Sunday, August 1, 2010

Comic reviews.

It used to take me two days to do my monthly comic orders. Nowadays, I can do it in one day. It's an activity that seems to suck brain cells directly out my ears, though. So I usually sleep on my orders, and try to give them a fresh look the next day.

So I got done yesterday in time to do some comic reading.

IZombie #1-3: I've always like Mike Allred's art, but haven't much cared for his writing. This title is written by Chris Roberson and is a fun read. Kind of a goth, zombie combo.

Terminator #1: Well done. Reminds me of the movies, which is why you'd read it in the first place, right?

Joe the Barbarian #1 - 6: This is one of Jasper's favorite comics and he's been hounding me to read it. It's great! What comics should be. It's told from the perspective of a kid who's going into diabetic shock and starts to imagine that he has opened a window to another world, populated by his action figures and toys (interesting crowd scenes, with all kinds of DC characters since this is a Vertigo title) and most especially by his pet rat, Jack, who is a giant warrior rodent named Chakk.

To me, Grant Morrison is especially effective in writing these little, contained stories, like WE3. He manages to create real emotion.

Captain Swing #1: Set in 1830, it's a steam punk story starring Captain Swing (or Spring-heeled Jack or....Jack the Ripper.) It's a time travel story -- I think, and I can't tell if Jack is a good guy (rebel) or a bad guy.

DV8 #3 & 4: Way better than it should be, because the superhero team is pretty lame, but Brian Wood manages to make them seem interesting by setting them on a world where their superpowers make them gods.

Sweet Tooth : One of my favorite reads. The "Big Guy" is coming around, I can tell. He'll save the little kid in the end, I just know it.

Electric Ant #3 & 4: A very effective adaptation of a Philip K. Dick story, with all the paranoia and questioning of reality intact.

Garrison #3: A mysterious agent, who is still a little too mysterious 3 issues in, for my taste. Still, I'll keep reading.

Batman: Odyssey #1: A strange title. They gave the 70's - 80's Batman artist, Neal Adams, freedom to write what he wants. The results are -- dated. It seems really old-fashioned, and 'off' somehow. But an interesting curiosity. Not sure if I'll read further.

Turf #2: The turf war between gangsters, aliens and vampires continues in 1930's New York. Written heavily but effectively by English talk show guy, Jonathan Ross. The plot's a little thick, and the exposition is a bit much, but the dialogue and scenes setting are well done.

Scarlett #1: The third ICON (creator owned, and a reward for Marvel's biggest producers) title, after Kick-Ass and Nemesis. This one's by Brian Bendis, and Alex Maleev, and it's another very intriguing story that's over the top (like Kick-Ass,) with first class production. I think these ICON titles are the best these guys can do...

Tom Strong and the Robots of Doom #1: It isn't Alan Moore, and it shows.

Comic Book Guy, The Comic Book #1: Do I have to explain? Not as funny as it should be, but moderately entertaining. And we comic book guys really do fit a stereotype, don't we?

Sparta #4 & 5: Imagine Red Dawn, only the rebellion starts in a "Village" that is a lot like an idealized 1950's America. I like it, even if I'm not completely sure what's going on.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

This compressive deflationary collapse is not the kind of cyclical "downturn" that we are familiar with during the two-hundred-year-long adventure with industrial expansion - that is, the kind of cyclical downturn caused by the usual exhalations of markets attempting to adjust the flows of supply and demand. This is a structural implosion of markets that have been functionally destroyed by pervasive fraud and swindling in the absence of real productive activity.

Anonymous said...

Anger?

The fuckers who made our nest that we call 'Bend' are hoping we keep on watching TV and drinking cheap beer.

They have made sure that the local police have a gestapo like mentality, and an arsenal to go with it.

If the slobs get unruly, we'll just crack their fucking heads open, just like we always do.

They are counting on that to keep us from cracking THEIR fucking heads open.

The ultimate game of 'chicken'.

Is this all that's left of our 'civilization'? It's barely worth having at this point...

Anonymous said...

"All you have to remember is Yale, Princeton, Harvard, Bullets, banks and bombs." Our academia, think tanks and political system is replete with these fundamentalist supply-side-globalists, who will not rethink this insanity to the detriment of the middle class. - HBM

It's always good to know that Bend is covered with the best minds that money can buy.

Anonymous said...

Of course we all know that the reason no one in Bend went to jail is because everyone was in on the fraud.

The takeover of politics by massive amounts of money led to our leaders turning a blind to the thievery. The politicians sold themselves out to corporations and lobbyists.

If we make it through to the other side of this disaster with enough collective intelligence still intact, then someday in the future someone will connect the dots and perhaps justice will be served.

I'd like to see a clawback ala Bernie Madoff's beneficiaries. But that will not happen until the money changers are run out of town.

Anonymous said...

Dmitry Orlov's "Reinventing Collapse"

There is always hope, even if you live in the darkness we call Bend.

Duncan McGeary said...

Dimitry Orlov.

Wasn't he the James Bond villian?

Anonymous said...

Sad when all the Bend pussy's are silent. So sad, ... Even HBM seems to have stuck his corn-dog up his arse for the long haul.

Personally I think its fear that pervades our Bend. Fear of comics.

I think Dimitry was on Dr. Strangelove. He was the prez of Russia in the movie.