critiques of pop culture and rants and ravings too

pariah

pariah
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Wednesday, November 25, 2009

The Sword #1

I came across this issue recently by the Luna Brothers after reading there Spider-woman Origins mini series.
and i really like this comic, the premise is simple basically a paraplegic girl in a wheelchair finds a magic sword beneath her house after her family was murdered and her house burned down by a pair of evil mages.
thereby giving her the exact means for her revenge which may seem a little too convenient but the mages where looking for that sword in the first place.

The pacing is so great that it only takes them 2 pages to shockingly reveal Dara is handicapped.

The art is very simple and clean too with soft pastel colors in some area's and a great sense of normalcy in everything from the backgrounds to the anatomy.

I have rarely seen such a collaborative effort where there lines of artistic deviation aren't divided up by Writer and Penciller.

I feel like i don't read enough indie comics for various reasons but this one feels very classic even tho it started in 2007 this could have been made at any time.
I really can't say enough about this book so please give it a try.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Black Widow - Deadly Origin #1

Black Widow- Deadly Origin #01 (by Paul Cornell, Tom Raney, and John Paul Leon)

I'm not sure who this book is meant for really and I can't say I am interested in this at all.

The story takes several jumps through places and times including her origin and while the book starts off with Black Widow in a Mini Space Shuttle playing a game of spy one upmanship unfortunately we then get five pages of wordless grunting and pointless fighting.

Then we get to the main plot where a man who is apparently like a father to her named Ivan is on the run because of something called the “icepick protocol” and from there we get somewhat random flashbacks about Natasha's early childhood and for some reason Wolverine makes a cameo appearance (boy that guy sure did get around) and then back to the present.

To be perfectly honest this story bored the hell out of me maybe if you are a big fan of spy type stuff this would interest you and we also have no clue what the icepick protocol is or what it's about and the flashbacks are kind of dull and don't tell us much except Natasha was a killer at an early age.


The art in the present by Tom Raney doesn't really work well especially since all his females have chubby faces it doesn't really fit how Widow is supposed to look which I think should be strong and fierce and determined with high cheekbones, his storytelling isn't all that great either.

The Flashbacks by John Paul Leon are nice and atmospheric and has some interesting layouts that look Steranko-esque.


I can't say if I will continue reading this but right now I can say I don't have much interest, I would advise most people to read something else unless youre a hardcore fan of the original Black Widow or you love Spy books no matter

Friday, November 13, 2009

Valkyrie

I was really looking forward to seeing this movie the other night but ultimately i was very disappointed in it.

The actors don't seem quite passionate enough for something as life and death as this(overthrowing Hitler)
Not to mention that noone even attempts a German accent and most of the actors besides Tom have British accents which is really jarring.

There is no mention of the atrocities that the SS and Hitler are performing on Jews or exactly what exactly they plan to do once they get rid of Hitler.

If this was supposed to be some sort of comeback vehicle for Tom Cruise..... well then i'm curious why he and his people didn't invest more effort into making this movie more authentic and passionate?
since after all this would have been a great oscar bait if it was more successfull.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Deathlok the Demolisher #1 (1of a seven issue limited series)

Apparently this book is reviving the Marvel Knights imprint (which has seemingly been dead for quite a while,)although from the writing here with it's glorious use of violence and long string of obnoxiously edited curse words they might as well put it out in the Max imprint. of course one even wonders why Marvel and DC are always trying to revive long dormant characters but I guess they should be rewarded for at least trying even if most of the time the results are null and void, which is pretty much what we seem to be getting here.

Granted I know next to nothing about Deathlok except he was a african american half cyborg and possible soldier of some sorts and his book was considered edgy for it's time and that's just going from memory..

Anyways all those idea's have been apparently thrown out the window for some reason at least for the time being what we get is a mix and match of sci fi tropes all thrown into together in something that doesn't seem anything at all original so basically what we have here is Starship troopers meets Rollerball meets Running Man which basically amounts to a parody of extreme sports commentators over a a bunch of hard ass military goons pretending to be jocks.

The first big mistake is the pacing which doesn't even get to the action until page 15 where the book is already half-way over and the second is the extremely obnoxious extreme sports commentators who don't offer any real insight into the players or what's going on in the book at all just check out this exact quote from one of the commentators “that can only mean one thing the house of pain is open for business” “ amateurs need not apply” “we got the big dogs in the ring tonight and one of them ain't going home with a bone” And then they insult one of the former players turned commentators who was handicapped from a field explosion .
Apparently all this is supposed to be some sort of dark comedy but the dialogue is way too in your face to ever be funny so i'm not sure who exactly this book is supposed to be marketed towards.

Lan Medina's art is really lovely in the beginning and has lots of nice detail and a level of almost painterly realism, but then when the action starts the action seems stiff and the blood red colors blur a lot of the energy and detail out of the pencils. Sadly Deathlok himself doesn't even appear in this issue at all so maybe the next issue will pick up on the action and leave the commentators behind.

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Secret Six #15

Secret Six 15

Deadshot is having issues ! he keeps seeing dead people and he wants to kill everyone he sees and he doesn't like to not be in control so will he kill everyone or will he reform and become a priest?

In this story Deadshot meets up with one of his old friends Reverend Richard Craemer at a downtown Gotham Cafe and he tells the Rev that he has been having uncontrollable homicidal feelings. they catch up on what Floyd has been doing lately then he takes the Reverend to his old house and tells him how he had to “evict” some gang members from his old abandoned house and told them to spread the word that it's his. We also get a nice short flashback of Deadshots origin where he meets Bruce and Batman for the first time.

John is not someone I'm overly familiar with, I know he has been working a lot on the Dark Horse Star Wars Republic series and did a lot with the Suicide Squad in the late 80's including reinvented Barbara Gordon as a computer hacker named Oracle. So I wasn't sure what I was expecting completely it seems a lot of older generation writers from the 80's have really lost there touch lately , but it seems his skills probably never atrophied like a lot of other writers.
Either way it's hard to not be impressed with this issue it's dark and pretty grim at times, but not to the point of parody. Deadshot has always seemed very contradictory about who he decides to kill or not kill on any given issue while even characters like Wolverine who have killed they usually are a little more repentant about it and Deadshot only cares about this sudden impulse cause he can't control it and that bothers him, but he does not care about the moral implications even when he is discussing things with a Reverend the only problem with this story is how suddenly Batman mysteriously disappears in the middle of the story.

J. Calafiore is on pencils and although it doesn't look anything like his regular work the storytelling is very good even in the shadows.

To sum it up Great issue if you have been liking Secret Six so far I seriously doubt you could be disappointed by this at all.

Psylocke #1

(script by Christ Yost Art by Harvey Taliboa)

Psylocke is back in a new body and maybe a new mind but she still doesn't know who she really is anymore so she travels to japan with Wolverine in tow



I'm not sure if Psylocke needs a mini series but here we are !


The book seems to be basically about Psylocke trying to find out who she really is deep down inside which is a great hook to reel people in and gives Yost a lot of room to clear up some things with Betsy who is probably the most screwed over X-men .


Although one wishes this would have come out sooner since it ties into her reappearance in Uncanny X-men where of course she switched minds/bodies again ! And frankly the first couple of pages of this comic are a bit of a cluttered almost impossible to read mess It also doesn't help that there is some weird back and forth timeline going on making it hard to place when the opening scene actually happened. and of course it is also nice to see Psylocke and Dazzler has buddy buddies again even if they haven't seen each other in a long time.


I think the best thing about this book is Betsys inner monologue which comes across as intelligent and witty befitting someone who grew up a rich socialite in england with a well healed education.


The art is very reminiscent of Stephen Segovia with long wavy lines everywhere unfortunately some there is too many extreme close ups in the beginning and the actions scenes are extremely cluttered at first but then it starts to come together around page 10