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Review: Nightwing #44: Working out on Chest and (throw) Back Day

*Mild spoiler whited out at the end*

I came to read this really interesting comic — Nightwing #44 “The Bleeding Edge” part one because everyone’s favorite comics PR guy Clark Bull tweeted:

Now, I tend to choose which superhero comics to read based on the writer and artist working on them rather than because of the particular characters in it. A great creative team can make anything work, yes even Deathstroke. I was previously unfamiliar with Christopher Mooneyham (pencils) and Benjamin Percy (writer), Nick Filardi (colors) and Carlos M. Mangual (letters). But as a critic who analyzes art through a feminist and queer lens I’ve developed an academic interest in Dick Grayson.

Grayson is one of the only male characters that straight male creative teams have frequently offered up to the androphilic gaze. In layperson’s terms– Nightwing is a rare character that even straight men deliberately depict with the intent to make readers find him sexy and that many readers who are attracted to men see as sexy, even before the creators came around to the idea. Meanwhile, almost every female character is drawn to appeal to the male gaze, even lesbian characters. I, as a queer person, might find some of those female characters hot too– but that is a side effect, they were not depicted with my gaze in mind.

Nightwing exists in a critically interesting space for these reasons. And if Clark tells me to watch for Discowing worthy visual tributes in Nightwing #44, sure I’ll check it out.

What I found was a comic full of early 80s visual cues– everything from John Romita Jr-esque squared-off lips and Klaus Jansen/Frank Miller gritty but pretty action filled pencils to subways with 1980’s level graphitti. Even Dick’s haircut is early 80’s compliant, and flattering (see 50% of Duran Duran).

And what is this utterly Bronze Age Nightwing doing? He’s complaining about our modern relationship with the portable internet. Which is seems in-character. He’s also using his newly modified escrima sticks exactly like Daredevil uses his batton, ricocheting it around the subway car. It even has a break in the center for grappling hook use, like Murdock’s primary mode of transportation.

Was there a rift in the multiverse through which a dimension-hopping Dick got to replicate Matt Murdock’s batton? Were Grayson’s escrima sticks always like that and I just never noticed before because the art wasn’t so similar to what I associate with my favorite old Daredevil comics? I’d never connected Daredevil and Nightwing till now despite their shared acrobatic skills and handsome figures. But maybe the brooding and emotionally damaged Matt Murdock– the Worst Boyfriend in Comics™– isn’t so different after all from the joyful and emotionally intelligent Dick Grayson — the Best Ex-Boyfriend in Comics.

Halfway into the issue we are greeted with a shirtless and unshorn Dick Grayson stretched out on the coach. I appreciate the unshorn which is especially realistic if we’re doing an 80s throwback aesthetic. His body language is open as we look down on him from above.

You know what? We deserve artist Chris Mooneyham’s Dick Grayson lying shirtless on a couch. The recognition that men can be the subject of our sexual desires and that people might want to look at them being sexy is still a pretty radical proposition in superhero comics. It was part of the recent Grayson series’ success and it is actually part of the story here.

Unlike many of the random semi nude women in comics it makes sense for Dick to be shirtless. He’s at home relaxing in a bright window while flirting with his on again off again. Grayson’s anatomy while rare, is within the range of things a body can be.  And that’s good. Physically impossible figures are honestly not sexy to me. He doesn’t have the dead-eyed objectivized look we often see on shirtless women when drawn by men. He’s clearly in thought here. Look, I like semi clothed women as much as the next person who’s sexualy attracted to women. But it shouldn’t always be women. That’s not a balanced diet and its hurting storytelling.

This art is a helpful reminder that sexy art is best served by being character driven, by having a torso that accommodates lungs and a gastrointestinal system, non-fictional muscles, and even has body hair (women have body hair too, I know this may be shocking to some men who’ve never been naked with a woman IRL). I’m not suggesting that a character needs to look like Dick does here in order to be sexy. I want to see all sorts of bodies and genders represented on the page, especially the acknowledgement that bodies that deviate from Hollywood norms are desirable too. Why are no characters drawn like Katie King or Ximena Santos from Raven the Pirate Princess in the DCU or Marvel?

Anyway….

Dick’s legendary chemistry with Barbara Gordon is in full display here — the juxtaposed panels of their phone conversation establish a visual flirtation between the two characters. They may be in different apartments talking on the phone but their eye lines across the gutters keep them flirting even more than their dialog does.

One thing I could do without is the heavy deli owner being drawn as a slob. It’s an anti-fat stereotype and below this comic’s intelligence.

Mild spoiler (highlight the text)

In the end, as with many great things of the 1980s, this story ends in body horror. I won’t say how. As a huge fan of the works of David Cronenberg I say hooray!

In conclusion Nightwing #44’s virtues include:

  • Early 1980s Daredevil aesthetics
  • Shirtless Dick Grayson drawn just for you and me
  • A villain who uses technology in creative ways
  • Light social commentary
  • An easy jumping on point for new readers of the series, like me

That’s good promise from just a single issue of a new character arc in an existing series. Sure, I’ll keep checking out Nightwing– literally and figuratively. You should too! We deserve it.PS: For an extremely thoughtful and historically centered look at the way Dick Grayson has been depicted in comics read the essential Meg Downey’s essay In Defense of Dick Grayson: Objectification, Sexuality, and Subtext.

Review: Princeless: Raven the Pirate Princess #1 and #2

PP2_CVREveryone loves Princeless, Jeremy Whitley‘s funny, exciting, explicitly feminist, all-ages fantasy comic staring women of color and a dragon. It’s the first comic I tell parents to buy their kids of any gender because it’s so likable and fun yet emotionally healthy. I’m not a parent but I think kids who grow up reading it will be better off then kids who don’t.

Whitley’s new series, Princeless: Raven the Pirate Princess is even better.

We first meet Raven Xingtao, the heroine of this new series in volume 3 of Princeless. Raven is brash, determined and roguishly charming. But you don’t need to read Princeless to read this new series. Everything you need to know is in the first issue.

Raven the Pirate Princess is not just a spin-off series, it is actually the next step of maturation for the adventure/fantasy world Whitley is building. While both series are all-ages this one is aimed at slightly older kids. The tone feels more mature then before. The characters’ voices even sound more mature and they are drawn in a more adult manner.

The art here is the best yet on a Princeless related title. It’s drawn, inked and colored by the brand new dynamic duo of Rosy Higgins and Ted Brandt who Whitley connected with on Tumblr. The art is more detailed and less cartoonish then the art on Princeless. It feels more elegant. The coloring is way more professional too. The characters are drawn a bit older and the action scenes are more dynamic and better composed. They also hit harder.

Issue two features a barnstormer of a scene where Raven tries to hire a crew for her pirate ship. It is one for the ages. The scene very effectively lampoons real world sexism in ways I have personally experienced and I’m sure you have witnessed too. I want to put the conversations he lampoons on freaking flyers and hand them out at conferences. They are perfect illustrations of the ways men disrespect women both consciously and subconsciously. This comic is doing a public service.

In issue two we also get a new character that I just adore, Katie King. I don’t want to spoil anything but you do see her on the cover. She looks like Brienne of Tarth from Game of Thrones except she seems far better adjusted. The idea of a Happy Brienne melts my heart. More mighty women with giant muscles in comics please!

Just as important, this comic features teenage girls flirting with each other. They are adorable. This is such a rare thing in comics. Lumberjanes has been rightfully praised for this and Raven deserves praise for it too. So now, reading this series you get pirate ships and also shipping in one family-friendly, queer positive, comic book featuring mostly people of color.

Marvel, DC, take note.

I guess Marvel did sort of take note because they hired Jeremy Whitley to write one story in the Secret Wars: Secret Loves book. But the time has come for much much more!

Story: Jeremy Whitley Art: Rosy Higgins and Ted Brandt
Story: 8 Art: 8 Overall: 8 (but I’d give it a 10 for kids since a kids comic this good is so rare)  Recommendation: Buy

Action Lab Entertainment provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review

Elana’s Best Comics of 2015

Island01_CoverMost Ambitious Experiment

Island Magazine

From Brandon Graham, joined by Emma Rios and the large crew of alt comics creators they’ve invited to write and draw for his new comics anthology magazine. The first if it’s kind in ages, think of it as a modern version of Heavy Metal Magazine, the legendary adult scifi and fantasy comics mag that was huge in the 70s and 80s known for featuring work by artists European artists like Moebius and Milo Manara. Graham is doing the modern equivalent for new and old audiences with artists like Farel Dalrymple and Tessa Black. He puts his money where his mouth is in terms of diversity on every level too and welcomes quality work by newcomers. Here’s our podcast with him. The audio is rough for the first half but it’s better after that and he’s an amazing guest.

 

Innovation of the Year 

Rosy Press. Founder Janelle Asselin is leading a revolution in feminist, inclusive romance comics! A woman-lead company funded via a kickstarter online and now in print. This genre has been missing from the shelves for too long.

 

STK682942.jpg.square-true_maxheight-285_size-285Creative Team of the Year

Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie

Between The Wicked + The Divine and Phonogram: the Immaterial Girl this was their best year yet. I think they are the best creative team of my generation. Even the Wic+Div issues with guest artists maintained their storytelling excellence.

 

Prettiest Covers

Kevin Wada. Everything he touches is beautiful. He did regular covers for Catwoman and The Death-Defying Dr. Mirage this year and variants for everything from Zodiac Starforce to Midnighter I bought A-Force #3 just for his variant to frame on my wall.

Stephanie Hans for Angela Queen of Hel and 1602 Witch Hunter Angela and The Wicked + The Divine #15

 

tumblr_nydqrox7dE1sh15v9o1_500Best Interior Artist

Stephanie Hans (Angela Queen of Hel, Angela Asguard’s Assassin, 1602 Witch Hunter Angela). She paints better than anyone these days.

Jamie McKelvie (Phonogram, The Wicked + The Divine) I mean he did an entire issue that was a remix of an earlier issue and it was still brilliant.

Tom Neely (The Humans) Brutal, lurid, period perfect and expertly crafted

 

Best Limited Series: Phonogram: The Immaterial Girl

 

Best First Issue of a New Series: Monstress (w) Marjorie Liu (a) Sana Takeda

Runner Up: All-New Wolverine #1

 

HumansNo5-1024x768Comics Art: Best Two Page Spreads:

Here are the comics that keep me buying individual printed issues because their two page spreads are jaw dropping and book binding or online interfaces will just get in the way:

  • Silver Surfer, penciler Mike Allred. Colorist Lee Allred. This may be the best Allreds work to date. One of these pages was a moebius strip you had to spin around to read
  • The Humans, penciler/inker Tom Neely colorist/ Kristina Collantes. Some are lurid mandalas. Some say “Ka-Fuckin-boom” across them. Always far out and exciting.
  • The Sandman: Overture. penciler JH Williams, colorist Dave Stewart. JH Williams is the best comics artist working today. So yeah.

 

Best Single Web comic: Lighten-Up by Ron Wimberly

 

Best webcomic series: Bashback: A Story of the Queer Mafia (w) Kelsey Hercs, Lawrence Gullo, (a) Fyodor Pavlov who will be on our podcast January 25th.

 

KAPTARA VOL. 1Funniest Comic

Kaptara: (w) Chip Zdarsky and (a) Kagan McLeod: scandalously hilarious sword and sorcery and scifi in space with a diverse cast)

Honorable mentions:

Jughead (w) Chip Zdarsky and (a) Erica Henderson: All of the revamped and reimagined Archie titles are wonderful but Jughead has a particularly funny and absurdist humor, ear for dialog and Henderson (you know her from Squirrel Girl) nails the sight gags every time.

1602 Witch Hunter Angela (w) Marguerite Bennett and Kieron Gillen. That lawyer joke though… actually all of their Angela comics have been very funny)

Archie vs Predator (w) Alex De Campi (a) Fernando Ruiz ‘Nuff Said.

Princeless: Raven the Pirate Princess (w) Jeremy Whitley (a) Rosy Higgins and Ted Brandt. The hiring hall “not all men” scene alone would be enough. But there’s more!

 

Best DC Comic:

Constantine: The Hellblazer (w) James T Tynion IV, Ming Doyle (a) Riley Rossmo (usually)

It’s one of the comics I anticipate most every month. I hadn’t read the earlier series and it hasn’t mattered. I love the mystery, dark humor and creative art especially when writer/artist Ming Doyle gets to step in. Having a bisexual man writing a bisexula male character pays off.

Runners Up:

Gotham Academy (w) Brenden Fletcher, Becky Cloonan (a) Karl Kerschl. Charming and inventive. The art is wonderful and sets the tone of a comic that’s “Hogwarts in Gotham” love this crew of funny, believable and diverse kids. Batman mythos are woven in fun ways but you do not need to know Batman or read other comics to follow along.

Catwoman comics of 2015 (w) Genevieve Valentine (artists especially David Messina) For a uniquely creative and fresh character arc, queer ladies kicking tail and stunning art that actually used characters’ street clothes as key signals in character development. The story arc came to a complete, satisfying conclusion. That’s rare these days. I treasure it.

Black Canary (w) Brenden Fletcher (a) Annie Wu. Because it was time that Dinah had a band. And her band is grand. Band on the run hijinks.

 

All New Wolverine cover 2Best All New All Different Marvel:

All-New Wolverine (w) Tom Taylor (a) David Lopez (a) David Navarrot

Runners Up:

Weirdworld (w) Sam Humphries (A) Mike Del Mundo

Any comic before or after the relaunch with Angela’s name in the title and Marguerite Bennett writing it.

 

Best comic for people who hate superheroes and genre fiction:

No Mercy (w) Alex De Campi (a) Carla Speed McNeil

A bus load of college bound teens heading to Central America for some poorly throughout voluntourism falls off a cliff. That’s just the premise. It gets darker from there especially because the teens are so damn believable. The art is also really unique, illustrative and approachable.

 

Best Fantasy Comic: Monstress (w) Marjorie Liu (a) Sana Takeda

 

Best Sci-Fi Comics (which also happens to be very politically radical)

Bitch Planet Vol 1 (w) Kelly Sue DeConnick (a) Valentine De Landro

Concrete Park Vol 2 Tony Puryear, Erika Alexander (click and scroll down for my capsule review)

 

Best Horror

Grindhouse: Doors Open at Midnight Vol 3 & 4 (w) Alex De Campi (a) R. M. Guéra (a) Afua Richardson (a) Chris Peterson and Nolan Woodard

 

MIDNIGHTER-color_580_54d44587ae0d50.88049035Best “Daaaamn that’s Brutal” Moments

Midnighter #1 (Steve Orlando, Aco, Fajardo Jr). Midnighter punches a rib-eye steak through a guy’s head. Staked with a steak!!!

The Humans #4 (Keenan Marshall Keller and Tom Neely) Drugged, ape-like Humans kept as slaves battle to the death. Actually pretty much every issue of this comic would rank in creative brutality and fight scene bloodbaths.

 

Most Well-Intentioned Guy who’s Being a Dick: Dick Grayson

In his solo title, Grayson, Dick Grayson is getting idealistic teenagers arrested allegedly for their own safety, including countless brown kids. His privilege is blinding him (I explain why here). And then in Batgirl he crashed Alyssa’s wedding to try to swoop in and steal Babs away from her date. Stop being a Dick, Grayson! His 2016 resolution should be checking himself. (The creative teams on his books are strong so it will be good to read either way).

 

Awesome New Butch and Tomboy Characters

Regardless of sexual orientation female characters with a more masculine self presentation are incredibly rare in comics. This year four stood out Katie King of Princeless: Raven the Pirate Princess, Kim aka Taurus of Zodiac Starforce , Mac of Paper Girls (who is obviously a baby dyke and the f-ed-up slur is clearly part of that story) and Sanna Strand from Battleworld: Runaways. Here’s to a new year where more people see themselves reflected in stories.

 

Best New Character

Sera from various Angela comics published by Marvel and written by Marguerite Bennett and/or Kieron Gillen.

 

Archie2015_01-0Best Revival/Thing I Never Cared About but Now I do

Jughead and Archie

 

Best Mystery/Detective

The Fade Out (w) Ed Brubaker (a) Sean Phillips

Picture perfect noir set in Hollywood’s Golden Age.

Black Magick (w) Greg Rucka (A) Nicola Scott. Sensitive Witch Noir with a great woman detective lead (which is Rucka’s speciality).

 

Best New Tween Comics (to keep Ms. Marvel company)

Princeless: Raven the Pirate Princess (w) Jeremy Whitley (a) Rosy Higgins and Ted Brandt

Zodiac Starforce: (w) Kevin Panetta (a) Paulina Ganucheau

Jem and the Holograms (w) Kelly Thompson and (a) Sophie Campbell

 

Best Ongoing All-Ages Series (to keep Lumberjanes company):

Gotham Academy: Hogwarts at Gotham with a diverse cast.

The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (w) Ryan North (a) Erica Henderson. Can I also point out how Squirrel Girl does a great job of solving problems in creative ways that don’t involve violence at times? And how amazing it is to see a super heroine with thick thighs and legs?) Because that is radical and needed.

 

Cover that Made Me Buy a Comic/ Best Arm

The Mighty Thor #1 cover by Russell Dauterman. On the cover of The Mighty Thor 1 we had the mightiest arm on a Marvel leading lady. It matters. Read why.

 

tumblr_npou35R4bc1qhb9cho1_500Most Subversive Cover

Ming Doyle’s Constantine #1 Variant. There has never been a male character in a more “come-hither” comic book pose by a mainstream publisher. Not even Grayson (which is also impressive).

 

Best Character Rehabilitation/Character Who Used To Be Offensive and Now is Fascinating

Cyborg as done by David Walker. Cyborg is now a comic that deals with issues of race and disability in a sci-fi frame work. Funny what happens when you get a black writer to write a black character.

 

Wedding Of the Year

Alyssa & Jo in Batgirl #45. Comics weddings are usually a complete madhouse (in a fun way). This was emotionally wise, adult and sweet– also in a fun way. It’s also the first trans wedding in a mainstream comic.

 

Cutest Newly Confirmed Couple

Angela and Sera in Various Marvel Comics with Angela in the title. I’m sure Harley Quinn and Ivy are Cute too but I haven’t read that series.

 

Best Lettering

The HumansTom Neely. It’s all done by hand by the penciler and inker. It puts other books to shame. TO SHAME! The words are integral to the art. He spells “brains” in brains!

 

Best Colorists

Kristina Collantes (The Humans)

Matt Wilson (The Wicked + The Divine and Paper Girls)

 

secret wars secret love 1 coverBest Thing in Secret Wars (and best one shot comic)

Secret Wars: Secret Loves (our podcast with Jeremy Whitley covers it) from Michel Fiffe, Felipe Smith, Jeremy Whitley, Marguerite Bennett, Katie Cook, Gurihiru, Kris Anka

Emotionally resonant ultra short romances about fan favorite characters like Kamala Khan aka Ms Marvel or Daredevil. Marvel, please hire Whitely to do an ongoing romcom comic about a biracial couple like Danny Rand and Misty Knight. Yesterday!

 

Best Thing in DC’s Convergence

Greg Rucka’s The Question. The rest of you guys can go home now. (Though I did enjoy New Teen Titans I think it was mostly Nicola Scott’s lovely art, my nostalgia and some shall we say unexpected shiping that did the talking).

 

The Comic that’s gone MIA that’s got me SAD

8house Arclight (w) Brandon Graham (a) Marian Churchland. The beautiful, creative and trans-friendly fantasy comic went on hiatus for a bit but it will be back in a few months.

 

Best Body Diversity in Comics Art

Jem and the Holograms (Sophie Campbell)

The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (Erica Henderson)

Rat Queens (Tess Fowler)

 

Geek Event of the Year

FlameCon New York’s first LGBTQ comics convention. And it has people from across the spectrum attending and participating. I haven’t felt that sort of unity since, um, ever.

 

Comic most in Need of a Revamp Relaunch

Wonder Woman. Here’s an explanation of the problem artistically and what could fix it. But here’s why DC won’t fix the problem. It has to do with sexism.

 

Up and Coming Artist to Watch-Out For

Paulina Ganucheau. She’s done work for BOOM! but Zodiac Starforce is taking flight. I expect BIG things from her soon.

 

Best Merchandise

The Wicked + The Divine and Bitch Planet Nail Wraps.

 

The Best Podcast We’re Not On

Jay and Miles X-Plain the X-Men (which you can find under Rachel and Miles X-Plain the X-Men). It’s educational, touching and hilarious.