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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 24

Last Week in Comics

Posted on Tuesday, November 24, 2009 by Al in reviews

After many misadventures with trying to get hold of this past week’s comics (the problem, in the very unlikely circumstance that it is interesting to you, was that I had ordered the War of Kings hardback, and as it is the size of a modest paving slab it meant that my books had to be couriered to me and there was nobody there to get them because they were couriered to my flat while I was at work and… oy. Anyway.) they have finally turned up, and can be reviewed. Pleasingly, there is only one common point between my books of this week and Paul’s, so these reviews may be worthwhile reading should the mood take you. So! Let’s at it!

PHONOGRAM: THE SINGLES CLUB 5: Hmm. A comic with a colon in the title, when my reviews already have the format of being headed up with the title followed by a colon, thus making the whole review look like an unwieldy subtitle to the book. Could be worse, could be the Spider-Man thing I’ve reviewed below. This is the crossover point between my reading list and Paul’s, so see his review for plot details and so on. I think by now I could probably put together a macro template for reviewing Phonogram Madlibs style. It would involve praising Gillen’s technique in weaving the protagonists’ stories together, and mention how there are no bit players in The Singles Club (or perhaps that everyone is a bit player to each of the leads in turn). It would highlight the numerous clever variations on relating to music that allow for different varieties of phonomancy, and how each is appropriate to the spotlight character. It would then say that McKelvie’s art is spot on at portraying mood, and how he’s probably the best body language artist in comics (and is giving Kevin Maguire a run for his money in terms of facial expressions). So plug this issue’s specifics into the above and voilà! Instant review. My only issue is that going by the backmatter Gillen seems to regard Laura Heaven as the closest thing in the series to someone who could be regarded as a villain, and I come down very much on the other side of that fence – if Laura’s a villain, then everyone who’s ever done anything out of a momentary desire for control, no matter how small or petty, is a villain. I shall be writing a stern missive to your publication, Mr Gillen.

DARK REIGN: THE LIST: THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN: Serious colon overload. Anyway. The List one-shots have supposedly been the first step along the path to Norman Osborn’s fall from grace, and there seems to have been an unfortunate tendency among fans online to discount their importance. I think the main problem is that these issues are definitely important to the individual characters’ books – Clint Barton is captured, Frank Castle is dismembered, Bruce Banner is re-exposed to gamma radiation etc – but there doesn’t seem to be much of a through-line between the issues beyond the lip service paid to the concept of the list itself. As a result, the various List one-shots have just served to take milestone developments out of the eyeline of readers who only buy the relevant characters’ regular titles, thus neatly managing to glean the worst possible result – people who don’t read, say, Punisher will skip it because there’s no continuing story between the List books, and people who just read Punisher may decide to skip what may well be something that’s linked to Dark Reign rather than to their favourite character (because, to be honest, how likely is it that major Dark Reign developments are going to happen in the pages of Punisher at this point?).

Anyway. That aside, this is actually a pretty good issue of Amazing Spider-Man, if one chooses to view it as such. Osborn has his first major PR disaster that he can’t hand-wave away with the aid of a good spin doctor, and it’s caused by Peter Parker. I’m sure Spidey will play a significant role in Siege, and can I just reiterate at this point that if he doesn’t it’ll be a scandal, but even if he doesn’t then this issue can be looked at as a significant milestone in the ongoing Dark Reign saga. Dan Slott, a man for whom I have a lot of time, gives us a pretty great Spider-Man in this issue, using both his acrobatic skills and his brainbox to hand Osborn a decisive defeat. Adam Kubert’s work is typically dynamic, with some nifty Neal Adams-style panel layouts and some first-rate character work (the first double-page spread shows definite influences of some of his most talented peers, from Leinil Yu to Tim Sale and Patrick Zircher). Pretty good stuff, although I question the wisdom of reprinting the issue of the Pulse in which Luke Cage scores from Spidey’s assist, to borrow some football terminology, as it just serves to undercut Peter’s victory in the main feature.

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 612: The Gauntlet finally kicks off, and it’s somewhat different from what I was expecting. Rather than just gather up all the classic Spider-foes and toss them at Spidey like one of those pitching machines you get in batting cages, it looks like Ma Kraven (a Boney M song waiting to happen) and her leather-bound kid are taking a more subtle approach. The sad-sack version of Electro that Spider-Man finds himself up against in this issue is the most interesting that particular villain’s been in years, and writer Mark Waid gives us sufficient insights into the antagonist’s head to have us empathising without actually sympathising with him. Artist Paul Azateca makes his ASM debut, and he’s very much in the mould of a Sean Philips or an Eduardo Risso, which in case anyone’s wondering is a good thing indeed. Increasingly over-reaching attempts to re-explain Peter and Michelle’s one night stand aside, this is definitely a promising start for The Gauntlet, going off as it does in a bunch of directions I hadn’t anticipated (although Waid is going to have to be careful that his thinly-veiled Tea Partiers don’t become straw man targets). There’s a very good backup strip by Joe Kelly and JM Ken Niimura that looks like it would be more at home in a Popgun anthology than an issue of Amazing, but that’s a very welcome thing, and it sets up Black Cat’s new status quo quite neatly and positions her to be a major supporting cast member in the short term. In all, a huge step up from the Ben Reilly issues.

THE AUTHORITY: THE LOST YEAR 3: More colons. This would likely have made it onto the podcast in place of Victorian Undead if the books had arrived with me before Saturday morning, but c’est la vie. This is the first issue of Keith Giffen and Darick Robertson’s takeover of Grant Morrison and Gene Ha’s abortive run (which was, to be fair, 100% longer than Morrison and Lee’s WildC.A.T.S.), featuring the Authority turning up on our own Earth and discovering that there’s something decidedly odd and possibly catastrophically out of kilter about it. It’s actually a pretty decent book in its own right, and Giffen establishes his own voice on the book from the very beginning with an action sequence that would have been very out of place in Morrison’s vision. Nicely paced and with some intriguing ideas, this is the best Authority story I’ve read in a good while. Two major complaints, though – firstly, Darick Robertson is a great artist, so it’s a mystery why he’s been paired with inker Trevor Scott, who seems determined to obfuscate every line Robertson has drawn with some scritchy loose inks; and secondly it’s probably just a horrible coincidence but for one of the original architects of the Annihilation series to unveil this book in the same week that DnA do their Realm of Kings one-shot, both books featuring essentially the same villain, is terribly bad timing.

REALM OF KINGS: Speaking of. This is essentially a Quasar one-shot, with Wendell Vaughn finding out what lurks at the far end of the Fault, but we also get some decent moments for the Guardians of the Galaxy and a spit and cough cameo from Nova. Leonardo Manco and Mahmud Asrar do a decent job on the art, although they’re not sufficiently different in style to necessarily justify their splitting the issue. The story works well at properly establishing the central evil at the core of the Realm of Kings stories, but the unfortunate result is that the various non-GotG books get somewhat of a short shrift when it comes to setting up their stories to come (the Inhumans and Imperial Guard have to make do with tiny semi-previews at the back of the book). Looked at as a Quasar book, though, this will satisfy any cravings you may have on that score (and some people do have them, apparently).

DR. HORRIBLE: Okay, let’s put this as simply as possible. If you are a fan of Dr. Horrible, I recommend this book to you, as it has some great character likenesses from Joelle Jones and a fittingly silly plot and script from Zack Whedon that is completely in keeping with the original web series. If you are not a fan of Dr. Horrible, there is nothing in this book that will enrich your life to the value of $3.50. It’s really that straightforward.

TRANSFORMERS 1: I kind of lost track of the Transformers a while back. I was reading the various IDW series, but I didn’t know if I had to read Stormbringer or not, and then they started putting out the Spotlight one-shots which I thought were skippable, but then it turned out that the story had snuck in there so I was massively behind, then they skipped forward a year and destroyed the world in All Hail Megatron and now it turns out there are 14 trade paperbacks just of the IDW stuff and AARGH AARGH AARGH. Sorry. Anyway. This series skips forward again by another two years, and gives us a pretty neat setup that we haven’t seen to any great extent since, I think, In The National Interest, of all things, with the Autobots’ main enemy now being the humans they’re trying to protect. There are plenty of pleasing G1 cameos here, including a character death that’s very well executed (as it were), but there’s one glaring problem with it – what’s the deal with all the Bay-influenced character redesigns? Hot Rod and Bumblebee in particular have been revamped for the worse, with those awful goatee-esque pointy chins that the Noisy Movie introduced. If you can ignore that, and don’t mind that Prime’s course of action at the end of this issue seems more to do with martyring himself than actually helping the Autobots at all, then this is an issue that should prove pleasing to TF fans who were a little bored of an over-reliance on squishy human characters.

So that was my week. What did you read?

Nov 23

Number 1s of 2009: 22 November 2009

Posted on Monday, November 23, 2009 by Paul in Music

Well, I said last week that it was a foregone conclusion, and I was right.  “Meet Me Halfway” by the Black Eyed Peas only gets a single week at the top, and it’s replaced by the latest X Factor-related hit.  If you count the Black Eyed Peas (who climbed to number 1 after appearing on the show), it’s the fifth consecutive number 1 to be connected with the show.

Yes, it’s a charity single by the acts who made the live rounds of the show.  And it’s… not desperately good. (more…)

Nov 22

The X-Axis – 22 November 2009

Posted on Sunday, November 22, 2009 by Paul in x-axis

If you haven’t listened to this week’s podcast, it’s just a couple of posts below.  Go do so.  We talk about the first issues of SWORD, Supergod and Victorian Undead.

This is an unusually quiet week for new releases – everything seems to be in the middle of a storyline right now – but let’s run through the books anyway. 

Dark Avengers #11 – Is it just me, or does Norman Osborn have a tiny itty bitty head on the cover?  Anyway, when I reviewed the “Utopia” crossover, I pointed out that the Dark Avengers didn’t get much to do.  Somebody pointed out that, actually, that’s pretty much par for the course – it’s really a Norman Osborn solo title, with the other guys standing in the background.  And indeed, that’s what we get here.  Since they’re the official government-appointed superheroes, the Avengers have gone off to investigate weird stuff in Colorado, and they’ve blundered into the Molecule Man, one of those virtually-omnipotent characters who’s way out of their league.  Naturally enough, that means the Avengers themselves make cameo appearances, and Norman Osborn has an extended dialogue with the nerdy maniac.  I have no idea why somebody thought it would be a good idea to have a few pages randomly painted by Greg Horn, of all people.  At first it looks as though Horn’s going to do all the pages showing the Avengers trapped in worlds created for them by the Molecule Man… but then they kind of drop that idea and Mike Deodato takes over again.  Besides, Horn is trying for hyper-realism, so he’s a weird artist to be doing surreal dream scenes.  Still, all told, this actually isn’t bad; if you’re going to do a book like this, then it makes sense to do a story where the ersatz Avengers are put in the underdog role and have to actually try and do the job properly.

Echo #16 – Presumably this is going to be the opening chapter of the fourth trade paperback, because it opens with a really blatant piece of recapping.  To be honest, this isn’t the strongest issue of Terry Moore’s series; it’s built around some scenes with Ivy and her Tragically Ill Daughter which end up seeming a bit heavy-handed and sentimental.  (The problem here, I think, is that said Tragically Ill Daughter doesn’t display much of a personality beyond being Tragic and Ill, which makes it all seem a bit disease-of-the-week.)  That said, even when he’s doing material like this, Moore’s storytelling puts most of his contemporaries to shame.  He’s great at the tiny little details of body language which make a character believable.  The odd thing about this series is the combination of those little personal touches with a Hollywood plot and rather one-dimensional villains.  Often it works, when the characters run into the action story elements and play off it; occasionally it feels a bit contrived, and for some reason this issue seemed to be in the latter category.

G-Man: Cape Crisis #4 – Chris Giarrusso’s work on this series has been comfortably up to the standards of his “Mini Marvels” strips, but this issue has some of the best material of the series.  It’s the sequence with G-Man escaping a wood full of… well, I’m guessing it’s a riff on Where the Wild Things Are, but it doesn’t really matter.  There’s just something about vicious monsters with a fully-fledged public transport infrastructure that works for me.  Sure, G-Man‘s story is basically just a framework to hang a load of jokes on, but when they’re funny, I’m fine with that.

Hellblazer #261 – And we’re off to India for a new storyline, so that Peter Milligan can write about gullible western tourists and the heritage of Empire.  Some of this is, well, less than subtle.  (The British nineteenth-century justifications for colonialism were a little more complex than “we’re taught to possess the world,” for example.)  But the basic idea of people trying to exploit a condescending Empire-era ghost is entertaining, if heavy-handed. And Giuseppe Camuncoli is doing great art on this series – good clear storytelling, and he knows how to play up the tongue-in-cheek bits.

Nomad: Girl Without A World #3 – Despite the rather stark covers, the set-up here is almost a throwback to the early years of Buffy the Vampire Slayer.  Nomad isn’t exactly a character with a built-in fanbase – she’s the “Heroes Reborn” version of Bucky, now stranded in the regular Marvel Universe – but Sean McKeever plays to that by duly positioning her as a Z-list superhero protecting her neighbourhood and her high school.  And the big villainous scheme is… people using mind control to dominate high school politics.  Some of the action scenes are a bit ropey, but I do like the way the book plays the creepily politically-conscious students.  I’m not so sure about the cliffhanger, though – it’s one of those moments where the villain is suddenly revealed to be somebody from another comic entirely who hasn’t been mentioned in years and who would probably have long since been forgotten if they hadn’t managed to scrape an entry in the Official Handbook back in the mid-80s.  Still, it’s something different, this book, and it plays to McKeever’s strengths.

Phonogram: The Singles Club #5 – Ah, the one that got pulped because it had the wrong bar code on it.  They don’t make scandals like they used to.  Each issue of this miniseries is showing us the same club night from the perspective of a different character, and we’ve now reached Laura Heaven, the lyric-quoting girl who hung around with Penny B back in issue #1.  Laura is the pretentious fan looking for identity in the music of her favourite band, and not quite getting it right yet.  It’s the sort of story that, in the past, you’d have done with a fan of the Smiths or the Manic Street Preachers.  But there isn’t really a band like that around at the moment, at least with that sort of profile.  So instead Laura is a fan of the Long Blondes – a risky approach, because frankly, they’re a bit obscure.  (We’re dealing here with a defunct band who never made the top 40 album chart, and who never got a single into the top 20.  Their biggest hit was “Weekend Without Makeup”, if you’re wondering.)  But as usual with Phonogram, it doesn’t really matter whether you know the band or not.  The point is what they mean to Laura, and her love/hate relationship with Penny… and that’s universal.

Thunderbolts #138 – Jeff Parker and Miguel Sepulveda take over as the new creative team.  With storylines already in progress, though, it’s far from a clean break.  To be honest, I haven’t been buying this in a while, and the current line-up really is a motley collection of weirdos.  Nuke wearing a hockey mask and calling himself Scourge?  Mr X, the serial killer from Frank Tieri’s Wolverine run?  The Headsman, from frigging Untold Tales of Spider-Man?  Actually, there’s a nice dynamic here, between the characters who are stark raving mad, and those who are merely mercenaries.  Still, it does feel like a book that’s drifted an awfully long way from its roots – though clearly it’s going to need a new direction in a few months when Dark Reign is over.  In the meantime, Parker tells an enjoyable enough opening story with them, and then sets up, you guessed it, an appearance by the Agents of Atlas.  Let nobody say they haven’t got enough exposure.

Wolverine: Origins #42 – In which Wolverine chats with Bruce Banner for a few pages and then, having apparently exhausted the potential of the mandatory guest appearance, pops off to Japan to speak to the Silver Samurai.  Basically, it’s one of those stories where the bad guy knows how the good guy thinks, and so the good guy has to act out of character to outwit him.  You know the schtick.  It’s always horribly contrived, and this is no exception.  As so often with Wolverine: Origins, it’s got moments where you’re obviously meant to stand back and admire the clever plot twists; naturally, much depends on how clever you think they really are.  Admittedly, it all fits together – the thing is, it fits into a horribly convoluted pretzel.  But Doug Braithwaite’s art is pretty good, and it’s all harmlessly silly.

Wolverine: Weapon X #7 – This is the second part of Jason Aaron’s asylum arc, and evidently he knows better than to drag out the mystery for too long.  This issue doesn’t give us a complete explanation of how Wolverine ended up in the asylum, but it does give us a reasonable idea of what’s going on there: once upon a time it had a sideline in providing mentally unstable but readily deniable hitmen, but now the lunatics are literally running the asylum and the whole operation has gone completely off the rails.  Equally, five issues of Logan shivering in a corner would have been a bit much, but Aaron moves us forward on that one too.  I’m enjoying this one a lot; it’s a weird little story, but with plenty of dark humour, and it knows not to outstay its welcome.

X-Men Legacy #229 – Isn’t this book meant to be part of the “Necrosha-X” crossover?  Oh well, evidently it’s going to join that one late.  In the meantime, we’re still in the middle of a “Nation X” branded arc – which, as you’ve probably guessed by now, simply means it’s the first arc to take place after the move to Utopia, no more, no less.  This issue, Rogue tries to rescue Bling! from Emplate’s clutches.  I realise that’s a bit melodramatic, but Emplate’s a melodramatic kind of guy, and I feel very strongly that he has clutches from which minor characters must be rescued.  Daniel Acuna’s art is perfectly suited to the surreal weirdness of Emplate’s dimension (if slightly less suited to the scenes in the real world), and I really Mike Carey’s take on Emplate, as someone who fancies himself a long-suffering stoic victim of circumstances.

Nov 22

Survivor Series 2009

Posted on Sunday, November 22, 2009 by Paul in Wrestling

Continuing another series from If Destroyed, it’s time for another WWE pay-per-view preview.  Mercifully, the days of three-week gaps between shows appear to be behind us, as the 2010 schedule is generally more relaxed than this year’s.  So this time, the writers have had plenty of time to build to the show.  This isn’t to say they’ve done it very well.  But they’ve had the time.

Survivor Series is traditionally one of the big shows of the year – which is to say, it’s the Thanksgiving show, and they’ve been using the name for 23 years now, so it must be important.  As we’ve mentioned before, the WWE is currently on a kick of giving every show a gimmick, but Survivor Series always had one: 5-on-5 tag team elimination matches.  Fortunately, the company seems to have figured out that you can’t always shoehorn the main event storylines into the gimmick match du jour, so a pattern is emerging: two title matches to headline the card, three gimmicks below. 

And this month’s card looks like this… (more…)

Nov 21

House to Astonish Episode 27

Posted on Saturday, November 21, 2009 by Al in Podcast

In which we look at conventions, movies, TV, awards and, believe it or not, some comics. We do our usual round-up of the solicitations and review S.W.O.R.D., Supergod and Victorian Undead, and bid a welcome return to the Official Handbook of the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe. All this plus the Shiny Happy Marvel Universe, a doughnut half-filled with delicious jam and half-filled with poison, and the Daleks getting people to read Wednesday Comics.

The podcast is here and on iTunes as usual – let us know what you think by way of comment here, on Twitter, by email or through flashing a lamp on a Dover cliffside in the middle of the night.

(As promised in the podcast, Kate Beaton’s website is at Hark! A Vagrant! – go check her out.)

Nov 16

Number 1s of 2009: 15 November 2009

Posted on Monday, November 16, 2009 by Paul in Music

Continuing my series from If Destroyed, there’s yet another new number 1 this week… but not the expected one.  Most of us took it as read that Leona Lewis, the 2006 X-Factor winner, would go in at number 1 with “Happy”, the lead single from her new album.  Especially after she showed up on the X-Factor to promote it.

But instead, the Black Eyed Peas unexpectedly pick up their third (and least irritating) number one of the year, with “Meet Me Halfway.” (more…)

Nov 15

The X-Axis – 15 November 2009

Posted on Sunday, November 15, 2009 by Paul in x-axis

Well, hello there.  I’m Paul O’Brien, the other half of House to Astonish, and it seems to us that there’s not much point in having two blogs for one podcast.  So we’re folding them in together.  Which means that basically you’ll be getting all the stuff I was doing at If Destroyed, but with a more memorable URL and a more attractive layout.  (Well, except that we won’t both have to plug the podcast, obviously.)  Oh, and I get to use WordPress instead of Blogger.  It’s got a lot more buttons, hasn’t it?

I gather the comments system here has all sorts of exciting moderation options that I could never be bothered figuring out with Haloscan.  As near as I can figure out, we’ve currently got it set up so that comments should be appearing automatically unless they get flagged as spam, but, well, who knows?  I’ll keep an eye on it.

So let’s get down to business.  Not many X-books this week, but there’s a ton of other new releases worth mentioning…

Batman & Robin #6 – I’ve seen quite a few people saying that this was the issue where Philip Tan’s limitations as an artist really leapt out at them.  True enough, getting him to follow Frank Quitely invites rather unflattering comparisons, particularly when Quitely is still doing the covers.  This issue’s villain is the Flamingo, evidently conceived as a flamboyant, Liberace-style assassin who inexplicably communicates entirely in grunts.  And yes, it works much better on Quitely’s cover than it does in the interior, because Tan doesn’t seem entirely sure how to combine those two elements, and ends up drawing a generic raving lunatic in very odd clothes.  Something’s also going on with the style, which seems less precise (or scratchy) and more soft focus than even the previous issue.  But it’s not that bad, it’s just not up there with the standards set by Quitely on the opening arc.  Admittedly, my previous experience of Tan is his hopeless 2003 run on Uncanny X-Men, so perhaps I’m just perpetually surprised that he’s improved so much over the last six years.  As for the story, well, Morrison is evidently trying to do some sort of meta-commentary about alternate models for the evolution of the Batman franchise, with Dick and Damian representing thoughtful development, and the Red Hood and Scarlet as thuggish violence; but it does feel a little as though he’s still arguing over the grim-and-gritty developments of the mid-nineties.

Cable #20 – You’ll never guess, but in this issue, Bishop tries to kill Hope, and Cable tries to protect her, and in the end Bishop doesn’t manage to kill Hope, and they escape.  Just like in every other issue.  I’ll give Duane Swierczynski credit – there’s a point near the end of this issue where I actually thought for a moment he was going to kill Bishop and the story was going to do something different for a change.  But then he didn’t, and it didn’t.  Cable has become a sorely repetitious comic, where the characters do the same thing every month while hoping for something to turn up.  As I’ve said before, the series would really benefit from giving Cable and Hope some sort of goal beyond mere survival: why not let them try and kill (or strand) Bishop, or at least give them some sort of quest to find a way back to the present day?  Without any of that, it’s just the same story in a different setting time after time.  Fortunately, it looks like we’re finally nearing the end, since Hope’s return to the present day is evidently the focus of the next major crossover.  But that seems to have been dictated more by the demands of Marvel’s publishing schedule than the needs of the story.  They could have done this more effectively in half the time.  This particular issue is a characteristically competent rendition of the usual, and while the art is a bit lacking in atmosphere, it tells the story.  It’s okay; it’s just the same thing we always get.

Dark X-Men #1 – This is a five-issue miniseries about Norman Osborn’s fake X-Men team, by Paul Cornell and Leonard Kirk.  Thanks to a year of saturation coverage, virtually every story you could possibly tell with “Dark Reign” has been done at least three times by now.  So thankfully, Dark X-Men doesn’t much bother with that stuff, and simply focusses on telling a regular story about this wonky and wholly unqualified team of lunatics trying their best to act the part of proper superheroes, by investigating weird mutant-related stuff in California.  After all, even Norman’s teams have to go out and do their official job from time to time.  With the wider storylines de-emphasised, this turns out to make a surprisingly successful team book.  The Dark X-Men aren’t an entirely unsympathetic team – only one of them is an outright bad guy, after all – and the team dynamic of Mystique trying to keep her crew of maniacs on the rails makes for good entertainment.  You might have seen in the pre-release publicity that this series also provides the return of a character who’s been out of circulation for the better part of a decade; I wasn’t really looking forward to that, but by the end of the issue, Cornell has more or less managed to sell me on it. 

There’s also a back-up strip by Duane Sweirczynski and Steve Dillon, billed as part two of “A Girl Named Hope.”  (The first part was in Psylocke #1, if you’re wondering.)  From what we’ve seen so far, presenting this as some sort of serial is a bit of an overstatement.  It’s actually a string of character vignettes, presumably intended to introduce Hope to readers who haven’t been buying Cable.  Which would be fine if it was appearing in Uncanny X-Men or Wolverine, but perhaps it’s a bit dubious when it’s used as a sales device in its own right to try and shore up Dark X-Men.  Still, the story itself isn’t bad at all – especially because it focusses on Cable and Hope’s relationship rather than getting caught up in the Bishop stuff.

PunisherMax #1 – A relaunch of the Max imprint’s version of the Punisher, this time with Jason Aaron and Steve Dillon.  And yes, they’re really calling it PunisherMax.  Perhaps the name sounds slightly less stupid to Americans (though I doubt it), but it can’t help reminding me of the trailers that used to run on the Adam & Joe podcast.  (“The Adam & Joe podcast now has a new name: PODMAX.  The name will never be written down, or spoken out loud, but every time you think of the Adam & Joe Podcast, remember: PODMAX…”) 

Anyway, Aaron is working on the basis that his Punisher is a completely separate character from the Marvel Universe version.  And he’s taking advantage of that fact, by doing a story that introduces his version of the Kingpin.  To be honest, it’s only very loosely based on the original character; he’s kept the name and appearance, but otherwise Aaron is telling a story about a henchman politicking his way to the top.  The tone of the story is weirdly inconsistent – it veers between over-the-top gross-out violence and more down-to-earth character moments.  Presumably Aaron’s going for black comedy drama, much as Garth Ennis did, but he’s in danger of lurching between the two instead of bringing them together.  Still, Steve Dillon can do both , and the story hangs together.  It’s a strong first issue, but the comedy sequences could be blended in a little better.

Strange #1 – At first glance, this is an odd time to do a Dr Strange miniseries.  The current set-up, from events in New Avengers, is that Strange’s hands have started shaking again, so he can’t do proper magic any more.  Consequently he’s been replaced as Sorcerer Supreme by Brother Voodoo, handed his cosmic carriage clock, and packed off into retirement.  But in fact, in many ways this makes Strange an easier character to write.  The problem with magic is that it’s terribly open-ended, and omnipotent heroes aren’t very interesting, because they have to face horribly contrived threats.  In this version, Strange still has tons of mystic knowledge, and some rudimentary mystic ability, but not a great deal else.  And so Mark Waid is doing stories with that.  The tone is pretty light – this issue, Strange helps to thwart a demonically-possessed baseball team – but it’s a good read, and goes to show that you can do more with the character when he can’t just hand-wave everything away.  Artist Emma Rios is working in a slightly manga-tinged version of the Marvel house style (though a Google search suggests her range actually extends way beyond that), and it’s the right approach for a slightly old-fashioned but fun story like this.

Supergod #1 – Warren Ellis’ latest Avatar miniseries sounds like it might be an exercise in controversy-baiting – and the cover, showing a Superman-style figure on a crucifix, certainly wouldn’t dissuade you from that view.  In fact, Ellis’ big idea for this series is Voltaire’s claim that if God didn’t exist, it would be necessary to invent him.  So it’s a story about various government super-soldier projects all trying to produce superhumans to… worship, basically.  Well, I call it a story.  It’s really more of a lecture, with a series of vignettes that are variations on that basic theme.  But it’s not much of a narrative – it’s a whole issue of the usual stuff about how dangerous superhumans would be in the real world, with a bit of religious fervour sprinkled over the top, and a couple of hints about plots to be developed in future issues.  Ellis is clearly very pleased with this idea, so it’s a shame he didn’t just allow it to emerge from the story instead of painstakingly explaining it for 20 pages.  In its favour, though, the book has some excellent artwork from Garry Gastonny, who has some wonderful character designs, who knows how to make his cities look different from each other, and who generally looks like he’d be right at home doing this sort of thing for a major publisher.

S.W.O.R.D. #1 – Kieron Gillen and Steven Sanders are the creative team for this ongoing series about the intergalactic Earth-protecting agency that Joss Whedon introduced in Astonishing X-Men.  Or, more accurately, it’s an ongoing series for commander Abigail Brand and some supporting characters… but S.W.O.R.D. is catchier.  And this actually has some potential as an ongoing title.  Brand is a relatively undeveloped character, and the organisation’s remit is broad enough to allow stories about virtually anything.  Plus, it has a comfortable niche in the Marvel Universe, bridging the gap between the cosmic titles and the earthbound titles.

It’s a good introductory issue.  Henry Gyrich is brought in to provide an internal sparring partner for Brand, we get a cheerfully bizarre parade of the sort of stuff S.W.O.R.D. has to deal with (alien diplomats demanding “temples of pain”), and there’s a story about Brand’s embarrassing brother showing up with a bounty-hunter in tow.  Since this book is written by somebody British, you can probably guess which bounty-hunter.  And a couple of subplots are set up for members of the supporting cast.  As Hank points out near the end, these are pleasingly traditional challenges, rather than the catastrophic upheavals that most Marvel titles seem to go for these days.  Quite right too; it’s only issue #1. 

The dialogue is great.  I’m not so wild about the art; it’s generally solid, but Sanders goes overboard with Brand charging around, and his Beast is so far off model that he appears to have turned into a donkey.  Mind you, he does a decent line in robot bounty-hunters.  There’s also a back-up strip illustrated by Gillen’s Phonogram partner Jamie McKelvie; it’s basically an extension of the Lockheed subplot from the main story, but X-Men fans may wish to note that it does finally offer an explanation of why nobody’s been able to recover Kitty Pryde yet.

Uncanny X-Men: First Class #5 – Um… well, a bunch of aliens invade Earth and the X-Men fight them.  Yeah, that’s basically it.  It’s good to see a First Class issue creating its own villains rather than relying on the parade of guest stars that seems to have become the norm in these books, and in fairness, Scott Gray and Nelson DeCastro do a fine job of building them up as a threat.  And they’re villains with great character designs, too.  But it’s still a very familiar story.  Then again, that’s fine, if you think the First Class books are there to provide a lead-in for younger readers; by that standard, if any book should be doing the X-Men in generic action stories where they fight bad guys, this is the one.

X-Babies #2 – Well, this is turning into a very strange series.  The plot is straightforward enough.  The new management at Mojoworld have replaced the X-Babies with even cutesier versions.  The brats have escaped, but now find themselves hounded by a string of impossibly saccharine and irritating characters extracted from Star Comics, Marvel’s short-lived mid-eighties imprint for younger readers.  The Star imprint is so obscure that it’s hard to imagine there’s much of a built-in audience for this.  The motive, presumably, is some sort of warped corporate synergy: there’s a Star Comics trade paperback due out at the end of the month.  This issue even includes a reprint of Planet Terry #1, encouraging readers to pick up the trade to find out what happened next.  (The answer, if you’re wondering, is that the book got cancelled at issue #12 without resolving the plot.)  But the main story seems to have no affection for the characters at all – they’re openly portrayed as hatefully twee, boringly worthy, generally loathsome relics of a justly-forgotten past.  To be fair, I wouldn’t be surprised if the final issue reveals that these are supposed to be cutesy doppelgangers of the Star characters, much like the imposter X-Babies from issue #1.  But still, if the aim of this series is to promote the Star trade paperback – and I can’t imagine what else it could be – you’d have thought they’d be trying to convince us that these were lost classics, instead of encouraging us to throw the characters down the deepest available well.

X-Force #21 – Rather confusingly billed as the second part of “Necrosha”, though it’s the third to appear.  So presumably the New Mutants and Legacy chapters don’t count.  For the most part, this is a fairly dispiriting read.  Zombie mutants are still attacking Utopia, and X-Force fight them, and… yeah, that’s basically the story.  Actually, that’s not quite fair – there’s also various people trying to wake up Elixir so that he can resolve their respective subplots.  But basically it’s an extended fight scene along much the lines you’d expect.  Artist Clayton Crain gets through most of the issue without drawing more than a handful of intelligible backgrounds, seemingly content as usual to turn down the lights and hope for the best.  Naturally, the result is that the action appears to take place in an unspecified fogbank somewhere, with the occasional girder lying around.  To be fair, there’s a couple of decent moments in here (there’s a rather nice panel of Archangel shielding the team from a fire, which makes effective use of light and shade), but a lot of it is just murky and inexpressive.  Now, having said all that, the story does start to get my attention near the end, when it finally gets to the point, and Selene attempts to resurrect the entire population of Genosha, thus restoring mutantkind… ish.  That’s got some potential, and evidently this is going to be more than just a whole storyline of “and then vengeful techno-zombies attacked.”  So if we’re getting that obligatory stuff out of the way before moving on to the more interesting bit of the story… fair enough, I guess.

X-Men Forever #11 – The last issue of Chris Claremont’s alternate-history series ended by teasing that the differences from the Marvel Universe went even further than he’d previously suggested.  But naturally, we don’t pick up on that subplot straight away.  Instead, it’s off to Russia, where Colossus has taken up a position as an official superhero of the Russian government.  From the look of it, this is going to be a device to bring Magik into the cast (the eighties ended with her turned into a child and packed off back to Siberia, so that’s where the series picks her up).  A nice straightforward globe-trotting lead story, and a bunch of cutaways advancing a score of subplots… yes, it’s eighties-style Claremont.  But that’s what he does best.  Tom Grummett is on form, too.  He does a great job with the Crimson Dynamo armour, and I like his patriotic redesign of Colossus’ costume – yes, it has vague echoes of Judge Dredd, but maybe that’s no bad thing.

Nov 8

House to Astonish Episode 26

Posted on Sunday, November 8, 2009 by Al in Podcast

It’s the one-year anniversary of House to Astonish, and as a special treat (if you can call it that) it’s an extended and unedited edition of the podcast, with the usual news roundup, reviews of Assault on New Olympus, The Great Ten and Stumptown, and a special bonus Listener Questions feature. All that plus our anniversary renumbering, the phrase ‘boring boring boring lazy boring boring crap’ and a saucepan being hit with a metal stick.

Download here, and let us know what you think either in the comments threads or by email, Twitter or by secret coded messages in ancient Templar manuscripts.

Thanks to everyone who’s enjoyed our show for the last twelve months, and we hope we’ll continue to entertain as we head on into our second year.

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?