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Jan 9

House to Astonish – Slight Delay

Posted on Saturday, January 9, 2010 by Al in Uncategorized

Sorry to say, folks, but due to the non-delivery of comics in the UK this week due to the snow, we don’t have anything we can review. We’ve decided to move the next instalment of the podcast back to next Saturday, so stay tuned (and hope the weather clears up a bit).

Nov 26

Give Thanks!

Posted on Thursday, November 26, 2009 by Al in Uncategorized

Happy Thanksgiving to all our American listeners and readers. As a little celebration, I thought it would be nice to see what comics everyone is thankful for at present. What books brighten up your day every time they ship?

For me, there are a handful of Marvel titles that are really singing right now. Incredible Hercules has got to be the best thing either of the Big Two are publishing at the moment, although it seems to be sailing under a lot of people’s radars. It’s fun, it’s action-packed, it’s doing big, epic stories with little nuggets of juicy characterisation and it’s got the best double-act in superhero comics front and centre every issue. It’s also now got an Agents of Atlas backup strip, just to tip it over into completely awesome.

As a New Warriors fan, Avengers: Initiative is essential. It doesn’t hurt, of course, that it also features a load of other B-to-H-list Marvel heroes and villains, which as a devotee of OHOTMU are my bread and butter. Dan Slott and Christos Gage have done first-rate work with this book.

Marvel’s cosmic books, Nova and Guardians of the Galaxy, are hugely enjoyable and do a great job of topping the previous month’s cliffhanger every issue. Bring on Realm of Kings, I’m ready for it.

Over at Image, Chew is wickedly entertaining and full of great twists, Elephantmen is one of the most coherent worlds in comics, Viking is inventive and compelling stuff and Phonogram has some of the best examples of the craft of comics in the field today.

DC’s Detective Comics blows my mind every month. The stories are first-class Bat-books fare, and the art shows what you can get it your artist is never content to rest on his or her laurels. Scalped is the best Vertigo book going at the moment (alas, poor Young Liars), and Jason Aaron deserves all the good reviews he’s been picking up – pick up his Ghost Rider run in tpb to see the best stories that character’s ever been in.

Lastly, I have to mention The Goon – Eric Powell’s stories manage to be laugh-out-loud funny and get-choked-up sad at the same time, which would be some achievement even without his gorgeous artwork.

That’s what I’m thankful for at the moment – what about you?

Nov 7

This Week in Comics

Posted on Saturday, November 7, 2009 by Al in Uncategorized

Two things:

1) I have been recovering from seriously major dental surgery so I haven’t been able to get my head together properly in order to review last week’s comics. Of the stuff that came out, though, I definitely recommend Ares, Detective Comics, Incredible Hercules and Avengers: Initiative.

2) Hooray, the postal strikes are over, so I can cover this week’s books! For the first time, well, ever, it’s time for THIS WEEK IN COMICS!

ASSAULT ON NEW OLYMPUS: We don’t know whether we’ll be doing a podcast for certain this weekend, or what we’ll be covering if we do, but this could be in with a shout. It’s the first part of a big event story that’s happening in the pages of Incredible Hercules, which for some reason they’ve chosen to put out in a format that looks like a random team-up one-shot, with the Herc and Spidey logos given equal space (which, to be fair, isn’t much) on the front page. Given that random team-up one-shots tend to sell fewer copies than the parent title, it seems a strange choice, but whatever floats their boat, I guess. This issue handily recaps the last year or so of Hercules issues as well as Oeming’s Ares mini, and sets up the new twin threat of Hera’s Continuum project and the return of nasty god chappie Mikaboshi. After the last half-dozen issues, where the threats were alternately non-Earthbound and personal to the protagonist, it’s good to see a return to proper world-shaking problems for Marvel’s Butch and Sundance. A theoretically-not-unwelcome appearance by Spider-Man seems to do little other than pad out the pages with They Fight And Then Team Up shenanigans, although it’s refreshing to see the reason for the fight being, essentially, ‘Are you looking at my girlfriend?”. There are also some flashes of the humour this book has become known for, particularly in a moment when Spidey is trapped under some heavy machinery, as seems to happen to him relatively frequently. The Agents of Atlas backup is a welcome addition to the book, and the Venus vs Aphrodite plotline is set up neatly in the main story, giving a plausible reason for this backup to feature in this title. A good package, then, with a slightly baffling publication format.

THE GREAT TEN 1: Nothing like striking while the iron’s hot, eh? Three years after being featured in 52 and then promptly forgotten about, China’s super-team get their own maxi-series, by Tony Bedard and Scott McDaniel. It doesn’t seem like it should be a must-buy, but Bedard brings his team book skills to bear and sensibly concentrates on introducing the characters in small units. We only really get a lot of panel time for four of the team in this issue, with the spotlight and narration focusing on Accomplished Perfect Physician, giving his origin and history in an economic fashion and setting up his rivalries with August General in Iron and Ghost Fox Killer. This really seems the best way to go when you’re dealing with a team this size; I presume each of the team’s members will be featured in turn over the course of the ten issue series. Scott McDaniel turns in some of the best art he’s produced since his work on Nightwing, and manages to make even conversational scenes dynamic. A pleasant surprise overall.

DOOM PATROL 4: Well, I’m glad that there was a recap in the first couple of pages of who the sort of Detroit Doom Patrol were, because I’d have no clue otherwise. This is a fairly obvious attempt to boost sales of Doom Patrol by tying it in to Blackest Night, and in that respect it’s unfortunate, as it’s probably the weakest issue of this series so far (although the Black Lanterns who turn up do have one nice twist to them). Regular artist Matthew Clark steps off this issue for whatever reason (you’d think that if you were doing an issue designed to bring in new readers and show them what you do, you’d want to show off the regular team, but I’m no publisher), and Justiniano steps in to little effect – his work is less sharp than Clark’s and is a bit of a disappointment. The Metal Men backup is, as usual, the best thing in the issue, and benefits from not trying to shoehorn in the whole team. If you’ve been curious about Doom Patrol, I don’t think this is the issue I’d recommend trying to see what the fuss is about – which seems to defeat the purpose of the exercise, really.

DOCTOR VOODOO 2: I understand that we’re seeing a novice Sorceror Supreme at work here, but aside from the Dormammu smackdown in the first issue, we’ve basically been witnessing Jericho Drumm get punked by a variety of sources for the first two issues, and he’d better get his act together or this could become wearing. The villain of this issue is apparently Marvel’s flavour of the months, turning up in the last issue of Avengers: Initiative and this week’s Deadpool Team-Up too, which I presume is just poor scheduling, but it’s good to see some of Strange’s old villains gallery get some face time. Palo’s art continues to impress, with a JH Williams-esque art style shift for the flashbacks to Drumm’s childhood, and while the story is a little shaky at the moment the whole package shows enough promise to keep me coming back.

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 610: Guggenheim’s weakest Spidey story wraps up, and there’s nothing really to it that makes this final part any more worthwhile than either of the preceding two. You could almost plot this yourself – final showdown, villains turn on each other, burning building, weak excuses for absence from Peter, inexplicable and completely pointless Screwball appearance. A complete waste of time – here’s hoping the Gauntlet turns out to be better than these three issues.

So, yeah, that’s what I read this week. What about you?

Oct 28

Last Week in Comics

Posted on Wednesday, October 28, 2009 by Al in Uncategorized

I don’t know if anyone outside the UK knows this, but we’re having something of an industrial action situation with the postal service at the moment. The upshot is that, well, you know those comics that came out last Wednesday? They arrived today. So, with apologies for the delay, let’s get right to it.

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 609: I’ve got a theory about this storyline, which is that everything about it is as 1990s as possible, on purpose. Return of Clone Saga villain? Check. New bad guy with a 1990s-style armour suit? Check. Bad guy’s secret identity something improbably macho like ‘Damon Ryder’? Check. Bad guy named after monster from early-1990s blockbuster movie? Check. Artist paying way too much attention to boobs of female lead? Check (although that one’s not an exclusively 1990s thing, sadly).  The whole package is a little too eye-rollingly predictable for comfort and the pacing is irritatingly bitty. The revamped ASM has had some ups and downs but this is the first real complete misfire it’s had for quite a while. Disappointing.

EX MACHINA 46: You know that thing about showing a gun in the first act if you’re going to use it in the third? Well, that comes into play in a fairly literal fashion here with another of the alien trinketry McGuffins that litter Mitchell Hundred’s life being brought front and centre as the series goes hurtling towards its conclusion, pinballing the story off all the characters as it goes. Not much in the way of new information gets revealed this issue, but there’s some effective atmosphere building being done with Suzanne and Tony Harris gets to stretch his legs a bit with a stylishly-framed fight sequence. This month’s civics lesson in disguise is on abortion statistics, if that floats your boat.

CHEW 5: You’re lucky you get to read these reviews rather than have me read them out loud to you, because my jaw is still on the floor after the multiple layered twists and shocks in this issue. Tony’s world comes down around him in a classic Everything You Thought You Knew Was Wrong style, and it makes what was already a great series into a truly first-class one. If you aren’t reading this, I heartily recommend picking up the tpb when it comes out, because Layman and Guillory are firing on all cylinders here and it looks like they’re just getting started.

ELEPHANTMEN 22: Part seven of the eight-part Dangerous Liaisons series deals (partly) with Simm, the mysterious figure who’s made it his business to follow Vanity Case around and ingratiate himself into her life. It also follows Hip and Miki as they track down Ebony, fresh from his rampage last month and apparently none the wiser for it. The return to an ensemble cast approach is refreshing after the last six issues of character showcases, but while it’s still pretty good it’s weaker than last month’s for three main reasons – firstly, Simm just doesn’t have much of a character yet, and while the single-character issues were a device that was in danger of becoming repetitive, Simm is ironically one of the characters that could do with a bit more fleshing out; secondly, Andre Szymanowicz’s art is striking in a Seth Fisher meets Moebius sort of way but he needs to work on keeping characters on-model from panel to panel; and lastly there are a couple of cameos from old UK sitcom characters that are just a bit on the too cute side and detract from the mood of the scene they’re in. Not the greatest issue, then, but still worthwhile.

COWBOY NINJA VIKING 1: File this one under ‘noble failure’. Here’s the pitch: a guy with a multiple personality disorder, which manifests itself as a cowboy, a ninja and a viking, which in turn are represented via different hats and custom speech balloons depending on which of them’s talking at any given moment, is tracked down by agents working for the doctor who turned him into a weapons-proficient super-spy and reactivated to take down another three-way nutjob. Sounds reasonably involved and complex? You bet, and that’s before we even reach the part where the story is told in three time periods over the course of a week, presented out of order. Or the part where the custom speech balloons don’t match the hats the personalities are wearing. Or the part where the art is so sketchy you can’t tell if the character who’s just had his head chopped open is the same character you’re seeing being recruited for a job a couple of pages later. Or the part where the three ‘distinct’ personalities speak almost identically, rendering the whole concept a bit moot. There’s no shortage of ambition here, it’s just not working in the execution. If you want to read an action comedy about a super killing machine with three smart-mouthed voices in his head then I hear Deadpool is popular right now – you could try that instead.

So, that was my haul for this week (along with Azrael, which we reviewed on the podcast, but in short – good concept, plays nicely with framing sequences, art lets it down somewhat, costume isn’t a patch on the original, worth checking out if you’re an Azrael fan). What did you read?

Oct 28

A bit of admin

Posted on Wednesday, October 28, 2009 by Al in Uncategorized

Hi all, just to let you know that I’ve tinkered a bit with the comments – we’ve been getting a frankly ridiculous amount of spam comments (usually 50+ per day) so rather than have to manually come in and spam or approve each comment that gets posted, I’ve installed a new plugin which will mean two things:

1) Your comments will no longer be held in a moderation queue if you’re a first-time commenter.

2) You’ll have to type in a little CAPTCHA thing each time you want to post a comment. Sorry that this has to be done – it’s just to try to weed out bots.

We’ll see how it gets on with cutting down the spam – if it succeeds, great, and we’ll keep it. If not, then we’ll try something else.

Oct 24

All Quiet on the Western Front

Posted on Saturday, October 24, 2009 by Al in Uncategorized

Howdy all. Just a quick note to say that you’ll have noticed that I’ve not updated the blog in the last two weeks – very sorry about that, but things have kind of been a bit hectic here recently. The long and the short of it is that my girlfriend and I have just taken the big step of getting engaged, which has kind of kicked off a whirlwind of things we need to organise, cross-country visits to families, and all sorts of similar shenanigans. So, apologies, but it’s been all go here. I’m going to try to get back to doing some reviews (or possibly more in the way of longer pieces like the Cable & Deadpool one from a while back), so we’ll see how things go, but thanks for bearing with me in the meantime.

Oct 5

Last Week (And The Week Before) In Comics

Posted on Monday, October 5, 2009 by Al in Uncategorized

Evening all, how are you? You look great! Smashing.

I’m back from my holidays, and there’s a ridiculously big pile of comics to review, so for this week only, we’re going to try something a bit different – reviews in haiku form. Haikviews, if you will. Anyway. On with it!

RUNAWAYS 14

Wow, just… really, wow.
I did not see that coming
Which is ironic.

SHANG-CHI, MASTER OF KUNG FU

This book is crazy.
Crazy in a good way, though.
Kung-Fu Motorbikes!

THE WEB 1

Exposition yay!
Leonardi-esque artwork.
Better than The Shield.

UNDERGROUND 1

Jeff Parker writing,
Steve Lieber on art duties…
Just buy it, OK?

SUPERMAN: SECRET ORIGIN 1

Thousandth retelling,
Starring Young Christopher Reeve
As a bobblehead.

DETECTIVE COMICS 857

Gorgeous art again
Plus a heck of an ending.
Backup strip good too.

DARK X-MEN: THE CONFESSION

X-Leaders spill beans;
Their mutant power is chat.
Can we move on now?

X-FACTOR 49

Gay jokes and plot twists
To cut a long story short…
Yeah, too late for that.

AVENGERS INITIATIVE 28

Gage is on form here.
New Warriors fans take heed:
Really cool last page.

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 606-607

Spidey and Black Cat
Have romantic interlude.
Diablo is lame.

INCREDIBLE HERCULES 135

Amadeus Cho
Fights Pythagoras Dupree.
This book is awesome.

SPIDER-WOMAN 1

Story is a drag
Art is really lovely, though.
Cover? Ludicrous.

So, that was what I read. And you?

Sep 23

Last Week in Comics

Posted on Wednesday, September 23, 2009 by Al in Uncategorized

I’m off on holiday to Switzerland as of this Saturday, so there’ll be no blogging next week, but in the meantime here are some reviews of books I got last week that I’m going to try to write while watching Batman: The Brave and the Bold. Let’s go!

ANTI-VENOM: NEW WAYS TO LIVE 1: The ever-reliable Zeb Wells gives us the first part of a mini featuring the Once And No Doubt Future Eventually Venom, with art by Paolo Siqueira, who’s been strutting his stuff recently on the main Spidey book. It’s actually a pleasant surprise, with hints of the better aspects of the lethal protector set-up shorn of the 1990s earnest grimness. Wells gives us an Eddie Brock who’s convinced, as he was in New Ways To Die, that he’s a force for good, but whose natural nasty streak can’t help but threaten to manifest itself. Siqueira’s also hitting a home run here, with art that’s got a bit of Barry Kitson and a bit of Terry Dodson and a good helping of its own charm. A well-judged cameo appearance by the Punisher rounds off what is, all in all, a pretty great package all round.

X-MEN LEGACY ANNUAL 1: Now, I don’t want to sound like an old fuddy-duddy here, but I remember the days when an annual was a comic that you could pick up and read without it folding into the main book. If anyone who reads X-Men Legacy decided to pass on this annual, though, they’d be pretty much out of luck when they went back for the next issue of the regular series, because this is part one of a four-part story (and not one that continues in other annuals, either – ah, Shattershot, you were generally terrible). It’s the new direction for this book, which appears to be that Rogue is acting as camp counselor for the cast-off kids of Young/New X-Men. That’s fine by me – characters like Rockslide, Hellion and Anole are some of the best the X-books have generated in the past few years. Regular series writer Mike Carey has really made Rogue his own over the last few years, and seems to have a pretty good handle on the kids that are featured in the new team line-up too, which bodes well. Daniel Acuna’s art is a bit of an acquired taste, and it’s one that I run hot and cold on – it’s undoubtedly expressive, and he’s great with facial expressions, but looking at it is a bit like looking at people on a really overcast day when you’ve got a migraine. The backup strip is a fairly generic Gambit affair, with hints that Carey may address the Gambit-as-horseman-of-Apocalypse thing from Peter Milligan’s run, but on its own merits it’s pretty forgettable.

BRAVE AND THE BOLD 27: J Michael Straczynski finally gets round to starting his run on this book, and in the first of what looks like is set to be a continuing set of bizarre team-ups (November? Batman and Brother Power the Geek, which is a beautiful dream Mark Waid once had), Bats hooks up with Robby Reed and his H-Dial to foil a plot by the Joker. One wrinkle – for most of this issue, the H-Dial is actually in the possession of a low-life who’s been paid to help run interference for the Joker, but who wishes he could be more. It’s a nice conceit, but does rather sideline Robby for the majority of the issue, leaving him moping on his hotel bed while Batman teams up with Joe Random Scumbag. It’s a difficult thing to mess up, you’d have thought – Batman and Dial H for Hero should make for a Bob Haney-style anything goes team-up, but instead we get a nice enough idea executed fairly competently. Two things stick out from this issue – one, Jesus Saiz should get to draw the Joker again, and soon, and two, Batman is not a motivational speaker and should definitely not be making the speech he makes at the end of this issue. An underwhelming start to the run.

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 605: Ah, Spider-Man, a guy for whom dating is something that happens to other people (and when it’s not, it never ends well). Fred Van Lente gives us two chapters of this over-sized three-part story, dealing first with Peter’s former beloved Mary Jane and filling us in on what she’s been up to between the point when we last saw her in the Paper Doll arc up to the wedding of May and Jay, then carrying us through Peter’s disastrous break-up with Michelle Gonzales, before handing over to Brian Reed for True Tales of Internet Dating Terror as Harry tries to convince Peter to get back on the market. Van Lente and Reed complement each other well, to the extent that without the chapter headings you’d never know where one ended and the other began, but Van Lente has the edge for two reasons: 1) his first story has Mary Jane fighting the White Rabbit, and 2) it’s drawn by Javier Pulido, who remains fantastic. Reed’s chapter is illustrated by Yanick Paquette, doing credible impressions of both Terry Dodson and Gene Ha and acquitting himself credibly. An extra-length, stand-alone issue with three stories and multiple creative teams for a slightly higher price? Surely this is what an annual is meant to look like?

MODOK: REIGN DELAY: Ostensibly a Dark Reign tie-in, this is Action Philosophers artist Ryan Dunlavey’s take on Marvel’s best, biggest-headed supervillain, originally published on Marvel’s digital comics site. Dunlavey writes, draws, colours, and letters this story, which is either an extreme level of achievement or an extreme level of showing off. Telling the story of MODOK’s assignment in Norman Osborn’s new Initiative, as the ‘protector’ of the great state of Pennsylvania, it’s about as daffy as it’s possible to get with the character, and when you consider that we’re talking about MODOK here, that’s pretty daffy. It’s a bit of a cliché to say that there’s a great gag on every single page, but there honestly is – Minion Designate Mother is a fantastic sight gag, and the spectacle of MODOK having his head flushed down the school toilet is worth the price of admission alone. It’s rare to get a genuinely comic comic, but this is one of those rare examples.

So, that was what I read this week (along with Vengeance of the Moon Knight and Beasts of Burden, which we talked about at the podcast – still available for your listening pleasure! – and X-Factor and Ex Machina, which I figure would both be pretty much the same as the last reviews I did of them so if you want to see what I thought, scroll down the page). What about you?

Sep 16

Last Week in Comics

Posted on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 by Al in Uncategorized

Right, there isn’t actually much time before it’s Wednesday, which to most people reading this (i.e. our friends in the West) is new comics day. So regardless of the fact that I’m just back from the pub, it’s time to review the books of last week. It’s an exercise in random impressions and possibly completely unfair snap judgements – it’s Last Week in Comics!

THE SHIELD 1: I should point out at this juncture that Paul is just back from his holiday in the States (literally just back – he landed this morning. Although he did make it out to the pub this evening, which is fairly heroic, to be honest. But anyway.) and so we haven’t had time to put our heads together and decide what we’re going to be reviewing on this week’s podcast. I had originally ordered this book on the basis that it might make for podcast fodder, but to be honest, it’s rather unremarkable in what it does and it’s unlikely to make the cut. Reader’s Digest version: DC licensed the Red Circle heroes years back from Archie Comics, they published the !mpact line, and have recently re-licensed them in order to publish a couple of ongoing titles – the Shield, with a backup strip starring Inferno, and the Web, with a backup strip starring Hangman. Now, taken completely in isolation, the Shield isn’t a bad book at all. It’s a fairly generic patriotic hero, and aside from the rather over-the-top flag-waving might makes right message in this first issue, it’s perfectly palatable. The backup is nigh-incomprehensible (the hero has a different physical appearance when his powers are activated? Maybe? I have no idea) but the main feature is inoffensive enough. That’s the first sign of the problem, though. Who was asking for this character’s return? Who was asking for Eric Trautmann to write it and for Marco Rudy to draw it? Why is this comic being published? There’s nothing particularly outstanding about the writing, there’s nothing particularly dazzling about the art, and there’s certainly nothing compelling about the concept (nanotech-powered patriotic superhero operating in warzones, with no apparent nuance and some presumably unintentionally humorous moments). It’s the same problem I had with the first issue of Marvel’s Torch last week – is this just being published because DC can? Because that’s not a very good reason. I mean, fair’s fair. There’s not a whole heck of a lot that’s actively bad about this book – overly-simplistic depiction of war and the military aside. To say that is to damn with faint praise, though. If I can’t be motivated to evangelise about this book, why should anyone else be expected to? The audience for this book seems to be people who wish DC had their own Captain America, or the presumably miniscule fanbase for what is unarguably a footnote in comics history. If you’re excited about this book, then that’s great – it’s not a bad comic. If you’re not excited about it, then don’t worry, because taken purely on its own terms, it’s really not that exciting.

INCREDIBLE HERCULES 134: Back with Herc for the second part of his story while the late-summer bi-weekly overlapping stories run, and things are hotting up for the gung-ho faux-Thor, as he lets his libido lead him into what turns out to be a thoroughly ill-advised dalliance with the queen of the dark elves. As with the last few issues of this book, it’s a great rollicking read, with a few nice twists and turns in the plot to complement the always sharp dialogue, and a superbly amusing final scene. Greg Pak and Fred van Lente again turn in the kind of story that puts most of the rest of Marvel’s output to shame, and while Hercules may be the best-kept secret in Marvel’s line-up, it’s one that rewards its faithful every time.

ELEPHANTMEN 21: I’ll put my hands up and admit it – I’m a sucker for the world of Hip Flask. Ever since that first one-shot came out years ago, I’ve been a fan of Richard Starkings’s hippopotamus PI and his bizarre milieu. What we get in the current issue of the regular Elephantmen series (there is technically a miniseries, with art by Jose Ladronn, also running at present, but that’s been running for the last five years so it’s touch and go whether we’ll see it completed before the eventual heat death of the universe) is simultaneously a perfect jumping on point and part six of an eight-part story, and there aren’t many books that can claim that. In this installment, the remnants of the evil Mappo corporation decides that they’re going to test out the chips that had been implanted in the spinal cords of the Elephantmen back in the days of their bloody war, and pick Hip’s pal Ebony Hide as their test subject. What follows is a brutal fight sequence between Ebony and a number of alligator Elephantmen, with overlaid narration calmly discussing the role the Elephantmen played in the war, coldly at odds with the violent acts Ebony is carrying out on his enemies. It’s a great primer for the series, and a nice way to get new readers on board. My only issue is with the art – some of Boo Cook’s work on this issue is a little reminiscent of the kind of art you used to get on late-90s Image and Wildstorm superhero books, and isn’t representative of the kind of light work Marian Churchland and Moritat usually turn in. That’s a small complaint, though, and it’s one which is balanced out by the first sign of the book’s meta-plot moving forward for the first time in a while. Worth a look if you’ve been curious about this book.

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 604: It’s that man again, as Fred can Lente once more puts his head above the parapet to take the slings and arrows of the notoriously hard to please Spider-Man fanbase. Thankfully, behind the cover from Leinil Yu (which manages to be both symbolic and literal at the same time, which is something it’s hard to get away with outside of Chameleon stories) there’s the final part of a story which has been one of the most satisfying since the Brand New Day direction began. Van Lente manages to make Chameleon into a genuine threat, something which hasn’t been done with him for quite some time, while also making him a properly creepy villain into the bargain. J Jonah Jameson also gets a few good lines in, a particular high spot being the moment when he declares that his lawyers have decided that Spencer Smythe’s work on the Spider-Slayers was work for hire and therefore Jonah owns it, although it’s probably about time that the Spidey office dialled JJJ back a little – he’s really coming across as a one-note, two-dimensional character at present and he works best when he’s a little more rounded. Mary Jane’s return to the book has been very well handled, her interactions with Peter being played fairly low-key – you get the impression that Peter and MJ are a couple who are bonded by more than just their erstwhile nuptials, and while I’d be surprised if they aren’t reunited romantically in the fullness of time, the path that’s being taken to get there is fine for the moment. Two small niggles, though – first off, if all these stories are going to tie in some way into the Gauntlet, then the Gauntlet should hurry up and get started, because at present it’s just made for a really abrupt end to what was otherwise a first-rate Chameleon story, and second, can we please have a moratorium on the faux-Boston accents in this book?

I also read the Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Exodus one-shot (liked it, on the whole, although there are a couple of points that grate) and the Avengers: The List one-shot (about which I had more in the way of reservations) but as I say, I’m not sure what we’re going to talk about on the podcast and both of these are definite candidates – I’ll write more about both once I know what we’re going to say on House to Astonish proper but for the moment I’ll hold off.

What did you read last week?

Sep 9

Last Week in Comics

Posted on Wednesday, September 9, 2009 by Al in Uncategorized

Good old postal strikes, eh? Between localised industrial action and holiday-induced late shipping, I’ve received this week’s books in the twilight of the week again, so this might all seem a little old hat to you cutting-edge kids. You’re probably all twittering about next week’s comics already. Bah! Get off my lawn. Anyway. I’ve got the new Brendan Benson album, I’ve got comics, let’s go!

THE TORCH 1: This is another of Marvel’s 70th anniversary commemoration books, like The Marvels Project, Cap: Reborn and Finding Namor*, this one dealing with the least celebrated of their original Big Three, the Human Torch. At least, that’s the theory. In this Alex Ross/Mike Carey/Patrick Berkenkotter book, the Torch appears in a non-flashbacky way in one panel. In his stead, we get the handwavingly-resurrected Toro, the Torch’s old-school sidekick, and his spirit guide, the Spectre Golden Age Vision, who’s kicking around for no real reason and to no properly explained end. The plot, such as it is, features Toro having a big old complain, then deciding to take down the Mad Thinker (who has dropped the ‘Mad’ from his name, presumably for public relations reasons) and coming a bit of a cropper in the process, while the Thinker is working on a super-weapon for AIM. If it sounds slim, then you’d be right – my sketchy summary above is essentially all that happens in the first issue. Mike Carey manages to salvage what would otherwise be a bit of a shambles by dint of his usual well-crafted script, but the shadow of Ross’s necromantic hand is all over this book, the art looks like Igor Kordey’s rough work and the colours make everyone look like they’re claymation models. The words are good enough to let you overlook the art, but the basic purpose needs to be questioned – why has Toro been brought back, and why is the Torch being brought back? What is the reason for this story? Why are these characters important or compelling or necessary? These questions should have been asked before this was commissioned, and if they were, the answers aren’t apparent.

SWEET TOOTH 1: Jeff Lemire, Eisner-nominated writer/artist of the Essex County trilogy, has just started his new Vertigo ongoing, featuring a mutant kid (but not the comic-book kind of mutant. The unfortunate kind) who lives in the forest with his dad, who unlike his son does not have antlers or deer-like facial features. This first issue gives us Gus, who is cared for by, and who in turn cares for, his ailing father. They struggle by, his dad getting sicker every day, until hunters turn up – and they’re not interested in rabbits. Lemire’s quiet, considered scenes are hugely atmospheric, and he can even turn something as ostensibly uneventful as Gus and his dad eating dinner into a moment of creeping dread. The backstory amplifies that dread, what little of it we get; it seems there’s been some kind of incident that’s led to people getting sick and dying, and kids being born with physical mutations, which suggests radioactive fallout, but the answers aren’t laid out on the table for us and we’re expected to pull our own weight. We get little help from the narrator; Gus is not an obvious protagonist – he’s simple, nervous and gawky – but his plain language is without artifice and if any reader of this book doesn’t fear for him by the end of the first issue and want to protect him then they’ve got no soul. Lemire has a fantastic way with both words and pictures, which is essentially all comics are. The fact that he’s nailed it so perfectly in the first issue is a real sign of good things to come.

YOUNG LIARS 18: A review of this Vertigo book, on the other hand, is kind of redundant. If you’ve been reading the series so far, you’ll probably already have read this issue, and if you haven’t, then for pity’s sake don’t read this issue, because it will make absolutely no sense whatsoever and possibly sour you to the entire concept. I think the series as a whole probably deserves a separate post at some point down the line, once I’ve re-read the whole thing, but in short this is as good an ending as there is likely ever to be for what will go down in Vertigo history as one of their strangest and most polarising books. There are, I’m almost certain, no comics readers who have tried Young Liars and come away from it thinking “Yeah, it was okay, I guess”. Either you’re like me, and have been gleefully holding on for dear life as it pinballed around from normalcy to Mars and back, or you’ve written it off as willfully obtuse and precious nonsense. I’ll give the detractors one thing – if you’re reading Young Liars looking for a story that will reveal its secrets on a first or second or ninth reading, you’re likely to be disappointed, because it doesn’t reveal its secrets at all. It’s a series where what you get out of it is whatever you take from it, not one red cent more, and it’s completely unapologetic about it. So, yeah. Young Liars. I loved it. Make of it what you will.

CHEW 4: Look, if you’re not reading this, you are demented, so there’s nothing I can really say that will change your mind, but if somehow you just haven’t got round to it yet, please do. In this issue, Chu and Savoy go to a remote observatory and fight some people who may or may not be vampires but are definitely Russian girls in their underwear while investigating the death of a secretly criminal Senator and Tony’s brother Chow gets pursued by some gangsters that look like they could snap him in half. Layman and Guillory are firing on all cylinders here. This is great comics.

RUNAWAYS 13: Delayed from last week but better late than never. Kathryn Immonen’s story is starting to look a little shaky on its feet here, with random and slightly inexplicable hookups, an inability to decide whether Hunter Stein is actually a bad guy or not (Chase seems to think he is, and he’s clearly wrapped up in something shady, but none of the other kids seem too bothered) and what looks like a circuitous route back to something resembling the BKV-era setup all whacking at it with hockey sticks in an attempt to take it down. The three parts of Homeschooling so far have had a slightly dreamlike quality to them, with some perfect moments and a feel for the characters that’s been lacking since Vaughan left, but like a dream the plot appears to be moving in odd directions and at an uneven pace. Events like the recent death of a major character get minimal amounts of attention given to them, and the kids have only clapped eyes on the story’s real credible thread for a few seconds. If the book’s going on hiatus (and it appears that that’s the case) then this is a slightly strange way to wrap up the series, but Immonen’s got one more issue to pull it back – the first two parts of this story were a lot more satisfying and I’m easily prepared to chalk this issue up as an atypical mis-step. Sara Pichelli and Christina Strain keep hitting the high notes, though, and to be honest, this is still the best the book’s been in a few years, and if it suffers by comparison to Immonen’s first two issues then at least part of that is because they were very good.

So that’s what I read this week (that and the Secret Six tpb, of course, which also deserves its own post). What about you?

*Not really, but it would be good, right? And if I hadn’t referenced the Disney thing you’d have been disappointed.