Monday, December 04, 2006

The Hot List - Week of December 6th


Damn that's a lot of comics.
A lot of good comics too.
DC
52 Week #31
All-New Atom #6
Batman Confidential #1
Detective Comics #826
Exterminators #12
Jonah Hex #14
Justice Society Of America #1
Manhunter #26
Mystery In Space #4
Nightwing #127
Outsiders #43
Superman Confidential #2
Tranquility #1

Image
Invincible #37
Nightly News #2
Walking Dead #33

Marvel
Agents Of Atlas #5
Doctor Strange: The Oath #3
Incredible Hulk #101
Irredeemable Ant-Man #3
Marvel Holiday Special 2006
newuniversal #1
Uncanny X-Men #481

I'm burnt out on Batman: Year One stories, but I'm still going to give Batman: Confidential a look, but it's on a short leash/

No exaggeration, Justice Society of America may be my most anticipated title this year. It feels like I've been waiting for it for years.

Manhunter returns with a lot of DC's marketing muscle behind it and about as much support from the creative community as any major label book ever. Will it be enough? I hope so.

By popular acclimation I'm picking up Nightly News. I'm still not sure what it's about.

newuniversal is the kind of major label work Warren Ellis was made for. A blank slate, realistic world with lots of super science. The 'no capital letters in the title' thing is still stupid, though.

Friday, December 01, 2006

Review Time - Week of November 29th

Teen Titans #41 - Ok so Jericho is back. Good thing? Maybe, but thats another hero-gone-bad and brought back. I complained when Johns resurrected all of the Green Lanterns Hal Jordan killed, and I'm going to complain now that Jericho has been made a White Hat again. He killed, or tried to kill, the rest of the Titans; now apparently it wasn't Jericho's fault since the 'souls of Azerath' drove him mad and made him do it. It just seems like whitewashing to me. Other than that is was a meh issue. The art was mediocre on some pages and bad on others. I understand that Tony Daniel can't pencil 12 issues a year, but this 5 issue arc had 4 different pencillers. Not good planning on DC's part.

Ultimate Power #2 - I was wrong. I expected this issue to be a re-hash of #1 but from the Squadron Supreme's POV. Instead we get a full-on brawl between the Squadron and FF, with the X-Men, Spidey and the Ultimates jumping in later. The battle itself was a little too busy, with some of the players just there. But the parts of the fight that were fleshed out were a lot of fun. The art is typical Greg Land; pretty but kind of vapid. The Powers that Be at Marvel promise that this series will have a lasting impact on both universes so maybe the whole 'our world was destroyed' thing will actually stick. (Which would be a nice nod to the original Squadron Supreme series)


Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Heroes vs. Lost

Now I love both shows, a lot. But last night's episode of Heroes illustrated a big difference between it and Lost.

For the first few episodes of both shows a whole truckload of mysteries were introduced. 55+ episodes into it's run and Lost still hasn't answered the vast majority of those questions, while still shoveling new questions onto the pile. But last night Heroes actually went out and answered a lot of the mysteries they had spent the previous nine episodes laying out.

We know who Sylar is. We know how Eden hooked up with Clare's father. We know how Nathan Petrelli's wife was crippled. We know a little more about the whole Nikki/Jessica situation.

Were all of the mysteries solved? No, but they cleared the field enough to keep things workable. Lost, as much as I love it, just keeps shoveling new mysteries onto the massive pile of unsolved ones. (sidenote - a great list of the 50 biggest Lost questions can be found here) Tim Kring and crew looked at that great, steaming pile of questions and saw an impediment to the average viewer.

So, to abuse a metaphor, Heroes is the sidewalk that gets shoveled regularly during the winter, you still see the snow but it doesn't impede your progress. While Lost is the monstrous mountain of snow sitting in the mall parking lot that will probably still be there in April.

Monday, November 27, 2006

Emma Frost Statue


Hot damn.

Part of me wants this, badly.

Part of me also realizes that some people may get the wrong idea if something like that was displayed too prominently.

And part can only think "Damn, that's hot."

The Hot List - Week of November 29th


DC
52 Week #30
Aquaman Sword Of Atlantis #46
Batman #659
Batman The Spirit
Green Lantern #15
Guy Gardner Collateral Damage #1
Ion #8
Superman Batman #30
Teen Titans #41

Marvel
Captain America #24
Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man #14
Immortal Iron Fist #1
Nextwave Agents Of HATE #10
Ultimate Power #2
X-Men #193

DC is releasing three Green Lantern books (four if you count the GLs in Batman/Superman), four chronically late books on time and a Batman - Spirit crossover that I swear was announced during the Clinton administration.

Nextwave is up to 10 already? Time really does fly.

I'm not a huge Iron Fist fan, but with Brubaker and Fraction writing it I have to at least give it a shot.

A Trilogy of Sumrfs Movies !?!

What. The. F&%k.

I know every studio wants a big animated flick. Every studio also wants the next epic franchise. But what sane person thinks you can have both of those together in The Smurfs? Smurfs was the first show I outgrew. It is about as mindless as a cartoon can get. Yet somebody thinks that it wouldn't just make a hit animated movie, but it would also be the cornerstone of a Lord of the Rings-like franchise.

Oh God my brain just exploded.

This is the kind of idea they should be using for the next season of Entourage. It has to be a joke. Nobody, nobody, could think making a movie about those little commies is a good idea.

Sunday, November 26, 2006

Review Time - Week of November 22st

Uncle Sam and the Freedom Fighters #5 - I still like this series but damn it's starting to get repetitive. How many times have the Freedom Fighters had their heads handed to them only to be saved at the last moment by a prospective new member. Acuna's are is also becoming really inconsistent. Some panels and pages look awesome, others look horribly rushed.

Runaways #22 - No I don't think BKV is really going to go there with Chase and Nico, but just for a moment I did, so that last panel did it's job. And how can you not love a book that contains this picture.

(Pirate Werewolves, although Molly calls them Werewoofs)
Punisher War Journal #1 - This may be a sign of the apocalypse. I read a Punisher book, and I liked it. When I was a comic readin' kid I was pretty much the only one of my peers that didn't love The Punisher. But some friends comvinced me to pick this one up more for Matt Fraction that Frank Castle. I'm glad I did, because for the first time ever The Punisher was fun. Yeah he's still a violent ass but now he has a humorous internal monologue and gets attacked by a swarm of tiny Iron Man robots. Punisher purists will probably hate the book, but that's why Marvel still publishes Punisher MAX.

Friday, November 24, 2006

Random Musings - Influenza Edition

I hate being sick on holidays. You just cannot enjoy Thanksgiving while howrking up a lung.

On Heroes they Saved the Cheerleader but how did they Save the World?

Gears of War kicks unbelievable amounts of ass. On- and off-line.

I can't decide whether the people getting trampled at 5am outside of a Wal-Mart on Black Friday is funny or sad. Probably funny.

Stories are surfacing that Sony shipped fewer than 180,000 Playstation 3s at launch. Ouch.

Okay I have to go take some Nyquil. Why the hell am I blogging when doped up on cough medicine anyway>

Monday, November 20, 2006

Full-time Superheroine

I'm not going to pretend I know Valerie D'Orazio. I've never met her, and I've never spoken to her. However she was one of the first people to add this little ole site to her blogroll, and I've thoroughly loved her blog since the first time I read it.

It broke my heart to read what she went through. But more than that, after reading what she went through, I smiled a little.

Why? Because she got through it. She walked through the valley in the shadow of death and came out the other side. People go through terrible things everyday and too often let those terrible things crush them. She fought through it.

That makes her a Full-Time Superheroine. Brava, Valerie. And feel better.

Whats up with Aqua Teen Hunger Force?

A little more than a month ago I was eagerly anticipating the new season of Aqua Teen Hunger Force, one of the funniest and most unique shows on television.

Now? Wondering where all that unique humor went.

Five weeks into the season and ATHF is batting an anemic .200, 1 for 5. Clever, if wacky, plots have been replaced with an entire episode about 'Dicks'. However I was fine with the show, until last night. Each episode is 11 minutes long. Before this run they had produced three episodes in two years. (yes I know they were making an ATHF movie, its still been three episodes in two years) And after four episodes we get...a clip show. Maybe the clip show only took up half the episode, but considering how bad the rest of the episode was (Tera Patrick as a guest star?) it was still too much.

What happened? Looking back at previous seasons there were always the occasional stinker, but they were drowned out by the great, funny episodes. Did the writers get burnt out working on the movie? Or have they simply hit the wall creatively? I don't know why, but I still hope things turn around, and soon.


Tuesday, November 14, 2006

The Hot List - Week of November 15th

Oh my God! I'm going to need a loan this week. Either that or I'm gonna have to start jackin' fools.
DC.
52 Week #28
Aquaman Sword Of Atlantis #45
Astro City The Dark Age Book 2 #1
Birds Of Prey #100
Checkmate #8
Green Lantern Corps #6
Omega Men #2
Robin #156
Shadowpact #7
Supergirl #11

Image
Bomb Queen Vol 2 #2
Invincible #36
PvP #29

Marvel
Astonishing X-Men #18
Cable Deadpool #34
Civil War #5
Iron Man #13
Moon Knight #6
Ms Marvel #9
New Avengers #25
Squadron Supreme #7
Thunderbolts #108
Ultimate Fantastic Four #36

I had the chance to read most of the Astro City trades recently and I cannot tell you how great they are.

I <3 Birds of Prey. Even if Black Canary is leaving (for now).

They told me that Astonishing X-Men would come out monthly. Astonishing X-Men is not coming out on time. Astonishing X-Men needs to come out on time.

Is Civil War woth the wait? We'll know soon enough.

Monday, November 13, 2006

Looking Forward - DC's February Solicitations

From our comrades @ CBR.

DETECTIVE COMICS #828
Written by Paul Dini
Art by Don Kramer & Wayne Faucher
Cover by Simone Bianchi

That is an awesome cover. Bianchi is getting better and better.

ROBIN #159
Written by Adam Beechen
Art by Freddie E Williams II
Cover by Patrick Gleason & Wayne Faucher
He's fought the Joker and Johnny Warlock, OMACs and King Snake. But can Robin survive the challenge of...a first date?

This has to be Tim Drake's eighteenth 'first date'


52: WEEKS 40-43
Written by Geoff Johns, Grant Morrison, Pat Olliffe & Drew Geraci, Joe Bennett and others
Greg Rucka, Mark Waid
Breakdowns by Keith Giffen
Art by Chris Batista & Rodney Ramos
Backup features by Waid and various
Covers by J.G. Jones

That cover is epic. It's like the greatest inspirational poster ever

FIRESTORM: THE NUCLEAR MAN #33
Written by Dwayne McDuffie
Art by Dan Jurgens & Ken Lashley
Cover by Pete Woods
The superstar creative team of Dwayne McDuffie (JUSTICE LEAGUE UNLIMITED, STATIC), Dan Jurgens (Superman, Captain America) and Ken Lashley (The Flash) bring Firestorm to bold new heights! Jason Rusch and Prof. Martin Stein just want to get their lives back to normal, but the New Gods have other plans! When Orion comes looking for Prof. Stein, you can bet a throwdown's not far behind! Guest-starring the Seven Soldiers' Mister Miracle!

Lots of New God/Fourth World references in this set of solicits.

GREEN LANTERN #17
Written by Geoff Johns
Art by Ivan Reis & Oclair Albert
Cover by Ethan Van Sciver
The explosive conclusion of "Wanted: Hal Jordan!" Wanted throughout the world, Green Lantern suffers the wrath of a new enemy who will plague him for years to come. But what does this alien want from Hal Jordan? And why is it impossible to give? Plus, witness the birth of the new Star Sapphire!

WONDER WOMAN #5
Written by Allan Heinberg
Art and cover by Terry & Rachel Dodson
Concluding the 5-part story "Who is Wonder Woman?" The combined forces of Wonder Woman's transformed rogues gallery declare all-out war on the amazing Amazon, compelling the all-new Wonder Woman to mend fences and join forces with her predecessor and with Wonder Girl if she's going to survive to finally answer the question: "Who Is Wonder Woman?"

DC soliciting these books for February is a bold-faced lie. I know these issues won't be out in February. DC knows they won't be out in February. Just about every retailer knows they won't be out in February. Yet they still list them and act shocked, shocked, when they slip.

MANHUNTER #28
Written by Mark Andreyko
Art by Javier Pina & Robin Riggs
Cover by Kevin Nowlan
"Unleashed" Part 3! Manhunter's dogged pursuit of justice for Wonder Woman brings her face-to-face with the hero she admires and fears the most - Batman!

I'm glad DC is stacking this book with guest stars in an attempt to attract sales, but I also hope it doesn't become a gimmick book.

MYSTERY IN SPACE #6
Written by Jim Starlin
Art by Ron Lim and Starlin & Al Milgrom
Cover by Shane Davis & Matt "Batt" Banning

Shane Davis already needs a fill-in artist?

TEEN TITANS #44
Written by Geoff Johns
Art by Tony S. Daniel & Jonathan Glapion
Cover by Daniel
Part 2 of the "Titans East" storyline explodes as the two Titan teams clash!

Great, old school cover


UNCLE SAM AND THE FREEDOM FIGHTERS #8
Written by Jimmy Palmiotti & Justin Gray
Art and cover by Daniel Acuña
The stunning miniseries conclusion! The Freedom Fighters make their last stand against President Knight with the fate of a nation hanging in the balance.

Is that The Ray blacked out on the cover, or a new 'mystery member'? And who the hell is the chick in the red armor?

No All-Star titles or Ex Machina for February, but otherwise no glaring omissions.

Friday, November 10, 2006

Spiderman 3 Trailer

In all it's glory.

Thomas Hayden Church looks perfect as Sandman. James Franco looks terrible as the new Green Goblin.

Voltron coming to [adult swim]


From TV Squad.

While it hasn't been added to the schedule grid yet, the '80s animated series Voltron will in fact be a part of Adult Swim starting on November 13. However, the episodes will air at 5:30 am, so if you want to see them on television you'll either have to never sleep, or wake up really early.
The good news: it will also be available online at the [adult swim] fix. Now to make me really happy Cartoon Network needs to pick up Transformers (the original), Thundercats, Silverhawks and Battle of the Planets as well.



Thursday, November 09, 2006

Alan Moore to Appear on The Simpsons!

Never in a million years could I have seen this coming. (thanks to Warren Ellis)

Moore, aged 53, recorded his lines at The Lodge studios in Abington Square last month for an episode which will be called Husbands and Knives.
The Simpsons' production team are long-time fans of Moore's, whose reputation in the world of graphic novels is legendary.

He features in a sub-plot which sees a new 'cool' comic shop opening in Springfield in competition with the Android's Dungeon, run by Comic Book Guy who is voiced by Hank Azaria.
The new shop has persuaded Moore to make a public appearance.

Random Musings - Cliffhanger Edition

Before the television season started I thought Heroes had maybe a 60% chance to be good and a 40% chance to be successful. Happily it's not only great it's (alongside Ugly Betty) the big new show of the season. Which pretty much guarantees that we'll see at least 3 new superhero shows on the '07 fall schedules. I think they need to stop, or at least slow down, the constant parade of new characters and develop the existing ones a little more, but otherwise it's been tremendous.

I was a little disappointed in the first six episodes of Lost. I know that Kate, Jack and Sawyer are the focal characters of the show, but as of now we've seen too much of them and too little of the rest of the castaways. We've gained a little insight into the Others, and possibly the other Others, but not enough to justify almost abandoning three quarters of the cast for four of the six episodes. I am glad that the hatch is finally gone, but the show otherwise feels like it's treading water.

I've only had a few hours to knock around with it, but Gears of War is every bit as great as the hype made it out to be. Is it the most original game ever? No, but neither was Halo, or Half-Life or Rainbow Six. GoW is in that class of shooters.

I don't see how Microsoft can sell TV shows and movies on the 360 without having a larger hard drive available. Those 20GBs will fill up real fast with HD content.

After six months every issue of 52 has shipped on time and sold 100,000+ copies. Did anyone, could anyone, predict such success?

Monday, November 06, 2006

I Don't "Collect" Comics. I Read Them.

This past week while discussing hobbies with some neighbors I mentioned that I read comics. One of the neighbors said that he also 'collects' comics and proceeded to rattle off a laundry list of classic and valuable books he owns. I asked him what he's reading now.

"Oh I don't actually read them. I just collect them." It was then that I realized that I may be different.

I don't collect comics.

I (generally) don't bag & board. Most of my comics sit in various boxes strewn about my living space. The stack of books on (or under) my nightstand is usually around a foot tall. I have no earthly idea how much money any of my books could fetch on eBay. It then struck me that the difference between 'collecting' comics and 'following' comics may be the reason that the general public still views them as kids stuff.

Gamers don't collect video games, even the ones with libraries of games that number in the triple digits. The friend everybody has that buys half a dozen DVDs a week is a movie buff, not a collector. For whatever reason the term collector has developed a negative connotation.

A collector sits in their basement gazing longingly at their mint-in-box toy action figure collection. A collector spends his or her weekend scouring flea markets and garage sales for that one rare coin/stamp/Hummel/vinyl record. A collector is obsessive, compulsive and creepy. In other words: Comic Book Guy from The Simpsons.

I know most comic fans are nothing like Comic Book Guy. You (probably, hopefully) know that most comic fans are nothing like Comic Book Guy. But the average adult too often hears "Collector" and immediately pulls up a mental image of an obsessive, emotionally immature fat guy. That image isn't going to draw many new faces into comic shops.

The rank-and-file comics fan, who buys the books for the stories and the characters and the art, has to stop calling themselves collectors. Leave that label for the people that seal their books up in Lucite, never to be read. We read comics. We follow comics. We are comic buffs. We are aficionados.

Review Time - Week of November 1st

Superman: Confidential
Writer: Darwyn Cooke
Artist: Tim Sale

"Kryptonite"

The story of the infant Kal-El as he rockets towards Earth is once again retold, this time from the perspective of the kryptonite that accompanied him to this planet. The (sentient?) xeno-mineral crashes in the Himalayas and expresses feelings of loss and isolation before the locals drag it to a temple. Back in Metropolis Superman fights the Royal Flush gang just two months into his career as a superhero. At this point he doesn't yet know the limits of his powers, so every new experience, in this case being frozen by liquid nitrogen and falling from a great height, may be the one that can actually harm him. Straight from the fight Superman takes Lois Lane on a date at the top of Eiffel Tower, lamenting that with all of his other responsibilities he cannot give Lois the attention she really deserves. Back in Metropolis (again) Perry White has a job for Clark, Lois and Jimmy. They are to investigate Anthony Gallo, a rich industrialist who manages to convince the city council to let him open a huge casino on the waterfront. Perry is convinced that Gallo is crooked and used his wealth and power to buy enough influence on the council to get his way. He sends Clark, Lois and Jimmy to investigate because he knows that they cannot be bought. While Clark and Jimmy set up surveillance equipment Lois tries to worm her way into Gallo's confidence.

Every generation seems to have a definitive Superman artist. Curt Swan in the 60s. John Byrne in the 80s. This period of time will likely be known as Superman's Tim Sale era. His art is the epitome of elegant; simple, clean, but always striking. On a book that is tasked with telling stories of Superman's early days he is the perfect choice to provide the art. (Sale does all of the in-show drawings for NBC's Heroes) Darwyn Cooke does a very good job capturing a young Superman. I don't know if I've ever read another book where Superman was still scared that he could be hurt. Cooke also gets Perry White down better than any writer in a long time. While I like the manic Perry that most Superman writers portray this version of Perry a little more grounded and realistic; The classical American newsman rather than a nicer J. Jonah Jameson. While the art and characterizations are top notch, the story leaves a bit to be desired. Clark, Lois and Jimmy acting like real reporters is nice, but the story they were assigned to didn't grab me at all. I realize you can't use Luthor in every story, but the apparent villain of the piece, Anthony Gallo, is too much of a blank slate to really be interesting at this point. I also couldn't tell if the kryptonite meteor itself was sentient or there was something inside of it that was narrating the opening scene.

Bottom Line:
A tremendous character piece that unfortunately doesn't have a story to match
3 out of 5

Irredeemable Ant-Man #2

Writer: Robert Kirkman
Penciller: Phil Hester

"Shock & Awe"

Present day: Ant Man meets Beth, the woman whose life he just saved, for dinner, telling her he forgot his wallet so she is forced to pick up the bill for their date. She asks him how he became Ant Man and...Six months ago Eric O'Grady, the SHIELD agent that stole an experimental Ant-Man suit from Hank Pym last issue, is still wandering around the Helicarrier, stuck at 2 inches tall. He has no idea how to work the suit and even worse his best friend, Chris McCarthy, is trying to make time with his girlfriend, Veronica. After wandering around for days he stumbles upon a firefight inside of the carrier. A horde of mind-controlled supervillains have attacked in an attempt to secure the still mind controlled Wolverine (as seen in the Enemy of the State storyline from Wolverine last year). Eric uses the Ant Man suit to subdue a couple of the villains and finally figures out how to return to normal size just before he finds his friend Chris hunkered down in his room. They go to escape the carrier but Chris pushes ahead of Eric. At that moment Eric takes a shot to the head from another enthralled villain, killing him. A distraught Chris takes the suit and flees just as the carrier crashes. Back in the present Chris, after telling his date a much more interesting origin story involving Doctor Doom, is invited up to Beth's apartment. Back on the street Chris is being tracked by his former supervising officer Mitch Carson, who now blames Chris for the massive deformity he now sports over one side of his face.

As origins go this new Ant Man's is pretty good. He's a bit of a sleaze, but still feels a lot of guilt over what happened to his friend Eric. I really dig the redesign of the Ant Man suit, complete with an extra pair of arms and a jet pack. He hasn't actually communicated with any ants yet so I don't know if that's still part of the gimmick. I love how Kirkman (Walking Dead, Marvel Zombies, Invincible) tied the origin to the great Enemy of the State storyline in Wolverine last year. In the big picture it doesn't really change the character much, but it's refreshing to see a writer use continuity instead of changing it to fir his/her needs. Kirkman has also laid down some very neat little mysteries for the readers to ponder, the big one being: how did Chris's supervisor, Mitch, get half of his face burnt off and why does he blame Chris? Hester and Parks (Green Arrow, Nightwing) are one of my favorite art combos. Their style may be a bit cartoony for some, but for a book about a dude that shrinks and may or may not talk to ants it fits beautifully.

Bottom Line:
I'm still not certain that the character has enough legs (get it? Legs? Ants? Haha. I'm funny!) to make it as an ongoing series, but this is a promising start.
4 out of 5


Blue Beetle #8

Writers: Keith Giffen & John Rogers
Artists: Cully Hammer & Casey Jones

"Road Trip"

Jamie (the new Blue Beetle), his friend Brenda and the mysterious Peacemaker are taking a road trip to seek out one of the former possessors of the scarab, Dan Garrett. What they find is Danielle Garrett, granddaughter of the first Blue Beetle. She loved her grandfather and has been studying his life, but she never saw any indication that the scarab was alive. She tells Jamie the story of how he became the Blue Beetle and how Ted Kord took over the mantle, sans powers, when he died. Meanwhile a big zombie has been following them, looking for Jamie. He kills a priest and begins tearing through the nearby town. Just as Jamie, Brenda and Danielle are about to start questioning the Peacemaker on his connection to the scarab, it alerts them to the zombie's rampage. Jamie, armored up, fights the monster, but it regenerates so quickly that he can't damage it. The whole time it is rambling on about how Jamie is the angel of death and the harbinger of the apocalypse. Now that it is close to the scarab it knows the name of the danger. "I have dreams, of armies from the heavens. They call, The Reach is Coming, and they bring doomsday." The zombie is finally taken down when Peacemaker hits him with an anesthetic nerve gas that he formulated from household cleaners and rock salt. Danielle Garrett gives them the rest of her notes on the scarab and Jamie and Brenda head out of town, determined to hear the Peacemaker's story.

This book has a very pleasant learning vibe, much like the early issues of Spiderman. Jamie is an extremely likable character who suddenly has to deal with the burden of powers that he doesn't fully understand except that are potentially very dangerous. Giffen and Rogers have built up a wall of enigmas around the Scarab but instead of hoarding every nugget of information (*cough*Lost*cough*) they reward the reader by doling out tidbits regularly. It also seems like DC is positioning Blue Beetle as a possible player in the major events to come in the near future, by tying him into the chalkboard from 52 (references to the Reach and the Armageddon). This issue in particular has a little bit of everything that makes this book fun: a little more light is shed on the scarab and what it can do, we meet a link to the character's past and we cap it off with a big fight scene. Is it a revolutionary concept? No, but it executes everything well and in the process crafts an endearing story.

Bottom Line:
A book with mysteries, humor and action that is more than suitable for all ages.
4 out of 5

Quick Hits

Justice League of America #3 - Where we see a Canary kick major ass, a machine with pointy ears, and the most threatening piece of seafood ever.
Detective Comics #825 - This story sucked. Alfred read like a 9th grader trying to do Monty Python. At least Dini will be back next month.
She-Hulk #13 - Slott spends an entire issue explaining away a continuity gaffe. Unfortunately it was a gaffe he himself wrote...in the last issue. Weak.

Sunday, November 05, 2006

The Hot List - Week of November 8th




DC
52 Week #27
Batman #658
Fables #55
Firestorm The Nuclear Man #31
Gen 13 #2
Green Arrow #68
Green Lantern #14
JLA Classified #29
Stormwatch PHD #1
Superman #657
Tales Of The Unexpected #2
Teen Titans #40
Y The Last Man #51

Marvel
Annihilation #4
Civil War Young Avengers & Runaways #4
Doctor Strange Oath #2
Eternals #5
New X-Men #32
Ultimate X-Men #76

Dark Horse
Star Wars Dark Times #1

Note to DC: Make Ivan Reis and Ethan Van Sciver co-pencillers on Green Lantern. Have them each pencil 6-8 issues a year of the book, this way you not only get back on schedule you potentially have enough extra issues to go bi-weekly during the summer.

I've been pretty underwhelmed by the Worldstorm so far, but Stormwatch looks promising, especially with Doug Mahnke providing the pencils.

How good is Brian K. Vaughn? He made a Doctor Strange story that not only was good, it was great. An act of magic if there ever was one.

The Star Wars comics have been worlds better than I expected, so I'm going to give Dark Times a shot. I can only hope it's as good as Knights of the Old Republic.

Thursday, November 02, 2006

Busiek Leaving Aquaman to Work on 'Mystery Project'

Links from Newsarama

Sayeth Busiek:

I was having a very good time writing the book, as I think anyone who reads it can tell, and was all set for a lengthy run, exploring the world and the characters and the many mysteries and portents and such.
I love writing heroic fantasy, and I think the exotic world of the oceanscape suits it perfectly.

But then, stupid me, I had an idea for something that I thought would be a good project and had the potential to benefit DC, the fans and the comics marketplace in general. It was a very non-standard idea, and I didn't think DC would go for it. But I thought it was a good idea, and I didn't want to just assume it'd be shot down. I'd rather toss it on the table and get an actual ‘no’.

So when I was in New York, I ran it by Dan Didio, and to my surprise, he liked it a lot -- and thought it was something DC should do.

And by the time I got home, he'd pitched it to Paul Levitz, and Paul also thought it was a good idea, and something DC should do.

And they've been wrangling over formats and schedules and such since then, but it's a pretty large project -- more than the usual 22 pages a month that most series are, and it was pretty clear that t wasn't something that could be just added to my schedule, I'd need to give up something to make room for it. And I've been having a great time with both Superman and Aquaman, and it'd be hard to leave either one, but with Carlos kicking ass on Superman and Butch Guice leaving Aquaman, I had a tighter grip on the Kryptonian than the Atlantean, and Dan decided I should let Aquaman go to make room for the Mystery Project.
He's being replaced by fantasy writer Tad Williams (Memory, Sorrow and Thorn, Otherworld, DC's The Next)

I wonder what the mystery project is? It sounds too out of the blue to be 'Look to the Skies' (which scuttlebutt says Jim Starlin will be writing)

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Review Time - Week of October 25th

Seven Soldiers of Victory #1

"The Miser's Coat"

We open in The Tailor's Shop; seen previously in the Zatanna mini, as the Tailor entertains his client with a tale of The Seven Soldiers who are destined to save the world from an evil queen, yet never meet. We then move to the far distant future where The Shining Knight Sir Ystin, stepping out of the cauldron of rebirth, greets Gloriana Tenebrae, Queen of the Sheeda, in her throne room. We then move 40,000 years in our past, when the New Gods came to Earth and created Aurakles, the first superhero. Aurakles is given seven items of power and set to tame the Earth. Eons pass and Neanderthal super scientists create a time machine, which is sent into the future where Melmoth, scavenger King of the Sheeda, finds it. And so begins the first harrowing of Earth. The next harrowing occurs 30 millennia later, in the days of King Arthur and his knights, but the Sheeda and their Castle Revolving crush them as well. Back in present day New York The Guardian leads the defense against the Sheeda hordes, Bulleteer tries to get help for her nemesis and Zatanna & Misty fly to the rescue with a horde of flying horses. Misty, Zatanna's apprentice and daughter of Melmoth, knocks her teacher out so she can confront her stepmother, Gloriana Tenebrae. Before Misty can get far she is confronted by Klarion, who steals her magic die, (which he calls a Croatoan, the Sheeda word for Fatherbox) and escapes. Zatanna wakes up just as the Castle Revolving pops into existence over Manhattan. On the bridge of the Castle Frankenstein informs SHADE that the Sheeda are not aliens, or extra dimensional, but what humans will become in a billion years. Just as Frankenstein is about to finish the Sheeda Klarion, who still possesses power to control 'Grundy-Men', stops him. High over Manhattan Gloriana and Sir Ystin fight fiercely until Ystin is thrown off the Castle Revolving, only to be saved by his Flying Horse. At street level Mister Miracle confronts Darkseid in human guise. The Lord of Apokolips has struck a deal with the Sheeda, they get the Americas to ravage, and Darkseid gets Aurakles. Shilo offers to take Aurakles' place as Darkseid's captive, claiming that he will make his greatest escape. Darkseid agrees since Shilo, the New Gods spirit of Life and Freedom, is the one he actually wants. Darkseid then pulls out a pistol and shoots Shilo in the head, killing him. Back on the castle Gloriana is about to send her assassin, I, Spyder, to kill her step-daughter Misty when he turns on the Queen of the Sheeda, shooting her in the head with an arrow and dropping her to the street below. On the street below she is struck and killed by 'the spear thrown by mighty Aurakles 42,000 years ago' in the form of the car driven by Bulleteer as her nemesis, Sonic Sally, tries to kill her. We end with scenes showing Sir Ystin attending a girl's school (yes in this version Shining Knight is a girl), The Tailor sewing up Zor (from the Zatanna mini) into the Miser's Coat, Klarion as the new lord of the Sheeda and Mister Miracle's grave as he rises out of it.

The first thing that has to be said about this book is the art. J.H. Williams III produces some of the most amazing art ever seen in a comic book, and his work is even more extraordinary when you see the different art styles he uses for each of the Soldier's chapters. And the art isn't just pretty, it's creative and well thought out, traits you don't always get with other 'pretty' pencillers. There are about a dozen different panels and pages in this issue that should be hanging in a museum. The story Morrison tries to tell also deserves praise; its epic, audacious and has a lot of heart. Unfortunately the story is so epic and convoluted that it's often hard to understand. The story jumps from the distant past to the distant future and back to the present several times while (possibly) breaking the fourth wall at times as well. Several of the Soldiers, Frankenstein and Guardian, didn't seem to do too much in this issue at all. It took me a while to figure out that Bulleteer is apparently Aurakles' descendant, and hence the spear thrown 42,000 years ago that finally found its mark. Ultimately while I think the ideas behind the book were top notch, the presentation was so muddled and convoluted that it made it difficult to fully enjoy. The six-month delay definitely hurt as well. I just don't remember a lot of the details of the seven mini-series, details that may have shed some light on this book.

Bottom Line:
Great art and an epic story that collapsed under the weight of it's own high concept.
3 out of 5

Sensational Spider-Man #31

"The Deadly Foes of Peter Parker, part 3"

As Peter responds to his old flame Liz Allan's distress call The Chameleon, disguised as Peter, worms his way into Avenger's Tower and next to Aunt May. Peter and Liz hash our some lingering resentment before he is ambushed by The Molten Man, The Scarecrow and Will O' The Wisp. Spidey is taking a beating when Black Shows up and they make quick work of the 3 villains. Molten Man tells Peter that the real target is Aunt May and he goes swinging off to save her. Back in Avenger's Tower May is baking cookies for the man she thinks is her nephew. The Chameleon is fantasizing about strangling the elderly woman as the two engage in conversations about cookies, locked doors and yarn. Aunt May has the last laugh however. She knew immediately that it wasn't Peter, so she ground up some of Mary Jane's sleeping pills into the cookies she was baking and fed them to the fake Peter. The real Spidey crashes through the window only to find The Chameleon already unconscious on the floor.

I like the bad-ass, self sufficient Aunt May. For all too long she was portrayed as a doddering victim-in-waiting, so its nice to see her written as competent for once. The rest of the story was a nice exploration of the consequences of Peter's unmasking, but it just wasn't particularly gripping. Angel Medina's art looks a lot like Todd McFarland's Spiderman work from the early 90's. So much so that it distracts from his otherwise competent work. Both of the Spiderman satellite books (Spectacular and Friendly Neighborhood) have been good but both also feel like they're treading water while moving from crossover to crossover.

Bottom Line: A fun story but not a particularly memorable one
3 out of 5

Action Comics #844

"Last Son, part 1"

Superman, after visiting with a computer simulation of his father in his Fortress of Solitude, returns to Metropolis in time to catch a shell-shaped object as it rocketed to Earth. Inside the object is a child. Superman brings the child, who looks about 8, to the Department of Metahuman Affairs where is quickly becomes apparent that the child is Kryptonian. The DMA later learns that the rocket containing the child came not from outer space but from hyperspace. Clark doesn't know what to do with the child, all he knows is the feelings he already has towards the boy. The next day Superman goes to visit with the child but the lab has been stripped down. The child is gone. An enraged Superman forces his way into the Pentagon to get some answers from the DMA head, Sarge Steel. The military convoy transporting the child is ambushed and the child taken away. Finally, on the Kent's farm, Clark shows up with the child and asks his parents to help him raise the boy.

A good start. While the book seemed a little light at times the seeds of some very interesting storylines were planted, first and foremost: Is the boy really a Kryptonian? With almost any other creative team such a huge change for the character would be inconceivable, but the Johns-Donner combo is big enough that you really feel this change may stick. And there in also lies a problem. This run has been so hyped for so long that this first issue felt like a bit of a let down. It may be unfair, anything short of instant classic would have fallen short of the hype, but my initial reaction was: That's it? The lack of an overt villain, other than a one-page tease from Lex Luthor, brings the book down a notch, but not substantially. Adam Kubert's art seemed very sketchy at times. In some places it worked well, in others it looked rushed or incomplete.

Bottom Line: A good start to a storyline with a lot of potential
3 out of 5

Quick Hits

Civil War: Choosing Sides: A whole lot of nothing.
Nextwave #9: You think this 'E' stands for America?
Justice #8: For the first time on a long time, Aquaman is a badass.

The Awesomest Thing Ever!

The poster is right, this is the most awesome thing ever created by man. The only way this could be better is if Leia was on stage with a key-tar.

(Thanks to Ragnar Danneskjold, The All-Seeing Pirate @ The Jawa Report)

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Crackhead Squirrels

For some reason the fact that this story comes from a British newspaper makes it even funnier.

SQUIRRELS are getting hooked on crack cocaine — hidden by addicts in gardens.

They are digging up the stashes and eating the mega-addictive drug, which comes in small chunks.

Several have been spotted behaving bizarrely in Brixton, South London, since a police blitz against pushers and users.

One resident said: “My neighbour said dealers had used my garden to hide crack.

“Just an hour earlier I’d seen a squirrel digging in the flower-beds.

“It was ill-looking and its eyes looked bloodshot, but it kept on desperately digging. It seems a strange thing to say, but it seemed to know what it was looking for.”


Other residents have seen squirrels become unusually aggressive.

The RSPCA said: “These animals are big foragers. They are attracted by smell and will dig up what they fancy.

“If a squirrel did open a bag of crack and start consuming it there is no doubt it would die pretty quickly.”

Crack squirrels are a recognised problem in America. They are common in parks used by addicts in New York and Washington DC.

They have been known to attack park visitors in their search for a fix.

Monday, October 30, 2006

The Hot List - Week of November 1st

DC
52 Week #26
All-New Atom #5
Blue Beetle #8
Detective Comics #825
Ex Machina #24
Exterminators #11
Jonah Hex #13
Justice League Of America #3
Manifest Eternity #6
Midnighter #1
Mystery In Space #3
Nightwing #126
Outsiders #42

Marvel
Agents Of Atlas #4
Criminal #2
Incredible Hulk #100
Irredeemable Ant-Man #2
She-Hulk 2 #13
Uncanny X-Men #480
X-Men: Phoenix Warsong #3

Fallen Angel Vol 2 #10

It feels like an age since Ex Machina's last issue hit the stands. The wait is worth it.

Justice League has been fun so far, but this issue needs to up the action quotient a little.

I've been riding a wave of good will towards Garth Ennis lately so I'm going give The Midnighter a try.

Planet Hulk started off great, but has been treading water for the last few issues. Pak needs to move things along a little bit.

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Random Musings - Lost Year Edition

Did I read that right? Wildcats #2 delayed until March?!?! All-Star Batman delayed until January? I love Jim Lee, but someone needs to pull him aside and tell him not to take on so many projects. Wildcats. All-Star Batman. The DC massively multiplayer game. He needs to look himself in the mirror and hand one of these off to another artist before its too late.

Fuse, the music video network, was actually playing Evil Dead this week. I don't think I've ever seen that broadcast outside of the premium channels. One of the great horror movies of all time.

I read Seven Soldiers #1 today. I didn't understand it, but I read it. The damn thing should come with a tab of acid to drop while you read it, maybe then it would make some sense.

Japanese game shows are funny. And so very, very painful.

I need Gears of War. Now.

I was given something called a Slanket the other day. Its a big, plush blanket with sleeves in it. It sounds a little odd at first (and it kind of looks like monk robes) but its actually a great idea. Being able to surf the web and play Saints Row in a cold house while snuggly wrapped up is very nice. And since a bunch of my friends and family seemed to like it my Christmas shopping got a bit easier this year.

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Review Time

Birds of Prey #99

"Headhunter, part 4. Class Dismissed"

Black Canary and Huntress chase the Turkish gunrunner Yasemin into an abandoned tenement as Oracle faces the new Batgirl. The new Batgirl seems to know all about Barbara and her Birds and claims to have been in Oracle's base many times before. In keeping with superhero tradition Faux-Batgirl attacks Babs before getting dropped herself. Barbara realizes that the girl isn't really a threat, but she cannot let her fight crime under her cowl. Faux-Batgirl asks Barbara to train her "just like you trained Cassandra (the last Batgirl, who is now apparently evil)" and Babs gets angry slaps the girl, promising to show her "what it means to be Batgirl." Meanwhile Huntress is forced to pursue Yasemin after a henchman waylays Black Canary. Yasemin taunts Huntress, threatening to kill every child in the class Huntress' alter ego teaches. This pisses Huntress off and, after scaling the side of the building, beats Yasemin with an antenna before dangling her over the edge. Huntress threatens to drop her 10 stories to the pavement below unless she promises to stay away from her students. Yasemin, bruised and bloody, consents; much to the relief of Black Canary who thought her friend may once again cross a line. Back in Barbara's base she reluctantly shows the girl just what it means to be Batgirl, giving her the slug The Joker put into her spine, and showing her pictures of Spoiler lying dead on a mortuary slab. The girl is heartbroken by the images and agrees to give up her dreams of being Batgirl and leave, although she says she never promised she wouldn't become a superhero. Next we see Black Canary present Babs with a copy of her memoirs as she tells her best friend that she is leaving the team to spend more time with her adopted daughter, Sin. The two reminisce over past adventures before Dinah goes to break the news to Huntress. In a scene with a surprising amount of lesbian subtext Dinah says goodbye to Helena, with Helena thanking her for being such a good friend. At the end Huntress has, for the first time, taken over as narrator of the series.

...And so begins a new era for one of the best, most consistent books on the market. The dialogue between Canary and Huntress in the first few pages, Huntress teasing Canary about gaining weight, Canary speaking in Bizarro Black Canary voice was absolutely priceless and served as a great counterpoint to the Oracle/Faux-Batgirl scenes. Raiz did a great job capturing the combination grief and determination on Oracle's face as she showed the young girl exactly what being a Batgirl can do to you. Huntress also had a great scene with Yasemin on the roof; almost everything you need to know about her character was included on those few pages. Raiz' art was pretty good (complete with the new trend of drawing every seam, buckle and lace on the costumes) although his faces looked a little blocky and odd at times. The scene with Huntress and Canary at the end was odd. To call it lesbian subtext almost doesn't do it justice, I really expected the two characters to start making out for a moment. It didn't detract from the story, but it took a scene that was (in my opinion) supposed to be more about the big sister-little sister dynamic and turned it into something else completely.

Bottom Line: Humor, poignancy, action, character development and lesbian subtext, all in one neat package


The Authority #1

"Utopian"

A submarine in the Norwegian Sea goes down after members of the crew attack one another. A man named Ken wakes up in England to a cold, unhappy marriage. Ken is called in to investigate the submarine incident but his wife doesn't want him to go. Ken and his crew, Tor and Dex, take a small sub and investigate the site as his wife packs a bag to leave him. They reach the sub and find the crew had been killed, some with broken necks, others with their heads torn off. Tor is confronted by a familiar wall of shimmering orange light before disappearing suddenly without a trace. Ken is worried when he is informed that a large anomalous object has been detected right in front of them. They hit the lights and see an absolutely massive structure sitting on the bottom of the sea.

When I got to the last page of this book I almost thought there were pages missing from my copy. Why? BECAUSE ABSO-FREAKING-LUTELY NOTHING HAPPENED! It felt like the first five minutes of an episode of Law & Order. The Authority, you know the stars of the title, do not appear in one single panel in the entire book. Books that have rich, complex, likable supporting casts can survive an issue without the stars, but the cast of this issue has all the appeal of canker sore. Did I mention that in the first post-reboot issue of one of the flagship titles of the Wildstorm line the main characters are not even mentioned? The whole book just feels pretentious; like it's so mind-numbingly brilliant that they don't actually have to include anything approaching a story to make you but it. The only saving grace of this book is Gene Ha's art, which is impressive to say the least. Other than that there is nothing to this issue. Don't buy it. Avert your eyes lest its hippotamic feculence infects thine eyes.

Bottom Line: Quite possibly the worst comic I've ever read that didn't have the words 'Rob Leifeld' on the cover


John Woo's 7 Brothers #1

"Son of Heaven, Son of Hell"

A great Chinese Emperor sends four treasure fleets to the four corners of the Earth. These fleets circumnavigate the globe collecting wealth and knowledge before returning to the Middle Kingdom. Upon arriving home they are greeted not with honor but with scorn. The expedition cost so much money that the peasants revolted and the Empire was thrown into disarray. In the end China turned to isolationism and all records of the treasure fleets were stricken from history. Almost. In the present day Los Angels a pimp named Double-Double is letting some hos know what the score is when the ladies proceed to beat the crap out of Double-Double for their boss, a big pimp named Skull. We then see a very nice apartment where six men are meeting. All six men were given a plane ticket to LA and $50,000, with the promise of another $50,000 if they attend the meeting. All of the men are intelligent and speak English but hail from all over the globe. The story then cuts back to Double-Double, who is about to receive The Unkindest Cut from Skull when a slender Asian woman pulls up in a sports car. She proceed to beat the holy hell out of Skull and his crew, hitting them so quickly that they did not feel the blows until 30 seconds later. She takes Double-Double, real name Ronald, with her to the apartment. The Asian lady, Rachael, informs the men that she does not have the rest of their money at the moment and they begin to leave when she divulges their secrets. Each man has powers: speed, far-seeing, far-hearing, teleportation, sonic scream and flight. She does not know what Ronald's power is but she knows that all seven of them are needed to save the world. We then move to China where a team of spelunkers is in a cave under the Great Wall. They find a wall inscribed with characters but before they can breach it several members are killed in a freak cave in, an omen of things to come.

I really wasn't expecting much from this book but I was pleasantly surprised by how good it was. Garth Ennis' trademark over the top dialogue mixed with John Woo's martial arts flair and just a hint of Eastern mysticism produced a fun book. Geevan Kang's art was a little rough and dark for my tastes but he did an adequate job on the book. Ennis' work is fun if not exactly original; its equal parts obscene and funny. The scenes with Double-Double, Skull and Rachael were fun, but the rest of the story seems a bit light in comparison.

Bottom Line: An interesting beginning that falls just short of compelling
3 out of 5

X-Factor #12

"X'D Out, part 3"

The Eldest Tryp calmly explains to Madrox, Rahne and Monet that he is also a kind of 'Multiple Man', capable of existing as past, present and future versions of himself at any point along his own timeline. In his future X-Factor was instrumental in undoing the effects of the Decimation and restoring the Mutant's powers. But the sudden re-powering of millions of mutants caused the balance of power to shift and soon there were 'No More Humans'. A pair of rampaging mutants destroyed Tryp's future body while his mind was in the present, so he now exists in a state of near incorporeality. His goal now is to either keep the mutants powerless or kill X-Factor; both actions would suit his goals. A scuffle ensues and the ghostly Tryp uses his powers to show them the future he is trying to prevent. Layla meanwhile does her Butterfly thing back at X-Factor HQ with a few calls to local pizzerias and a set of bolt cutters, the end result being Mrs. Buchanon getting sprung from her captor's van. While Madrox and the others are busy fighting with Eldest Tryp Rictor and Siryn discover Singularity's hidden files and their even more hidden armory. Rictor and Siryn are ambushed by the other two Tryps but the manage to escape. Madrox tells them to stand down as they go the leave Singularity alone. However a Dupe, created in the scuffle with Tryp, comes out of the armory strapped with C-4. This Dupe remembers when Tryp used his elemental powers to kill Madrox' family with a tornado when he was small. The Dupe blows himself up, ejecting X-Factor from the building and destroying The Tryps and their offices in the process. Back at X-Factor HQ Layla is confronted by the Eldest Tryp, who survived the blast. He realizes that Layla is actually the danger point of the group, and tells the stunned girl, "When chaos battles chaos, expect the unexpected"

Firstly, Tryp's power is a little hard for me to get a firm handle on. Whether this is an intentional obfuscation or just a poor explanation is still an open question. The story itself was Peter David near the top of his game. Deep philosophical questions layered over some breakneck plot twists and sprinkled with quirky humor. It was a very villain heavy piece so a lot of the cast faded into the background a bit, but not enough to weaken the story. The art, especially that of Roy Allan Martinez (Son of M) on the flashbacks, was good, although Renato Arlem tries a bit too hard at times to make the book feel noir-ish. I love the concept of Madrox's Dupes each having different personalities with slightly different lettering for each Dupe's speech bubbles.

Quick Hits
Runaways #21 - Chase does the right thing in the end, even if the reader may have been wishing for him to do otherwise. And Molly has too much caffeine.
Checkmate #7 - Only three members of the Suicide Squad died on a mission. That's like an all time low.
52 #24 - The Justice League is back (sort of), Skeets returns (better than ever), Black Adam makes peace (for now) and Amanda Waller makes Atom Smasher an offer that he can't refuse (although he may wish he had). Plus the debuts of POLEDANCER AND E.S.PETE!



Monday, October 23, 2006

The Hot List - Week of October 25th

Sorry for the lack of posts but its been an...odd week.
DC
52 Week #25
Action Comics #844
Boys #4
Jack Of Fables #4
Justice #8
Secret Six #5
Seven Soldiers #1
Supergirl And The Legion Of Super-Heroes #23
Superman Batman Annual #1
Trials Of SHAZAM #3
Uncle Sam And The Freedom Fighters #4

Marvel
Captain America #23
Civil War Choosing Sides
Daredevil #90
Exiles #87
Heroes For Hire #3
New Avengers #24
Nextwave Agents Of HATE #9
Ultimate Spider-Man #101
X-Men #192

Is Justice the best Justice League story ever told?

Is the Seven Soldiers finale actually coming out? For reals?

Is The Sentry actually going to do something in New Avengers?

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Pull List.com

Digg + Comic Book News = Pull-List.com.

I'm not sure how big it can get with such a narrow focus, but I'll stick around to find out.

Looking Forward - Marvel's January Solicitations

Oh mighty crystal ball. Tell us what the House of Ideas will bring forth in the dead of winter's heart.

ULTIMATE CIVIL WAR SPIDER-HAM CRISIS (FEATURING WOLVER-HAM) #1
Written by J. MICHAEL STRACZYNSKI
Penciled by MIKE WIERINGO, MIKE ALLRED, JOHN SEVERIN, NICK DRAGOTTA, ARIEL OLIVETTI and JIM MAHFOOD
Cover by MIKE WIERINGO
You asked for it, you got it! Quite possibly the most important comic ever! A life-changing event that will change the way you look at yourself and the world around you! Spinning out of the page of CIVIL WAR -- and every other top-selling comic crossover event you can think of - it's ULTIMATE CIVIL WAR SPIDER-HAM FRISIS (FEATURING WOLVER-HAM)!!! He's little, he's pink, he knows how to bring home the bacon. He's Spider-Ham - and he's about to embark a kaleidoscopic, time-spanning, universe-shifting journey that will prove just how big a pig he really is. Guest-starring: Iron Ham, Deviled Ham, Fantastic Ham, Green Ham, Ant-Ham, Ultimate Captain Ham, Hambit, Hamneto, and everyone's favorite Sorcerer Supreme -- whathisface? You know, the guy with the blue tights and red cape…Mustache…Man-servant named Wong? -- anyway, you know who I'm talking about. He's in it, too. And Wolver-Ham - did I mention him?

I probably won't buy this, but it's still a great idea. I'm glad that Marvel can poke fun at itself.

NEXTWAVE: AGENTS OF H.A.T.E. #12
Written by WARREN ELLIS
Pencils and Cover by STUART IMMONEN
To all those who HAVEN'T been buying NEXTWAVE-
Thanks a lot, jerks! This is the last issue! To all those who HAVE been buying NEXTWAVE- YOU RULE!! Do not miss this pulse-pounding conclusion to the greatest work of western literature EVER! Hamlet? Horrible. War and Peace? What-a-joke! The Great Gatsby? The Great Lame-by, maybe. Those works are going to be moved to the Bad Section of your local bookstores after this issue comes out. Don't miss this or you won't know what your children's children are reading in school.

While I knew that Ellis probably wouldn't keep this book going for long, I'll be sad to see it go. It was a great, fun read.

NEW AVENGERS: ILLUMINATI #2 (of 5)
Written by BRIAN MICHAEL BENDIS & BRIAN REED
Pencils & Cover by JIM CHEUNG
The Infinity Gems offer their users complete mastery of the universe -- if any one of the Gems fell into the wrong hands, it would be catastrophic. So, when the Illuminati discover the Infinity Gems are scattered across the cosmos, completely unguarded, the race is on to collect them before anyone else learns the truth. The fate of the Marvel Universe hangs in the balance as Brian Michael Bendis (New Avengers) and Brian Reed (Ms. Marvel) team up with Jim Cheung (Young Avengers) to tell another chapter in the tale of the Illuminati!

I'm a sucker for the Infinity Gems

SQUADRON SUPREME: HYPERION VS. NIGHTHAWK #1 (of 4)
Written by MARC GUGGENHEIM
Pencils and Cover by PAUL GULACY
It had to happen: The ultimate throw-down between the two stars of the smash hits "Supreme Power" and "Squadron Supreme:" Hyperion and Nighthawk.
But what could draw these two heroes into the biggest of all smackdowns? Nothing less than genocide. In this ripped from the headlines story, Marc Guggenheim (Wolverine, Blade) and comic book legend Paul Gulacy (Master of Kung Fu) explore the real-world tragedy that is going on right now in Darfur, Africa. The most thought-provoking and action-packed book you'll read all year!

Please stop with the Squadron Supreme minis.


CIVIL WAR: THE RETURN
Written by PAUL JENKINS
Penciled by TOM RANEY
As the Civil War rages, two of the universe's greatest heroes are confronted with pasts they can't leave behind in two heart-rendering tales. On Earth, the Sentry confronts his inner demons as the shadows of past and future battles tear him apart. Within The Negative Zone, the walls of 42, are pulled back to reveal the return of one of the Marveldom's greatest heroes…now face-to-face with a Universe they no longer recognize.

Captain Marvel was one of the great deaths in comic history. Why not let him stay dead?

WOLVERINE #50
Written by JEPH LOEB
Penciled by SIMONE BIANCHI & ED MCGUINNESS
Wraparound cover by SIMONE BIANCHI
"EVOLUTION," PART 1
A DOUBLE-SIZED SPECIAL 50TH ISSUE! WITH SPECTACLAR WRAPAROUND COVER BY BIANCHI!
Superstar Jeph Loeb (Batman: Hush) is joined by future superstar Simone Bianchi for the biggest, best and, quite possibly, last battle between Wolverine and Sabretooth! These sworn foes have been locked in an endless grudge match that goes back longer than either can remember -- or even imagine. The key to victory is eons old, and it's certain to rock their world. Think you've seen Marvel's fiercest go toe-to-toe before? Those were just warm-ups. Also featuring a 12-page backup story "PUNY LITTLE MAN," by Loeb and superstar Ed McGuinness (Superman/Batman): He's big, he's green, he's mean, and he just got his mitts on Logan. Now THIS is gonna hurt.

While I'm not the biggest Jeph Loeb fan I'm really looking forward to this story.




X-MEN: PHOENIX - WARSONG #5 (of 5)
Written by GREG PAK
Penciled by TYLER KIRKHAM
Cover by MARC SILVESTRI

Wasn't this the end of Neon Genesis Evangelion

No solicits for Astonishing X-Men, or Civil War #7. I am shocked. SHOCKED.

Monday, October 16, 2006

Looking Forward - DC's January Solicitations

Books to be released by the Distinguished Competition in the month of the god of doorways.

DETECTIVE COMICS #827
Written by Paul Dini
Art by Don Kramer & Wayne Faucher
Cover by Simone Bianchi
Meet the all-new Ventriloquist! After surviving a near-fatal explosion, Batman discovers the Ventriloquist and Scarface are back - with a vengeance. As the Dark Knight tries to unravel the mystery behind his enemies' resurrection, Scarface unites the most feared names in the Gotham Underworld and introduces them to a surprising new ally in their war against Batman.

Was anyone really pleading for the return of The Ventriloquist?

SUPERMAN/BATMAN #33
Written by Mark Verheiden
Art by Matthew Clark & Andy Lanning
Cover by Phil Jimenez
Mark Verheiden (Battlestar Galactica, Smallville) brings you the conclusion of the epic story pitting DCU aliens against the Earth. You won't believe who the Last Son of Krypton and the Dark Knight must face in this finale!

Nice concept on this cover, but the execution needs some work.

BLUE BEETLE #11
Written by Keith Giffen & John Rogers
Art by Rafael Albuquerque
Cover by Andy Kuhn
Lost in space - again! But this time the Beetle's got Metron of the New Gods on his side - if he can survive the hostile world where they've met.

The New Gods are a recurring theme in these solicits

CHECKMATE #10
Written by Greg Rucka
Art and cover by Jesus Saiz
"Pawn 502" concludes! All spy agencies have special forces. Only Checkmate has Shadowpact - but even magic may not stop a survivor of Luthor's Everyman Project from blowing this op sky-high!

The Shadowpact and The Everyman Project in the same issue? The threads of 52 pull tighter.


JUSTICE SOCIETY OF AMERICA #2
Written by Geoff Johns
Art by Dale Eaglesham & Art Thibert
Cover by Alex Ross
Variant cover by Eaglesham
The new adventures of America's greatest super-team continue! After a deadly arrival at their new headquarters, the JSA must discover who's hunting down their descendants. Will the youngest member, Cyclone, be the next victim?

How badass is this cover?

TEEN TITANS #43
Written by Geoff Johns
Art by Tony Daniel & Jonathan Glapion
Cover by Daniel
Part 1 of the eagerly anticipated "Titans East" story! Led by Deathstroke, a Teen Titans team consisting of Batgirl, Risk, Match, Alter Boy, Enigma, Sun Girl and Inertia is out to chew gum and kick butt…and guess what? They're all out of gum!

I want this book now!

No solicits for Justice League, Green Lantern, Firestorm and Wonder Woman this time. That's not a good sign.

The Hot List - Week of October 18th


DC
52 Week #24
Authority #1
Birds Of Prey #99
Checkmate #7
Exterminators #10
Fables 1001 Nights Of Snowfall HC
Omega Men #1
Robin #155
Sandman Vol 2 #1 $0.50
Shadowpact #6
WildCATS #1

Marvel
Cable Deadpool #33
Civil War X-Men #4
Runaways Vol 2 #21
Ultimate Fantastic Four #35
X-Factor #12

The Worldstorm continues with the Grant Morrison penned relaunches of both The Authority and Wild C.A.T.S. hitting stands this week. I'll give both a shot but to be perfectly honest I never really liked The Authority.

It feels like I've been waiting for the Fables 1001 Nights of Snowfall Hardcover for 1001 days. I'm sure it will be worth the wait.

A $.50 comic? Oh hells yeah. Its a Sandman Mystery Theater relaunch? Double hells yeah.

If Civil War: X-Men was a six issue mini then I would have already dropped it, but since there is only one issue left I'll bite the bullet and pick it up.

Friday, October 13, 2006

Warren Ellis Writing Castlevania Animated Film

This blew my mind. Castlevania has so much potential as an animated film, and Ellis can get the most out of the concept. I'm not sure who the lead designer is on the project, but the material lends itself to some very stylish visuals.

Review Time - Week of October 11th

Fables #54 - Hansel arrives in Fabletown as the Emperor's ambassador and kicks the proverbial beehive. Prince Charming, absent from Fabletown for most of it's history, hears Hansel's story from Beauty and Frau Totenkinder, and it isn't pretty. After killing the Witch in the Gingerbread house (the afore mentioned Totenkinder) Hansel immediately begins to show a disturbing fascination with killing. When he and his sister reach Fabletown in the 1600s Hansel is horrified to find Frau Totenkinder living peacefully, safe from harm by force of the Fabletown compact. Hansel immedately leave to live in the Mundy world, becoming a world renowned Witch Hunter in the process. When he returns to Town a century later he finds his sister has become friendly with the old witch. In a fit of rage Hansel kills Gretel and tries to portray it as an accident. The Fables don't buy his story and exile him, stripping him of his amnesty under the Fabletown Compact. Soon after the business of Witch Hunting dried up and Hansel returned to the Homelands to work for the Emperor. This backstory is interwoven with Hansel's attempts to secure new digs and Beast's quandry of how to keep track of the Emperor's embassy.

Where is Gretel?

I know she was shown killed in the flashback, but shes a pretty famous Fable. Goldilocks survived multiple gunshots, a fall down a cliff and a axe to her head, so Gretel should be able to bounce back from a broken neck. So I fully expect Gretel to show up at some point soon. As for the issue, it was the normal excellence I expect from Willingham in this series. This issue really made me realize well he writes Prince Charming. Prince began the series as an almost irredemable louse, but ever since he became Mayor of Fabletown he has slowly become a very likeable character. He's still ruled by his libido, but he also seems to genuinely care about the fate of his people now.

New X-Men #31 - The New X-Men face Nimrod, a Sentinel from the future so advanced that even the X-Men, with one of their most powerful lineups ever, couldn't defeat it. They attack, but seem hopelessly outmatched, with Rockslide being blown to bits by Nimrod. Forge comes up with a plan to destroy the Super-Sentinel and the NXM attack en masse. Each teammember gets their licks in before Talon tears open its armor, allowing Mercury and Surge to overload the time device. Nimrod wakes up in the past, just before it's first encounter with the X-Men. The NXM however are devastated with Rockslide in pieces and Talon injured so badly her healing factor cannot compensate. Rockslide pulls himself together, albeit looking somewhat differently, and Hellion takes Talon and tries to fly her from Dallas to Westchester so Elixir can heal her. He makes it an collapses at Elixir's feet, but he manages to save Laura from death.

When Kyle and Yost first took over this book I disliked how many characters they killed off early on. It was a bit gratuitous, especially coming right on the heels of the Decimation. This issue those deaths really paid off. I really thought they killed off Rockslide for good this time. Santo Vaccaro isn't a great character, but I found myself feeling bad when I thought he was gone for good. The rest of the issue was equally great, with each team member getting a moment to shine. Its tough to take what is essentially a junior team and craft stories that are sufficently threatening while working within the bounds of the mother books, and in this case the writers did a bang up job. I tip my cap to Misters Yost and Kyle for making a worthy successor to the old New Mutants book without being slavishly bound to the past. This issue shows why Paco Medina is a rising star. Some fans think his work is too cartoony, but I think it fits the material here perfectly.

Quick Hits
Ultimate Power #1 - Bendis' take on Reed Richards may be his best work. Ultimate Reed may be the most sympathetic character in the Ultimate U.
52 Week 23 - The Island of Mad Scientists should get it's own series.

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Infinite Crisis ver. 2.0?

DC released the hardcover version of Infinite Crisis this week. In addition to the retouched artwork and 'deleted scenes' that we were expecting DC also apparently made some substantive changes to the dialouge itself. The details can be seen here and here, but the gist is that DC apparently may be bringing back Earth-2 in some way, shape or form.

This makes me angry.

The return of Earth-2 doesn't bother me. If DC's braintrust thinks they can get good stories out of it, great.

The 'deleted scenes' don't bug me. If they were taken out in the first place then they probably didn't add anything to the whole.

The retouched art doesn't really bother me much. I wish I had it but I'm not going to spend $19.99 to see it.

What does make me angry is changing the story, even incrementally, from the original to the hardcover. I bought all 7 issues of the main book, all 30+ issues of the lead-in minis and lord knows how many tie-in issues, yet I now discover that I don't have the whole story. DC is essentially saying "The $21 you paid for the series? It doesn't entitle you to the whole story. Pony up another Jackson." You want to make things right DC? Post a panel-by-panel comparason on your website. Let the people that bought IC when it came out (i.e. - your loyal customers) see what you want us to see without having to buy the HC.

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Random Musings - Fembot Edition

Terrence Howard will be playing Jim Rhodes in the new Iron Man movie. Good casting, but with an eye towards future iterations of the character/franchise. The comic book movie collapse is staved off for another year.

David Eick, one of Battlestar Galactica's showrunners, will be bringing the Bionic Woman back to television, updating the concept a la BSG. The ethical/moral implications of a bionic person have always fascinated me, so this is right up my alley. No word on when the show will debut, but I'd guess Fall '07.

On a related note: A lot of people disliked BSG's season premiere.
It was too talky.
It was too political.
It was too different.
Me? I liked it. It wasn't great, but I thought it was effective. Lots of people hated the direction the show took at the very end of season 2 when the focus shifted to the New Caprica colony. The producers could have kept them bopping around in space for the next 6 seasons without a word of complaint, but they took a chance and changed the status quo of a hit show. It was very politically charged, but the past 2 seasons have dealt with complex hot button issues so well, and so even handedly, that it didn't bother me this one time.

Last BSG tidbit: earlier today a rumor hit the net (via AICN) that NBC was thinking of moving it form Sci-Fi to the mothership. This would be a collosally bad idea. BSG does very good, maybe great, ratings for a basic cable channel. Put those same numbers on a network show and you have a disaster.
(UPDATE - NBC has since debunked the rumor. Its staying on Sci-Fi)

So people are now camping out in front of game retailers to make pre-orders on the Playstation 3? For a console that costs $500-$600 and may only launch with ONE semi-exclusive title? I feel shame for my fellow gamers.

Monday, October 09, 2006

Huh?!? Google to Buy YouTube for $1.7B


This makes no sense.

I like YouTube. I could spend hours on it watching old Sportcenter commercials and Japanese gameshows. However when you get right down to it 90% of YouTube's content falls into two categories.

1) Video of little Billy's first baseball game or baby Sally's first steps, uploaded to give the grandparents an opportunity to see these magical moments. These videos, of course, have no appeal to anyone else in the world.

2) Copyrighted material. SNL clips. World of Warcraft machinima. Morons lipsynching the latest Black Eyed Peas song. Video of Oleg Maskaev knocking Hasim Rakhman through the ropes a decade ago.

All of these are, in some way, shape or form, copyrighted material. You want to use it for your personal use, fine, the big boys aren't going to go after you. But now that YouTube has actual capital behind it (Google Money) you can be sure the heavyweights are going to be beating a path to your door with cease-and-decist orders.

This just smacks of the late 90's internet boom, when even moronic ideas like pets.com had dumptrucks full of money dumped in their laps. Google would rather be known as the company that bought a failing YouTube than the company that passed up the opportunity to buy a massively successful YouTube.

The Hot List - Week of October 11th

DC
52 Week #23
Fables #54
Firestorm The Nuclear Man #30
Gen 13 #1
Green Arrow #67
Green Lantern Corps #5
JLA Classified #28
Martian Manhunter #3
Tales Of The Unexpected #1
Worldstorm #1

Marvel
Annihilation #3
Civil War Front Line #7
New X-Men #31
Thunderbolts #107
Ultimate Power #1
Ultimate X-Men #75
Uncanny X-Men #479

Another light week. My wallet says 'Yay', my sense of wonder and anticipation says 'Yawn'

Worldstorm is the semi-relaunch/revamp of the Wildstorm Universe. I don't know all that much about the WSU other than The Authority and Captain Atom - Armageddon but with the talent DC is putting into this relaunch I have to at least give it a shot.

I'm done with Civil War: Frontline. The whole series to date has bugged me, but the last one pissed me off to no end.

New X-Men has been a very pleasant surprise. When Yost & Kyle took over I thought it was going to turn into Little Miss Wolverine and her Amazing Friends, but they've managed to keep the entire team in the spotlight. I still think the student massacre a while back was excessive, but the rest of the run has been a lot of fun.

Ultimate Power lust looks like a lot of fun. This may be heresy to the ol' comics blogosphere but I like Greg Land's art. Its cheesecake-y and Land does make his characters look a lot like real celebrities, but its still beautifully drawn. Is he an all time great penciller? Probably not, but I still enjoy his work.

Play NES Games For Free In Your Browser

Link

...And there goes my productivity for the rest of the week. Ah Bionic Commando. How I missed thee.

Friday, October 06, 2006

Ellis & Deodato, Jr. on Thunderbolts


Thanks to Newsarama

Issue #110 will be the first for Ellis & Deodato, Jr.

Ellis is at his best when dealing with anti-heroes, so I have to assume he'll be just as good when writing non-heroes. On the other hand Ellis does his best work when he's not too encumbered by continuity, which this book will probably be dripping in.

Deodato is hit or miss for me. Every now and then he draws a book that blows me away, but all too often his work seems blah.

But the thing that really sold me was a quote from Mark Millar:

My idea for Thunderbolts, very simply, was that it should employ the same strategy as New Avengers and JLA in that if we have a team, why not make it the A-Team in the sense that they're all recognizable names? Sure, these guys would be harder to control, but that also takes the story in interesting new directions. I really started to see the Marvel Universe in terms of pre and post-Civil War and the Thunderbolts line-up was one of the big changes.
They could have gone the Suicide Squad route and stocked the team with D-listers*, but they went whole hog and put big names on the team and even bigger names on the marquee. A job well deon Marvel.

*(This was in no way a shot at the Suicide Squad, which was a great book, but when your big names are Deadshot and Captain Boomerang you're not exactly playing with the big boys)

Thursday, October 05, 2006

Random Musings - Playoffs Edition

Heroes has been a lot of fun so far, but after two episodes the only characters I like are Hiro and maybe Mohander. That can change quickly but the producers should have done a better job of making the characters connect with the audience.

While I liked the time-travel twist in the second episode, I think it may have been too soon. Time travel and paradoxes (paradoxii?) generally tend not to play well with most audiences, especially if the characters haven't caught on yet. I think a lot of people may have been turned off by the last episode.

Lost's season premiere was good (well, maybe very good) but not great. The producers actually answered a few questions without completely innundating the viewer with too many fresh ones. I can't really say what I found wrong with the episode. Something just felt...off.

My initial pessimism about Smith seems to have been off base.

Why are there no good videogames based on DC games? I'd love to see a Batman game that blends the stealth elements of Splinter Cell with the acrobatics of Prince of Persia. Somebody, please make this happen.

Jackass 2. Words cannot describe this movie. I have a pretty strong constitution but I had to cover my eyes for a good 20% of the movie. It was that revolting. Now that doesn't mean it wasn't funny, it was, but it was also so very, very hard to watch.

The South Park premiere was everything a fan could ask for. The cadence and inflection Cartman uses while planning and executing the raid was tone perfect.

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

Gamerscore Farming?

Link

This is one of the dumbest, most gobsmackingly stupid scams I've ever seen. And I really wish I had thought of it first.

Only $299.99 for 3000 gamer points. What a deal!

(h/t - Evil Avatar)

Review Time - Week of September 27th.

Ultimates vol. 2 #12

“Grand Theft America part 6“

The Ultimates fight back. In the middle of Washington, D.C. the two teams quickly pair off against their counterparts with Hulk taking on Abomination, Quicksilver obliterating Hurricane, and Captain America squaring off against The Colonel, Abdul al-Rahman. The fights are fierce and gory, with Abomination having his arms and head ripped off by Hulk and Hurricane dissolving after being taken for a ride by Quicksilver. The Crimson Dynamo, realizing that things are beginning to go south, sets out to kill as many civilians as possible but he and his drones are stopped by Iron Man 6, an arena-sized iteration of Tony Stark’s armor. Meanwhile in New York the X-Men, Fantastic Four, the Defenders and the other heroes are set free by the Captains Britain, France, Italy and Spain. The freed heroes then wipe the floor with the remaining Schizoid Men and Dynamo Drones. Back in D.C. Wasp uses a gift from her husband to become Giant Wasp and step on Swarm as Fury, Hawkeye and Scarlet Witch get the President, the VP and their families to safety. Cap and The Colonel fight, with neither gaining the clear upper hand until some Schizoid men grab Cap. Al-Rahman is about to execute him when Hulk throws Cap’s shield, slicing off al-Rahman’s hands and freeing Cap. Just when The Ultimates think the fight is over Loki makes his presence known by setting the National Mall aflame as he hovers above. He gloats for a moment before a thunderbolt streaks across the sky, heralding the return of Thor.

The Ultimates is, bar none, the best yearly comic ever. Kidding aside this was a great issue. While the concept of having two super-teams square off against their opposite numbers is a bit overdone in regular comics it seems a bit fresher since The Ultimates is such an irregular comic. Each team member gets his or her moment to shine, but the story (at least in this issue) doesn’t feel stretched. Bryan Hitch’s art is spectacular as usual, with several pages that just take your breath away.

Secret Six #4 (of 6)

“Six Degrees of Separation, part 4”

Vandal Savage breaks bread with Cheshire and Dr. Psycho, praising them in their effort to break his daughter Scandal, but chastises them for trying to actually kill Catman, (the man Savage wants to father his granddaughter) by serving them Grundy Steaks. Cheshire is nauseated but Dr. Psycho just asks for some Worcestershire Sauce. Meanwhile The Six, damaged physically and emotionally and matched up with the vastly more powerful Doom Patrol, manage to win out through luck, guile and a peculiar little man with a hat fetish. Mad Hatter (somehow) mentally influences the Doom Patrol, forcing Elasti-Girl to bite Robotman’s head off (I promised you all another decapitation) and Negative Man to have a seizure. The Six escape and return to the House of Secrets to convalesce but her father soon contacts Scandal through her dreams, demanding that she get to work making an heir for him. She wakes up and investigates a noise only to discover her beloved Knockout bumping uglies with Deadshot on the kitchen table.

Gail Simone’s trademark wit and humor do a lot for this book (Ragdoll looking up Elasti-Girl’s giant-sized miniskirt and Mad Hatter apparently pleasuring himself with a vibrating Stetson are just some of the highlights) but they cannot completely paper over the convoluted plot and awful art. Pitting the Six against the equally off-kilter Doom Patrol was a nice touch, but like every other battle fought in this series it just felt random and meaningless to the plot. I don’t like to slam artists but Brad Walker flat out should not be doing a book with even this high of a profile. Character’s faces change not only page-to-page but also panel-to-panel.

X-Men #191

“Supernovas, part 4”

Serafina, using her powers to interface with the comatose Lady Mastermind’s illusion weaving abilities, forces Cannonball to live out the perfect suburban life with her as his wife. They meet, marry and have children all in the blink of an eye before Wolverine severs Serafina’s connection to Lady Mastermind. She takes Logan down and makes her escape. Meanwhile Sabretooth tells the X-Men how he got involved with the Children of the Vault. Several months earlier he and a partner had taken a job to assassinate several scientists and in the process had stumbled upon The Conquistador, a heavily modified tanker ship that had been sitting undisturbed in the south Atlantic for three decades. Inside of the ship were the Children. Sabretooth barely escaped from the ship and has been hunted ever since. The X-men, utilizing Cable’s connection to the Global Infonet, determine that the ship had been licensed to a group of scientists, biologists studying evolution and physicists studying time acceleration. Together they created a sealed system to study evolution by speeding up time within the ship. In the 30 years since the experiment began over 6,000 years have passed on the ship. On the ship Serafina reports to the leader of the Children that she was seen, but the leader, Sangre, tells hip people that it really doesn’t matter and a conflict was inevitable. We then see the exterior of the ship, as it is about to fly into New York Harbor.

The art in this book almost kills what is an otherwise good story. Now Clay Henry’s art isn’t bad, it’s clean and he has a good grasp of anatomy and kinesiology but it also looks nothing like Chris Bachalo’s art. Character designs that were interesting and dynamic with Bachalo’s art look hideous in Henry’s more naturalistic style. Serafina looks like a character from a Tim Burton film when drawn by Bachalo, but with Henry she looks like a fat girl wearing children’s clothing. The story itself is nice, although if I have to endure another version of ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’ in a comic this month I may scream. The problem is the X-Men, other than Cannonball, don’t get very much page time in this exposition heavy issue.

Batman #657

“Batman & Son, part 3”

Batman takes the blindfold off of his son and shows him the Batcave for the first time. The child, Damien, is an absolute terror, aggressive, demanding, imperious and rude to Batman Robin and Alfred. After receiving a call from the Commissioner that The Spook (who I’ve been informed is a real Bat-villain) has taken the Mayor hostage Batman confines the kid to his room. After a funny exchange between one of The Spook’s henchmen and an undercover cop Batman finds The Spook’s headless body. Back in the Cave Damien is shadowboxing when Robin swings in. He offers to spar with the child but he refuses, instead pulling The Spook’s head, complete with a grenade in it’s mouth, out of a sack and throwing the whole thing at Robin. Robin dodges and the two fight throughout the cave. Damien gets the upper hand after Robin saves him from the mechanical dinosaur and sucker punches his adopted brother. Damien then confronts Batman on a rooftop dressed in an old Robin costume.

Have you ever seen Problem Child? Well mix that with a dash of The Omen (Damien, get it?) and you have the son of Batman. The story itself, while not bad, just feels…I don’t know, flat? I kept expecting something else, some twist, some revelation that just never came. The issue is also fairly un-Morrison like, with none of the wacky goings-on and metatext he usually infuses into his work. Andy Kubert’s art is terrific, as usual. The action and fight scenes in particular jump off the page although his faces still, after all these years, seem a little off to me.

Quick Hits

Justice League of America #2: The team begins to take shape and the plot thickens.
Ultimate Spider-Man #100: I read it 3 times and I still don’t know what happened in this issue.
Teen Titans #39: This issue is all about the Titans from the missing year. Unfortunately none of the missing year Titans really interest me that much.
Daredevil #89: Daredevil versus El Matador!