Tag Archives: the fade out

Around the Tubes

Lots of new comics yesterday in the first week of new comics for the year. What did folks get? Anything good?

Around the Tubes Reviews

Comic Vine – The Amazing Spider-Man #12

Comic Vine – Angela: Asgard’s Assassin #2

Bloody Disgusting – Ant-Man #1

Comics Alliance – Ant-Man #1

Comic Vine – Birthright #4

Comic Vine – Bucky Barnes: The Winter Soldier #3

Comic Vine – Deadly Class #10

Comic Vine – Detective Comics #38

CBR – The Fade Out #4

The Beat – Feathers #1

Comic Vine – Green Arrow #38

Comic Vine – Green Lantern #38

Comic Vine – Hawkeye vs. Deadpool #4

Comic Vine – Hulk #10

Comic Vine – Lady Killer #1

Talking Comics – Operation S.I.N. #1

The Beat – Operation S.I.N. #1

Comic Vine – The Punisher #14

Comic Vine – Robocop #7

Comic Vine – Spider-Man 2099 #7

CBR – The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl #1

Comic Vine – Wolf Moon #2

Talking Comics – X-Men #23

Review: The Fade Out #3

So The Fade Out continues to expand. Issue number two indicated that Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips would be taking their time with this series, showing many sides to the same story, and this issue doesn’t disappoint on that front.

This issue takes a break from Charlie Parish, the screenwriter (who might or might not still be the main character), to focus on two other characters: Mr. Thursby and Maya Silver. Mr. Thursby is the head of the studio employing all of the other characters and we learn quite a bit about him. In fact, we learn some pretty deep and dark secrets about him that may well have an effect on the plot as a whole.

Apparently, back in the 1920’s he, for several weeks, lived in a pagan commune where, as Brubaker puts it, the “sex and booze flowed freely.” It turns out that Thursby hasn’t been able to get that experience out of his head ever since then, and his addiction to sex with (and/or power over) women has led to him building a secret corridor from his office that runs behind every female star’s dressing, with a door leading into each through the closet. That seems like a very important detail: it implies that he regularly visits the starlets (which he did in this issue), but it also tells the audience that there is a way for someone in the know to enter and exit these dressing rooms unseen. That seems like an important detail that might very likely come up again in the plot. A plot that has already featured one dead movie star, mind you, and could possibly feature more.

The majority of the issue focuses on Maya Silver, the woman brought in to replace the dead Valeria Sommers. We see her first scene with Early Rath. We see how she actually had met Valeria Sommers before. We see that she used to be married to a Hispanic man but gave that up to be a star, and we learn that she got some help in doing that by the husband himself, who took a $20,000 payment to leave his wife alone. We learn that she’s had to do some pretty sordid things to get to the top, and that she might have more of an appetite for violence than she once thought. After learning more about her, she seems like the perfect beginning of a classic femme fatale, and I wouldn’t be surprised if Maya ended up having a role in any future murders or schemes.

Again, though, this issue, in throwing a wide net and fleshing out the world, the murder plot which gave the debut issue so much agency, is all but forgotten. It’s a genuine pleasure to read such a well crafted comic, but for those of you interested more in the murder mystery than in the setting, tone, and world building, I have a feeling that this story might read a little bit better in a collected form.

Speaking of setting and tone, I have to once again give praise to Phillips’ art. After having read Fatale and Criminal and now The Fade Out, I’m running out of ways to compliment his work. It’s really quite sublime. The aspect of his work which stood out to me in this particular issue was the inking. For example, in the scenes set actually on the movie studio or outside, the line work is precise and expertly inked, giving the figures definition and clarity, which helps in the reading of facial expressions and body language. In scenes set in the dark, in closets or the back ways of the studio, entire sections of the page are awash in shadow and darkness, not causing confusion at all, but lending the characters and settings a slightly muffled sense of existence that nicely fits with the noir feel. The scene with Greavey (Maya’s talent agent) and Brodsky (studio head of security) is a particularly good example, and perhaps the finest moment in the issue. Furthermore, he continues to experiment with different art styles in this comic. There are several pages in which we read narration from Maya and in the foreground the pages show Maya undressing from the movie shoot, while the background (in a much sketchier penciling style) shows her history as an aspiring actress, not all of it pretty. It’s deviations in the art like that which really make this comic unique.

Issue number four can’t come soon enough, and be it either more information on the murder or further character/world building, I am totally on board.

 Story: Ed Brubaker Art: Sean Phillips

Story: 9 Art: 9 Overall: 9 Recommendation: Buy

 

Image Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review.

Preview: The Fade Out #3

The Fade Out #3

Story By: Ed Brubaker
Art By: Sean Phillips
Art By: Elizabeth Breitweiser
Cover By: Sean Phillips
Cover By: Elizabeth Breitweiser
Cover Price: $3.50
Digital Price: $2.99
Diamond ID: AUG140646
Published: November 12, 2014

BRUBAKER & PHILLIPS’ new crime noir masterpiece is just getting started! Remember, every month THE FADE OUT has exclusive back pages articles that are only available in the single issues.

FadeOut03_Cover

Sell-Outs and New Printing Roundup

Here’s this week’s announced sell-outs and new printings.

Image Comics

Skybound‘s Birthright #1 by Joshua Williamson and Andrei Bressan has sold out and will return November 5, the same day as the second issue.

birthright01

Copperhead #2 by Jay Faerber and Scott Godlewski has sold out and will return for a new printing on November 5, the same day as the third issue.

Copperhead02_Cover

The Fade Out #2 by Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips has sold out. It’ll return November 5, the same day as the third issue.

Fadeout02_Cover

It should be no surprise, but Scott Snyder and Jock‘s Wytches #1 has sold out at the distributor level. A second printing is in the works, and it’ll hit shelves on November 12, the same day as the second issue.

wytches #1 second printing

Preview: The Fade Out #2

The Fade Out #2

Story By: Ed Brubaker
Art By: Sean Phillips
Art By: Elizabeth Breitweiser
Cover Price: $3.50
Digital Price: $2.99
Diamond ID: JUL140545
Published: October 1, 2014

Was a murder covered up? Or did the movie starlet commit suicide? And how does the show go on with a dead leading lady and an unfinished film? BRUBAKER & PHILLIPS’ new crime noir masterpiece is just getting started! Remember, every month THE FADE OUT has exclusive back pages articles that are only available in the single issues.

Fadeout02_Cover

Review: The Fade Out #2

Fadeout02_CoverIn the debut issue of The Fade Out, Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips set in motion a hardboiled noir in literally the most classic sense: 1948 L.A. and a dead Hollywood starlet. While there are no private eyes (yet), we have an interesting and complex protagonist in Charlie, who wrote the movie which starred the dead girl. After the debut issue’s introduction of the main characters, as well as the initial conflict (after a blackout drunk, Charlie wakes up next to her corpse with no memory of what happened, and then later discovers that someone came to the house after he left and made her death look like a suicide), issue number two moves right into world building.

And in some cases that might be a problem. This issue contains several flashbacks which, honestly, slow down the story just a tiny bit. We’ve just been introduced to the murder mystery, but then nothing happens in that regard. We learn more about Charlie and Gil (Charlie’s blacklisted writing partner), more about Charlie and Val (the dead girl), and more about the movie studio and its politics, but the A story hardly moves forward at all. Most stories, be they novels, comics, films, or television, give the audience a little while to become more intrigued by the plotline before diving headfirst into background that, while informing on the main story, has yet to actually have an impact.

Not only that, but this issue just has so much information. Brubaker name checks the Hollywood Ten, Howard Hughes, RKO Studios, and anti-trust cases against the movie studios. Any of those ideas would make for a compelling story, but Brubaker just tosses them in, assuming the reader will keep up. And yet even with so much information on display, there are hints of even more information not yet presented to the reader: in this issue there are two violent outbursts that don’t feel earned. They feel like they’re coming out of nowhere, which is even more confusing.

The Fade Out strongly reminds me of James Ellroy’s L.A. Quartet, in which Ellroy examines post-WWII Los Angeles with a sweep and breadth that is mindboggling: there are so many characters in his novels, and so many plotlines and subplots and twists, that eventually you lose sight of the main thrust of the story amidst all of the detail and grit. But you know what? I love it. The Fade Out is Brubaker’s love letter to one of the most well known, and most American, of genres. Like Ellroy’s novels, the tone it sets is so tangible, the details so rich, and the character so complex, that I can’t help but get swept up in it all.

Brubaker pulls in pieces and characters and ideas and back stories until the issue seems to burst, but I know that it will ultimately make for a richer, more thorough story. It’s nice that he has the freedom at Image to tell the story he wants, with whatever background tapestry he wants, instead of being rushed along from action sequence to action sequence.

Most of the rich tapestry presented by this comic is due to Sean Phillips’ once again nearly impeccable art. His attention to background and character detail is astounding. Emotions and body language are clear and comprehensible, while character movement seems natural. I could feel the weight of every punch thrown and I even felt myself wince with sympathetic pain once or twice, which is not something I frequently do when reading a comic book. While still providing industry leading art, Phillips also branches out and tries something new, which is always a pleasure. He experiments with color and texture in a way that I haven’t seen him attempt before (although you can see the beginnings of it in Fatale). During panels of close-ups, the background art seems almost like a watercolor, swirls of blue mixing with purple and red. It makes for beautiful art but also adds to the emotion and tone, allowing feelings to more clearly come through.

Finally, just a quick shout out to cemetery scenes. The issue is bookended by scenes at a cemetery, first for Val’s funeral and second during a drunken brawl. The use of shadow and chiaroscuro in that final scene is nothing short of perfect. To be honest, I reread that scene three times for the art alone. If nothing else about this story interests you, I’d say read the book for those pages alone.

But really, everything about this comic should interest you. It’s a comic by two creators at the pinnacle of their game, telling a story which is clearly important to them. With so much detail and information already available in this issue, I can’t wait to see where the story goes. I’ve read a lot of Brubaker comics, and I know that he doesn’t include information which doesn’t directly inform the story, even if I don’t yet know how. And I can’t wait to see what happens next.

Story: Ed Brubaker Art: Sean Phillips
Story: 8 Art: 9.5 Overall: 8.75 Recommendation: Buy

Image Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review.

Sell-Outs and New Printing Roundup

Check out this week’s announced sell-outs and new printings!

Image Comics

The Fade Out #1, the debut of the latest series from Ed Brubaker, Sean Phillips, and Elizabeth Breitweiser, uncontested noir masters, has sold out immediately at the distributor level. The second printing will hit September 24, the same day as the second issue.

the fade out 1 2nd printingOutcast #1 has sold out again and will return for a fourth printing! The series by Robert Kirkman and Paul Azaceta will see the new printing hit stands September 10.

outcast 1 fourth printing

Review: The Fade Out #1

FadeOut01_CoverA noir film stuck in endless reshoots. A writer plagued with nightmares from the war and a dangerous secret. An up-and-coming starlet’s suspicious death. And a maniacal Studio Mogul and his Security Chief who will do anything to keep the cameras rolling before the Post-War boom days come crashing down.

Is there now a sub-genre of 1930s style noir crime stories centered around television/movie production? I have been following Satellite Sam on and off since it came out, though I am a few months behind on the story.  It was a fresh take on the medium, plugging some new elements into pulp to make it interesting enough to pursue. It was kind of like The Maltese Falcon crossed with Mad Men. With the new Image series The Fade Out by Ed Brubaker, it would seem as though there are now two separate titles challenging for this one small niche.

Satellite Sam already broke this ground with a few of the notable clichés that one might expect. The main character/burnout chasing away his own demons in Hollywood with booze and women, the Hollywood big wigs more concerned with production schedules than the people that work for him, and sassy secretaries who are more capable than they let on. Clichés are not as bad if they are done right, and in the case of Satellite Sam, they exist as a fertile ground for a different take on this time and this genre. The question then, is there anything left for Brubaker? Certainly he has both the mainstream comic credibility from his work at Marvel as well as noir credibility from Fatale. In this case though, it tfoseems as though something is missing, as the take on this specific setup doesn’t seem as fresh, especially for someone that has been reading Sam (which is not much of a stretch, considering that Image publishes both of them.)

The story progresses somewhat as one might expect with the main character waking up from a night of drinking without much of an idea of where he had been. Soon there is a discovery of a crime which changes the course of his life.  In trying to capture the essence of the period, the presentation of this fadeout01story does seem a bit too disingenuous in a sense. One of the hallmarks of Hollywood at the time was the fact that everything was hidden to some degree, including sexuality. When women’s hemlines were still at knee level, it was of course taboo to show even more, yet this story doesn’t seem to mind, even if we know that it was there. So instead of the nostalgic grandeur of the golden age of cinema, there are gratuitous scenes with naked breasted women or of women kissing, stuff that presumably happened at wild parties back then just as it does now, but also which doesn’t really help to establish either the story or the atmosphere.

I am tempted to give Brubaker a free pass here though. Admittedly this is the kind of story which might be well suited to the medium of comics, but it is seems equally to be a story that depends on a fair amount of setup before it gets going.  It is not a superhero story where characters interact with one another in a superficial sense, rather these are honest characters being established. While it might not be up to the level of its predecessor from Image yet, it still does have some potential, and is probably worthy of being picked up by most people that are interested in crime noir.

Story: Ed Brubaker Art: Sean Phillips
Story: 8.2 Art: 7.7 Overall: 8.0 Recommendation: Buy

Image Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review

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