Showing posts with label Marvel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marvel. Show all posts

Thursday, 3 September 2015

Comic Bytes

Some little bite-size reviews/comments. So with a little nod to the Fast Show, this week I have mostly been reading:
Loki Agent of Asgard #16

Writer: Al Ewing
Artist: Lee Garbett
Colour Artist: Atonio Fabela
Letterer: Clayton Cowles

 This carries on in the same light-hearted, fun fashion already established, as the battle between the forces of Asgard and the old Loki and his allies comes to a conclusion of sorts, in which the new Loki has a decisive part to play. It's not often a super-hero comic makes me smile when I'm reading it nowadays (they all seem so serious, po-faced and grim) but Loki, together with Ms Marvel, has me grinning from ear to ear. Take this from Sigurd the First Hero to Queen Freyja and the other deceased Asgardian gods:

Sigurd: We also bring tokens of our fealty from our long sojourn on Midgard.

Sigurd: The mortals believe these, when worn, confer the heroic magic know as...”cool.”

Queen Freyja (donning sunglasses): I see. Well then heroes...let us ride.

If that doesn't at least raise a little smirk then you officially have no sense of humour.

Beneath all this there seems to be a serious comment on the modern day insistence on binary stances which allow for no shades of grey, no overlapping on any Venn diagrams (e.g. you're either Tory or Labour, football managers are either great, when they're winning, or awful, when they lose, etc.) Loki is neither for one side nor the other. There's also appears to be some meta-textual theme being played with here with Loki as the god of stories. We'll see how that develops but it is being handled with a delightful lightness of touch, which is something Ales Kot needs to develop. This leads nicely into the other comic I've been reading this week.

Zero Volume 4: Who By Fire

Writer: Ales Kot
Artists: Ian Bertram
      Stathis Tsemberlidis
      Robert Sammelin
      Tula Lotay
Colours: Jordie Bellaire
Letters: Clayton Cowles

This has been a good series, and this is an interesting conclusion. What it all means I have no idea and will spend some time mulling it over. This started out as a science fiction war/black ops book rooted in the international political situation of current times. The use of different artists throughout has been well handled and added to the overall effect the book had on the reader. This final collection changes none of that but adds a strange meta-textual twist to it as it intertwines the tale with William Burroughs, who appears to be writing the tale, or some of the tale, or commenting on the tale with Allen Ginsberg. All the while there is a metaphor for the violence inherent in man, and whether this can be removed or is something we need to learn to accept and learn to live with and limit. The shift is slightly jarring but one has to believe that the writer had it in mind from the beginning.

There is little doubt that Ales Kot is an ambitious writer, striving to move the comics form on, and Zero has been largely a successful series. The main fault I find with this concluding volume is that it reads less like moving the form forward, and more like moving it back to ape the worst of Grant Morrison's excesses. There is also a fault with the series overall in that humour is definitely lacking. Even in the heaviest tale, in fact especially in the heaviest, darkest stories, you need that humour to help lighten things. It gives the reader a sense of relief and, more importantly, it serves to emphasise the darkness, to make it more effective, by acting as a contrast. It's an old trick (Shakespeare used it in every tragedy he wrote) but it works and works well. Without it a book can start to feel dragged down by the weight of it's own portentousness.

All this is not to say that Zero is a bad book. It is well worth picking up and has some fine moments, but don't expect too much from the whole package. Definitely a case of the parts outweighing the while, but having said that most of the parts are damn good.


Tuesday, 4 August 2015

Loki: Agent of Asgard #15 (Marvel)

Title: The Old Army Game
Writer: Al Ewing
Artist: Lee Garbett
Colour Artist: Antonio Fabela
Letterer: VC's Clayton Cowles
A while ago when I read 2000AD, Al Ewing started to appear to great praise from many of the readers. There was a sense of humour at the heart of his work that made him stand out, and this has happily transitioned over to his work on Loki.

The Ewing/Garbett Loki: Agent of Asgard is fifteen issues old and, despite a slight wobble during the tie in with the last big Marvel crossover event (the curse of modern day super-hero comics), it has shone brightly as a beacon of entertainment that doesn't take itself too seriously. This issue has two main narratives that could be titled “The Origin of Verity Willis” and “The Battle of Asgard”. Both are tales are told completely differently.
Verity's tale is told mainly as a flashback, with muted hues delineating it from the more vibrant colours used in the Asgardian battle narrative, which takes place at the present time. This is nicely executed by Antonio Fabela on colours, and the almost pastel shades seem tom suit Verity's personality. This is a more understated story than the battle, more grounded in reality and the regular panel layout adds to this, only breaking out into a full page splash for the climax showing the result of the actions of the female Orlando type Loki.

On the other hand the battle between the forces of Asgard and old Loki is completely over-the-top and ridiculous in the best possible way. It recalls Walt Simonson's acclaimed run on the title, and has big, energetic panel layouts which really bring out the atmosphere of Odin with a huge machine gun, Loki riding a dragon creature Freyja facing down Loki and Odin blowing some impossibly gigantic horn, the Gjallahorn. Everything leaps off the page  into the readers mind, really bringing the whole spectacle thrillingly alive. The lettering also helps here as the Asgardians have suitably over the top text bursting out of the speech bubbles, and the sound effects are big and bold. It's all completely ludicrous but enormous fun.

I don't know how long this team will stay on this title, but that's a worry for the future. For now we just need to sit back and enjoy the most fun super-hero comics can be.

Monday, 22 April 2013

Hawkeye: My Life as a Weapon



Writer: Matt Fraction
Artists: David Aja, Javier Pulido (Alan Davis/Mark Farmer on Young Avengers)
Colour Artist: Matt Hollingsworth

A Page 45 Comic Book of the Month


Clint Barton (aka Hawkeye): “Ok...this looks bad.”

Page 45 have been running the Comic Book of the Month Club for about six years now, the idea being that they recommend a comic every month and those that sign up get 20% discount. There's no tie in, and you don't have to buy each one. It's a wonderful way to expand one's literary horizons, especially given that the people there have very good taste. I've probably not enjoyed two of the books, and given there's been seventy four of them so far, that's an excellent hit rate. It has to be said also that even the ones that missed at least had something interesting about them. The seventy fifth Comic Book of the Month (or CBOTM) was announced at the start of April – Hawkeye: My Life as a Weapon. A super-hero book for the first time in the club's six year history.

I am not a big fan of modern day super-hero comics. I've tried to like them, and always find myself gravitating back towards them, only to leave after a year or so. For the most part they are extremely derivative and incestuous. An example would be the prevalence of major supporting characters and villains that first emerged fifty years ago, or at best twenty years ago. They seem to have lost their sense of fun and are written as if they want to be taken seriously as adult works, but have the most ludicrous plots this side of Dan Brown. An instance of this would be known psychotic Norman Osborne being made head of the US intelligence agency, or whatever SHIELD is, a few years ago due to one action during an invasion by aliens. That would work in a comic aimed at children up to the age of fourteen, as they used to be. Aimed at an adult audience, that sort of weak writing just does not hold water.

Anyway I don't want to digress too much into my feelings on a genre of comics. I just felt it necessary to lay the context for this brief review of Hawkeye.

So what did I make of Hawkeye: My Life as a Weapon? It has a lot to recommend it. Stephen Holland at Page 45 said that “...it's not even a super-hero comic” and he's right. Five of the chapters are extremely light on the tropes you would expect of the genre, and the first chapter especially is close to wonderful, without anything that would indicate this was part of the whole tights and capes thing. It feels much more of a crime comic, and one can't help but speculate as to whether the creators would like to have pursued that route, with Russian gangsters and a flawed, and very vulnerable hero, trying to do the right thing. At times it reminded me very much of Frank Miller's run on Daredevil in feel, when Miller was desperately trying to disguise the crime stories he wanted to write. David Aja's art especially seemed to evoke this, particularly in the scene in which Clint Barton enters the underground casino.

Matt Fraction and David Aja were unfortunately only together for the first three issues here. Unfortunate because, despite the couple of issues which I will be coming to, the there was real promise of something a little different. Matt Fraction's plots feel fresh and his dialogue is sharp. His handling of foreign languages is brilliant and funny:

Ringmaster: “Ladies and gentlemen. (French stuff.) (Wait, maybe some Italian too)”

Trust me this comes across much better on the page. The real star is David Aja though, which is why it was such a shame he only did three chapters of this book. The design is beautiful, but it fits perfectly into a seamless storytelling. There's a scene where our two heroes are walking across the floor to some stairs at a posh circus party, and Aja executes this with such grace it makes you want to shout out with joy. It is this quality that makes this shortcomings all the more galling.

Let's take the first problem I found. In the first issue, Matt Hollingsworth uses a nice subtle colour code to illustrate time, with pages that take place later in the narrative in a predominantly blue pallette. It worked well until the Russian thugs visit Hawkeye in a vets, which utilises the colours to let us know this is later in the narrative. At the bottom of the page we cut to a long rectangular window seen from the outside, and that blue palette. The very next panel, at the top of the next page shows Hawkeye being thrown through a window and landing outside. The same blue colours are used, so I didn't click that this was going back in the story again. I could have noticed that the window was different, but these were action scenes so the pace is fast. The average reader doesn't slow down to examine every detail in the panel during these scenes, or if they do the artist has usually done their job incorrectly (although admittedly there are times when you want the reader to slow down during an actions sequence). A minor thing maybe, but it pulls you out of the story, and thus shatters the spell that the creators have been trying (successfully) to weave to that point.

The second major problem is much more intrusive. The thing with super-hero comics is that they usually rely too much on prior knowledge on the characters and what has happened to them. In order for this book to really succeed as a self-contained effort, it would need to be a satisfying read for a reader with no prior knowledge of the characters inside. To this end I tired to approach it as if I did not have any knowledge of the characters (not too hard as I've never really read much of Hawkeye outside his Avengers exploits, and I know nothing of Young Avengers). So Kate Bishop, the other major character in this story, is introduced thus:

Clint Barton (aka Hawkeye): “Kate took over for me as Hawkeye once upon a time when I was...well dressing up like a ninja, sort of, is the short version. She is without doubt the finest and most gifted bowman I've ever met but she's like nine years old and spoiled rotten.”

She's nine years old. This brings up some major problems with the whole story, but the first thing I wondered was why Matt Fraction didn't bother to tell the artist, or why David Aja decided to draw her more like a young woman the a pre-pubescent girl. There are other problems at work here too, such as why Matt Fraction, having said she's nine years old, then tells her one of the reasons he wants her to work with him is that he doesn't want to sleep with her, which together with the images leads the reader to think that maybe she's not nine years old after all, but closer to twenty. Kate is persistently portrayed as being sexually mature until Javier Pulido draws her being unmasked in a later story, in a panel swiped directly from one of the Hernandez brothers in which she looks just like a little girl. There's also the unlikely ability of a little girl to pass herself off as a major criminal, to mix in adult society with ease, and to drive a car like an expert. Normally you could pass this off as the sidekick genre trope, but the book moves so firmly away from these tropes that this jars badly. We're shown Hawkeye getting consistently hurt and ending up in hospital at times. It goes to such great lengths to present a much more adult tale, and this aspect just ruins all of that.

The two chapters drawn by Javier Pulido are decent enough, but it is a bit of a let down after the opening chapters, and does not appear to advance the plot any from chapter two, at the end of which it appears that Clint Barton has drawn the eye of many of the heavy hitters in the underworld. In fact my last main criticism of this book is the inclusion of the Young Avengers chapter at the end. If anything it should have come near the start to illuminate the relationship between Kate Bishop and Clint Barton. As a self-contained work it would really have been more useful to have just included the issues that advanced the overarching story, unless this has not been finished or even dealt with. The Young Avengers chapter instead just reads like filler.

Surprisingly enough I did actually enjoy reading this book, especially the first three chapters, despite the above criticisms. As I said earlier, the standard set by Fraction, Aja and Hollingsworth was so high that the faults, when they appear, impact a lot more than they would normally have done. I would still urge all to read this, even if just for the consummate skill Aja shows in his page design and storytelling. That's half the fun of participating in the CBOTM club. I would never have picked this book up on my own, and so would have been unaware of just how good Aja can be. Now he's an artist I'll be on the look out for, and definitely someone I'll be investigating further, and so the sum of my knowledge becomes a little greater, and my appreciation a little deeper.





Saturday, 26 May 2012

The Secret Service (Marvel Icon)

Writer: Mark Millar
Artist: Dave Gibbons
Co-Plotter: Matthew Vaughn
Colourist: Angus McKie
Editor: Nicole Boose
I have mixed reactions when I hear that a book has been written by Mark Millar. Sometimes he puts out stuff that has this reader purring with delight. Work such as Saviour (the little I saw of it), The Ultimates, The Authority easily falls into this category. At other times he seems to court controvery for its own sake, with little beneath the surface, such as Kick-Ass and his 2000AD strips. However the one defining thing is that he knows how to construct a story so even when delivering shallow, meaningless drivel it is at least well written and makes sense to the reader, so when I heard that he and Dave Gibbons would be working on a book together, it seemed well worth checking out. There was one final concern which regarded the inclusion of Matthew Vaughn and its seeming parallel development as a film property and comic, the fear being that the comic would be neutered by the need to only inlude scenes that would make a good film.


It would seem that any fears were unfounded as this is a wonderful comic that confounds expectations. We have all the hallmarks of a James Bond film, the big, exciting introductory scene, suave and sophisticated agent, Jack, dining with his boss on wine and fish in the Westminster. Each of these is wittily undercut by the inclusion of a twist. The first scene is a daring rescue of Mark Hamill which doesn't quite go as expected, and the dinner with the agent is interrupted by a text from Jack's sister telling him his nephew is in trouble with the law again, as it turns out our sophisicated agent is from a rather less sophisticated background, less James Bond and more Jeremy Kyle. This is all good stuff, but it is in the depiction Jack's sister and her family that Mark Millar really shows his chops. Rather than stereotypical and slightly condescending, this is a lot more realistic. Certainly it is exagerated, but the actions, the language, the atmosphere are all spot on.

As you would expect from such an established and talented pro, Dave Gibbons turns in some wonderful art that does its job so perfectly you barely notice it as he manages to drag you into this world without once pulling you out of it due to clumsy panel transitions, strange page design, or wierd looking bodies that don't fit together like any real world human being. Expressions too are perfectly rendered so we always have a good idea about what the different characters ma be thinking and feeling.

This is an excellent book, and when the end came I found myself wishing the next issue was already available, and you can't ask for much more than that.

Wednesday, 16 November 2011

Criminal: The Last of the Innocent (Marvel Icon)


Writer: Ed Brubaker
Artist: Sean Philips

Marvel Comics launched their Icon imprint back in 2004. The most famous and successful and famous Icon comic is probably Kick-Ass by Mark Millar and John Romita Jr., which just goes to show that the world loves to have its prejudices about comics being second-rate, immature entertainment for emotionally stunted boys (albeit boys in their thirties and forties) reinforced. However the most consistent in terms of release and quality is Criminal by Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips, which is now released in story arcs averaging around four issues before going on hiatus until the next arc is ready, and the two creators have released other projects.

Ed Brubaker had been around for some considerable time as an “alternative” comic creator. I first read him in Dark Horse Presents in the late nineties on a strip called The Fall, which failed to grip me but this was more to do with the fact that I didn't have all of the issues of DHP that contained the strip, and it wasn't until Gotham Central from DC Comics, a police procedural that just happened to be set in the Gotham City of Batman, that I really started to take notice. His run on Captain America for Marvel helped reinvigorate the title, but to my mind Criminal is where he really demonstrates his chops.

As a twenty-something in the early nineties I latched onto Sean Phillips art in the relaunch of the Judge Dredd Megazine in which was the John Smith and Sean Phillips strip, Devlin Waugh. At the time I felt that this art was like nothing else I'd seen in comics, and he certainly stood out as somebody who could clearly tell a story whilst at the same time providing some innovative visuals. On reading Criminal all these years later, it is clear that he is the perfect artist for the title. He and Brubaker seem to have developed a definite chemistry. This is very much a comic by two co-creators rather than one dominating the other.

I was a latecomer to Criminal. Page 45 (the comic shop in Nottingham) featured the collection of the first story arc, Coward, as their Comic Book of the Month, and I've not looked back since. 

The title itself consists of self contained story arcs set at different times in Central City. Each arc can be read on its own with no reference to any of the others and provides a complete and satisfying story. However for regular readers there is also the connections that can be made between the different characters. It is not unusual for the people we have met in a previous story to turn up in a minor role, or mentioned, or in the background of some other story. Sometimes we get to see these people later on from a different point of view, or we have seen them earlier and so the mere mention of them has a ring of frisson about it.

The latest story arc is set in 1982 and concerns a man called Riley Richards going back to his home town of Brookview for a few days to see his terminally ill father. Richards is far from innocent, having a fondness for strippers and gambling, and being in debt to Sebastian Hyde, the kingpin of organised crime in Central City. However his trip back to the small town of his childhood is also a trip back to innocence as he stays in his old bedroom that has not been changed since he left, and meets up with his old childhood sweetheart and his best friend. This glimpse of how simple life used to be gives Riley the wherewithal to get rid of his debt and to be with his childhood sweetheart. All he needs to do is murder his wife, who just happens to be from a wealthy family and whose father made him sign a pre-nuptial agreement. What follows is the very opposite of innocent as he murders his adulterous wife and frames her lover, who happens to be another childhood acquaintance. Oh and he kills his childhood best friend too.

As usual with this title, and noir in general, none of the characters are what you could term wholesome. The title would seem to refer to the one person totally untainted by anything, Riley's childhood girlfriend Lizzie Gordon. You find yourself pulling for Riley and wanting him to win through, but the sucker punch in him killing his best friend is quite a blow. It shows just how far gone Riley is, and brings to mind the quote from Macbeth after he has murdered his friend, the noble Banquo:

...I am in blood
Stepped in so far, that, should I wade no more,
Returning were as tedious as go o'er.”
  • Macbeth, Act 3, Scene 4

Sean Phillips compliments the story perfectly, utilising the dark style consistent with the rest of the series, with a more innocent style reminiscent of Archie for the flashbacks to more innocent times. This is effective as used throughout, but the real payoff comes in the last panel, where we see Riley and Lizzie together, drawn in the innocent style, against a backdrop of a seedy city scene drawn in the more familiar dark, sinister style; an omen of the changes that are about to come crashing into the innocent Lizzie Gorden's life we wonder?

Criminal is a wonderful comic and this latest arc has been it's strongest yet. The plot may not have exactly been original, but it was executed with sufficient panache and style to feel fresh, and Sean Phillips excelled his usual high standards, pulling out all the stops to maximise the emotional resonance of the tale.