Category: Comics

  • Neal Adams: recollections on the passing of a comic book legend

    Neal Adams: recollections on the passing of a comic book legend

    Neal Adams, the phenomenal comic book artist who brought new life to Batman, Green Arrow and so many others with his hyperreal art, has died at 80.

    When I first met Adams it was (unsurprisingly) at a comic book convention. I was in Seattle for the Emerald City Con and momentarily browsing some of the prints for sale on his table. He looked up and said, ‘Have you heard of these things called comic books?’ From memory, I stammered out some gushing praise for his work, paid for my print and off I went.

    The following year, when I was working on my book I casually emailed him just before going to bed to enquire about a potential interview. The reply came back immediately: “Is now good?” So, that’s how I found myself talking to Adams for almost two hours, wrapping up at about 1am Sydney time. We spoke about his extensive career, his unique approach to art, the culture at DC Comics and Marvel and his work beyond the Big Two.

    Neal Adams

    Adams began his art career in the late 1950s, initially doing commercial work when he found the comics industry difficult to break into. “I would say impossible,” he told me, adding that he got work on Archie Comics “because they felt sorry for me.” Turning to commercial work for the pay, his work on the Ben Casey strips, Goodyear and AT&T helped developed his photorealistic style that would, in many ways, revolutionise comics.

    “We forget sometimes, it’s not just guys with muscles. We’re comic books: comic books are drawings of naked guys with lines on their bodies. Really. Naked, muscular guys with lines on their bodies,” he said of his style. “When do we get to the faces? When do we get to the people underneath it?”

    After finding work at Warren Publishing’s black-and-white horror-comics magazines, he would bring this attitude to DC Comics. After working on a variety of titles, his signature comic for the company was initially Deadman. Continuing to freelance for DC, he teamed up with writer Roy Thomas on Marvel’s X-Men, then on the verge of cancellation.

    Green Lantern/Green Arrow #76 (1970)

    Yet it was his revolutionary work with writer Dennis O’Neil on Batman and Green Lantern/Green Arrow that he will always be remembered for. O’Neil’s New Journalism traditions and ‘realism’ are matched spectacularly by Adams’ iconic character designs. The hyper-realistic muscles of his leads, the heavily detailed and photorealistic faces of average citizens is infused with a mixed-media approach Adams learned in advertising. It all coalesces to ensure that even if the cultural references may date, the spirit and style of this comic will remain forever fresh. 

    A tireless advocate for the rights of artists and other creators, he formed the Comics Creators Guild in the late 1970s and continued to maintain his voice in the area until his death. “I was doing a lot of fighting,” he said in a personal interview, “but quietly, with a smile.” This included his efforts to get the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, operated by the government of Poland, to return original artwork of Holocaust survivor Dina Babbitt.

    Often outspoken about this beliefs, he ran a website claiming that the Earth is expanding. Elements of this belief made it into his 2010 mini-series Batman: Odyssey. Even though it was met with mixed reviews, Adams called it “one of the best collections out there.”

    Reflecting on his impressive body of work, I asked Adams what he would have told his early career counterpart. “He would have said everything you did was right, Neal — and you win.”

  • 007 Case Files: Permission to Die

    007 Case Files: Permission to Die

    Bond. James Bond. Join me as I read all of the James Bond books in 007 Case Files, encompassing Ian Fleming and beyond. For Your Eyes Only: there’s spoilers ahead.

    James Bond comics have been around at least as long as the film franchise. The first official one was an adaptation of the Dr. No film in 1962. A series of Swedish and Spanish comic magazines followed, but it took almost two decades before another official comic was attempted with Marvel’s For Your Eyes Only (1981) tie-in. Yet the late 1980s saw a period where new novels, comics and films were all being simultaneously released, making it a golden era for fans of 007.

    Permission to Die

    At the time of penning his short series of James Bond comics, writer and artist Mike Grell was on a bit of a career high. His seminal classic Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters had just reinvented the character for a new generation and was followed by an ongoing series, a first for that character.  His characters The Warlord, Jon Sable Freelance and Starslayer were 80s staples for all self-respecting readers. Then he turned his attention to another icon: James Bond.

    In 1988, Grell wrote and illustrated the comic book adaptation of the film Licence to Kill, which was also adapted into a novelisation by John Gardner. The following year, Grell tried his hand at an original James Bond story. Released as a three-issue prestige mini-series by Acme Press and Eclipse Comics, it was the first English-language Bond comic that was not an adaptation of existing material. (Outside of the US and UK, Swedish comic book publisher Semic Press started a James Bond comic book magazine in 1965, which was simultaneously published in Norwegian, Danish, and Finnish editions. In Japan, Takao Saito published a monthly Bond serial in shonen magazine Boy’s Life before going on to create Golgo 13).

    Permission to Die

    PERMISSION TO DIE is sort of set in an alternate reality to both the films and the books, one where Bond is still a Commander and Felix Leiter has a hook for a hand (presumably from Live and Let Die and not Licence to Kill). Grell’s comic is a kind of follow-up to From Russia With Love. It certainly starts off with a Connery era Bond, complete with a gun hidden under a kilt at a dinner party. The mind boggles, doesn’t it Moneypenny?

    After a swift bit of action, the story proper kicks off with M summoning Bond to investigate stories of a cheaper alternative to the military’s ‘Star Wars’ defence mechanism. Dr. Erik Widziadlo — the mechanism’s creator and Phantom of the Opera lookalike — offers the device to the British Government in exchange for the safe return for his daughter, who is trapped in East Germany. After that, there’s a freewheeling series of circumstances that involves Bond disguising as a ‘gypsy’ and heading into British Columbia to avert a nuclear attack.

    The comic book format allows Grell to cut loose and do things that aren’t possible in print – or in the films for that matter.  Grell — along with his regular colourist Julia Laquement (and art assistants Rick Hoberg, Mark Jones and Dameon Willich) — have a terrific sense of place. In between Grell’s penchant for intimate love scenes that skirt the line of actual nudity (just as he did with Ollie and Dinah in Green Arrow) are ornately detailed backgrounds. Look at the Jules Verne inspired trappings of Widziadlo’s lair, for example, or the montages that mirror the opening titles of the films. At other times, he cuts loose in splashy, multi-page dialogue-free action sequences that compress time in a way that it would be impossible for cinema to imitate.

    Permission to Die

    Is it all a bit jumbled? Yes, but no more than some of the contemporary Bond films. Here we see James Bond encountering a medium that was finding massive mainstream success in breaking barriers and storytelling convention in ways that Hollywood would borrow from years later. Indeed, in some ways it is a far more faithful vehicle for 007 than John Gardner was providing in the official continuation novels at the time.

    James Bond comics started appearing more regularly after this. Dark Horse released a series of original comic stories throughout the 90s, starting with Serpent’s Tooth from Moon Knight co-creator Doug Moench. Since 2015, Dynamite Entertainment has been releasing mini-series from heavy-hitters like Warren Ellis, Andy Diggle, James Robinson, Benjamin Percy, Kieron Gillen, Ales Kot, Jeff Parker and Greg Pak. Yet in many ways, it all started here with Mike Grell and a fun outing that has all the hallmarks of peak 80s goodness.

    James Bond will return…in Brokenclaw.

  • Where to start: Superman and Lois comics you should read

    Where to start: Superman and Lois comics you should read

    Superman logo (Black)

    With the launch of SUPERMAN & LOIS on the CW this month, the seventh spin-off series in the Arrowverse, there’s a lot of buzz around the Man of Steel again.

    The setup for the show sees Clark Kent/Superman (Tyler Hoechin) and Lois Lane (Bitsie Tulloch) returning to Smallville, and learning to juggle their working lives while raising their two young boys. Wait, what?

    Yes, some big changes have happened to to the Arrowverse since the Crisis on Infinite Earths crossover event last year. After bringing several of the shows together on the same world, the Metropolis established in Supergirl is now a part of the same Earth as The Flash, Black Lightning, Batwoman and Legends of Tomorrow.

    While Lois and Clark are new to this world, the relationship between Superman and Lois Lane is as old as comic books. It has weathered multiple reboots and remains (mostly) constant across the Multiverse, continuing to adapt to whatever crisis the world throws at it. So, join us as we take a dive into some of the comics that will help you get in the mood for the show.

    Superman: Lois & Clark Vol. 1

    Superman: Lois and Clark

    From everything we’ve seen so far, much of the basic setup for this show is taken from this 8-issue comic series. Like his TV counterpart, this series sees Superman and Lois settling into a freshly minted world in the wake of a Crisis-level event (in this case, Convergence). In this case, the main couple are refugees from an older version of Earth. They are raising their son on a farm, content in the knowledge that the new Earth’s Superman is doing what needs to be done. Of course, no Man of Steel can stay in retirement for long. If you dig on a bearded Superman and that black suit, this is the book for you.

    Single issues: Superman: Lois and Clark #1 – 8 (2015-2016) Collected edition: Superman: Lois and Clark (2016)

    Superman: Rebirth

    Superman: Son of Superman

    A direct follow-up to the above in the wake of the DC Rebirth event, Peter J. Tomasi and artist by Patrick Gleason run with the concept of Clark and Lois as parents. In the wake of a global tragedy, this Superman must step up and become a new hero. One suspects that some of the stories from the new show will be loosely based on this setup.

    Single issues: Superman: Rebirth #1, Superman (Vol. 4) #1-6 (2016)
    Collected edition: Superman – Vol. 1: Son of Superman (DC Universe Rebirth)

    Superman: Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?'

    Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?

    Crafted as an “imaginary story” – the kind that the legendary and tyrannical Mort Weisinger concocted during his lengthy editorial run – this is Alan’s Moore pre-Crisis coda. Using the framing device of an older Lois Lane being interviewed, Clark Kent is outed as Superman. His various enemies gathering to work against him and his allies rush to help him face his ‘final’ fate. Before Watchmen put the final word on heroics, here’s Moore having fun with history. It’s all here: the goofy characters Krypto, the tragi-comic Bizarro, the light sci-fi of the Legion, Lana Lang and Jimmy Olsen. Yet Moore infuses Curt Swan’s lovingly rendered imagines with an incredibly heart-breaking significance and a knowing wink.

    Single issues: Superman (Vol. 1) # 423 + Action Comics (Vol.1) #583
    Collected editions: Superman: Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow? or DC Universe: The Stories of Alan Moore

    Lois Lane: Enemy of the People

    Lois Lane: Enemy of the People

    Greg Rucka puts Lois into full investigator mode when a White House press conference leads her to a secret that will rock the foundations of the world and impact on Superman’s life. Its sort-of-ripped-from-the-headlines leanings had certain corners of the web up in arms, but it showcases Rucka’s innate knowledge of Lane as a character.

    Single issues: Lois Lane (Vol. 2) # 1-12
    Collected editions: Lois Lane: Enemy of the People

    A Superman for All Seasons

    Superman for All Seasons

    If you know Jeph Loeb and artist Tim Sale’s work (Batman: The Long Halloween, Spider-Man: Blue), then you’ll be aware they love two things: classic takes on characters and seasonal snapshots. Filled with Norman Rockwell inspired art, this acts a parallel origin story told from the perspective of Jonathan Kent, Lex Luthor, Lois Lane and Lana Lang. Lois’s narration of summer is particularly apt for our reading here, as it reflects on the impact Superman’s appearance has on her journalism career. A beautiful book.

    Single issues: Superman for All Seasons # 1-4
    Collected editions: Superman for All Seasons: Deluxe Edition

    Lois Lane: When It Rains, God is Crying

    Lois Lane: When It Rains, God is Crying

    While the lofty title is typical of the mid-80s melodrama (think: Chris Claremont’s God Loves, Man Kills or Jon J. Muth’s Dracula: A Symphony in Moonlight & Nightmares), the subject matter is a little more serious. Originally released as two extra large sized issues (coming to about 100 pages of story in total), Mindy Newell crafts a Lois-centric where Clark is a background character. The rather dark story, brilliantly illustrated by Gray Morrow (Tarzan, Green Arrow: The Wonder Year) is about child abduction and murder – including some hitherto hidden secrets about Lana Lang’s past.

    Single issues: Lois Lane (Vol. 1) #1 + 2 (1986)

    All-Star Superman

    All-Star Superman

    This is not at the bottom of this list because of any ranking system. It’s down here because it’s the ultimate Superman story. The last Superman story that we might ever need. Written by Grant Morrison and drawn by Frank Quitely. With a year left to live, Superman reveals his identity to Lois to spend his remaining time with her. One of the more touching moments is when Clark imbues Lois with powers for a day, and she gets to see what it is like to be a Superwoman through his eyes. Arguably the greatest Superman story ever told.

    Single issues: All-Star Superman #1 – 12 (2005-2008)
    Collected editions: Absolute All-Star Superman or All-Star Superman (DC Black Label Edition)

    Superman

    Further reading

    The Man of Steel (1986)

    One of those classic tales that is also very much of its time and place. If Alan Moore and Curt Swan’s Superman: Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow? was the final word on Superman in a pre-Crisis on Infinite Earths world, this John Byrne led mini-series was a declaration of what the Man of Steel would be going forward. It was the official origin — at least up until the universe got rebooted again. Dated, but a good yarn in and of itself.

    Kingdom Come (1996)

    One of the more notorious Elseworlds stories, it deals with an alternate future tension between out-of-touch traditional heroes and their edgier and largely amoral children. While it’s a great story about the restoration of the hope Superman represents, it’s less successful for Lois, and is an example of the notorious mid-90s habit of ‘fridging’ heroines to spur on the male hero. This story has been referenced in the Arrowverse as well, with Brandon Routh returning to play a future version of his Superman Returns character during the Crisis on Infinite Earths crossover.

    Superman: Last Son of Krypton (2006-2008)

    Not to be confused with Elliot S! Maggin’s tie-in novel for Superman: The Movie, this arc (also known simple as Last Son) combines the talents of writers Geoff Johns and director Richard Donner. Influenced by the latter’s films, it introduces Christopher Kent, the adopted son of Clark Kent and Lois Lane who is in fact the biological son of General Zod and Ursa. There’s parallels with the newer books at the top of this list.

    Superman #708
    Be sure to explore more comics! Once you’ve seen a good Superman, you can never stop at just one.
  • Where to Start: Ant-Man and the Wasp comics you should read

    Where to Start: Ant-Man and the Wasp comics you should read

    ANT-MAN & THE WASP is upon us! The historic 20th film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe is appropriately the first sequel to Ant-Man, one of the founding members of the Avengers and a character with a long-standing history at Marvel. So maybe you want to start reading some more of those comics. After all, Scott Lang is only one of three main characters to have taken on the Ant-Man mantle (Ant-Mantle?) over the years. 

    First introduced back in Tales to Astonish #35 (September 1962), Hank Pym was the first Ant-Man. His girlfriend (and later wife) Janet Van Dyne appeared a year later in Tales to Astonish #44 (June 1963), and the duo became founding members of The Avengers later that year. Complicating matters is Pym’s changing identities over the years: Giant-Man, Goliath, and Yellowjacket were just some of his alter-egos. 

    The version we seen on screen is Scott Lang, a little bit of an amalgam of several character traits. Some of the more recent comics are definitely keeping in line with the MCU version, so if you’re looking for something in that vein, skip right to the end.

    Astonishing Ant-Man

    Ant-Man: Essentials

    This is where it all began for Ant-Man and the Wasp. Any of the early collections that cover Tales to Astonish (1959) #27 and around #35 to #69 will get you the first appearance of Hank Pym, the origin of Ant-Man, and the first appearance of Janet/The Wasp. The stories may not hold always up to modern tastes, but all the fundamentals are here. It’s also well before we even get into Pym’s downfall as a wife-beating alcoholic. 

    The Avengers: Earth’s Mightiest Heroes

    Ant-Man: Avengers Masterworks

    When Marvel launched their flagship team book in 1963, the founding members were Ant-Man, the Hulk, Iron Man, Thor, and the Wasp. By the second issue, Ant-Man had become Giant Man as well. The Wasp’s contribution was significant from the beginning: it was Janet who gave the superhero team their name! Fun fact: The Wasp later became the longest serving leader of the Avengers outside of Captain America. In later issues of this run, Hank will become Goliath (#28) and create the villain Ultron (#54 and #55). Speaking of which…

    Avengers: Ultron Unlimited

    Avengers: Ultron Unlimited

    …Ultron! Moviegoers will blame Tony Stark for that particular mess (and so they should), but it was poor old Hank who got the blame in print. This 1999 mini-series from writer Kurt Busiek and George Pérez sees Hank go missing, while Wasp and the Avengers team up in Wakanda to take down Ultron. Getting into the meat of the daddy/son issues of Hank/Ultron, it also contain’s Thor’s classic line “Ultron, we would have words with thee.”

    Ant-Man & Wasp: Small World

    Ant-Man: Small World

    At one point Eric O’Grady stole Hank’s suit and became the Irredeemable Ant-Man, a sexist womanizer who regularly lies and cheats. After Janet’s apparent death (she’s actually in the Microverse, just like in the movies), Hank takes on the mantle of the Wasp in her honour. Worth a read for a very different take on both characters, and a chance for two assholes to slowly redeem themselves.

    Fantastic Faux

    Fantastic Faux

    There are two immutable laws of comic book movies: Christopher Reeve is the greatest Superman, and there will never be a good Fantastic Four film. Not so with the comics. In 2013, the Marvel Now! reboot saw the FF head into space. Their replacements? Ant-Man, She-Hulk, the Inhumans’ Medusa, and…Ms. Thing. You come here for Matt Fraction’s writing and Mike Allred’s pop art. You stay for a great Scott Lang arc, one in which he gets into a punch-up with Doctor Doom. This may never happen on screen, so read these books and dream.

    Second Chance Man

    Ant-Man: Second Chance Man

    This series came out just before the first film, and it is still one of the best contemporary comics of the last few years. Writer Nick Spencer and artist Ramon Rosanas tap into the rich mine of loser superheroes, following Fraction’s Hawkeye run. Lang tries to make ends meet, negotiate visitation rights with his daughter, and moves to Florida to start a security firm. The term might be “failing forward.” Soundly re-positioning Lang as the everyman hero, it’s pure fun. Definitely shares some DNA with the films, but lovers of all good comic stories should dig this. 

  • Len Wein, co-creator of Swamp Thing and Wolverine, has died at 69

    Len Wein, co-creator of Swamp Thing and Wolverine, has died at 69

    [pullquote class=”right”]“Hi, I’m Len Wein creator of Wolverine, Swamp Thing and god knows how many other characters…”[/pullquote]

    Legendary comic book writer and editor Len Wein, co-creator of Swamp Thing and Wolverine, has died at the age of 69. 

    Wein was partly responsible for the revival of the X-Men in the 1975 Giant-Size X-Men #1, an issue that introduced Storm, Nightcrawler, Colossus, and Thunderbird, and made Wolverine a part of the X-Men world.

    Wein’s first professional comics story was “Eye of the Beholder” in DC’s Teen Titans #18 in late 1968, and began a successful career at both DC and Marvel, including a brief stint on Daredevil, co-written with staff writer/editor Roy Thomas.

    Of course, it was with The House of Secrets #92 that he co-created Swamp Thing with artist Bernie Wrightson, who also passed away in March this year. The character would go on to high profile status under Alan Moore, and become a platform for the introduction of other characters such as John Constantine. After his stint at Marvel, that included his X-Men work, he returned to DC to edit historic series such as Camelot 3000 and Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons’ iconic Watchmen

    House of Secrets #92
    The House of Secrets #92 (cover date July 1972). Writer: Len Wein. Artist: Bernie Wrightson

    He had undergone heart surgery in 2015, and as recent as 8 September his official account tweeted “Out of latest surgery, which went very well.”

    Wein was once kind enough to record a brief bumper for our podcast Behind the Panels back in 2013, that began “Hi, I’m Len Wein creator of Wolverine, Swamp Thing and god knows how many other characters.” It seems like a fitting summation of a career that has touched so many corners of the comic book world that we’ll be feeling their impact for years. He will be missed. 

    House of Secrets #92 Giant Sized X-Men #1

  • Sequart releases book on Green Arrow

    Sequart releases book on Green Arrow

    Moving Target: The History and Evolution of Green ArrowWe are very proud to announce the publication of MOVING TARGET: THE HISTORY AND EVOLUTION OF GREEN ARROW, written by none other than Richard Gray, the editor of The Reel Bits! It goes without saying that we are super proud to finally have this book out into the world.

    Out now through Sequart Publishing, it’s a comprehensive history of Green Arrow in the comics and on TV. With a foreword by Green Arrow artist Phil Hester, it features new interviews with Green Arrow creators from across the decades, including Neal Adams, Mike Grell, Chuck Dixon, Phil Hester, Brad Meltzer, and Jeff Lemire.

    Amazon

    For over 75 years, Green Arrow has been a part of the DC Comics world, working his way up from a supporting player to the star of a flagship television series. Yet for much of his career, he was a hero without a home, separate from his contemporaries, or unfavorably compared with a certain Dark Knight.

    Whether it is the “cowboys and Indians” influences of the 1940s and 1950s, the rebellious realism of the 1970s, the darker edge of the 1980s, or the melodrama of his TV personas, Green Arrow has remained the conscience of the comics world, and perhaps an even better representative than Batman of what one person can do.

    This collection is the definitive analysis of the Emerald Archer, from his Golden Age origins to his small screen adventures and beyond. Exploring overlooked chapters of Green Arrow’s life, and those of alter ego Oliver Queen, this book shows that Green Arrow has never been just one thing, but rather a perpetually moving target. 

    MOVING TARGET: THE HISTORY AND EVOLUTION OF GREEN ARROW is available in print and on Kindle. (Just a reminder: you don’t need a Kindle device to read Kindle-formatted books; you can download a free Kindle reader for most computers, phones, and tablets.) Find out more, and buy the book, on the official page or its Facebook page.

    Moving Target: The History and Evolution of Green Arrow

  • Marvel releases first Look at ‘Journey to Star Wars: The Last Jedi – Captain Phasma’

    Marvel releases first Look at ‘Journey to Star Wars: The Last Jedi – Captain Phasma’

    Marvel Comics has announced a new tie-in title on the Journey to Star Wars: The Last Jedi, focusing on Captain Phasma. Portrayed in the film by Gwendoline Christie (Game of Thrones), the comic explores. Check out the press release and preview images below. 

    It’s the galaxy’s big mystery: How did Captain Phasma survive the destruction of the Starkiller Base in the final moments of Star Wars: The Force Awakens? All will be revealed this September, when superstar writer Kelly Thompson (Hawkeye, Star Wars Annual) teams with blockbuster artist Marco Checchetto (Star Wars: Shattered Empire, Star Wars: Screaming Citadel) to bring you JOURNEY TO STAR WARS: THE LAST JEDI – CAPTAIN PHASMA #1, a four-part miniseries bridging the events between Star Wars: The Force Awakens and the upcoming Star Wars: The Last Jedi!

    Captain Phasma’s fate seemed like it was sealed when she was cornered by the Resistance and thrown into a garbage compactor before the Starkiller Base was destroyed. But it’s going to take much more than that to keep this chrome-armored warrior down!

    “The Star Wars films, with so many fantastic characters, obviously can’t be a ‘Phasma story,’ and it’s especially cool that Phasma is getting explored in depth in both her forthcoming novel and comic book,” said series writer Kelly Thompson. “The most exciting thing to me about our mini-series is that we were given the awesome responsibility of bridging a gap between Force Awakens and Last Jedi – of answering the question of what happened to Phasma after she went into that trash chute. Anytime you get to write official Star Wars is pretty incredible, but getting to decide what that link is, for a super intriguing character in some of the most epic movies of all time, is next level!”

    JOURNEY TO STAR WARS: THE LAST JEDI – CAPTAIN PHASMA #1, on sale this September!

    JOURNEY TO STAR WARS: THE LAST JEDI – CAPTAIN PHASMA #1 (OF 4)

    Written by KELLY THOMPSON
    Art by MARCO CHECCHETTO
    Cover by PAUL RENAUD
    Variant Cover by MARK BROOKS
    Black and White Variant Cover by MARK BROOKS
    Funko Variant Cover by DIEGO OLORTEGUI
    Where’s Phasma Variant Cover by TODD NAUCK
    Homage Variant Cover by PAULINA GANUCHEAU
    Young Variant Cover by SKOTTIE YOUNG
    Blank Variant Cover and Movie Variant Cover also available

    JOURNEY TO STAR WARS: THE LAST JEDI – CAPTAIN PHASMA #1

    JOURNEY TO STAR WARS: THE LAST JEDI – CAPTAIN PHASMA #1

    JOURNEY TO STAR WARS: THE LAST JEDI – CAPTAIN PHASMA #1

    JOURNEY TO STAR WARS: THE LAST JEDI – CAPTAIN PHASMA #1

  • Review: Spencer & Locke #1

    Review: Spencer & Locke #1

    Sure he’s got his idiosyncrasies. He’s a freakin’ talking panther, what do you expect?

    Spencer & Locke #1Bill Watterson’s Calvin and Hobbes has served as a backbone for all that is good about comic strips for the last 30 years. Often parodied and rarely bettered, it speaks to the child inside all of us that refuses to grow up. Writer David Pepose goes that extra step and flashes forward to a slightly different version of that relationship with his original creations SPENCER & LOCKE.

    The opening issue follows a detective named Locke, who once had an imaginary series of adventures with his plush panther Spencer. Yet the carefree days never really lasted, and a series of harsh realities growing up have darkened his worldview. However, imaginary friend Spencer has not left his side, and now Locke works as a detective solving crimes alongside his lifelong partner. When an incredibly personal case presents itself, Locke has to unpick some old wounds in the process.

    Spencer & Locke #1Pepose is not the first to imagine a grown-up version of Calvin and Hobbes, with Dan and Tom Heyerman’s Hobbes and Bacon and Martine Leavitt’s schizophrenia-focused Calvin just some of the inspired texts. Make no mistake about it: this is no parody, and nor is it a noir version of Drop Dead FredSPENCER & LOCKE stands on its own two feet (or six depending on your point of view), playing on our familiarity and nostalgia over a perennial favourite and our more perverse desires to witness the corruption of the innocent.

    The secret to this comic’s success is that it plays it straight at all times, committing to the high concept at every turn. By the same token, the book is far from humourless, with pun-master Pepose delivering deadpan lines with a matter-of-factness that is laugh-out-loud. Locke telling a waitress, who can only see a stuffed toy in a booth, that he is having a “private conversation” is priceless. Yet the book is also shrouded in a love for hard-boiled noir that shines through like so many Sin Cities. 

    This dual love of nostalgic hat-tipping and gritty noir comes through in Jorge Santiago Jr. and Jasen Smith’s versatile artwork. Opening with a clear tribute to Watterson’s highly imitable style, the duo juxtapose this with the neon glow of sin and vice in the big city. From the first page, the childhood illusion is literally slapped in the face and shattered, instantly replaced with an underlit and bloodied crime scene that prepares us for anything. A fight scene between Locke, a perp and ‘Spencer’ frenetically fuses all of these things together, delivering on the promise of Pepose’s wonderful premise.

    Spencer & Locke #1

    SPENCER & LOCKE is unquestionably one of the most gripping debuts of the year. Pepose’s long career in writing about comics pays off with this excellent first issue that doesn’t just throw out a novelty concept, but creates an entire world to go with it. A wicked fusion of comic strip by way of Blacksad, we’re in for the haul with this limited series.

    [stextbox id=”grey” bgcolor=”F2F2F2″ mleft=”5″ mright=”5″ image=”null”]2017 | US | Writer: David Pepose | Artists: Jorge Santiago Jr. and Jasen Smith | Letters: Colin Bell | Publisher: Action Lab Entertainment| Release Date: 12 April 2017[/stextbox]

    Spencer and Locke #2 is due out on 31 May 2017. Ask your local comic book store for a copy now.

  • Where to Start: Wolverine comics you should read

    Where to Start: Wolverine comics you should read

    LOGAN is now out in cinemas, and according to our review it transcends convention with “its dark outlook and relentlessly violent narrative.” Yet it is not a creation entirely of James Mangold and his screenwriting team, with the look and feel of Wolverine crafted over decades of outstanding sequential art.

    So we thought we’d pick some of the best known stories from the last few decades with the character.  It’s not a comprehensive list, but we think they are all worth reading at some stage in your personal comics journey. This list is an updated version of the one first presented when The Wolverine was released in 2013, over at our sister site Behind The Panels. We’ve added a few more suggestions since then.

    First introduced in 1974 in the pages of The Incredible Hulk, he was introduced to the X-Men in the pages of Giant X-Men #1 in 1975, and soon became a staple of Chris Claremont‘s historic run that followed. Now the character is quite literally everywhere, occupying several of his own monthly titles, along with various X-Men and Avengers books and many, many films and animated TV series.


    Wolverine (1982)

    Wolverine (1982)The opening line of this comic has become legend: “I’m the best there is at what I do, but what I do best isn’t very nice.” If the first solo title for the character isn’t enough to entice you, then perhaps its creative team will. Chris Claremont defined the modern versions of the X-Men, with his historic 17 year run on Uncanny X-Men. By 1982, it was time to give the popular character his own spotlight, and a chance to explore his previously hinted at Japanese influences. Joining him was Frank Miller, a writer/artist who had just finished his own major run on Daredevil, and was only a handful of years away from his creator-owned Ronin and his unquestionable masterpiece, The Dark Knight Returns. Working at the height of their powers, the duo crafted a four-issue story that perfectly encapsulates the pent-up rage and mystery that has always been the appeal of the Wolverine. Taken together with Uncanny X-Men #172-173 (with artist Paul Smith), this forms what is often referred to as “The Japan Saga”, for it is set almost entirely in that country. Indeed, the new film draws much inspiration from this run, including the appearance of the Silver Samurai (pictured above). Aside from Claremont’s tightly woven thriller story, Miller’s art is an example of some of his best layouts. The iconic shot of the titular warrior leaping out of a window while fighting off a horde of The Hand’s warriors is perhaps one of the most reprinted, but Miller entirely makes the character his own. This is a rough and tumble Logan, one that scares his true love Mariko and excites a new woman in his life. From the the opening sequences in which he fights a bear in the Canadian Rockies, to the thrilling concluding fights, this is a one-man war against his own animalistic nature. Guess who wins? 

    Kitty Pryde And Wolverine (1984)

    Kitty Pryde And Wolverine (1984)A few years after the initial Wolverine mini-series, Chris Claremont turned his eye to one of Marvel’s most popular characters and combined it with his own fondness for Kitty Pryde. In his introduction to the hardcover edition, artist Al Milgrom also listed it as a unique opportunity to work with Claremont, who was the most high profile writer at Marvel Comics at the time. It’s immediately a much grittier, street-level story for both characters, and featuring another return to Japan for Logan, along with an appearance from Yukio. As such, it’s another ‘Wolverine as ronin’ story that would go on to define the character further in the next decade or so, and here he takes on an unlikely mentor role long before he was a school teacher. It’s also a significant comic for Kitty Pryde, graduating from being the light-hearted “kid sister”, and eventually taking on her own costume and choosing the alias of “Shadowcat” by the end of the story. Milgrom’s unusual art style may not be for all tastes, but it fits the grittier style of storytelling Claremont was aiming for here. Curiously, despite the significance for both characters, this has only been reprinted once as the aforementioned 2008 hardcover edition.

    Weapon X (1991)

    Weapon X (1991)Barry Windsor-Smith’s unique story arc originally appeared in the pages of Marvel Comics Presents #72 through #84, telling the story of Logan’s time at the Weapon X program. It is only partly told from Wolverine’s perspective, and for the most part Logan is either being treated as a subject (as opposed to a human being) – by Professor, the director of the Weapon X program, and his assistants Dr. Cornelius and Miss Hines  – or simply a mindless creature that has escaped into the wilderness. It is an intense story that journeys into horror movie territory, perhaps a first for the character, and something that filmgoers will have only seen in brief segments in the X-Men Origins: Wolverine and X-Men 2 films. The significance of this story in particular is that it was one of the first to really start to examine the origin story of Wolverine, a character that had been shrouded in mystery. Windsor-Smith’s artwork (he wrote, pencilled, inked, coloured, and co-lettered) is something else, often enveloping the hero in body horror mass of twisted wires, metal and flesh to the point that each is indistinguishable from the other. His influences from this series are incalculable. As a sidebar, if you want to see some of the work foreshadowing this series, go back to Uncanny X-Men #205 in which a recovering Wolverine is written by Claremont and drawn by Windsor-Smith. Weapon X is freely available as a TPB, but don’t make the mistake of accidentally picking up the similarly-titled Wolverine: Weapon X series by Jason Aaron. If you’ve seen X-Men: Apocalypse, you’ll undoubtedly recognise the costuming and the key Wolverine appearance in that film.

    Wolverine: Origin (2006)

    Wolverine: Origin (2006)The title says it all. Revealing Marvel’s massive mystery could have been their biggest bungle, but it was a gamble then editor-in-chief Joe Quesada was willing to take. Together with Bill Jemas and Paul Jenkins, the trio crafted a story that took us back to Wolverine’s earliest days, as a sickly child in Canada named James Hewlett, that would grow to one day run with the wolves. With a script by Jenkins, this was a massive deal back in 2006, with audiences just as hungry for Logan’s back-story as the character himself. Jenkins takes his time over the course of the six issues, playing with the reader somewhat in the first issue before dropping the big revelation in the final panels of the second. It is this delaying of immediate satisfaction that makes the reveal of this secret all the more tangible. Many of the characters were early representations of counterparts that would become key to Logan’s mythology: Smitty had parallels to Cyclops, Dog Logan with Sabretooth and Rose naturally gave us a reason as to why the clawed one had an affinity towards redheads. These representations are lovingly detailed in Andy Kubert‘s jaw-droppingly beautiful artwork, lavishly coloured by Richard Isanove. The Tom Sawyer/Call of the Wild-esque beauty is contrasted by the sickeningly cool image of Logan’s bone claws popping out of his skin for the first time, a terrifying and satisfying moment for long-term and new readers alike. The legacy of this series is strong: not only was the opening to X-Men Origins: Wolverine film based on this series, but a sequel was announced this month. Wolverine: Origin II will be written by Kieron Gillen with art by Adam Kubert, the brother of the original artist.

    Wolverine: Logan (2008)

    Logan Vol 1 #2While this may not be one of the more famous runs, and at a humble 3 issues, it may barely register on some radars. However, it is difficult to overlook a Wolverine book by Brian K. Vaughan and Eduardo Risso, two creators who were literally hitting the peak of their creative strides. This series will be interesting to those who enjoy The Wolverine film, as it partly follows (via flashback) Wolverine’s adventures in Japan during the Second World War. At the time, one of the nuclear bombs being dropped on top of Logan seemed somewhat ridiculous, but they did in the film and it kind of works. The series came out of the fallout from the House of M, and Wolverine remembered all of his sordid history prior to adamantium being added to his skeleton. The series accounts for much of Logan’s familiarity with Japan and Japanese culture, and is another great puzzle piece following Wolverine: Origin. He also fights a radioactive immortal mutant, so it is fair to say that the film swings between one extreme and the next. Risso, getting towards the end of 100 Bullets, provides a heavily inked and distinctive set of art, some of the most unique to frame the character. If you can’t find it in singles or digitally, there’s also a trade paperback available for under $15. Well worth a look.

    Old Man Logan (2008-2009)

    Wolverine_Vol_3_68 - Old Man LoganOne of the most unlikely Wolverine stories turned out to be one of the most acclaimed as well. Modern master Mark Millar originally presented this tale in the pages of Wolverine #66 through #72, ending it over a year later in Wolverine Giant-Size Old Man Logan. Set over 50 years in the future of the Marvel universe, the United States has be carved up by supervillains,  The country is run by the Abomination, Magneto, Dr. Doom and the Red Skull, who has named himself President. Logan has long since abandoned the mantle of “Wolverine”, refusing to pop his claws for any reason. Yet when he is asked by a now blind Hawkeye to take him across country, he is back in the game. Millar has played with these themes before, including in his creator-owned series Wanted, but here it is smack bang in the middle of a twisted version of the Marvel U. Steve McNiven follows Millar’s lead and portrays this as a Western, with bleak landscapes and having fun with the alternative versions of familiar characters. It’s a cinematic event, and should be read as a complete piece. The film LOGAN takes a number of stylistic cues from this work, along with the one immediately below, but it is certainly not a straight adaptation of this excellent work. 

    Death of Wolverine (2014)

    Death of WolverineIn comics, death is terminally impermanent. While the saga was seen largely as a publicity stunt when it was released a few years ago, viewers of LOGAN may notice a few tips of the hat to this series by Charles Soule and artist Steve McNiven. With his healing factor diminished thanks to a virus from the microverse, Wolverine finds out that he has a bounty on his head. What follows is a sufficiently action-packed “last” hurrah for the most popular of mutants as he travels across the globe and clings on to dear life with the last of his claws. The actual manner of the titular death may surprise some, and baffle others, but it started a legacy that introduced multiple Wolverines into the Marvel Universe. This collection is readily available , and while it may not go down as a classic of modern comics, it certainly provides some context around the comic book legacy that led to the current cinematic one.

    All-New Wolverine: The Four Sisters (2016)

    All-New WolverineIn the aftermath of the Death of Wolverine arc, Laura Kinney (aka X-23) succeeds Logan in the role of the yellow and blue spandex-clad hero. Written by Australia’s Tom Taylor, and with art by David López, it coincided with a Marvel Comics relaunch and a new focus on female-led books by the publisher. The new direction paid off, with one of the more original and witty pieces of straight-up awesome to grace the racks in the last few years. While the Laura that you see in this comic may be very different to the one that appears on-screen in LOGAN, we can extraoploate this as a possible future for the cinematic franchise if Fox and/or Marvel decide to build some films around X-23 and similar characters in the future. It would be the female-led action film that audiences have been craving for some time. Taylor’s penchant for humor mixed in with his action makes this a joyous experience, but what readers also get to see is Taylor’s clear love of the Marvel Universe. Not necessarily essential reading, but a fun one nonetheless.

    Bonus Pick: The Dark Phoenix Saga (1980)

    Wolverine Alone: Uncanny X-Men #133This is a significant story for the X-Men, as it contained so many classic Wolverine moments long before the character reached iconic status, and it just might be one of the reason why the character is so enduring. The saga spans Uncanny X-Men #129 to #138, but things really kick into high gear for the Wolverine at the iconic end to #132 (“And Hellfire Is Their Name!”), as a beaten down Wolverine emerges from the sewers with the immortal line “Now it’s my turn!” This panel alone should ensure the inclusion of this saga on any list of must-read Wolverine stories. This leads directly into #133 (“Wolverine Alone”), in which the titular figure handily slices and dices his way through the Hellfire Club, perhaps the first time we had seen him in full beserker flight on this scale. Let’s face it: if you’re a Wolverine fan or X-Men fan and you haven’t read this run of comics, you need to get thee to a comic bookery right now and get some Comics 101 into you. The film X-Men: The Last Stand majorly botched the fate of Jean Grey (who does appear in The Wolverine), so go back and see how it was done right in a time when a death in comics meant something.

  • Review: The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl Beats Up the Marvel Universe

    Review: The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl Beats Up the Marvel Universe

    THE UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL BEATS UP THE MARVEL UNIVERSE OGNThe Unbeatable Squirrel Girl is a comics title that’s always been in love with the lore and history of comic books and super heroes; often to a greater degree than many of its fans will be. I’m pretty sure everyone who read The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl #1 (the first one) would have immediately begun singing the Squirrel Girl theme song to the tune of the Spider-Man theme song. But how many of us had to hop on Youtube to know the tune to the Iron Man cartoon theme song that #7 (again, the first one) references?

    That song gets another mention in THE UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL BEATS UP THE MARVEL UNIVERSE, a comic that is so ensconced within the lore and history of Marvel comics that its very title is a reference to one classic graphic novel (The Punisher Kills the Marvel Universe) and its basic premise calls back to a different classic run from within Marvel’s history (The Clone Saga). So for someone who didn’t even know that Iron Man had a ‘60s cartoon, the idea of reviewing this graphic novel may seem a bit presumptuous and I don’t doubt that I’m missing a lot of its cleverness. But here’s the thing: For all that? The real thing this comic is about is the history of Squirrel Girl herself, and a tension between the character’s history and her ongoing series.

    THE UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL BEATS UP THE MARVEL UNIVERSE OGNA quick synopsis: THE UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL BEATS UP THE MARVEL UNIVERSE is a 113 page original graphic novel written and drawn (as always) by the inestimable Ryan North and Erica Henderson respectively. Squirrel Girl and her superhero team of Chipmunk Hunk & Koi Boy, along with less-super but still heroic squad mates Nancy Whitehead and Tippy-Toe, are invited to Stark Tower to see Iron Man’s new and as-yet untested invention. Inevitably, things go awry, Squirrel Girl is accidentally shoved into the machine, and two Squirrel Girls emerge — Our familiar Dorren Green, and new Squirrel Girl Allene Green. (Allene turns out to be Doreen’s middle name, because of course it is.) The two Squirrel Girls come to blows three days later, and we’re ready for at least one of them to enact the scenario promised by the title.

    As we’d expect, the writing is breezy and enjoyable, filled with lovely in-jokes buried within panels, reinforced by amusing footnotes and featuring strong character work on just about everyone. North seems particularly energised by the chance to do longer-form arcs within the graphic novel format and relishes the more relaxed pace. (A brief interlude involving an activity page and a fight scene is beautifully paid off a few pages later; a particularly meta gag that may have felt too intrusive within 22 pages but is well worth the time within over a hundred.) And of course, he delivers on the title’s promise: He creates a preposterous yet weirdly credible scenario by which Squirrel Girl defeats every single character of the Marvel Universe. (It does call back in a way to a particular story beat of The Punisher Kills The Marvel Universe.) Overall, it’s not his most amusing work within the Squirrel Girl franchise, but it is entertaining nonetheless.

    Henderson’s art continues to be a perfect match for North’s style — while it’s been unjustly criticised by many for its pointedly cartoony exaggerations of both body and facial movement, she knows when to rein it back in to let an emotional punch land and when to push it to accentuate North’s frenetic storytelling. I couldn’t imagine this series without her, and that’s as true for ‘BEATS UP THE MARVEL UNIVERSE as anything.

    Thematically, though, what carries the most weight is the reason for the conflict between the two Squirrel Girls. And it is here, I feel, that North is really making his stand on why he feels Squirrel Girl is a relevant and important character for the Marvel Universe, while also acknowledging that to make her be relevant in this fashion, he’s had to fundamentally reinvent the character.

    THE UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL BEATS UP THE MARVEL UNIVERSE OGNLet’s step back. Squirrel Girl was introduced to the Marvel Universe in 1992 by Steve Dikto and Will Murray. Her conception in this original story is clear: Her powers are unusual and not obviously useful, but she unexpectedly punches far above her weight and defeats Dr. Doom. However, it was not until 2005 and Dan Slott’s 2005 Great Lakes Avengers mini-series that her character appeal became solidified in this way: Squirrel Girl’s mythology developed around her beating incredibly powerful Marvel villains in surprising ways with clever uses of her limited power set. It was this reputation that created the title for the new series, The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl.

    But… well, that’s not the Squirrel Girl we’ve got. Squirrel Girl of the past was a combatant. While her defeats of villains were creative and surprising, they none the less fit the standard bill of a ‘superhero fight’. By contrast, North’s comic (freed from the expectations of the superhero genre by slipping instead into the comedy genre) sees Squirrel Girl as less combatant and more problem-solver. Sure, she may never lose, but she’d rather nobody else had to either. She’s a master of compromise and finding ‘third way’ solutions to intractable problems.

    And this forms what is really the clever crux of THE UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL BEATS UP THE MARVEL UNIVERSE — Squirrel Girl’s clone isn’t evil. She’s just the Squirrel Girl of earlier books, given a bit of a psychological deconstruction along the way. And North is arguing that this shift between the two is pronounced, so much so that the two are unable to avoid coming to blows. (Although, given the nature of Doreen Green, naturally it will not end in blows.)

    North’s writing becomes most passionate on this point — He believes in the values that his Doreen Green espouses; of compromise and lateral thinking. The comic never deviates too far from its comedic tone but finds time to make that message clear. It criticises dogmatism and argues instead for tolerance and moderation of belief. (In a weird way, it’s oddly topical within the midst of this particular US presidential election season.)

    Thankfully, the comic does not belabour this meta-narrative too heavily. It’s more interested in creating Allene’s clever beat-ups and allowing Doreen the chance to show off her lateral thinking skills in hilarious fashion. But there is a brain underneath the silliness, and it’s what has elevated The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl before and what continues to do so here.

    [stextbox id=”grey” bgcolor=”F2F2F2″ mleft=”5″ mright=”5″ image=”null”]2016 | US | WRITER: Ryan North | ARTISTS: Erica Henderson, Tom Fowler | LETTERER: Travis Latham | PUBLISHER: Marvel Comics[/stextbox]