Sunday, November 30, 2014

Secret Wars: My Thoughts on Marvel Comics' Next Big Thing

Secret Wars promises to draw some conclusions to Jonathon Hickman's run on the Avengers in dramatic fashion. Thus far, the colliding worlds threatening the 616 universes have been nondescript Earths that readers are as-yet unfamiliar with. Secret Wars shows the continuing collapse of the competing Earths, now from alternate universes that at least some readers will recognize. The history of parallel universes in Marvel comics is a long and diverse one, with familiar faces from stories like House of M, Age of Apocalypse, Marvels, Hulk's Maestro universe, Old Man Logan, the New Universe, and the Ultimate Universe, to name just a few. This collapse offers Marvel a chance to revisit some fan favorite stories, to propose some epic face-offs that comic fans drool over, and to clean up some of the competing characters and reintroduce some new blood. 

Here's the thing: I hate parallel universes. I was burned by the Cross-Time Caper in Excaliber as a kid and I've never forgiven parallel universes and time travel for how badly they ruined what should have been a great book. I love the idea of destroying all of the complicated universes that make my favorite fictional world inconsistent and annoying. I like continuity. I don't want a bunch of Elseworlds garbage floating around muddying up my stories. I'm old school like that. Who do I want to see these characters fight? The inside of a black hole, an exploding red giant, the smell from Hulk's shoes. I don't care. I just want them to go away. We'll keep Miles Morales; everything else can go. 

What's the point? I think the idea is to clean up Age of Ultron where the solution required Wolverine and Sue Storm to tear a whole in time to stop Ultron before he was "born". The consequences ripped space/time a new arsehole and resulted in, among other things, Angela popping into the Marvel U. I suspect the genesis of the colliding Earths problem in Avengers to be related to this irresponsible use of time travel. The motivation at Marvel? Well, a lot of things, but I think chief among those is to get Miles Morales out of the Ultimate U., a collapsing portion of the Marvel line, and into the 616 universe where he can raise his profile (and hopefully his sales numbers). The ancillary benefit is telling some big action stories that may appeal to a variety of casual fans of old x-overs. Which, ok -- sure. That's a little cheap but you've got to put butts in the seats. 

Marvel has released some map that shows all of the action. You can see that here: http://www.newsarama.com/22828-marvel-release-full-map-of-secret-wars-battleworld.html. Various sites have spent their time trying to break down what is who and such. I won't do that. I just want to read the stories. 

What am I most looking forward to from Secret Wars? Eh. I sort of hate the idea, but I trust the creators so I'm just going to hold my breath and trust in Hickman and Ribic. They're two of the best. Even given that, I can't help but feel like we're being gamed with a ton of mini's, one-shots, and once-off appearances in books no one is reading. But, Hickman. In Hickman I trust. So I'm looking forward to that. Look, I'm gonna buy it. I just hope that it's not real dumb and a waste of time. There are simpler ways to get MM into the main Marvel U. (he's already been there like 10 times!). 

Other things: well, Duckworld. I was actually thinking to myself, "Will there be Howard the Duck?" Short answer: yes. I love Howard the Duck. That's awesome. Maestro and Old Man Logan were good, so I'll look forward to seeing those products, presuming they feature good creators. Actually, everything to me depends on that. I don't read comics for the properties. I read them for the writers and artists. If the material is good, I can read any character. And some stories are so bad it doesn't matter how much you like the characters, it's unreadable (see: Excaliber). For me, everything will depend on whether I trust the people producing the books. 

What does this mean for things like Edge of the Spider-Verse? A new Spider-Gwen (a hot new character featuring the Gwen Stacy from an alternate universe that's taken the mantle of Spider-Man where she comes from) book is on the way. Miles and the 616 Peter Parker are teaming up to fight the creepy space vampires who feed off of Spider-stuff. Peter Porker, the Spectacular Spider-Ham is around (awesome). Is Secret Wars going to get rid of all of these characters? I hope so. I hated the idea of Edge of the Spider-Verse from the moment I heard about it. I will admit that the ASM portion by Slott and Coipel has been good (not great), but I still have a bad taste in my mouth regarding the nature of this story. In my estimation, too much parallel universe and time play never goes well. It doesn't build a strong story that can last. On-going comics need continuity. 

I'd like to see Marvel declare a one year moratorium on new cross-overs and focus on story an character development. Their best books, with the exception of the Avengers, have largely been immune to cross-overs or barely affected by them. Hawkeye is a good model for how to handle a comic book: explore the character, introduce slowly a supporting cast and some rogues, and tell good, complete stories. Cross-overs are like a cannonball in the pool: fun, but kind of dicky. I get it: they sell books so I'm wrong. But this statement makes a suggestion about how consumers work that's unsupportable: it's implies that they have intrinsic interests, not influenced or even led by availability and marketing. Push Hawkeye like you push cross-overs and the industry would be different. People buy what you sell them. Let's sell good books. That said, maybe Secret Wars will be super tight. Maybe it'll be as good as Original Sin or Civil War. Maybe it's not a Cross-Time Caper. Only time will tell. It's a SECRET war after all. 

The Ladies of Marvel Comics

A lot of (deserving) noise has been made about the comics industry’s mishandling of female characters. Ladies have been portrayed as any or all of the following unflattering archetypes: damsels in distress, seductresses, eye-candy, or sexually available sidekicks. The industry blames the audience (largely 20-something-yo white guys) for wanting their female characters to be stereotypical. The audience blames the industry for failing to promote quality books with realistic women and for failing to hire or promote women creators and editors. Even given these facts, at times, the comics industry has gotten a lot right with great female characters: Gail Simone’s Birds of Prey, Jenny Sparks in the Authority, Mockingbird in West Coast Avengers, & the 1980’s X-Men all portrayed women as superheroes that stood up to the big pecs crowd and held their own. The audience and the industry are, albeit slowly, evolving.

My current top 10 comics feature four books with female leads (although I’ll admit that I think Thor is still a Thor book, others have made the argument I should include it, so I will): Velvet & Lazarus from Image, Thor, and Mind MGMT from Dark Horse. Of course, three of the four mentioned are indie books, not quite superhero titles and not from the Big Two that dominate comics. What have the major publishers done to promote titles led by women and to promote women in the industry?

The last set of Marvel Now! additions were notably heavy on female leads: a re-launch of Captain Marvel, the new Ms. Marvel, She-Hulk, Black Widow, and Elektra joined the Brian Wood X-Men title featuring an all-lady version of the mighty mutant super-team. Recently, Jason Aaron’s Thor was re-launched (new #1) with a depowered (for a god) Odinson and a mysterious woman wielding the uru-laden Mjolnir. I’d like to spend some time taking a look at each of these titles and discussing their quality and their futures.

I’ll start with Black Widow because she’s the oldest of the characters, first appearing in 1964. She’s also probably received the least attention of any of these characters, including the new Ms. Marvel. If it were not for the Avengers movies, she’d still be a relatively unknown commodity. I was immediately drawn to this book by artist Phil Noto. His art is exceptional, blending traditional penciling with painted backgrounds to great effect. His line work is thin and detailed, not overly inked and blocky like the more cartoony 90’s art. He’s seen a recent resurgence doing some work with Rick Remender on his stellar Uncanny X-Force run, penciling a few lesser Dark Horse offerings, including a re-launch of the popular Ghost, and a largely forgettable run on Thunderbolts with Daniel Way. One of the best things about Noto, in my opinion, is that he draws incredibly detailed and realistic figures. This leads me to why he’s such a good fit for Widow: he doesn’t draw her like she’s boobs with feet. We all know the stereotype of a female superhero is basically a huge chest, tiny everything else, and long flowing hair. Widow is drawn in profile infrequently, her face is the focus of most panels, her body dimensions are appropriate, and her hair is typically pulled back or cut short, probably a good idea if you’re trying to do some hardcore spy work. I love the way that Natasha is visually portrayed in this book.

The writing is excellent. Natasha is on a mission to clean up her messes. As you know, she is not a nice lady. She’s been an assassin, worked for the KGB and as a mercenary, and she’s done some bad news bears in her lifetime. Now that she’s rolling with the Avengers on the reg, she feels remorse for her old life and wants to make it right. And she has a lot of making it right to do. It’s a solid vehicle for putting her basically around the world and in touch with a variety of thugs, villains, and shady characters, as well as the Marvel U.’s spy community, in a way that doesn’t feel forced for movement. Nathan Edmondson is a relative newcomer, but he’s plotting this book well. I’ll also give him a solid mark for dialogue. The book isn’t heavy on word balloons, but that’s a good thing. Widow is a loner, she shouldn’t just be wandering around chatting people up, and when she does talk, it should be with a clear goal in mind. Too many comic writers force dialogue on their characters. Edmondson feels content letting Noto’s art do the talking where it should and that’s a pretty mature move to make as a writer. Overall, I’d say this book is close to the top of my list of Marvel Now! female leads, second only to Thor.

Next I’ll discuss the second oldest of the character here, premiering in 1977: the Carol Danvers Captain Marvel book. I’ll be honest from the outset: I’m not currently reading this book. I read the beginnings of each Deconnick run on the book and set it aside. I’ve done the same thing with each Deconnick book I’ve read. I think that the plots are missing something for me, a certain, say, big picture. Conceptually, I just don’t understand where these books are going. I know why Marvel wants there to be a Carol Danvers book. I know why fans like Carol Danvers. I just don’t understand what the point of this book is. It feels like a Captain Marvel meets the supervillain of the week title and that just doesn’t cut it for me. My intrinsic interest in the character is pretty low and her rogues’ gallery isn’t exactly drawing me in. That said, I like Kelly Sue Deconnick just fine. I think she wrote a solid run on Avengers Assemble. Her writing here displays a certain skill, page-wise. I think the bigger pulse of the book needs a lot of work.

Other things that are good about this Captain Marvel book: the new look for Captain Marvel. I think the reimagining of this character is solid. Red over blue is a good color choice, displaying power rather than raw emotion, an approach color over an avoid color. The hairstyle is good, shorter, tighter hair showing that she’s all about business. This is a lifetime military woman; she’d be no-frills and no-nonsense. I feel like things are moving in the right direction for Captain Marvel, although not quite right enough for me to lay down by $4 a month to read about it. I wouldn’t mock anyone for reading this book. It’s not Deadpool.

She-Hulk is next in line, appearing in 1980. Of all of the characters we’ve discussed, She-Hulk is the worst. Sorry, Shulk fans, it’s just true. It’s late Stan Lee (his last Marvel creation), which is awful in its own right, but it’s also a derivative Bride of Frankenstein type character. It’s actually one of the worst ways to make a female lead – turn a traditionally male character into a female character and just see what happens (oops, Thor), as if there’s nothing special to women that hasn’t already been done by a man or that women can only be interesting when acting like men. This bad mojo makes me unsurprised that She-Hulk has been a generally irrelevant Marvel character, resigned to also-ran teams and cross-overs. It’s more shocking when there’s a good She-Hulk than a bad one. Fast forward to 2005: Dan Slott (now of Superior and Amazing Spider-Man) writes a truly great She-Hulk series. It’s greeted with…quick cancellation. Fast forward to 2013: Charles Soule writes another great She-Hulk series. It will soon meet the same fate.

I really, really enjoy this book. People that know me have heard me gush about Brian Pulido, probably in reference to his masterful Hawkeye annual last year. I think he’s doing some really innovative page work these days. It takes me about twice as long to read an issue of She-Hulk because I don’t want to miss anything in the details of Pulido’s work. His line work on this book has displayed an even greater range of emotion and energy than he’s used in the past. I will say that I’m not entirely sure that he and Soule are on the same page and that’s in spite of liking both of them a bunch. It happens. But, regardless, this book should absolutely not be getting canned. It’s not like the Captain Britain and MI:13 crisis of 2010, but it’s not that far off really. This is a top 10 Marvel book in terms of quality and yet it’s meeting the corporate shredder. If this was a DC book, it would get 30 more issues. Of course, if this was a DC book, it would be their second best book, not lower in the top 10.

Like, She-Hulk, Elektra first appears in the early 1980’s and is next in line for a review. This book is pretty bad. W. Haden Blackman isn’t a name that jumps out to most comics fans. He’s best known for writing in the Star Wars universe (maybe not coincidental that Marvel got interested in him right as Disney bought Star Wars from Lucasfilms), but also worked with J.H. Williams III on Batwoman and left, along with Williams, when DC began to compromise that character in the New 52. I was skeptical, naturally, of this cat I didn’t know working on a character I have some strong ties to (Daredevil was an early favorite book of mine). I was, however, excited to see Mike Del Mundo’s interiors. He’s been doing covers and variants for Marvel for a few years now, notably on X-Men: Legacy (a truly awful comic) and GotG. His painted, experimental style really drew me in. Check out his page at DeviantArt http://deadlymike.deviantart.com/.

I gave this book a full arc. I regretted it. It even had Taskmaster in it and I still regretted it. Let me tell you something about Taskmaster: he’s awesome. Anyway, this book is better to look at than it is to read. The plot is bad. The villain is bad. Elektra is more of a boundary condition than a character in the book. She fades into the background of the super evil villain she’s facing. It’s just not a well thought-out book and doesn’t have anything that feels especially Elektra about it. Del Mundo’s art is fascinating and beautiful. I think this man has a solid future in comics. I’m unconvinced by Blackman. His work felt pretty hackish. I would flip through these at the store to see the Del Mundo art, but save your sheckles for a real book. Read Daredevil or something.

Next up is Brian Wood’s X-Men. I want to like Brian Wood. I have nothing against Brian Wood. I’m starting to feel like Brian Wood is not much of a comic book writer though. This is his biggest stage yet: he’s writing the world’s most popular super-team, it’s a big launch because of the all-lady cast, and it’s a basically stand-alone Marvel Now! release and Marvel Now! is pretty hot. What does he do? Put Jubilee front and center. Ok, well, I think we all know how that works. Jubilee sucks. She is a jacket, basically. No, the jacket is cooler than she is. It feels like this had to be a dare. Like, “I dare you to take your biggest money-making opp and focus it on Jubilee.” To which, any normal person would reply, “Shut up.” If you’re unfamiliar with Jubilee, let me give you some quick background: she lived in a mall, she could make sparkles, sort of like Dazzler but less powerful, she had a yellow jacket and followed Wolverine around, sort of like a low-rent Kitty, and now she’s a vampire. Sounds stupid? It is stupid. So, she’s a critical focus of this book. That’s not good.

What is good about this X-Men team? Psylocke, fresh off of the mind-twisting results of Remender’s run on Uncanny X-Force, is complicated and tough. Storm trying to distinguish herself from the disaster that is the main X-Men teams is both rational and bold. Thankfully Wood has distanced himself from the mistake that was her short-term tryst with Uncanny X-Men leader Cyclops. This was such a bad idea for so many reasons. Even Rachel Summers is moderately interesting in this book, and that’s a character that’s had a pretty weak history, especially lately. Here’s the problem: the sum is less than the individual parts. Wood can do some solid individual scenes, but seems to struggle at plotting arcs tightly. I’d be fine with this if the book wasn’t still in the arc format. It is. And the arcs are too long, they ramble, and they fail to deliver at key points. I held this book for twenty issues, much the same as I did with his Star Wars series. I don’t think I’ll make the same mistake again. This is not a very good book, but it’s not the worst thing in the world either. I assume it’s close to being canceled or re-launched.

Unlike the other titles here, Ms. Marvel is a wholly new creation, penned by a new-to-Marvel woman, G. Willow Wilson. The book has received a ton of press because the lead character, Kamala Khan, is both a teen girl and a Muslim, a Pakistani American. I’m going to do my best to talk about this series without using any spoilers because the plot devices used to explain her powers here are pretty cool and should be a surprise for the reader. This book is good. Wilson writes great dialogue and internal monologue. She has a feel for the character. The book feels like early Spider-Man (or recently Ultimate Spider-Man). That’s a really good thing. The family drama, the friend/love interest confusion, the uncertainty about her powers and how to be a hero, it all feels familiar and comfortable. Adrian Alphona makes Ms. Marvel look great. The art has an energy that’s fitting for both her powers and her personality. It feels youthful without being explicitly cartoony. I like the focus on detailed penciling.

The plot is excellent. Who does Kamala look up to? Carol Danvers, of course, not Captain America, not Iron Man, not Wolverine. She becomes Ms. Marvel sort of by accident because she makes herself look like Captain Marvel. It’s a cool explanation for her familiar look. Her mad scientist antagonist is both cool and mysterious, and maybe not an antagonist at all, it turns out. She’s had run ins with some of the main Marvel U., including a depowered Wolverine before his recent demise, the actual Carol Danvers, Spider-Man, and some others who are tied to her unfolding origin story. I look forward to this book each month. The number of new Marvel creations in recent years has slowed, with most creators choosing to do their new development at the indies, knowing that they’ll have both more control and more financial reward for doing so. Ms. Marvel bucks the trend. The book is doing well and I expect it to continue to grow and evolve. It looks promising for sure.

This leaves us to Thor, the newest of the female leads. The book is only two issues in, so I won’t be able to go into too much detail, but I can tell you some things about the creators and ask some questions about its future. Jason Aaron is at the top of the comics industry at the moment. He’s writing the best superhero comic. He’s about to write Star Wars with the fan favorite John Cassady, sure to be an enormous book. He’s done a major Marvel crossover, Original Sin, and done it well. He’s an indie darling with hits like Scalped, Men of Wrath, and Southern Bastards. His pairing here with Russell Dauterman probably raised some eyebrows. Thor was penciled by Ron Garney, Esad Ribic, and Simone Bianchi, three huge names. Dauterman, by contrast, is a relatively unknown commodity. I’ll say this: his art stands up and holds its own, even with these greats. This is (still) a great book.

Who is holding Mjolnir? What happened to Thor? Well, Thor was deemed unworthy, assumedly for being some sort of a dick. Thor is a great hero, but he’s also a Marvel hero and is prone to being, well, a meathead. He’s drunk a lot. He’s a god in the traditional sense, so he often thinks he’s better than everyone and is prone to god-like hubris. You can’t wield Mjolnir if you aren’t worthy, so Thor’s hammer was left unclaimed at the end of Original Sin. I honestly don’t know who is holding the hammer. Frigga is the easy answer. Too easy, probably. The lead-in to the first issue certainly pushes the reader to this conclusion. The blonde hair may lead some to believe it’s the Enchantress, Lorelei. But, why would she be acting like a hero? Brunnhilde? Perhaps. Marvel has tried, unsuccessfully, to push this character several times in recent years. I’d say that she has a better chance than the previous two. Sif? Almost assuredly not, but I wish. Sif rocks. I’d say 50% chance it’s an unknown, 25% Brunnhilde, and 20% any of the other three mentioned, with 5% left for some other Marvel character we haven’t discussed.

That’s a wrap for now. The Marvel Now! books with female leads are overall pretty good, but sadly She-Hulk, one of the best, is going away soon, and Elektra and Captain Marvel absolutely don’t make the cut. X-Men, while ok, is nothing special by X-book standards. Thor is an industry standard and Black Widow is a rising star. Ms. Marvel represents hope for the future: new, woman-penned female characters leading titles. Hopefully some commercial success for these books will inspire Marvel to do more with its line of female characters and to promote more female creators. DC could use to take some advice from their competitors and promote their characters that are women. There was a time in the mid-2000’s that they were on the right track; today, they’ve fallen behind, very far behind, Marvel’s line-up.



Coming Comics Content: Preview & Feedback

So, I've recently organized my thoughts on a variety of comics related materials and have a master plan of several thematic posts I'll be writing about. They are as follows:

B. Bendis
Spider-Man
G. Rucka
M. Waid
Milligan & Allred
Marvel Now! Books w Female Leads
DC Titles
J. Hickman
R. Remender
S. Snyder
Vertigo
Image
M. Fraction
Valiant
E. Brubaker
Dynamite
Dark Horse & Others
Misc. Marvel
M. Millar
J. Aaron
Guardians & Associated Books
Axis
C. Bunn
W. Ellis
Wolverine
Comics TV
Upcoming X-Overs
Comics Movies

If you have a vote on things you'd like to see covered first in this list, comment here. I'll be glad to take some feedback.

Disclaimer: Under Construction

Some of this blog is under construction: a few of the posts got updated as new that were old (the last 2: Winter Break Comics Update and Summer Comics Update. They're actually from like 2012. Please ignore unless you want a trip down memory lane. I will have a lot of new content coming soon; that's just not it.

Winter Break comics update

I know that I haven't been keeping this as updated as I'd hoped, but I have been saving ideas for times when I can write a lot. I have a ton of things to cover and I'll try and do them systematically.

The biggest news in comics is...no real news. Most of what I have to write about here won't be mind-blowing to anyone, but maybe it'll tip you off to some new materials you haven't covered.

Scott Pilgrim: I liked the movie. I didn't like the books much. That's about all I have to say about that.

Kick-Ass: Don't forget that Kick-Ass is awesome. Buy the DVD. Watch it a million times. If you don't like Hit Girl, you suck.

What do I think about upcoming movies? I'm for em!

Thor: It looks awesome. I think the acting should be strong, the story of Thor should be good, the action should be amazing. I'll be interested to see how they integrate Thor into the rest of the Marvel U. I hope I'm as blown away as I expect to be. I'll be waiting in line for the premiere for sure.

Green Lantern: The effects look good, the story will probably suck. I like Ryan Reynolds; I can't even lie about it. The guy is funny. I'm not sure that he is Hal though. I don't know who is, but I think it isn't him. I'm excited to see if they pull it off though.

Avengers: I get all tingly inside when I think about it. I don't care if Mark Ruffalo is playing the Hulk. I really don't. He doesn't scream Banner to me, but I can live with it. The idea of seeing all of the big Marvel heroes together on one screen is such a nerdgasm that it doesn't matter much to me how it gets done or who does it, I want to see it.

Iron Man 3: Ok, director out.

Summer Comics wrap-up

This morning I finished the last 6 months of comics (some more than that -- like I had 8 or so issues of Wonder Woman to read). I haven't posted since January and the run-down in January was basically just an early return on the New 52. This post will be a more complete description of where comics are today. In sum, "I have concerns and I am excited simultaneously". I continue to be perplexed by the New 52's performance. I was pleasantly surprised by AvX. I am both concerned and excited by the upcoming launch of Marvel NOW! I'll do what I typically do and review books and then talk about the industry itself, especially the big 2.

Saturday, November 29, 2014

The Top 10: Comics You Should Be Reading

This is going to be a countdown. Prepare for the suspense. Brace yourself. Ok, go. 

10. Saga – Brian K. Vaughn writes great comics. He has an enormous imagination, a very fresh image of new worlds that are deftly filled with interesting and colorful characters. If you haven’t read Y: The Last Man and Runaways, you should; they’re great. Saga is also a very good comic book, beautifully illustrated by Fiona Staples. The premise is familiar – star-crossed lovers on the run from their families and a few intergalactic empires and bounty hunters who are out to halt their forbidden love. The execution is excellent in most parts, although prone to ham-handedness (the hugely-endowed giant was a bit much). Fan favorite extras (Lying Cat, the walrus boy, etc.) make the book feel like a Star Wars tribute, which I’m sure it is. It’s hard not to like this extra solid book, one of 4 notable Image titles on the top 10.

9. Batman – OMG! Batman at NINE?! Yes. Batman is a very good book, although prone to Scott Snyder’s B-level writing and clunky dialogue. Batman is boring, I get it. He is obsessive so often you don’t care much what he has to say. BUT, Snyder’s Bruce is chatty and, well, sort of annoying. That said, this IS a good book. The plots are masterfully woven, something Snyder excels at doing. His Riddler story – Zero Hour – is a great mystery reminiscent of the old laser shark pit days of the 60’s TV series. His newest story, only just starting, is a Joker story featuring the Justice League that promises to be excellent too. But, the real drawing power of this book is Greg Capullo, a top 5 artist doing unparalleled pencils on this book. It’s hard not to be impressed with the detail and precision that goes into every panel. His art reminds me of a cleaner Frank Quitely, an admirable comparison to say the least. In spite of its flaws, this book has so many draws it’s certainly a great read.

8. East of West – The second Image title and first of two Jonathon Hickman books on the list, East of West is an uncategorizable end of times romp through the great civilizations of modern history. The countries of today have devolved into clans defined by their cultural archetypes and they’re engaged in war, intrigue, magic, and future-science to jostle for power. Dragotta’s pencils have grown up enormously since his Fantastic Four and FF days; he appears to be born to draw this book. The art is clean, powerful, and kinetic, a perfect complement to Hickman’s heavy writing style. I think fans of Preacher, Bladerunner, and Dune will all appreciate this fascinating book that features one of the best writing/art tandems in comics today. If I had to provide one piece of criticism – and I’m loathe to do because this book is so good – I’d say that the narrative is a bit frantic causing major plot pieces to be buried or under-featured. This can make following the story difficult in places. It’s not damning, but can be bulky on the reader.

7. Hawkeye – Matt Fraction’s skill at writing B-level (no offense, Hawk-Guy fans) into real people that deserve serious attention is impeccable. He and Brubaker wrote the hell out of Iron Fist, an also ran that made Luke Cage seem like a living, breathing character by comparison. Hawkeye has always just been a low-rent Green Arrow, the guy that hassles Captain America and hustles around Avengers Mansion trying to get with all the ladies. He’s a nobody. Fraction turns this into great writing. This book is gold. At this stage, the book is less Clint Barton and more of the new Hawkeye, Kate from the Young Avengers. She’s written well, sort of a precocious Juno-type, but with badassey under her belt rather than just a mouth. The art by David Aja and Brian Pulido is second to none, perfectly displaying the introspective tone and the tongue-in-cheek moments of this book. Clint’s dog and the Russian Bros are great co-stars to fill out a cast. This book has been Eisner nominated each year for a reason. It’s superb. The only knock on it is that it’s slow and sometimes just not delivered. Unclear why, but this is a frequent Fraction issue, especially at Marvel.

6. New Avengers – The last year I’d have reversed this and listed the main Avengers title as the better book. No longer. Simon Bianchi and Steve Epting on art is a powerful advertisement. They’re two or my favorites – and both will be mentioned again on this list – and they do amazing work on this book. But, the more compelling portion of this book for the time is the fallen heroes of the Illuminati. Reed Richards, Beast, Iron-Man, Namor, Black Bolt, Black Panther, and Dr. Strange came together (with Charles Xavier) to keep the Infinity Gems guarded from Thanos, but have stayed together to pile on their secret governance – mostly, to hide their dirty work from Cap). Today, they’re confronted by the mysterious (and very, very cool) Black Swan with the ultimate responsibility: they decide if they’ll destroy entire planet that threaten the Marvel 616 universe. Earths from multiple universes are colliding and the only way to save their world is to wipe out competing Earths. There’s a lot of hemming and hawing. Dr. Strange wipes out a planet of fake Justice Leagues by selling his soul for much enhanced power. This move to sell his soul is scary and sure to have enormous ramifications on the 616 universe overall. Even after this, the rest of the Illuminati is all sad about having to do the right thing and Namor just goes behind their backs, forms a thing called the Cabal, and stocks it with people who couldn’t possibly care, like Thanos, Black Swan, that crazy Inhuman, Terrax, and some of Thanos’s goons from Infinity. They kill a boatload of other Earths, awesomely, and the Illuminati is all “Wut!? You can’t just do that! Namor, you’re a good guy!!”. To which Namor replies, “Am I?” Anyone with half a brain will remember the 50 or so years where Namor was at least morally ambiguous and often a literal villain. He sure did remember that. This book is awesome. Hickman loves the Avengers. He loves the power. He loves the Marvel “flawed” hero. He seems to write Black Swan to tell the heroes what they can’t admit about themselves, things he can see as a writer but the characters can’t see on the other side of the wall. It’s great listening to Reed Richards be told about himself (and not just because I hate Reed, but because clearly his single-minded pursuit of truth without regard for what’s right is his biggest problem – he’s all brains and no heart). Brilliant, must-read book.

5. Guardians of the Galaxy – Some people will say that this is a stretch. That it’s just another Marvel book, nothing special. I disagree. Several really great things are going on in this book. For one thing, the art is spectacular. The alien worlds and space battles have never appeared so beautifully illustrated in a Marvel book. If I had one knock on the old Abnett and Lanning series of GotG books, it was that the art rarely stood up to the writing. This does. In fact, it greatly enhances the narrative. Second, Star-Lord is Bendis. Bendis is Star-Lord. He’s born to write these characters. Star-Lord is a Peter Parker-esque man-child and Bendis kills at that sort of thing. Quill is dating Kitty Pryde, it’s adorable, and I love it. Sorry, I just do. But everything Star-Lord does in this book is fantastic. I’d read Bendis just writing a Quill diary. It would be glorious. Third, Flash Thompson as Venom. I really like this. I know Dan Slott gets the credit for it; he invented this in Superior Spider-Man, but I just think it’s wonderfully executed here. The Angela introduction I couldn’t care less about. I don’t know that character. But I know Flash Thompson. I love that Flash is getting a chance to be something. I love that it’s him struggling – literally and metaphorically – with his demons. It’s cool. Finally, the Original Sin tie-in that explains the Richard Rider Nova’s last days is amazing. While the Trial of Jean Grey (one of my all-time favorite characters) was good, this is the best arc. If you didn’t read this and you only read two issues of GotG to see if it’s for you, read those issues. Bendis is so good at making heroes look heroic that I don’t know if there’s anyone else, ever, who has been better. Maybe Claremont on the X-Men, but that’s some great company. This book is not that much better than, say, All-New X-Men, but I gave it the nod literally because of that Original Sin tie-in, my favorite comic arc of the year.

4. Mind MGMT – Matt Kindt is a god among men. A lot of people can write a book a month; a lot of them can’t, especially some of the most talented writers in the industry. Some of the best comics writers (Kevin Smith, for instance) have suffered from failure to deliver books on time and a ton of artists (Ed Benes, Dale Keown, notably) have moved on because they can’t deliver a product consistently. It’s rare that someone draws and writes their own book. Matt Kindt does it all. Mind MGMT is always on time. It’s shockingly consistent. It’s chock full of content, including on every inside cover and in the margins of every book. KINDT EVEN DOES THE COVERS. The paint is moody and clearly detailed to match the ideas being presented. Mind MGMT is enormously thoughtful, brilliantly illustrated, and impossible to categorize. If I told you it was a spy book, I wouldn’t be wrong, but I wouldn’t be totally right either. If I said it’s about secret societies, the same. It’s about the brain, imo, and that’s a subject I’m very interested in so I naturally love it, but it’s not about brains like how we know things, but about how we feel them, about how we feel deeply. It’s important, I’d say. This might be the most significant of the comics on this list over time. The collected editions, if you haven’t seen them, are wonderful, very sharp looking, and if I didn’t have every loose issue, that’s for sure how I’d read this book.

3. Thor – The best superhero book on the shelves, the last title from the Big Two in this top 10, and a seminal work on the Asgardian Odinson. Jason Aaron was special from the day he walked in the door. His war stories in The Other Side were wonderfully detailed and gritty. His early Marvel work on Ghost Rider, of all things, was memorable and weird. Scalped is one of the greatest things Vertigo ever produced. It’s no small wonder that Aaron has become prolific and powerful as a writer. I honestly never expected him to become a major superhero writer like he did on this book. I’d have predicted he’d do some Brubaker-type big company work and then venture back out into the Indie world to write screenplay-esque comics and make his millions. His Wolverine, for instance, was medium. Wolverine and the X-Men was pretty bad. This book, however, is a neat fit for him because he seemed to embrace the tragic nature of Thor. The Norse are tragic. They’re doomed, right? Ragnarok and all. Aaron gets this. God-Killer and the God-Bomb draw on it. The Last Days of Midgard is all about it. He’s really hitting the right notes there. His writing on Malekith is exceptional (and the origin of Malekith at the end of this run is enormously well-done). The father, son, and kid Thor are amazing, differentiated, and fun. The ladies are well-written, human, and respectfully done, unlike most Marvel ladies (and, especially, Thor ladies – is any character more disrespected historically in the Marvel U. than Sif?). Issue #18 is one of the absolute best stand-alone comics in an on-going superhero book I’ve ever read. I won’t spill the beans, but you absolutely must read it. This book is illustrated by Ron Garney and Esad Ribic, two giants of comic art, and even they don’t stand up to the truly inspired writing Jason Aaron is pouring out in these pages. Honorable mention goes to Bianchi for his work on the Thor and Loki 10th Realm spin-off from Original Sin, which was penned by Aaron. Always a pleasure to see his work and he really added some dimensions to this Angels vs. Norse gods book.

2. Lazarus – The 3rd of four Image books in the top 10. The final two are actually a pick ‘em. I think they’re nearly too close to call. Both writers are phenomenal. Both artists are top talents. The plots are spectacular. The execution is masterful. It’s hard to find a single knock on either book. I think it’s possible that the color work on one puts it very slightly ahead. But, I digress. This book is written by Greg Rucka and illustrated by Michael Lark and features a unique, post-apocalyptic world divvied up to clans who live in a cold peace with one another of shifting alliances and political and military intrigue. Each family is protected by a Lazari, a sort of totemic warrior that represents the families’ strengths (and often weaknesses). The mystery of what the Lazari are is hard to understand because they appear to be different from family to family – maybe a cyborg, clone, genetically augmented family member, drug enhanced fighter, etc. The central Lazarus, Forever, is the main character of the story and the narrative is drawn around her, her family, their feuds internally and with the other clans, and her love interests and relationships with the other Lazari. I hope this book gets a good, long run. It feels like it has a ton of gas in the tank. If you haven’t ever read Rucka, he tells very clean stories, he writes simply and clearly, and he doesn’t waste dialogue. Lark’s pencils really bring out the starkness of this world without skimping on style and detail. I think this book has a lot to offer and hope to be reading it for many, many years. Fans of Saga should definitely be reading this book.

1. Velvet – Ed Brubaker is my favorite current writer. I’m not sure he’s the best – I think that’s probably Hickman – but Brubaker doesn’t ever do anything I won’t like. I even tried not to like Fatale; I really pushed at it and still ended up loving it in the end. His pairing with Steve Epting is wonderful. They seem to be in one another’s’ heads. They make it look so good. Velvet is the story of a disillusioned aging secret agent out to make things right. The story is a beautiful period piece, reminiscent of a Mad Men with a soul (and a cohesive narrative, but I’m not here to bash Mad Men). It’s a flash forward/flashback story no unlike what Bru and Epting did with their run on Cap, to my mind one of the best superhero runs in the history of the business. The story feels perfectly paced, with each piece of the mystery revealed only when the reader needs it. There’s no long Bendis-esque monologues, no Stan Lee type editorializing (I guess that’s not really even done anymore, but whatever). The grit and danger is apparent, but the protagonist never feels like they’re doing anything unbelievably heroic, humanizing the story. I think Brubaker gets that better than most writers of modern comics. The characters need to feel intrinsically motivated, not simply motivated by their archetype. He produces these full-fledged people, these fictional humans that are relatable, and then he puts them through the wringer. I love what he’s doing here. I will be right there until the end. You should come along.

1. Velvet
2. Lazarus
3. Thor
4. Mind Mgmt
5. Guardians of the Galaxy
6. New Avengers
7. Hawkeye
8. East of West
9. Batman
10. Saga


So, in all, 4 Marvel books, 4 Image books, a DC book, and a Dark Horse book, with Image holding the top 2 spots and DC breaking the top 10 by the skin of Greg Capullo’s poised drawing hand. I think Dark Horse has a better shot at a second book in the top 10 – new Hellboy on-going next year – than DC does. Their closest is probably Aquaman at around 25-30. I’ve considered cancelling nearly all of my DC books over the last year. Image, on the other hand, I almost always want to try their new titles and often drop their books only to pick them up in trade later (or miss them and pick them up in trade anyway). It’s amazing what Image has put together, honestly. Marvel probably has more top 25 books than Image by a good range (a lot of the new Women of the Marvel Next books like Black Widow, She-Hulk, and Ms. Marvel would be in that area), but the absolute highest quality is coming from Image at the moment. What, if anything, will stop the tale-spin at DC? Will there be any new talent in editorial? Will Geoff Johns start writing well again? Will there ever be a good Wonder Woman book (certainly not the next one, basically written by David Finch, a man who couldn’t even make a readable Batman book)? DC has a lot of problems at the moment. I’d recommend basically cleaning house, abandoning the New 52, and trying to just tell some good stories instead of pushing gimmicks and hoping something sticks. 

Thursday, November 6, 2014

2014 Comics Overview

Welcome back!

I guess it’s more of a welcome back to me than you all. You’ve been on the Internet all this time; I just haven’t been writing this column very frequently in the last year. I’m hoping to make this a more regular occurrence. My goal is always to “finish all my reading” before I write this, but then Wednesday comes around once again and I have more things to read and I never quit catch up. From here on out, I’m going to take the column piece by piece and write when I have something interesting to say rather than as a complete review of everything comics.

Needless to say, given the delays, I’ve got a lot of things to say about books, movies, TV, and the industry in general. I’m going to restrict this to books and have some follow on posts regarding other media coming up shortly. I think the more hardcore followers of this page are here primarily for books and, for some, I’ve promised reviews and recs for a while.

Overview:
Marvel has won the war. DC is a wholly different type of product now, seemingly less interested in producing high quality comic book products than merely selling them. Lemire and Parker are barely writing books for them. Gail Simone is – frankly – past her prime and writing weak to very weak books. Only Batman and Justice League feature premium writing talent, and Justice League is uneven at best. In my view, Geoff Johns has not adjusted well to balancing editorial and executive responsibilities with his writing needs, leaving DC’s premiere team book in jeopardy. I think Aquaman is the company’s second best book. Let that settle for a minute: Aquaman is the second best book at DC. New books coming out of DC are nearly universally off-putting if not patently irrelevant (Lobo through one issue is the singular counter-example I could recall). The editorial blunders for DC continue to drive off talent, confuse the narrative for books, and produce a generally uneven product. Not everything is wrong at DC, but far more is wrong than is right. Some of their mid-level books, like Sinestro and Green Arrow, have some real promise, but neither is selling well in spite of some good intangibles for each character.

Marvel, on the other hand, has so many premium titles that it’s ridiculous. I’m not sure that any comic book company in any era was creating a higher proportion of high quality titles. Each Bendis book is must-read, producing classic work on the X-men at a clip of two books a month (while executive producing two television shows and advising Marvel’s movie production) while also writing the single best superhero comic on the shelves in Guardians of the Galaxy (GotG henceforth). Jason Aaron’s Thor is nothing short of amazing. Mark Waid’s Daredevil is great. Fraction’s Hawkeye (Hawkguy) is innovative, interesting, and fun superhero fare. Ms. Marvel, She-Hulk, and Black Widow (my personal favorite of the new Marvel lady books) are all rock solid reads at least as good as Justice League and probably better most months. Spider-Man is good again. And fan favorites like X-Factor and Deadpool (a book I don’t read but that sells like hotcakes) round out the reasons Marvel is trouncing the opposition. I didn’t even mention the Avengers, that’s how good Marvel is doing today.

The more interesting story from my point of view though isn’t that Marvel is so far ahead of DC – and constantly widening the gap – but that Image is nipping at the heels of both companies. Not beholden to universal continuity, preying off the entertainment industry’s lust for new storytelling and fresh voices, and willing to be more flexible both financially and creatively, Image has risen from a chippy opposition movement to a legitimate business threat to the Big Two. While they don’t have the multimedia backing that Marvel and DC have from Disney and Warner respectively, the success of The Walking Dead and interest in other products like Saga, Fear Agent, Peter Panzerfaust, and a host of others has given Image the clout to attract top talents. The day of the company exclusive contract is done. Top writers are regularly producing their non-superhero material at Image and telling incredible stories. Jason Aaron’s Southern Bastards, Greg Rucka’s Lazarus, and Ed Brubaker’s Velvet are just a few of the premium titles Image is turning out month-to-month. Marvel and DC wish they had the creative moxie to tell some of these stories. Image is not just doing great work, but their sales numbers are improving also, in spite of lower production numbers and less access to general audience outlets. This is great for the industry and for those of us that love all comics, not just the big pecs big tits spandex crowd.

I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention that some of the other indy publishers are suffering a bit. IDW and Dark Horse are producing fewer quality products, although each has some great books (Mind MGMT, for instance, may go down as one of the greatest comic books ever made, an instant top 50 candidate). The oversaturation of the horror market in the mid- to late-2000’s seems to have hurt IDW in particular. Valiant’s hot start was followed up with a major cooling off. Archer & Armstrong suffered from a Cross-Time Caper-esque catastrophe of simultaneously becoming too much of a joke book and featuring enormously long arcs. It’s fallen from my favorite book of 2013 to off my pull list. X-O has held steady or improved, but the rest of their line is, in my opinion, mostly unreadable, or, at a minimum, below the high standards set for indy publishing by folks at Image. I’m still bullish on medium sized publishers and I spend a lot of time wading through the things that these companies are making, but most of the more exciting things of note for me are collected editions and resurrected silver and bronze age stuff. And there’s nothing wrong with any of that, but it drives the price up and drives my interest a bit lower compared to new books with fresh ideas.

Cross-Overs & Events:
I know they can be off-putting, but they also define a lot of the popular interest in comics for casual fans. I’m going to spend some time reviewing them.

I’ll start with DC. I liked Forever Evil. SPOILER ALERT: everything from here on out will have spoilers. I’ve always liked the Crime Syndicate and the new Injustice Society, while a little bit wooden, was solid too. More Luthor is always better for DC (just like more Osborn is always better for Marvel).  It had far less Superman than a company-wide DC cross-over usually does, which is good. I will say this though – it did nothing to raise the profile of even a single DC superhero. Am I the only one that things DC is struggling to make anyone care about their primary product? There was a time in the early 2000’s that Flash had an identity. Green Arrow had an identity. Even Hawkman had an identity. Every character now feels a little bit like Batman: a spoiled white guy who is sad but has to fight for justice or some other abstract idea. I’m concerned for DC that they’re turning all of their characters into the Arrow version of Oliver Queen. Is there a single fan that really *likes* that Ollie for anything other than his abs? He’s pretty insipid to be quite honest. I think they should do a better job of creating core identities for characters. Parker’s Aquaman should be the model. He’s doing great work. But, back to Forever Evil: very good, one of DC’s better cross-overs, but little improvement in the company-wide product. David Finch is still a pretty artist. He should stop trying to drive the books’ plots though.

Future’s End, on the other hand, has not grabbed me. To be frank, I read the first ten issues and sat it aside for future consumption. It’s a weekly, which I hate. It’s 3008365892365982365 issues long, which is terrible. It’s written by a lot of different people and edited by, it appears, no one. Besides Batman Beyond, I don’t care about any of the characters in this book (Mr. Terrific, new 52 style, no thanks). It’s already pretty OMAC-oriented, which isn’t working for me. I wish DC would cut it out with the weeklies. They’re really killing folks. Batman Eternal is probably ok and would be something I’d read if it came out once a month instead of four times a month. I liked the first ten of it too. And I’ll read Future’s End someday, I’m sure (I am still buying it, but just pulling it out so I don’t fall behind on the other 60 books I read every month). Conceptually, it’s basically everything wrong with DC today: long arcs, bad characters, awful marketing and editing. I’m sorely disappointed.

Marvel’s events have been awesome. Infinity worried me because I’m not a huge Thanos fan. He’s a little too B-side Darkseid or identical Doomsday for me. He’s a weirdo, which is tight. But his power set and interests are just not Marvel-oriented enough for my tastes. Marvel’s the land of political intrigue and grey area super villains. DC is the ultimate good, ultimate evil company. Thanos is a bit too much the force of death for my tastes. BUT, it’s Jonathon Hickman, it’s Mike Deodato, it’s the Avengers, and it’s glorious. Thanos kid should be dumb for years after this, but the story of Infinity was brilliant and I loved it. Thanos’s crew was sick and awesome, very much the D&D anti-party. The Avengers were heroic. The story was huge in scope but felt very personal for the characters involved and I really liked that. It’s a special move of Hickman to highlight people in the middle of huge action, sort of like Mike Oeming’s use of facial expression in action gives you some insight into the emotional state of these characters while they’re undergoing enormous tasks. It’s impressive to write that and not feel stilted. I maintain that Hickman is special and still underrated in spite of being in the spotlight now for five years or so.

Original Sin was even better. I was unsure of Jason Aaron when he came to Marvel full-time. I loved Scalped. I really liked Ghost Rider (the first thing I read of his). But, I remained unsure that he was a good fit for most Marvel books. He seemed a bit too rough and tumble for most of the Marvel material outside of Punisher and street-level stuff, like maybe a Luke Cage or Kingpin book. It was hard picturing him on superhero action. I thought his work on Wolverine was uneven and I really didn’t like Wolverine and the X-Men (I still strongly prefer the newer LaTour stuff to Jason Aaron’s long run on W&tX). That said, I forgot one of my favorite characters and someone he’s perfect to write: Nick Fury. While Aaron’s Thor has been amazing – and I mean exactly that word, I think it’s the best Thor writing ever – Original Sin and his portrayal of the secret history of Nick Fury, his rise and fall, was spectacular. It’s already my favorite comic event of all time. I’ll admit to being a total homer for Fury. Sgt. Fury & the Howling Commandoes #12 was the first comic book my mom ever found for me at a garage sale when I was a kid and I’ve been obsessed with the character ever since. This book has it all. Every major Marvel player, a huge conspiracy 50 years in the making, secret heroes and villains, the B-listers rising to the A-list, a great murder mystery, and the missing link that ties Fury to everything. God, I can’t even begin to explain how much I loved this book. So good.

Upcoming events for both companies reveal a similar trend. Marvel’s Secret War goes back to Jonathon Hickman and will feature pencils by the stunning Esad Ribic, while DC will work with newcomer Jeff King (TV’s White Collar and Continuum) and Scott Lobdell, who I love (and Dan Jurgens, who is pretty much the worst). Secret War is going to be some kind of parallel universes solution, featuring all sorts of Marvel alternates, like the Ultimate U., Age of Apocalypse, House of M, Future Imperfect, Old Man Logan, and others. I suspect the goal is to end the Ultimate U., save Miles Morales from irrelevance, and finish what Age of Ultron started. Convergence is bringing the Multiverse back to the new 52 (perfect!), but it’s unclear whether that means the old versions of core characters will be returning or if the new 52 will remain the major publishing status quo. Frankly, who cares? Braniac will be around, so that’s pretty tight, but otherwise the “we had to get an outside talent who is a comic writing novice to produce this book” message is not a good one for DC who is continuing to struggle to attract any competent writers.

Comic book news:
The best new news for comics is the Jason Aaron/John Cassady Star Wars book Marvel is publishing early next year. For one, it returns to regular pencils the best artist in comics. John Cassady, if you’ve never seen his work, is breath-taking. Read Planetary. Take your time. You’re looking at real art, not cartoons. He’s the perfect person to bring to life the Star Wars U. on the page. Jason Aaron will tell the gritty, in the muck Star Wars that folks who are watching Rebels and loathing its squeaky cleanness were hoping for. I expect a lot of canteena’s, a lot of alien weirdos, and some badass fights. This should be a great book for as long as Marvel can keep top talent interested in it. I’m sure Cassady won’t do more than 12 issues, but Aaron could stick around for a long time. He’s not a one-and-done creator.

New Miracleman. New, old Miracleman, I guess. But, Grant Morrison’s lost Miracleman book is coming out at Christmas, the first new material on this beloved and highly-acclaimed product in 30 years. If you don’t know about Miracleman, you should read up on it. It’s one of the most interesting publishing sagas and stories in comics history. Alan Moore and Neil Gaiman, comics royalty, both wrote the book. Top artists drew it. The story is compared favorably to the Watchmen and the Dark Knight Returns. Marvel has only recently acquired the rights to the book and has indicated it intends to start producing new Miracleman material, likely in 2016, and hopefully with Neil himself. This is huge news and should be exciting to everyone who loves comics.

Hellboy and the BPRD comes out next month. Personally, I’m very excited. I fell out of love with the Arcudi penned BPRD series years ago; it eeked forward slowly, seemingly caught in an ever-widening frog monster arc that it couldn’t escape from. Going backward may help the narrative. The series is set in the 1950’s and fills in the time when Hellboy was part of the BPRD in the post-war era. I love this idea, I love these characters, I love Mike Mignola, and I’m anxiously awaiting this book. I don’t hate John Arcudi, but I will say his BPRD books seemed uninspired after a bit and could likely have used some additional direction or focus. Hopefully, the addition of the big guy to the team and a period piece will help to spell out a more positive future for these characters.

SHIELD also comes out at Christmas. This book will feature Mark Waid who is on one of the best winning streaks in comics at the moment and a rotating cast of artists, starting with Carlos Pacheco. This will be an attempt to bring the TV & movie version of SHIELD into the Marvel U., with Coulson and crew teaming up with superheroes to do the spy-vs-spy work of the superhero universe. It should be a really solid book. Like I said, my love for Fury is strong and, as a result, I’m a SHIELD buff as well. I like the TV show in spite of its flaws and have high hopes for the book to bring the organization back to prominence in the Marvel comic book universe. Little is known about the plot for the book at the moment, which is just as well, but given its release date – a spot reserved for only special products and featuring the lost Miracleman book as its sole companion – I expect Marvel thinks they’ve got something pretty special here.

To be continued:

I’ll be back shortly with more info on specific books with reviews and insights. Stay tuned.