This week has to be considered a great week because the Orioles
made the playoffs and won the wild card game. It is a tough damn thing that MLB
added this year to start the playoff round with a one and done for four teams. Oh
wait this is suppose to be about comics…..
The week in comics was not as good. I would give the week a B. There
were way too many okay books and books that were entertaining and only a few “A”
list type books. To be fair I have left five books to be read that are not
included.
I think it we should take it category by category.
The top books for me were Detective Comics #13, Before Watchmen Rorschach
#2, Fatale #8 and Animal Man #13.
Detective Comics #13 by John Layman and Jason Fabok
was the best book of the week. I was anticipating John’s work on this book and
had high hopes going in. The cover featuring the Penguin made me pause as I’m
not a Penguin fan, but John delivered and made the book great. Jason Fabok’s
artwork was well done and the book was not only highly entertaining but a good
looking book as well. The backup story by Layman and artist Andy Clark was also a nice end piece.
John has set the Penguin up as a man looking to recapture the glory that his
family had in building Gotham . The Wayne family is his
nature enemy. This is all building off the rich back story and history Scott
Snyder has built for Batman. There is a part of me that dislikes all of this
added history, there is another part that says since DC has taken all the
legacy of most characters away, so it is nice to have one character with a
significant back story. Layman has proven himself to be a great writer from
Chew, to a great Godzilla mini-series and to Mars Attacks. John laces his
stories with humor and fun. He keeps the humor contextually correct for the
book and in this Batman story he lays out the plot by Penguin to kill Bruce
Wayne. The story has Bruce, Batman, Alfred and Nightwing are involved in the
story. It also has all the fighting and high tech gadgets you could want, opens
up a great story arc and sets up a dangerous situation that the hero will have
to overcome in the next issue or two. It is all done without being too dense
and the book is easily the best of the week. Layman has become a great writer
and I see his star rising fast at DC. I just hope he does not take on too much
work and is able to keep everything he does at such a high level.
The other three books all had different things going for
them. Fatale #8
by Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillps keeps getting better and
better. I swear Sean Phillips gets better as an artist all the time. From
Sleeper, to Criminal, to Incognito to Fatale his work impresses me all the time.
Each time I think he has gotten to be the best he can be, it ticks up a notch
or maybe I just appreciated his work all the more. The story itself becomes
better as we get deeper into the story. The story of Nick and Jo is becoming
more interwoven. The richness of both the noir and horror angles gets better as
each chapter resonates with the chapters before. I can’t remember if Ed has
said it, but I have to assume this story may take 60 or more issues, but it has
to have an endpoint. One gripe I have had with Ed is that his super hero work
would drag at times and appear overlong and drawn out. In this type of story
that same type of story telling works perfectly. Next up is Before Watchmen
Rorschach #2 (of 4) by Azzarello
and Bermejo. The book just hits the
right notes about a character who is obsessed, crazed, horribly violent and yet
sympathetic and tragic. Animal Man #13 by Lemire, Pugh and Green II
finally got the story started. It was way too long in coming, but now I’m very
interested in what is going on. The story has Animal Man being thrown a year
into the future and the Rot has won the war.
The second group of books were all entertaining but just did
not quite hit the “A” level for various reasons. Uncanny X-Force #32 is a middle
chapter and for me Phil Noto’s style
was incompatible with the story. Age of Apocalypse #8 saved the book from cancellation
as the ending was a great twist. This book is more of a careful read as I’m
still learning the characters and the art is often tough to follow as it is so
darkly colored. Non-Human
#1 almost lost me in the first few pages as it was jumping right into
the character without any set up; by the end of the book I was sold. Glen (Jersey Gods) Brunswick and Whilce Portacio have given us a new
Blade Runner type setting that is very cool. It has toys coming to life and we
are in the year 2041. Fariest #8 is Rapunzel’s story and set before the
beginning of the Fables series. All set up, but makes you want to come back
next issue. Sweet
Tooth #38 maybe should be in the top category as Jeff Lemire’s story comes to a close, I
think I’m just disappointed the story is ending so soon. Avengers vs X-Men #6 (of 6) (the
fight book) was actually well done and had some very funny one page type things
in it. Almost a jam book where everyone just had fun with what they are doing.
Finally Swamp
Thing #13 was the green side of the Rotworld story and was a good
opening and also actually started the story that has been hinted at for over a
year. It was just not as good as the Animal Man opening.
The bottom group was either an opening chapter that was too
much set up and not enough story (Amazing Spider-Man #695 and Green Lantern #13), a middle chapter
of a story that was confusing or too soft (Danger Club #4 and Earth 2 #5) or a place marker trying
to be a nice one and done and missed (Action Comics #13 and World’s Finest #5) . There is also a
special circle of hell for books like Avengers vs X-Men #12 (of 12), but I talked about
that book enough on Friday.
After Beating The Rangers Oct 5, 2012 |
This format work out well in that I managed to at least
mention almost every book and kept the post to a more reasonable size, we may
try this again next week.
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