Thursday, November 5, 2015

2015 Comic Book Awards Pt 1: Best Characters


Best Female Lead (non superhero):  Beth Ross (Prez) from Mark Russell & Ben Caldwell - She's sassy and smart and in this year of the "outsider" candidate, she's the most unlikely, most outsider-esque and the President we need! Nominees: Velvet Templeton (Velvet), Forever Carlyle (Lazarus), Maxine Plouffe (Bandette), Chondra Jackson (Effigy)

Best Male Lead (non superhero): Charlie Parish and Gil Mason (The Fade Out) as created by Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips - At first I just named Charlie for this award, as he's the center of the mystery. But what's Charlie without Gil? Mason's appropriately the second banana, but in many ways he's also the co-star. He's the one writing Charlie's scripts, he's the one who stirs the pot on the investigation. Both of these broken, haunted men are not quite complete without the other.

Best Female Superhero: Captain Marvel as written by Kelly Sue DeConnick - Kelly Sue made Carol Danvers relevant. Under her pen she became a true hero, a leader, a friend, no longer Ms, but "Captain" - someone to admire. So admired that her steadfast fans became known as the Carol Corp. In 2015 DeConnick took her final bow with the character. You'll be missed, but never forgotten. Nominees: Silk, Spider-Gwen, Spider-Woman

Best Male Superhero: Spider-Man as written by Dan Slott, Gerry Conway and others
The Spider-Family has grown, and Parker's its mad patriarch. I liked Spider-Verse, I dug Conway's return in "Spiral", I was crazy for "Renew Your Vows" and I love, love, love the new direction for "Amazing", in which Peter makes like Tony Stark and heads a thriving tech company, which allows Spidey to sport a whole lot of new neat toys (including a cool Spider-Mobile). Success hasn't gone to his head though, as the hero is still as funny as ever. 

Best Super-team: Uncanny X-Men from Bendis & Bachalo

Best Supporting Character (Female): Maps Mizoguchi (Gotham Academy)
Olive might be the star of the show, but Maps puts 'em in the seats. She's comedy gold for the way she loves her gadgets, and for her fun, plucky personality. Nominees: Ayane (Wayward), Edie (Effigy), Briar (Magneto), Maia (Invisible Republic), Drake (Gotham by Midnight)

Best Supporting Character (Male): Killer Croc was never a fav in the past, but he’s had a personality shift and was a welcome addition to Gotham Academy and Catwoman in 2015 (this shift goes back to Red Hood and the Outlaws, Batman Eternal and Batwoman). Nominees: Inanna (Wicked + The Divine) Ishmael, Boo (Copperhead)

Best Sidekick: Nobody, Maya DuCard (Robin: Son of Batman) created by Patrick Gleeson
She is the daughter of one of Robin's mentors and deadliest foes... at first she's looking for revenge, but soon becomes a vital ally (at least for now). Nominees: The Skinless Boy, Emmy’s familiar in Harrow County

Best Villain (Male): Dr. Doom (Secret Wars) – How does a baddie past his prime make this list? With the help of Jonathan Hickman, that’s how. Victor killed the Beyonders, took their power and became a God. But he was a God with feet of clay and a Kryptonite named Reed Richards. Who he both envied and feared. 

Best Villain (Female): Ananke (The Wicked + The Divine) created by Gillen & McKelvie - She's supposed to guide, protect and help the young music Gods in her care.... but like many managers, she's a backstabbing, lying, manipulative a-hole... and you can add murder to her resume. Hon Mentions: Mother (Batman & Robin Eternal), Kammi (Harrow County)

Best Anti-Heroine: Catwoman as written by Genevieve Valentine

Best Anti-Hero:  Constantine

Best Child/Youth (Female): Valeria Richards-Von Doom (Secret Wars, Runaways)

Best Child/Youth (Male): Babylon (East of West)

Best Couple: Duncan and Madison created by Matthew Rosenberg, Patrick Kindlon & Josh Hood (We Can Never Go Home, Black Mask)

Best Comic Book Version of "The Odd Couple": Cindy Moon and J. Jonah Jameson, (Silk). JJJ being a fan of a spidery superhero is one thing, but that the old grump has this warm and supportive relationship with one of his employees, who also happens to be that spidery hero is another. Good heart and humor from this unlikely duo. 

Dream Team-Up: Maps and Damian Wayne, Gotham Academy #7 by Becky Cloonan & Brenden Fletcher, illustrated by Mingjue Helen Chen - This was a match made in heaven, and featured so many hilarious moments. Like when Damian upsets Maps, and in retaliation she wipes her nose on his hand. Or the sweet scene when Robin gifts her a Batarang. But the best was Maps love affair with Damian's grapple gun. Not only funny, but a geek treat. Because at one point Damian quotes Keaton from the Batman movie. "See that thing on my belt? Grab it. Whatever you do, don't let go."

Best Siblings:  The Stepford Cuckoos (Uncanny X-Men) by Bendis and Chris Bachalo - While I prefer it when the sister's look alike, Children of the Damned and all. Bendis did put a funny spin on them seeking out their individuality (by changing their hair color)

Best Ensemble Cast: East of West by Johnathan Hickman & Nick Dragotta. Nominees: Wayward, Copperhead, Revival, Batman & Robin Eternal, Gotham Academy

Best Performance by an animal: Puck (Doctor Fate) created by Paul Levitz and Sonny Liew  - Nominees: Chewie, Murder Face (Spider-Gwen), Dragon Kitties (Hex11), Goliath (Robin)

Happiest Returns: Cassandra Cain (Batman & Robin Eternal)
Last year I got my Steph back, this season they gave me Atlee (disappointing) and Ralph and Sue Dibney (quirky good) but the very happiest of returns was seeing former Batgirl, Cassandra Cain find her way back to regular continuity

Links
Part 1: 2015 Best Comic Book Characters 
Part 2: 2015 Best Writing, Art, Designs 
Part 3: 2015 Best Stories, Arcs, Events, Misc

2015 Comic Book Awards Pt 3: Best Stories, Arcs, Events, Collections, etc

Best Ongoing Series: Velvet (Image) by Bubaker, Epting and Breitweiser - The artistic synergy on this spy story is a wonder to behold. It's slick, sexy and smart... a true masterpiece from 3 masters of their craft. Nominees: The Fade Out, Trees, Lazarus, Catwoman, Pretty Deadly

Best Miniseries: Prez (DC) by Mark Russell and Ben Caldwell - What a great year for minis, and this hilarious, trenchant satire was my favorite. Nominees:Toil & Trouble, Nameless, The Multiversity, Master of Kung Fu, 1602: Witch Hunter Angela, Captain Marvel a/t Carol Corps, Convergence: Harley Quinn

Best New Series: Harrow County (Dark Horse) by Cullen Bunn and Tyler Crook - Harrow is rural horror that is poetic and drenched in eerie dread. The character work is exemplary as well. Nominees: Invisible Republic, Injection, We Can Never Go Home, Hex11, The Vision, All-New Wolverine

Best Weekly Series: Batman & Robin Eternal (DC) from James Tynion IV, Scott Snyder,Tim Seeley, Steve Orlando, Genevieve Valentine, Ed Brisson, Tony Daniel, Paul Pelletier and others. It's back, this time with a mystery that focuses on the Robin's and their relationship with Bruce.

Best Licensed Property Originally Created for Book, TV or Film: James Bond (Dynamite) from Warren Ellis and Jason Masters. Nominees: Godzilla in Hell (IDW), Edward Scissorhands (IDW) 

Best One Shot: Agents of Atlas (Marvel) by Tom Taylor and Steve Pugh - While Parker didn't write this one, I was not let down, as both the art and story were stellar and each member of the team had their moments to shine. Nominees: Hank Johnson: Agent of Hydra, Gregory Suicide, Agent Carter, Mockingbird, Quake

Best Animated Digital Comic: Batman ’66 #54-55 (DC Digital First) by Jeff Parker and Sandy Jarrell - The ailing series got a shot in the arm with this eerie tale, which went down a different story path and took Bruce and Barbara out of the safe confines of Gotham to the land of haunted Japan, where they faced Lord Death Man. The animated digital format made it all the more creepy and interesting.

Best Event or Crossover: Secret Wars (Marvel) from Johnathan Hickman and Esad Ribic - I've never liked well, any major company wide happening. So it’s not hyperbole when I say… “BEST, EVENT, EVER!” Everything Hickman has written for Marvel was leading to this. And while not every Tie-In was a knock-out, when they were good, they were so very good.

Best Arc: Inheritance (Catwoman) the final collected arc from Valentine & Messina

Best Backup Story: Tales of Harrow County by various, in Harrow County (Dark Horse)

Best Web Comic: Super Mutant Magic Academy by Jillian Tamaki - Funny and insightful mashup of Hogwarts with Xavier's School for Mutants.

Best Graphic Novel (Original Story): The Sculptor by Scott McCloud (First Second)
The piece spoke to me on a personal level as it touched upon the nature and relationship of the artist with their craft - and the need to leave something important behind. 

Best Collected Edition: Sandman Overture Deluxe (Vertigo) by Neil Gaiman and J.H. Williamson

Most Improved Series: Spider-Woman got out from under Spider-Verses thumb, donned a new costume and went from m’eh to marvelous.

Best All-Ages series: Gotham Academy (DC)

3 Important Individual Issues:  Action Comics #42, Wicked + The Divine #13, Prez #3 (though that includes every issue in this mini) - In the past this was for 3 Favorite Issues, this year I'm targeting significant stories, issues that said or did something powerful. Considerations from other series... Invisible Republic, Lazarus, Trees

Miscellaneous
Best Comic Book Movie: Ant-Man - Hilarious and intense heist film as superflick. Ant-Man might not have as big a name as his Avenging counterparts, but his was the better movie.

Best Actor: Paul Rudd as Scott Lang (Ant-Man)
Best Actress: Scarlett Johansson as Natalia Romanoff, the Black Widow (Avengers: Age of Ultron)
Best Supporting Actor: Michael Douglas as Dr. Hank Pym (Ant-Man... with a nod to Paul Bettany as Vision in Age of Ultron)
Best Supporting Actress: Elizabeth Olsen as  Wanda Maximoff, the Scarlet Witch  (Avengers: Age of Ultron)

Best Comic Book TV Series (Network):  iZombie - Gotham got too mean, Flash irritated, and SHEILD bored me. But with iZombie I FINALLY found a comic based show I could love completely. And I love it for it's drama, scares, it's great sense of humor and cute character interactions. McIver has proven to be a versatile actress with a likable screen presence. As with most shows that follow a pattern each week , I'll eventually tire of the routine. But that time is not now, now it's pure undead gold. Runner-Up: Supergirl, Agent Carter

Best Comic Book TV Series (Pay TV/Cable):  Jessica Jones - I was actually disappointed with Daredevil, I thought it was draggy and I didn't care for Foggy or Karen. But Jessica (aside from a few bumps, like Simpson) lived up to the hype. It's a well crafted, sharply scripted and acted show. It's dark as hell, has heartbreak, humor, and a damaged, hard nosed, wise cracking detective at its center. There's also a vicious yet charming sociopath for villain, and love interest Luke Cage, who is pretty darn cool. 

Krysten Ritter is remarkable in the title role, as she shows a lot of nuance. Jessica is impudent and tough but she's also haunted, there's vulnerability to her. She’s suffered greatly and is dealing with PTSD – so while she can be rude, your heart bleeds for her.

Best Actress: Krysten Ritter as Jessica Jones (Jessica Jones) and Rose McIver as Olivia "Liv" Moore (iZombie)
Best Actor: David Tennant as Kilgrave (Jessica Jones) 
Best Supporting Actress: Rosario Dawson as Claire Temple (Daredevil, Jessica Jones) 
Best Supporting Actor: Dominic Cooper as Howard Stark (Agent Carter)

Best New Product: Southern Bastards T-Shirts! From Sweet Tea to Boss BBQ - you've seen 'em in the comics, now you can wear 'em on your body and be the envy of all. 

Links
Part 1: 2015 Best Comic Book Characters 
Part 2: 2015 Best Writing, Art, Designs 
Part 3: 2015 Best Stories, Arcs, Events, Misc





Sunday, November 1, 2015

2015 Comic Book Awards Pt 2: Best Writing, Art, Design, etc

Best Writer: Ed Brubaker (Velvet, The Fade Out) 
Put Ed's name right up there with the best Noir and Espionage masters. The pacing, structure, characterization, dialog, setting and tone of his twin masterpieces is flawless. I don't know that I've ever enjoyed Brubaker's work more. Nominees: Mark Russell (Prez), Johnathan Hickman (Secret Wars, East of West), Warren Ellis (Trees, Injection, Karnak, James Bond)

Best Artist: Steve Epting (Velvet)  
Steve is a master of noir expressionistic lighting techniques. His action sequences are cinematic in scale. He stages chases that are intense and breathtaking. For example: when we see Velvet exit the window of a moving train, the angles Epting employed gave a real sense of danger. And when her pursuers dog her every step, the tension and exhaustion in her was palpable. But Steve's also aces with quiet, conversational scenes well. Nominees: Ben Caldwell, Emma Rios, Aaron Kuder, Jason Howard, Cliff Chiang.  

Best Colorist: Matthew Wilson (Wicked + The Divine, Paper Girls, Mighty Thor)
In 2015 Wilson reunited with his Wonder Woman cohort, Cliff Chiang on Paper Girls. And in Gillen's experimental WicDiv #8 he was front and center as a storytelling partner - brilliantly capturing the vibrancy and personality of the music in that issue.

Best Writer/Artist: Jaime Hernandez (Love and Rockets) 
One reviewer wrote that Hernandez "draws like an Angel", and that's so true. I love his line work - and as a writer he's created a living, breathing world, with characters and are real and situations that are wise and relatable.

Best Cover Artist:  Jenny Frison (Red Sonja, Revival)
Jenny's illustrated some amazing covers over the years, both haunting, beautiful and even terrifying (as seen in Revival) Nominees: Dave Johnson (Coffin Hill) Darwyn Cooke, Amanda Conner, Jason Howard (Trees)

Best Set and Costume Design: Chris Burnham for Nameless
What a nightmarish world Burnham brought to the page. The structures inspire a terrible awe, and I like the space suits, with sigils painted in the face plates. Nominees: Nick Dragotta (East of West) Jamie McKelvie (Wicked + The Divine)

Best Panel/Sequence: Kal vs Cops, Action Comics #42 by Greg Pak and Aaron Kuder, hard to pick one panel or page, as this whole issue was incredible. But Kal standing with the people was a powerful image.

Best Splash Page: Japan's new Gods, Wayward #10 by Jim Zub and Steve Cummings - This was the final page of the end of the first (or second?) arc. And it was a fist pumping, let out a "Hell yeah!" moment.

Biggest Laugh: Red-Arse (Red Hood and Arsenal #3) - Roy's well meaning, but his screw up on an advertising campaign leads to some unintended laughs.

Best Dialog: Harrow County, Cullen Bunn weaves words into rural poetry.

Best Cover: Weirdworld #4 by Mike Del Mundo (runner-up: Dr. Fate #2)

Best Variant: DC Movie Variants (Runner-up: Spider-Gwen #1 by Adam Hughes)

Best Humorous Cover: Batman and Robin #39 by Patrick Gleeson (Runner up: Hank Johnson: Agent of Hydra #1 by Amanda Conner)

Best Look - Hero: Spider-Man, Peter Parker. Designed by Steve Ditko, update by Alex Ross - I actually didn't like Ross' initial sketches, but in the comic itself, Spidey looks great, I like how the eyes and chest logo glow.

Best Look - Villain: Madame Masque (Iron Man) Designed by Gene Colan, update by David Marquez - I like the new mask, with that ornate design up top, going clear on the bottom half.

The "Kiss Me Sexy Batman" Award: Velvet Templeton as drawn by Steve Epting - 2015 was a very steamy and sexy comic book season: from Midnighter's bedroom scenes to Dick Graysons butt, to Constantine hooking up with a demon. For me, the sexiest and coolest and toughest was an older woman, the lead in Ed Brubaker's provocative spy thriller, Velvet. She always made my paper heart go pitter-patter. Runner up: Magik, Illyana Rasputin as drawn by Chris Bachalo.

Best Designed Vehicle: The Spider Mobile - Also updated by Alex Ross and it's hella cool! It can drive on walls (even upside-down), and detach spider like grappling legs when needed. 

Links
Part 1: 2015 Best Comic Book Characters 
Part 2: 2015 Best Writing, Art, Designs 
Part 3: 2015 Best Stories, Arcs, Events, Misc




Thursday, October 29, 2015

My Top 13 Comics For October 2015

Marvel began publishing its new line-up, set 8 months after Secret Wars… even though Secret Wars (running behind schedule) has yet to wrap. Vertigo offered a first issue on each Wednesday (Survivor’s Club, Twilight Children, Clean Room and Art Ops), while DC relaunched a weekly with Batman and Robin Eternal (featuring the return of Cassandra Cain to regular continuity) and brought back Lois and Clark. These publishers, along with Image and Boom, debuted the new with rock star talents like Cliff Chiang, Darwyn Cooke, Mike Allred, Gilbert Hernandez, Warren Ellis and Mike Carey.

More comics from TV land emerged. iZombie and Supergirl were the two I watched and enjoyed. I’ve dropped Gotham, it’s just too mean and ugly (Alfred –an adult- smacking a kid, Selina - the scene where youths on a School Bus are threatened with guns - the slaughter at the police station). 

Collected Edition of the Month

The Multiversity - Deluxe Edition by Grant Morrison with Frank Quietly, Ivan Reis, Jim Lee, Cameron Stewart and others

13. Gotham By Midnight #10 (DC)
Written by Ray Fawkes
Art and Colors by Juan Ferreyra
Look to this issue for a masterclass on how to draw an astonishing, citywide chase sequence. That final page with the monster was eye popping as well.  Right now the cops are thinking “Good riddance to Corrigan and his crew!” I’m guessing they’re going to rethink that sentiment soon.

12. Black Magick #1 (Image)
Written by Greg Rucka
Art by Nicola Scott * Colors by Scott assisted by Chiara Arena
What you got here is your basic hostage situation, with a Wiccan twist. There’s not much beyond that, but I like the way Rucka establishes his characters and sets up the conflict that will no doubt drive the series.  Nicola Scott’s art is expressive, rendered in black and white with washes - Color blooms when magic is used, which contributes to an incredible looking double page spread.

11. They're Not Like Us #9 (Image)
Written by Eric Stephenson
Art by Simon Gane * Colors by Jordie Bellaire
FINALLY this book gets going again. While it starts off with a lot of dancing, things take a tense turn as Syd and her group discover there are worst Mutants out there than the Voice (who pops back up, and proves he’s still a royal asshat)

10. Toil and Trouble #2 (Boom/Archaia)
Written by Mairghread Scott
Art and Colors by Kelly & Nichole Scott
Macbeth (unknowingly) finds himself in the middle of a heated conflict between 2 of the 3 witches. While the issue is heavy on the narration, the dialog is beautifully scripted, with each woman given a distinct voice. Art wise: The design and coloring was top drawer; especially in those magic-based sequences. 

9. Amazing Spider-Man #1 and 2 (Marvel)
Written by Dan Slott
Art by Giuseppe Camuncoli * Colors by Marte Gracia
In the “new” first issue of Amazing, Slott pretty much recast Peter as Tony Stark. The opening sequence in that issue was fast paced, funny as hell, and hey... the Spider-Mobile is back!  The second issue was even more of a blast! Exciting, hilarious and whip smart. I love this new direction for Spidey! It’s so nice to see Pete finally grow up, realize his potential and be more than a lovable loser. Art was amazing as well, I especially like Gracia’s colors, the way the eyes and logo glow on the costume was a nice touch.

8. Karnak #1 (Marvel)
Written by Warren Ellis
Art by Gerardo Zaffino * Colors by Dan Brown
The inhuman who sees the flaws in everything is a cynic, a philosopher, and a cold hearted jerk. But he's also curiously fascinating. The pacing of the comic is measured - the tone, weird and moody, with dollops of humor. Dialog is impressive, and based on all that I'm giving this issue a high 5. However - while the art is appropriately gritty- perspective is glaringly off kilter and figure work is stiff. Ah, if only David Aja did the interiors as well as the covers.

7. Spider-Gwen  #1 (Marvel)
Written by Jason  Latour
Art by Robbi Rodriguez * Colors by Rico Renzi
She’s back and as amazing as ever. Events from Gwen’s past return to haunt her. And what she uncovers during the course of her investigation is bigger than she imaged. Art is fantastic, brightly colored, stylistic - a kin to trippy 60s pop art. There's a lot of energy in it, with dynamic movements that have Gwen practically leaping off the page. Great stuff (and now I want to see Janet Van Dyne and learn how that connection happened.)

6. Harrow County #6 (Dark Horse)
Written by Cullen Bunn
Art and Colors by Tyler Crook
I have questions about just how Kammi came to learn of her sister, but her presences and her interaction with Emmy are incredibly scripted, Bunn has such command of the character of language, it’s a joy to read. The contrasts in each women is fascinating - Emmy is stable, mature for her age, while the older Kammi is quietly unhinged and that’s damn scary.

5. Paper Girls #1 (Image)
Written by Brian K. Vaughan
Art by Cliff Chiang  * Colors by Matt Wilson
While Vaughan's script was exceptional, Chiang's contributions were equally as important: A few sequences I admired... After the dream, when Erin leans over the bunk bed to ask her sister if she's dead; the expressions in those panels were priceless (grumpy, woken up sister, to Erin's relieved smile). Little things like that impressed me. Or Tiffany's upset over having the stolen radio. That was such a small, but wonderful scene, and my heart went out to her. She doesn't have money to burn, and the artistic details add much (a small tear, her torn jeans). Also Chiang's double page spread when Erin first heads out to deliver her papers - I loved the composition in that page. 

Heck, Vaughan could have tossed out the spooky weirdness and it still would have been great, just as the first chapter in a coming of age story. While it was decompressed in spots that's not a negative here, it suited the tone of the piece early on, with those sleepy mornings when things are quiet. I like how it set things up, allowed us to ease into this girls life. Story wise, I was thinking of Super 8 as I read it.


4. Catwoman #45 (DC)
Written by Genevieve Valentine
Art by David Messina* Colors by Lee Loughridge
There are some great dramatic moments here. Penguin really shines, as he wheels and deals and does whatever he needs to position people where he needs them, in order to get what he wants. All while smiling that smile of his. Antonia was also a highlight, as was Catwoman;s confrontation with Mask -- though sequences thereafter felt hurried. Still there are so many great moments. And to see these circumstances wither away whatever chance at a relationship Selina and Eiko might have had, adds to the rather Shakespearean tragedy Valentine has been building.

3. Twilight Children #1 (Vertigo)
Written by Gilbert Hernandez
Art by Darwyn Cooke * Colors by Dave Stewart
Sweet Sassy-Molassy this was simply one of the best comics I've read this year. Within you'll find that wonderful Gilbert weirdness set among the mundane, everyday life, with rock solid character work, married to Cookes perfect pencils... it's a match made in Heaven. The story is very mysterious, kind of reminds me of 50s sci-fi movies. I can't wait to see what comes next.

2. The Fade Out #10 (Image)
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips * Colors by Elizabeth Breitweiser
The slow burn is heating up as more pieces of the mystery fall into place. In addition to Charlie and Gil’s investigation, we learn that Dottie -a woman who knows the power of secrets- has a secret of her own. Brubaker is doing some masterful writing here (and on Velvet). I don’t know that I’ve ever enjoyed his work more (it’s at least the equal to Winter Soldier)

1. Prez #5 (DC)
Written by Mark Russell
Art by Ben Caldwell * Colors by Jeremy Lawson
Caldwell’s back so the art, its ability to sell and tell the story, is aces! And while I might not agree with everything Madam President is doing, I am grateful to have a book that encourages me to pause, use my brain and ponder these complex issues. It’s one of the qualities that make this title important, special. I like the ideas presented, I like that there are repercussions (Beth can’t just make all the bad go away). I like how it exposes flaws and corruption within the pharmaceutical companies and special interest groups. And I am curious to see where Russell’s going with his ‘War Beast’ subplot. It’s not subtle - there was some obvious (though hilarious) foreshadowing with a ‘meat generator’ in this chapter. But all told, Prez proves to be trenchant political satire on “Dr. Strangelove” levels of brilliant.

Other Favorites: Doctor Strange #1 (Marvel), 1602: Witch Hunter Angel #4 (Marvel), 1872 (Marvel), Revival #34 (Image), Action Comics #45 (DC), Rowans Ruin #1 (Boom), Batman & Robin Eternal #1 through 3 (DC), Plutona #2

Writer of the Month: Gilbert Hernandez (Twilight Children)
Every writer on my top 14 is worthy of this accolade, but I gave it to Beto because his Vertigo team-up with Cooke more than met expectations.

Artist of the Month: Cliff Chiang (Paper Girls)
It was so nice to see Cliff back on an ongoing series that I'm putting him in the spotlight ahead of stalwarts Caldwell, Cooke and Phillips.



Art Panel of the Month
Invincible Iron Man #2 from Brian Michael Bendis and David Marquez - Tony remembers his past with Whitney Frost. 

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