Showing posts with label batman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label batman. Show all posts

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Quick Comic Reviews–September 10th, 2011 New DC 52 Part 2

Well, the first round of reviews was interesting and a bit of a mixed bag.  Let’s delve in the rest of this week’s New 52 from DC!  Don’t forget to vote for your favorite!

262271Justice League International #1 – Written by Dan Jurgens, Penciled by Aaron Lopresti and Inked by Matt Ryan.  There are people disappearing, there’s a line-up of super heroes being selected, Batman lurks, people are mad about the Justice League moving in the Hall of Justice.  There you have the issue in a nutshell.  Now keep in mind, it isn’t a bad nutshell, but just a nutshell.  The things I liked was Guy Gardner’s flat out refusal to join and Booster being back to his roots as a guy nobody else is willing to put much trust into.  Booster is forced into the lead role, Rocket Red is fun, and Godiva really seems to dig Booster.  Its hard to do much character development in this one, but I have a feeling we’ll see some as we go.  I really thought the art was very solid and fit in well with the team presented.  I wanted to like this issue a lot more as I was a big fan of JLI and Justice League Europe back in the day.  Dan just doesn’t have quite the biting wit of Giffen and company.  But this is a pretty good first issue, chock full of superheroes and issues that need to be resolved, so worth picking up, but don’t expect anything sensational.

 

262276Static Shock #1 – Written by Scott McDaniel and John Rozum, Penciled by Scott McDaniel and Inked by Jonathan Glapion and Le Beau Underwood.  This one was a bit confusing.  I felt that most of this was a bit hard to say what exactly was happening.  I agree that they need to have a Dakota-verse character still and this was the best character of the bunch.  However, the story just didn’t grab me and I was never really sure what was going on.  It just didn’t have a great flow to it.  Some guy puts on a suit he shouldn’t in STAR Labs and flies around and Static chases him, the guy ends up getting killed by mysterious bad guys who sniper him from miles away somehow.  We get a whole lot of Static flying around, a very brief look at his home life, and then more flying about.  While some of his background is revealed, it is still a tad confusing how he’s hooked up with Hardware in the first place.  I really liked the artwork and the vibrant colors in this issue.  However, if you’re going to target this character to a younger audience, you really need to make it a bit more accessible to kids.  They rated it for Teen for some unknown reason.  Nothing to see here folks.  Move along!  Move along.

 

262265Animal Man #1 – Written by Jeff Lemire, Penciled by Travel Foreman and Inked by Travel Foreman and Dan Green.  This comic has that old Vertigo feel where things are a bit “off” and the art is a bit more sketchy and a bit darker.  I do like the old goggles and orange A.  Why they had to change it to white, I have no idea, but I would prefer the orange.  Then again, I’m weird.  Speaking of things that are strange, welcome to Animal Man.  And what a fantastic voyage it is.  It opened with an “interview” of Buddy (Animal Man) Baker from a “magazine” which was about the only thing that annoyed me.  It read like a really boring and bland interview that celebrities give ALL the time.  It really just annoyed the crap out of me.  Other than that, the issue then gets off to an interesting start as Buddy has been spending much time doing things heroes should.  When he finally gets off his loafing butt and intervenes, he finds there’s much more about himself than meets the eye when he ends up bleeding from said eyes.  We soon learn about the Red.  I guess we have the Green for plants and the Red for animals and it is hinted that these two things will eventually give Swamp Thing and Animal Man a common bond.  I’m all for that!  The color here is very muted and the artwork isn’t for everyone.  I’m not a fan of artwork like what Travel Foreman does usually, but given the tone of the issue and overall feel, it works.  This is a really good issue that you should pick up if you like more adult themes in comics!

 

262278Swamp Thing #1 – Written by Scott Snyder and Art by Yanick Paquette.  Swamp Thing returns in grand glory.  Ignore the fact that the return of the Swamp Thing from Brightest Day ever happened, because technically it didn’t anyway.  We see mass outbreaks of birds and animals dropping dead (ah, true to life!) in groups.  We then meet Alec Holland as it were and Superman drops in on him for help.  There’s some other mysterious stuff going on and the Green is apparently not very pleased with Alec trying to live his life.  We get explained some of Alec, but there’s still a bit of mystery as to whether he’s even Swamp Thing or if he can control Swamp Thing or what.  I’m pretty interested in finding out though!  Scott Snyder puts a lot of thought into this character and makes a very interesting first issue.  Yanick Paquette’s artwork is fantastic and creates atmosphere in it.  So altogether we have a tremendous debut of a character that has had his fair share of changes.  If future issues are anything like this one, it will be one hell of a series.  Pick this one up!

 

262273Men of War #1Written by Ivan Brandon and Art by Tom Derenick.  Has anyone been hankering for some new adventures of Sgt. Rock?  Ok, well here’s how he became a Sergeant in the first place!  Modernized for today’s type of wars, this one just didn’t hit home for me.  I didn’t really feel like he was the Sgt. Rock kind of character in the first place, so that didn’t help him.  There’s too much yelling back and forth early on and it came off super lame. There are some scenes where you just can’t tell what exactly is going on either and I think I blame that on the art not making it clear who is who in the scenes.  Not that we had much time to set up any characters, but still it didn’t seem very clear.  Then we have super heroes fighting?  Ok, could we just leave the super heroes out of the war series?  Please!  Ugh!  The art was ok, but there were just times were I couldn’t tell what was going on clearly.  The second story is Written by Jonathan Vankin and Art by Phil Winslade.  This story gives me a bit of feeling like I used to get from The ‘Nam back in the day.  The characters grow a bit as the story develops and we get a good surprise at the end.  This homage to our modern day heroes overseas hits a bit more spot-on and saves this issue from being a waste.  I liked the story laid out about the Navy Seals and I hope there’s plenty more of them in the future.  Overall, an average issue that should have been better, but reinventing Sgt. Rock just didn’t work for me and made this one somewhat forgettable.

 

262266Batgirl #1 – Written by Gail Simone, Penciled by Ardian Syaf and Inked by Vicente Cifuentes.  We get introduced to Barbara Gordon and for some reason, the happenings in “the Killing Joke” actually happened, but she was only paralyzed for a few years.  So we have continuity that isn’t continuity?  Anyway, she is actually a pretty interesting character and I really like how her costume was done.  She isn’t infallible and she has to move forward past some things.  So in the first issue we see some growth of character.  We also get a decent amount of action and a mysterious villain that I thought was well done.  There was a lot to like in this issue and is definitely a solid #1 and it looks like this could be a great series.  Excellent art, great writer, it just works, worth picking up!

 

262267Batwing #1 – Written by Judd Winick and Art by Ben Oliver.  This is one of those titles that I didn’t have any expectations for.  It looked like it might even be rather awful.  I stand corrected.  First off, the artwork in this book is magnificent and the coloring by Brian Reber is fantastic as well.  It all came together into a perfect conglomeration.  The story told here is about Batwing and mainly his background working with the local law enforcement and his juggling the two things.  But there’s a lot more than that going on.  There’s an interesting mystery mixed in with everything.  Keep in mind, this issue is a tad gruesome in spots, so it isn’t for kids.  For the rest of you, this is a grand introduction to a character I really had no interest in at first and is a title worth checking out!

 

262269Green Arrow #1 -  Written by J.T. Krul, Penciled by Dan Jurgens and Inked by George Perez.  First off, let me admit one thing.  I’m a huge fan of Dan Jurgens’ art.  He does a simply fantastic job with this issue and does a great job of storytelling with his pencils.  But teaming him with George Perez to ink those beautiful pencils produces and even better result.  I was really liking the art in this one.  The Arrow himself feels a tad more like Batman than Green Arrow.  Maybe even a tad Tony Stark-ish.  But what really made me annoyed was the “Oracle”-like team he had running things.  I didn’t feel they really added much to the story and detracted from what could have been a stronger character.  But in this issue, Green Arrow fights a bunch of bad guys who do bad things, yadda yadda.  His own company complains about him ad nauseam.  You get the picture.  A decent enough issue, but not much of a hook.  Despite the great artwork, my overall feel from this issue was that it was simply ok, nothing great, just kind of average and that’s not what you want to do in your number 1 issues.


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Saturday, September 18, 2010

Quick Comic Book Reviews–August 19th, 2010

Huge set of reviews here folks!  I’ve got plenty more stuff I’m reading, but boy, having a third kid under the age of 4 really takes away most of your time.  I’m struggling to read all this stuff, let alone write about it.  Anyway, hope you enjoy!

batman703Batman #703 – Written by Fabian Nicieza and Artwork by Cliff Richards.  A Fabian Nicieza issue of Batman! Boy, does that have me stoked, but Fabian has always been one of my favorite writers.  He doesn’t do anything that takes your breath away, but just tells good, solid, interesting stories.  This is the story of Batman losing track of a new Getaway Genius and trying to track this one down.  Of course, Batman doesn’t know it isn’t the original (or does he?) and trying to figure out how to do so.  Well, it also appears that Vicki Vale is getting inside info on where the Genius will strike next.  So Dick Grayson confronts her about the Batman insinuations she has been making recently, trying to expose who Batman and Robin really are.  So there’s some build-up for another big plot down the road.  This is one of those self-contained issues where you read the whole story and you’re pretty much done.  But it’s a really fun story and these are the kind of stories I really enjoy as well.  The artwork doesn’t do much for me.  The facials are pretty good, but Cliff Richards’ style just leaves me cold.  But the story made up for it and the art wasn’t terrible, just not my cup of tea.  This is worth picking up if you’re looking for a comic that you can pick-up and read just to test it out this month.

avccru2Avengers: The Children’s Crusade #2 of 4 – Written by Allan Heinberg and Penciled by Jim Cheung.  The supposed spiritual heirs of Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver are a part of the Young Avengers.  Wiccan and Speed.  They are on a quest to try and find the Scarlet Witch to help Wiccan maintain control of his powers.  However, Magneto also has the same idea.  In this issue, we have a run-in with the New Avengers who believe Magneto is up to no good.  Throw in a guest appearance of Quicksilver and this issue is really pretty interesting.  I managed to completely miss the first issue and I’m kind of sorry I did.  I really like Jim Cheung’s artwork and the big Avengers fight scene is great.  So the art really adds to this issue.  I think, overall, this is an outstanding issue with a purpose.  I’m actually very interested to see what happens next.  This could be a great mini-series!  Check it out!

amazspid641The Amazing Spider-Man #641 – Written by Joe Quesada and art by Paolo Rivera and also Joe Quesada, Danny Miki, and Richard Isanove.  So we reach the final installment of “One Moment In Time” storyline.  We see what finally happened to drive the relationship apart in this alternate reality.  Well, let me just say this.  This is the most piss poor excuse for a Spider-Man story ever.  Joe hinted that it was a story to bring Mary Jane and Peter back together, but instead, it’s to drive the final wedge into their relationship so that it’s finally over and he can probably get rid of MJ.  The only good thing from this run is that Paolo Rivera is a pretty decent artist.  Quesada’s artwork has been terrible and he’s really just become a hack.  I’m so glad he’s done with the series now so that we can get back to some real stories.  I was excited about this story at first, but man, he took it in a different direction than anyone expected and gave us a very forgettable story.  It wasn’t interesting at all.  The drama was pretty non-existent.  I guess when you’re the Editor in Chief you can push crap out the door and people will tell you it is good.  Hear that Didio and your terrible Outsiders issues?  But anyway, don’t pick this up, don’t waste your time, Quesada shows that he doesn’t connect with the Spider-Man audience.

batrobin14Batman and Robin #14 – Written by Grant Morrison and Artwork by Frazier Irving.  This is part two of “Batman and Robin Must Die!” and as bizarre and macabre as it is, a wild and fascinating romp.  Robin attempts to take out the Joker, but alas, it was a set-up by the Joker the whole time.  Commissioner Gordon is kidnapped by Pyg’s piglike perps of putridness.  I don’t want to give too much away, but darn is it a wild one folks.  The story flows very fast and reaches a heart pounding pace as the good guys try to outwit the bad guys who are all but stepping on each other.  The artwork in this issue grew on me a bit.  Once again, not a style I liked, but it does portray the rather nightmarish images in a realistic sort of way.  At times, it’s like an insane hallucination frame-by-frame.  As much as I didn’t like it last issue, to me, with Grant Morrison’s crazy writing style, yeah, the art fits.  I’m not crazy about it, but it has a noir feel which I think is really some of the stylization that we’re going for here.  Overall, this issue a roaring romp of a good time, so pick it up!

secretsix25Secret Six #25 – Written by Gail Simone and Art by J. Calafiore.  So we throw out the storyline from the last issue because apparently it was just a weird thing they decided to do.  So we have our two Secret Six teams out there on their own missions and their paths are about to cross.  Bane and Jeanette are leading up a team that now includes King Shark, Giganta, Lady Vic and Dwarfstar.  Catman’s team consists of Scandal Savage, Ragdoll, Deadshot and Black Alice.  What’s this?  You didn’t know there were two teams either?  Well join the club, because apparently they don’t like each other.  I guess there was something that went on awhile back that happened but it didn’t, but now it did, or… ok… this issue has some great moments, but it is a giant WTF moment.  I have no idea what missions these teams are on, why they’re on them or anything.  I’m completely lost for a second issue in a row.  At least the previous issue some things made sense if we’re just playing pretend in that one.  This however… just ugh!  I love Calafiore’s artwork and he has some key facial expressions that he hits dead on in here.  It is as twisted as always, but also a chaotic mess that leaves you tapping out waiting for some sort of logical explanation.  Poor storytelling and mass confusion makes this a must miss.

shadowland3Shadowland #3 – Written by Andy Diggle and Pencils by Billy Tan.  The third issue of the soon to be epic.  We get a better glimpse at what Daredevil is truly becoming in this issue as we see things spiraling out of control.  The heroes are turned back and have to make decisions on what to do.  The Punisher returns in his normal form again and Ghost Rider is fully back in business.  The return of the Punisher to his normal form isn’t even recognized or mentioned by the other heroes.  Not even a “I thought you were dead!”  Nope, just, “hey Pun, how you doing.  Shoot anyone lately?”  Tarantula shows deepening concern for affairs here.  Moon Knight is taking on a more active role.  There’s some good spots, but I just don’t get the Punisher part.  Maybe they’ll retcon his death.  This IS Marvel after all and they can do that.  The artwork is pretty decent and is really matching moodiness, but it was a tad brighter overall this issue.  Another really solid issue with one huge gap in logic, but still a good series to read as Matt Murdock’s decent into madness continues.

btgirl14Batgirl #14 – Written by Bryan Q. Miller and Penciled by Lee Garbett.  In this issue, Supergirl drops in for a guest appearance and wants to hang with our Batgirl, Stephanie Brown, for a day of fun.  What starts as a day of fun quickly goes awry due to a messed up science experiment (do science experiments ever go right in comics?) and we have carnage on our hands.  The experiment manages to create 24 vampires that the girls have to kill.  It’s a crazy and fun romp with some witty zingers and just hilarious dialogue.  Whoever Bryan Q. Miller is, he does some darned good work.  Yeah, the story itself is kind of weak, but it’s made up for by the characters cutting loose and having fun.  It doesn’t take itself seriously, so that helps.  I’ve liked this Batgirl the best so far, plus her costume is probably the best designed one I’ve seen.  Overall, she’s been a great character and her series has been pretty decent.  The artwork by Garbett is great.  He even captures great eye-rolling moments, and captures a great image of a vampire riding a Segue scooter that made me about die laughing.  Awesome job, pick up this campy but fun issue of Batgirl and have some great laughs.

teentitans86Teen Titans #86 – Written by Felicia D. Henderson and Penciled by Jose Luis.  Well, we continue from last issue and the Wyld creature or whatever it is.  It possesses Miss Martian and is attempting to kill off Raven.  So we see the whole Titans team trying to take care of business and rescue her.  I’m not exactly sure what all is going on in this issue, but it has some moments.  Garth’s overzealousness to rescue Raven shines through as we know about his feelings for her.  Wonder Girl and Superboy continue their romance (yawn already) and the only character that I really like, Kid Flash has like one line I think.  But anyway, this story does show that this comic can and may be turning around.  We then have the Coven of Three back-up feature.  Written by Rex Ogle and Art by Ted Naifeh.  I’m not big on this whole Coven of Three, but I was a tad surprised with this one.  Enchantress isn’t quite like I remember her either, but that’s ok.  So our heroes (?) are trying to find their three avatars to supposedly fend off impending doom.  So the search begins to find them, but just when everything looks good, things go awry.  But it has an interesting surprise at the end that got a chuckle out of me.  A mostly “meh” issue, but nothing deplorable, just slightly below average, certainly not worth rushing out to get.

daredevil510Daredevil #510 – Written by Andy Diggle and Anthony Johnston and Art by Marco Checchetto.  Foggy Nelson and Dakota North try to play it safe and fail miserably.  Meanwhile the city is going crazy and insane things are happening.  Tarantula falls even further from grace and questions the unhinged and possessed Murdock.  The artwork here is fantastic and really captures the essence of everything going on.  It’s kept dark enough, but it isn’t quite the sketchy art in the last few issues and that’s ok, because this works.  I love this story as Daredevil is one bad brother who is hell-bent on his style of justice and nothing else will do.  However, I just feel like we all know how this one ends.  He’ll be exorcised and then run off for a year or something because he feels bad for all that he’s done, yadda yadda.  But they could surprise me and Diggle would be just the kind of guy who would throw you a curveball and set you down swinging.  But this issue is excellent.  One of the best issues yet!  If you haven’t been reading the Shadowland stuff, this is the issue to buy and buy now!


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Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Comic Movie Review–Batman: Under the Red Hood

I first read the story of Jason Todd (the 2nd Robin) years ago.  I found a Batman issue at my local pharmacy in the small town I grew up in.  On it, depicted the bloody face of the Boy Wonder with apparent rubble behind his head.  I knew that issue had to be a monumental issue given the name “A Death in the Family”.  What happened there rocked the comic world.
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Fast forward about 15-20 years later and DC decided to unleash a story about someone named the Red Hood.  The first time it ended with a red herring. Then they did a second story about the Red Hood and it turned into what people had wanted from the first go at it.  Now DC is bringing that story and part of the Death in the Family story to life in an all new animated movie on DVD and Blu-Ray.
So what did I think of the new movie based on these events?
Well, the story is simply about Batman trying to find out who the Red Hood is and then, ultimately, stop him.  The Red Hood styles himself a good guy who is willing to go to extremes to get the job done, including bankrolling himself through criminals and collecting from them.  He’s like the mafia of the mafia, but just one man.  The Red Hood also tries to draw the attention of Batman and the reasons (if you haven’t read the comics) is going to surprise you.
This is the epitome of a great story brought to life via animation.  This story would never have gotten told in live action, but here we see everything take form.  The animation style is excellent and it helps you forget that you’re watching animation at times.  The voice acting isn’t bad at all, some if down right excellent.  Bruce Greenwood does his usual spot-on Dark Knight approach.  Jensen Ackles does an effective Red Hood.  My favorite though is Neil Patrick Harris as Nightwing.  So the voice acting is very good here.
The story is very closely told to the comics with some minor modifications.  The time of year and place that Robin died at was different and the way he was brought back was altered.  But the changes made sense and made it more effective for the format it was presented in.  In fact, condensing the story down to make it accessible really brought home some key points.
Some of my favorite scenes are the flashback sequences.  The way those were done were amazing.  And the final one was something a good movie can only hope to have as it’s final “lump-in-the-throat” moment.  But there were plenty of other things that made this great.
The sheer brutality of this makes this movie not for young kids.  Probably more like teens on up.  It is very grim and dark in most of the tone. 
What we had was a lot of storytelling and plenty of action to keep you entertained as well.  The story had a lot of exciting fight scenes that were also well done and the animation very smooth.  Judd Winick wrote this and did an excellent job of lovingly taking the material and transferring it to a different medium.  So hats off to DC and everyone involved.
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A five star excellent adaptation.  A must for any comic book fan!  One of the best animated films I’ve seen yet and I hope for more just like this!

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Monday, September 13, 2010

Quick Comic Book Reviews–August 13th, 2010

More catching up and more fun today!  This time around we have some pretty good stuff and only a few duds.  Also, in Friday’s Sioux City Journal there will be an interview with me, so check that out!  On with the show!  (I just did an old comic book thing, put exclamation points at the end of everything!  Again!  Wow!  Ok, just stop.)

capam609Captain America #609 – Written by Ed Brubaker and Penciled by Butch Guice.  We continue to see what’s going down with Baron Zemo’s master plan of revenge on Bucky Cap.  And this time Zemo leaves a message for Bucky and he’s off, knowing that he’s probably walking straight into a trap.  It kind of has an old movie feel to it where the villian tries to play a head game with the hero and sets up traps.  So the cat and mouse game comes to bear this issue.  The artwork is pretty solid with this issue and the story works pretty well.  Nothing groundbreaking here, but it’s pretty decent.  We also have a back-up Nomad story as well.  Written by Sean McKeever and Art by Filipe Andrade.  Nomad mulls over starting training with Steve Rogers and joining him.  Of course, this could have profound implications for the Young Allies team.  Very appropriate that Sean McKeever is the writer in that case.  A lot of inner turmoil going on here and Steve Rogers helping out.  This is a good back-up story.  Overall, pretty solid issue, nothing spectacular but very solid.

batman702Batman #702 – Written by Grant Morrison and Art by Tony Daniel.  Well, leave it to DC to come out with an issue that deals with how they’re going to explain-away the eventual turn of Bruce Wayne.  And they do owe that much to the fans.  The explanation I find lacking though.  Grant Morrison has been hit and miss with me.  While I’m a huge fan of his Animal Man and Doom Patrol work, this explanation leaves me feeling completely unexcited about the return of Bruce Wayne.  DC has pretty much always let it be known that eventually Bruce Wayne would be back and it was just a matter of time.  They continue to handle it a lot like how Captain America was handled by Marvel.  Neither time did I buy it, but the end result of Steve Rogers returning in a different role was good.  I’m hoping this pans out along those lines as well.  The artwork has a very sketchy feel to it and it wasn’t too bad.  There were spots where it was excellent, actually.  I think this might be a good issue if you don’t know what happened to Bruce Wayne and want to find out what occurred, otherwise the story isn’t anything interesting.

curseofmutstormgambit1Curse of the Mutants: Storm & Gambit #1 – Written by Chuck Kim and Penciled by Chris Bachalo.  This issue in the crossover event of… whatever, brings us to the adventures of… guess who!  Storm and Gambit, just like the cover states!  This one-shot gives us the tale of the quest for Dracula’s body.  And guess what?  The story is actually pretty interesting!  Storm and Gambit form an interesting team that I didn’t think would be all the good, but it was.  Despite the artwork being a tad too “manga” for my taste, I couldn’t deny that the artwork also helped with the ebb and flow of the issue.  In some aspects, “manga” style sometimes leads to some simpler but more fluid artwork, and it really worked well here.  There are a few “mystery” pages where it looked like they were just suddenly scribbled together.  I’m not sure if that was entirely intentional or not.  I loved seeing Storm have to rely on something other than her weather manipulation powers, it was a pleasure to see.  Some hard choices have to be made this issue as well.  The best book in the Curse of the Mutants crossover yet.  That may not be saying much, but this is a very good issue and enjoyable!

newmut16New Mutants #16 – Written by Zeb Wells and Art by Leonard Kirk.  A quick word of warning, this issue does not feature the actual New Mutants at all.  Instead, it focuses on General Ulysses and the history of his group in Limbo.  So we see a lot of weird stuff going on here and why Ulysses is so peeved right now.  It’s more of a military viewpoint and really, some interesting stuff.  I like the fact that Zeb Wells is willing to basically make this a New Mutants free issue of New Mutants.  He understands that the backstory does have to be told for everyone to understand what is driving this General.  And better yet, there are some mysteries that could come from all of this.  There is a great surprise at the end of this issue as well and boy was I stoked to see it.  I liked what I saw, I won’t ruin the surprise though.  The artwork by Leonard Kirk was solid as always and he drew some very interesting scenes quite well.  I’m not sure a lot of artists would have taken this task on quite so well.  Zeb really is doing a fantastic job of setting major things up!  Honestly, this is a pretty great issue and if you’re a "Marvel Mutants” fan, this is an issue I highly recommend.

wondwom602Wonder Woman #602- Written by J. Michael Straczynski and Penciled by Don Kramer with Eduardo Pansica.  Well, our second full JMS issue of Wonder Woman and we’re treated to Wonder Woman returning to help save the Amazons from the terrible invading army that’s trying to kill them.  I can’t quite figure out why the soldiers are so hell bent on killing the Amazons, but whatever.  We get a glimpse at some back story and some moral issues that Diana must face.  So what do we really get?  Well, you get to see Wonder Woman kick some butt and wax about the choices she must make.  Nothing too spectacular.  I honestly get tired of always having to see what the Amazons are up to.  I would rather JMS have just ditched the Amazonians and made Diana deal with the world we live in and integrate more into that.  He, however, just keeps bringing us back to this.  The Amazonians are the reason I never found Wonder Woman that interesting.  It kind of continues to be that way, so I guess, nothing has changed.  It is alright for what it is, but nothing very special going on here.

wolvie1Wolverine #1 – Written by Jason Aaron and Penciled by Renato Guedes.  When I first heard the concept of Wolverine going to hell, I was skeptical.  We have vampires going on over in the normal X-Men series and now we have this to boot?  Well, I was wrong about this one.  We start off with Wolverine visiting Wraith and them talking about things like faith.  We then end up seeing a much different Wolverine and apparently some minions from Hell going after Wolvie’s girlfriend.  I’m really interested in knowing what exactly happened to Wolverine and the implications this has.  The only thing I’m disappointed in is the continuity that Marvel has.  When I say that, all the other X-issues will probably have Wolverine acting normal and everything and never even mention that this happened.  That gets annoying in a shared universe how nothing ever ties into anything else until it’s time for the big crossovers.  However, I did like this issue and the artwork is very well done.  The back-up story with Silver Samurai wasn’t very entertaining though.  Worth checking out and seeing what the heck is happening with the world’s favorite mutant.

taskm1Taskmaster #1 – Written by Fred Van Lente and Art by Jefte Palo.  The Taskmaster finds the repercussions of his recent actions come bearing down on him.  He has managed to anger the entire underworld of evil henchmen, like Hydra, A.I.M., and Secret Empire.  Boy do things go downhill for our non-hero fast!  I’ve been a real fan of Taskmaster as of late.  Van Lente seems to know how to write him well too.  The character has been really interesting and I like that they gave him a mini-series.  I really like how the explore how his memory works as well.  This can only lead to bad things though.  The artwork is pretty solid and fits in well with what’s going on.  I might not have liked it so much if not for the spectacular color job on it.  It was also interesting to have a dossier at the end of the book that told about these teams like Hydra, so it’s a pretty decent jumping on point.  I really thought this was some great stuff, check it out!

shadelektraShadowlands: Elektra #1 – Written by Zeb Wells and Art by Emma Rios.  Two issues I’m reviewing this time that were done by Zeb Wells.  This time we see some background on Elektra and her past involvement with the Hand. She has these half-hallucinations going on through-out.  Honestly, where Zeb Wells hits homerun with New Mutants, here he fails miserably.  I think that has more to do with the material requested of him than anything else.  Listen Marvel, there is no reason to even publish this issue besides trying to make more money off the tie-in.  The story isn’t terrible, it’s just completely unnecessary and useless.  Couple that with the fact that I wasn’t interested in the least by this and you’ve got a real dog.  The artwork was just kind of bland and Elektra looked like she might have taken Anime meth or something.  Add this one up and this issue is better off being sent in to the recycling center than anything.


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