This week I’m doing six posts, Monday contains a some quick
hits on everything I read and Tuesday is five short solo reviews spotlighting
five new series from the last two weeks as I missed a week.
The clips:
Batman #20 was
just flat out fun. Capullo can draw
the crap out of Batman and each issue is just beautiful. Scott does a nice job
with Batman defeating Clayface. My one gripe is that Snyder has fallen in love with Batman having more gadgets then
ever. On one hand, of course Batman would own every technological advantage
possible. On the other hand I like to think ultimately Batman’s brains and
physical skill can take down almost anyone. It is a tough line to straddle with
the level of foes Batman is up against. All in all this is just a rock solid
beautiful book. Another plus is that
this book will not be part of any of other “events” for a little while.
Buy it.
The first think that strikes me is seeing Mike Carey writing
for BOOM Studios. I know Waid wrote for them, but after he was their EIC for
awhile. Carey has done a lot of work for Marvel and Vertigo so it was
surprising to see him show up at BOOM. I’m curious as to the ownership of the
story and other background details. The one thing this points out to me is that
more and more the choice of creators is not just Marvel or DC.
The story itself was interesting. Our point of view
character, Leo, is a normal police officer in a world where super powers have
been cropping up more and more. Also the good guys seem to become bad guys
rather quickly.
Once you have read as many stories as I have it is it is
hard to not read something and say it reminds me of this, this and this. It is
a function of being a fan of stories via comics, TV, movies and books and then
multiplying by my age. Ten Grand is about an ex-hit man trying to pay off his
debt to heaven to buy a few minutes with his dead wife on occasion. A little
Hellblazer mixed with a hard edge noir character and the assassin with a heart
of gold type deal. This thing could have easily been a train wreck as all the
disparate elements have to be put together right to make it work. JMS and Templesmith pull it off.
X is a revival of Dark Horse’s nineties foray into super
heroes. Instead of the excess of the nineties Dark Horse seems to be dipping
its toe slowly in the water in reviving Ghost, X and other characters. First
off they do some work in Dark Horse Presents. Then they green light a
mini-series and watch the sales to see if they are getting it right or
not. Therefore the Zero issue is a
repacking of the Dark Horse Presents stuff and then we jump into issue #1. Duane Swierczynski seems to be the go
to guy for the hard edge and shoot’em up type of characters. Paired with Eric Nguyen the series has the right
type of feel for a vigilante who seems to be more prone to getting himself beat
up and shot as much as he defeats the bad guys.
It starts with Hitler about to blow his brains out when he
receives news they have won the battle. We jump around and find out Churchill
is crushed by the news, but a spy from England has been part of what the
Nazis have been doing. She succeeds in blowing up production of the drugs that
are making super humans and is trying to make it to England . The Nazis are reveling in
their glory and some are wondering what they have unleashed. The atrocities of
WWII just got ratcheted up a level as we watch a super soldier slaughter POWs.
The story opens with our PI scratching runes into his
bullets. The time frame appears to be the late 30’s. He sticks a gun out a
window and fires. We then flip to what appears to be a Middle Eastern country.
Some form of mystic battle takes place and a skeleton is still alive and crawls
away after losing the fight. He is told that if he interferes again they will
track him down and kill him. He looks dead to me already.
Tune in Monday and
Tuesday for the full length features.
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