerned. Also, the art by Ed Benes is solid Green Lantern-style space opera, and goes down like fine wine.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/red-lanterns-1-initial-reaction

 

12134132682?profile=originalRESURRECTION MAN #1

Written by DAN ABNETT and ANDY LANNING

Art by FERNANDO DAGNINO

Cover by IVAN REIS and JOE PRADO

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T+

 

I feel like this book has never been gone.

 

Resurrection Man opens with the man doing his thing, which is not only a fast open but clues in new readers what Mitch Shelley does: He resurrects, each time with new super-powers. (Kind of a grisly version of "Dial H for Hero.") This time he’s Magneto, and takes a plane to Portland. En route, an angel or a demon – hard to tell – comes after his soul. Evidently, the constantly resurrecting has “polished” his soul so that it’s quite a prize to “the upstairs office” and “the downstairs office” alike. And it’s not just angels and demons after Mitch; the Body Doubles are in pursuit, just as they were in the last series. He escapes due to his magnetic powers -- well, not entirely, because he dies again. And resurrects as Hydro-Man!

 

Yep, the Body Doubles again. And Abnett & Lanning are the writers, just as they were for Resurrection Man #1-27 (first series, May 97-Aug 99). And while former artist Butch Guice is otherwise occupied, he clearly influenced Fernando Dagino's (and there’s a strong Gene Colan influence, too). So, honestly, this reads to me like Resurrection Man #28.

 

Which isn’t a bad thing. Resurrection Man is never going to be a big seller; it’s always going to be a second-tier, acquired-taste kind of thing, which means it has to be the best second-tier book it can possibly be to survive on the bubble. And I think Abnett, Lanning and Dagino have achieved that. They’ve added a man-on-the-run element to Mitch, as he’s chased by angels and demons, an added facet which also ratchets up the conflict level. That’s a pretty familiar turf – from The Fugitive to Incredible Hulk – with the added twist of Mitch’s weird power. Oh, and the Body Doubles for “fun.”

 

12134133689?profile=originalSUICIDE SQUAD #1

Written by ADAM GLASS

Art by MARCO RUDY

Cover by RYAN BENJAMIN

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T+

 

Wow. Who decided to ruin so many characters and concepts in a single book?

 

Suicide Squad opens with various characters from the old 52's Gotham City Sirens, Secret Six and elsewhere being tortured to spill the beans on Task Force X (the Suicide Squad), of which they are apparently members now. The characters are Black Spider, Deadshot, El Diablo, Harley Quinn, King Shark, Savant and Voltaic. Everyone has flashbacks as to how they got to Belle Reve’s death row, and then “recruited” into Task Force X with a micro-bomb in their necks. One spills the beans. One doesn’t survive. Eventually, the remainder begin a mission.

 

So Harley is a stone killer now. The Secret Six is kaput (or maybe never happened). The Suicide Squad is even more mean-spirited than before, with none of John Ostrander’s wit and craft. And I gotta say, I guessed the “surprise ending” on Page 2. These characters deserve better – and they once had it, with Gail Simone on Secret Six. Phooey.

 

12134134269?profile=originalSUPERBOY #1

Written by SCOTT LOBDELL

Art by RB SILVA and ROB LEAN

Cover by ERIC CANETE

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

Superboy #1 takes us right back to the beginning of today’s Superboy, when he was being cloned at Cadmus. Only this time it’s at something called Project N.O.W.H.E.R.E. and a Dr. Zaniel is in charge. Once again, he’s a clone of Superman and a human, and once again the human is likely to be Lex Luthor (as one scientist says, “unless Superboy’s human cells originated in a deeply pathological, megalomaniacal narcissist, the likes of which the world has never known … it means we did something wrong”). Of course, it may not be Luthor, which we’ll find out in time. Meanwhile, the sympathetic scientist in charge is very likely Catilin Fairchild of Gen13, prior to being bulked up, and the security person in charge of killing Superboy should he escape is Rose Wilson, not once called Ravager and with both eyes. Fairchild – or “Red,” as she’s always called – can’t prevent Zaniel from sending Superboy on a mission, which will somehow involve the new Teen Titans, which we haven’t met yet.

 

Since most of this information is warmed over material from the Superboy #1 prior to the last one, I tended to linger over the new bits, like the relationship between “Red” and her charge, which is complicated. (She’s sweet and protective, but Superboy thinks, “I believe in my heart that her intentions are pure. She’s trying to protect me from them. … [but] a jailor is still a jailor.”) The Rose Wilson cameo was interesting as an indicator of her status in The New 52, and it makes you wonder if she’s knows Deathstroke is her dad, since she hasn’t had the traumatic eye thingy.

 

But, you know, most of this was set-up, and it’s set-up we’ve seen before, so we won’t really see anything new until next issue. Then, I’m guessing, we’ll see Superboy defect to the Titans, which would mirror the Young Justice cartoon series. I’m guessing that will be the model for the most part, to appeal to viewers of that show.

Read more…

52 Reviews 52 (Part One)

52 Reviews 52

 

This is the start of 52 reviews of each of “The New 52” #1 issues. I apologize for the tardiness; The first 13 of The New 52 debuted the same week school started at the University of Memphis, where I am now teaching classes in addition to my job at The Commercial Appeal, my weekly column for Scripps Howard News Service and my monthly articles for Comics Buyer’s Guide. The timing couldn’t have been worse, really, as there is no such thing as “spare time” this month – perhaps all of this semester.

 

But I am making time for this event, perhaps the most ambitious the industry has undertaken in history, certainly the most ambitious since I began reading comics in the early 1960s. The New 52 deserves the attention.

 

 Again, I’m getting a late start, and various Legionnaires have already taken the time to comment on various threads. I assure you I have read all those comments, and have linked to them. It is not my intent to usurp those conversations, but simply to go on record with my initial thoughts about this unprecedented effort.

 

 

WEEK ONE

 

12134121276?profile=originalACTION COMICS #1

Written by GRANT MORRISON

Art by RAGS MORALES and RICK BRYANT

Cover by RAGS MORALES

Variant cover by JIM LEE and SCOTT WILLIAMS

40 pg, FC, $3.99 US • RATED T

 

I love this book. Let me tell you why. (And settle in – I have a lot to say about this one.)

 

DC touts Action Comics #1 as the “cornerstone of the entire DC Universe,” which is entirely appropriate for the title that gave us the first superhero in 1938 – the character that gave his name to the entire genre. Superman’s status as “the first superhero” wore away over the years in-story, with Crisis on Infinite Earths – which inserted DC’s World War II heroes, previously relegated to “Earth-2,” into “our” Earth’s history – putting an emphatic end to that aspect of the Man of Tomorrow. After 1986, Superman was inarguably just one of continuum of superheroes stretching back to the 1930s, if not further (you could go back to the likes of Super Chief, Black Pirate, or even Anthro, depending on your definition).

 

But writer Grant Morrison restores Superman’s status as “first superhero” – this story is set “five years ago” before any other heroes appear – which does make it the cornerstone of The New 52, as well as a warm and welcome development all on its own. Superman deserves to be the first, and thanks to Morrison, the “new” DC Universe begins with the Man of Steel, just as the original one did in 1938.

 

But that’s not the only similarity the second Action Comics #1 has with the first. For one thing, Morrison’s story begins with Superman’s appearance in Metropolis, and the reaction of Metropolitans to it, just like in 1938. Well, technically, in this Action Comics #1, Superman is mentioned as having debuted “six months ago,” which allows for his future antagonists to already be mobilizing against him – a time-saving decision probably necessary for today’s faster-paced style, and the audience that expects it. At any rate, just like the original Action, there is no origin story – another time-saving decision of which I heartily approve, not only for its parallels to the original Action, which began in media res, but also because with today’s audience the “rocketed to Earth from the doomed planet Krypton” bit can be treated as a given. Also, intrepid reporter Lois Lane has already named the newcomer Superman, getting that out of the way.

 

So instead of dwelling on elements of the Super-mythos most Americans can recite by heart, Morrison dives straight into the story. And it is a fine, and finely crafted, story.

 

For one thing, it begins with action on the first page, action that hurtles pell-mell throughout the story and doesn’t end until the last page. Even when talking heads take over – exposition has to be delivered somehow – the action continues elsewhere, and it’s referred to, or it’s happening on screen in the background, or Morrison simply cuts back and forth. This book lives up to its name, which is another entirely appropriate touch.

 

And speaking of appropriate touches, Morrison’s reverence of the mythos extends to particulars that one only notices on close reading (and therefore doesn’t detract if you miss them). For example, Clark Kent’s landlady makes mention of Superman roughing up a wife-beater – a shout-out to events in the original Action #1. And in the course of the story, we are shown explicitly much of the intro to the Adventures of Superman radio and TV shows. Is Superman faster than a speeding bullet? (Sorta.) More powerful than a locomotive? (No.) Able to bend steel in his bare hands? (Yes.) Able to leap tall buildings in a single bound? (Yes.) I suppose it’s too much to have had Superman change the course of a mighty river, too!

 

As must be obvious from the above, Morrison has also cut Superman’s power back significantly. For the most part, he uses the status quo established in the original Action #1, where Superman can leap 1/8 of a mile but not fly; where “nothing less than a bursting shell can penetrate his skin.” (Lex Luthor even mentions that mortars are ineffective, but Superman does sustain injuries in a fight with a tank that Kent’s landlady mentions.)

 

While this is enjoyable for the first story, I don’t think that level of power would be sufficient for today’s comic-book threats (nor would it allow Superman to be paramount in the Justice League, which he must be). Fortunately, we needn’t worry on that score; stories set in the present show a flying Superman with greater power (see Swamp Thing #1). So for the length of the “five years ago” stories in Action and Justice League, we can have our cake and eat it, too.

 

But Morrison is not so beholden to the past that he never deviates very far from it – something I think has been the problem with various reboots of the Action Ace from Man of Steel in 1986 to Superman: Secret Origin in 2009. From John Byrne to Geoff Johns, most Superman re-writes have just been some variation of the Mort Weisinger version from the Silver Age. And while I loved the Silver Age Superman when I was a kid, and still enjoy re-reading those old stories, it is no longer the 1960s and neither I nor today’s audience will be satisfied with that character regurgitated endlessly. It really is time for a 21st century Superman to appeal to a 21st century audience, and you can’t do that with simple repackaging.

 

So despite his obvious reverence for the character, Morrison is showing the guts to radically re-imagine some aspects of the mythos.

 

One minor way he does so is to introduce Luthor in the first issue. In the Golden Age, Luthor’s first appearance is subject to debate, but it certainly wasn’t in the first issue (and he didn’t even get a first name until 1961). In Morrison’s Action #1, Luthor is there from the beginning, coolly telling Gen. Lane that “a monster … walks among us.” (Of course, we know what the general doesn’t – that the monster is Luthor himself, not Superman.)

 

But he also deviates from canon in a major way, by writing out Clark Kent’s pose as timid, clumsy and ineffectual.

 

And I applaud it.  Who believes Lois Lane could tolerate a co-worker like that (much less date him)? For that matter, why would such a man ever be promoted, given any position of responsibility or trusted by his colleagues? It may be a good cover for his Superman identity, but the “mild-mannered reporter” routine is a sure path to failure in an industry (if not a world) that rewards aggressiveness, so Kent’s relative success over the years – heck, his continued employment – has been harder and harder for this 30-year journalist to swallow.

 

The only time I thought Clark Kent really worked was when he was played by George Reeves in the 1950s Adventures of Superman, precisely because that Kent was not meek. Reeves imbued the reporter with an implicit toughness and serene confidence such that I truly believed this guy could be respected by friend and foe alike. But all other Clark Kents fail the plausibility test, so the character, IMHO, needs to be tougher.

 

And Morrison’s Kent certainly is. I don’t think I can describe it any better than did editor-in-chief Bob Harras when I interviewed him last week:

 

I kinda like what Grant has done, where you get this sense of, you know, Clark has rough edges. Clark is a little angry. He’s a little finding his way in the world. And that’s what intrigued all of us. That was kinda what the whole new 52 was all about. We wanted to tell stories about heroes who are at the beginning parts of their careers. And to me that’s much more interesting because again it’s about people who are less sure of where they’re going to end up in life. And that was more intriguing across the line, than people who are actually totally, totally set in their ways. I think that the ambiguity of points of view is something that’s very exciting and I think again will have ripple effects across the line when characters interact. … Clark’s in his early 20s, and in your early 20s you’re going through a lot, and if you’re Clark Kent and you have these powers, you’re going through even more than normal and what would your reaction be? And I think Grant has found an interesting way to explore that. He’s not the Clark Kent you expected, but in some ways he’s a more realistic Clark Kent.

 

Other changes include Kent working for one of the Daily Planet’s rivals, which – again – we won’t have to worry about beyond this initial story. (Kent is shown in the window of the Daily Planet with Lane, Jimmy Olsen and Perry White in the aforementioned Swamp Thing). And speaking of Olsen, he and Kent are contemporaries and friends, removing the older man-younger man “Superman’s pal” business which occasionally veered toward the uncomfortable.

 

Lastly, a word about something else Morrison has lifted from 1938: Superman’s politics.

 

As almost anyone reading this knows, Superman was a New Deal Democrat in his earliest incarnation – mainly because most people in the late 1930s were, judging by election results. Most characters in the late 1930s and early 1940s shared that outlook, but Superman was, in particular, a champion of the little guy. As noted, one of his first adventures was defending a wife from her abusive husband (“you’re not fighting a woman, now!”). He also broke up rackets, terrified grifting politicians, saved innocent men from execution – in short, defended ordinary people from people and organizations more powerful than they were.

 

Which is exactly what Morrison’s Superman does. He forces a ruthless CEO to confess to white-collar crime against blue-collar people, and saves poor folks from going down with the demolishment of a building. “You know the deal, Metropolis,” he says. “Treat people right or expect a visit from me!”

 

One post on this board notes that the squatters Superman saved during the building demolition were there illegally. Well, yes, they were. (Most appeared homeless, with their possessions in trash bags.) And, technically, Superman was breaking the law when he stopped the wrecking ball from killing them in a legally sanctioned and properly announced demolition. Less technically, Superman was very much breaking the law when assaulted and threatened a corporate CEO, an act to which the police took a dim view. Then there’s resisting arrest, destruction of public property, assaults on police officers …

 

This Superman doesn’t care about the law. He cares about what’s right, just as he did in the early issues of Action Comics in the 1930s. He is in 2011, as in 1938, an outlaw. And if some of the people he helps are technically breaking the law, too, it’s because he believes the law is unfair. He even says in his confrontation with the police “tell it to someone who believes that the law works the same for rich and poor – which ain’t Superman!” Those squatters had probably been evicted from those very buildings, and had nowhere else to go. That’s supposition, but it’s not hard to imagine from the premise.

 

This new/old philosophy for Superman is on purpose, of course. In his book Supergods, Morrison defines the Man of Tomorrow as “a hero of the people. The original Superman was a bold humanist response to Depression-era fears of runaway scientific advance and soulless industrialism.”

 

I applaud this attitude adjustment in the Metropolis Marvel for a variety of reasons, not just because it mirrors my own politics. First, there’s that historical precedent. Plus, there are very few voices in today’s media that aren’t pro-corporate (regardless of what you hear about the nearly non-existent “liberal media”), and this gives Superman a unique voice (instead of the generic one he’s had for years). And, most important, this humanizes Superman in a way I haven’t seen before (except in reprints). Whether you agree with his politics or not, at least they’re recognizable. They’re human. His decades-old job as bemused and detached protector of the status quo was fine during economic boom times, but doesn’t make sense during the Great Recession, nor are most people as strangely and avowedly apolitical as the Weisinger Superman. His new/old attitude gives him a more human face.

 

But there is a danger in Superman’s politics being recognizable, in that it may drive off those with a different philosophy. For years superheroes have been fiercely apolitical, for this very reason. Remember Marvel being forced to apologize to the Tea Party for Tea Party signs depicted in Captain America, signs that were lifted from photos of actual Tea Party events. Politics is always tricky ground, especially in today’s divisive climate.

 

Perhaps the retailer who threatened to boycott Grant Morrison comics because he interpreted a grunt as blasphemy is a lone nut. Or perhaps it’s the beginning of a smear campaign to force the Man of Steel – or rather, his corporate owner – to remember which side their butter is on. After all, that retailer revealed his own politics when he called Morrison a “liberal Scottish schmuck.” The political reference – and his use of “liberal” as a pejorative – suggests his complaint wasn’t really about religion after all.

 

I hope that doesn’t develop, especially since it’s likely to be a moot point after the “five years ago” stories are done. I don’t think either right-leaning or left-leaning readers will long accept a Superman who enforces his opinions by main strength, because none of us are in favor of “might makes right.” I think most Americans believe it’s the other way around, a philosophy I’d bet money Superman will adopt ere long.

 

In the meantime, I’ll enjoy a Superman who is a champion for the little guy. We haven’t seen that fellow in 70 years, and it’s a breath of fresh air to see Grant Morrison take him out for a walk.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-political-aspect-of-morrison-s-new-superman

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/profiles/blogs/dc-s-bold-gamble-gives-us-a-superman-of-the-people

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/dcnu-action-comics

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/action-comics-1-initial-reaction

 

 

12134122254?profile=originalANIMAL MAN #1

Written by JEFF LEMIRE

Art by TRAVEL FOREMAN and DAN GREEN

Cover by TRAVEL FOREMAN

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T+

 

Animal Man is a surprise hit of The New 52, and after reading the first issue it’s not hard to see why.

 

Before delving into the actual comic book, it might well be worth noting how many different takes there have been on Animal Man. He was created in the 1965 in one of DC’s second-tier suspense titles, Strange Adventures, as a rather lame superhero, a movie stuntman named Buddy Bland Baker who was given super-powers by aliens. He made occasional cover appearances, but didn’t even get a costume until 10 issues into his run, and it was a pretty hideous one at that. Buddy was booted out of Strange Adventures after the advent of Deadman, with his final appearance being in issue #201. He was virtually forgotten for a couple of decades except for rare guest appearances, especially in a 1980s concept called (appropriately) “The Forgotten Heroes,” a team comprised of other marginal characters like himself. Fortunately, he was resurrected in 1988 in an eponymous title written by Grant Morrison, who revamped Buddy as vegetarian animal-rights activist and an everyman in bizarre situations, with a strong emphasis on his family life. That took a turn for the weird when the title fell under the new Vertigo umbrella in 1993, and writer Jamie Delano wrote Animal Man as a horror book. After the title folded, Buddy moved back to the DCU, where he was a fairly standard superhero, serving in Justice League Europe and going on an extended space adventure with Starfire and Adam Strange in the pages of 52.

 

All of which is neatly summarized on a full-page text piece presented on Page 1 as a faux magazine article on Baker. Granted, it’s not a very attractive Page 1, but I appreciated the effort at streamlining Baker’s confusing history and getting all of us on the same page – even Baker, as he is introduced reading the magazine article on page two, and discussing it with his wife.

 

What follows is some back-and-forth family dialogue for several pages. The adults talk careers and goals, the little girl wants a pet, the little boy is – well, he’s a little boy, running about excitedly.

 

In the second act, Baker does a superhero turn (in a new uniform that is marginally less hideous), wherein we learn that there is something wrong in “The Red” (the animal equivalent of Swamp Thing’s “The Green”). We know this because Baker’s eyes bleed mysteriously when he uses his powers.

 

In the third act, a dream sequence reveals the problem: “The Hunters Three” are stalking The Red, who way they represent a rot at the heart of the DCU that will have terrible consequences. They threaten Baker’s children specifically, which rachets up the drama. Baker awakens in a cold sweat to discover the nightmare has only begun; there is a truly disturbing revelation about his daughter that ends in a cliff-hanger.

 

Did I like it? Yes.

 

The story is by Jeff Lemire, whose Sweet Tooth is so absorbing that I love it despite my dislike for Lemire’s art style, so I expect good things. From Sweet Tooth I know Lemire is good at both  interpersonal relationships and horror, the two elements he juxtaposes in the first issue to good effect. I suspect that juxtaposition will be a theme of the series, as it was in the Morrison Animal Man – Baker attempting to defend his family from horrible weirdness, while maintaining some semblance of normality – and that’s a good hook.

 

Not every writer can write family dialogue with verisimilitude, but Lemire’s first few pages were perfect. That sort of thing may bore some readers, but I found it charming, and the dialogue rings true. Plus, I suspect it’s the last time we’ll see this humble domestic scene, and those few pages are there specifically to show us what Baker is fighting for: that warm, rumpled, homey contentment.

 

In case you missed how important Baker’s family life is to him, Lemire helpfully spells it out for you in a thought balloon: “It’s Ellen who lets me be who I am. I can be an actor, a superhero, a stuntman, an activist. It doesn’t matter because as long as I’m with her, I’m anchored. I know who I really am.”

 

If I have a complaint, it’s that the first issue is a little slow. Also, the art by Travel Foreman (Immortal Iron Fist) is excellent in virtually all scenes except The Hunters Three reveal, which could have been a little more horrible.

 

Those nits aside, I have very little to pick at in Animal Man #1. It’s a decent set-up, and I’ve seen Lemire follow through before, so I’m confident this is a keeper.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

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12134122090?profile=originalBATGIRL #1

Written by GAIL SIMONE

Art by ARDIAN SYAF and VICENTE CIFUENTES

Cover by ADAM HUGHES

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

Let’s get this out of the way in a hurry: Yes, The Killing Joke is part of the “new” Batgirl continuity. She is out of the wheelchair due to an as-yet-undescribed “miracle.” Moving on now.

 

Can we? That’s what writer Gail Simone is trying to do, and by and large, I want her to succeed. The New 52 is supposed to be a new beginning, and the absolute last thing I want – and I presume what DC wants – is to have to know 40 years of comic-book history to understand something with a #1 on the cover.

 

Since we’re starting over, this first issue is lots and lots of set-up. The villain is introduced. Barbara moves out of her dad’s apartment. We are introduced to the zany roommate. Barbara has two outings as Batgirl, and we learn some details (one being a lack of money). There’s some unexpected psychological baggage revealed. The villain returns. Then a cliff-hanger.

 

Is that enough? It is for me. Batgirl #1 has to deal with a ton of exposition, and I think Simone does so as well as can be expected – especially since she manages to work in two action scenes, both thematically linked by a thorough understanding of Barbara’s psyche (which you’d expect with Simone’s long association with the character), presented with quirky humor, sparkling dialogue and squirm-worthy horror (which you’d expect if you’ve ever read anything by Simone, especially Secret Six). All of this ties together just as we’re treated to the cliff-hanger, and I’m ready for the next issue.

 

But beyond that, the real star of the first issue is Barbara’s joy at returning to the cowl, which bleeds right through the pages as if she’s a real person. Chalk it up to Simone’s insightful script, or to Ardian Syaf’s full-page reveal on Page 4, or to my own fondness for the character, but I finished Batgirl #1 happy and satisfied. So like I say, it’s good enough for me.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/dcnu-batgirl

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/batgirl-1-initial-reaction

 

12134122655?profile=originalBATWING #1

Written by JUDD WINICK

Art and cover by BEN OLIVER

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

The best part of Batwing #1 is also its greatest drawback: It takes place in Africa.

 

Before I explain that, let me get the summary out of the way. We are introduced to Batwing – the Batman of Africa – in combat with a ferocious enemy called Massacre. Massacre is wielding a machete, which from what little I know of African conflicts means he deals in horror, intimidation and terrorism as well as plain old murder. Batwing has Bat-armor and wings with which he can actually fly, which he helpfully informs us were provided by the Dark Knight himself (presumably as part of Batman, Inc.)

 

In the second act, we flash back to a visit from Batman as he aids Batwing in an ongoing investigation of brutal massacres. (No points for guessing who did it, since the heroes haven’t met Massacre yet and you have.) We learn about Batwing’s “Batcave” (The Haven), his “Alfred” (Matu Ba, formerly of The Children’s Harbor, a child-soldier rescue organization) and his secret ID, David Zavimbe of the Tinasha Police Department, Democratic Republic of the Congo. A potential love interest is introduced, a fellow officer named Kia Okuru.

 

In the third act, something really awful happens. Then there is a really awful cliff-hanger. I mean it, what happens is seriously awful (in a good way).

 

This is all pretty standard superhero fare – except none of it works the way it does in other superhero books, because this doesn’t take place in a Western democracy. Batwing takes place in Africa, and not even in one of the nicest places on that huge, complicated continent. The rules are different there. It’s like a parallel universe, like the old Earth-3, where up is down, black is white, good is evil.

 

Nothing really slaps you in the face in that regard; Winick isn’t on a soapbox. But the dialogue and the stone walls Zavimbe hits reminds you that the cops here aren’t necessarily the good guys, that violence is pretty much the norm and people are worrying about a lot more than their cell-phone service.

 

And I find that exciting. Like any parallel universe, everything you learn is fascinating, every bit of information important. And I spent my youth learning about parallel universes, so why not this one? The only difference between Batwing and “Earth-3” or the Ultimate universe or Kingdom Come is that the Congo is a real place, with real politics and real problems – this parallel universe is just a plane flight away. Wow!

 

Of course, for some people, that’s a reason to drop the book. Not in the U.S.? Pfft, adios.

 

I understand that. Ethnocentrism is a tribal instinct built into our lizard brains. And it takes time to learn about a foreign culture. It may strike some as a dull and useless waste of time. So they won’t read Batwing no matter how good it is.

 

And I think it is good – a solid superhero book set in an exotic locale, written and drawn by a veteran team. I was a little dismayed at Batman guesting, but I suppose it’s somewhat mandatory from a sales perspective. Thankfully he acted as an ally and a guest, not as a patronizing white superior telling a black guy how to do his job.

 

And the Batman appearance is just about my only quibble. I already knew from Vertigo’s Unknown Soldier and First Second’s Deogratias graphic novel that the story potential of Africa is astounding. Batwing threatens to mine that rich resource, and I want to be along for the ride.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/batwing-1-initial-reaction

 

12134123084?profile=originalDETECTIVE COMICS #1

Written by TONY S. DANIEL

Art by TONY S. DANIEL and RYAN WINN

Cover by TONY S. DANIEL

On sale SEPTEMBER 7 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

HEY! What the hell is going ON here?

 

Oh, wait. We already know. This is Detective Comics, starring Batman, like it has since 1939. And the Dark Knight we see here is the familiar one of recent vintage, doing familiar internal dialogue in grim, clenched-jaw fashion and taking on The Joker. For a #1, there’s not a whole lot of “new” going on here.


Which is not a complaint. The Bat-books have been very good lately, going back at least to the advent of Grant Morrison, and this book continues the quality. I particularly like Tony Daniel’s Batman: powerful, sleek and intimidating.

 

And, OK, there are some new things here. We readers are in the know on something Batman isn’t: There’s a new bad guy in town, and he’s really, really bad news. He’s called the Dollmaker, and at the end he and The Joker …

 

Hey, wait. Wait! HEY! What the hell is going ON here?

 

Wow, that’s some cliff-hanger!

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/detectice-comics-1-initial-reaction

 

12134123263?profile=originalGREEN ARROW #1

Written by J.T. KRUL

Art by DAN JURGENS and NORM RAPMUND

Cover by BRETT BOOTH and ROB HUNTER

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

My first reaction to Green Arrow was: Whew! The second was: Meh.

 

The “Whew” was a sigh of relief that they’ve completely divorced Oliver Queen from the unworkable and inexplicable character he had become prior to The New 52. I won’t get into all the ways previous writers ruined the Emerald Archer, as it’s history now. (But I will mention A) punting his marriage for no reason and B) committing murder for no reason are two things that made the character toxic.)

 

Green Arrow #1 makes all that moot – this is a much younger guy, with an entirely different temperament, and an entirely different status quo. (How much of his past holds over from the previous “universe” – especially with the Justice League and Roy “Arsenal” Harper – remains to be seen.)

 

We open with the CEO of Queen Industries, a fellow named Emerson, griping at a meeting about Oliver Queen not being at the meeting, a fellow who I suppose tends to miss a lot of meetings, even though he’s the head of “Q-Core,” the R&D division of Queen Industries, because he’s also secretly, duh, Green Arrow. (Why the guy with his name on the letterhead isn’t the CEO, or can’t get rid of this CEO, who clearly has it in for him, is not something I understand. But then, I’m a journalist, not an MBA.)

 

Anyway, what Queen is doing instead of attending the meeting is tracking three super-villains in Paris, and then proceeds to capture them over the course of a number of pages while participating in the meeting by phone, with the help of his two partners back at Q-Core, Naomi and Jax (new characters, as far as I know). These three super-villains are really quite powerful, but Green Arrow captures them almost with ease, thanks to a variety of high-tech toys.

 

In the final act, Queen returns home to meet with Adrien, an older employee whom he assigns to be liaison with Emerson “to keep Queen Industries as far away from Q-Core as possible.” (Again, this doesn’t make sense to me, since Emerson is the CEO of Queen Industries, and Q-Core is described as a division of Queen Industries, so it seems to me he can get as close as he wants, or fire everyone there including Queen, or just shut it down, or whatever. He’s the CEO! Man, I need to take some business classes – or writer J.T. Krul does.) We get a little more chit-chat with Naomi and Jax (revealing a little more of their background and relationship with Queen, none of which is very interesting), and then we shift to the three super-villains in jail, where a cliff-hanger occurs.

 

So, yes, I heaved a sigh of relief that Green Arrow was no longer the schizophrenic moron of recent years. There was definitely a Smallville vibe to this version instead, which is a definite improvement over that homeless guy wandering in a forest near Star City. (Who should have been in jail. Hello, “Justice” League, he killed someone.)

 

But following the “whew” was the “meh.” I like cool toys as well as the next guy, but the set-up here seemed terribly familiar and cliché: Rich guy uses toys to fight crime, abetted by standard sidekicks, with an arch-foe businessman. (Frankly, it read like 1980s Iron Man. “Clytemnestra and your brother whose name I forget, help me figure out how to beat Obadiah Stane!” Sometimes I thought of Naomi and Jax as Wendy and Marvin from Super Friends and Teen Titans.) There was nothing particularly original or interesting about the super-villains. There was nothing particularly original or interesting in here at all.

 

It may have just suffered in comparison to the other New 52 books, where there was a lot more meat – and, it seemed to me, craft. Green Arrow seemed shallow and by-the-numbers, a single-act book surrounded by three-act books with lots more information.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

12134123701?profile=originalHAWK AND DOVE #1

Written by STERLING GATES

Art and cover by ROB LIEFELD

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

I didn’t like Hawk & Dove the last time Rob Liefeld worked on it, and nothing here changes my mind. This book is for people other than me, and that’s OK.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/hawk-dove-new-old-spoilers

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

 

12134124654?profile=originalJUSTICE LEAGUE INTERNATIONAL #1

Written by DAN JURGENS

Art by AARON LOPRESTI and MATT RYAN

Cover by AARON LOPRESTI

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

This book can’t seem to make up its mind what it wants to be, but I still enjoyed it.

 

The first act involves two people (Andre Briggs and Emerson Esposito, new characters AFAIK) trying to sell the United Nations Global Security Group – which consists of three of the Security Council members, France, UK and China – on a UN super-team. They discuss various members, dismissing a few for various reasons. They decide on ones that are easy to manipulate, especially the leader, Booster Gold. The act ends with the introduction of the problem, a mysterious hole in Peru that swallows a UN research team.

 

The second act is the gathering of the team, which is mostly the old Justice League International with a few new faces. Specifically, it’s August General in Iron (from China’s Big Ten), Booster Gold, Fire & Ice, Godiva (from the Global Guardians), Guy Gardner, Rocket Red and Vixen.

 

The third act is the team going to Peru to investigate the mysterious hole. Batman appears and effectively joins the team as Booster’s Jiminy Cricket. Once in Peru they are attacked by Lava Men – which first appeared in Avengers #5, at another company, which is kinda strange – and then a giant robot. That’s the cliff-hanger.

 

Let me get my complaints out of the way.

 

As I said in my lead, this book doesn’t seem to know what it wants to be. It veers toward Bwah-ha-ha here and there, but it also wants to take itself seriously as a standard super-team book. They present the characters as heroes, while simultaneously suggesting they are little more than easily-manipulated puppets. It seems Jurgens wants to have it both ways – the Giffen-DeMatteis humor, but the drama of Justice League: Generation Lost.

 

Also, a number of character act oddly or out of character, not for story reasons, but because of plot necessities or needless drama:

 

  • Guy Gardner, for example, storms off – although everybody, in story and out, knows he’ll be back. So what’s the point? If you want to remind people he’s an arrogant hothead, you could do that with dialogue – you know, writing – and use those panels for something constructive.
  • Batman acts as a wise old mentor for Booster instead of his usual take-charge self. Which is way out of character. Plus, he’s a lot less competent than usual, so that the team can shine. If this was Dick Grayson I’d buy it, but it’s not.
  • Godiva is so over-the-top in the flirtation/snark department (isn’t that Fire’s job?) that she should have been kicked off the team by now. I know, I know, it’s comics, and super-teams always have at least one trouble-maker. But her “characterization” is really heavy-handed.
  • Speaking of Godiva, when the Lava Men attack she’s in there fighting with the rest of the team. In the very next panel, Batman chides her for not pitching in – which she was clearly depicted doing – and she tells him to “sod off” because she doesn’t want to ruin her nails or something. I’ll write off the miscommunication between writer and artist (Godiva should have been shown not participating), but I won’t write off the clumsy way a Batman-Godiva tiff has been set up. Seriously, it’s Batman – if he doesn’t like Godiva, she’s gone.
  • Speaking of tiffs, I agree with The Baron that the Chinese and Russian guys bickering is ham-handed and annoying, instead of amusing, and I’m tired of Russian guys who talk like Boris Badenov. (You know, some Russians are actually smart enough to master a second language. True fact!) Plus, it requires August General in Iron to act in a petty and undignified way, which is the opposite of how he’s been presented to date. He’s China’s Superman, not their Green Arrow.
  • The whole point of Booster’s last title was to establish him as “the best hero you’ve never heard of.” Again and again we were shown that despite his growing maturity and competence, the world didn’t know what he was doing in the timestream and still thought of him as a clown. Now he’s suddenly the leader of the highest profile team on the planet? I guess the UN was reading Booster Gold comics, not his press clippings.
  • Which, if nothing else, should make Booster suspicious of this sudden offer. He’s egotistical, but even he should suspect something.

 

OK, enough of that, because I still want to complain about something else. Specifically, the “10 impossible things before breakfast” the book requires for you to believe. There are just too many.

 

For example, the United Nations is going to form a super-team? You’re joking, right? For one thing, it would have to get by the Security Council – which includes Russia and the U.S., not just the three members of the fatuous “Global Security Group” – which can’t agree on anything. Plus, it’s United Nations Research Team Three that’s swallowed in Peru, which means the DC Universe United Nations has about three more research teams than our world does.

 

Also, people are protesting the Hall of Justice being given to the new JLI, because it’s a public building. How dare the U.N. use a public building for the public good? That always drives me to violence.

 

The UN thinks Green Arrow is too likely to cross the line and rejects him … although they accept Fire, who as a member of Checkmate, has crossed that line so many times she’s crippled with guilt.

 

I could go on, but at this point you’re probably wondering what I like about this book. And the answer is simple: I love these characters. I didn’t even realize that until I read this issue, so it’s a fairly recent conversion, which I blame on the latest Booster Gold series, which gave him a status quo and a purpose I could respect, and Justice League: Generation Lost, which showed these guys believed in themselves when nobody else did – so convincingly that I began to believe in them, too.


That sounds corny, and it is. It’s also probably tenuous, because these are fictional characters who are only as good as their last issue, and if they continue to be mishandled I will stop liking them. So far I’m only annoyed, and I’ll give Jurgens time to get his feet under him. And who knows: Maybe I’ll start to like Godiva.

 

Naw.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

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12134124900?profile=originalMEN OF WAR #1

Written by IVAN BRANDON

Art by TOM DERENICK

Cover by VIKTOR KALVACHEV

40 pg, FC, $3.99 US • RATED T+

 

My hopes for this title were only mid-high … and I was still disappointed.

 

I asked for a war book, I want a war book and I will buy a war book. The genre has been ignored for far too long and even *I* get tired of superheroes now and then.

 

So we get a series starring Sgt. Rock’s grandson, and what’s that I see on Page 9? A superhero. Which one, we don’t know, but that’s not what I wanted. And I’ll bet these guys are in “Qurac” or someplace, not Iraq or Afghanistan, also not what I wanted.

 

What I wanted was ‘The Nam. Or the recent Sgt. Rock minis that take place in real battles of World War II. Or Harvey Kurtzman's Two-Fisted Tales or Archie Goodwin’s Blazing Combat or Garth Ennis’s Battlefields. Our folks in uniform – especially the special forces – virtually are superheroes, with the training and weaponry they have. I want to read about them, not fictional characters in a fictional country fighting a fictional war with superheroes overhead. At worst, I want moving and realistic war stories from any theater in any war.

 

The second story, about Navy Seals is more along the lines of what I wanted. I’m not too crazy about the leads – they’re a little clichéd, and they talk too damn much – but I’m more interested in that than I am the lead feature.

 

I can’t hold DC accountable for my expectations, and I don’t. I’ll try to adjust my perception to what they’re giving me instead of what I want them to give me. I’ll give Men of War more time, in the hopes that occasionally I’ll see the kind of story I want. Because if I don’t support it at all, it’ll be a million years before I see another war book.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

12134125684?profile=originalO.M.A.C. #1

Written by DAN DIDIO and KEITH GIFFEN

Art and cover by KEITH GIFFEN and SCOTT KOBLISH

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

I thought I’d hate this book sight unseen. Turns out I like it.

 

It’s not a very deep book. The story in issue #1 is that Cadmus is invaded by O.M.A.C. (one similar to the Kirby original, not the recent ones). A voice is instructing O.M.A.C. to download Cadmus’ computers, and giving him all the power he needs to overcome each obstacle that comes up. In the meantime, a Cadmus employee is concerned for her missing boyfriend, while a mutual friend (that she has slept with in the past) is snarky about it. O.M.A.C. succeeds, there's a Big Reveal on the voice, The End.

 

This is pretty paint-by-the-numbers. O.M.A.C. is exactly who you think he is (the missing boyfriend). The voice is exactly what you think it is (Brother Eye). It’s a one-act play with no subtleties whatsoever.

 

And it’s written by Dan DiDio, who has only written Outsiders before that I’m aware of, and I didn’t care for that (especially his character creation Freight Train). I knew Keith Giffen was going to draw it in his Kirby pastiche style, and that has always annoyed me. So I expected to dislike the book.

 

Instead, I found something I wasn’t expecting, and even if had expected it, wouldn’t expect to like: Wackiness. Full-bore, Kirby at his Don Rickles craziest, Three Stooges wackiness. DiDio took a bunch of Kirby Koncepts from different series and threw them in a blender. O.M.A.C. and Build-A-Friend from O.M.A.C. Mokkari, Cadmus, Gobblers and Dubbilex from Superman’s Pal Jimmy Olsen. Nebbish protagonist Kevin Kho from – well, just about every Kirby series. Even the Cadmus minions looked like World Peace Officers from O.M.A.C.

 

All of this was thrown together, and it all having the same “dad” and a guy drawing like “dad,” it all kind of worked. I thought Giffen’s Kirby swipes would bother me, but they actually helped. (And points for drawing the “pretty girl” like Kirby would – which isn’t all that pretty.) Also, there are visual hints that O.M.A.C.'s mohawk is an antenna  to keep in contact with Brother Eye -- which explains that odd fashion choice, and is kinda cool.

 

I don’t know where the series is going, and I don’t know how long DiDio can continue rifling through a dead man's closet, without coming up with his own stuff. It’s a high-wire act, and either writer or artist could fall at any time. Or we could all just get bored.

 

In the meantime, I’m enjoying the wackiness. Bwah-ha-ha!

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/dcnu-omac

 

12134105258?profile=originalSTATIC SHOCK #1

Written by SCOTT McDANIEL and JOHN ROZUM

Art and cover by SCOTT McDANIEL and

JONATHAN GLAPION

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T

 

I love Static! If Scott McDaniel is true to the character, I will love this book.

 

And so far, so good. The story’s not much – mostly just set-up, where we learn A) Static’s family has moved to New York, B) Virgil’s an intern at S.T.A.R. Labs, and C) he’s being mentored long-distance by Hardware. There’s a fight, Virgil wins, the bad guys plot to kill him. The End.

 

Terrific! Not because of that flimsy plot, but because Virgil read like Virgil, and I love Virgil. Also, I loved that Dakota was acknowledged, and that Hardware is (indirectly) progressing as a character as well. Plus, Virgil’s sister is as nasty to her sibling as ever, and I had two sisters, so those scenes had me chuckling. (I love my sisters and they love me, but MAN we were mean to each other growing up!) Keep this coming, and I’m a happy camper.

 

Did I mention I love Static?

 

12134126475?profile=originalSTORMWATCH #1

Written by PAUL CORNELL

Art and cover by MIGUEL SEPULVEDA

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T+

 

I was never a big fan of Stormwatch, although I appreciated what Warren Ellis and others did with it – at least philosophically – as it morphed into The Authority. (The actual execution was somewhat depressing.)

 

So why go backwards? That’s what this Stormwatch is, an anachronism from its pre-Ellis days. And I didn’t much enjoy it.

 

For the record, the story is as follows: The Engineer, Adam One (a new character) and a girl who was never named are in Stormwatch HQ in The Bleed monitoring three missions. In the first a new character named Eminence of Blades discovers something called “The Scourge of Worlds” on the moon, with that celestial body somehow transforming into a giant claw. In the second mission, Jack Hawksmoor (who now has tire treads on his hands as well as feet), Martian Manunter and a new character named The Projectionist attempt to recruit Apollo in Moscow. In the third, Jenny Quantum and an immortal black man whose name was never mentioned (c’mon, Mr. Cornell, names are Storytelling 101) are transporting a gigantic horn from the Himalayas to HQ for study. The other two missions are unresolved, but in the second Apollo defeats Manhunter’s team and meets a fellow named Midnighter. The End.

 

Wow, that was tedious. Lots of bickering, and an insistence – twice – that this team was somehow not superheroes, were better than superheroes, when they don’t behave any differently than the Justice League. But Hawksmoor says they’re “professionals,” not superheroes (although Apollo defeats them easily enough), and Martian Manhunter says he’s a “superhero” when he’s with the Justice League, but a “warrior” when he’s with Stormwatch (*Snort!* But at least they didn’t eliminate his entire history.) There’s also indication that Stormwatch has been around for centuries, like Jonathan Hickman’s S.H.I.E.L.D., and at least one incarnation is related to Demon Knights.

 

With stories like this, it won’t be around much longer. Hey, if you’re going to bring WildStorm characters into the DCU, have the courage to make them those characters, instead of re-inventing them. I’ve read The Authority and even liked parts of it, but I don’t know who these guys are, and with a beginning like this, don’t much care.

 

A “warrior.” *Snort!*

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/stormwatch-1-initial-reaction

 

 

12134103862?profile=originalSWAMP THING #1

Written by SCOTT SNYDER

Art and cover by YANICK PAQUETTE

32 pg, FC, $2.99 US • RATED T+

 

Swamp Thing has had numerous incarnations, and therefore has been all over the map in quality and enjoyment. Based on this first book, I’m hopeful this will be one of the highlights of the moss-encrusted mockery of a man’s career.

 

We begin with mass extinctions all over the globe. Not MASS mass extinctions, but like when those birds all dropped dead in Arkansas a while back. LITTLE mass extinctions. Birds in Metropolis, bats in Gotham, fish somewhere near Aquaman and (we’re told later) cattle near Coast City. Superman takes the initiative to go ask Alec Holland, newly resurrected in Brightest Day, if he has any ideas. Although, since these are all animal deaths, Superman should have gone to Animal Man. Not that it matters, as Holland makes the new status quo crystal clear: He is not Swamp Thing, and he never was Swamp Thing. Just like we discovered in Alan Moore’s “The Anatomy Lesson,” Holland died in Swamp Thing #1, and the monster-cum-Defender of The Green simply thought he was Holland for a while, due to some planarian worms. However, since his resurrection, Holland has flashes of Swamp Thing’s memory, for reasons unrevealed. Holland is now working in construction, trying to get far away from his previous life, although we do learn that he has re-created the bio-restorative formula, which seems important. This remains unresolved, but meanwhile some force animates a mammoth fossil in Arizona (that’s “mammoth” as in the animal, not “mammoth” as in size, although it is that, too). Three diggers are attacked by swarms of insects, which fly into their ears and make them twist their own heads backwards, killing them. However, they remain animate, following orders from something unrevealed. In the last few pages, Holland’s hotel room is overrun with plants while he sleeps, and he threatens the plants with the bio-restorative formula, when he is stopped … by Swamp Thing.

 

OK, I’m having fun. This is CREEEEEE-py! Especially the bugs thing, which harkens back to Moore’s run, when Abby’s dead husband was animated by flies for a time as an agent of Hell. It also reminds me of The Amityville Horror, which has nothing to do with Swamp Thing, but Rod Steiger’s death-by-flies was the best part of that movie.

 

It was interesting to see the Superman parts, as it established what we didn’t know from Action Comics #1, which is that in his current incarnation he can fly, and he works for the Daily Planet. Also, he was shown being in immediate contact with Justice League friends Batman and Aquaman, information we didn’t have yet from Justice League of America #1. So, that happened.

 

And it happened fast. I admired Snyder’s economy in covering all that info in just a few panels, completely silent. The story rocketed along without wasting any time on exposition. That came with Superman’s chat with Holland, a necessary evil, I’m afraid, but Snyder handled that pretty well, too – if you have to have two talking heads, it helps visually if one of them is in a Kryptonian battle suit and is hovering four feet above the ground.

 

It also helps that I know Snyder is a terrific horror writer from American Vampire, which you should be reading if you’re not.

 

Anyway, as mentioned, the flies thing was ultra-creepy. Yanick Paquette’s art is superb, and his horror scenes convey the chills that the ones in Animal Man did not. And Swamp Thing’s appearance at the end – sorry for the spoiler – raises more questions than it answers, which just whets my appetite for issue #2.

 

Other threads on this board on this topic:

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/the-new-dcu-begins-now

 

https://captaincomics.ning.com/forum/topics/dcnu-omac

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Retro-Review: Marvel Team-Up (1977)

12134120666?profile=originalThis is supposed to be a high point for team-up titles in general and Marvel Team-Up in particular.  This was the year that Chris Claremont and John Byrne worked on the series, which led in turn to their magical pairing on Uncanny X-Men. In retrospect, these issues reveal the limitations of a team-up title more than the possibilities.

            Before Claremont and Byrne were paired together, they each worked on several issues separately.  John Byrne partnered with writer Bill Mantlo on a short run that began with Marvel Team-Up Annual #1 at the end of 1976.  Chris Claremont then took over and teamed with artist Sal Buscema for a couple of issues.  Finally, Claremont and Byrne worked together for 12 consecutive issues (#59-70) and one last coda (#75). 

            The Mantlo-Byrne team begins with a fairly prosaic story in Annual #1. Spider-Man and the X-Men are brought in separately to investigate an energy experiment that went awry.  They’re defeated; the villains explain their plan; the heroes then escape and defeat them.  There’s little about this story that’s original or enlightening.  I suppose there’s something unique about the first meeting between Spider-Man and the all-new X-Men but that’s not enough to carry the story on its own.  It’s a little bit interesting that Mantlo uses the Hindu gods as villains but he has them possess ordinary scientists so it’s more of a half-hearted attempt.

            Fortunately, the stories improve from there.  Mantlo sets up a series of obstacles that prevent Spider-Man from getting home to New York.  He’s sidetracked first by a Hulk rampage in New Mexico and later accidentally sent to the Blue Area of the Moon.  The way in which one story leads into the next is a lot of fun.  It’s not quite a rollercoaster but it is a bit of a carnival ride.  Unfortunately, it’s annoying that both Hulk and Woodgod constantly refer to themselves in the third person.  One feeble-minded hero might be interesting.  Two is aggravating.  More notably, the stories are innocuous and inconsequential. We know that anything important will happen in Spider-Man’s own title.  It’s a problem that has dogged many a team-up title, including Mark Waid’s most recent attempt to re-start The Brave and the Bold. 

However, John Byrne’s art is a bright spot.  It’s already polished.  And it’s occasionally brilliant as on a splash in which a delirious Spider-Man hallucinates miniature versions of his rogues’ gallery.

           12134121081?profile=original The Claremont-Buscema team is an awful mess.  Claremont’s stories are uninventive and formulaic.  A villain-or two- commits a common crime like robbing a bank or an armored car.  One hero is tracking the criminal.  Another hero stumbles onto the crime accidentally.  They fight, make up and team up to defeat the bad guys.  I know that comic book writers used to compare work-for-hire to playing in someone else’s sandbox but Claremont didn’t have to take the metaphor literally.  The plots are about as interesting as a HeroClix scenario.  They’re less interesting than watching a kid play with their toys as the child might actually surprise you. 

Finally, Claremont and Byrne are paired together.  Claremont and Byrne give us a pretty good tour of the Marvel Universe.  They alternate between kung fu and the cosmic (an adventure with the Super-Skrull, Human Torch and Ms. Marvel is followed by one with Iron Fist and the Daughters of the Dragon).  They pair Spidey off with established veterans and bright newcomers (founding Avengers Yellowjacket and the Wasp appear in the first story while the first American appearance of Captain Britain occurs a little bit later).  And they manage to balance human concerns with godlike wonder (Spider-Man squares off against the Living Monolith with Havok and Thor).  Byrne shows excellent range as an artist, depicting urban landscapes, aerial dogfights and hand-to-hand combat. 

The stories are a marked improvement over the previous issues and not just because of John Byrne’s art.  Claremont expands his horizons as well.  He begins to experiment with two-issue stories, allowing more room for plot twists and cliffhangers.  And he brings weight to the stories by focusing on the guest-stars more than Spider-Man.  We know that Spider-Man won’t die, break up with his girlfriend or lose his job at the Bugle in a secondary title.  But we don’t know that something essential won’t happen to a guest star.  A minor character might very well be killed off or lose his powers.  This intensifies the stakes in a story, bringing greater conflict and drama.

Individually, the two-part stories work well.  However, read in sequence, Claremont’s new formula eventually becomes repetitive.  It might have been nice if they had alternated the pace of their stories a little more (there are a couple of one-shots guest-starring Tigra and the Man-Thing near the end of the run).  It definitely would have been better if Claremont had occasionally shifted the focus back on Spider-Man.  He feels like a secondary concern in his own title, continually caught up in other people’s adventures.  At times, Team-Up starts to feel like an advertisement for other comics.  “Hey, check out Ms. Marvel or Iron Fist in their own titles!”  Claremont also makes the mistake of completing abandoning Spider-Man’s supporting cast.  Sure, they’re not going to play a significant role.  But without them, he stops being Peter Parker.  He’s just another hero with a smart mouth and a mask.

Marvel Team-Up can be pretty good.  But it’s never great.  

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DC's bold gamble gives us a Superman of the people

 

12134118475?profile=original

Andrew A. Smith

Scripps Howard News Service


Sept. 13, 2011 -- DC’s grand experiment, “The New 52” titles starting over at issue #1, launched 13 of them Sept. 7, with augers and portents of success. Especially for Superman, whose Action Comics #1 seems to be the biggest seller.

 

There are no official numbers yet, but shop owners and customers on my website and elsewhere on the Internet reported sell-outs all over the country, especially Batgirl #1, Swamp Thing #1 and the surprise hit Animal Man #1. My local shop, Comics & Collectibles in Memphis, Tenn., said Sept. 8 that all 13 first issues had sold out at the distributor level (meaning they can’t be re-ordered until there are second printings), and #comicmarket on Twitter, where comics retailers chat, is electric with debate, surprise and more excitement than I thought possible among these often cynical merchants.

 

These anecdotal reports are encouraging. But comic-book readers in this country total less than one percent of the population – maybe as low as one-tenth of one percent – and it’s not only current and lapsed readers DC is hoping to reach, but new ones. The bitter irony is that there’s a huge superhero revival on the big screen, but that success is leaving the comics market, from whence those characters leaped and flew, untouched.

 

That’s DC’s true grand experiment: The Hunt for New Readers. Part of the calculus is same-day release of all their comics digitally at comiXology.com (at the same price as the print versions, to avoid slitting the throats of the brick-and-mortar stores).

 

12134119075?profile=originalBut DC is definitely putting its best foot forward. I don’t have room to discuss all of “The New 52” in this column (although I promise I will on my website), but I have a lot to say about Action Comics #1.

 

Actually, it’s Action writer Grant Morrison who has a lot to say about Superman, and he has already done so in his book Supergods: What Masked Vigilantes, Miraculous Mutants, and a Sun God from Smallville Can Teach Us About Being Human ($28, Spiegel and Grau).

 

Morrison has written a lot of critically successful and often controversial comics, and there’s probably no one on Earth who has thought as much, or as well, about superheroes. He’s especially philosophical about Superman, the first and greatest superhero, the one who created the genre and gave his name to it.

 

12134119652?profile=originalTo backtrack a bit, Morrison attributes the various superhero “waves” in history as a response to existential crises. Superman arrived in 1938 during the Great Depression and Hitler’s reich. The superhero revival of the late 1950s and 1960s was, he said, a response to the fear of The Bomb and total annihilation at any second. And a third wave of superheroes, the current one, is the same:

 

“Look away from the page or the screen and you’d be forgiven for thinking they’ve arrived into mass consciousness, as they tend to arrive everywhere else, in response to a desperate SOS from a world in crisis,” he writes in his book. “Could it be that a culture starved of optimistic images of its own future has turned to the primary source in search of utopian role models?”

 

If you suspect that’s a hint about Morrison’s Superman in Action, you’d be right. The Man of Tomorrow’s incarnation in the 1940s, he wrote, “was a hero of the people. The original Superman was a bold humanist response to Depression-era fears of runaway scientific advance and soulless industrialism.”

 

12134119489?profile=originalWhile it’s a lot to read into a single issue, it appears that Morrison’s Superman in Action will return to those roots. After forcing a confession from a ruthless corporate CEO, the new/old Superman announces “You know the deal – treat people right, or expect a visit from me!” To blue-collar workers being forced from their homes: “If you need me, I’ll be there!” Even his Clark Kent persona – working for one of the Daily Planet’s competitors – is a crusader for the little guy.

 

Superman’s current power levels also harken to his past; he only leaps instead of flying, and he isn’t invulnerable – he’s injured several times in this first issue. There are hints his power levels are increasing by leaps and bounds, though, so we might not have long to enjoy this Man of Steel 1.0.

 

This is a huge departure from decades of the character’s role as invincible protector of the status quo. And to tell you the truth, it’s fresh air. The rich and powerful don’t need a champion, but the rest of us do. I like this all-too-human Superman, and I think a lot of you will, too.

 

 Contact Andrew A. Smith of the Memphis Commercial Appeal at capncomics@aol.com.


 

 

 

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Comics for 21 September 2011

ALL NIGHTER #4 (OF 5) ANITA BLAKE CIRCUS DAMNED SCOUNDREL #1 (OF 5) ANNE RICE SERVANT OF THE BONES #2 (OF 6) ARCHIE CHRISTMAS CLASSICS TP VOL 01 ARCHIES JOKE BOOK HC VOL 01 BOB MONTANA ARMED GARDEN & OTHER STORIES HC ART OF COMIC BOOK INKING TP VOL 01 NEW PTG ART OF JOE KUBERT HC ART OF METAL GEAR SOLID HC ARTIFACTS TP VOL 02 ASTONISHING SECRET OF AWESOME MAN YR GN AVENGERS #17 FEAR AVENGERS CHILDRENS CRUSADE #7 (OF 9) BACK ISSUE #51 BART SIMPSON COMICS #63 BATMAN #1 BIRDS OF PREY #1 BLUE BEETLE #1 BOYS BUTCHER BAKER CANDLESTICKMAKER #3 (MR) BPRD HELL ON EARTH RUSSIA #1 BRIMSTONE #5 (MR) BROKEN PIECES #1 CAPTAIN AMERICA #3 CAPTAIN AMERICA CORPS #4 (OF 5) CAPTAIN ATOM #1 CATWOMAN #1 CHEW TP VOL 04 FLAMBE (MR) CLASSIC MARVEL CHARACTERS #1 SPIDER-MAN COBRA ONGOING #5 CONAN ROAD OF KINGS #8 (OF 8) CREEPY ARCHIVES HC VOL 11 DALES COMIC FANZINE PRICE GUIDE 2011 DAMAGED #2 (OF 6) (MR) DAREDEVIL #4 DARK HORSE PRESENTS #4 DARKNESS #93 DARKWING DUCK #16 DC UNIVERSE PRESENTS #1 DMZ #69 (MR) DONE TO DEATH GN ESSENTIAL SPIDER-MAN TP VOL 04 NEW ED EVELYN EVELYN HC EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT LOTUS #3 (OF 3) FABLES #109 (MR) FATHOM VOL 4 #2 FEAR ITSELF FEARSOME FOUR #4 (OF 4) FEAR FEAR ITSELF HOME FRONT #6 (OF 7) FEAR FEAR ITSELF UNCANNY X-FORCE #3 (OF 3) FEAR FEAR ITSELF YOUTH IN REVOLT #5 (OF 6) FEAR GAME OF THRONES #1 GENERATION HOPE #11 SCHISM GI JOE COBRA CIVIL WAR 100 PG SPECTACULAR GI JOE DISAVOWED TP VOL 04 GOBS #2 (OF 4) GODZILLA KINGDOM OF MONSTERS TP VOL 01 GREEN HORNET #18 GREEN LANTERN CORPS #1 GREEN WAKE TP VOL 01 (MR) HALO FALL OF REACH TP BOOT CAMP (MR) HELLBLAZER #283 HELLBOY TP VOL 11 BRIDE OF HELL & OTHERS HELLRAISER TP VOL 01 (MR) HEROES FOR HIRE #12 HULK #41 INFERNO GFT DREAM EATER ONE SHOT (C/O PT 11) INVINCIBLE IRON MAN #508 JUSTICE LEAGUE #1 2ND PTG JUSTICE LEAGUE #1 3RD PTG JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA OMEGA HC KA-ZAR #4 (OF 5) KEVIN SMITH BIONIC MAN #1 2ND PTG KEVIN SMITH BIONIC MAN #2 KOLCHAK NIGHT STALKER COMPENDIUM HC LEGION OF SUPER HEROES #1 LOVE AND CAPES TP VOL 03 WAKE UP WHERE YOU ARE MARK TWAINS AUTOBIOGRAPHY 1910-2010 HC MARVEL COMICS IN THE 1970S SC MARVEL UNIVERSE VS WOLVERINE #4 (OF 4) MASS EFFECT TP VOL 02 EVOLUTION MINDFIELD #6 MNEMOVORE HC (IDW) MOON KNIGHT #1 3RD PTG VAR MOON KNIGHT #2 2ND PTG VAR MOON KNIGHT #3 2ND PTG VAR MORNING GLORIES TP VOL 02 MYSTERIOUS WAYS #3 (OF 6) (MR) NEAR DEATH #1 NEW MUTANTS TP VOL 03 FALL OF NEW MUTANTS NEW TEEN TITANS GAMES HC (RES) NEW YORK FIVE TP (MR) NIGHTWING #1 NORTHLANDERS #44 (MR) PLANET OF THE APES #6 PUNISHER CIRCLE OF BLOOD TP NEW PTG RED HOOD AND THE OUTLAWS #1 RED WING #3 (OF 4) RICHIE RICH #4 (OF 4) RUSE TP VICTORIAN GUIDE TO MURDER SAMURAIS BLOOD #4 (OF 6) SHOWCASE PRESENTS ALL STAR COMICS TP VOL 01 SONIC UNIVERSE #32 SOULFIRE VOL 3 #4 SPIDER-ISLAND CLOAK AND DAGGER #1 (OF 3) 2ND PTG SPIDER-ISLAND CLOAK AND DAGGER #2 (OF 3) SPI SPIDER-ISLAND DEADLY FOES #1 2ND PTG CASELLI VAR SPIDER-ISLAND SPIDER-WOMAN #1 SPI SPIDER-MAN VENGEANCE OF VENOM TP SPONTANEOUS #4 (OF 5) STAN LEE SOLDIER ZERO #12 STAR TREK ONGOING #1 STAR WARS JEDI DARK SIDE #5 (OF 5) STAR WARS KNIGHT ERRANT DELUGE #2 (OF 5) STAR WARS OMNIBUS EPISODES I-VI COMP SAGA TP STUFF OF LEGEND JESTERS TALE #2 (OF 4) SUPERGIRL #1 TEEN WOLF BITE ME #1 (OF 3) TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES ONGOING #2 THE GUILD CLARA THOR GOES HOLLYWOOD #1 THUNDERBOLTS #163 POINT ONE TINY TITANS #44 TRANSFORMERS ONGOING #26 ULTIMATE COMICS HAWKEYE #2 (OF 4) ULTIMATE COMICS THOR TP ULTIMATE COMICS X-MEN #1 UNCANNY X-MEN #543 FEAR VAMPIRELLA SCARLET LEGION #4 VENGEANCE #3 (OF 6) VENOM BY RICK REMENDER PREM HC VOL 01 WALKING DEAD WEEKLY #38 (MR) WITCH DOCTOR #3 (OF 4) WOLVERINE AND BLACK CAT CLAWS 2 #3 (OF 3) WONDER WOMAN #1 WOLVERINE PUNISHER GHOST RIDER OFF INDEX MU #2 X-FACTOR #225 X-MEN #18 X-MEN FIRST TO LAST PREM HC X-MEN ORIGINS II TP X-MEN SCHISM #4 (OF 5) YOUNG JUSTICE #8 ZOMBIE TALES OMNIBUS OUTBREAK ZORRO RIDES AGAIN #3 Comics & Collectible posted this list on Facebook. Arrivals at your LCS may vary.
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Retro-Review: Spider-Man versus Wolverine (1986)

12134115055?profile=originalIt’s been 25 years since Marvel published the Spider-Man versus Wolverine special.  In some ways, it feels very much like a product of its time.  However, in other ways, it’s timeless.

The bulk of the story takes place in Berlin.  As a reference point, this is several years before the Berlin Wall was torn down when Berlin was still on the frontlines of the Cold War. 

Spider-Man is in Berlin for a couple of reasons.  As Peter Parker, he’s trying to escape some of the complications of his personal life- particularly his on-again off-again relationship with Mary Jane.  They would get married a year later but, as of this story, they aren’t sure they should be dating despite their strong feelings.  Peter Parker is also trying to make some good money as a photographer, accompanying reporter Ned Leeds on an important story.  The photo angle gives Peter a good excuse to get out of town and a specific reason to be in Berlin.  The ambiguous relationship gives Peter some interesting characterization and depth. 

Wolverine’s reason for going to Berlin seems less complicated.  An old contact from his spy days sent him a message and asked him to come.  However, it’s never that simple.  The X-Men were a fractured team at the time, trying to pull themselves back together after the Morlock Mutant Massacre.  Storm asks Wolverine not to go.  Havok argues that Wolverine’s current loyalties to the X-Men are as important as his former ones.  It’s more subtle, but Wolverine is running away from his responsibilities every bit as much as Peter Parker.  He’s using duty as a cover to escape the problems of the X-Men. 

That’s strong rationale for both characters to leave New York for Berlin and a surprising level of depth.  It’s a testament to writer James Owsley, who would later become renowned under the pseudonym Christopher Priest.  It’s also a testament to artist Mark Bright.  His use of body language conveyed most of the emotional information while also keeping the reader engaged in the quieter first half of the story.

However, one specific aspect feels dated and that’s the hefty use of inner monologue for narration.  Some pages are very text heavy while some of the best scenes are ones in which Owsley pulls back, allowing the picture to tell the story with a few, pithy or poignant words.  “It’s a good kiss” during an embrace between Peter and MJ is a good example.   A silhouetted Wolverine on the far side of a doorway in a panel with no text boxes is another. 12134115265?profile=original

 The story picks up once both characters are in Berlin.  Ned Leeds is trying to contact a Cold War covert operative codenamed Charlemagne and Peter Parker is trying to help him.  Wolverine is trying to catch up with his old friend, Charlie.  There’s a nice combination of expected twists and unexpected surprises.  Ned Leeds and Wolverine run afoul of the KGB.  Wolverine and Spider-Man work together.  Charlie and Charlemagne are the same person.  There are other surprises as well but I’m not going to mention them all.   

The expected twists are truthfully quite welcome.  It’s nice that the two stories dovetail together so well.  A lot of team-up tales are primarily about one character more than the other and the second character seems shoehorned into the story.  That’s the case in the Wolverine/Nick Fury graphic novel that came out a couple of years later.  It’s a Nick Fury story with Wolverine tacked on.  But Spider-Man versus Wolverine is truly a story for both characters.  They both have a specific reason to be involved- Spider-Man through Ned Leeds and Wolverine through his prior friendship with Charlie.

Even though they both have a reason to be interested in what happens to Charlie, James Owsley continues to write Spider-Man and Wolverine as separate characters.  They may work together but that doesn’t mean they get along.  They have different and sometimes competing interests.  Wolverine fluctuates between reluctantly showing Spider-Man what’s going on to harshly telling him to go back to New York. 

The distinction between the two characters becomes the strongest trait in this story.  There is a cliché in team-up tales.  The two characters meet; they fight because of some misunderstanding; they clear the air and then they work together.  It’s the fight-one-another-then-team-up trope that was being mocked at least as early as the 1970s.  Spider-Man versus Wolverine turns that trope upside down.  Spider-Man and Wolverine initially work together.  But their competing interests and values eventually drive them apart.  By the end, Spider-Man is actively trying to stop Wolverine from completing his goals.  When they finally fight, it isn’t because of a misunderstanding.  It’s because of a real and deep disagreement.  They’re not happy to be on opposite sides.  But they’re not about to give in either.  It’s an amazing conflict full of conviction and emotion and ambiguity.  And it’s an incredible display of creativity and craft. 

It’s been 25 years since Marvel published Spider-Man versus Wolverine.  In some ways, it’s a little dated with excessive inner monologues and Cold War intrigues.  But in the ways that really count, Spider-Man versus Wolverine is timeless.  It defies convention.  It brings nuance and depth.  It asks interesting questions like “Is it ever appropriate to kill?”  And it’s a spectacularly good superhero story.  

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'Sidekicks': A book about young adult superheroes
that young adult readers will enjoy

 

Andrew A. Smith

Scripps Howard News Service

 

Sept. 6, 2011 -- Falling vaguely in this column’s bailiwick is Sidekicks (Abrams, $16.95), an entertaining young adult novel set in a superhero milieu, written by Emmy-award-winning writer Jack Ferraiolo (Wordgirl.)

 

12134115883?profile=originalThe star is 13-year-old Scott “Bright Boy” Hutchinson, sidekick of the world’s premier (and Batman-esque) superhero, Phantom Justice. Bright Boy is coming of age, and unexpected hormonal surges are causing some predictable problems in his too-tight, and bright yellow, tights. His public embarrassments are compounded when he discovers that his chief foe, Monkeywrench, sidekick of the world’s worst super-villain, Dr. Chaotic, is secretly a girl. A girl who attends his school. A popular girl at said school, whereas he is a dweeby loner, in order to protect his secret identity. Talk about injustice! Now the arch-foes must work together to protect each other’s secret, as well as their own, despite the almost inevitable result of two very healthy, very attractive, very athletic teenagers being forced to spend a lot of time alone together.


What do Phantom Justice and Dr. Chaotic think of the situation? It turns out they have secrets of their own, which complicate matters even further. That is actually unfortunate, in that the plot shares a number of elements with a comic-book miniseries titled Brat Pack, published by King Hell in 1990. But there are only so many ideas in the world, and Sidekicks develops this familiar premise in a unique way that is sure to amuse its target market, young adults. Aside from some stiff expository dialogue on occasion – not the deliberately pompous superhero speeches, but the “real” conversations – Sidekicks is a joy ride in tights, using the conventions of superhero comics to tell a story we can all relate to, regardless of age.

 

REPRINT ROUNDUP

 

12134116453?profile=original* Nobody does a better job of collected editions than Dark Horse, and the latest evidence is Hellboy Library Volume 4 ($49.99). I’ve already bragged on the first three volumes, part of a series collecting all Hellboy stories chronologically in beautiful oversize (roughly 9 ¼ x 12 ½ inches) hardbacks.

 

This is the first volume to contain Hellboy stories not drawn by the series writer and creator, Mike Mignola, but as both he and editor Scott Allie assert in forewords, they chose Mignola’s replacements carefully and successfully. The 72-page “The Crooked Man” is an incredibly creepy story adapted from Southern U.S. folklore and drawn by the legendary Richard Corben. A 19-page vampire story set in Prague is limned by the extraordinary P. Craig Russell. No complaints there! Plus, there’s plenty of Mignola himself – not only Hellboy tales, but also some obscure but gorgeous stories he crafted for various Dark Horse projects that have never been reprinted before. That, plus sketches and commentary, are some of the advantages a book like this has over the original issues.

 

12134116297?profile=original* Irishman Garth Ennis has proved himself a master at telling World War II stories, which he does for Dynamite Entertainment as standalone miniseries under the umbrella title “Battlefields,” which are then collected in groups of three in hardback. My wife and I both devoured the first collection, and Battlefields Volume Two ($29.99) may be even better.

 

This volume includes “Motherland,” a sequel to “The Night Witches,” about a Soviet combat aviatrix; “Happy Valley,” concerning the short lives and camaraderie of British bomber pilots; and “The Firefly and Her Majesty,” featuring a cat-and-mouse match between a Prussian commander of a King Tiger tank and Ennis’s British Sgt. Stiles, equipped in this story with a modified “Firefly” tank instead of a Churchill – but still just as irritable (and his Northumberland accent is still just as impenetrable to friend and foe alike).

 

12134117463?profile=originalAs usual, Ennis’s stories shed light on little-known corners of that enormous conflict, and are more about people, emotions and consequences, rather than the patriotic jingoism and invincible, wisecracking Allied soldiers one usually finds in war comics. If it can be said that stories can make you cheer through your tears, it is these.

 

* Dark Horse has another winner with Flash Gordon Comic Book Archives Volume 4 ($49.99), if only in comparison to previous volumes, which were pretty mediocre. This one collects the Gordon comic books published by Gold Key (1978-80), and are the best so far. One reason is continuity; events have consequences issue to issue. Another reason is girlfriend Dale Arden finally throwing a few punches and occasionally coming to Gordon’s rescue, instead of her usual, tiresome role as Helpless Hostage.

 

1. "Sidekicks" is a young adult novel starring young aides to superheroes. Courtesy Abrams.


2. "Hellboy Library Volume 4" includes some of the first stories not drawn by Hellboy creator Mike Mignola. Courtesy Dark Horse.


3. "Battlefields Volume Two" continues writer Garth Ennis's evocative series of stories set in World War II. Courtesy Dynamite Entertainment


4. "Flash Gordon Comic Book Archives Volume 4" reprints stories about the character published by Gold Key, which are a level above those published earlier by Dell, King Features and Charlton, which were reprinted in volumes 1-3. Courtesy Dark Horse

 

 Contact Andrew A. Smith of the Memphis Commercial Appeal at capncomics@aol.com.

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Comics for 14 September 2011

27 SECOND SET #1 (OF 4)

ALL NEW BATMAN THE BRAVE AND THE BOLD #11
ALL WINNERS SQUAD BAND OF HEROES #4 (OF 8)
ALPHA FLIGHT #4 (OF 8) FEAR
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #669 SPI
AMERICAN VAMPIRE SURVIVAL OT FITTEST #4 (OF 5)
ARCHIE ARCHIVES HC VOL 02
ARCHIE THE MARRIED LIFE TP VOL 01
ASTONISHING X-MEN TP XENOGENESIS

BALTIMORE CURSE BELLS #2
BARKS BEAR BOOK HC
BATMAN AND ROBIN #1
BATWOMAN #1
BLACK PANTHER MAN WITHOUT FEAR #523 FEAR
BLUE ESTATE TP VOL 01 (MR)
BONNIE LASS #1 (OF 4)
BRIGHTEST DAY SER 3 BALANCED CASE
BTVS SEASON 9 FREEFALL #1

CAPTAIN AMERICA #1 2ND PTG
CAPTAIN AMERICA AND BUCKY #620 2ND PTG
CAPTAIN AMERICA BY DAN JURGENS TP VOL 02
CARBON GREY VOL 01 SISTERS AT WAR TP
COMPLETE MAJOR BUMMER SUPER SLACKTACULAR TP
CRIMINAL LAST OF INNOCENT #4 (OF 4) (MR)
CRIMINAL MACABRE NO PEACE FOR DEAD MEN
CROSSED TP VOL 02 FAMILY VALUES (MR)

DAKEN DARK WOLVERINE #14
DAREDEVIL #1 2ND PTG
DAREDEVIL #3
DEADPOOL #43
DEADPOOL ALL IN FAMILY TP
DEATHSTROKE #1
DELLEC #6 (OF 6)
DEMON KNIGHTS #1
DOCTOR SOLAR MAN OF ATOM #8
DOLLHOUSE EPITAPHS #3 (OF 5)
DRIVER FOR THE DEAD TP VOL 01
DUCKTALES #4
DUNGEONS & DRAGONS DRIZZT #2 (OF 5)

ESSENTIAL SPIDER-MAN TP VOL 03
EVOLUTIONARY WAR OMNIBUS HC
EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT ORCHID #3 (OF 3)

FARSCAPE #23
FEAR ITSELF #2 (OF 7) 4TH PTG
FEAR ITSELF #3 (OF 7) 3RD PTG
FEAR ITSELF #6 (OF 7)
FEAR ITSELF HULK VS DRACULA #1 (OF 3) FEAR
FEAR ITSELF MONKEY KING #1 FEAR
FLY #4
FRANKENSTEIN AGENT OF SHADE #1
FREAKY MONSTERS MAGAZINE #4

GHOST RIDER #3 FEAR
GI JOE A REAL AMERICAN HERO #170
GLADSTONES SCHOOL FOR WORLD CONQUERORS #5
GOD SOMEWHERE TP NEW ED (MR)
GREEK STREET TP VOL 03 MEDEAS LUCK (MR)
GREEN HORNET YEAR ONE #12
GREEN LANTERN #1
GREEN LANTERN SINESTRO CORPS WAR TP
GRIFTER #1

HACK SLASH TP VOL 09 TORTURE PRONE
HEAVY METAL NOVEMBER 2011 (MR)
HELLRAISER #5 (MR)
HERC #7 SPI

INFINITE #2
INFINITY GAUNTLET TP NEW PTG

JOHN CARTER A PRINCESS OF MARS #1 (OF 5)
JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY #627 FEAR
JUGHEAD #209
JURASSIC PARK DANGEROUS GAMES #1 (OF 5)
JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA TEAM HISTORY TP

KEEPING THE WORLD STRANGE PLANETARY GUIDE SC

 

LADY DEATH ORIGINS ANNUAL #1 (MR)
LEGION LOST #1
LIFE WITH ARCHIE #13
LIL DEPRESSED BOY #6
LIVING CORPSE EXHUMED #2 (OF 6)

MICE TEMPLAR VOL 3 #5
MIGHTY THOR #4 2ND PTG
MISTER TERRIFIC #1
MMW INVINCIBLE IRON MAN HC VOL 0
MORIARTY TP VOL 01
MYSTERY MEN #5 (OF 5)

NEW AVENGERS #16
NIGHT O/T LIVING DEAD DEATH VALLEY #4 (OF 5) (MR)

OPTIC NERVE #12

PHERONE TP (MR)
PIGS #1
PUNISHER #1 2ND PTG
PUNISHER CIRCLE OF BLOOD TP NEW PTG
PUNISHERMAX #17 (MR)

RED LANTERNS #1
RESURRECTION MAN #1
ROBERT JORDAN WHEEL OF TIME EYE O/T WORLD #12

SCALPED #52 (MR)
SECRET WARRIORS HC V6 WHEELS WITHIN WHEEL
SERGIO ARAGONES FUNNIES #3
SEVERED #1 (OF 7) VAR CVR 2ND PTG (MR)
SEVERED #2 (MR)
SHERLOCK HOLMES YEAR ONE #6
SIMPSONS COMICS #182
SIMPSONS TREEHOUSE OF HORROR TP V6 BEYOND
SKULLKICKERS #10
SPACE WARPED #3 (OF 6)
SPIDER SATANS MURDER MACHINES HC
SPIDER-ISLAND AMAZING SPIDER-GIRL #2 (OF 3) SPI
STAN LEE STARBORN #10
STAND NIGHT HAS COME #2 (OF 6)
STAR WARS INVASION REVELATIONS #3 (OF 5)
STAR WARS OLD REPUBLIC #4 (OF 5) LOST SUNS
SUGAR AND SPIKE ARCHIVES HC VOL 01
SUICIDE SQUAD #1
SUPER DINOSAUR #4
SUPER HEROES #18
SUPERBOY #1
SUPERGOD TP VOL 01 (MR)
SUPERMAN THE BLACK RING HC VOL 02
SUPREME POWER #4 (OF 4) (MR)
SWEETS NEW ORLEANS CRIME STORY TP (MR)

THANOS IMPERATIVE TP
THOR VINTAGE HAMMER PX GREY T/S
TITANS FAMILY REUNION TP
TRANSFORMERS ONGOING TP VOL 04
TUROK SON OF STONE #3

ULTIMATE COMICS SPIDER-MAN #1
UNCANNY X-FORCE #15
UNCANNY X-MEN TP BREAKING POINT
UNWRITTEN #29 (MR)

WALKING DEAD WEEKLY #37 (MR)
WARLORD OF MARS #9

X-MEN LEGACY #255

I copied this list from the Facebook posting by Comics & Collectibles, Memphis. Arrivals at your LCS may vary.

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I Like Ham 12: Doctor Who Book Reviews

I've recently read two books related to Doctor Who that I think those of you who are fans of the show might enjoy.  The first book is The Science of Doctor Who, by Paul Parsons.

 

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Parsons is a scientist and a journalist, and his book is pretty much what you would expect from the title - it examines various elements of the program and discusses their scientific plausibility.  There have been a number of books of this nature - I've read some that similarly treat the science of programs like Star Trek and The X-Files, and enjoyed them both, so I had high expectations for this book. By and large, Parsons does not disappoint. The book a quite readable, and largely avoids the pitfalls one sometimes finds in these "science for the masses" books, those of being either too simple-minded or of being too technical.

 

Among the topics covered are such things as -

 

  • Regeneration, could it happen and how would it work?
  • Time travel, can it be done, and how?
  • Would it be possible to create a object that was bigger on the inside?
  • What physiological purpose would a second heart serve?
  • How close are we to having "real life" Cybermen and Daleks?
  • How close are the show's portrayals of robotics, space travel and alien life forms to what scientists expect we might actually encounter?

The above merely scratches the surface of what the book covers. Of course, the point of a book like this is to not only address how well the science of the show corresponds to "real world" science, but to educate the reader in general about the sorts of things that scientists think may be possible, and thus give them a better idea of current notions about the nature of the universe.

 

The second book is Doctor Who and Philosophy - Bigger on the Inside, edited by Courtland Lewis and Paula Smithka.

 

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Lewis is (or was at the time of writing) a PhD candidate and Smithka is an associate professor of philosophy. Again, I've read a number of similar books, covering such varied subjects as Monty Python's Flying Circus and The Wizard of Oz. The book consists of a series of essays on various philosophical questions raised by various aspects of the program. Where Parsons' book tends to ask "Could this be done?" or "How would this be done?", the essays in this book tend to ask "Should this be done?" or "What would it mean if this was done?" There's a certain amount of overlap, but not much.

 

Among the topics this book covers are such things as -

  • Is the Doctor the same person after he regenerates as he was before?
  • How would a race that was devoted to logic (as the Cybermen claim to be) really behave?
  • Could it be possible to do high-level science without numbers, the way the Carrionites do?
  • If "To be is to be perceived", where does that leave the Weeping Angels?
  • Is the Master truly evil?
  • Would it be right for us to exterminate the Daleks? Can we exterminate the Daleks?

Many other topic are covered as well. As with Parsons' book, a major goal of this book is to use the fiction of Doctor Who to make us think about our own lives -  how do we know who we are, and so on. By and large, this book is quite readable, as well. There are one or two essays where the terminology gets a little too "specialist" - I'm not quite sure what the chapter about the Doctor's "monads" is all about - but overall I didn't find it hard to follow. This book also has a chapter at the end consisting of favorite quotes from the beginning of the show up through the end of Matt Smith's first season. There were one or two small glitches in this book - the Doctor's car is referred to as "Betsy", for example, but overall it seemed well-researched.

 

To sum up, I quite cheerfully recommend either of these books to fans of the show.  I think you'll find them entertaining and thought-provoking.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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12134027688?profile=originalFor those who came in late, at one time in America, there were only three channels of television programming available, controlled by the networks NBC, CBS, and upstart ABC. Traditionally, all three networks debuted their new shows the second week in September every year. In 1965, the new fall season was scheduled to kick off a week earlier than usual.  The ABC network, always looking for an edge to compete with its older, stronger rivals, used the extra week to attempt a new strategy.  It created two "books" of new shows---the ones which would debut in September, 1965 and a package of shows held in reserve, which would be used to replace any of September's offerings that failed to acquire an audience in that first thirteen weeks.

 

Mid-season replacement series were common then, as now, but ABC was the first to issue a full block of replacement shows all at once, in January of ’66.  This kicked off what the network ballyhooed as its Second Season -– “an exciting new television season just when you’re ready for one.”  In the second week of 1966, ABC launched several new programmes: Blue Light, The Double Life of Henry Phyfe, The Baron---and a show that would erupt into a world-wide phenomenon . . . .

 

12134106461?profile=originalBatman.

 

Produced by William Dozier, Batman mocked the mythos of the Caped Crusader, and comics in general, by adhering to familiar comic-book conventions and then taking them over the top.  Adam West’s Batman was ultra-serious; Burt Ward, as the Boy Wonder, was nearly apoplectic in his enthusiasm; the “special guest villains” were gleefully evil; and the citizens, particularly the authority figures, were fawning in their admiration of the Dynamic Duo.  All performed with tongue firmly in cheek.  Dutch angles, visual sound effects, and garish colours were all employed to evoke a sense of comic-book panels.  The result was a burlesque unlike anything seen on television.  TV had done super-heroes before, with Adventures of Superman, but while that show had been performed as straight as possible, Batman exaggerated every fanciful aspect of the super-hero to a comedic level.

 

And the viewers ate it up.  Children, oblivious to the satire, adored watching the feats of their heroes.  Adults, recalling their youthful naïvité, chuckled at seeing how the show skewered the comic-book adventures they used to read.  If you weren’t around then, it’s difficult to comprehend the runaway popularity of the show.  I was around then, and I never saw anything like it, before or since.  The coonskin-cap-and-buckskin-jacket fad inspired by Disney’s Davy Crockett in the mid-‘50’s came close, but was restricted to the kids.  Batman crossed generational lines.

 

From Mark Cotta Vaz’s Tales of the Dark Knight (Ballantine Books, 1989):

 

. . . Batmania raged like a wildfire . . . .  There was a nightclub outside San Francisco known as “Wayne Manor”, where guests could buy their tickets from Batman at the front door, be seated by a Joker maître d’, and enjoy drinks being served by Wonder Woman while girls dressed like Robin danced behind a plate glass screen and led revelers in the Batusi.  A Detroit hairdresser invented the Bat Cut, while a veteran Cleveland cop named Gilbert Batman became a local celebrity and helped stimulate blood-bank donations by donating his own blood---while costumed as his fabled namesake.

 

 

 

 

Batmania spread fast, indeed.  The 11 March 1966 issue of Life magazine displayed Adam West as the Caped Crusader on the cover, and the article within highlighted all the things mentioned by Cotta Vaz, and more.  Saturday Evening Post ran its own Batman feature in its 02 May 1966 issue, and TV Guide published three Bat-articles over the next year.  In the fall, the show achieved that definitive distinction of popular culture when it was lampooned in the September, 1966 issue of Mad magazine.

 

12134107300?profile=originalBatman-related toys, games, and merchandise packed the shelves.  Two months after Batman’s debut, some one thousand Batman items had been licensed for sale---Batman capes, Batman masks, Batman t-shirts, Batman utility belts, Batman play sets, Batman model kits, Batman board games, Batman trading cards, Batman badges, Batman lunch boxes, Batman colouring books, Batman puppets, Batman wristwatches, Batman toothbrushes, even Batman toiletries.

 

There were foodstuffs:  Batman milk, Batman ice cream, Batman juice bars, Batman cola, Batman chewing gum, Batman bread, Batman peanut butter, and so (naturally) Batman jelly.

 

There were at least five different Batman record albums, the most notable of which contained songs all written by Neil Hefti, the composer of the Batman TV show theme.  Department store book-racks carried paperbacks reprinting stories from ‘50’s issues of Batman and Detective Comics, and a novelisation of the Batman feature film soon to be released.

 

Jay Emmett, then president of the Licensing Corporation of America, told Newsweek, “This is the biggest thing that’s ever happened in licensing.”

 

The only demographic that seemed to hate the Batman television show was the narrow set of hard-line devotees of the Batman comic books.  It had been less than two years since DC editor Julius Schwartz had rescued the character from gimmicky science-fiction plots and restored him to dignity.  Now all of the Masked Manhunter’s newfound respectability had been capsized by the campy programme.  The old fans saw it as making a mockery of their hero.  They had no idea that the humiliation was just beginning.

 

 

 

12134109267?profile=original 

 

 

It didn’t take long for Batmania to show its influence in Batman and Detective Comics.  Batman stories drawn by Carmine Infantino, in his sleek, dynamic style, tapered off.  Sheldon Moldoff  took up the slack, but his Batman no longer operated on darkened streets, casting broad shadows in the moonlight.  Now, Batman and Robin were surrounded by brightly lit backgrounds and colour-splashed characters.

 

12134110056?profile=originalThe scripts began to reflect the television show, as well, but gradually.  DC was caught between serious-minded Batman readers, who wanted the realism of the New Look to continue, and fans of the television show, who were now buying the comics and expecting to find the same campy approach.  Insidiously, elements of the TV show crept into the Bat-titles.  The comic-book Robin adopted the “Holy fill-in-the-blank!” exclamations of his television counterpart.  Letterers increased and enlarged the sound-effects, especially in fight scenes, until the POW!’s and the BIFF!’s threatened to crowd out the figures themselves.

 

The sluce gates opened and costumed villains came rushing back into the Bat-books.  The Joker---one of the most popular villains on the show---got a lot of face time, but he was vastly watered down from his early days as a maniacal killer.  Now he was played as a cackling jester who bedeviled the Dynamic Duo with gags, reflecting the lightweight version portrayed Cesar Romero.  The Catwoman was dug out of mothballs.  And the Riddler, a minor foe with only a handful of appearances, was promoted to the first tier of Bat-villains on the strength of his television popularity.  In between threats from his traditional rogues' gallery, Batman was set upon by such new and insipid costumed crooks as the Bouncer, the Eraser, and Bag O’Bones.

 

Not that the surge of costumed adversaries bothered the Caped Crusader much, since he had acquired another trait of his television counterpart---an unending supply of devices from his utility belt.  No longer was Batman shown as relying on his wits and innate skills to get out of trouble.  He simply had to reach into his utility belt (drawn increasingly larger, to emphasize its presence, until it began to look like a truss) and pull out the perfect gimmick, that he “just happened” to have on hand, to extract him from his current scrape.

 

The statement of ownership published at the end of 1966 showed that Batman posted an average total paid circulation of 898,470---almost twice that of the previous year and, for the first time, out-selling Superman.  No wonder the Batman purists were losing out to the “high-camp” Bat-fans---DC knew which side was pumping in the bucks.

 

 

 

 

While those changes were sort of slipped under the door, there were two major developments in the Bat-titles that were directly attributable to the television show.  The first was the return of Alfred the butler.

 

When Julius Schwartz had Alfred killed off back in Detective Comics # 328, he intended for the character to remain dead.  However, the folks at ABC wanted Batman and Robin’s trusty retainer back in livery, again.  Tales of the Dark Knight reported Schwartz’s reaction:  “It became a very difficult situation when [the show’s producers] wanted Alfred there and they wanted me to bring him back.  I said, ‘But he’s dead!’  They said, ‘You can think of a way.’”

 

12134111080?profile=originalAnd the resourceful editor did think of a way.  For the past two years, Batman and Robin had been menaced by “the Outsider”, a continuing villain possessing unusual capabilities.  Thus far, the true identity of the Outsider had not been revealed.  I’ve never come across any information on who Schwartz had originally planned to be the villain, but it didn’t matter.  In an effort to push a square peg into a round hole, Schwartz came up with “The Inside Story of the Outsider”, from Detective Comics # 356 (Oct., 1966).   At the conclusion, the bizarre criminal was revealed to be Alfred.  The contrived situation which turned the loyal butler into a deformed villain was reversed, and Alfred was restored, in body and mind.

 

Alfred’s return did not bode well for Aunt Harriet.  The overprotective aunt had rarely taken a significant part in the Bat-stories as it was, figuring prominently in only a couple of adventures.  The return of Alfred eliminated what limited purpose she had.  Aunt Harriet’s presence was increasingly marginalised through the remainder of the Silver Age, until she finally disappeared completely without so much as a footnote.

 

The other notable development forced by the producers of the television show was the creation of a new Batgirl. 

 

By 1967, the Batman craze had peaked, and ratings of the television show were sliding downward.  Dozier and company hoped that the introduction of a Batgirl would revive male interest in the show and bring in female viewers, to boot.  Once again, they pressed upon Julius Schwartz.  Since the television Batgirl was going to be a curvaceous cutie of obviously adult age, bringing back the prepubescent Bat-Girl of 1961 would not do. Schwartz was forced to come up with a completely new character.  He did this, in the form of Barbara Gordon, daughter of Commissioner Gordon.  The “Dominoed Daredoll” was unveiled to the readership in “The Million-Dollar Debut of Batgirl”, from Detective Comics # 359 (Jan., 1967).  A couple more appearances rapidly followed, to cement the new Batgirl in fans’ minds before the show presented her on 14 September 1967, in the first episode of the third season.

 

 

 

 

One could never accuse the executives at National Periodical of having any flies on them.  With the Bat-craze sweeping the nation, the Caped Crusader was a guaranteed draw for any comic in which he appeared.

 

So, decreed the brass, he would appear in as many as possible.

 

Between the summer of 1966 and the beginning of 1968, it was nearly impossible to find a DC magazine in which Batman did not show up.  The Masked Manhunter made the rounds of DC titles like an actor hitting the talk-show circuit to plug a new movie.  Batman popped up in Superman, Action Comics, Jimmy Olsen, Lois Lane, Aquaman, Metal Men, Blackhawk, and even The Adventures of Jerry Lewis.  He became the permanent star of The Brave and the Bold.  Over in Teen Titans, Robin was thrust to preëminence, making his the largest figure on the cover, shoving the other three Titans into the background.

 

And when the Bat-guy himself failed to make a personal appearance, readers of DC mags were constantly being reminded of him by “product placement”.  Artists would insert into backgrounds billboards advertising the Batman television show, and story characters all seemed to be fond of watching Batman on the tube.

 

 

12134111486?profile=original 

But, perhaps, nowhere was this Bat-saturation more painfully obvious than in Justice League of America, nor more unwelcome by that title’s fans.

 

In the earliest issues of JLA, the participation of Batman, along with Superman, was largely curtailed, letting the other members shine.  Eventually, JLA writer Gardner Fox broke out of that formula, and the World’s Finest Team appeared as often as the rest of the Justice League.  Batman was just one of gang, no more, no less.

 

Then, in the summer of ‘66, Batman became The Star of Justice League of America.  Starting with issue # 46 (Aug., 1966), the Masked Manhunter was the largest figure on nine straight covers, often reducing the other members to mere headshots.  That is, when he wasn’t the only JLAer to appear on the cover at all.  In the stories themselves, Batman was now the prime mover of the group, determining the action and bringing about the final resolution.  In “The Lord of Time Attacks the 20th Century”, JLA # 50 (Dec., 1966), fully half the page count was devoted to Batman in action before the Justice League appeared at all.

 

12134112453?profile=originalAs if that wasn’t enough, Fox would shoehorn Batman into tales which, logically, he had no business being in.  “Missing in Action---5 Justice Leaguers”, JLA # 52 (Mar., 1967), tells the story of the League members who missed the adventure in # 50 and why they were unable to answer the emergency signal.  Even though Batman did appear in # 50---heck, he was practically the whole story---he was squeezed into the account of the missing JLAers at the same time.  And then there’s the case of “Z---as in Zatanna---and Zero Hour”, from JLA # 51 (Feb., 1967).

 

This was the landmark case which brought to an end Zatanna’s two-year search for her father, a quest which had brought her into contact with several DC super-doers:  Hawkman, the Atom, Green Lantern, and the Elongated Man.  But not Batman.  Yet, when “Z---as in Zatanna . . .” opened with the Mystic Maid summoning the heroes who had assisted her to the secret sanctuary, there was Batman.  The Gotham Gangbuster even admitted to her, “I have no recollection of ever meeting you, let alone helping you!”   Granted, Gardner Fox found a clever way to justify Batman’s participation, still, it was obvious his presence was forced.

 

Not surprisingly, regular JLA readers howled at this Bat-exploitation, referring to him as “His Bat-ship” and “the center of distraction”.  Reader Leonard Rosenburg, of the Bronx, New York, caustically pointed out that the title of the magazine was not “Batman and the JLA”.

 

By the time of 1967’s annual Justice League/Society team-up, those complaints were at a fever pitch.  So Fox did an end-around.  Batman was absent from that year’s team-up.  Instead, Fox handed the readership the grown-up Robin of Earth-Two, who occupied almost the entire cover of JLA # 55, wearing a costume clearly patterned after his Caped Crusading mentor’s.

 

 

 

 

Fortunately for Fox, for whom by now, JLA fans were coming with pitchforks and torches, by the start of 1968, the bubble of Batmania burst.

12134112492?profile=original 

Actually, it was more like it deflated.  Like all fads, once it flared, it began to die.  Ratings on the Batman television show started to sag in the fall of 1966.  They remained high enough to carry the show through the season, but continued to hæmorrhage viewers throughout.  In response, ABC trimmed the show’s budget, forcing Dozier to reduce production costs---and the cutbacks showed on screen.  To further economise, the show was cut back from two episodes a week to one.  The introduction of Batgirl did little to stem the tide.

 

In March of 1968, the television Batman was cancelled, and the Bat-craze was over.

 

Over at DC, Batman’s “fifteen minutes of fame” had passed.  Sick of his omnipresence, readers were now turning away from anything Bat-like.  His guest-star turns were eliminated.  He returned to his normal place in JLA and actually missed a few cases, to placate Bat-sick Justice League fans.  Only his constant presence in The Brave and the Bold continued to be profitable, so there, he stayed.

 

In the Bat-titles, Julius Schwartz made an attempt to regain the momentum lost by having to cater to the “camp Batman” concept.  All the pop art, Bat-gadgets, and “Holy this!” and “Holy that!” were shelved, as Gardner Fox and his eventual replacement, Frank Robbins, once again aimed for legitimate mysteries and realistic crime capers.  A new contract between National Periodical and Bob Kane no longer required a certain amount of art produced by him, and Shelly Moldoff was quietly let go.  Gil Kane and Chic Stone filled in on the art chores, until DC settled on regular artists Irv Novick, for Batman, and Bob Brown, for Detective Comics.

 

By the end of the Silver Age, Batman was creeping his way back to being “The Batman”, a dark avenger who haunted the underworld, warring on all criminals.

 

He wouldn’t quite get there, though, until the Bronze Age came in, along with a couple of fellows named Denny O’Neil and Neal Adams.

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Comics for 7 September 2011

50 GIRLS 50 #4 (OF 4) ACTION COMICS #1 ACTION COMICS #1 VAR ED ALTER EGO #104 (C: 0-1-1) AMERICUS GN (C: 0-1-1) AMULET SC VOL 04 LAST COUNCIL (C: 0-1-2) ANIMAL MAN #1 ANITA BLAKE PREM HC CIRCUS OF DAMNED INGENUE BOOK 02 (MR) ASTRO CITY LIFE IN THE BIG CITY TP NEW ED ATOMIC ROBO GHOST OF STATION X #1 (OF 6) AVENGERS ASSAULT ON OLYMPUS PREM HC DM VAR ED 74 AWAKENING OMNIBUS SC (MR) (C: 0-1-2) BAKE SALE GN (C: 0-1-1) BATGIRL #1 BATTLESTAR GALACTICA SEASON ZERO OMNIBUS TP (C: 0-1-2) BATWING #1 BIG LIE #1 BOYS #58 (MR) BRIGHTEST DAY HC VOL 03 CANTERBURY TALES GN (C: 0-1-2) CASANOVA AVARITIA #1 (OF 4) (MR) CAVEWOMAN SNOW #3 CHARMED #13 A CVR SEIDMAN (MR) CHARMED #13 B CVR PHOTO (MR) CHARMED TP VOL 02 (MR) (C: 0-1-1) COBRA ONGOING #4 CODE WORD GERONIMO HC (PP #978) COMICS BUYERS GUIDE #1682 OCT 2011 (C: 0-1-1) CONQUERING EVEREST CAMPFIRE GN (C: 0-1-2) CONSPIRACY O/T PLANET O/T APES HC (MR) (C: 0-1-2) CRITTER #2 (OF 4) CRYSIS #4 (OF 6) CUBA MY REVOLUTION TP (MR) DANGER GIRL ARMY OF DARKNESS #3 DANGER GIRL ARMY OF DARKNESS #3 10 COPY BRADSHAW B&W INCV (N DARK TOWER GUNSLINGER BATTLE OF TULL #4 (OF 5) DETECTIVE COMICS #1 DISCORD GN (C: 0-0-1) DISNEY FOUR COLOR ADVENTURES TP VOL 01 DOCTOR WHO CLASSICS TP VOL 07 DON QUIXOTE CAMPFIRE GN VOL 02 (C: 0-1-2) DRUMS #4 (OF 4) DUNGEONS & DRAGONS FR DRIZZT OMNIBUS TP VOL 01 ELF #4 (OF 6) ELRIC THE BALANCE LOST #3 ENDERS GAME FORMIC WARS BURNING EARTH PREM HC DM VAR ED EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT IRIS VOL 2 #3 CVR A FRANCISCO EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT IRIS VOL 2 #3 CVR B BENITEZ EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT IRIS VOL 2 #3 CVR C BENITEZ SKETCH INCV FEAR ITSELF WOLVERINE #3 (OF 3) FEAR FEYNMAN GN (C: 0-1-1) FRACTURE #1 GARTH ENNIS JENNIFER BLOOD #4 (MR) GARTH ENNIS JENNIFER BLOOD #4 10 COPY BRADSTREET VIRGIN INCV GFT MYTHS & LEGENDS TP VOL 01 (MR) GI JOE ORIGINS TP VOL 05 GI JOE SPECIAL MISSIONS TP VOL 04 GODZILLA GANGSTERS & GOLIATHS #4 (OF 5) GODZILLA GANGSTERS & GOLIATHS #4 (OF 5) 10 COPY INCV (NET) GREEN ARROW #1 GREEN HORNET STRIKES #9 GRIMM FAIRY TALES #64 (C/O PT 10) A CVR MYCHAELS (MR) GRIMM FAIRY TALES #64 (C/O PT 10) B CVR GARZA (MR) GRIMM FAIRY TALES THE LIBRARY #1 A CVR CACAU GRIMM FAIRY TALES THE LIBRARY #1 B CVR PEKAR GRIMM FAIRY TALES TP VOL 10 (C: 0-1-2) HACK SLASH #7 CVR A LEISTER & ROSENBERG (MR) HACK SLASH #7 CVR B STONE (MR) HALO FALL OF REACH COVENANT #3 (OF 4) (MR) HAWK AND DOVE #1 HEROES FOR HIRE #11 FEAR HOUSE OF MYSTERY #41 (MR) HULK #40 INFESTATION OUTBREAK #3 (OF 4) INFINITE #1 VAR CVR K 2ND PTG INSURRECTION V3.6 #4 INTERACTIVES GN (C: 0-0-1) INTREPID ESCAPEGOAT #1 (OF 3) CURSE O/T BUDDHAS TOOTH IRREDEEMABLE #29 IZOMBIE #17 (MR) IZOMBIE TP VOL 02 UVAMPIRE (MR) JUSTICE LEAGUE INTERNATIONAL #1 KATO #12 KIRBY GENESIS #3 KULT #2 (OF 4) (C: 0-1-1) LADY DEATH (ONGOING) #9 (MR) LADY DEATH (ONGOING) #9 ART DECO 3-COPY INCV (NET) (MR) LADY DEATH (ONGOING) #9 WRAP CVR (MR) LEGION OF SUPER HEROES HC VOL 02 CONSEQUENCES LITTLE LULU GIANT SIZE TP VOL 04 (C: 0-1-2) LOONEY TUNES #202 MARINEMAN A MATTER OF LIFE & DEPTH TP MARVEL MINIMATES X-MEN 1ST CLASS BOX SET (C: 1-1-4) MEGA MAN #5 HORN CVR MEGA MAN #5 SPAZ VILLAIN VAR CVR MEGA MAN TP VOL 01 (C: 0-1-1) MEN OF WAR #1 MOON KNIGHT #5 MORNING GLORIES #12 (MR) MYSTIC #2 (OF 4) NARUTO TP VOL 52 (C: 1-0-2) NEW AVENGERS ANNUAL #1 NEW AVENGERS ANNUAL #1 ARCH VAR NINJAS VS ZOMBIES #3 OCCULT FILES OF DOCTOR SPEKTOR ARCHIVES HC VOL 03 OLIVER TWIST CAMPFIRE GN (C: 0-1-2) OMAC #1 OZ HC OZMA OF OZ PATRICIA BRIGGS MERCY THOMPSON MOON CALLED #8 PENNY FOR YOUR SOUL FALSE PROPHET #1 (OF 7) (MR) PILOT SEASON DECLASSIFIED 2011 ONE SHOT (C: 0-0-2) POKEMON BLACK & WHITE GN VOL 03 (C: 1-0-1) POP MARVEL IRON MAN VINYL FIG (C: 0-1-2) POWERS PREM HC VOL 02 ROLEPLAY (MR) PUNISHER #3 RED SKULL #3 (OF 5) REED GUNTHER #4 RUE MORGUE MAGAZINE #115 (C: 0-1-1) SAVAGE SWORD OF CONAN TP VOL 10 (C: 0-1-2) SCOOBY DOO WHERE ARE YOU #13 SCREAM MAGAZINE #5 (C: 0-1-1) SCREAMLAND ONGOING #4 SLAINE THE WANDERER GN (C: 0-1-2) SONIC UNIVERSE TP VOL 01 (C: 0-1-1) SPAWN #211 SPIDER NEW SERIES #2 (C: 0-1-0) SPIDER-ISLAND AVENGERS #1 SPI SPIDER-ISLAND I LOVE NEW YORK CITY #1 SPI SPIDER-MAN POWER COMES RESPONSIBILITY #6 (OF 7) STAND TP VOL 01 CAPTAIN TRIPS STAR WARS DARK TIMES OUT O/T WILDERNESS #2 (OF 5) (C: 1-0-0) STATIC SHOCK #1 STORMWATCH #1 SWAMP THING #1 SWEET TOOTH #25 (MR) TANTALIZE KIERENS STORY GN (C: 0-1-2) TERMINATOR ROBOCOP KILL HUMAN #2 THOR FOR ASGARD TP THOR HEAVEN AND EARTH #4 (OF 4) THUNDERBOLTS #163 TRANSFORMERS ONGOING #25 TRUE BLOOD FRENCH QUARTER #1 (OF 6) TRUE BLOOD FRENCH QUARTER #1 (OF 6) 10 COPY INCV (NET) UNIVERSAL MONSTERS SERIES 2 RETRO CLOTH AF ASST (C: 1-1-4) USAGI YOJIMBO #140 WALTER KOENIG THINGS TO COME #1 WARLORD OF MARS DEJAH THORIS #6 WARLORD OF MARS DEJAH THORIS #6 10 COPY RENAUD RED INCV (NET WARLORD OF MARS DEJAH THORIS #6 20 COPY GARZA RISQUE INCV (N WOLVERINE #15 WOLVERINE DEBT OF DEATH #1 WOLVERINE WOLVERINE GOES TO HELL TP WONDERLAND HOUSE OF LIDDLE TP VOL 01 (MR) WONDERSTRUCK HC (C: 0-1-2) WORLD OF ARCHIE DOUBLE DIGEST #10 X-23 #14 X-FACTOR #224 POINT ONE X-MEN #17 ZOMBIES VS ROBOTS UNDERCITY #4 (OF 4) List copied from the list posted at pittsburghcomics.com. Arrivals at your LCS may vary.
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A Continuity Checklist

12134101668?profile=originalDC’s new 52 debuts in earnest next week.  Justice League #1 was this week’s appetizer.  Next week, the real experiment begins.

            It’s been interesting to watch the reactions since this ambitious endeavor was initially announced.  At first, there was an equal mix of cynicism and enthusiasm.  That tells us more about fandom- and humanity in general- than it does about DC.  There will always be pessimists prepared to declare a new initiative the worst idea ever and optimists ready to hope for something brilliant. 

Then there was an exaggerated mood of disappointment when the actual comics were announced as if some fans secretly hoped that the line-up would be designed individually for them.  I remember one of Captain Comics’ great philosophies: “I don’t like wrestling and I have no interest in wrestling comics but I’m glad they make them because it means they’re making comics for more than just me.”  Some of the new 52 titles that I’m least interested in are the ones that have other fans the most excited.  Good.  I wasn’t going to buy all 52 anyway.

I’ve also been intrigued by the way in which many fans have assessed the new 52 for how well the list has conformed to their own continuity checklist.  In the long run, that’s not going to matter.  The books will succeed based more on quality than whether or not the right character is wearing the Robin mask.  After all, I was prepared to dislike the third Firestorm series because it didn’t star Ronnie Raymond.  But Jason Rusch’s adventures were so good that I was persuaded he’s the better Nuclear Man.   

Yet, without the actual books to talk about, it is fascinating to discuss how these books fit with our own personal notions.

 

12134101492?profile=originalThe Superman Family: Action, Superman, Superboy, Supergirl

 

I’ll admit that I was disappointed when I heard about the back-to-basics approach for Superman.  I grew up with John Byrne’s Man of Steel.  I liked having a Ma and Pa Kent around.  And I had no objection to the idea that Superman wasn’t the first superhero.  Like Babe Ruth or The Beatles, he didn’t have to be the first to be the best.  So I didn’t like the idea that DC was returning to the Silver Age status quo.  It struck me as a move backwards. 

But then I thought about it a bit more.  DC isn’t trying to get old Silver Age fans back.  They’re trying to attract new fans.  Those potential readers would know about Superman primarily through the long-running TV series Smallville.  Jonathan Kent died during that series (and Martha too for all I know).  Plus, Clark was the first hero who eventually inspired and assembled others.  I realized this isn’t about the Silver Age; it’s about Smallville.  That’s especially evident in Action Comics where a beginning Superman hasn’t even adopted a costume. 

They’re still not the choices I would have made (I’ll miss you, Man of Steel) but now that I get what DC is trying to do, I’m much more likely to give this new continuity a chance (say hello, Man of Tomorrow). 

 

12134102458?profile=originalThe Batman Family: Batman, Detective, Batwing, The Dark Knight, Batman & Robin, Batgirl, Batwoman, Nightwing, Catwoman, Birds of Prey and Red Hood & the Outlaws

 

I’ve never been a dedicated Batman reader.  I’ve sampled Batman from time to time but there were always too many titles for me to become fully engrossed in the line.  That hasn’t changed- and it’s not going to.  However, I have been a big fan of some of his apprentice heroes.  On that score, the new Batman line has both a hit and a miss.

  As much as I enjoyed seeing Dick Grayson finally wear the mantle of the bat, I knew that it wasn’t going to last.  So I’m glad that he’s landed gracefully on his feet, back in his own title as Nightwing. 

On the other hand, I wasn’t happy that Barbara Gordon was going back to her Batgirl identity.  Like a lot of fans, I liked Barbara as Oracle.  She proved a lot more effective beating the bad guys with her mind.  And she increased DC’s diversity as a handicapped character.  Plus, I liked Stephanie Brown as Batgirl.  She had earned it after long service as Spoiler and a short stint as Robin. 

But then again, I wasn’t currently buying either Batgirl or Birds of Prey.  And I’m intrigued enough by this new series that I’m planning on buying Batgirl.  I want to see if DC can make it work, even if I think they shouldn’t have done it.  I guess it’s another case of fans saying one thing with their keyboards and another with their wallets. 

 

12134103060?profile=originalGreen Lantern, Green Lantern Corps, New Guardians, Red Lanterns

 

The Green Lantern line was one of DC’s most successful franchises.  So they didn’t have to change a lot.  They did anyway.  I approve.  I like that they’re being bold, rather than rightfully resting on their laurels. 

Some of the changes are slight.  Guy Gardner and Kyle Rayner have traded places, but they’re still both Green Lanterns.  Guy and John now share the lead in Green Lantern Corps (Guy had been the lead in Emerald Warriors).  Kyle now takes over the third Green Lantern title as New Guardians replaces Emerald Warriors in the line-up. 

Other changes are significant.  Hal Jordan has been kicked out of the Green Lantern Corps.  Sinestro has been bonded to a green ring against his will.  And, at least initially, the new Green Lantern title will feature Sinestro instead of Hal.  Is it permanent?  Probably not.  Is it interesting?  Very. 

They haven’t changed everything, of course.  The color spectrum is still represented by other corps, and one of them now receives their own title.  Although older fans claim to hate it, the other corps have been incredibly popular.   Even Sheldon from The Big Bang Theory has been spotted wearing T-shirts from the other corps. 

 

12134103093?profile=originalJustice League, Justice League International, Aquaman, Wonder Woman, Flash, Captain Atom, Fury of Firestorm, Savage Hawkman, Mister Terrific and DC Comics Presents

It’s nice to see Aquaman, Firestorm and Hawkman back in action.  One of the reasons why I loved Brightest Day was that it resurrected so many of these older characters.  Yet it was more than that.  Brightest Day made them relevant again.  I liked the new Aqualad.  I liked that Jason and Ronnie now shared the Firestorm matrix.  I could have skipped the Hawkman storyline, but at least he was alive again.  I always hoped that they would get their own titles coming out of Brightest Day, just as Booster Gold got his own title coming out of 52.  And now, my wish is granted.  I’m especially pleased that they’re going forward with a combined Jason/Ronnie Firestorm.  Their interaction has been a lot more interesting than any previous incarnation.  I would have liked to see a Martian Manhunter title too but we’ll get to that later.

The Flash is the title that reminded me I have my own continuity checklist as much as anyone else.  I like Wally West as the Flash and I’d be a lot more interested in this title if he was the lead instead of Barry. 

            The biggest continuity change comes in Justice League #1 as Cyborg replaces Martian Manhunter as a founding member of the team.  I have no problem with that.  I’ve been through enough ret-cons by now that I no longer bat an eye.  Plus, my allegiance to both characters is about the same- they’re both safely in my top ten for DC heroes.  I’m also intrigued by the new line-up in Justice League International.  It’s nice to see one of the heroes from the Great Ten be integrated into the greater DC Universe, even if their own title didn’t sell well.

 

12134103862?profile=originalThe Dark: Justice League Dark, Swamp Thing, Animal Man, Frankenstein, I Vampire, Resurrection Man and Demon Knights

 

            This section isn’t really for me.  I’m ambivalent about whether or not the main characters belong in a separate Vertigo line or back in the DCU.  I prefer a pseudo-Silver Age Animal Man with the cool orange costume to the warped Vertigo version.  And I’ve never been interested in The Demon. 

            That’s okay, of course.  I’m not the target audience for this and DC should be targeting multiple audiences.  If this reinvigorates interest in Swamp Thing or provides some off beat cult hits like Frankenstein: Agent of SHADE or I, Vampire, that’s a good thing.     

            The one thing I like is the return of Resurrection Man.  That was one of the underrated titles of the late ‘90s and it will be fun to get in on the beginning this time. 

 

12134104095?profile=originalThe Edge: Stormwatch, Voodoo, Grifter, Deathstroke, Suicide Squad, OMAC, Blackhawks, Men of War and All-Star Western

 

The big change here is the integration of the Wildstorm characters into the DC universe.  I’ll lay my cards on the table: I’m all for it.  I’ve read a lot of comments from people who are opposed to the idea.  Some of them simply don’t like the Wildstorm characters.  That’ s fine.  You don’t have to read these titles if you don’t like them.  But these characters have been around for 20 years now and, at a certain point, the complaints sound as ridiculous as old people criticizing rap music.

However, some Wildstorm fans have also opposed the idea.  I’ve seen several suggest that the Wildstorm characters are better off on their own little world.  I strongly disagree.  They’ve been segmented off in their own little world for a long time and it hasn’t been a good thing.  The last series was a great post-apocalyptic tale and it was practically ignored.  The only way for these characters to become relevant again is for them to become part of the DCU.

I’ve heard similar arguments over the years about Captain Marvel, Plastic Man, Blue Beetle and the Freedom Fighters.  “They’re fine in their own world but they don’t belong in the DCU.”  I think it’s ridiculous.  When SHAZAM had his out-of-continuity series in the ‘70s, it was quickly cut back to a bi-monthly and lasted 35 issues.  The in-continuity series in the ‘90s lasted 47 issues.  Ted Kord’s enduring popularity today has more to do with his appearances as part of the Justice League than with any of his solo series.  I don’t think it’s a coincidence that Plastic Man was given his first ongoing series in almost 40 years after joining the JLA. 

The exposure is good for the Wildstorm characters.  And though I’d rather see him in his own title, I’m fascinated by the idea of putting the Martian Manhunter in charge of Stormwatch.

 

12134105258?profile=originalYoung Justice: Teen Titans, Static Shock, Hawk & Dove, Blue Beetle, Legion of Superheroes, Legion Lost

 

I’m impressed that DC came up with a group name.  This is a very disparate bunch.  In terms of continuity, there are some backward steps, forward steps and corrected steps.

The backward step is Hawk & Dove.  I’m one of the few people on this board who actually likes Rob Liefeld but even I’m disappointed by this class reunion.  Why is DC intentionally trying to revive a minor hit from the late ‘80s?  That seems like a bad idea.  I’d much rather see Dove and her sister as Hawk than retread old ground. 

The forward step is Static Shock.  I know that some other observers think this is another backward step.  After all, DC is reviving another ‘90s concept.  But this isn’t a straight retread.  They’re incorporating elements from the successful cartoon and building off of his recent appearances in Teen Titans.  I’m intrigued by this new title and I hope it does well.

The corrected step is Blue Beetle.  I can’t say that I was an avid fan of the previous series.  I borrowed a couple of trades from the library after the series was already canceled.  But it was very good.  So this is a smart revival.  DC could build on the positive reviews and the good will from the previous series.

There’s also a sideways step in the form of Legion of Superheroes.  It certainly seems like the recently re-launched Legion is being re-launched again simply because everybody else is doing it.  It’s essentially the same creative team and concept as before. 

 

That’s my checklist.  I know that it won’t match with everyone, or even anyone.  We all have our own opinions about which character should bear which codename and which heroes should be in which team.  Those opinions have been shaped by favorite stories and series of the past.  Then again, it’s always possible that these new series could shape new opinions.  After all, who would have thought in 1986 that they’d like a Justice League with Blue Beetle and Booster Gold? 

 

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Andrew A. Smith

Scripps Howard News Service

 

'99 Days,' 'Cyclops' fail to ignite

 

Aug. 30, 2011 -- Maybe it’s the heat, but several graphic novels in August simply didn’t wow me.

 

12134098885?profile=original* 99 Days ($19.99), by Matteo Casali and Kristian Donaldson, is the latest in DC/Vertigo’s crime-slash-mystery line of graphic novels. Set in L.A., the title refers to the length of time two detectives investigate machete murders in a gang war, as well as the length of the time one of the detectives was a child soldier – using a machete – in the Hutu slaughter of Tutsis in Rwanda. Will the machete murders bring the detective’s secret horror to the surface? Well, yeah.

 

I shouldn’t be snarky, because there are some good bits. There’s convincing sexual tension between detective Antoine Davis and his partner, happily-married Valeria Torres; the scenes of the Rwandan civil war are appropriately horrifying; and Donaldson’s artwork is pleasant and serviceable. But the clichéd gangsta dialogue seems lifted from bad TV shows, and the premise – flashbacks to Rwanda genocide from the perspective of a traumatized survivor – reminds me of a much better graphic novel, Jean-Phillipe Stassen’s Deogratias.

 

* Uncouth Sleuth ($12.99), by Charles Fulp and Craig Rousseau, is a parody of private eye and Indiana Jones movies, starring “Harry Johnson” in “The Case of the Crabbes.” Get it? See, the clients are named Crabbe, and Harry Johnson is a euphemism for … oh, you got it.

 

12134099869?profile=originalThat sort of humor is pretty much the book’s raison d’etre; Sleuth involves lots of double entendres and half-dressed women (drawn cartoonishly zaftig, like Jessica Rabbit, but without any actual nudity). Points are awarded for being completely up front about this: There’s no pretension to high art, and the naughty jokes and puns are delivered with adolescent zest.

 

I’m not anywhere near adolescence, so I’m not the target audience. But for those who enjoy MAD magazine kind of humor, this is well done MAD magazine kind of humor.

 

12134100259?profile=original* Cyclops Volume One ($19.95) collects the first 110 pages of Archaia’s ongoing series about a near future where wars are run by corporations to knock off competitors, who make a profit by selling broadcast rights to the combat. The battles are filmed by cameras mounted on the soldiers’ helmets (giving rise to the nickname “Cyclops”), and successful soldiers are paid and treated like pro athletes.

 

Gee, what could go wrong? I mean, corporations never do anything illegal or unethical, do they? And mercenaries are the cream of humanity, right? Cyclops follows one such mercenary, who for some reason has a conscience, and you can see where this is going with one eye or two.

 

Not that we get there. Volume One is mostly set up. And while the art is in the excellent Franco-Belgian style, I have to say the coloring on my copy was so overdone and dark as to be muddy.

 

Still, Cyclops is by Matz and Luc Jacamon, the team that produces the excellent The Killer. That earns them extra time from this critic to show me what they’ve got.

 

12134100867?profile=original* Anne Steelyard: The Garden of Emptiness, Act III: A Thousand Waters ($14.95) is the third and last in a series set in the Middle East before World War I. Written by best-selling author Barbara Hambly (Blood Maidens) and drawn by experienced comics artist Ron Randall, it stars an English woman who refuses to marry the man her father selects, and instead embarks on a mission to find a lost of city in Arabia, in order to make a reputation, in order to get a position at a university, in order to achieve the freedom denied her gender in the Britain of the time.  The first volume was pretty straight up two-fisted archeology stuff, with pre-Nazi (but still evil) Germans, noble Arab bedouins, stuffy English and untrustworthy Turks. But the second – which I somehow missed – added supernatural elements from Arabic mythology, some of which Anne learns how to use.

 

My wife read this book, and promptly declared it “stupid.” (My wife is an extremely pithy reviewer.) So, there’s that. But while I generally dislike political anachronisms in period pieces (in this case a feminist before feminism existed), I found Anne’s determination to be admirable, all the moreso because Hambly takes pains to show how difficult her path is. More men help her than is likely, but she pays a price – especially in the romance department, which certainly makes sense.

 

It’s not Shakespeare, but I found Act III a satisfying finish to a mildly entertaining story.

 

Art above:

1. 99 Days explores the life of an L.A. detective who was both participant and survivor of the Rwandan Civil War. Courtesy DC Entertainment Inc.


2. Uncouth Sleuth is a parody of Indiana Jones and Sam Spade that leans heavily on double entendre. Courtesy Fulp Fiction


3. Cyclops posits a future where corporations wage war, and their mercenaries are celebrities. Courtesy Archaia


4. Anne Steelyard is an English heroine in the Mideast before World War I. Courtesy Penny-Farthing Press

 

Contact Andrew A. Smith of the Memphis Commercial Appeal at capncomics@aol.com.


 

 

 

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