Showing posts with label Best Of. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Best Of. Show all posts

12.8.11

The Best _____ This Week for 8/10/11: Cloak and cowl

The Best Part Of This Balanced Breakfast:
Spider-Island: Cloak and Dagger #1, written by Nick Spencer, art by Emma Ríos, colors by Javier Rodriguez, letters by Joe Caramagna

The Best Thing We'll Probably Never See Again:
Batgirl #24, written by Bryan Q. Miller, art by Pere Pérez, colors by Guy Major, letters by Dave Sharpe

Red Lantern Damien? Why you gotta tease me, Miller?

The Best Satanic Familiar:
Ghost Rider #2, written by Rob Williams, art by Matthew Clark, inks by Sean Parsons, colors by Rob Schwager, letters by Clayton Cowles
And now, onto the real categories:

This Week In Rant for 8/10/11: Odds and Endings

So in a bid to artificially inflate my post count break up these increasingly-long weekly post a little, I'm going to split up the usual Best Of post into three parts: the "little" spiel that normally goes up top here getting its own post, the main Best Of the week post that it was originally meant to be, and finally the Best of the Rest reviews, which are what I started the post to avoid doing in the first place because now I feel bad about not mentioning some books. Just goes to show how bad I am at long-term planning.

Starting At The End

So if every week has some kind of running theme I can pull out of it, the impending relaunch of the DCU has made the entire month of August feel like there's been a running theme of books coming to their end. And, given the staggered nature of three-through-six issue story arcs coming out, every week something is coming to an end, but I can't remember anytime so many major titles have reached their end within so tight a time-frame. Even if we remember most (mrr) of these books are coming back next month, the whole comic zeitgeist feels permeated with a sense of finality. The endings of other books, not even remotely related to DC's relaunch, feels more impactful just because its all hitting in the middle of this massive fall-off of titles.
Last week, my pull saw the end of two books facing vastly different fates: Gail Simone's Secret Six and the current run of Jonah Hex. The former went out, deservedly, with a bang, but left some glimmer of hope for continuation, even if its continuity has been warped and reshaped like Playdough in the interim. Hex on the other hand, by virtue of its nature to stay further disconnected from the greater DCU, did not have the same sense of concluding things. It was, however still laid out in such a way that it  could serve perfectly well as a last issue without putting any kind of cap on things. It, like seemingly the Batman and Lantern books will be, is going to be able to start back up in September without missing a beat regardless of the new quota of making all the books, even the fringe titles like All-Star Westerns, actively connected to the publisher's shared continuity. Especially since the creative team is not being particularly shook up, with Palmiotti and Gray still handling the writing.
Batgirl #24, cover art by Dustin Nguyen
This week, I picked up two more books cut down to make way for the DCnU, Batgirl #24 and Detective Comics #881, Detective Comic's first last issue ever since it started back in 1937. Batgirl sees the end of Stephanie Brown's tenure as the character, with the Simone-penned Batgirl next month putting a de-wheelchaired Barbara Gordon back in the costume. Bryan Q. Miller has done an excellent job on this series, taking a character who probably wasn't the handled the greatest over the years, and proving the adage that there aren't any bad characters, just ones who haven't found the right writer yet. Miller put twenty-three of the most fun Bat-books in years out on the shelves, and he wraps it up with this one, a pitch-perfect issue and a wonderful, touching good-bye to the character. And as sad as I am to see this incarnation of the series and the character go, I can't read that last page without smiling.
Detective Comics, on the other hand, is about as tonally different from Batgirl as you can get. Wrapping up the hanging threads Snyder has been working on since taking over the title. It is a strong, classic Batman tale mixing the superheroics and detective work that Detective Comics at its best has always utilized, but in a lot of ways placed secondary to the family drama and turmoil the Gordons find themselves going through. Like Hex, though, while it is a good wrap to this particular story, it doesn't feel in any way like this is a last issue. This could make any changes that do occur in the shuffle that much more abrupt, or if the changes are negligible making the whole relaunch/renumbering feel that much more pointless.
Hellboy: The Fury #3, written by Mike Mignola, art by Duncan
Fegredo, colors by Dave Stewart, letters by Clem Robins
Outside of DC, the other big ending this week was obvious Hellboy. Both Hellboy's three-part The Fury and B.P.R.D.'s Hell On Earth: Monsters came to a close, and within the former we see the end of Hellboy's seventeen-year macro-arc, facing down the very end of the world we've been teased about since the series began. It's hard to say Hellboy or BPRD ever truly ends, as each arc builds off the previous and sets up the next all while being its own stand-alone story, and Fury is truly no different as it ends with a teaser for next year's Hellboy series; somewhat negating the impact of the final scenes here but in no way taking away from the series itself. The only thing I really noticed was, with all the hype Dark Horse and the blogs were putting on The Fury, Monsters seemed to slide by relatively unmentioned. Which is a shame, because this is a good bridge series (and Crook's ability to draw expressions in particular has completely won me over at this point, the man can draw a smirk). And with my attention mostly directed towards Hellboy, the ending here came entirely out of left field, and was very impactful, especially with no clue as to how permanent its going to be.

Girls, Girls, Girls

B.P.R.D.: Hell On Earth: Monsters #2, written by Mike Mignola and John
Arcudi, art by Tyler Crook, colors by Dave Stewart, lettering by Clem Robins
This is obviously not a new topic, but certainly one that also got a fire lit under its ass by the frenzy surrounding DC and their handling of the relaunch and is spreading out to other areas of the comic consciousness, is women in comics, both characters and creators. As such, this week's pull had its fair share to chime in on about the subject, for better or worse (but for once mostly better, I think). In the above-mentioned comics alone, Monsters focused almost entirely on Liz Sherman kicking some ass, and when it wasn't it shifted over to Kate Corrigan for a couple of scenes, who has always been two of my favorite characters in comcis regardless of gender.
Over on Batgirl and Detective Comics, we got to see two of the women to wear the cowl have their proper send-offs from the current status quo, including a trip through Stephanie's subconscious and Barbara having the chance to play horror-movie heroine when kidnapped by a serial killer.
Batgirl #24, written by Bryan Q. Miller, art by Pere Pérez,
colors by Guy Major, letters by Dave Sharpe
Also from DC, the Batman 80-Page Giant special had a short Catwoman story that I loved, and also featured Renee Montoya's Question, a great and greatly-underused character, in a Riddler story, which is delightfully fun in concept but can't say I quite enjoyed the execution. On the other hand, it also features a Zsasz story about a doctor at Arkham who falls in love with her patient and adopts their psychosis to impress them. Which is, what, the fifth, sixth time they've done that premise? They've done it with just the Joker at least twice, and this was easily one of the clumsiest handling of an already-weak plot.
Marvel had the potential to do something with their Ghost Rider book, as the current host of the Spirit of Vengeance is a woman, but as of yet they haven't done much with her, depicted more as a tool than a character, and despite his depowered status, the book has so far still mainly focused on Johnny Blaze. I'm starting to get worried the new host is merely a gimmick for this first arc instead of a viable character in her own right. I'll wait until its actually over to pass judgement, but if this is just a vehicle to get the fire back in Johnny, I'll be more than a bit disappointed.
Spider-Island: Cloak and Dagger #1, written by Nick Spencer, art
by Emma Ríos, colors by Javier Rodriguez, letters by Joe Caramagna
Where Marvel did get things right, however, is the new Cloak and Dagger. I'm going to be discussing this one at length in the next post, but needless to say this is a book featuring main characters who are a) a woman, b) a minority character and, most importantly, c) not written like these two things matter in defining who these characters are. These are two characters who have endured for years but never truly caught on, and here, with Nick Spencer doing possibly the best job of writing them to date and Emma Ríos providing some absolutely stunning work with the art, this book is in danger of getting lost in the Event shuffle. Don't let the Spider-Island banner turn you off; at least so far as we've seen in the series, you can pick up and enjoy this without any prior knowledge of Spider-Island, or even Cloak and Dagger themselves, as their recap is deftly covered, mostly in one amazing two-page spread and gotten out of the way immediately to jump into the story. As Spencer himself has said, speak with your dollars and pick this up. Whether you're concerned with the issue of racial and gender representation in comics and their creators, or you're completely ambivalent and just concerned with picking up a great book, this is the one to get.

5.8.11

The Best _____ This Week for 8/3/11: A good week to be bad

Since it doesn't really come up in the superlatives, I'll talk about it up top here: I am real excited for Miles Morales to be the new (Ultimate) Spider-Man. I will be even more excited once I see enough of him to establish him as more than a palette-swapped Peter Parker. I picked up Ultimate Fallout #4 in spite of myself, just because I got swept up in the wave of (positive) hype and wanted to get a taste of the character. And a taste was about all it was, seven pages of him fighting Ultimate Kangaroo. Calling him a copy of Parker is a bit of hyperbole, especially given so small an amount of time to differentiate himself, however, he is not so different from what came before that, if you weren't aware of what led up to this, you might not even notice a difference. The differences are present, however; he definitely seems meeker and less sure of himself than Peter ever did in the suit.
It seems the intended impact of the reveal at the end, which may have worked if it wasn't all over the newsoblogosphere, was removing the mask to reveal a non-white kid, but I kind of hope this was not the case. Especially with as many eyes turned to diversity in comics as there are right now, that we have a non-white character to be carrying his own book, especially as high a profile character as Spider-Man, regardless of universe, is inarguably a good thing, unless you are a Horrible Person. However, to make the reveal "Oh we have a (half-)black Spider-Man, BET YOU DIDN'T SEE THAT COMING" (although I think everyone did) smacks of sensationalism and glamour, and putting that diversity up on a pedestal strikes me as more of a public relations move. Maybe that's unavoidable right now, but I think artist Sara Pichelli said it best, "Maybe sooner or later a black or gay — or both — hero will be considered something absolutely normal." In the meantime, it's a talking point.
What I did actually like, however, was the age. He definitely looks young; I believe it was announced that Miles is thirteen although I couldn't really source that beyond Miles' own unofficial Twitter account. That would probably place Miles in middle school, substantially younger than Peter ever was in any iteration of the character, I think. If accurate, how Bendis uses this is one of the aspects of the story I'm most interested in; it'll certainly be a fresh take on the character and how he manages to pull off the superhero lifestyle.

And while on the subject of diversity in superheroics, I really have to question what I read versus what I saw in Flashpoint #4. In this issue, Element Woman, aka Emily Sung, joined the team of freedom fighters. As far as I'm aware, Sung is almost exclusively a name of Korean or Chinese origins. To look at her in the issue, she does not appear particularly asian:

Flashpoint #4, written by Geoff Johns, art by Andy Kubert, inks by Jesse Delperdang, colors by Alex Sinclair, letters by Nick J. Napolitano

Granted, I'm just going on the name, and for all I know she's not meant to be, or she is meant to be and I'm just interpret ting the art wrong (speaking of Kubert specifically here but she still looks similarly Caucasian to me in Jim Lee's JLA promo art). That weirdness aside, I do like this character so far and hope she retains her manic personality through the relaunch. And hell yes, I want a juice box.

Now, onto the Best Whatever I Read This Week:

29.7.11

The Best _____ This Week for 7/27/11: Conventional

Didn't grab a whole lot of comics this week, at least not new ones, so unlike last time I don't have a whole lot to talk about. As such, in lieu of the usual first round of superlatives I'm just going to do a special first round of announcements that came out of SDCC this past weekend. Since I wasn't in attendance, this is all just the news that filtered down to me, and then managed to catch my eye, which is fairly impressive as overall the

Best News From Comic-Con International (In Not-really-particularly-ordered List Form)


4. The Amazing Spider-Man panel
Now if you read my post about the Amazing Spider-Man trailer, you know I wasn't exactly won over. The panel went a long more to alleviate my worries, hearing Spidey described as "quippy" and the Lizard looking Ditko-esque (or like Killer Croc, depending on who you talked to). But I think the highlight, or at least the thing that got the most buzz, was Andrew Garfield (Peter Parker)'s entrance to the panel:


And if that wasn't enough, the Lizard's human half, Rhys Ifans was arrested after the panel for his apparent drunken and beligerent behavior as he tried to enter the hall. Though I suppose if he really wanted to channel his inner Lizard, he really should just eat some kids.


3. The book announcements
Aside from DC, who had announced pretty much all of their upcoming books before the con, most major publishers had something to showcase. As for what stuck out to me, amongst their Fear Itself fallout titles, Marvel announced of a Defenders book from Matt Fraction, and Jason Aaron taking over The Incredible Hulk. IDW talked about a Dunwich Horror adpatation that should be "more action-packed and exciting than Lovecraft readers might expect". Dunwich being one of my favorite Lovecraft stories, I'll definitely be picking up this four-issue mini. They'll also be putting out a crossover of their Star Trek licensed comics and DC's Legion of Superheroes, and splitting the license for KISS comics with another company, which will result in the craziest crossover announced during the con: KISS meets Archie.

Among the top picks for me, however would have to be Archaia Comics' Cow Boy, by two of my favorite creators, Nate Cosby and Chris Eliopoulis, about a ten-year-old bounty hunter in the old west. You can see a few preview pages over at the books' Tumblr now. Also, Image had their share of promising announcements, including a Chew spin-off Secret Agent Poyo, about the continuing adventures of the deadly fighting chicken, the squee-worthy news of another Witch Doctor series coming down the line from the Skybound imprint, and Brian K. Vaughan's new creator-owned series Saga, including art from the incredible Fiona Staples.


2. The TV announcements
I think I came away from this con's news cycle more excited about the TV news than the comic stuff, and especially where the two intertwined. Marvel had a lot of news, with live-action Hulk, Jessica Jones, Mockingbird and Cloak and Dagger series coming to ABC, as well as Ultimate Spider-Man and a Hulk-family series, Agents of SMASH coming to the animated front. DC did not have as much, but they did release an extended preview of the new Green Lantern series, which I am slowly warming up to:


The animation... is not pretty, the broad Timm-ian character designs don't translate terribly well into that medium. and besides when they're in the void of space the backgrounds are textureless and lackluster, reminscent of computer-animated series from twenty years, which is something I'd have hoped we'd moved away from long ago. Once you get accustomed to the point that you can tolerate it, however, the rest of the show shines through. The acting and plots seem fine, albeit obviously targeting a younger audience, much in the same way The Brave And The Bold does, and that is one of my favorite animated series in years.

My absolute favorite animated series in recent years, however, is without question Avatar: The Last Airbender, so I was already excited knowing there's a new series coming to continue the series. The trailer for The Legend Of Korra released at the con, though, managed to blow away every expectation I had.


It looks like they've ramped up everything from the original series, from animation quality to action, and for the hell of it dumped in a dose of prohibition-era American gangster film. I've honestly lost count of how many times I've watched this trailer at this point.

Additionally, it was announced Cullen Bunn's Sixth Gun will be getting a series on the Syfy network, which I'll remain cautiously optimistic about until something more has been released about it, and an extended trailer for Walking Dead season two was released:



1. "Retractable pants"
I'm assuming when Cliff Chiang said this at one of the New 52 panels DC held throughout the con it was as a joke, but that doesn't make it any less awesome a phrase.

And now, onto the regular comic superlatives:

22.7.11

The Best _____ This Week for 7/20/11: In the details

Small pull for me this week, tricking me into thinking I should branch out some more until I remember last week by comparison. It's seemingly even more myopic of a cross-section of books because one title basically sweeps the superlatives here. I think the most surprising thing is half of what I grabbed is Fear Itself tie-ins, as the two I actually want to read both came out (Deadpool and Fearsome Four), and the books I'd be reading otherwise are into or kicking off their tentacles of this particular eventopus (Herc, Hulk and Huncanny X-Men).

Similarly weak this week was the digital pull, which is a damn shame because I just upgraded my reading experience. I had up 'til now been reading my digital comics either on my phone or my iPod Touch but this week I finally broke down and picked up a tablet (the Acer Iconia, if curious) and I have to say, suddenly I get it. That is to say, presented in this format, digital comics seem like at least a viable alternative, albeit not a preferable one, to print. The forced use of Guided View on ComiXology on the smaller devices was infuriating  and browser viewing never felt quite natural but with a screen roughly the size of a normal comic that I can read normally, or browse and zoom when so desired in ways that feel intuitive. I still prefer my hard copy to the digital, and this doesn't eliminate issues like the licenses or price points, but I can see ways this nascent format may come into its own somewhere down the line. But this could be its own post, instead let's look at The Best Whatever I Read This Week.

8.7.11

The Best _____ This Week for 7/6/11


And now, the best of the stuff I picked up this week. Facing down a fairly large pull, and a lot I wanted to cover, so I added in a couple of new categories in order to give every book a fair shot.