Before we get to the crux of the matter we need to first
provide you with a list of next week’s books, with the clean and concise list
here and the more detailed offering page here. You will note the list is almost
bare as it is actually a skip week. Publishers have cleverly decided to ask
retailers to hold these books so they have something for the interim holiday
week. I’m of course most curious to read Spider-Man #700 and see if Marvel is
making a serious change or what they are planning. Sadly, like New Coke, I
believe the backlash to any real change will be a hasty retreat to the status
quo.
What this means for the blog is that next week will not be a
week in review as I have asked my store to not ship anything until the next
week. The postage cost will be half the cost of the books. I have decided
instead to do a series of solo reviews of a few comics from my massive pile of
over 40 freaking titles this week and will post them as few post over for
December 24 and December 31. So it will be Part 1, Part 2 this week and we will
see how many parts in total for next week. Of course readership is usually down
during the holidays but still Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays to everyone.
The one and only book I’m reviewing for this post is Hawkeye #6 by Matt Fraction writer, David Aja
artist and Matt
Hollingsworth colorists. My pithy title for the post is due to the
fact that this book is receiving almost universal praise as the best thing to
ever hit the stands. Per many others it is monumental and blowing people away
with it brash and boldness. If I believe all that was written I would swear
this is the next Dark Knight Returns or Watchmen. (A quick side note, it has
been too many years since someone has redefined the super hero in such a
dramatic fashion.) It is a good book even a very good book, but it is not all
that.
First off in regards to the actual series, let’s face it a
Hawkeye series was only green lit because of the Avengers movie. Secondly no
one at Marvel expected the series to be much of anything. That means that
Fraction was left to play with this character. Fraction was allowed to make
this Clint Barton vastly different from the many iterations of the character
done before and in truth that is a positive. As I read the book this version of
the character has a genuine quality to him that is lacking in many super hero
characters. At the end of the day when this book was released the bar was so
low that anything of quality was going to be a surprise. Fraction has infused
the book with a light hearted tone and a street level feeling that makes this
Clint Barton more of an everyman as opposed to a true super hero. As in the movie
a guy with a bow and arrow next to a Norse God, high tech Armor and a super
solider is out of place. Therefore Fraction removed him from that place. Add to
that mix the artwork of David Aja and the color work of Matt Hollingsworth and
you have a book that is a fun and quick read. This of course has created the
showering of accolades for the book.
And of course being the contrarian that I am the more the
book was being praised as the Second Coming the more I took a harder critical
eye in my view of the book. The more I looked the more I saw it for what it is
a wonderful stage illusion that loses some of its charm once it is explained.
Nothing I’m saying means I do not love this series or that I want the series to
fail. Fraction has made me a fan of his work with this and his FF work, but it
is just a very good series, it is not the best book out there, it is not the
most innovative thing ever done. It is a very good series, but let’s be honest
about it.
What is great is David Aja’s art. He has a minimalist touch
to his work and is far from a photo realism of many artists. It is almost a
simplistic style and in the family of the Cameron Stewart, Cliff Chiang and the
Chris Samnee(s) of the art world. The simplistic nature of the actual drawing
belies the great story telling, layouts and deft hand in displaying emotions.
He uses body language, camera angles and every tool in the box to tell a great
story. The words, even in conveying complex story parts, are superfluous. To
his credit Matt Fraction leaves many panels wordless as to add anything would
be a crime. It takes restraint for most writers to know when be quiet and let
the art speak, Fraction has done a great job in that area.
The other great piece of this book is Matt Hollingsworth. The
color palette that he is working with adds and enhances the art. It is not
garish or over the top, it is muted with a wide variety of colors. Each book
regardless of the artist has the same feeling to it as the issue before. I
believe the advent of digital coloring has been one of the great enhancements
in comics as once a colorist finds the perfect palette he can save those exact
gradations for the next issue.
Finally we get to the core of what this book is about and
that is the writing. Matt Fraction is doing a good job, not a great job. I’m
enjoying it, but I see problems with it that as an editor I would push Matt to
be even better. Issue #6 is as good an example of the series as any. First off
Marvel is publishing this series almost every other week. I know Marvel plans
to make many of their book 18 issues a year or more then 12 and while the pace
is fine for decompressed stories, it has enhanced the sameness I get from
Hawkeye. Hawkeye has become the punk in almost every issue of the book. He
rises above it after a point, but he has been beaten up by some many street
level thugs that I feel his place as a major level hero has been eroded.
Hawkeye should be able to stand up to some level of criminal or else how can he
even hang his hat out as a legitimate hero. I have never been a fan of the
“Charlie Brown” type character being cast as the hero. For years many
Spider-Man fans talked about him as “Charlie Brown”. Clint needs to be more. An
occasional defeat is fine and certainly part of the super hero cannon, but it
is already feeling like a formula.
Next is the structure of the story. I believe that a strong
writer can tell a story that starts at the beginning and moves forward in a
straight line until the end. Flashback, jump cuts, flash forwards and all the
rest have their place in certain stories and certainly can spice up a tale or
two. Fraction is seemingly relying on those features to try and make a story
seem cool or edgy when it is not. This issue was about Hawkeye taking a break
from being a hero, getting beaten up by the Russian mob, wanting to quit to
protect others and getting his mojo back after Kate (the other Hawkeye) lecturing
him. He becomes the hero again and we get a warm Christmas story in the mix of
it. This was a very good issue and a very nice story. The problem is the jump
cuts going from Dec 18 to Dec 13 to Dec 18 to Dec 17 to Dec 14 to Dec 15 to Dec
19 to Dec 15 to Dec 16 to Dec 19 where not necessary. It was a trick and not
needed for the story. It is way too much of pulling a rabbit out of the hat and
almost not trusting that you have a good story. It is a good story and should
have been told in a linear fashion. Fraction is telling a story stories that didn’t
need the trick arrows in his quiver.
As I said this is a good to very good book, but not a great
book. Hawkeye is on my reading list and will be with Fraction as the writer for
a long time, but I hope he learns to trust what he has written and stop trying
to dazzle us and just tell us the story. One thing that would be nice is that
in a collected edition or a digital version we should be given the linear
version of the story.
Part 2 Later Today – The DC Preview Review Wednesday and
then one last time next Monday before the New Year.
Jim,
ReplyDeleteWhy don't you just cut up your issue and put it together the way you like it? I thought I read somewhere (letters page?) that Matt always makes sure the story works in order first, before he decides to change it around (blame Pulp Fiction for highlighting the out of sequence approach).
Even though I thought issue 006 was "Awesome", I voted for it in the best of the week poll primarily to see it go 6 for 6 when All-New X-Men #004 was really my favorite.
I think part of the charm of the series is that you just come away from the reading experience knowing you really enjoyed it. Was it the best ever? Probably not, but it's consistently good and worth the three or four bucks (that's saying something right there).
I don't think you're wrong about it starting to get a little stuck in a particular formula though (and I enjoyed your explanation). I don't consider this the Hawkeye that I've been reading about for years. It's not a new face under the mask, but it's just a new personality under the old face. With continuity thrown out the window a lot of times, isn't it nice to just have a good story be told the way the writer wants without worrying about reboots and the like?
My favorite part of the series is his interactions with Kate. I think story-wise the issue where she turned out to be disguised as Madame Mask was better than this past one.
Now go take some time watching the second season of Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes on Netflik. It's wonderful and I love the way they blend in 50 years of continuity into something the fits together much more concisely. I watched the Ant-Man (Scott Lang) episode yesterday and it was partially the familiar Marvel Premiere #47-48, but they added Luke Cage (Bendis version)and Iron First (70's outfit) into the mix.
So have a very Merry and SWEET Christmas!
If I cut it up and rearrange my nephew will be confused when he reads it.
ReplyDeleteMerry Christmas to you and your family also.