Tag: Hawkeye

  • Best TV of 2021

    Best TV of 2021

    The last couple of years have forced us to reacquaint ourselves with our old friend television. The pandemic didn’t create the war for our small screen attention, but it certainly turned it from a cold war between a few giants to an active series of battles between many players.

    As Disney+ consolidated its vast holdings and added a flood of content, new platform Paramount+ got in on the ‘plus’ market by replacing the CBS All Access service in the US and ultimately around the world. Of course, that meant pulling Star Trek: Discovery from Netflix globally only two days before the Season 4 premiere, adding salt in to the wound by saying it then wouldn’t arrive until 2022 for global fans. (They relented a week later, ‘fast-tracking’ it to the local Paramount+ — but the damage was done to the fanbase).

    Still, there’s some hope for global viewing equality, and there’s commitment to the long haul as well. Apple has spent a small fortune developing Isaac Asimov’s FOUNDATION for its own streaming platform, reportedly planning on an eight-year run to tell the mammoth story. Next year, we’re getting Prime’s The Lord of the Rings, another multi-year commitment to a fan-favourite franchise.

    Which brings us back to this year, where the best TV spanned intimate stories and epic cinema-worthy content in equal measures. Here’s a few we enjoyed in 2021. If it’s not on the list, I didn’t get around to it (or didn’t like it as much as these).

    Hacks (2021)

    Hacks

    If the barrel of awards didn’t tell you already, then HACKS is hands down one of the wittiest, funniest and heartfelt new comedy/drama series of the year. In a TV year owned by Jean Smart (see also: Mare of Easttown), here she effortlessly proves why she is the ruling monarch of our screens. The acerbic wit, the razor sharp delivery of Lucia Aniello’s (and fellow writers) dialogue, and chemistry with Hannah Einbinder make this most addictive show of the season. Already greenlit for a second season, and we can’t wait.

    Pretend It's a City

    Pretend It’s a City

    The American remake of The Trip is on point. No, seriously: this much-watched and variously parodied meeting of minds between Martin Scorsese and writer/humourist Fran Lebowitz is exactly as New York as you want it to be — and maybe a little more. Following their previous collaboration of Public Speaking (2010), and intercut with footage from other public appearances, it’s getting to hear your favourite humourist tell jokes while your favourite director laughs maniacally at them.

    Starstruck (2021)

    Starstruck

    While this wasn’t New Zealand comedian Rose Matafeo’s first foray into television, this is show is 100% pure Matafeo. As the writer, creator and star of this unconventional rom-com — about the screwball mishaps following ex-pat Jessie (Matafeo) hooking up with movie star Tom Kapoor (Nikesh Patel) for a one-night stand — this BBC/HBO Max collaboration is everything. Disarmingly charming, it always feels authentic, even when the misadventures get comedically complicated.

    Kevin Can F**k Himself

    Kevin Can F**k Himself

    If WandaVision hadn’t also come out this year, creator Valerie Armstrong’s series may have been labelled revolutionary. Fresh off Schitt’s Creek, actor Annie Murphy plays Allison, a woman who tries to find a new approach to life while in an unhappy marriage with the titular Kevin (Eric Petersen). The show’s conceit is that whenever Allison and Kevin are together, the format shifts to a typical multiple-camera sitcom complete with canned laughter. Yet the rest of the show takes on the single camera model of a drama, as Allison and neighbour Patty (Mary Hollis Inboden) go deeper down a dark rabbit hole. Like WandaVision, it uses the sitcom form as horror, highlighting the everyday terror that men cause when following selfish pursuits for ‘comedic’ effect. Will make you look at every sitcom lead (and especially The King of Queens) in a different light.

    Mare of Easttown

    Mare of Easttown

    There was a time this year when you couldn’t swing a cursor on social media without hearing someone rave about this HBO series created by Brad Ingelsby (The Way Back). It wasn’t just the amazing ensemble either — although Kate Winslet, Julianne Nicholson, Jean Smart, Angourie Rice, Guy Pearce and Evan Peters counts as a ‘stacked cast.’ Each episode drew us in, kept us there with amazing characters and wanting more with a series of cliffhangers. You can rarely go wrong with murder in a small town, and this is just excellent proof of that.

    Cooking with Paris

    Cooking With Paris

    Arriving when we needed her the most, Paris Hilton’s cooking show is everything you want it to be. Despite the fancy clothes, the even fancier gloves and the string of guests who ‘casually’ drop around for dinner — bestie Kim Kardashian West, Saweetie, Nikki Glaser, Demi Lovato, Lele Pons, Kathy Hilton and sister Nicky Hilton Rothschild — Paris is every one of us trying to add glitter to our French toast. It’s the metaphor for the whole lockdown. #sliving

    Only Murders in the Building

    Only Murders in the Building

    From the opening scenes of this wonderful series, we were hooked. The only thing stranger than the unlikely combination of Selena Gomez, Martin Short and Steve Martin is just how much that continues to work for us. A Manhattan murder mystery that plays into podcast culture in equal measure, the world followed the leads’ obsession with episodic storytelling as Disney/Hulu made this appointment television.

    Squid Game

    Squid Game

    It would be impossible to talk about TV in 2021 without at least mentioning this Korean thriller. It helps that it was also very, very good. A crossover hit if ever that term could apply, creator Hwang Dong-hyuk crafted a show that is simultaneously horrifying to watch and impossible to turn away from. The set-pieces are obviously the highlights that make this semi-bingeable (although I needed a break after each episode), but it’s the character-driven elements that are compelling from beginning to end. The recognisable cast of faces, not least of which is Lee Jung-jae, disappear into these roles as each game is played. In the end, you the viewer are torn between wanting to see someone survive but ponder just how bloody it can get. That’s when you know the show has you hook, line and sinker.

    Allen V. Farrow

    Allen v. Farrow

    If you’re still struggling with reconciling Woody Allen as a filmmaker and the crimes he’s been accused of, stop for a moment and consider how hard it has been for Dylan Farrow. She had to tell her story repeatedly and consistently for decades, only to be met with armchair critics offering opinions. Kirby Dick and Amy Ziering’s docuseries makes its case and makes it well. Not that it has to. Through some heart-wrenching interviews, an analysis of Allen’s films, and a review of the events, the Farrows of the title give voice to a case that was dismissed not due to lack of evidence, but evidently due to procedural decisions. This is Dylan Farrow having her voice heard, and goddammit you should listen.

    The Chair

    The Chair

    There needs to be more love for this series, created by Amanda Peet and Annie Julia Wyman. It follow’s Sandra Oh as a professor appointed as the first female chair of a prestigious university’s English department. Yet her role as a single parent and relationship with friend and colleague Bill Dobson (Jay Duplass) is tested when a scandal rears its head. Anybody who has spent any amount of time around academia will instantly recognise the archetypes on display here — and know how much worse the real world can be. Plus: David Duchovny guest starring as himself is the best version of David Duchovny.

    The Moth Effect

    The Moth Effect

    This disarmingly clever sketch comedy show seemed to come out of nowhere and work its way straight into our hearts and various other organs. Probably the only Australian sketch comedy show to feature a time traveller who has to sleep with his own mother to save the world, the ridiculously sharp scripts tackle contemporary issues and the esoteric with equal gusto. The Amazon Prime money allows for a mammoth cast as well:  Bryan Brown, Vincent D’Onofrio, David Wenham, Jack Thompson, Miranda Otto, Ben Lawson, Peter O’Brien, Kate Box, Zoe Terakes, Miranda Tapsell, Jake Ryan, Mark Humphries, Nazeem Hussain, Zoe Coombs Marr, Jonny Brugh, Lucinda Price, Dave Woodhead, Louis Hanson, Steen Raskopoulos, Tim Franklin, Sam Cotton, Christiaan Van Vuuren, Sarah Bishop, Sam Campbell, Megan Wilding and Brooke Boney. (Plus, it also features at least two original cast members of Fangirls, so that’s a win-win in our books).

    Superman & Lois

    Superman & Lois

    Following the CW’s Crisis on Infinite Earths crossover, the network has done very little to capitalise on their world-building. In fact, since bringing together all of the shows onto a united Earth, Arrow, Supergirl and Black Lightning have ended and the first season star of Batwoman left. Yet we did get this: a series that draws directly from the comics while combining the best of Smallville and marching to the beat of its own drum. Tyler Hoechlin is as perfect a Clark Kent as he is in the suit, and the back half of this season was compulsory viewing for comic book fans.

    Disney+ Marvel shows 2021

    Marvel’s WandaVision, Loki, What If, Hawkeye

    It’s kind of hard to separate these four, as they ushered in a new era for Disney (or more specifically Disney+) in rapid succession. As MCU fans, it became impossible to separate them from the theatrical output — and not just in terms of scale either. Each provided vital clues to future films, from Black Widow to the upcoming Dr. Strange and the Multiverse of Madness and Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania. Is it too much Marvel at once? Maybe. Does it make it hard to casually tune into the MCU? Definitely. Do we want more? Absolutely. (For the record, my personally favourite was the Matt Fraction/David Aja-inspired HAWKEYE for the street-level, low-stakes, Christmas action). The Falcon and the Winter Soldier was also a show, but let’s just gloss over that for a moment.

    The Beatles: Get Back

    The Beatles: Get Back

    Despite being almost nine hours — or perhaps because of it — new gems and discoveries emerge every few minutes in Peter Jackson’s restoration of the Let It Be sessions. Process junkies will love seeing germs of classic songs emerge from fragments of thoughts. Somehow, hearing ‘Don’t Let Me Down’ for the umpteenth time does nothing to take away its impact. Watching George casually walk in with an early version of ‘Something’ (in Part 3) is gold. There’s drama, of course, but perhaps not as much as you’d think. Could this have been half the length? Probably, but then you’d miss some of the more subtle moments that emerge. One of my favourite is actually early in the piece, as a camera catches an unguarded McCartney on the morning after George has walked out and John has failed to show up. The tears in his eyes speak to someone in their late 20s watching the tightest group he’s ever known falling apart. 

    Hellbound (지옥)

    Hellbound

    If there’s a constant in Yeon Sang-ho’s career, then it’s change. After beginning his career with the animated King of Pigs, he has since crossed over into the global mainstream with Train to Busan. Since then, he’s kept adapting with Psychokinesis and Busan sequel Peninsula. With HELLBOUND (지옥), Yeon’s second foray into television, he brings the blockbuster sensibilities of his features to serial storytelling. Read our season review.

  • Cover Story: Best Comic Book Covers of October 2012

    Cover Story: Best Comic Book Covers of October 2012

    Each month, hundreds of comics are released to stores for the hungry masses of fans around the world. To stand out on the shelves, you have to put the great art up front. You can judge a book by its cover.

    Welcome back to our continuing monthly column, or at least it would be if DC hadn’t released 52 almost identical covers last month. It’s a comparatively bumper crop this month, and we have to give props to Adam Hughes, who appears twice in this month’s list. Let’s get covering.

    Click images to enlarge

    All-Star Western #13 Cover - Artist: Moritat

    All-Star Western #13 (DC Comics) – Artist: Moritat

    The only thing more terrifying than Jonah Hex is a clown. With a really big knife. Actually, Hex looks terrified in this shot, perhaps revealing a hitherto unknown coulrophobia in the character. Moritat continues a striking series of covers for this book.

    American Vampire: Lord of Nightmares #5 (DC/Vertigo) - Artist: Dustin Ngyuen

    American Vampire: Lord of Nightmares #5 (DC/Vertigo) – Artist: Dustin Ngyuen

    Ngyuen’s ink wash cover is distinctive for what it lacks: details on the figures, a minimal background and a simplicity of colour schemes. All these things combine to make the real threat of the shapeless vampiric figures in the background as attracted as we are to the splash of red up front.

    Astonishing X-Men #55 (Marvel) - Artist: Phil Noto

    Astonishing X-Men #55 (Marvel) – Artist: Phil Noto

    We thought that the X-Men were being used as cannon fodder lately, but this is ridiculous. The X-Men are not the actual weapon here, but they are powerful ammunition to have in one’s arsenal. The bigger question is: who is pulling the trigger?

    Batman #13 Cover (DC Comics) - Artist: Greg Capullo

    Batman #13 (DC Comics) – Artist: Greg Capullo

    So many amazing things to say about Batman #13, and we did in Graphic Bits. This was one of several covers, including a mask cover featuring Batman and Joker. This cover is as terrifying as the issue itself, depicting a greatly changed Joker glimpsed through a mirror. In the issue itself, we only get a small look at Mr. J as well.

    BEFORE WATCHMEN: DR. MANHATTAN #2 (DC Comics) - Artist: Adam Hughes

    Before Watchmen: Dr Manhattan #2 – Artist: Adam Hughes

    This isn’t new! It’s from the 1950s! Or is it? It’s not. It’s from a forgettable set of comics, but it is still a very cool Adam Hughes piece of retro-inspired art that features a cute girl where a giant blue cock should be. It’s win-win, really.

    Captain Marvel #5 Cover - Terry Dodson

    Captain Marvel #5 (Marvel) – Artist: Terry Dodson

    You can always tell a Dodson cover from a mile off, but thankfully you don’t have to as it’s right here. Unless you are viewing this screen from over a mile away, in which case we need to talk. Dodson’s Marvel is classic and strong, showing her femininity without making it exploitative.

    Daredevil #19 (Marvel) - Artist: Paolo Rivera

    Daredevil #19 (Marvel) – Artist: Paolo Rivera

    It’s not a good month for Daredevil. He’s headless in this shot, and dead in the cover following. Using little more than red, black and white, Rivera presents us with an infinitely textured and intriguing cover. This might just be the Year of the DD Cover.

    Daredevil: End of Days #1 (Marvel) - Artist: David Mack

    Daredevil: End of Days #1 (Marvel) – Artist: David Mack

    David Mack + DD is always a winning combination. Unless, in this case, you are actually Daredevil, and you will probably end up under a police ‘do not cross’ line. The comic that claims to show the death of DD is a bold move, and this is the bold cover to draw in the reader to a Daredevil dream team.

    Dark Horse Presents #17 - Carla Speed McNeil

    Dark Horse Presents #17 – Artist: Carla Speed McNeil

    This beautiful cover looks like so many cherry blossoms. It’s a highly appropriate cover, as the anthology book contains a treasure trove of detail within.

    FABLES #122 (DC/Vertigo) - Artist: Joao Ruas

    Fables #122 (DC/Vertigo) – Artist: Joao Ruas

    Ruas offers a modern twist on a classic villain. The threat of the wolf is offset by the indifferent confidence of the woman who is paying him no mind. That blood does seem to be in the middle of the wolf’s paw, after all.

    Fairest #8 (DC/Vertigo) - Cover: Adam Hughes

    Fairest #8 (DC/Vertigo) – Artist: Adam Hughes

    There are many reasons we could say this cover was picked for the month, but Adam Hughes just really knows how to draw the feminine. The excessive amount of hair would imply Rapunzel, and it may be a slightly exploitative shot, but it is an undeniable celebration of the female form. Compare this with the Hughes cover for Captain Marvel above.

    Ghostbusters #14 (IDW) - Artist: Tristan Jones

    Ghostbusters #14 (IDW) – Artist: Tristan Jones

    It is an undeniable love of Ghostbusters that saw this variant cover included in the list, with Jones choosing one of the more obscure fan favourites from the 1984 film to highlight in this ongoing series. Combining it with the classic poster for Martin Scorsese’s Taxi Driver is genius, making this a double geekgasm all ’round.

    Hawkeye #3 (Marvel) - Artist: David Aja

    Hawkeye #3 (Marvel) – Artist: David Aja

    All hail to the Aja! Like the book that it covers, these images are simple and iconic, stripping the character back to the barest essentials and giving us recognisable shapes to associate with them.

    Joe Kubert Presents #1 - Artist: Joe Kubert

    Joe Kubert Presents #1 (DC Comics) – Artist: Joe Kubert

    Hawk fights elephant sounds like the premise of a new reality show, but it’s just the master Kubert showing us how old-school pencil sketches kick the elphantine arse of everything else on this page.

    Lot 13 #1 (DC/Vertigo) - Artist: Glenn Fabry

    Lot 13 #1 (DC/Vertigo) – Artist: Glenn Fabry

    Fabry’s covers were always the defining feature of Vertigo’s long-running Preacher, and for all the gore he depicted, very few of them were as creepy as this awkward family photo from hell. Didn’t notice that face in the lower right corner? Check again, then check your pants.

    Road to Oz #2 Cover - Skottie Young

    The Road to Oz #2 (Marvel) – Artist: Skottie Young

    Young’s Oz covers are always so bright and vibrant and full of life, so it is terrific to see that devoid of those things, the simple effectiveness of his iconic style shines through.

    Transfusion #1 (IDW) - Artist: menton3

    Transfusion #1 (IDW) – Artist: menton3

    How could we not include any cover that claims “Vampires versus robots”? menton3’s art is a nightmarish vision of the future that finds a depth of colour within its greys, browns, blacks and naturally, some splashes of red.

    Thunda #3 (Dynamite) - Jae Lee

    Thun’da #3 (Dynamite) – Artist: Jae Lee

    Jae Lee is pretty hot right now, and so is this cover. Taking a “less is more approach”, Lee distinguishes himself from the other Dynamite covers of the month, almost all of which feature women in various stages of undress. His is a classical beauty, rather than the stuff of dime store novels.

    The Unwritten #42 (DC/Vertigo) - Artist: Yuko Shimizu

    The Unwritten #42 (DC/Vertigo) – Artist: Yuko Shimizu

    Not to be confused with the creator of Hello Kitty, this Shimizu may not have started her career as a graphic artist, but she certainly has the talent for it. We love this cover, contrasting the chaos of the fire with the delicacy of the butterflies. We particularly like how the colours move from dark to like as you travel up the page, with the titles intended to land on the bottom third of the sheet.

    Wolverine MAX #1 (Marvel MAX) - Artist: Jock

    Wolverine: MAX #1 (Marvel MAX) – Artist: Jock

    Jock has been doing some amazing things in both the film and comics world over the last few years, and this cover is no exception. Like many of the great covers this month, the real joy is in how simple and iconic it is. Inspired by Japanese influences, it is interesting to contrast this with the style used in The Wolverine teaser poster for the film.

  • Graphic Bits: DC Zero Month, Harvest, Hawkeye, Road to Oz and more!

    Graphic Bits: DC Zero Month, Harvest, Hawkeye, Road to Oz and more!

    Don’t have time for full reviews of comics? Then check out Graphic Bits: bite sized chunks of comic book goodness designed to get behind the panels and into your hearts.

    This week (5 September 2012), the Newish 52 clocks back for a month of Zeroes, and we check out some of the more interesting ones, including Action Comics, Green Arrow, Green Lantern and Phantom Stranger. From Marvel, we look at Hawkeye #2 and Road to Oz #1, Image’s Harvest #2 and the debut of Damsels #1 – which may be only shades away from Fairest #7.

    Don’t forget to listen to Behind the Panels, our weekly comic book podcast, as well.


    Action Comics #0  – DC Comics, Grant Morrison (writer), Ben Oliver, Sholly Fisch (artists)

    Action Comics #0“S is for story” is something that Grant Morrison reminds us of in this pre-origin origin story. With Action Comics already one big origin tale, Morrison is still able to look back in this one-shot by focusing on some smaller characters within the DCU. One of our favourite moments in Morrison’s run was the backup story in which a T-shirt salesman recounted the time that he met Superman. Issue #0 picks up here, but then shifts to another tale, in which Jimmy and Lois are trying to simply prove Superman’s existence, and two young boys get their hands on Supe’s cape. They use it not to play or to do mischief, but to literally escape the harsh realities of an abusive parent. It could have been a naff one-shot, but instead it is one of the most heartfelt books of the run. A stark contrast to the intergalactic smack-downs we’ve seen over the last few months. Ben Oliver’s art nicely compliments this change of direction in story, and there’s also a nice little backup in which Sholly Fisch draws Morrison’s background to the Captain Comet and Neo-sapiens story.

    Bits Rating: ★★★★


    Damsels #1  – Dynamite, Leah Moore & John Reppion (writers), Aneke (artist)

    Damsels #1 cover (Dynamite)On the surface, Damsels reads like a clone of Fables, or more accurately its spin-off series Fairest (also released this week). Dig a little deeper, and you’ll see it’s not as good as either of those titles. All the pieces are there: Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, The Little Mermaid, and Snow White slowly pitched together. Sound familiar yet? That said,  Moore and John Reppion genuinely try to draw a point of difference in their book, perhaps overcompensating with the amount of information given in this debut issue. Flipping back and forth between several stories, there is enough food here to fuel the ongoing series, but none of it is terribly engaging. As Brian K. Vaughan once said, and we’re paraphrasing here, modern comic readers give you one page to connect with them before they tune out and move onto the next rack. The biggest crime of Damsels is that is just fails to engage in this first issue. While the world is an intriguing one, setting up concepts of outlanders and several monarchies at play, the plotting is too scattered for the reader to latch onto any single element. It may have been enough to concentrate on the ‘fleeing redhead’ storyline, unveiling her story over time, yet we get a whole lot of information at once. The artwork is purely functional, neither wowing or disappointing, which is really as much as can be said for this first issue.

    Bits Rating: ★★½


    Fairest #7DC/Vertigo, Matthew Sturges (writer), Shawn McManus (artist)

    Fairest #7 CoverSpeaking of Fairest, Matthew Sturges (Jack of Fables, House of Mystery) gives us a stand-alone issue that gives us a completely new spin on the Beauty and the Beast fable. Laying its scene in the golden era of Hollywood of the 1940s, where Beast and St. George (in their mid-20th guises) are on the trail of a deadly femme fatale through the bars and gin-joints of Los Angeles. St. George’s connection is obvious from the start, but the joy of this issue is how Beast’s involvement in the tale unfolds. Sturges manages to hold true to both the wider Fables universe as well as giving this the feel of a genuine period noir film, from the dialogue to the gritty crime scenes. You’d expect a story like this to be in sepia/black and white, and it is. Yet so effective is McManus’s artwork that we were not even conscious of this fact until the final pages switch back to a colourful modern-day. Ironically, this seems less real somehow, demonstrative of how enveloping the 1940s world would be. Only that it would detract from this excellent one-off, a whole series set in this era would be awesome, but that’s why we have series like Image’s top-notch Fatale to cover some of this ground for us. Indeed, this is the closest comparison for this first-rate issue, making this one of the better single issues of any comic in 2012.

    Bits Rating: ★★★★½


    Green Arrow #0 – DC Comics, Judd Winick (writer), Freddie E Williams II, Rob Hunter (artists)

    Green Arrow #0 (2012)

    It’s no secret that since the reboot, the once great Green Arrow hasn’t been terribly good. The reasons are many, but principally the writing team(s) have yet to settle on something resembling a compelling narrative hook for this new version of Oliver Queen. So the return, however briefly, of Judd Winick gave some cause for hope. Winick’s historic run on the series from 2004 to 2008 made some major changes, and most of these made the character a richer and more engaging one. However, with his one-shot deal at re-envisaging the origins of the archer, it’s almost possible to see the strings of company mandate behind the scenes. With Arrow due to hit the small screen next month, this edgier young archer is all about post-adolescent angst. Hamstrung by a lack of clear identity within the Newish 52 world, the umpteenth retelling of the origin is flat and uninteresting. The pre-island storyline conclusively cans most of the events of the magnificent Green Arrow: Year One, and with the introduction of a new villain, it turns one of the best character arcs in comics history into nothing more than a super-powered slugfest, surrounded by a hedonistic party on an oil rig. As the book spends a fair bit of time carefully introducing a familiar villain to long-time Green Arrow readers, this seems more like a set-up for future events than an origin story. Noncenti will return for the conclusion to the bafflingly bad Chinese saga from #13.

    Bits Rating: ★★½


    Green Lantern #0  – DC Comics, Geoff Johns (writer),  Doug Mahnke (pencils)

    Green Lantern #0 CoverAfter the thrilling events of the Green Lantern Annual #1 last week, fans would have been on the edge of their seats wondering what was next. Like all master storytellers, Johns delays our immediate satisfaction by introducing a new character. Highly publicised by the mainstream media, DC’s first major Arab-American superhero makes his debut in the form of Simon Baz, who is introduced as being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Touching on the prejudice against Muslims in America since 9/11, the book carefully establishes Baz as his own man, and someone who will bring a distinctive spin to the Green Lantern history. If Green Lanterns are chosen for their ability to “overcome great fear”, few groups have been the target of a culture of fear as much as Muslims and people of Arabic descent within the West over the last decade. DC casting one of their post high-profile heroes as Arab-American is not simply a token gesture, but a positive step. Baz isn’t an entirely wholesome character, and the fact that he has a criminal record for illegal street racing means that DC and Johns are avoiding the simple good/bad dichotomy that they so easily could have fallen into. The final pages tease the fate of Hal Jordan and Sinestro, setting us up for a corker of a new saga, and as exciting as Volume 3’s Green Lantern #50, when Kyle Rayner was introduced to the ring.

    Bits Rating: ★★★★½


    Harvest #2 (of 5)Image Comics, A.J. Lieberman (writer), Colin Lorimer (artist)

    Harvest #2 (Image Comics)Lieberman’s first issue hit hard and fast, giving us more twists and turns than a twisty-turny thing that had an appetite for Twisties with a twist of lime. In the second issue, the narrative retreats back into the cover of darkness somewhat, not hitting with quite the same force but rather quietly developing character and story in its place. We learn that the organisation that recruited Benjamin Dane to carry out organ transplants is far more advanced than the shady dealings of the first issue would indicate, and much more about our lead who isn’t done screwing up yet. In his efforts to make things right, we are led to an explosive finale that you won’t see coming, and one of the most interesting uses of medical equipment we’ve seen in a comic to date.  Lorimer’s art is still one of the big drawcards for this title, and he once again hits all the right touchstones. An intriguing title that might barrel through events too quickly this month, but perhaps because Lieberman is keen to get us to the bigger story he has waiting.

    Bits Rating: ★★★


    Hawkeye #2Marvel, Matt Fraction (writer), David Aja and Matt Hollingsworth (artists)

    Hawkeye #2 CoverThere was always a chance that the brilliance of the first issue was a fluke, but the winning team of Fraction and Aja once again prove that they are simply on target with this character. The real beauty of this book is that it is rarely about ‘Hawkeye’ per se, but about his alter ego Clint Barton and the fact that he can’t take a break. Indeed, in the first issue, he saved a dog, and that’s the kind of guy Clint is. If that first issue was about establishing who this Hawkeye and his New York is, the follow-up is about what this world is going to be going forward. We are reintroduced to Kate Bishop, who was briefly Hawkeye while Barton was off either being dead or Ronin. Fraction quickly establishes her as an equal, if not a superior, and their adventure against the Ringmaster and the Circus of Crime shows how effective they could be as a team going forward. Indeed, Barton resolves to do just that by the end of the issue, just as one of Marvel’s major villains vows to get vengeance on Hawkeye. The issue could work as a strong standalone, but hints at a bigger story, indicating that the off ill-treated character is in safe hands for now. Aja and Hollingsworth’s artwork is once again phenomenal, bringing a gritty realism to this world of costumed heroes. It will be interesting to see what they do when Hawkeye suits up on a more regular basis. A must read.

    Bits Rating: ★★★★


    The Phantom Stranger #0  – DC Comics, Dan Didio (writer), Brent Anderson (artist)

    The Phantom Stranger #0The DC Free Comic Book Day issue gave us the pivotal Newish 52 story in which the mysterious ‘woman in red’ Pandora, The Question and the Phantom Stranger were introduced. This issue is the first to deliver on the promise of the bigger story that will lead us into next year’s Trinity War, but it is nothing more than exposition with a bit of uninspiring art behind it. What begins by covering the same ground as the FCBD book rapidly becomes a weighty, pseudo-biblical tale, plodding through a ton of explanatory text for what is otherwise a fairly straightforward story.  There is a bit of a reveal towards the end, with the introduction of another familiar character, but it all feels far too contrived. You can almost hear Didio screaming “And that’s the origin of that!” after every page. The series that is said to begin next month will hopefully be a short one leading into Trinity War, as what we have on the page here is not enough to sustain a series.

    Bits Rating: ★★


    The Road to Oz #1 (of 6)Marvel, Eric Shanower (writer), Skottie Young (artist)

    The Road to Oz #1 (Skottie Young)The dream team of Eric Shanower and Skottie Young’s fifth foray into L. Frank Baum’s classic series of Oz books is, unsurprisingly, another delightful adventure.  The Eisner Award-winning series launches into the Baum’s fifth novel (strangely enough), and shows no signs of losing its magic. Here Dorothy begins her journey in Kansas, first meeting the Shaggy Man who is not looking for the road to Butterfield. Along with her little dog Toto, the trio soon find themselves at a previously unseen crossroads, and decide to take the seventh road. This first issue takes us up to the meeting with  Button Bright, a little boy in a sailor’s suit, and some foxes in uniforms. The deliberately unhurried pace gives this the sequential art equivalent of a lazy spring afternoon, where the destination is nowhere near as important as the journey. Young’s artwork has been one of the defining features of these comics, and in many ways have become synonymous with the very idea of Oz. This is the start of another magical adventure, and we can’t wait until the next one.

    Bits Rating: ★★★★

  • Graphic Bits: Deadpool Kills the Marvel Universe, First X-Men, Harvest, Hawkeye, and More!

    Graphic Bits: Deadpool Kills the Marvel Universe, First X-Men, Harvest, Hawkeye, and More!

    Don’t have time for full reviews of comics? Then check out Graphic Bits: bite sized chunks of comic book goodness designed to get behind the panels and into your hearts.

    Has it really been a year since DC’s New 52 launched? This week (1 August 2012),  Action Comics #12 and Green Arrow #12 turn 1 with mixed results, the fight continues in Avengers Vs. X-Men #9, and we look at no less than five series debuts in Marvel’s Deadpool Kills The Marvel Universe, First X-Men and Hawkeye and Image’s Harvest.

    Don’t forget to listen to Behind the Panels, our weekly comic book podcast, as well.

    Action Comics #12 CoverAction Comics #12 [DC Comics, Grant Morrison (writer), Rags Morales, Cafu, Brad Walker (artists), Bits Rating: ★★]: Oh how the mighty have fallen this month. Grant Morrison’s usually strong take on the big league superheroes slips badly one year out. Although offering us glimpses of what a multiverse Superman might have looked like, this issue is primarily a big ol’ fight with a fairly uninteresting villain. It is typical of Morrison’s run to date, all about psychic entities from beyond and Earth-shattering consequences. None of them pay off in this mish-mash of panels and new information that pushes the book into the playground of the preposterous. Superman can learn medical surgery in five minutes and perform it with his thumbnail. He can read a flash drive without plugging it into a computer. He isn’t the only god here, with Batman arriving with a last minute deus ex machina that might restore the Clark Kent status quo faster than we think. All this does is negate the rare but genuine character moments, such as firemen complaining about having to clean everything up. Three artists on the issue actually works out OK, with the panels feeling consistent throughout. It is just a shame that this issue, nor the story arc it belongs to, can claim the same.

    Avengers Vs X-Men #9 (AxX)Avengers Vs. X-Men #9 [Marvel,  (writers), (art) ★] – This is more like it. It’s no secret that we’ve not been enjoying AvX at all, as t has simply felt like a precursor to another event. However, after several months of water-treading and in-fighting, we get the powerhouse issue we should have seen two months ago, one that balances character and smackdown action in a way we’ve been sorely missing. Spider-man is the focus of this issue, and what better example of “with great power comes great responsibility” than one of the ‘smaller’ Avengers standing up and taking his place. Through Peter Parker, we see just how bad things have gotten for the Avengers camp, but what is more intriguing is how things are unravelling for what is left of the Phoenix Five. This is the darkest chapter of the saga to date, and it is an epic issue that actually moves the story along at an amazing pace, something sadly lacking from the previous entries. Peter’s musings on what makes a hero to Hope, along with  a much-needed dose of humour, means that this book isn’t taking itself quite as seriously as it has been for the last few months. Adam Kubert really steps up to the plate on the art too, matching the pace inch-for-inch and giving us some glorious splash pages this time around. It’s still not perfect, but another three of these and the event will end much better than it started!

    Daredevil #16 coverDaredevil #16 [Marvel, Mark Waid (writer), Chris Samnee (artist), Bits Rating: ★★★★½]: We never have a bad word to say about this Eisner Award winning run on Daredevil, and the latest issue gives us no cause for concern. Last issue, Waid took away Daredevil’s senses temporarily, and here he lets somebody else – namely Hank Pym The Giant Man (aka Ant-Man) – literally get inside Matt Murdoch’s head, with Tony Stark and Dr. Strange also making cameos. The mostly personal journey manages to still pack in some decent action as well, but the net result is a better understanding of what makes both Pym and Murdoch tick. The personal and super drama finally take their toll on Matt’s relationship with Foggy, which comes to a head in the final pages of the book. This is simply compulsory reading. While it is bad news that Paolo Rivera is leaving the book as regular interior artist, and his work has literally changed the way Daredevil views the world, the equally amazing Chris Samnee is remaining, and his work on this issue means that this is a cause for joy. If Hawkeye hadn’t come out this week, with its similar focus on character in the big bad New York City, then this book would have been our Pick of the Week. Let’s call it a tie then, shall we.

    Deadpool Kills the Marvel Universe #1 CoverDeadpool Kills The Marvel Universe #1 (of 4) [Marvel, Cullen Bunn (writer), Dalibor Talajić (artist), Bits Rating: ★★]: Oh hai! We’ve met before haven’t we? Almost forgotten, Punisher Kills the Marvel Universe was Garth Ennis’ take on the mass slaughter of our favourite Marvel heroes, but it was only when he returned to the character with Welcome Back Frank that it came to light again. The concept isn’t even new to Deadpool, with Evil Deadpool floating about for some time. This alternate universe imagining has some nice moments to be sure, and the opening pages are actually some of the most atmospherically paced panels we’ve seen for some time. Yet where Ennis played it (mostly) for laughs, Cullen Bunn plays this purely for menace, something that is solidified by Dalibor Talajic’s incredibly dark artwork. Deadpool’s multiple voiceovers sell his insanity, but rather than providing Frank Castle’s emotional reason for wiping out the Marvel Universe, something that led to a touching conclusion with Daredevil in that book, it merely provides fodder for fanservice and mass carnage. If this had a target audience, it is mid-1990s fan boys who yearn for a return to foil holographic covers. Let’s hope that Deadpool sees himself as part of the Marvel Universe and ends this quickly.

    The First X-Men #1 - Cover (Neal Adams)The First X-Men #1 [Marvel, Neal Adams and Christos Gage (writers), Neal Adams (art) ★★½] – Having run out of places to sandwich in Wolverine in the current continuity, this book takes us back to the heyday of Harlem, “many years ago”. Effectively retconning the history of the X-Men, this supposes that Logan drags Sabretooth along as he sets out to help young mutant kids get off the streets and into the warm and fuzzies. To this aim, he approaches a young Charles Xavier at Oxford, still denying his mutant abilities and on the cusp of marrying Moira (who is full of “Och, loves”). If you can put this continuity gaff aside for the moment, it is hard to reconcile this Logan with the wildman loner who was only tamed by the X-Men. As with this week’s Hawkeye (below), this is a case of comics imitating the films, with the retro style surely aimed at those who loved X-Men: First Class. Sadly, the great Neal Adams’ old-school style doesn’t gel with modern comics, with Wolverine looking blocky and awkward, a lumbering giant rather than a killing machine. The rest of the art is fairly inconsistent, visuals often garbled. The series nevertheless has promise if you can ignore half-a-century of continuity, which is occasionally a good idea when fresh stories are needed.

    Green Arrow - Issue 12Green Arrow #12 [DC Comics, Ann Nocenti (writer), Harvey Tolibao (artist), Bits Rating: ★★½]: – One year on, and three writers later, Green Arrow remains without a distinctive voice of its own in the New 52. Here Nocenti gives us a graphic version of the Wikipedia entry to the People’s Republic of China, throwing in as many cliched cultural references as possible as a substitute for depth. It reads like a pale imitation of some of Gail Simone’s best work on pre-Flashpoint Birds of Prey, and it is becoming increasingly clear that DC are shaping Arrow to be more in line with whatever his television counterpart will be come October. This story has become quite ridiculous, with Oliver Queen stranded in China and relying on a series of increasingly outlandish gadgets (including a holographic arrow gun of some kind) with which to kick ass and take names. At many points, Nocenti resorts to explaining what we can already see on panel, making this a throwback to the Silver Age without the corresponding quality. Tolibao is the fourth artist on the series in the last 12 months, which is perhaps another reason why this title can’t find its way, and it simply doesn’t suit the character. The final page promises an origin story next from Judd Winick, before the “Chinese adventure continues” in #13. We know which one we are looking forward to.

    Harvest #1 Cover (Image Comics)Harvest #1 (of 5) [Image Comics, A.J. Lieberman (writer), Colin Lorimer (artist), Bits Rating: ★★★]: Without a doubt, this year has belonged to Image Comics. From the debut of Fatale in January, Saga in March, Mind the Gap in May and last month’s Revival, they have consistently proven that they have what it takes to gather a roster of writers and artists who can instantly draw in audiences week after week. So too is the case with Harvest, which is undoubtedly the strongest debut in a week of strong debuts. Lieberman’s story time jumps in the best Christopher Nolan cinematic tradition, giving us a view of protagonist Doctor Dane as he seemingly reaches the end of his tether. Our “hero” is an alcoholic drug-addicted surgeon, whose vices lead him into a seedy black market. The story promises all manner of twists and turns, and we are spun about several times over in a first issue that wastes no time in plunging us into the deep end. Yet Lorimer’s art is the star here. Noir in its style and muted colours, he simply has a different way of looking at a scene to most artists, unafraid to take his “camera” to vantage points we don’t normally view in sequential art and tripping us out completely on whatever Dane is taking. The only disappointment is that there are only four more of these left in the coming months.

    Hawkeye #1 (Marvel, 2012)Hawkeye #1 [Marvel, Matt Fraction (writer), David Aja (artist), Bits Rating: ★★★★½ – PICK OF THE WEEK] – Superhero reboots/debuts aren’t that uncommon, but good ones are often few and far between. With a renewed fan-base, thanks to that little indie film The Avengers, Hawkeye gets his first solo series in a while. Just as Mark Waid crafted a version of Daredevil that is wholly familiar yet completely new and fresh, so too has Matt Fraction with the underused Hawkeye. Yet the strength here is that Fraction doesn’t concentrate on the Avenger but the man who has come up from the streets and has to work every day at being good. This was touched on recently in an issue of Avenging Spider-man, and with the exception of the first page and a half, this book is about Clint Barton in civvies doing his bit for the neighbourhood. Aja’s artwork is magnificent artwork is unquestionably perfect, suiting this gritty world of the New York streets. You can almost smell the same air Barton refers to on panel. Matt Hollingsworth’s subdued colour palette must also be commended for making this feel like a lived-in world. DC’s archer should take notes on this one.

  • 8 new character banners for The Avengers

    8 new character banners for The Avengers

    Disney Australia and Marvel have released eight (count ’em) new character banners for next year’s event The Avengers, finally offering unobscured portraits of the main characters glimpsed in the earlier character pieces.

    Continuing the epic big-screen adventures started in Iron ManThe Incredible Hulk,Iron Man 2Thor and Captain America: The First Avenger, Marvel’s The Avengers is the superhero team up of a lifetime.

    Starring Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, Mark Ruffalo, Chris Hemsworth, Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner and Samuel L. Jackson, and directed by Joss Whedon, Marvel’s The Avengers is based on the ever-popular Marvel comic book series The Avengers, first published in 1963.

    The Avengers is released in Australia on 25 April 2012 from Disney. It will be released in the US a week later on 4 May 2012.

    Click to enlarge

    The Avengers poster - Australia - Loki

    The Avengers poster - Australia - Black Widow

    The Avengers poster - Australia - Thor

    The Avengers poster - Australia - Iron Man
    The Avengers poster - Australia - Captain America
    The Avengers poster - Australia - Hawkeye
    The Avengers poster - Australia - Bruce Banner (Hulk)
    The Avengers poster - Australia - Nick Fury