Saturday, July 26, 2008

Superman, M.D.

The Man of Steel will stop at nothing to save a life in danger - -

-- even if that life is of a young terminal cancer patient who is hospitalized under medical supervision...

YES, even then, Superman won't hesitate to swoop in the hospital ward, push the actual trained doctors and medical staff aside...



...get his magic healing (unsterilized) hands on the patient, shout orders to the doctors about the correct treatment...




...take over using the electric shock-pads for resuscitation and performing C.P.R. ...



...and in the tragic case of the boy not making it, Superman is also hero enough to update and console the grieving parents himself, before flying away (probably to deliver a baby in the maternity ward)...

That's the stuff of heroes!

Source: Supergirl #31 (DC Comics)
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Friday, July 25, 2008

Sandman 20th Anniversary Poster


My retailer Haroon from Travelling Man Manchester surprised me pleasantly today by giving me this amazing just-released poster, when he saw I ordered the new Death II T-shirt. (thanks Haroon, LOVE you :) )

The poster is an enormous fold-out jam session featuring most every major character from the Sandman mythos, with art by almost every artist who has contributed in the historic series. The image I've posted (courtesy of New York Entertainment) has a cheat-sheet attached, but it's fun to play 'spot the artist with your geek friends; all of these modern masters have utterly distinct styles - like my favourite artist Mike Allred who started his career on the title, and beloved artists like Jill Thompson, Bucky, Peter Gross, D'Israeli, Bryan Talbot, Kevin Nowlan, Marc Hempel, Shawn McManus, Teddy Kristiansen, Sam Kieth, Dean Ormston, P. Craig Russel, Charles Vess (boy, I never realised how Sandman ultimately shaped my taste in comic book art) -, making for a fun challenge.

I'm in the mood for cracking open the Absolute Sandman volumes and having a bit of a reminisce...

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Thursday, July 24, 2008

Madman Summer Fun



My latest geek-cred comics-related order:

Make the most out of those warm summer days this year with the Madman Summer Fun Playset. Features the huge ( almost 3' x 6') heavyweight Madman Beachtowel together with two different sets of Madman Magnets. Be the coolest dude out on the beach this year with Madman at your side.

I don't really intend to take this to the beach (mainly because of the lack of beaches - or summer- in the UK), but this will make an amazing full-wall poster/decoration on my wall. Plus, MAGNETS, you can never go wrong!
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Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Marvel Capsule Reviews Week 27 2008

The debuts of Astonishing X-Men and Secret Invasion Frontline save the day in an otherwise dreadful (yet thankfully short) week - when has Marvel ever had only 6 titles out in a week before?

Read on!

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #564

(Mark Guggenheim, Dan Slott & Bob Gale / Paulo Siqueira / Amilton Santos)

Three writers, three short stories, three POV on one eventful car chase through NYC.

The three Spider-Trust writers (minus Wells) give the Spidey, Cop and Villain -eye view on a Spidey vs Overdrive (the villain who can pimp any ride - snicker). It's a good idea, executed in the most standard and expected way without any big surprises.

Well, apart one. The sheer idiocy of having Spidey recklessly endanger a bus-load of kids during the fight. After Overdrive commandeers a school bus for his escape, Spidey bursts through one of the windows, glass shards flying in every directions towards the unsuspecting kids. He repeats this genius move once more. Later, in his grand scheme to save the kids, he fires a sonic boom in their direction, breaks the rear window and has them escape into a web cocoon, which he then drops off the still moving bus!


Spider-Menace indeed!

5/10




ASTONISHING X-MEN #25

(Warren Ellis / Simone Bianchi )

It's a short week, so I'll devote a bit longer on the star release...

When it was time for Joss Whedon to step down from his celebrated (critically acclaimed, fan-adored, sales-topping, tear-jerking...) run on Astonishing X-Men - there could only be one name fit to pass the torch (after Whedon himself had succeeded Grant Morrison, establishing the Emma - Scott - Wolvie - Beast uber-core team) to...

(Well, ok after Alan Moore and Neil Gaiman refused to return the editors' emails)

Warren Ellis!





So, Warren had a bit of a up-and-down history with the X-Franchises, with a healthy and memorable/definitive run on Excalibur (it does take a Brit to do it justice), a short stint on Wolverine, and three hit-n-miss takes on X-Force, X-Man (which did kinda rock) and Generation-X.

Now, he makes his triumphant return - to the core (the 'core-est' of the core) X-Men books, using the familiar star-making cast (with Storm replacing the late Kitty - who had replaced the late Jean Grey - hmmmm), and once more using them to launch the X-Men into a new exciting direction.

Yes, they've officially moved into San Francisco, they have a new X-Cave, X-plane, (hideous) X-car, X-uniforms -- a franchising dream-scape of opportunities! Their new mission statement actually makes sense in this crazed-up Initiative-driven world (although we might need a bit more explaining how it fits in with the rest of the line): the X-Men are acting as consultants to the SFPD, visiting the scene of the mutant(?)-related crime in their street/police-gear, and being careful not to step on any toes. The crime is related to (yet another) a supposedly new species of mutant - or beyond mutant- handily explained in typical Ellis pseudo-science.

Despite initial fan unrest over Ellis' handling of the X-Cast I was overly very impressed, Armour sticks around after Whedon's run, well on her way to becoming this generation's Kitty Pryde. Her rapport with Hank was a welcome distraction, showing off her quirky mix of irreverence and respect to her teachers/teammates. Cyclops and Emma click very well, without their dialogue getting too sappy (someone send a copy to Brubaker for reference); Cyclops is still reeling from the balls-growing rollercoaster of Unbreakable, while Emma is her usual fabulous caustic self; Ellis overshoots just a bit in her dialogue, going too far with her Samantha-isms ("I'll simply have to this, and absolutely have to that, oh and will simply have to the other thing as well"). Queen Storm's the clear stand-out from the group, making her triumphant return from the pages of Black Panther after an extended honeymoon leave; she's a tough character to crack, with a voice that writer after writer has failed to get right - she always ends up looking like the boring mother of the group, a paper-thin leader figure or a frigid queen; Warren Ellis makes it seem so easy to catch the warmth, the regality, the fire and the humility of Ororo.


Finally... Simone Bianchi. An italian super-star artist, his art, his designs and his storytelling... jump out of the page and are incredibly rich in personality and texture - like an abject super-reality squished on the comic page. Going back to my gay-crash on Storm, no artist has captured her attributes so easily - and it's been decades since she had a decent costume design - an homage (but not derivative of) to the original Cockrum timeless leather piece.

Ah, I've been babbling. Good times are coming!

9/10




AVENGERS/INVADERS #3

(Alex Ross & Jim Krueger / Steve Sadowski)

First of all many Happy Wishes to Steve Sadowski who tied the knot with his loved one this week!

The Invaders do -of course- stage an escape from SHIELD captivity -- thanks to Bucky's retconned hardcore spy-awesomeness. Meanwhile WWII Namor (pre-dye job) discovers the ruins of Atlantis and gets in a nonsensical fight to the death with present-day Namor (yeah that's smart, what a win-win situation) - who's inexplicably gone from being all about 'Declaring War on the Surface World' (did anyone else read that mini?) to a peaceful co-existence mode. HUH!

I *might* already be losing all interest in this title - and with 9 issues ahead, that's never a good sign. Thankfully Sadowski's hubba-hubba art is enough to make me stick around and just stare at the handsome heroes...

7/10





CABLE #5

(Duane Swieczynski / Ariel Olivetti)

'War Baby' part 5. Finally concluding! Once more it's Cable vs Bishop in the vaguely-defined apocalyptic (?) future. Bishop commandeers some random street mercenaries. Cable gets his waitress darling (I don't even care to remember her name, let's call her Annie) into spandex, gives her a gun, and lets her loose. Well, at least he had the forethought of shielding the baby in a protective armour shell this time. The fight gets cut short when Cable ultimately makes an escape jump further into the future.

That was it? Was there any point to the events of the past 5 issues? Utter disappointment and lack of any worthwhile plot structure, characterisation or any redeeming quality whatsover.

2/10




SECRET INVASION: FRONT LINE #1

(Brian Reed / GG Studios )

By Gawd, they finally get it!

In the heart of heart of NY, ordinary everyday people go about their ordinary everyday lives. Well, about as ordinary as you get when you're living in a super-hero populated NYC.

A young E.R. doctor, reporter Ben Urich, a high school student and her negligent father (a designer for the Fantastic Four toy franchise), a cop, a cabbie who gets his taxi wrecked by Spidey vs Menace...

Reed follows their everyday lives, giving us the ultimate intimate street-eye view of what it could mean to be a real commuter in the Marvel Universe New York... and then of course, the Skrulls invade! Reed succeeds where Jenkins failed miserably 2-3 times in a row; he focuses the story on the people on the street - instead of giving just a newscast recap of the event, wasting time on a lame conspiracy or just using it -let's say- as a continued showcase of the reporter's lifestory.

8/10



SQUADRON SUPREME #1

(Howard Chaykin / Marco Turini)

HUH?

I absolutely didn't understand a single thing that happened this issue...

Did I need to be familiar with the previous book? The Ultimate Power mini? I've not read either, so I'll need your feedback on that.

The recap page was hardly helpful as only one of the characters explained there actually makes an appearance in the book. Well, him and Ultimate Nick Fury - someone will also need to explain the reasoning behind spinning him out on his own like this 'Private Practice'-style. Talk about 'doomed from the get-go'.

Ok, so what did I piece together? The Squadron Supreme (Marvel's version of the JLA) is... somewhere off world. The remaining members (a Zatanna analog and a smart guy) are working with Nick Fury on... something. Meanwhile across the board we get introduced to freaky gruesome new analogs of (I'm totally guessing here)... familiar Marvel characters, like the Fantastic Four, Spider-Man and Captain America.

Howard Chaykin has zero consideration for the new reader here, not bothering to properly introduce all his cast and his situation, while new artist Turini has the oddest fascination of drawing porn artists on the news. Seriously, what kind of newscaster talks like this on the news? And why would a scared helpless victim pout like a call-girl ad?

Disappointing.

2/10


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Monday, July 21, 2008

JJJ Was Right - Spider-Menace Uncovered!

He's been saying it for years, but we never really listened.


Beat by beat, Spider-Man's fight against a C-list villain on a school bus in the latest Amazing Spider-Man (written by Mark Guggenheim):

The armed villain Overdrive (with the power to super-'pimp' rides) has boarded the bus full of innocent school kids after Spidey thwarted his escape.

Spider-Man approaches with caution -- by kicking through the bus' rear window:
Glass shards are obviously flying in all directions - but Spidey is apparently too focused on the villain to care about the kids' safety. The baddie eventually kicks him out of the bus and continues his escape.

Spidey has learned a valuable lesson, so he re-approaches the bus - this time punching through the front window - just in case he didn't cut all the kids on the first go.

So he punches in, shards flying everywhere again, wrestles the sonic boom gun from the villain, and turns it towards the kids, shooting to make EVERY window in the bus explode on the kids - who are probably too busy having their eardrums burst or the bodies crushed from the boom to care at this point.

For the grand finish, yes, he does indeed get the kids to jump out of the moving bus, onto a hastily thrown web-bag skidding on the asphalt; finally, he throws the sack-o'-kids out of the moving vehicle so he can focus on his escaping baddie...

MENACE!!!

Source: Amazing Spider-Man #564
(Marvel Comics)



"We're sorry Spidey, you'll need to follow us to the station"

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Panel of the Week Voting Weeks 24-26 2008

Hulk's Kung-Fu was Strongest One there is indeed last week, making it out over the competition by a narrow margin in a slow voting week. Don't forget to forward a copy of the column to your friends this week!

It was hard to keep to a handful of panels this week, lots of favourites from both Marvel and DC:



Panel A
Robots Wet Dream - Justice League of America #22 (DC Comics)


Panel B
Greek Lover - She-Hulk #30 (Marvel Comics)

Panel C
Bat-Calibre - DC/Wildstorm: Dream War #3 (Wildstorm Comics)

Panel D
Johnny Storm, French Maid - Marvel Adventures Fantastic Four #30 (Marvel Comics)

Panel E
Hulk No Like Peeping Toms - Hulk #4 (Marvel Comics)

Panel F
Hulk No Like Smurfs Either - Marvel Adventures Fantastic Four #30 (Marvel Comics)
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Sunday, July 20, 2008

DC Capsule Reviews Week 26 2008

Short and Sweet this week, with only 8 titles from DC. Big premiere for Madame Xanadu and James Robinson's Superman, curtain close for Mike Carey's Crossing Midnight - and me going ga-ga over Kelley Jones! Can't Miss!


BATMAN: GOTHAM AFTER MIDNIGHT #2 (OF 12)

(Steve Niles / Kelley Jones)

How did i ever miss the first issue of this? The Twin Masters of Horror themselves Niles and Jones working on Batman at the same time?

In my mind there's few other artist who can surpass Kelley Jones' horrific take on the Dakr Knight and the city of Gotham. Here he's at his career's best, expertly playing with the shadows and the light, inking his own work and sweating over every detail of his composition and style. Niles of course gives him all the space he needs to breathe and do his own thing, although Jones can expertly make even your standard dialogue scene in a police office shine with a moody use of light separations.

Yes, I do have the hots for mr Jones, move along now!

8/10








CROSSING MIDNIGHT #19

(Mike Carey / Jim Fern / Jose Villarubia)

Final Issue. Mike Carey's epic story of a twin brother and sister divided and set against each other by the traditional Gods of blades and inanimate objects reaches its conclusion here with the ending of the war and the ultimate confrontation between the siblings.

Carey had set up a remarkable drama machine here: pitting the amnesiac assassin sister against her brother, making her believe he's really a face-stealing murdering spirit - you know that can't end well. The ending Carey chose is even more tragic than I was expecting, really shocking me into focus, as elements from throughout the series crystallise. The series was canceled before its time, but Carey managed to wrap things up impressively without any sense of haste seeping into the script. He surprisingly leaves things a bit open ended to a potential sequel, so let's hope the trade sales and word of mouth help this title make an eventual return.

9/10




MADAME XANADU #1

(Matt Wagner / Amy Reeder Headley)

The newest young hopeful launch from the legendary Vertigo imprint attempts a return to the family's roots, with a mature readers look at a forgotten C-rate DC character. Matt Wagner (Mage, Grendel, Trinity) writes, with a young artist bringing a mainstream Manga aesthetic (hey I hate using that incorrect term too, but it paints the picture easily).

We don't actually follow Madame Xanadu (who is hardly even mentioned in this opening issue, leading to much confusion), but a young(ish) nymph Nimue in the time of Camelot, who leads a merry life, talking to trees, hanging out with her flying smurf friends, visiting her nasty Queen sister Morgana and -ahem- spending 'quality time' with an evil necromancer?

Nothing has grabbed me so far; the title feels more like a mainstream DC take on Camelot than a true Vertigo take - it's not the violence, it's more the feel of the art and the quality of the plot. I hope i'm proven wrong next issue, but this isn't a title i'm willing to follow just yet.
6/10








FINAL CRISIS #2 (OF 7)

(Grant Morrison / J.G. Jones)

I don't feel I can do this multi-layered super-drama justice through a capsule review (well, not even through a normal review. Check out my boy Joel La Puma's very detailed and insightful review of the issue here.

I'll just say, I'm enjoying this book a lot, it is certainly more complex than what is going on in Secret Invasion, but it still lacks on one crucial Summer Event factor: excitement/f-anticipation.

Sure i'm enjoying this, and I'm sure Morrison is going to wow us by the end of the story and we'll be looking back and rereading this for decades, but... I don't find myself eagerly waiting the next installment, I still haven't had a wow moment (especially with Barry Allen's return spoiled by an online press release following DC Universe #0 2 months ago), it's not rocking my world the way Infinite Crisis did 2 years ago.

p.s. what is up with the blacked-up cover to this issue? The original white background looked so sexy, the one that got published looks like a-nother bad hack job like the Trinity covers (yeah, I'm not feeling the Chipp Kidd love right now)



8/10



GREEN LANTERN #32

(Geoff Johns / Ivan Reis / Oclair Albert & Julio Ferreira)

'Secret Origin' part 4.

Geoff Johns continues the Ultimate-style retelling of Green Lantern's origin, infusing it with hints on his current and upcoming plans for the myth of the Lanterns. This issue, we bear witness to the birth of the villainous Hector Hammond, and Hal Jordan's first meeting with (the still legendary heroic at this point) Sinestro. Johns excells at painting a clear portrait of Sinestro's importance and experience in this juncture and planting the seeds for his future enmity with Hal through their early subtle differences in attitude and philosophy. As a rookie Green Lantern fan, this story is the best jumping-on point to the very hyped run.

8/10





THE HUNTRESS: YEAR ONE #4 (OF 6)

(Ivory Madison / Cliff Richards / Norm Rapmund)

I may be getting exhausted with this book. Even reading it in bi-weekly increments, it's easy to lose track of the crime bosses and the love affairs coming in and out of focus, while Helena tries out her new spandex threads and weapons against the mob bosses. Certainly a book that will read better in trade form.

This issue had more o the flair and memorable quotes of the first issue, along with an early meeting between Helena and her future 'boss' Barbara Gordon and (finally) the move to Gotham City.

Cliff Richards is sufferering from the strain of the deadline, his lines becoming more and more sparse with each issue, only occasionally springing some important panels or moments into focus and detail.
6/10






SUPERMAN #677

(James Robinson / Renato Guedes / Wilson Magalhaes)

'The Coming of Atlas' part 1. he rightfully-so acclaimed James Robinson begins his run on Superman's monthly title with a bang whimper... Oh wait, what?

The story opens with Superman kicking back and hanging out with his pal Hal Jordan and playing catch with his dog... in space. Robinson puts his stamp on the character, focusing on his wide-eyed optimism and revealing strong-standing elements of that all-american farmboy naivete that he can never lose (and really sets him apart from the other major superheroes).

Fine and dandy so far.

Unfortunately, it's not meant to last, as halfway through the issue, Superman completely disappears from the page, and we're instead treated to the first issue of 'Metropolis Science Police', following the narration of the forgettable force leader and getting introduced to every last generic armoured jetpack cop on the beat. -Yawn-


Sure, cops can be interesting, if handled in their proper environment and genre (Gotham Central is one of my favourite DC titles ever), but take a handful of them, prop them in face-concealing uniform armours and throw them up against a super-villain... Well, they just become badly-dressed sci-fi super-heroes - and where's the appeal in that?

7/10








TRINITY #4

(Kurt Busiek & Fabian Nicieza / Mark Bagley, Mike Norton & Scott McDaniel / Art Thibert, Jerry Ordway & Andy Owens)

Wonder Woman and Superman continue to manhandle the brutish Konvikt with the JLA running damage control, while Batman tries to detective his way into a solution. Meanwhile in the back-up story, the young Tarot character dreams of Despero fighting Kangar Ro?

This would be really fascinating stuff, if there was even the slightest amount of mystery about any of the situations. Instead, I find I really don't care either for Tarot, Morganna's shady plot or the forgettable Konvikt and his generic threat. Although the writing and art are enjoyable, the main plot keeps on moving at such a snail's pace, it's tedious even on a weekly title...

6/10


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