Category Archives: Reviews

Review: The Adventures of Supergirl Chapter 3

adventures of supergirl chapter 3Rampage is about to take her revenge on Kara Danvers-but can Supergirl count on her sister to save the day? The first story arc wraps up with Supergirl captured by Rampage and her sister missing!

The issue is an interesting ending to the story and really frames the first three chapters in a fantastic way with Kara reflecting on how she’s similar and also differs with Rampage.

A lot of the issue focuses on Rampage’s origin and does that without breaking stride of the plot in the present. It’s actually a really solid way to wrap up the issue in that it really shifts the point of the first arc away from just taking on some alien, and instead using that to discuss Kara/Supergirl’s history and origin. Writer Sterling Gates has done an excellent job of giving us much more than a capture an alien/punch the bad guy story, and that becomes very apparent here.

Artist Bengal has really improved with each chapter and is hitting his stride here. There’s a lot I like, and some of my gripes from the first chapter have gone away over the second and this one. It’ll be interesting to see where he goes from here as he gets a better feel for it all.

Each chapter is good, but the story as a whole is stronger when read together. That’s where the big picture becomes apparent and a simple story of capturing an alien becomes so much more.

Story: Sterling Gates Art: Bengal
Story: 8 Art: 7.6 Overall: 8 Recommendation: Buy

DC Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review

Investigating Alias #28

Alias (2001-2003) 028-000Investigating Alias is a weekly issue by issue look at the source material that inspired the popular and critically acclaimed Jessica Jones Netflix show.

In this installment of Investigating Alias, I will be covering Alias #28(2004) written by Brian Michael Bendis, drawn by Michael Gaydos, and colored by Matt Hollingsworth.

In Alias #28, writer Brian Michael Bendis, artist Michael Gaydos, and colorist Matt Hollingsworth wrap up the story of the superhero turned P.I. Jessica Jones as she faces Killgrave one last time and proves without a shadow of a doubt and in front of all the Avengers that she is a hero. She also reveals that she doesn’t like fighting (Even though she is good at it withe her superpowers and everything.), which is in line with her actions throughout the series as she tries to use her words and sleuthing skills to solve cases instead of just bludgeoning people into submission. Bendis also once and for all shows that Scott Lang is a slut shaming jerk (Not on Killgrave’s level though), and that Jessica Jones and Luke Cage were meant to be. Hollingsworth’s colors add some nice atmosphere to their tender romantic chat that closes out the series. And it’s fitting that this book ends on a conversation when some of the greatest battles in Alias weren’t punching brawls, but wars of words.

Alias #28 opens with Killgrave in Scott Lang’s bedroom gloating over him and taunting Jessica while still breaking the fourth wall and playing the critic calling her comic “mainstream with just a touch of indy”. In admittedly what is a cheap twist, Killgrave is actually using his mind control abilities on Jessica to make her see a dead Scott. Then, he manipulates Jessica even more by forcing her to see an image of her friend Carol Danvers snuggled up suggestively between Luke Cage and Scott. This is while he is slut shaming her, and then he walks out and makes her watch as he tells people to beat their neighbor to death. Then, a plot element from Alias #26 comes into play in that it’s revealed that Jean Grey left a psychic trigger for Jessica to overcome Killgrave’s mind control if she makes the choice.

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The Avengers fly into the street to apprehend Killgrave, and Killgrave tells Jessica to break Captain America’s back in a scene very similar to the flashback where he told her to kill all the superheroes to get at Daredevil. However, in what is basically the most epic moment of the series, she beats the crap out of him for entire page as the Avengers watch and admire her. She talks with Scott after the battle about how she feels and says that she is pregnant with someone else’s baby. He runs away. And Alias ends with Luke Cage telling Jessica how much he has begun to care for her after she opened up to him about Killgrave. She tells him that she is pregnant with his baby, and he takes it in stride saying, “Alright then. Next chapter.” Their relationship is further explored in The Pulse where Jessica Jones finally takes a job at the Daily Bugle for J. Jonah Jameson, who is a big fan of hers after she rescued his foster daughter, Mattie Franklin, who used to be Spider-Woman.

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After seeming a little jarring in Alias #27, the plot device of Killgrave having the ability to break the fourth wall is ingenious at showcasing his evil and powers in a unique way only comics can. His dialogue has a theatrical smarm to it, which means that getting an actor like David Tennant, who is renowned for addressing the audience directly in his soliloquies in Hamlet as well as his monologues in Doctor Who, was a clever bit of casting. Killgrave thinks he plays both author and critic about the world around him giving a short critical assessment of Alias as a comic, predicting future events, and then calling Jessica a “whore” over and over again and shaming her for enjoying sex. Unlike most superhero villains, he has no larger plan to take over the world or gain power just to do what it wants even if that involves rape or murder. Gaydos is the secret weapon here with Killgrave’s casual expression and toothy grin standing at odds with the killing going on around him. And because Jessica isn’t immune to his powers (unlike the TV show), overcoming him is a much tougher challenge.

Killgrave hogs most of the dialogue for the first third of Alias #28, but this comic is all about Jessica Jones’ triumphCapAdmiresJess over him, her PTSD, and making a conscious choice to not be a victim. That’s why the climax of the comic is five, almost silent, vertical panels of her beating Killgrave to a pulp. It is a truly cathartic reversal as she beats up the man, who told her to beat up other superheroes while the aforementioned superheroes watch and are impressed by her. Gaydos cuts away from Killgrave vs. Jessica for a single panel to show Captain America’s reaction as he realizes that his motivational words to her in the first arc where she protected his secret identity weren’t in vain, and that she is truly a great hero even if she hates violence, doesn’t , and isn’t interested in being some kind of a role model. Her beatdown of Killgrave isn’t just a typical end of arc superhero vs. supervillain slugfest, but a personal victory for her as she puts on a mantle of a job she doesn’t want (superhero) to take control of her narrative away from Killgrave, whose metafictional asides are getting a little annoying. And the hug she gets from Carol adds to the catharsis along with her tears as she looks as the incapacitated Killgrave. She has found a kind of peace for now.

After letting Jessica Jones triumph over her demons, Bendis and Gaydos provide the final word on her romantic relationship with Luke Cage and Scott Lang that have been brewing and burning throughout the series. First, Scott Lang is super cold, and his immediate leaving of Jessica after she says she’s pregnant with another man’s child make come across as deeply unkind for fans of Paul Rudd’s charming everyman in the Ant-Man film. But it definitely makes sense in light of his previous comments about her drinking on their first date, his prying into her past and even asking if she got raped, and finally shape changing into Ant-Man when she obviously wanted to be left alone. Even though he is ostensibly nice and heroic, Scott’s relationship with Jessica has been dictated on his terms, and he didn’t like the fact that Jessica slept with another man so he walks out not caring about her feelings in light of her confrontation of Killgrave.

Luke Cage’s relationship with Jessica Jones has been all over the place in Alias. It’s “frustrating” as he tells her in the closing pages of this issue going from passionate sex in Alias #1 to Jessica calling him out for being a “cape chaser” to awkwardness when they both were bodyguards for Matt Murdock and most recently, Jessica opens up to him about her past with Killgrave. This is something she didn’t do for Scott, and Luke listens to her experience and is physically present for her without prying or judging. This simply being there continues in Alias #28.

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Hollingsworth’s colors might be darker alluding to their first night meeting, but Gaydos’ layouts are closer together. There are also plenty of silent, beat panels from Gaydos like when Jessica tells him that she’s pregnant with his child. Instead of running away, Luke sheds a single tear and then smiles. He is ready to make some kind of a life and have some kind of relationship with Jessica Jones. Her face is pretty tensed up through this whole scene, but relaxes just a little bit at the end. And, in 2016, Luke Cage and Jessica Jones are still a couple (Happily married since 2006’s New Avengers Annual) and appearing in Power Man and Iron Fist. The chemistry in this touching moment and the earlier one involving Jessica’s past can be definitely be seen in Krysten Ritter and Mike Colter’s interactions as Jessica Jones and Luke Cage even if he disappears and gets used as Killgrave bait towards the end of the season. Maybe, we’ll get closure in his show or Defenders.

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By the time we roll around to Alias #28, we have a real idea of what makes Jessica Jones tick thanks to Brian Michael Bendis, Michael Gaydos, and Matt Hollingsworth. The “Secret Origin of Jessica Jones” and “Purple” arc are especially valuable for providing concrete evidence to why she mistrusts superheroes and their punch first, listen later tactics. There is also her paranoia present from the first arc that is born out of her fear of Killgrave escaping prison and manipulating her to try to kill superheroes or watch him rape young women. Her defeat of Killgrave in Alias #28 is well-earned as she makes a powerful choice to overcome her past, defeat him, and find some kind of closure.

And like all good comics creators, Bendis leaves a couple threads hanging for future developments in the arc of Jessica Jones. First, there is her pregnancy and closer relationship with the father of her baby, Luke Cage, and second, there is her pending job offer from the Daily Bugle, which gave her an honest and worthy headline when she defeated Killgrave. Both of these threads are explored in The Pulse, which places her more in the mainstream Marvel Universe than in the sexy, sleazy, and artistically bold MAX imprint.

Because Jessica Jones is such a compelling character with her unorthodox, yet relatable approach to heroism and has an excellent arc, I will be following her over to the Daily Bugle in The Pulse series in a new series of features of called “Feeling the Pulse”. Fuck yes! (Sadly, that favorite word of Jessica’s isn’t allowed in The Pulse.)

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I would also like to thank Kori and Emma at The Rainbow Hub for publishing the first installments of the series, Brett and Elana for helping me find a new home for Investigating Alias at Graphic Policy and letting me guest on their Jessica Jones podcast, and finally to Julia Michels for being the first Jessica Jones fan I met in real life, the best Jewel cosplayer ever, and for rekindling my love for Jess and Alias by taking a night bus to New York Comic Con from Washington DC just to see the Jessica Jones panel. (And snap a selfie with Krysten Ritter!)

Review: Bloodshot Reborn #11

BSRB_011_COVER-A_SOOKFar into a post-apocalyptic future, Los Angeles has descended into chaos. Even the remaining heroes of the Valiant Universe can’t stand against the G.A.T.E. super-tech that dominates the wastelands. As Bloodshot and Magic emerge with a small group of survivors in tow, an unexpected ally from the past shows up, seeking help, forcing Bloodshot to either turn his back on his friend…or his family!

There’s a different feel about this arc than the last two, and I have to say I’m really enjoying the new direction. The Analogue Man is very much a post apocalyptic tale set in a future that many of us could live to see; thirty years, while a life time in many ways, isn’t really that long.

Written by the prolifically brilliant Jeff Lemire, a man who is becoming one of my favourite comic book writers very quickly, and all you need to do is look at Old Man Logan and the past two issues in this series to find out why. The Analogue Man has a very  Unforgiven like feel about it (and if you haven’t seen the western starring Clint Eastwood and Morgan Freeman, it’s a great flick) with a technologically antiquated Bloodshot being drawn back, albeit reluctantly, into a life he thought he’d left behind.

With water being an extremely valuable resource, the last issue focused on Bloodshot making the dangerous trip to refill his settlements supply, where he eventually ran into one of Valiant‘s other stalwart characters: Ninjak. This issue delves a little into the events following up to that meeting from Ninjak‘s perspective, and I have to say, any Ninjak is always a treat for me, and I’m loving this older version of the technological ninja.

Bloodshot Reborn #11  has some absolutely stunning artwork to go along with Lemire‘s talent, too; the landscapes are as brutal as they are beautiful, but Lewis Larosa‘s artwork shines when you get to see the faces of the characters within the story. Brian Reber‘s colouring is also incredible here, and gives the story an added wow factor. This is a creative team that I hope stays together on this book  beyond the arc they’re currently publishing.

Whether you read The Analogue Man in single issue form or trade paperback, with two issues in, this has the potential to be an absolute blinder of a story. This is well worth the price of admission.

Story: Jeff Lemire Art: Lewis Larosa Colours: Brian Reber
Story : 8.5 Art: 9.5 Overall: 9 Recommendation: Buy

Valiant provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review.

Review: Metallic Silence #1 & #2

Metallic Silence #1A story that introduces you into a dystopian future based on the songs of the Spanish electronic band AZUL y NEGRO. In a world where elites are fleeing to a new planet, there is little place for hope. Or even for music.

Combining elements of Ghost in the Shell, Blade Runner, and even a subtle nod to The Terminator if you look close enough. There is a lot of crossover as science fiction meets dystopian, meets cyberpunk, meets a small musical. While there is a small love story as well that helps keep the plot grounded, it manages to be a large plot of the story as Basso tries to get his love Charlotte back from the Mannequin. While Mannequin sounds like a cheesy villain name, he is a man obsessed with immortality. He believes Charlotte is the key to that. However in his quest to gain that, he kills Basso (sort of). Basso manages to survive the explosion and returns to reclaim Charlotte after a he becomes a cybernetic version of Frankenstein’s monster.

Dystopian has almost become a synonym for gritty and dark. That is apparent in the art style in both issues of this mini-series. You can see the obvious influence of the film Blade Runner in the art in terms of both the world and the characters. Even a subtle influence of Frank Miller’s Sin City, as for the most part of the world is drawn in shades of gray. In contrast to the main characters who are drawn with more color, even if that color is limited

Story: El Torres Art: Angel Hernandez
Story: 9.0 Art: 9.0 Overall: 9.0 Recommendation: Buy

Amigo Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review

TV Review: Comic Book Men S5E7 Making Clay

comic book menIn this episode of Comic Book Men, Walt and Bryan audition the Secret Stash employees for a role in their new claymation film with friend and fellow podcaster Brian Quinn.

The first episode of the second half of the season was the best of the season, and it just took one episode for the series to get right back into old habits moving away from the focus on comics and instead being sidetracked with something else.

The episode does have some comic moments, the group buys a really cool toy and gives some solid history about it. While I don’t want a show only of that, it still is more of what the show should be.

Instead the episode introduces the television folks to Brian Quinn and instead has a lot to do with a claymation film that’s being done and their search for voice talent. What that has to do with the show and its comic focus is a big question. Yes the show is about these guys and their world, but, it’s expanded beyond the shop to their wacky adventures, with this being the latest.

For as good as last episode was, this one just goes back to old habits.

Overall rating: 6.4

TV Review: The Walking Dead S6E10 The Next World

walking-dead-5 photoA seemingly simple scavenging run proves to be very tricky when the group isn’t the only one vying for an unexpected goldmine.

The Walking Dead at times is criticized for dragging things out and being extremely slow. I’m sure the haters will be all over this episode which primarily focuses on Rick and Daryl as they head out on a supply run and run in to  a familiar face from comics.

A lot of the episode focuses on Rick and Daryl on their supply run when they run into Jesus, a character from the comic series. It’s not the introduction of Jesus that’s the interesting thing about the episode, it’s the tone of this entire section of the show that’s the fascinating part. It’s very comedic. Yes, there’s a serious tone in many ways, but the interaction between the three has a comedic action vibe of the thief who steals from the other thieves and then the items are stolen back and forth. It’s a common sequence, but in a show that is rather dramatic and relies heavily on horror elements, it’s a rather light hearted sequence.

The rest of the episode is primarily focused on Spencer who we find out has been sneaking into the woods for some reason. Michonne joins him and for as comedic as the trio was, the duo is very serious and dramatic. Spencer has been a rather irritating character in the series, much like an adult Carl, but here we see a bit of maturation.

Compared to the last few episodes, this one slows things down a lot, a very quiet moment compared to what has recently been on the air. Definitely the quiet before the storm.

And that ending… many will be jumping for joy… and laughing out loud.

Overall rating: 8.35

Mini Reviews For The Week Ending 20/2/2016

Sometimes, the staff at Graphic Policy read more comics than we’re able to get reviewed. When that happens you’ll see a weekly feature compiling short reviews from the staff of the comics, or graphic novels, we just didn’t get a chance to write a full review for. These are Graphic Policy’s Mini Reviews.


Alex

Kennel_Block_Blues_001_A_MainKennel Block Blues #1 (Boom!) Was a pretty odd comic about an anthromorphic dog living in a state of  half hallucinated reality as he enters prison. It’s good, and  it is worth looking into, but likely more a “wait for the trade” kind of book. Overall: 7.5 Recommendation: Read

The Last Contract #2 (Boom!) A comic about a retired hitman getting back into the game long after his retirement, The Last Contract has been a fantastic ride so far, with the eighty-plus year old killer taking no shit from anybody. Well aware of his physical limits, he’s a refreshing change from protagonists that can take on the world with their hands behind their back. Overall: 8.5 Recommendation: Buy

Gutter Magic #2 (IDW) This has got to be one of the most entertaining comics I’ve read in a long time. The art is fantastically detailed without being overly cluttered, and the characters are inhabiting a rich and vibrant world that feels fully formed before you turn the page. Highly, highly recommended. Overall: 9 Recommendation: Buy

Deluge #2 Is an indie comic set during the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. After reading the first issue, I’d actually thought it was just a one shot comic until I saw this. I actually found that the second issue was more enjoyable than the first, and I liked the first issue’s story about an undercover FBI agent infiltrating the New Orleans underworld amidst a layer of corruption from the local police. It’s a solid book that deserves a wider audience than it’ll end up getting. Overall: 8.75 Recommendation: Buy

Will Eisner’s The Spirit #8 (Dynamite) I have nothing to say here that hasn’t already been said. A solid comic book that’s well written, well drawn, and above all it’s very, very fun. Overall: 8.75 Recommendation: Buy

Huck04_CvrBHuck #4 (Image) I just… wow. Just wow. Overall: 9.75 Recommendation: Buy it now, or buy the trade. You need to own this.

Black Hood #9 (Dark Circle) Is a solid comic. It’s not my favourite comic from this publisher (that honour belongs to The Fox), but it’s a very good gritty vigilante thriller with a hero who is very much just a man. A decent series that’s worth checking out. Overall: 7.75 Recommendation: Read

 

Elana

Catwoman #49 (DC)* When the Messina/Valentine creative team ended their landmark run of Catwoman as a crime boss I thought Catwoman would go down hill. And while the comic did return to its roots with a far more traditional Catwoman story it’s still a really good comic! It’s a smart, interesting story suspensefully told. The lines are almost delicate and the splash pages pack in far more visual information that you think at first glance. Selina fighting Croc in front of a Nosferatu billboard? That’s cool! And the intrigue is high. I keep reading because it’s quality comics. So should you. Overall: 8 Recommendation: Read

 

Ryan C

American Monster #2 (Aftershock) *: Brian Azzarello and Juan Doe’s journey into the dark underbelly of America’s sleaziest small town continues with some revelations of both the major and minor variety that will serve to suck readers into the web they’re spinning ever deeper. Two issues in, I remain convinced that this has the potential to be Azzarello’s best series since “100 Bullets,” and Doe’s art, while first striking me as being a bit too “cartoonish” for the dark subject matter, is quickly starting to grow on me. Overall: 9 Recommendation: Buy

american monster 2Lucifer #3 (Vertigo) *: The devil went to The Dreaming, and all I got was this lousy t-shirt. Oh, and a damn good story — Gaiman-esque myth-spinning anchors one of Holly Black’s two main plot threads while the other, involving a trapped demon on Earth scheming to be set free, is pure Delano-era “Hellblazer.” Combine the two with Lee Garbett’s fun-yet-appropriately-grim artwork and a guest appearance by Matthew the Raven (who just turned up in his human form in the latest issue of “Swamp Thing”) and you’ve got yourself a heck — sorry, hell — of a book here. They say everything old is new again, and after three issues this series is proving that to be absolutely true. Overall: 8  Recommendation: Buy

The Tithe #8 (Image/Top Cow) **: Not a bad extra-length issue from writer Matt Hawkins and artists Rashan Ekedal and Phillip Sevy, but not a great one, either. The problem with the whole “Islamophobia” story arc isn’t that it was poorly done, just that it only had one big revelation in store and it gave that away in the opening installment. After that, we knew exactly where events were headed, and they simply proceeded to go there. It apparently pissed off a handful of right-wing dumbfucks online, though, so points to the creators for at least raising the blood pressure of all the right people. Overall: 6. Recommendation: Read.

The Shield #2 (Dark Circle) : Normally I’d say this isn’t a half-bad little issue because, well, it isn’t, but given that the gap between numbers one and two was something like five or six months in length, it should have — perhaps even needed to — return with a big splash, and it didn’t. I’m sure Adam Christopher and Chuck Wendig’s script was “in the can” some time ago, but some tinkering around the edges to re-engage readers into the storyline more fully would have been welcome, and the art-by-committee approach with Drew Johnson and Ray Snyder doing the first half of the book and Al Barrionuevo taking over the second half is jarring and messy. Still, we’ve got a Steve Rude painted cover as one of the variants this time out, so how petty am I for bitching about anything? Dark Circle’s been plagued with delays on pretty much all of their titles barring “The Black Hood,” though, so Archie really needs to get their shit together with this line or it will die the same quick death that these characters always seem to bring upon themselves in one decade after another. Overall: 6. Recommendation: Read

 

Bill-Ted-Go-to-Hell-1Shean

Bill and Ted Go To Hell#1 (Boom!): we catch up with the Wild Stallyns shortly after their adventures in the Triumphant Return.Colonel Oats and gang of baddies are enroute to Hell , kidnapping Bill And Ted’s buddy, the Grim Reaper, with them. The boys have to call on the help of Rufus and company to rescue him. By issue’s end , there is a bigger plan in play, than either of them expected. Overall:9.3 Recommendation: Buy


Well, there you have it, folks. The reviews we didn’t quite get a chance to write.

Please note that with some of the above comics, Graphic Policy was provided FREE copies for review. Where we purchased the comics, you’ll see an asterisk (*). If you don’t see that, you can infer the comic was a review copy. In cases where we were provided a review copy and we also purchased the comic you’ll see two asterisks (**).

Review: Snowfall #1

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In my experience, taking a “flier” on a new book you’ve attached no pre-conceived expectations to going in can pay off nicely. Right now, in fact, my pull list is populated with a number of series that I’m absolutely loving — from American Monster  to Hip-Hop Family Tree to Last Sons Of America to The Violent — that are the work of creators who I was either “down on” at one point and decided to give another chance to, or whose prior work (assuming there even was any) I was completely unfamiliar with.  I like the new. I like the unexpected. If I want the familiar, well — there’s always “The Big Two” for that.

Writer Joe Harris and artist Martin Morazzo are not, of course, new names — at least not for those of us who read their Image Comics series Great Pacific — nor are they creators who are in need of a second chance from yours truly, but still : when I first heard about their then-forthcoming, now-arrived new title Snowfall, I was in no way sure what to expect. It sounded — and judging by the few preview pages that were made available in recent months also looked and read — like something dramatically different to their prior work, and so my interest was piqued. Like I said, often the unfamiliar can yield surprisingly good results.

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Ya know what, though? Not always. And unfortunately that’s the case here.

None of the blame for why this extra-sized first issue (a nice value with 32 pages of story and art for $3.99 — full disclosure compels me to also inform you that I purchased my copy, no “review freebie” here) doesn’t work should rest on the shoulders of the artistic team, though. Morazzo and colorist-on-the-rise Kelly Fitzpatrick both go about their business splendidly, in fact. And the set-up that Harris presents us with involving a future Earth (the year being 2045, to be precise) that has seen some sort of “climate collapse” resulting in the desertification of much of the planet and the fall of the United States/subsequent rise of a new open corporate oligarchy called the “Cooperative States Of America” is an interesting enough bit of preliminary “world-building.” What he so clearly forgets to include, though, is any character-building, and so the search for the so-called “White Wizard” — some guy who has the power to make it snow and might be a terrorist, a freedom fighter, a mad scientist, you name it — falls well and truly flat.

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Don’t get me wrong — I feel bad that the various folks we’re introduced to here have to live in some sort of shitty dystopian society — but I don’t feel anything for any of them individually and frankly have a hard time discerning from events as presented who our main protagonists are even supposed to be, so completely one-note and un-involving are the lot of ’em.  Memo to Joe Harris : first issues are supposed to grab you with more than just an attractive price point, they’re supposed to make you interested enough in the proceedings to come back for more. Nothing on offer here manages to accomplish that most basic of tasks.

Obviously, Image has a reasonable amount of faith in these guys, and perhaps we should too — Great Pacific, after all, was something of a “slow burn” itself — but I’ve got (bad pun coming, you’ve been warned) cold feet already. A “slow burn” I can absolutely handle no problem — but this book feels like it’s in a deep freeze right out of the gate.

Story: Joe Harris Art: Martin Morazzo Color: Kelly Fitzpatrick
Story: 2 Art: 8 Overall: 5 Recommendation : Pass

Review: The Power of Power Man and Iron Fist

Power_Man_and_Iron_Fist_1_CoverLuke Cage is one of the great all time superheroes and David F Walker and Sanford Green do more than justice by him in their new series Power Man and Iron Fist.

Luke Cage: a struggling kid wrongfully imprisoned for the petty BS the criminal injustice system sends black men to jail for. Used as in medical experiments while incarcerated — which is never ever truly consensual. Made bulletproof, which as Joseph Phillip Illidge describes in his must-read essay Real Life Proves Why Luke Cage Endures:

“Is there any doubt the power fantasy of the Black man in the years following multiple assassinations of his leaders and children by way of the gun would be superhuman resistance to bullets?”

He marries detective Jessica Jones, a true survivor like himself and moves to Brooklyn to have a baby (like ya do). At the public’s request he briefly considered running for Brooklyn Borough President. Luke is the best. The core brilliance of the character survived years of clueless white men writing his dialog in a butchered black vernacular that they invented, seemingly without any knowledge of actual black vernacular.

With excellent writer (and excellent podcast guest) David F Walker and Sanford Green on art (one of Marvel’s only two black creative teams) I knew I’d like this comic. I love it.

I didn’t expect to get emotional about Power Man and Iron Fist but I did.

Something about how Luke is struggling between being a parent and being a hero and being a friend. Some days I’m Luke at the start of this issue: I just want to get home to my husband and cat. Some days I’m all about my job saving the world– or technically saving New York since I work for a NY community organization. And some days I’m Danny Rand, trying to get my friends with kids to leave their apartments and come to a party with me.

Green’s art has a scribbly, sketchy looseness that’s perfect for Luke’s roundhouse of a fighting style and perfect for Danny’s perpetually loose posture and body language.

Danny Rand Luke Cage _howyoudoin_

The clothes are realistic and contemporary. Luke’s beard is a new look for him and it definitely works with his tough-guy-cool-dad mystique

82% of women in prison are victims of domestic abuse and so is Luke and Danny’s former office assistant Jenny, who is released from Rikers in this issue. Jenny’s incarceration for killing her abusive boyfriend while she was possessed by a devil rings 1000% true in a world where magic is real.

The story is as firmly rooted in NYC as it must be and the NYC they depict feels real. The moments of interaction with the Marvel U are delicate and well placed and funny when they should be.

Power Man Iron Fist Street Selfie

I’m one of the many people who agrees with Keith Chow and other Asian-American comics fans who’ve called on Marvel to make Danny Rand Asian-American because it both resolves problematic aspects of his origin (a “White Savior” story), gives much needed diversity AND would be the source of great stories. A buddy comedy between a black hero and Asian-American hero can addresses specific issues of inter-racial friendships.

Luke Cage Danny Rand Jenny HugBut that ship has sailed. And if Marvel wants yet another blond American hero at least this team is the one writing him. Their Danny is anarchic and adorable. His enthusiasm makes the reader have fun too. I support his sideburns and tracksuit look.

I’m really loving this comic. Can’t wait for issue 2!

If you want to do something to help domestic violence victims facing unjust incarceration you can learn more about the Domestic Violence Survivors Justice Act in NY.

Overall Rating: 9 Recommendation: Buy!

Review: Alabaster: The Good, the Bad, and the Bird #3

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Dancy Flammarion was content to spend eternity in the nothingness of hell, but when a twisted pair of incestuous bounty hunters initiates a dark ritual, she finds herself unceremoniously cast from the afterlife into the deadly waters of the bayou! Now, new dangers are stalking Dancy, some of whom wear familiar faces . . .

Alabaster: The Good, the Bad, and the Bird #3 marks the midpoint of this five issue miniseries from the writer of Silk, Caitlin R. Kiernan. Why I haven’t read Silk? I have a suspicious feeling it is dark, fantastical, and down right strange. Honestly, the more I read of this series, the more I want to buy more works form Caitlin R. Kiernan. The writing is solid, complex and filled with unique characters. Of course this issue is no exception, as the past comes to life. Reuniting lovers, strangers, and a good chunk of backstory. Looking forward to the next issue.

The art by Daniel Warren Johnson continues the realism, as more occult influence begins to appear. Of course the art manage to create flashbacks of Dancy as she is brought out of the muddy waters of a swamp. The characters continue the streak of having a feeling of life, as they try to navigate the strangeness of the world.

Story: Caitlin R. Kiernan Art: Daniel Warren Johnson
Story: 8.5  Art: 9.0 Overall: 8.75 Recommendation: Buy

Dark Horse Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review

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