Category Archives: Comic Books


Permalink to Whoever said there’s nothing new in comics is a bloody liar.

Whoever said there’s nothing new in comics is a bloody liar.

I just finished reading the first issues of Saga by Brian K. Vaughn, and The Manhattan Projects by Jonathan Hickman and all I can say is that I’m still swaying a bit. They are both spectacular.

Hickman's past as a graphic designer often shows itself

Jonathan Hickman is often found writing for Marvel, but he initially grabbed attention for his original books. I remember picking up Pax Romana a few years ago and being beguiled by the aesthetic and mind-twisting story. His “The Manhattan Projects” takes that same Hickman style and applies it to this latest on-going project.

There are no superheroes here, at least not in the traditional sense. The Manhattan Projects is an alternate history of the development of the atomic bomb, with the twist being that the more public weapons development hides a variety of other super-high technology secret projects. Dr. Oppenheimer is one of our main characters, as should be expected, but his story holds its own special twists and turns and I simply can’t wait to see what happens next.

Dr. Oppenheimer arrives.

I admit the art isn’t quite to my taste on this book, which is odd as I liked the same artist’s work on last year’s Hickman-authored “The Red Wing”. It’s executed well enough, but not in a style I’m particularly fond of, though I do admit I like the way the tech is drawn and the character designs are cool. I think the colors match the style, as does the lettering, so the cohesive whole may have something to do with how I’m viewing it. But now I’m getting a bit geeky and technical. I just know that delving too much into what actually occurs in this issue will blow things for people and I am trying to be good about spoilers while still going “OMG I want to rave about this bit and that bit”.

So I’ll just skip to the next book instead, shall I?

Promo poster for Saga

Brian K. Vaughn wrote “Y: The Last Man” for those who are looking for a handhold on this author’s previous work. He’s written for the Big Two (DC and Marvel) as well as a fair amount of other “creator owned” work. “Saga” is his new on-going title and I am already in love.

Saga falls into the same “OMG I want to rave about this bit and that bit” category. Colors, art, stellar writing, a-mazing new world to float around in, I’ll be in this for the long haul.

Birth is a messy process

The story itself is, in some ways, as old as the hills. Romeo and Juliet, only there is a baby involved and no interfering monk causing miscommunication and death. This R & J are soldiers from opposite sides, and species, of factions that have been at war for longer than anyone really remembers. Sounds basic enough except that she has wings, he has horns, and there is another faction involved who have televisions for heads. Yeah, it’s not exactly like something The Bard would write.

But the story has a crisp edge to it, sharp dialog and sharp storytelling, and all around awesome.

In all, I would highly recommend picking both of these up and giving them a shot. A couple more books to add to the pile of comics that I would hand to someone who said they didn’t like comic books. There are plenty of them out there, enough so that I wonder when people will stop viewing superheroes as the scapegoat for why they don’t read the books.


Permalink to BACKLOG OF DOOM #1: Mouse Guard

BACKLOG OF DOOM #1: Mouse Guard

A venerable Mouse of the Guard

For the first installment of my BACKLOG OF DOOM comic book reading project, I chose Mouse Guard. I made the right decision to use this as a jumping off point!

What a pleasurable read! In the tradition of Usagi Yojimbo (which I have indeed read some of and will be reading more of for a future review), comes this masterfully told tale of the Mouse Guard, protectors of mousekind.

In doing my best to avoid any spoilers on plot, which is deftly written and beautifully drawn, I will say there is a bit of mystery, a bit of adventure, and is definitely a book almost anyone could enjoy. Just a note that young children might not get much out of the book, due to a bit of real violence and a perfectly twisty-turny plot. For everyone else, I encourage you to dig into the first book and don’t stop until you’re done.

Originally published as single comic book issues, the story is still on-going, with the fourth volume currently being published in installments. To keep things simple for this review, I read the first three stories as those are the ones available in collected editions, namely Fall 1152, Winter 1152, and Legends of the Guard.

The Mouse Guard has many heroes

A bit of discussion is in order here as it could appear from the artwork samples that we’re dealing with silly, anthropomorphized animals. While, yes, many of the main characters are mice, as the title might suggest, they are anything but silly. Instead, we have loyalty, depth, and strength in these well-rounded, charming and fully-realized, and very human, characters.

Author and artist David Peterson handles his cast in a way that belies his deep affection for them, and renders them with lovely details and a thoughtful approach to how the little world he has created works without getting ‘worldbuildy’ about the details. And did I mention that the pictures are gorgeous? The imagery starts strong and only gets better. Combining digital with traditional methods (which you can read a bit about on his blog), the whole book has a wonderfully evocative autumnal color palette.

The world itself is full of the stark and wild danger of the forest and set in a time much like our own medieval period. In other words, in the now-familiar time-that-never-was in a place-that-never-existed of many low fantasy tales. Fans of A Song of Ice and Fire will note the lack of sex and crude language, I mean it is an all-ages type of book, but the feeling of the environment is not dissimilar.

For me, David Peterson cannot put out the remaining issues of the fourth volume fast enough. I’m holding off to read it until the lst issue appears as the suspense would just kill me. If that’s not encouragement enough for you to hunt these books down, then I don’t know what will.


Permalink to Revenge of the Comic Book Backlog

Revenge of the Comic Book Backlog

Yes, I’m a huge comic book fan. Yes, I read a lot of titles. No, I am nowhere near caught up with all my books. This is WRONG in so many ways, you don’t even know.

I’m going to share a few secrets with you, Dear Internet. There are a few special books, books that I love, that I adore, that I even recommend to others… that I am years and years behind on reading. Also, I have never seen a single frame of Lost in Space.

Cue the little gnomes who are coming to revoke my geek cred.

In order to do penance or whatever for my horrible behavior, I’m going to take a good hard look at my collection and pull these titles out into the light of day. (Lost in Space will have to wait) And to make myself stay honest, I’m going to write up a post on each of them to tell you why you should be running out to hunt down these amazing books that are so good I haven’t made time to read them.

Maybe I’m savoring them and saving them for a special occasion? Nah. I just do silly things sometimes, this being one of the silliest. In fact, it’s even sillier when you consider that I have actually read huge chunks of some of these books (Fables, I’m looking at you) and then allowed myself to get distracted and let them fall to the wayside. Bad, geek girl, bad!

For the record, I’m going to first compile a list of my biggest sins, the ones that need fixing, like, now. Some are limited series and some are on-going titles. A few have been sitting in my special “to read” box for years. All sucked me in when the came into my possession and all fell so mysteriously to the background.

Without further ado, here are my top ten, OMG-why-haven’t-I-kept-up-with-these comic books, otherwise and heretofore known as the BACKLOG OF DOOM:

1. Fables
2. Usagi Yojimbo
3. The Invincible Iron Man
4. The Muppet Show
5. Unwritten
6. Joe the Barbarian
7. Noble Causes
8. The Walking Dead
9. Mice Templar
10. IZombie

But before I get to any of those, I’m going to start off with another title. Trust me, there’s more than just those on the list. That’s just the top ten I could think of off the top of my head. Anyway, this one has only been around for a couple of years and has come out in glorious little batches of awesome, so it’s not an overwhelming amount of catalog to wade through, or track down, if you are so inclined. In fact, with the exception of the current storyline, all the issues are easily available in collected three trade editions. I love the artwork, the story intrigued me, and yet I somehow managed to not read a single panel. For shame!

So, our inaugural title to be pulled out of the BACKLOG OF DOOM is David Peterson’s Mouse Guard. I’ll be reading this over the next week or so and post my review as soon as I’m done. If you’d like to run out and grab a copy and read along with me, do feel free.

 


Permalink to Review: The Walking Dead Rocks- and You’re Ugly.

Review: The Walking Dead Rocks- and You’re Ugly.

Season Two Spoilers:

If I had known the world was ending, I would have brought better books. -Dale

You know what I love the most in literature and cinema? Character development. It almost infuriates me when a good concept has none. Remember that guy who directed the 6th Sense? Yeah I won’t even speak his name anymore for what he did to the Last Airbender series… that’s how much I love character development- I think it’s a borderline sin to deprive people of it.

With this being said, sometimes shit gets a little boring when we develop characters. But I didn’t understand all of the bitches and complaints people were launching against the Walking Dead and its “slow” start to the second season.

Apparently the mindless masses just wanted zombies to horde rush and rage on our survivors for seven episodes… give us action and explosions- say, is Michael Bay available to direct? Give me a break… I realize a large part of the fan boys were upset about Darabont’s departure (as was I) but that didn’t mean I was going to go into the second season wanting to hate it.

The complaints I saw from facebook and twitter friends summed up to “oh my god this season is SO slow!” “where are all the zombies?!?!” and “six episodes of looking for a little girl?!”

Yeah… it’s called building drama, decent plot lines and character development. It’s like everyone forgets they should be challenged and watch a good show for once. First off I didn’t get the complaint that there weren’t enough zombies… there were… it was just spread out. They interacted with zombies in every episode- it just wasn’t Atlanta where the undead masses congregate like Westboro Baptist Church, ready to eat you (and your heathen ways).

Too slow? I suppose breaking into a Walker infested school, getting cornered, running, shooting a perfectly cool jolly fat dude to get away is way slow… Carl got shot, Sophia got lost and went all zombie, Daryl found himself (and got shot), Carol was sadsies and doing laundry, Andrea bounced back and forth between total idiot and semi useful armed chick who doesn’t want to be babysat, Shane and Andrea got it on, Dale got jelly of Shane, Lori found out she was pregnant, tried to ghetto abort that shit before Rick found out, Rick found out anyway (by the way Glenn can’t keep a secret to save his ass), realized she had a thing with Shane- who was like “lolz that baby is totes mine,” T-Dog was hanging out- being black and stuff, Hershel was hiding a ton of zombies in his barn, and Glen got laid… like twice! AND made a Portal reference! Fuck… what more did you want? Iron man to blast in and save the day? Actually that would have been cool…

Third- the little girl… yeah… I was a little irritated that no one could find her but then I realized what they were doing. They were building up to something- and since I’m a graphic novel reader and knew what the fuck was in the barn- I figured the writers were up to no good. Drama. You have to build it up. Takes awhile but as you can CLEARLY see, in the end it’s worth it.

I knew the writers wouldn’t make the barn scene go as it did in the comic- first off Hershel has a shit ton more kids and half of his children get bitten in the barn scene (because the zombies aren’t let out- they break out)… not only that but Hershel forces himself to kill them once he realizes they are bitten… not exactly fitted for television but what would be the next best thing? Let’s put this kid they’ve been looking for this WHOLE time in there… that’ll teach our fans not to fucking doubt us. Walking Dead 1 – Negative Nancy Fans 0 » by the way… admit you cried at the end of last night’s episode.

Yes I’m invested in this show because I love zombies, I’ve read the comics and I love anything AMC puts out. I don’t hold it up to shows like Breaking Bad because it’s NOT Breaking Bad. Totally different… unless Shane and Carl start a meth lab out of their new barn… which judging from Shane’s Neo Nazi makeover could very well happen.

Bottom line is this show is fucking amazing. For what it’s worth, it’s well written, I like all the characters because I can complain, talk, discuss about ALL of them. like when John decides to voice Shane… tearing up the trailer “Where the hell are my Fruit Loops?!?! Raaawwrrr!”

Today’s water cooler discussion is about how Rick is getting great at shooting little girls in the face (with a GUN, pervs!), and Shane spent the entire episode pacing around the barn like a deranged lunatic and Lori is still an idiot… I enjoy discussing this show but I need you to come at me with more than “it’s too slow.” Because that’s a stupid statement and you should expand your mind beyond that… Rick battles with morality every day, Shane is on a downward spiral into becoming the darkest character and the rest of them have purpose, story lines, interesting personalities (not all great- but all interesting)… etc. See beyond the zombies, people… this show’s main focus isn’t a zombie apocalypse… it’s about humanity.

I can’t wait for February.


Permalink to Batman Forever, or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love The Dark Knight

Batman Forever, or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love The Dark Knight

Batman Forever, or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love The Dark Knight

How does one quantify the feelings one has for something she has loved for, literally, as long as she can remember? I have loved The Batman (his proper title, dontcha know) since I was three. It’s all my parents’ fault. They were the ones that plopped me down in front of the boob tube when Adam West’s campy take on the World’s Greatest Detective was in reruns. They were the ones who gave me a little Batmobile to zoom around the house. It’s their fault I’m a such a dork over the Caped Crusader.

Adam West & Burt Ward looking intense in the Batmobile

Bang! Smash! Boing! Crack! Blam! At three, you don’t know that all that silliness is meant to be tongue in cheek. For me, Batman was super smart and a super nice and just plain super. Robin always needed rescuing, though he was good in a fight. Batgirl was right there, too, ready to kick the bad guys’ butts and she was so smart. Maybe one of the things that made such a huge impression on me was how Batman treated everyone. There was always a chance for redemption in Batman’s world; especially if you were Catwoman. (wink wink, nudge nudge) Oh and that would be Julie Newmar, please, though I loved Eartha Kitt, too. I loved Batman utterly, yet somehow, when the show went off the air, I lost track of him. I missed out on Frank Miller’s The Dark Knight Returns and Alan Moore’s Killing Joke, being a bit too young for such fare and having no access to comic books. I was a girl and comic shops didn’t really come into their own until a few years later. My parents were not the type to go into one anyway. For me, the next time I saw Batman was when the Tim Burton movies started coming out. Somewhere along the line, I had grown up a bit, and so had Batman. There was Batman stuff everywhere. Hats, pants, jewelry, stickers, you couldn’t walk three feet without seeing that symbol. Still, Batman and I were not ready to completely reconnect.

You know, Michael Keaton made an awesome Batman

I started reading comics when I was 15, at first borrowing my boyfriend’s X-Men, then getting into Vertigo books like The Extremist on my own soon after. The boyfriend is long gone, the comic books stayed. It wasn’t until I got into college that Batman came back into my life. I don’t really know why I hadn’t checked out “Batman” or “Detective Comics” or any of the other Bat books. I think maybe I was too busy trying to be edgy by buying indie books or something. The mainstream superhero books just were not on my radar. There was definitely a perception on my part that Batman was something I did as a little kid and not something the adult I was trying to become should take seriously.

Jim Lee's iconic Batman, overlooking Gotham

At last, one of my dearest friends and I were in a comic book store (don’t ask me which one, we go to all of them). I was probably done with my own browsing and waiting for her to finish. To keep myself occupied, I starting looking at all the books I had been ignoring, the ones with DC on the cover. And it was then that I found him again. I probably stopped in my tracks. The memory, as you can see, is a bit hazy, though I do distinctly remember thinking ‘Hey, I loved Batman as a kid, why am I not reading him?”. So I started picking up “Batman” and “Detective Comics” (the two main Bat titles). Soon after I started reading the other Batman-starring titles like “Gotham Nights” and “Legends of the Dark Knight”, both now gone, with many others taking their place. It felt like I had come home, whether it was to some innocent, younger part of myself, or simply to something that had resonance for me personally, I’m not sure. All I knew was that, just like The Beatles, The Batman was where it started and ended for me from that moment on. When the main titles were not enough, I threw myself in fully and found “Nightwing”, “Birds of Prey” and “Catwoman”, all featuring Batman’s sidekicks and nemesi. I came to love them all just as much as The Dark Knight, particularly Dick Grayson, the original Robin, and Barbara Gordon, the original Batgirl, both now grown up and with thrilling stories of their own. So here I am now, come full circle, back to the beginning. I read almost every Batman book I can get my hands on, watching as Batman and his family struggle against an un-ending tide of corruption, greed and growing evil, to keep the citizens of Gotham safe and bring criminals to justice.

The Bat Family, in all its glory. Circa early 2011.

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