Five books jumped out at me this week for different reasons.
Each book was surprising for different reasons, but it just shows how writers
and artists can try to do some different things to make a book different. Oddly
enough four are Marvel and one is from IDW. As I type this I still have a bunch
to read, but DC was a little blah this week to me, more on everything else in
Part 3.
Lighting is glare from my lights |
First up is Frankenstein,
Alive, Alive #2 by Steve Niles and Bernie Wrightson. Only 16 pages of
new story and art and then the actual Frankenstein novel is being serialized in
the back. As I have recently read the original work in an edition with all of
Bernie Wrightson’s work the backup material is not for me. Now for a $4 book
you may think I’m being ripped off to only get 16 pages but you are wrong.
Bernie’s work is so stunning and so amazing it is possibly the best pure
artwork ever produced for a comic book. I own a page of artwork by Berni from a
Marvel story and still regret that I did not buy a Doc McCabre page one year at
Balto-Con. Bernie Wrightson has always loved Frankenstein and the artwork in
this book shows that love. The level of detail and the depth and breadth of his
work is nothing short of astonishing. I have added five photos along with the
cover to give you an idea of how fantastic his work is on this book. Even with
great draftsman like Dave Stevens, Neal Adams, Joe Kubert, Wally Wood and an
incredible list of phenomenal talent in this industry this stands out as work
that will be hard pressed for anyone to ever match. If I had $5,000 to spend I
would love to own one of these pages (time to but a Powerball ticket). In
addition to all of that the actual story itself is good. Niles set up
Frankenstein’s death and now that he has learned he may not be able to die we
are getting the sequel to the original book done with respect and admiration
and staying true to the source material. It may take Bernie a long time to
complete these pages, but after looking at the art I wonder how he did it so
fast.
Daredevil #20 by Mark Waid
and Chris Samnee
was just damn odd. I have enjoyed Waid’s work and he seems to be hitting a
creative high point in his work lately. From Thrillbent to Daredevil and now
Indestructible Hulk; Waid’s work has been firing on all cylinders. Of course I
still think Waid would be the perfect EIC of DC, but I digress. This issue
Daredevil is just a head as the villain of the piece delivers the typical super
villain speech that allows the hero time to get out of the trap. I’m not 100%
sold on the how and why of removing people’s heads without killing them, but
the scenes it provides for the book are funny. DD is at times just a head on
the floor and at one point Coyote (the villain) is feeding other captive heads
bits of meat or something. Every arc of a series can’t be a slam dunk winner
and this story line is faltering for me as of this chapter. It is still better
then the vast majority of the books on the stands and Mark’s writing is smart
and inventive. Chris Samnee’s art is as always great and I believe deserves
even more recognition then he has garnered.
Next up is Hawkeye #4
by Matt Fraction
and Javier
Pulido. One of Marvel’s brightest new series but with this issue I
feel a trend is developing that I do not like. Clint Barton is ostensibly the
star of the book, although Kate Bishop is also Hawkeye. The problem is how
incompetent they are making Clint look. Also the artist portrays him as a puny
guy next to Captain America. Now I don’t expect Clint to be perfect and I’m not
saying he has to look like a roid rage wrestling star, but he is suppose to be
the central character. As such he should be competent and heroic. I mean this
guy hangs out with super power people and only shoots a bow and arrow. He
should not be Snapper Carr to the JLA, he is a hero of merit. I may be jumping
the gun, but Clint got his ass kicked seven ways to Sunday by people he should
be able to take out in a heartbeat and it looks like Kate is going to save his
ass yet again. On issue #4 we should not be hitting a formula. I still enjoy
this series and look forward to each issue but worry it is falling into a
rhythm and pattern way too fast.
Last and not least for this part is Amazing Spider-Man #698 by Dan Slott and Richard Elson. I had heard that spoilers were all
over the internet and I was not getting my books to Friday. I managed to avoid
the spoilers and went in reading the book clean. The first thing I noticed was
I have no clue about who the heck Richard Elson is and was shocked that an
unknown was drawing the theoretical end of the Amazing Spider-Man. It has been
announced that the new Superior Spider-Man will not be Peter Parker. Of course
we know that at some future point Peter Parker will be back, but like the death
of Superman you can’t help but look. It was a very bland “Day in the Life” book
until the very end. At the end we learn Doctor Octopus has taken over Peter
Parker’s body and has all of his memories so he can be Peter Parker, while
Peter is trapped in the dying body of Doctor Octavius. WTF was my initial
reaction. I have not been a tried and true fan of this book and only check in
on occasion but this blew me away. I have so many questions. When did Doc Ock
get this type of powers? How long has the switch been on? And how the heck does
this all work out? After some reflection I now have some other thoughts. It
goes to what is our identity. Phillip Dick played with this idea and they were
expounded on in Total Recall and Blade Runner. What makes us who we are? The
idea that Doc Ock inhabits Peter’s body but has all his memories begs the
question that is he not in fact Peter Parker in some way? If nothing else Slott
has me hooked on this story.
Part 3 coming up
later today.
No comments:
Post a Comment