Thursday, September 1, 2016

My Top 12 Comics for August 2016

I read a couple of promising debuts this month: Animosity (Aftershock), Kingsway West (Dark Horse), and Image published new books from Hickman and Brubaker.

The Suicide Squad movie was released, I’ve not been overly thrilled with comic flicks this year (no, not even Deadpool), so wouldn’t you know it, the worst of the bunch was the one I was most entertained by. If that doesn’t make a lick of sense, you can see my reasons why here... Letterboxd (funny, I forgot to mention Flag in that write-up, but then I always forget Flag. Even in the pages of a comic he rarely interested me)

Continuing with DC: Rebirth is selling well and seems to have made fans happy. But I’ve found most of the stories lacking, and only a handful of titles remain in my pulls list.

Marvel continues to shine in spots. Even if I’m not digging the event tie-ins, I still have ace titles to look forward to each month, like Gwenpool, Black Widow, Moon Girl and Ant-Man. Plus, the new Amazing Spider-Man arc started off with a bang.

12. Lazarus #24 (Image)
Written by Greg Rucka
Art by Michael Lark * Colors by Santi Arcas
The Cull continues as another family bites the dust and Forever gets closer to discovering the truth of her existence. Good tale, if a bit repetitive as it goes through the same motions of the previous issue.

11. Red Hood and the Outlaws #1 (DC)
Written by Scott Lobdell
Art by Dexter Soy * Colors by Veronica Gandini
Hate on Lobdell all you want, but there’s no denying he writes a damn good Hood! (Ok, you can deny that, but I’ll argue tooth and nail). Scott’s taking his time on this one: of Jason’s team-mates, only Artemis has shown up (and that was at the tail end of the issue), but both this and the Rebirth issue have set up an intensely interesting, street level undercover story, with Black Mask the primary foe (oh, I do so hope Kitty makes a guest appearance soon)

10. Tomboy #7 (Action Lab)
Written by Mia Goodwin
Art and Colors by Michelle Wong 
We see some significant changes in the aftermath of last month's masterpiece: Gramps shows he's more than a little psycho, and Addison's spirit guides... well, I wont spoil that. I still can't figure out the angel of death thing and what that's all about, but she's taken notice of Addison's actions and is on the move. Intriguing tale, good character piece. This series has really heated up of late.

9. The Wicked + The Divine #22 (Image)
Written by Kieron Gillen
Art by Jamie McKelvie * Colors by Matthew Wilson
An explosive end to the arc… literally! This series has always kept readers off balance, changing the game and the players at the snap of a finger, and this issue was no different. Who knows where we are going from here, but there’s the suggestion that something wicked this way comes.

8. Spider-Gwen  #11 (Marvel)
Written by Jason Latour
Art by Robbi Rodriguez * Colors by Lauren Affe
Odd to see someone other than Rico color Robbi’s art; Affe’s not as neon psychedelic, but it’s not bad and the story was amaze-balls. Gwen is coming through her dark night of the soul with a little help from Reed Richards. This superb character study sets the table nicely for her confrontation with Frank Castle (who I’ve come to hate. He’s the perfect foil for her: She, the superhero who is seen by many as the baddie. He, the cop hero who has lost his mind to obsession and become the villain)

7. Hellblazer #1 (DC)
Written by Simon Oliver
Art by Moritat * Colors by Andre Szymanowicz
Many laughs in this one, John and Swampy are great together. There were several British references that I had to look up (which is a good thing). Mercury’s harangue we've heard a thousand times over, but mostly I liked the issue, liked the way the twin stories were set-up.

6. House of Penance #5 (Dark Horse)
Written by Peter J. Tomasi
Art by Ian Burtram * Colors by Dave Stewart
An anti-gun message and the consequences of colonization are all present in this twisted, Lovecraftian nightmare. At first I thought Sarah Winchester was simply haunted and mad... but it appears the horrors of her mind have manifested themselves and entered the world of the real. Peter J. Tomasi has never written anything finer.

5. Black Monday Murders #1 (Image)
Written by Jonathan Hickman
Art by Tomm Coker * Colors by Michael Garland
I don’t know when I’ve ever been more bewildered, while still being impressed by a comic. The subject of Wall-Street and finance has seldom interested me, but detectives and weirdness do. And while it’s a long, difficult read, it’s a rewarding one if you can focus and stick with it.

4. The Vision #10 (Marvel)
Written by Tom King
Art by Gabriel Hernandez Walta * Colors by Jordie Bellaire
Virginia playing a piano that can’t play is chilling, Vision tossing an empty oil can into the garbage is telling, and praying for a dead relative has rarely come off so heartbreaking and yet, so pointless, because it’s an impression of flesh and blood. This is not who you are, it’s what your pretending to be. Its existential displacement at its bleakest -- However, at the end, it looks like Vision isn’t ‘pretending’ any more.

3. Trees #14 (Image)
Written by Warren Ellis
Art and Colors by Jason Howard
The series makes its return and with it comes several characters not seen since the first arc. The comic is as smart and sinister as ever, but I don’t know whose more frightening, the trees or the bureaucrats.

2. Kill or be Killed #1 (Image)
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips  * Colors by Elizabeth Breitwesier
It’s Bru, Phillips and Breitwiser, so of course it’s exceptional. It also took an unexpected turn midway through. If Fatale was Lovecraft blended with Pulp Noir, then KobK –at first blush- is Death Wish filtered through Stephen King.

1. East of West #29 (Image)
Written by Jonathan Hickman
Art by Nick Dragotta * Colors by Frank Martin
A father and son reunion! We waited years for this and it does not disappoint.  Dragotta draws some heart stopping pages and I like how it ends with a callback to the first issue.

Honorable Mentions: Miss Fury #5, Green Arrow #4, Future Quest #4, Unbelievable Gwenpool #5, Black Widow #6, Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur #10, The Astonishing Ant-Man #11, All-New Wolverine Annual #1 (with guest star Spider-Gwen)

Writer of the Month:
Jonathan Hickman had a huge month, with an important issue of East of West and the debut of the Black Monday Murders

Artist of the Month:
 Gabriel Hernandez Walta & Jordie Bellaire (Vision) 
brought so much soul to the story and these characters



Friday, July 29, 2016

My Top 12 Comics for July 2016

My mind was engaged with more than comics this month, so no preamble, let’s just get to the list...

Collected Edition of the Month
Sheriff of Babylon Vol. 1: Bang. Bang. Bang by Tom King and Mitch Gerads

12. Green Arrow #2 & 3 (DC)
Written by Benjamin Percy
Art and Colors by Otto Schmidt and Juan E. Ferreyra
I can forgive the clunky dialogue, when I get characters and stories as interesting and intense as they have been in this series. Ollie losing everything isn’t new, but it’s well told. I like the heist film atmosphere of the 3rd issue, as well as the Bond like villains with their fortress on the sea. Canary has been a great addition.

11. House of Penance #4 (Dark Horse)
Written by Peter J. Tomasi
Art by Ian Burtram * Colors by Dave Stewart
This descent into madness is becoming even more nightmarish and gruesome. And the anti-gun message comes more into focus.

10. Harrow County #14 (Dark Horse)
Written by Cullen Bunn
Art and Colors by Tyler Crook
When Cullen Bunn closes a door (the 6th Gun), he opens a Harrowing window. I’m glad I still have one supernatural Bunn series to enjoy. In this ish Emmy meets the family, and they are a ghastly lot.

9. Velvet #15 (Image)
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Steve Epting * Colors by Elizabeth Breitwesier
This isn’t an explosive finish, more in line with Hercule Poirot explaining the details of a case. But the dialogue is strong, and the art beautiful. I agree with Ed: Steve and Elizabeth’s work on this series was career defining

8. Spider-Woman #9 (Marvel)
Written by Dennis Hopeless
Art and Colors by Javier Rodriguez 
Hopeless serves up a Civil War tie-in that doesn’t disrupt the series, and actually fits right in with the mission. I like the humor, the humanity, and the wild action of this title. All seen here as Jessica’s crew unravel a mystery, fight off an army of Wendigo’s and contended with Captain Marvel’s  annoying persistence. 

7. American Monster #4 (Aftershock)
Written by Brian Azzarello
Art and Colors by Juan Doe
What an exceptional but appalling portrait of America Azz has painted here: It’s like this small rural town is the dumping ground for all of life’s losers and haters and bullies. You’ve got aimless kids with no future, and broken, used up adults haunted by their pasts. Doe’s storytelling on the art is equally as impressive, with movement and details you need to soak in rather than gloss over.

6. Batgirl #1 (DC)
Written by Hope Larson
Art by Rafael Albuquerque * Colors by Dave McCaig
It's a rather quiet and reflective tale for the most part. It speaks to the past as Babs coincidentally bumps into a childhood pal (or was it planned?) which ties into the action sequence at the end… where Batgirl meets someone she admires (another Bat from the past) who offers her some words of wisdom. 

Positives? I like seeing Barbara abroad. Artist Rafael Albuquerque stages some nice action sequences to go with his usually stellar character work.  And I like that writer Hope Larson uses thought bubbles - seeing them took me back and put a smile on my face.

5. Tomboy #6 (Action Lab)
Written by Mia Goodwin
Art and Colors by Michelle Wong
I picked this series up after hearing good things about it. And it is a decent, if unwieldy mash-up of several genres: mystery, conspiracy, supernatural, psychological horror, teen assassin. It's truly all over the place. But this explosive issue is tight as a drum. Scary, intense, violent and at the end, a heart breaker

4. The Vision #9 (Marvel) 
Written by Tom King
Art by Gabriel Hernandez Walta * Colors by Jordie Bellaire
Addresses predestination vs. free will, and asks, “Can you break your programming, can you challenge fate? Or are your best efforts to stay destiny’s hand, the very thing that sets into motion what you tried to prevent?” What caused the Vision to go mad? You get your answer here, and it’s heartbreaking.

3. Lazarus #22 (Image)
Written by Greg Rucka
Art by Michael Lark * Colors by Santi Arcas
The verbal exchanges between family members are just as scintillating as the exchange of blows in that thrilling fight between Lazarus’.  

2. The Unbelievable Gwenpool #4 (Marvel) 
Written by Christopher Hastings
Art and Colors by Gurihiru 
Gwenpool might have started off as a gimmick, born from a month of Spider-Gwen variants - but kudos to Christopher Hastings for transcending the gimmick and giving Gwen personality and vibrancy. This is my favorite superhero book of the right now, and this issue made me giddy - as Gwen finally has her revenge against MODOK… And oh what a glorious throw down it is. Not just physically (though that’s awesome sauce), but also in the way she mocks his intellect, and bruises his ego (you go girl!) And as a bonus there’s the return of someone I’ve missed as much as Gwen has.

1. Revival #41 (Image)
Written by Tim Seeley
Art by Mike Norton * Colors by Mark Englert
All hell breaks loose this issue, and damn - just… damn! No other words suffice. 

Honorable Mentions: Future Quest #2, The Wicked + The Divine #21, Black Widow #5, Spider-Gwen #10, Miss Fury #4


Writer of the Month: 
Tim Seeley (Revival)

Artist of the Month: 
Otto Schmidt (Green Arrow #2)
and there was some exceptional art found throughout the top 10 and beyond.




Wednesday, June 29, 2016

My Top 11 Comics for June 2016

Despite not reading Civil War II and being less than thrilled with Rebirth, June was packed with great comics. Though sadly, it signaled the end of two of my favorite series - The Sixth Gun and Amelia Cole

Lemire’s miniseries Plutona also came to a close, as did the 2nd arc for Pretty Deadly (with the promise of a 3rd)

11. Amelia Cole #29-30 (Monkeybrain)
Written by D.J. Kirkbride & Adam P. Knave
Art and Colors by Nick Brokenshire
#29 sees the final battle end with victory and tears. The 30th and last issue is a quiet look at what has become of the cast months after. Amelia might not have been a sales giant, but her humor, perseverance, startling green eyes, and use of a wrench for a wand, made her magic - in more ways than one.

10. Black Widow #4 (Marvel)
Written by Mark Waid & Chris Samnee
Art by Chris Samnee * Colors by Matthew Wilson
The series gets back on track this month. While it still leans on Samnee’s impeccable skill as storyteller (see all those wordless panels), there’s more heft to the tale, and it sets up the potential for even meatier stories from here on out.

9. Injection #10 (Image)
Written by Warren Ellis
Art by Delcan Shalvey * Colors by Jordie Bellaire
The case is tied up smartly, the injection is getting stronger and scarier… and do we really have to wait until the end of the year to see what comes next? I will be counting the hours.

8. House of Penance #3 (Dark Horse)
Written by Peter J. Tomasi
Art by Ian Burtram * Colors by Dave Stewart 
The art work was phenomenal, unusual, unique and unsettling, just like the story - which delves deeper into Sarah's motivations, and takes a gander at the demons that haunt Warren Peck. Along with the horror, a little tenderness is seeping into the tale.

7. The Wicked + The Divine #20 (Image)
Written by Kieron Gillen
Art by Jamie McKelvie * Colors by Matthew Wilson
Just when you think you know what’s what… you find out that you didn’t know jack. This issue has amped up my interest (and here I thought my interest was amped enough already

6. Revival #40 (Image)
Written by Tim Seeley
Art by Mike Norton * Colors by Mark Englert
The interaction between the sisters was a joy; General Cale continues to be a back stabbing jerk, but Rhodey and the spirits of the dead look to settle that score. Oh man what a nail bitter, very dark, grisly (the bone shiv - ’shudder’)…. Next issue, now, please.

5. The Unbelievable Gwenpool #3 (Marvel)
Written by Christopher Hastings
Art and Colors by Gurihiru 
I ADORE this comic, what with its lesson on ‘French frogs’, and M.O.D.O.K. talking to his pen (which pleases him to no end), and the ‘pink harmonic’…. all of it is a treat. The bits with Batroc were funny and includes a cutting observation on superhero comics (heroes struggle for nothing, they change nothing, their conflicts go on and on and on). And an appearance by a surprise guest was even better, as it employs humor, but also reveals a thread of sadness in Gwen’s life. I appreciate how Hasting’s is fleshing out story and character to make this more than a one trick (one joke) pony. Oh, and that Mizoguchi inspired cover is a kick.

4. The Vision #8 (Marvel)
Written by Tom King
Art by Gabriel Hernandez Walta * Colors by Jordie Bellaire
A relative with a secret comes for a visit. What freaks me out about this series is how everyone pretends not to notice how sideways everything’s gone. Virginia, for example, is still repeating words and no one expresses concern, or suggests fixing what’s broken. It’s surreal, disturbing (as was the scene where Viv visits a gravesite). Tom King’s dialog is literature.

3. Green Arrow Rebirth #1 (DC)
Written by Benjamin Percy
Art and Colors by Otto Schmidt
The only Rebirth issue I liked: The chemistry between Ollie and Dinah was immediate and palpable. I don’t know how this Rebirth thing is going to work out, but they do come off like people who had some connection in the past (even if they aren’t aware of it at the present). Otto Schmidt’s art and colors knocked me out: the composition, the line work, the way it moves, the body language. The way he uses the horizon line and vanishing points. There’s a little Sean Murphy in the sketchiness of the homeless encampment, and a lot of spooky atmosphere throughout.

2. Lazarus #22 (Image)
Written by Greg Rucka
Art by Michael Lark * Colors by Santi Arcas
Lazarus returns after a 5 month break with the layered character work intact, and the political intrigue at a full boil. The issue also reinforces what was suspected from last issues reveal that all those flashbacks we saw in the past, weren’t flashbacks at all. Riveting!

1. The Sixth Gun #50 (Oni)
Written by Cullen Bunn
Art by Brian Hurtt * Colors by Bill Crabtree
Jumpin’ Jehosaphat! Brian Hurtt can draw a jaw dropping apocalypse – but for all its sweep and grandeur, as with any truly successful series, it rises or falls on its characters. And the Sixth Gun was rich with character. Hurtt, Crabtree and writer Cullen Bunn took a world built of ink and color and made it live and breathe. Drake and Becky and the others became real people for me. Their struggles and sacrifices in this supernatural western mattered to me. The weirdness and epic scale was neat, but the bittersweet finale left me with a lump in my throat due to the people who populated the series - especially those heroes who gave up everything to rid their world of evil.

Honorable Mentions: Miss Fury #3, Invisible Republic #10, East of West #27, James Bond #7, Spider-Gwen #9, Silk #9, Green Arrow #1, Adventures of Supergirl #3-4, 


Artists and Writer of the Month
Brian Hurtt, Bill Crabtree (not pictured) and Cullen Bunn (The Sixth Gun)

With a nod to the stellar work done by artists Nick Dragotta (East of West) and Otto Schmidt (Green Arrow)

To July

Back to May

Thursday, June 2, 2016

My Top 11 Comics for May 2016

* DC made news by marrying the old with the new and introduced Rebirth -and their Hanna Barbera line- to a waiting world. I also heard good things about Johns final issue of Justice League, but I trade wait on that book, so it will be a while before I know this for myself. Oh, and they revealed a new logo.

*  Marvel launched their next event, Civil War II. And while some books are losing steam after strong first issues (Widow, Mockingbird, Power Man & Iron Fist), they still placed the most titles in the top 10, with 3.

* With Image it’s the much the same as it has been all year. A lot of my favorites simply weren’t published. What did make the list however, was stellar.

11. House of Penance #2 (Dark Horse)
Written by Peter J. Tomasi
Art by Ian Burtram * Colors by Dave Stewart
Enter the Winchester house, and you enter an expressionistic nightmare come to life. Open the pages of this comic (if you dare) and you’re hit by a blast furnace of insanity, wrought by grief and fear. 

10. The Wicked + The Divine #19 (Image)
Written by Kieron Gillen
Art by Jamie McKelvie * Colors by Matthew Wilson
The conflict escalates, the mystery deepens… but knowing Gillen, can we expect the old switcheroo? I trust nothing right now, not even the word of a mechanical owl.

9. The Unbelievable Gwenpool #2 (Marvel)
Written by Christopher Hastings
Art and Colors by Gurihiru * Prologue art by Beyruth & Bonvillain
Things just got real in this unreal world. Gwen’s trying to figure out the angles and is discovering that losing a friend hurts as much in the comic world as it does in the real one. In addition there are lots of laughs, Thor was used well and the art is a dream. I’m eating this series up.

8. Karnak #4 (Marvel)
Written by Warren Ellis
Art by Roland Boschi * Colors by Dan Brown
I have a feeling Karnak subscribes to the notion that ‘Hell is other people’… in a very literal sense. Issue is thin on plot, heavy on action as the Inhuman struggles to find the weakness in a difficult opponent. And he finally meets the kid he’s supposed to save, only to discover that the kid doesn’t want saving. He’s found his place in the world, with his Church and his art… in some ways he’s a more sociable, equally as dangerous Karnak.

7. American Monster #3 (Aftershock)
Written by Brian Azzarello
Art and Colors by Juan Doe
This dark pulpy tale is a couple months late, and I’ve lost track of a few details. But it hooked me: from the mystery surrounding the lead character, to the unvarnished look at small town America. Azz’s script is razor sharp; the art is draped in shadow, with colors that pop.

6. Catwoman #52 (DC)
Written by Frank Tieri
Art by Miranda, Mhan & Cafaro * Colors by De La Cruz, Sotelo & Starr
Tieri taps into Agatha Christie style storytelling (with folks standing in a room explaining who did what.) all while highlighting Selina’s uncompromising and free spirited personality. I like seeing Catwoman the thief, racing off into the Gotham night. I also like how it signs off with the promise that Kitty and Mask’s feud is far from over. I’ll miss you kit cat, don’t stay away too long.

5. East of West #25 (Image)
Written by Jonathan Hickman
Art by Nick Dragotta * Colors by Frank Martin
The gathering of chosen is marked by verbal daggers and a surprising arrival. Plus Death is joined by a rhyming eye. Oh, and I smiled when I saw that one of the bounty hunters was named "Psalm 137". The psalm speaks of Babylon as oppressor and ends with "Happy is the one who seizes your infants and dashes them against the rocks." And you know Death wasn't going to go for that. Clever, clever Mr. Hickman.

4. Bandette #13 (Monkeybrain)
Written by Paul Tobin
Art and Colors by Colleen Coover
A sweet, funny, exciting close to the arc: And not only do we get a hint at Bandette’s back-story (it’s not much, but it’s intriguing and whets my appetite for more), but there’s a villain who is still at large - so she finally has found her Moriarty it seems.

3. Monstress #6 (Image)
Written by Marjorie Liu
Art and Colors by Sana Takeda
Closes the first arc in explosive fashion, while revealing more about the charcaters: who –or what- they are and what drives them. Breathtaking and violent in both art and story. .

2. The Vision #7 (Marvel)
Written by Tom King
Art by Michael Walsh * Colors by Jordie Bellaire
What a moving, bittersweet, creepy, sad story. The issue is a walk down memory lane and covers Vision and Wanda’s relationship. I found it rather Vertigo-like (the movie, not the publishing line), with the Vision trying to reclaim something he’s lost.

1. Rachel Rising #42 (Abstract Studios)
Story and Art by Terry Moore
I normally trade wait on this horror series, but with this being the final issue, I went for the singles. And it was worth every extra penny, as this finale was everything that made the comic wonderful. It had nuanced stories and characters, it could be dark and violent, but also had a sense of humor and a lot of compassion. I’m going to miss spending time with Rachel, Jet, Zoe, Aunt Johnny, Earl, Lilith and the other witches and residents of Manson, Wisconsin.

Honorable Mentions: Future Quest #1, Harrow County #12, Spider-Gwen #7

Writer/Artist of the Month
Terry Moore (Rachel Rising) - for his line work and expressive features, for the satisfying and unexpected way he tied things up (and left things open)

Cover of the Month
Jenny Frison, Revival #39