Some weeks I write four or five posts and sometimes I
struggle to get two done. This week I was pressed for time more then usual. I
also enjoyed the brief blurbs on what I read and had fun giving my ratings. I
had so much fun with that format I’m back doing it for a second week. Lee had
the suggestion to only bold and red the rating at the end, so I have adapted to
that. He had another suggestion which I rejected. OCD man sometimes gets a
little inflexible. I kid about OCD, but I swear all comic book fans have some
form of it, whether obsessively collecting a character or the way we order our
books or some other idiosyncrasy.
Battlefields #5
by Garth Ennis and Russ Braun is Part 2 of the Rise and
Fall of Anna Kharkova. This is the character from one of the other Battlefields
series as we follow the fate of the former Night Witch. Anna is a great
character. We catch up with her during the Korean War. If anyone wants to read
the absolutely best work of Garth Ennis it is his war stories. Russ Braun’s
wonderful art is fantastic,
Buy it.
Mister X Hard Candy
by Dean Motter. This is a one shot
and perhaps collected from Dark Horse presents. I admit I never got Mr. X 100%
but the character has a cool vibe. This one shot was a great introduction to
the character and the city which is another character in the book. It is not
something that I would recommend for everyone.
Read it on the stands.
Go buy the trade.
Fatale #13 by Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips was a great one and done story. Ed is doing the best
work of his career and Sean’s work seems to improve as the series goes on. Sean
is a great noir artist and I have always enjoyed his work, but he just seems to
improve as time goes by. It is not a dramatic change, but it is one where I get
the feeling he is always doing just a little more or trying a new camera angle.
I think Sean belongs on my list. The one and done issues have been great as we
learn about other Fatale(s) throughout history. They are tragic and the
underlying horror that connects them continues to be a mystery that envelops
the entire series.
Buy two and give one to a friend.
Uncanny Avengers #5
by Rick Remender and Oliver Coipel was a great issue. We see
more team members get added. We harkened back to the first time a dramatic
change in the lineup was made as the press conference is held to introduce them
to the world. I know it has been done a ton of times but seeing Cap and the
Scarlet Witch made me think back to that early issue. It had a great twist at
the end of the story and the repercussions should be fascinating as Cap is
trying to erase the distrust between humans and mutants events continue to play
against it.
Buy it.
Red Team #2 by Garth Ennis and Craig Cermak was another good issue in what looks to be an
entertaining series. We switch to the female member of the group telling the
story. As with the first issue you get the impression the team has been
captured and are being interrogated by whoever caught them. I get the feeling
that the first four issues will be told by each character and I don’t believe
the interviewer wants them to stop. Red Team is shaping up as a very good
series about cops who decide to kill some bad guys but are trying hard to be self
aware about what they are doing and way. It has a lot of talking, but enough
action and a damn interesting story.
Buy it.
Justice League Dark
#18 by Jeff Lemire, Ray Fawkes and Mikel Janin. The art is good, the story is okay, I’m just not sure
I really get what the group is all about. Especially as John Constantine is the
leader of these guys. The character and Lemire has been what keep me around
this long, but they really aren’t the characters I actually cared about. It is
probably a series for me to drop soon.
Skip it.
I, Vampire #18,
hey it ends next issue. Unless you have been following this series it is not for
you. The series itself has been very good.
Buy the trades.
The Answer #3 (of 4)
by Mike Norton and Dennis Hopeless is just fast paced and
furious fun. We find out more about the organization who has captured Devin and
all the craziness that surrounds the place. The Answer is shot in the chest at
the end, but since he was killed in the first issue and ‘another” Answer showed
up I’m not worried about that. Way too much going on for this series to be
ending so I hope it is doing well so we can get another mini-series.
Buy it.
Guardians of the
Galaxy #1 by Brian Bendis and Steve McNiven. First off the art is the
biggest draw in this book. McNiven’s art, as always is great. In fact he is another
add to the artist list I have of who I want to own. As for the story itself it
is better then normal pace for Bendis as we have the group all pulled together,
a premise is set and the sh*t hits the fan. I’m just confused as it appears the
GOTG will be guarding Earth from all sorts of extra terrestrial threats, so why
is Iron Man part of this group? It is a little confusing as Iron Man is still
doing a lot of Avengers stuff and I know Marvel foes not really care about
cross continuity, but some elements demand a little explanation. I guess I’m supposed
to follow Iron Man, but for all his popularity in the movies I’ve never been a
big Iron Man fan. Bottom line the book has a great cast of characters,
fantastic art and a decent story.
Buy it.
BPRD Vampire #1 (of
5) by Mike Mignola, Gabriel Ba and Fabio Moon. You don’t need to know
anything about anything to jump into this mini-series. We start with a river of blood and set up the
story from there. Ba and Moon are handling the story and art with Mignola also
on the story. It was a great first issue and a very easy read.
Buy it
The Legend of Luther
Strode #4 (of 6) by Justin Jordan
and Tradd Moore. If you have not
gotten this series by now the book will make zero sense. We are going deeper
into the rabbit hole as Jack the Ripper and the old guy are both part of the same
cult of violence that help unlock Luther’s powers. It is a very cool story,
ultra violent and well done.
Wait for the Trade unless you are following the book.
Judge Dredd Year One
#1 by Matt Smith and Simon Coleby. It was the start of a good Judge Dredd story
but I had no feeling the book was truly a Year One type of book. Nothing, other
then a few remarks that it is early in his career, made it feel like a Year One
experience.
Read it one the stands.
Batman Incorporated
#9 by Grant Morrison and Chris Burnham is a great continuation
of the epic story that Grant has been doing with Batman versus Talia. This
issue is a great memorial issue showing Batman feeling the loss of Damian, yet
still continuing the story. At the same time I believe this book is easy to
pick up and read even without any background. Grant is doing some of his best
cape work and Burnham is a fantastic artist. This is the best Batman book on
the stands.
Buy it.
Age of Ultron #3 (of
10) by Bendis and Byran Hitch. It has great art but this
is Bendis at his decompressed best. For $4 we get a free digital edition some
AR, but a story that was all about the last page.
Skip this issue.
East of West #1
by Jonathan Hickman and Nick Dragotta was okay. Hickman is one
of the most frustrating writers out there. In some ways he reminds me of
Azzarello in that it is not a straight forward approach to what story he is
telling. What that means that even a successful story will read better as a
trade. Even with that the alternative history of Earth he has created is a
vastly different world. The US
is a group of 8 countries now and we have a wildly different type of today. It
is a mix of a high tech wild west with a touch of Christian mythology as the
Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, at least three of them, are our central
characters. What is going on and why things are happening are still to be
explained. The art is solid and at times very good.
Buy it and try it – not for everyone.
Last and far from least is Green Hornet #1 by Mark Waid
and Daniel Indro. It was a great
issue and Waid does a terffic job of establishing everything about the
character and giving us a one and done adventure. Then he gives us a great
cliff hanger to make us come back for next issue when it all starts to go to hell.
Indro’s art does a great job with the story. It is a very easy and enjoyable
read.
Buy It.
To wrap it all up, a few brief notes. First, congratulations
to Dynamite Comics and what they are producing. For years I have felt like they
were a low tier publisher with a few books I would want to follow, but far
under the scale of companies like Image, IDW and Dark Horse. Now they have
really managed to step up to the plate. The writers are Waid, Ennis, Roberson,
Diggle, Simone, Wagner and many more. Slowly the art is getting better and
better and even the lesser known writers are very good for the most part, just
not “names” due to Marvel and DC exposure.
Still, I wonder about the whole creator movement and creator
rights stuff as it comes to the characters they are using. I’m almost 100% sure
ERB, Walter Gibson, George Trendel, Fran Striker and others garner no income
for their estates from the use of these old characters. While we rant and cry
about the injustice to Seigel, Shuster, Kirby and Ditko we do not seem to give
a whit about the creators associated with this stuff. Also if I have read
correctly copyright laws were suppose to be a form of limited protection when
it started and the idea of public domain is one that used to be honored. Heck
if you read this stuff and go out and buy the novels it is based on I’m sure
some royalties still pass to the estates. I just think this is a great
intellectual discussion as we have twisted ourselves up in laws and what is
right versus what is “owed” to someone.
A final note is that while there were few “knock my socks
off” books, for the most part it was a very enjoyable week of books. I still
have more to read but what I did read was well done.
Come back next week and we can start this party over again.
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