Thursday, November 3, 2011

Episode III: HEART for sale

Yesterday, the long awaited HEART went on sale across the land.  Penned by G4 FRESH INK’s own Blair Butler (@theblairbutler) and penciled by Kevin Mellon, HEART is a four issue mini published by Image Comics focused on Oren “Rooster” Redmund and his journey from mundane to magnificent in the MMA.  Now, I am admittedly not the most well-versed in MMA.  I went through a Tank Abbot phase about twelve years ago and rented a couple UFC fights, but by and large, I cannot get into the MMA.  I respect the discipline and violence of their sport, but I just do not get engaged overly much.  As many of you have managed to suss out from the sister textcast to this one, I am a nearly lifelong professional wrestling fan.  The spectacle, choreography and grandeur of pro wrestling has essentially ruined MMA fighting for me. 

So, my approach is just a fan of comics and a good story, not as any sort of MMA technician (although I do know what a triangle hold is, thank you, because of the MMA creep into wrestling vernacular in the past 15 years).  And do not let the bloody cover fool you; this is a great story.  Butler has clearly learned how to play with narrative structure in an effective way.  Also with F-bombs.  Because I had a tendency to swear  in synch with Rooster.

I typically do not like to criticize art in comics because A) I am a terrible artist myself and 2) I have no bona fides in art criticism.  I am thrilled with the art direction they chose for this book.  I did not know that it was going to be a black and white book and that lends a crispness to the art and tone that was pleasantly unexpected.  You really can connect with the action and the character, rather than just person on person violence.  Speaking of which, I never really realized how rare it is to see person on person violence in comics until reading this book yesterday.  Zombies, mutants, superheroes, robots, aliens, etc etc.  I cannot recall the last time I read a book with such great depictions of people mashing each other in the mush.  Mellon has a clear understanding of human erosion and physiology and those crisp pencils lend what could have been festival of gore a certain amount of grim beauty. 

And now, the bad news.  The only real negative I have to say of the art is that many of the action sequences look frozen; like photographs.  While pretty, it does pull a punch, so to speak, and deny the action of dynamics.  Oftentimes, this stillness works to support the narrative.  When Rooster recalls his pedestrian life before the cage, or his rough break into the business, the stillness scans like a flood of still photograph memories.  The only other quibble that I have with the art, and it is the quibbliest of quibbles, is that in the beginning of the book, in the first match, Rooster and his opponent are in an octagon cage and later on, when the narrative returns to that same fight, it is a square cage (the same type used in the training flashback).  Again, quibble.  But hey, the cages look great!

I do not use rating gimmicks here.  I only use the same two criteria for comic books here that I do among friends (and you’re all friends here): Did I enjoy reading it?  Do I want to read the next issue?  HEART #1 is a solid yes on both counts.

Just a quick programming note: this is likely my last post on blogspot. I spent the entire day Sunday making a visual history of Spider-Man costumes in time for Halloween only to discover blogspot does not support images.  So I am shopping for another blogging site that will accommodate my boss Spider-Man guide.

Even though I will not be back, please post your comments in the comments, especially if you can recommend a blog site which supports multiple images.

Now go buy HEART.

And follow me on your Twitter Unit: @TheWinterCraig.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Confessions of a middle-age comic book fan

Episode I: A middle-age book report on launch month of DC’s New 52

There are really four phases of books that I encountered this month, so I’ll present them to you on the level that I engaged with them.  First, the books that I already subscribed to before the relaunch (or news of the relaunch).  Second, books that I picked up because I lost two titles to the relaunch.  Third, books that I picked up at the store because of recommendations or impulse buys.  Fourth, books that that skimmed through off the rack, but opted not to purchase.

Before the relaunch, I subscribed to BATMAN, DETECTIVE, BATMAN & ROBIN, BATMAN INC., RED ROBIN, GREEN LANTERN and THE DARK KNIGHT.  Despite my initial hesitation, and conflicting information from DC subscription service, I kept my subscriptions to most of these titles.  I loved what Scott Snyder did with Dick Grayson in Detective over the last year, so I was excited to see what he would do with Bruce Wayne in the core Batman book. 

Batman was exceptional.  I cannot say enough positive things about Snyder’s work.  And in the interest of full disclosure, Snyder’s promotion to BATMAN is the sole reason I kept my DC subscriptions.  Batman & Robin was fun, but lacked the ingenuity and verve of Morrison’s run.  Also, poor Damian can’t catch a break.  It feels like we are reliving the initial arc of B&R where Damian must earn trust and goodwill once more.  It has the benefit of being familiar, yet different.  A necessary growing pain in the new father & son dynamic.

GREEN LANTERN.  I’m of mixed feeling on this book.  I have not read War of the Green Lanterns yet; I missed one of the early GLC tie-ins and I hate missing an issue before reading a story for the first time.  So until I get off my duff and buy that backissue, I’m a little out of touch about exactly why Hal has no ring and why Sinestro has Hal’s ring.

DETECTIVE COMICS.  Again, I do not wish to get into spoilers, but the shock ending of this book ruined it for me.  It’s not a story-telling concern.  I’m patient enough to see where a story goes before passing judgment on it.  The visual itself was a downer.  And, as the father of a 13 year old budding comic book fan, it was a deal-breaker.  That book is not new reader friendly for young readers.  I’ll likely drop this book for something better (which I’ll get to in a minute) if Tony Daniel cannot lock it down.

I dropped Finch’s DARK KNIGHT.  For a couple reasons.  One, I’m of the opinion that we fans should not enable late issues, especially on “monthly” titles.   Two, it feels like it’s right out of the Loeb playbook.  I thought I was rereading HUSH on accident at first.  I do, finally, have all five issues of this volume, but I dropped the title for the relaunch and I’ll most likely HFB (Half Price Book) it.  Three, I just didn’t like it.  I’m not here to convince you not to like it.  Just not my tea cup.

BATMAN INC. and RED ROBIN are no more.  So I swapped three subscriptions (counting the exile of DARK KNIGH) and added: NIGHTWING (I’m a Dick Grayson fan for the first time thanks largely to Morrison and Snyder’s work with him.  I also picked up TEEN TITANS, as I am a huge Tim Drake fan (I made my own Robin costume for Halloween a few years back using Tim’s red One Year Later costume) and with the loss the of the excellent RED ROBIN, TEEN TITANS is my only Tim Drake recourse.  I also picked up RED HOOD & THE OUTSIDERS.  I have loved what Judd Winick has down with Jason Todd since Under the Hood and Red Hood: Lost Days and even though my favorite former REAL WORLD cast member is not writing Red Hood & Co., I felt I owe Jason some support.

Both Red Hood and Teen Titans are written by Lobdell and both have the distinction of being the first two new 52 books that I drop.  How in the world DC can produce books that portray women in such a strong, non-objectified manner (Wonder Woman, Batwoman, Batgirl) alongside the treatment of Catwoman (sorry Judd, but no) and Starfire in Red Hood is beyond me.

Speaking of Batwoman, this was one of my impulse buys.  Well, not really impulse.  G4’s Blair Butler (@BlairButler – follow her!) gave JH Williams book high marks.  Williams penciled Greg Rucka’s run on Batwoman when she headlined Detective for nine issues.  Batwoman is visually outstanding (it might take a few re-glances to follow the panel flow) because the art is so gorgeous.  It almost looks like a mosaic.

Other impulse buys: Action Comics (which is fantastic and the last Superman book that I enjoyed was Red Son).  Superman is fun and flippant and fights the man with a smile and a wink.  You need know nothing at all about Superman to get into this book, and if you are a long time fan, there are plenty of Easter Eggs to keep you smiling.  Wonder Woman (touted as a horror story related to mythology and delivering on the touting).  It’s moody and bloody and not the most kid-friendly introduction to Wonder Woman.  I’m a fan of Harley Quin (from B:TAS and  the Arkham Asylum video game) so I had to check her out in SUICIDE SQUAD.  I am not overly familiar with the rest of the cast, so I did not have much expectation other than to want to read the next issue.  I do not.  There’s no since in grading this comic because not wanting to read another issue of it is a greater indictment against it than any subjective rating I can give.

I did buy Batgirl, mostly out of curiosity about whether KILLING JOKE, never intended for main continuity to begin with, was still around.  And it is.  I must give credit to Gail Simone: I’ve never liked what has been done with Barbara Gordon since Killing Joke.  I didn’t like that DC maintained her crippling.  That being said, Simone clearly is setting up some great character growth with Barbara’s post traumatic stress disorder.  As we have a whole generation of brave young men and women at risk of PTSD for their service in Iraq and Afghanistan, I hope Simone uses this as a teachable moment about PTSD in the way Aaron Sorkin chose to give President Bartlett MS in WEST WING.  We CAN have great drama and learn something at the same time.  I will likely not continue buying BATGIRL, but not because of quality.  I just cannot make room for it in my budget.  Just as with Simone’s SECRET SIX, I’ll have to HPB or eBay it.  But Batgirl looks to be the best book I am not getting.

Books I passed on, for various reasons.  Grifter was the only IMAGE comic character that I really enjoyed (KINDRED crossover was pretty cool).  I was tempted to buy Grifter’s book and skimmed it at the LCS.  But I passed.  It was not just appealing to me.
I was tempted to buy FLASH, having enjoyed Geoff Johns REBIRTH treatment last year, but I did not read FLASHPOINT.

Now, if you are any good at maths, you’ll notice that the paltry sum of books discussed here are < 52.  I never promised you that I’d review all 52 books.  Or a rose garden (google it!)  I think that I have read enough “cornerstone” books to get a sense on whether the DC relaunch is successful, for me, as a collector and father of a new collector.   It’s too early to be sure, of course, but so far, so good.   Action Comics, Batman, Batwoman, Batman & Robin, Green Lantern, Wonder Woman and Batgirl are all worth the price of admission.  It is a shame that Detective Comics is so unfriendly to children, as one would think Action and Detective ought to be flagship all-age titles.  For my money, Batwoman is the best of the crop.  I even went out and bought her backissues by Rucka and Williams (and you should, too).

There is an honorable mention this month, but it’s not a DC book.  The best relaunch of the month is Marvel’s Ultimate Spider-Man 1 & 2.

Follow me on the Twitter device: @TheWinterCraig.  Feel free to post (friendly and/or constructive) all-age friendly commentary in the comment section.  What did I get wrong?  What did I inspire in you?  What do you think about this new DC?
 

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Confessions of a middle-age comic book fan

Episode II: the shape of things to come

Yes, that’s a LOST reference.  As many of you know, and if you do not, (what the heck are you even doing here?) the New York Comic Con #NYCC was this past weekend.  There was quite a bit of news, obvious like, in conjunction with Marvel’s release of teaser images for the coming year.  In this week’s textcast, we will review the top 5 things I’m excited about in comics for the coming year.  You understand there will be some spoilers ahead, right?

No. 5:  The Scarlet Spider is returning in January. 

Since word of this broke, many internet comic fans are guessing that it will be Kaine now, rather then Ben Reilly.  Given Kaine’s recent return and health improvements (thanks to one Eddie Brock), this seems like a pretty safe bet.  I call swerve!  My prediction is that this Kaine in Spider-Island is a wayward, possibly amnesiatic, Ben Reilly.  Let the predictions commence! 
I was never really much of Ben Reilly fan.  I missed out on the whole clone saga in the Spider-Man books (being only an X-fan at the time), but I’ve always dug his blue hoodie costume.  My 13 year old son loves the Scarlet Spider costume and is making his own for Halloween.  By which I mean, I will be making his Scarlet Spider costume while he eagerly watches oversees.  For myself, I’m making a Spider-Man Noir costume.  We’re making our own costume web-shooter and all.  Don’t worry; there will be photos later this month.

No. 4:  I'm going to cheat a little here and pick something that's starting this month: WOLVERINE & THE X-MEN.  Now, I have been a big Wolverine fan since the Claremont/Byrne days on UXM.  I get a sufficient dose of Logan already in the current UXM, Remender's Uncanny X-Force and both Bendis Avengers books.  I don't even buy Wolverine's current solo title because of character fatigue (and Spider-Man is hot on his trail).  I didn't love SCHISM, but I have no problem with the teams splitting (having cut my teeth on Blue and Gold team back in the day).  The premise is not troubling to me at all.  Scott wants a fortress with soldiers for perpetual conflict with humanity.  Logan wants mutants to teach the younger mutants to live in society.  Are they re-treading Magneto/Xaiver territory? Probably.  But mutants have been around for nearly 60 years now and do not quite have them metaphorical sting for Civil Rights and LGBT Rights as they once did.  So after spending the last few minutes telling you why I won't buy W&tXM, let me show you why I will:
http://ifanboy.com/articles/wolverine-gives-a-big-ol-middle-finger-to-cyclops-in-wolverine-and-the-x-men-1/. Yeah, that's some cold stuff right there.  Out of all the characters allied with Logan, as of REGENESIS, only Bobby and Beast are really all that interesting to me.  I don't know that I'll pull this book, but I'll at least give it a try.

No. 3:  Secret Avengers gets a new creative team.  http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=34929

I know he’s unpopular among comic book traditionalists, but I’ve very much enjoyed every Warren Ellis superhero comic I’ve read.  His IRON MAN: EXTREMIS made me like Iron Man for the first time.  Ever.  His work with Osborn in THUNDERBOLTS was stellar.  Twisted-stellar.  I am really digging his current Secret Avengers run (the plot to blow up Cincinnati – where I’m quasi-from) was a fun read.  Sadly, Ellis is only on for a limited run.  I was going to drop that book after his departure.  Until.  This weekend, Uncanny X-Force and Venom writer Rick Remender was named new writer of Secret Avengers.  Given his recent track record of covert books in X-lore and Spidey-lore, I welcome his contribution to Avengers-lore.  If you are not already reading Remender’s Uncanny X-Force and/or Venom, what is wrong with you?  They are two of the best books in comics right now.

No. 2:  http://ifanboy.com/articles/teaser-marvel-asks-what-if-there-wasnt-only-one/

I have no idea what this is, but it looks a whole heck of a lot like a teaser for a Winter Soldier related project.  Was that was killed in Fear Itself an LMD?  Did the Russians make clones of Winter Soldier?  Will Brubaker be involved?  Who can know these things?  It does make me excited to be Winter Soldier fan.  I mean, look at my Twitter handle!  It’s not because winter is my favorite season.  Well, winter IS my favorite season, but that is unrelated to my Twitter handle.

No. 1:  The wild man of Borneo (Google it) returns. http://ifanboy.com/articles/marvels-next-big-thing-avengers-x-sanction/

Now, I try to keep this textcast as kid-friendly as I can.  Comics need to be more welcoming to younger readers, in both content and marketing.  But, there is only one sufficient way I can sum up this next teaser: Cable is coming back, bitches!  And he’s going to have to fight off the Avengers in order to protect Hope, his adopted daughter and possible mutant Messiah and/or menace.
While I enjoyed Cable’s heroic sacrifice at the end of the 2nd Coming X-over (and seeing his body fully succumb to the Techno-Organic Virus), it will be good to have him back, it will be nice to have the “Captain America of the X-Men” back.  Jeph Loeb is writing, so, you know, pace your excitement.  But it’s Cable!  And he’s coming back!

Now, the more astute among you will have noted that there are no DC teasers in this list.  That's because I dropped all my DC books and tossed all my DC backissues after the New 52 Relaunch.   I'm joking.  If you'd read Episode One of this textcast, you would already know that I'm quite fond of many books in NuDC.  The reason I do not have any DC teasers is because I am purposefully avoiding any species of DC teasers and spoilers for the coming year.  Since we are fresh into a mostly restarted continuity, I would like to read it all as it happens.  So, I don't know what DC has in the pipe for 2012.  And don't tell me, either!  Spoiler no spoiling!

To be fair and balanced, I do want to spend a moment to discus things I am excited for in the current DC line.  I am glad they are taking a measured approach to getting the team together in JUSTICE LEAGUE and TEEN TITANS.  I am predominately a Batman fan, so Bruce and Tim, respectively, are the main guys in those books I am interested in.  I appreciate that they are taking a bit of time to slowly introduce new characters to the mix instead of muddy, convoluted pages of people I care nothing about.  I am enjoying Batwoman's reluctance to join and be answerable to the sausage fest that is Batman, Inc.  I like Damian's frustration that he has to, once again, prove himself as a reliable Robin.  I am looking forward to watching Hal become Hal again before putting the Green Lantern ring back on.  I have no idea where the story will go, but I am really enjoying the ride in ACTION COMICS.

And not to ignore the smaller guys, I am excited about John Byrne's new COLD WAR series (issue one hits the stands October 19th).  I am also digging IDW's new Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle ongoing.  Despite my long-ago blood oath inclination to never buy an Image comic again, Ed Brubaker (FATALE ) and Blair Butler (HEART) are going to make me reverse that decision.

I had originally planned on ending with things that I'm not so crazy for in the coming year.  But really, who wants to end on a negative note?

So, interneters, speculate on the teasers. Comment your commentary on the comment device. 
Follow me on your Twitter machine: @TheWinterCraig.