This week was so massive that I have not had a chance to
read close to everything but these five are the type of books that keep me
reading comics.
After far too long of an absence Astro City
has returned, this time it is under the Vertigo banner. Who knows all the
convoluted machinations that must have gone on behind the scenes, but I don’t
care as long as the creators are happy and we are getting an Astro City
comic. Kurt Busiek in the back
matter explains that he has been dealing with a long term illness that saps his
ability to work as much as he would like. He states that he is recovered enough
to be more productive and that during the interim he has stockpiled 10 full
issues of scripts. So now if there are delays in publishing I’m guessing it
won’t occur for over a year. Kurt Busiek and Brent Anderson have managed to create a world of super heroes that
tell stories about people first and foremost. By morphing his man on the street
POV from the Marvel series, Kurt now tells us stories about people. Powers
maybe involved, but it is the story of the person and the character study that
is the most interesting. Brent Anderson always does his best work on Astro City
and Alex Sinclair is one of the finest colorists in the industry. It is all topped
off with Alex Ross’ signature photo realistic style on the cover. This is a
perfect comic book package. Heck Kurt is even promising to keep a page for
letters, something sadly missing in any book published by DC.
So after all of that, what about the comic itself, it was
the best book I have read this week. We start with a framing device of the
Broken Man. He acts as the narrator of the story. Inviting us into the story,
soliciting our aid and telling us we work for him. Then we jump into the story with
American Chibi. I had to Google chibi to find out it means “Short person” or
“small child” and is usually referring to a cute anime type of character. She
is wonderfully bizarre and brutal as she takes down a group of bad guys. Kurt
also gives us a mystery of a huge floating glowing door that appears over the
middle of the harbor of the city. We then meet our everyman. He has been
divorced about 17 years, has two grown daughters, relatively successful but
finds this stage of his life to be somewhat empty. It is so nice to read
something about this type of character and set in a fantastic world of super
heroes. It is the core of Astro
City and this first issue
delivered all that and more. It helps that Ben Pullman, our everyman, is highly
relatable for me. I have two grown daughters, I’m divorced and I question what
to do with my life at this point. Of course there are differences as I’m
happily remarried and there are no super heroes on the Gulf Coast of Florida
(or anywhere). The story progresses as the door opens and it is a godlike being
from another part of the Universe and it is looking for a liaison and that
becomes Ben. Then we get a nice reveal about the Broken Man and I’m once again
enthralled and happy to be back in Astro
City .
Skipping to something totally different is Red Team #3 by Garth Ennis and Craig Cermak.
The more grounded in reality a story line is set in, the better Garth’s work.
Even his seminal work on Hitman was constantly de-emphasizing the super
heroics. The story about the hit team of police officers is great stuff. Every
issue we have a different member narrating the story. A simple shot of a man
behind an interrogation room telling the story of the killing. Who they have
been talking too is still unknown and while the set up seems like it would be
boring, the stories are great. This issue it is about Eddie and he brings the
next target to the group, a catholic priest who is a pedophile, but is still in
the church and a priest. Now from my reading of Garth over the years I know he
has a hard on against religion and Catholicism is his main target. Being a more
secular person I have no issue with this, but it was an issue comics have never
broached in my readings and it was a good story. Eddie not only is interested
in taking out someone beyond the law, but someone who by the nature of his
position is thought to untouchable. It was also a test on Eddie’s part to see
if the group was okay with taking out bad guys of any stripe. In addition Ennis
examined Eddie and his wife’s relationship as they are dealing with the death
of their unborn child. A lot of “heavy” stuff all packed into one issue. It is
a great series that deals with a lot of issues and concerns and meets them head
on. There are no true good guys or bad guys, just choices and how those choices
can change the life you live.
Okay, now I’ll switch to the most traditional super hero
book of this group Ulitmates #25. Part of
the story with this book is that the writer is Joshua Fialkov, who infamously walked away from two Green Lantern
books at DC after doing some magnificent work on I, Vampire. Joshua is a name I
know from some independent work that he had done and I, Vampire got everyone’s
attention. DC has been pissing off creators and driving them away in what seems
to be droves. While he is wrapping up his mini-series on Alpha for Marvel, this
is a higher profile book and he hits the ground running. I have not been
following this book for some time, yet I felt it was very accessible. The
regular Ultimates are taken down by the Hulk, Mr. Fantastic, Quicksilver and
Kang. The Ultimate Universe characters are of course very different, but it was
easy to pick up the story in a few pages. The Infinity Gauntlet is being put
together and this Universe’s Kang (female) is intent on saving the world. A
little confusing given how these are the “bad” guys. Still it was a fast paced
action adventure that seems intent on once again re-setting the Ultimate U. I was less impressed with the art,
but it is curious that the Infinity Gems are showing up in this Universe just
as the Infinity event is brewing over in the regular Marvel U. Plus the rumors
of Marvel doing something major again to the Ultimate Universe are all over the
place. The bottom line for me is that I enjoyed the book and glad to see Joshua
Fialkov’s name associated with a series again. DC screwed up losing him.
Swamp Thing #21
by Charles Soule and Jesus Saiz was a great issue. I love
Scott Snyder’s work and right now he is DC’s comic god, but Soule is making
this book better then it ever was under Snyder. Of course Jesus Saiz is one of
the best artists around which helps. It seems like Saiz receives very little
acclaim. Still I have added him to my prestigious list of artists whose work I
want to own. This book is a text book example of giving us a one and done story
that builds on the overall arc of the larger plot. It was also a book that
could easily have been a jumping on point for a new reader. A woman shows up
asking for sanctuary that was offered to her 800 years ago by a Swamp Thing.
She is pursued by killers due to the rumor that if they kill her they get her
ten centuries of life. It goes on from there and wraps back up into the story
about the Seeder. The tagline for the next issue is: The Whiskey Tree. Are you
kidding me, I’d switch to whiskey if they had one of those.
The last book in this group is Suicide Risk #2 by Mike
Carey and Elena Casgrande. It is
pretty funny to see BOOM start to become a viable choice for creators with Paul
Jenkins and Mike Carey making there home there. Both of their books would have
been projects once done by Vertigo or even Image, but I’m guessing Vertigo is
no longer a viable option for many of these projects. Carey’s Suicide Risk continues
to build from last issue. Our main character Leo now has super powers and is
starting to learn how to use them. The mystery of who the hell gave him these
powers is right below the surface. In this issue we are starting to see the
impact the powers are having on him as he is having strange dreams. It appears
the powers are wiping out some of his memories. This all may play into why
everyone who gets powers eventually becomes bad guys. Of course Leo has a wife
and two kids and it feels like this is not going to have a good ending. The
story structure is very straight forward with no annoying time jumps and such,
just our POV character learning with us as he goes. A very strong start to what
looks like something that could be a great series.
Part 3 will be a series of quick impressions of everything
else I read this week.
Look for it around 9AM US East Coast Time.
I've always had trouble getting into Astro City. I don't know why. I usually love Busiek's work -- maybe after I drop Hickman's Avengers I can try it out.
ReplyDeleteTry this issue out, perfect jumping on point and makes sense from the beginning, unlike the 56 chapter epic of Hickman
ReplyDelete