A reader Rob said it best about DC in reaction to my column
about the Batman family; the new DCU has left him feeling alienated and
apathetic. It is a perfect expression about what the new DCU has done to me
also. When I was a manager working for Citicorp/Citibank back in the 80’s I was
a rather brash and some would say arrogant person. Some people liked me and
some people hated me. My feeling was at least I left an impression. I never
wanted to go through my life as a cypher. Apathy is more dangerous then being
upset over changes, at least being upset you still care. Achieving apathy means
you just no longer care.
I want to review/talk about three books from DC this week,
that show that I still care just a little, but it is more about the reasons why
they have pushed me further and further into the realm of apathy.
Justice League #9
is an atrocious book and a horrible book to be the flagship of the DCU. In it
we have Geoff
Johns CCO as writer and Jim Lee Co-Publisher as pencil artist and the book
is making a zero impact on me. Geoff Johns’ characterization of the main
characters has no resonance and in fact he makes each of them some sort of sad
saps that we are suppose to feel sorry for, I guess. When you go and read Grant
Morrison’s revival of the JLA back in the nineties and compare it to this, this
book ranks below the JLA Detroit years. It
opens with someone being killed and then we focus on Steve Trevor and this
entire implied history about him and Wonder Woman. The Wonder Woman in these
pages has no relationship to the Wonder Woman in her book. Then we focus on
Batman and get a flashback of poor Bruce repainting his room after his parents
died moping over not having a favorite color anymore. Next Superman is crying
in a flashback about not being picked first for guys forming up teams when he
was a child. Finally we get Cyborg moping over his Daddy issues. Fortunately we
are treated to Steve Trevor being tortured to round out the book. These
characters are not even reflective of their own books, except Cyborg who has no
book and is now an integral member of the league and really has no background
at all. The new Shazam origin by Geoff Johns is being used as a back up in the
book. It has its moments, but it is Gary Frank’s wonderfully realized art that
is taking this slow to develop story and making it in to more then it is at
this point. Also Captain Marvel will never work with the costume that he has
had traditionally, good luck trying to make him a character that can fit inside
the DCU. Since I know they will be collecting this into its own book I realize that
paying four dollars for a back up story makes no sense. I can no longer buy
this comic and I have assigned this book to the cancellation side of the coin.
Let’s talk about a DC book that I’m enjoying and that is Wonder Woman by Brian Azzarello and Tony Akins
(usually Cliff
Chiang). Issue #9 is just the next chapter in this wonderful and new
take on the character. Gone are any hints of her being anything but Wonder
Woman and gone is any impact of her living the traditional super hero life.
Instead the book is stepped in the mythological aspects of the character. Right
now Diana is about to
marry Hades, as she made a deal with him to save Zola. The book has its flaws and
if you poke too hard some of the logic can fall apart, but the suspension of
disbelief that we accept coming into a comic is never dispelled. I loved seeing
Diana dressed to be a bride and poor Hades worried about whether he is really
loved or not. The cliff hanger where Wonder Woman has to pass the test of her
own lasso of truth to prove she truly love Hades is going to end poorly. I miss
Cliff’s work, but accept Tony Akins as a good second artist on the book to keep
it coming out monthly. This has to be my favorite run on Wonder Woman ever,
even surpassing the great 70’s experiment by DC of turning Wonder Woman into a
powerless “modern” and groovy kung fu crime fighter. It was bizarre but great
fun to read and this take is fun and yet elevates Wonder Woman into a true
hero.
Nightwing #9 by Kyle Higgins
and Eddy Barrows
and Andres
Guinaldo was a book that further redefines my apathy for most of the
DCU. On one hand it was a cool story (no pun intended) of Dick overcoming great
odds and putting down his great grand father who professes to be the greatest
Talon of all time. On the other hand this new convoluted back story about the
history of the Graysons is adding levels of complexity to a character that was
never needed. Bruce lost his parents and was dark; Bruce adopted Dick after
losing his parents and allowed Dick to be a lighter and brighter version of the
hero Batman had become. That and being flawed is enough for any character.
Again there is another part of me that likes the addition and changing
characters back stories is de rigueur in comics. No matter what I continue to
view this as a backward progression of the character since the new DCU. Also
the promised private lives of the characters have never been developed at all.
Finally the artwork is typical of what drives so many hero books. It goes for
the big scenes and we have page designs that are convoluted for no reason. The
seven panel page shown here of Nightwing and Talon’s fight is slanted and then
broken into growing panel sizes. I get the last three are for the dramatic and
cinematic effect. I won’t even get into how the car in the background was
smashed totally in the prior page and is now almost okay. The dramatic effect
to me is muted by slanting the panels for no reason. Nothing is gained in story
telling by slanting those panels. Also switching to Dick’s point of view at
that point did not add to the story either. The other page I scanned here is a
scene of Dick’s great grandfather going to the Court of Owls. It is not hard to
follow, but again why slant all of the panels. It only detracts from the story
telling. Way too many artists choose wonky page designs for no reason. JH
Williams III does some wonderful page designs and you can see he is thinking
over and over how to make it a story telling choice as well as do something
only a comic book can do. Williams choices work and sometimes fails, but you
can see a thought process. This is just odd page design for odd page design. It
is okay to have a standard grid format on pages. That way when you choose to do
something different it is to enhance the story. Growing the panels for dramatic
effect is okay, tilting every panel just because is not. All in all I will
continue with Nightwing, but will also drop it pretty readily if the next arc
is no good.
Now to wrap up the column I mentioned Adams
in the title. I meant Neal Adams and I want to publicly ask that Neal stop
doing comic book work. Neal Adams was one of the most influential artists in
the business. Neal’s page designs and move to a more realistic style of artwork
was one of the most innovative and most influential choices ever made. Neal
broke the mold in many many ways and his heir apparent(s) are many, I may give
Bryan Hitch the nod at this point with Ivan Reis. His work on Batman, Green
Lantern/Green Arrow, X-Men, Deadman and other books changed the face of comics.
He, like Jack Kirby, has to be considered the absolute top two biggest influences
for the silver age to the modern age of comics. His work on Batman Odyssey,
Avengers and his Dark Horse Presents stuff is unreadable when written by him
and over rendered from the art side. I wonder how much he does versus his
studio, but regardless he is damaging his legacy. I think Kirby stayed way too
long at the prom also and his work of the last few years was so clunky and
blocky as to be an insult to the creator he was when he was younger. Age is not
always a barrier, but often people have high points in their careers. Neal’s
work is past that prime and it is hard for me to try and convince newer readers
that you have to check out his work from the past when they see this stuff.
Neal, I love your work and you will always be one of the kings of comics, but
please rest on your laurels and devote your skills to other endeavors.
I have blathered on far too long again, I always think I
have nothing to say until I start to type and then I can’t shut up. Next week’s
list is way too big, Chew, Rebel Blood, Mind Mgmt (new series from Dark Horse and
Matt Kindt, should be great), Ragemoor, Cobra, Smoke and Mirrors, Comic Book
Comics GN, Lord of the Jungle, Warlord of Mars Dejah Thoris, Captain America,
Fantastic Four, Hulk , Secret Avengers, Absolute Dark Victory, All Star
Western, Aquaman, Batman Inc., Batman Dark Knight, Fables, GL New
Guardians, I Vampire, Justice League
Dark, Mad Archives Vol 3, Superman, Unwritten, Voodoo.
Come on back next Monday and let’s chat again.
Your Justice League review is a 10. Perfect.
ReplyDeleteI think Neal Adams still will do something great before he's done. Doubt that he'll be writing it, but maybe he will? Odyssey was totally bizarre, but damn, at least it wasn't a tired re-tread story. Maybe we need Ms. Mystic to come back?!!!
-Urthona
Urthona - hope you are right. I'd like to see something great from Neal again. Also someone should at least trade Ms Mystic!
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