I was only going to do a two part review this week and just
have notes on every other book that I read, but these seven books deserve a
little more than a quick quip about them. It has been an amazing few weeks of
comics with so many excellent books and these certainly fit in that category.
Stumptown #4 by Greg Rucka
and Matt
Southworth was an astonishing issue. I’m a big Greg Rucka fan and
love this series, but for me the first mini-series was better. This series while
very good was not as good and then we got this issue. It is a car chase done as
a comic book and it works. Now I will give Greg all the kudos in the world for
creating a great character in Dex Parios. I’m ready for the TV series and want
to be involved in the casting of Dex as we will need the right person to pull
her character off. All that being said the comic was ruled by the art work. No
one is ever going to mistake Matt Southworth for Ivan Reis or Byran Hitch, two
of today’s bigger super hero art stars, but I don’t think either one of them
could have pulled off making a car chase exciting in a comic book. The page
layouts, the blurring of the art, superimposing an old style speedometer over
the art, design, expressions the whole nine yards was flat out fantastic. Years
ago a movie “Bullitt” (yeah I’m old) pulled off a great car chase scene and it
is clear the Matt Southworth used it for an inspiration. You can click the link
to compare. I’m not trying to take anything away from Matt’s work, I’m pointing
out what appears to be an influence or inspiration for the car chase. What Matt
has done is almost the impossible and this is made an exciting car chase
depicted in still pictures. A simply amazing accomplishment and makes me look
forward to see how the whole thing wraps up next issue.
UPDATE -
Matthew Southworth said...
UPDATE -
Matthew Southworth said...
Hi Jim--
Actually, I didn't think of Bullitt while working on the chase (haven't ever seen the movie, though I've seen the car chase years ago), but it's bound to have been an influence. I deliberately didn't watch any chase sequences while working on it, though my favorite chase is probably Tarantino's DEATH PROOF, so that and others were undoubtedly in my head.
Stumptown is indeed a series of minis, and this arc is ending with issue 5. We haven't talked yet about what we're doing for the next one...
Jim: Thought we should add this to the body of the post - as Matthew clears up my impression with the facts. Thanks Matthew.
Actually, I didn't think of Bullitt while working on the chase (haven't ever seen the movie, though I've seen the car chase years ago), but it's bound to have been an influence. I deliberately didn't watch any chase sequences while working on it, though my favorite chase is probably Tarantino's DEATH PROOF, so that and others were undoubtedly in my head.
Stumptown is indeed a series of minis, and this arc is ending with issue 5. We haven't talked yet about what we're doing for the next one...
Jim: Thought we should add this to the body of the post - as Matthew clears up my impression with the facts. Thanks Matthew.
Blackacre #1 by Duffy Boudreau
and Antonio
Fabela from Image comics was a nice start. This is one of the best
first issues under the image banner in awhile. Many of the Image first issues are
intriguing but they are too mystery laden or they fail to set the premise for
the series in just one issue. This book contains an interesting credit which I
believe maybe a difference and that is an edits by Rich Amtower. Now I still
have an issue with how the setting was introduced but by the end of the book
you know the setting, the main character and have a clear storyline. Blackacre
is a city that was put together by a group of super rich elites (the 1% I
guess). As the rest of the US falls apart this city is an oasis and has created
its own prison or fortress against the rest of a declining America. The setting
is established by a professor in 2202 talking about the past. This means
Blackacre ultimately leads to a more utopian style future where suit and ties
are still de rigueur for lecturing professors. I think this is a minor problem
because the setting did not have to be done this way. You have made a story
about a dystopian future and then set it in the past that in a sense can
limited what you can do in your setting. With the setting established we meet
our central character Hull. He is a true believer in Blackacre and retiring
from being a guard on the wall. He is recruited to go find his friend from
childhood who has been gone for three years on a mission to the outlying lands.
What Hull does not know about his mission is his tracker, which is to used
recall him to the city, is a bomb as the city authorities want Green killed. It
is a great start and sets up either a limited or unlimited series. The art is
solid, although at times it was hard to tell Hull from his superior, but it
does a good job in telling the story.
Next up is Before
Watchmen Minutemen #5 (of 6) by Darwyn Cooke. I’m such a huge fan of this man’s
work. His story telling is superb. He starts with a one page about the adventure,
jumps to the future where Hollis is talking to Sally about his book and then
goes back to the last great adventure of the Minutemen. In fact it might be the
only truly heroic adventure the group has and the hero is an outsider. Darwyn
weaves a story about Hollis and his obsession of solving Silhouette’s case into
the story of the last adventure of the group before being disbanded by
Congress. We get great in depth characterization of Hollis as we see he has
been the surrogate father for Laurie (current Silk Specte) from the beginning.
We got a great super hero adventure as the Minutemen with help from two new
heroes stop a Japanese plot to irradiate
part of New York as revenge for the atomic bombs we dropped on Japan to end
WWII. We also get some subtle commentary as the real hero was the new hero Scout.
Scout is the son of Bluecoat (the two new guys). Bluecoat was in a Japanese
internment camp and was originally part of the plot against the US. At a point
he realized that revenge was wrong and the two gave their lives to save a
country that turned their back on them. Cooke then moves back to the children
being murdered crime that Silhouette died trying to solve. It ends it with
Hollis solving the crime by finding out that the Hangman is behind it all. Even
with all that I have recapped there is so much more to the story. With Cooke
the pictures truly tell much of the story and a thousand words would fail to do
it justice. The wrap up of this series in the next book should be great. Darwyn
Cooke is a true master story teller and one of the industry’s best
writer/artist.
All New X-Men #3
by Brian Bendis,
Stuart Immonen and Wade Von Grawbadger continues to impress and shock
me. The shocks are, I’m enjoying Bendis on the X-Men, have not run into any
dialogue blocks that kill me and with the accelerated publishing schedule the
decompressed story telling is working just fine. Of course Marvel has whacked
me for $12 retail just to get to the point of Cyclops and young Cyclops having
a showdown. When a story is well done and fast paced the price point is not as
egregious and I soothe my feeling with a free digital copy and a decent
discount from my retailer. This issue focuses on the current Cyclops and his
band of fugitives. We find out that the Phoenix force in addition to restarting
mutants worldwide has played havoc with their powers. Of course convenient
comic book logic allows that only certain mutants were impacted by the force.
You can’t press comic book logic, too hard, you just have to accept and move on
and enjoy the ride. I’m enjoying this ride.
Next up is Detective
Comics #115 by John Layman and Jason Fabok. I have to say it. Scott
Snyder and Grant Morrison need to look in the rear view mirror because Mr.
Layman is riding right up behind them and is threatening to pass one or both of
them. This issue had the die cut cover announcing its entry into “Death of the
Family”. I’m not sure John got the memo because it is a seamless story that
just continues to build on his last two issues. We get tons of Penguin, a little
Joker, lots of Clayface, some plot resolution and a new villain to enter the
fray, the Emperor Penguin. At the same time Jason Fabok is knocking the art out
of the park. What a great series. Note to DC, please give Mr. Layman as many
books as he can write without killing the goose that is laying the golden eggs.
If you don’t do it, Marvel will.
Fury Max #7 by Garth Ennis
and Goran Parlov
proves you can’t keep Ennis away from the Punisher. Nick is back in Viet Nam
being given an assassination assignment and needs a wingman who is Frank
Castle. Ennis has such a great feeling for these characters and makes them so
unapologetic that it is refreshing in its brutal honesty. I think my favorite
part of the book is where Fury is ruminating at some distant point in the
future about his life and he compares what the US did in Viet Nam against all
the other US misadventures in foreign lands. It took an Irish writer nail it to
a “T”. The quote “Nam. The greatest American f**k up of all time. Lose sixty thousand of
your own killing three million of the locals. Let the Khmer Rouge get in next
door. That’s another million right there. Make the guy in the G.I. lid,
everyone’s savior from WWII, make him a rapist and a butcher in the eyes of the
world and still lose.” That sums it up.
And the last of the magnificent seven is Colder #2 by Paul Tobin and Juan Ferreyra. This book should not
be equated with Chico, as it is a very strong book and not just tagging along
to prove its manhood. Colder is a great horror story and the first issue set up
the characters and this issue tells us what the heck is going on. Ferreyra’s
art is just terrific. The oddball character that has to be both comical and
menacing is pulled off to perfection. The scenes as Declan pulls Reece into the
madness to show her the other world are well done. Getting horror in a comic is
a tough job and Tobin with Juan has made it work. Tobin is building up the
characters and making us care about them, especially Reece, Declan former car
taker. She is our point of view character and we are both learning about the
insanity that surround Declan and the mysterious man chasing him.
Part 3 will be up
tomorrow later in the day. As this post ran longer then I thought, I figured it
should get its own 24 hours as top dog.
Not sure Stumptown ends next issue. Pretty sure its an ongoing now.
ReplyDeleteHmm. I thought Stumptown was doing the series of minis, a la Hellboy or Atomic Robo.
ReplyDeleteHi Jim--
ReplyDeleteActually, I didn't think of Bullitt while working on the chase (haven't ever seen the movie, though I've seen the car chase years ago), but it's bound to have been an influence. I deliberately didn't watch any chase sequences while working on it, though my favorite chase is probably Tarantino's DEATH PROOF, so that and others were undoubtedly in my head.
Stumptown is indeed a series of minis, and this arc is ending with issue 5. We haven't talked yet about what we're doing for the next one...
Matthew - Thanks for your comments. It is still just flat out an amazing piece of art.
ReplyDeleteI have cut pasted your comments into the body of the post.
Sorry its another mini, but I love the book, so as long as it returns, I'll be happy.
ReplyDelete