Each week breaks itself into parts and in order to get the
write ups done I decided to give some review/impressions on whatever I read
first. Often the order I read is almost random and I also use the Best Books ofthe Week post from Cosmic Comix as a guide since that post is up before I get
my books. I have broken up everything else I got around to into two groups, the
best of the books and the rest. These six are the rest of the group and Part 3
will be the best that I read.
Splash Page |
Teen Titans #15
by Scott Lobdell
plot, Fabian
Nicieza script, Brett Booth and Norm Rapmund art was total trash.
From the first page we the stereotypical impossible pose of a female super
hero. This stuff is now routinely mocked and as an industry we should be a
little more grown up about our portrayal of this stuff or at least have some
anatomical idea of what can or cannot be done. Next is the over laying dialogue
that took me a few pages to realize it was Red Robin as narrator. I know they
are trying to make Tim Drake this uber-smart tactician who can predict all the
actions but I find it a drain on the flow of the book as I had to read captains
and then look at the panels. It does not make for an easy read. Next is the
portrayal of Bunker, who I believe is a gay character. If I was gay I would be
insulted by how he comes off as a stereotype in this comic. I dropped this book
a few issues in and only got it again since it was “Death of the Family” book.
Bunker comes off as flamboyantly gay and not as just a good strong character.
Hell all the Titans are portrayed as caricatures and not characters. The
confrontation with the Joker and Red Robin was also boring and not frightening.
Yes, Red Robin is being outguessed by the Joker and the Titans are racing to
find him. The Joker outsmarts them at every turn and has the Titans as his
unwitting accomplices in his plan to turn the populace into people like him. Sadly
Titans #16 is another part of the DOTF story line and I have decided to read
all the chapters. The plus was Lobdell is only the plotter and maybe he is
coming off this book. Nah, it doesn’t matter this book is trash, except for Tim
Drake, who has been ruined by his new origin in the new DCU.
Let’s move onto Invincible
#99 by Robert
Kirkman, Ryan Ottley and Cliff Rathburn. How can you not love this book?
Every single page is a splash page and the entire story is moved forward with
an ease that belays description. While all splash pages the story is still effectively
told and sets up issue #100. Dinosaurus
starts off saying how this is not the death of everyone, therefore giving lie
to the name of the arc. Dinosaurus has a Ras As Ghul type of plan to make the
world better but you need to thin the herd and cut back on all of those huge
metropolises. The mass destruction goes against what Mark Grayson believes and
so the two battle. Mark of course is also dealing with the fact that he
supported Dinosaurus as he thought they could make a difference, but never with
killing people and destroy cities. The cliff hanger ends with Mark about to
have his head squeezed to death by Dinosaurus and now we await issue #100. Out
and out great super hero comic book work and made even better since we know
Kirkman can do anything since he owns the character. It makes what happens in
the book actually mean something to the internal continuity of the characters.
Another good book was Batman
Incorporated #6 by Grant Morrison and Chris Burnham. This has been a
fantastic series and the art by Burnham is incredible. His style is very
distinctive and is perhaps close to Frank Quietly. His work lights up a book.
In fact this issue it was easy to see the four pages that someone else did, I
guess to ease a deadline burden. This book is obviously Grant Morrison’s final
chapter in the magnum opus that his Batman work has become. It is a chapter in
an ongoing story but still reads extremely well. Often Morrison fails to make
each issue stand on its own, but with Batman Incorporated he has been hitting
all the marks. This is a great story about the strangest mother and father
battle over their son ever done.
Before Watchmen Nite
Owl #4 (of 4) by J. Michael
Straczynski, Andy Kubert and Bill
Sienkiewicz was a well done book. It has a touch of sadness as Joe Kubert
died before finishing inking the series. I have read and commented myself, that
this may be the bottom of the barrel as far as BW series have gone. The flip
side of that is the bottom of the barrel is surprisingly close to the top. The
series ends as Nite Owl, Rorschach and Twilight Lady bring down a mass
murderer. At the end of the story Nite Owl and Roscharch are both brought into
clearer definition of who they are and what makes up their character. I will
want to re-read Watchmen after all the series are concluded. I will deeply miss
the great stories that have been produced under this banner. It has been my
favorite work published by DC by far.
The final two books for this post are a beginning and an
ending.
The ending is Harvest
#5 (of 5) by AJ (Cowboy Ninja Viking) Lieberman and Colin Lorimer. I loved this series
of a disgraced doctor becoming involved in organ harvesting for profit and then
his exit from the operation and the battle to bring them down. I did not love
that the series did not end and never explained his hallucination of a small
boy who continued to urge him on. In fact they added a second child, a young
girl to further push the doctor into action. What further sucks is the fact
that the ending had nothing from the writer about what to expect next. Is there
a second mini-series and if not what was your planned ending? If yes, when is
it coming out? I have paid $17.50 for a part of the ride and was enjoying it
until you pulled the plug without the ride being over. This is pure crap and
piss poor marketing. I’m a grown up and can understand if it did not sell. If I
can’t get to see what was planned at least tell me. Also let me know if there
is a next part when it is planned to come out.
The last book is a new series, Black Panther #1 New Avengers #1 by Jonathan (I craft the longest stories ever)
Hickman, Steve Epting and Rick Magyar (who got the smallest
font size ever for an inker credit). The book is about the Black Panther
stumbling across a cosmic menace that will destroy the Earth and maybe the
Universe. He reluctantly pulls together the Illuminati of the MU, to which he
was opposed. The problem I had was the Panther exhibits all of these powers I
never knew he had. Apparently in the FF book by Hickman the Panther is now King
of Necropolis or whatever and has some new mystic relationship with all the
dead ancestors from before and I guess this grants him new powers. It was a not
a reader friendly first issue unless you are a devout Hickman fan. Also Hickman
has great concepts and ideas, but his dragged out story telling style means a
12 or more issue buy in to get to the point. Hickman does not pace his books
well. Hickman is the king of enticing me with some interesting concepts but his
books can be obtuse as Grant Morrison or Brian Azzarello. Reading over 100 plus titles a month it needs
to be a little more straight forward and cleaner for me to sing its praises.
Part 3 is coming
tomorrow.
I'm not sure I'll be back for Black Panther #2 either, but I did like seeing Epting's art. And I do like the Blank Panther -- he's really cool on the Avengers cartoon.
ReplyDeleteAt least you didn't waste three dollars on Morbius! Godzilla Half-Century and All-New X-Men were my favorites of the week.
Sadly I did buy Moribus, just never got around to reading it before I had to do the post.
ReplyDeleteKeatinge, writer of Morbius, did Hell Yeah! and Glory were were both very good. I bet Morbius will be good too... but I haven't read it yet.
ReplyDeleteI have read it and it was okay. A little standard, some good elements hear and there. The problem is that I will give it a chance, but without being a super strong opening issue it may kill the book before it starts. Moribus is a tough sell anyway and this was not different enough. Still Keatinge gets 2 more issues to draw me in.
ReplyDelete