Well Part 1 was a freaking long post so these next segments
are going to appear puny in comparison. For the most part I have lots of
complaints about the big two, but they provide a lot of quality entertainment
and this week I think these six books were either very good or excellent
comics.
Detective Comics #14
by John Layman
and Jason Fabok
was excellent. I had dropped Detective but with John Layman now on his second
issue this book has gone from a pass to one of my favorite DC titles. Batman
now has a writer line up of Grant Morrison, Scott Snyder, Peter Tomasi and John
Layman, hell even Dark Knight is coming along as a decent read. Layman
continues to redefine the Penguin, building on what Snyder did by making his
family one of Gotham’s elite. Layman is making him over into the negative of
Bruce Wayne. It is interesting to see him be given a level of gravitas that
turns him from a joke into a potent foe for Batman and Bruce Wayne. Then Layman
moves the story forward with Poison Ivy trying to take out a polluting plant
owned by the Penguin. While Batman does not disagree with Ivy’s goal, he cannot
support her methods. So many shades of gray are built into the characters that
it makes for a great read. The surprise that Clayface shows ups announcing Ivy
is his wife is explained in the back up story, also by Layman. I’m very
impressed with the range of Layman as he writes Chew, Mars Attacks and
Detective and every book is well written, planned out and all three are very
different in tone and content. Jason Fabok’s art is nice and it is great for a
super hero book. I believe he worked with David Finch and it shows in a good
way. All in all I almost hate DC for bringing me back to a book that I had dropped.
Plus they announced Lemire is writing Green
Arrow and Keith Giffen is teaming up with Levitz for LOSH, two more books I
will be getting again.
Swamp Thing #14
by Scott Snyder
and Yanick Paquette
was a very good issue. This book suffered from a year long build up, but now
the story is in high gear and I really enjoy it. We are a year into the future
and Arcane has won and the planet is almost 100% controlled by The Rot. This issue we saw Swamp Thing play Godzilla
against The Rot controlled Teen Titans and that was amusing. I will be curious
to see how this plays out as over the course of the story. In the end if Swamp
Thing and Animal Man win, they still have to re-set the world. If they re-set
the world what are the repercussions? If there are none, then it would
invalidate the story and Snyder and Lemire are too good to do that. The art on
Swamp Thing can be annoying as Paquette plays with some weird layouts and the
flow of the narrative is not always easy to follow. I appreciate what he is
doing and why but it needs to have a better design to keep it readable. Overall
Rotword is great and Lemire and Snyder are doing a great job with the story.
This leads us to Animal
Man #14 by Jeff
Lemire and Steve Pugh. Animal Man’s side of the story is The
Red Kingdom while Swampy’s is The Green Kingdom. It is the same deal with this
series as it was treading water for almost a year and now all the ground work
is paying off in spades. Animal Man is teamed up with some of Earth’s last
defenders and he goes off in search of Maxine, his daughter. This parallel’s
Swamp Thing’s search for Abigal and both are being led into obvious trap of
Anton Arcane, the master of The Rot. I like Buddy’s ragtag group of heroes
consisting of Constantine, Black Orchid, Steel and Beast Boy. It is such an odd
mix and yet Jeff already has them developing chemistry. Both series are coming
together nicely and this is how a cross over should work, separate stories
heading to the same goal. I have to give kudos to DC that they have definitely tried
to keep up a healthy mix of the type of titles they produced. Of course I hate
them for cancelling Hellblazer for no reason. Companies can run two different
versions of characters and make it work, Marvel does Max versions, DC should
maintain a Vertigo version of the character. Way off subject, back to Animal
Man and Swamp Thing; these series have gone from decent slow building to great
fast paced rides.
Marvel gets a representation this week, well I already
mention two books from Marvel and with Marvel Now coming into high gear I will
be reading a lot more. Oddly enough this book is from last week, but due to a
glitch I got Winter Solider #12 by Ed Brubaker
and Butch Guice
this week. Bucky is desperate to save the Black Widow and so he submits himself
to being turned back into the Winter Solider. Hawkeye and Wolverine are in
pursuit and a good battle ensues. Captain America finds out the target of the
new mission is Daredevil. It is a noir spy novel being done with super heroes.
There are some issues here and there and of course good guys committing crimes
under mind control is common in comics, but somehow it is all flowing and
working out to be a nice story. Guice’s artwork is an asset and Ed’s swan song
is high note for this series and shows off why Ed has been so popular.
DC has two more books on this list with World’s Finest #6 by Paul Levitz, Kevin Maguire and George Perez
and we have Green Lantern #14 by Geoff Johns
and Doug Mahnke.
World’s Finest is blessed with two great artists and this issue having Batman’s
two children face off (Huntress and Robin) was very cool. Earth 2 vs Earth DCNu
(what, what do we call it, as Earth One is the graphic novel world) was
enjoyable and should be interesting next issue when they team up. Green Lantern
is amazingly good. I swear just getting Hal away from being the main character
helps. We have the Guardians going off the deep end and the confrontation
between the new GL and the JL was well done. The one headache I have is the
First Lantern. He is not being shown and he is a mysterious part of the entire
Guardian history. The problem in the new DCU is that even a died in the wool GL
fan who is immersed in all the stuff that has been made up over the last 50
years could think he knows who it is and be dead wrong. Or he could be right,
but the character will be totally different. The “surprise” and shock value of
this type of slow reveal is lost because you can do anything you want since
past history means nothing in the DCU anymore. Still even with knowing that the
other set of little blue people will become the new Guardians down the road,
the story is playing out very well and the book has fresh life being breath
into it. These are two very enjoyable
series.
Part 3 promises to be
even shorter then this part as this got longer then I wanted.
OK, you sold me, I'll check out Detective with Layman. That beautiful cover helps the sale too.
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