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Feeling the Pulse #12-13

portrait_incredibleFeeling the Pulse is a weekly issue by issue look at the follow-up series to Alias featuring Jessica Jones and a team of reporters at the Daily Bugle, who investigate and report on superhero related stories.  In this installment of Feeling the Pulse, I will be covering The Pulse #12-13 (2005-2006) written by Brian Michael Bendis and drawn by Michael Gaydos with colors from Matt Hollingsworth.

In The Pulse #12-13, which concludes the three part “Fear” storyline, writer Brian Michael Bendis and artist Michael Gaydos continue to have a two plot structure with Ben Urich investigating and writing a story on D-Man while Jessica Jones goes into labor, gets discriminated against by an anti-mutant hospital administrator, but gets swooped up in the nick of time by the New Avengers. (Luke being on the team is super helpful.) Getting Gaydos and colorist Matt Hollingsworth back for this pivotal moment in Jessica Jones’ life is a true coup as her raw emotions are on display while they show just how much Luke cares for her as he runs through the streets of New York (breaking up a drug deal along the way) and leaps into a Quinjet just to be with his girlfriend, who will hopefully become his wife.

The Pulse #12 opens frantically with Carol Danvers (Ms. Marvel at this time) flying Jessica to the nearest hospital where she is peppered with questions about her mutant and radioactive status. This is while Luke Cage is stuck in the New York traffic and can’t catch a cab so Wasp does the old “Avengers Assemble” thing so he can be with Jessica. While this is happening, Ben Urich continues his titanic struggle with J. Jonah Jameson, who finds D-Man’s name and backstory to be amusing, but quickly backpedals when he thinks that this story is a cover for trying to keep Daredevil safe because he is currently being investigated by the feds after his secret identity is outed in Daredevil. Urich does end up doing the story, finds out that D-Man (whose real name is Dennis Dunphy) has been arrested for vagrancy multiple times, and ends up meeting him in the sewers after one of the shopkeepers he’s robbed tells him that he uses it for travel. Back at the hospital, an administrator basically says that Jessica can’t deliver her mutant abomination under her care, but the New Avengers show up in the nick of time and take her to the best doctor around, Stephen Strange.

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The Pulse #13 deals with the birth of Jessica and Luke’s daughter as well as Ben Urich interviewing and helping D-Man. Bendis and Gaydos show that Jessica and Luke are non-conventional parents when Jessica keeps swearing and also makes a leaning on the fourth wall reference to Alias when she tells Dr. Strange about her mouth “a few years ago” while Luke asks for Public Enemy and not soft music to be played in the delivery room. And then the press decides to show up overwhelming Dr. Strange’s valet, Wong so Captain America takes over the PR duties and lets Kat Farrell come through because Jessica signed an exclusive with the Daily Bugle to cover the birth of her child. However, Jessica refuses to talk to Kat and let the Bugle have the story because they lambasted Luke Cage in the paper back in New Avengers #15.

Speaking of the press, D-Man takes Ben Urich to his sewer home after complimenting his news stories about Daredevil and offering him a stale cupcake. There is some voiceover narration (Ben typing the story) about D-Man refusing to join the Avengers to be a hero for the homeless, but now he is just alone. Ben confronts him about stealing the jewelry, and it is clear that D-Man isn’t in his right mind as he thinks that the pieces of jewelry are Infinity Gems. And finally Jessica has her baby while J. Jonah Jameson is furious that he got scooped by the Daily Globe and printed a story about D-Man instead. Urich says he shouldn’t have disrespected her, and it flashes back to Urich getting in contact with Daredevil, who gets D-Man the help he needs. The issue closes with Jessica and Luke holding their baby when Luke proposes to her.

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The D-Man and Jessica giving birth plotlines in The Pulse #12-#13 aren’t super suspenseful, but they tie together nicely through the shared theme of empathy or the lack of it. Whether they are homeless petty thieves or celebrities (Superhero news stories are the celebrity gossip of the Marvel Universe.), these superpowered beings are human beings, who just want to make ends meet or start a family while helping others. Ben Urich chooses to listen to D-Man’s problems and not just use him for a story about a fallen story or as a joke, finds out that he respects Daredevil tremendously, and uses his connection with Daredevil to find him some kind of help or shelter.

And I don’t recall reading any of D-Man’s appearances in the past ten years, but currently, he is an important supporting character in Nick Spencer’s Captain America: Sam Wilson so perhaps Urich did some good. His actions are one final example of his belief that superheroes (even masked ones) are a force for good in society that is the complete opposite of his editor J. Jonah Jameson and fellow Pulse reporter Kat Farrell’s view that they’re good front page fodder to sell newspapers. Jessica Jones drives this point home more emphatically when she yells on the phone that Jameson is a mustache sporting Nazi while giving birth. Ouch, indeed.

On the other hand, with Jessica’s pregnancy, The Pulse #12-13 is a true example of superheroes cooperating to help one of their own even if they have different backgrounds from the retired Avenger Janet Van Dyne making the initial call to Carol Danvers being an amazing friend and holding Jessica’s hand and literally carrying her through this ordeal and finally to the New Avengers and Doctor Strange. Each New Avenger or guest hero (With the exception of Spider-Woman even though she and Jessica teamed up back in Alias.) has a great moment or line in support of Jessica.

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Carol’s shining moment comes straight out of the gates as she flies between New York skyscrapers and ensures Jessica checks into a hospital as quickly as possible and is followed by Wasp saying “Avengers assemble” as she immediately goes from chit chatting about fashion with Luke Cage to getting him a ride to the hospital. Wolverine gets to basically tell the anti-mutant hospital administrator to go to hell, Spider-Man makes awkward, badly timed jokes about the Vision and Scarlet Witch’s kids, and Iron Man flies the Quinjet moving Jessica from a hospital run by a bigot to the Sanctum Sanctorum of Doctor Strange. And Captain America pays forward Jessica’s saving of his reputation back in the first arc of Alias by being a literal shield for the hordes of press surrounding Dr. Strange’s house.

Cap gives a measured speech as Gaydos zooms into the star on his chest showing that he’s a champion for his fellow heroes whether they’re facing aliens, mind control, or journalists. Matt Hollingsworth’s color palette is usually pretty faded on Alias, but he makes the panels just a tad brighter when the various superheroes show up even Daredevil, whose red acts as a light to lead D-Man out of squalor and into a better life. Hollingsworth’s colors also stand out when Luke Cage is running to be with Jessica as she’s in labor and the street around him is all yellow because of the taxi cabs. Yellow has been Luke’s color since his Power Man days in the 1970s, and the use of color in both his shirt and surroundings shows his determination to be with the women he loves as she brings his daughter into the world. Their relationship continues to be the center of the story as he helps her get through the pains of labor holding his hand as she starts her contractions. (It was vice versa, but the unbreakable skin did more harm than good.)

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As I mentioned last week, Michael Gaydos’ return was super timely as he draw the dark corridors of the New York City sewers as well as the emotions that are running high as Jessica Jones has her daughter. Most of his facial expressions are pained as Jessica goes into labor while being hounded by doctors and various hospital people, who are asking about her mutant status, her superpowers, and kick Carol Danvers out because of her energy based powers. However, it gets better in The Pulse #13 when Carol, Luke, and Cap are there to soothe her as the pain increases, and the censored profanity increases. Even though he’s not allowed to show the actual words because this is a comic set in the mainstream Marvel universe, Bendis uses profanity in a manner similar to Alias to show Jessica’s raw feelings as she is about to experience a life changing moment. And Gaydos’ depiction of Jessica with her newborn daughter is quite touching as he goes away from the grid filled double page spreads that he uses to show the verbal tete a tetes that Jessica, Ben Urich, J. Jonah Jameson, and other characters have engaged in throughout Alias and The Pulse to back to back full page spreads. Also, the final page with Luke and Jessica is pure bliss with well-earned smiles everywhere. Of course, we don’t hear her answer to his proposal because Bendis has to leave one thread untied for next issue’s finale. (Jessica’s reaction to the proposal is priceless and ambiguous though.)

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J. Jonah Jameson detests it and mentions taking legal action while continuing to denigrate Ben Urich as less than a reporter, but the D-Man story that Ben Urich writes is what Jameson had in mind for The Pulse when he first came up with the idea. These articles that are in-depth, analysis pieces on superheroes that every day people can connect to, like human interest stories with a side of colorful costumes and punching. And this is the kind of story that Urich excels at writing even though he’s best known for investigative journalism about the Kingpin and Norman Osborn as D-Man talks about the “layers” he gave Daredevil, and how his writing style brought the Man without Fear close to a struggling superhero and wrestler, like him.

I’m not saying that Ben Urich is a self-insert character for Brian Michael Bendis, but it is handy to have a writer character in your story to  expound your ideas on a certain topic: superheroes in this case. In his superhero comics from Ultimate Spider-Man to Daredevil, Avengers, and way too many event miniseries, Bendis finds a kind of middle ground between deconstruction and reconstruction. He can write a character like Jessica Jones, who rejects the superhero life as painting too much in broad strokes and not looking at the big picture, or he can write Ultimate Peter Parker, who is the embodiment of heroism mingled with teen angst and optimism. Bendis’ best work and characterization has definitely come with the solo street level heroes, like Spider-Man, Daredevil, Jessica Jones, and Luke Cage, and he does better at telling dialogue driven stories focusing on the human side heroes with splashes of action even though he has a couple of cool concepts in him, like House of M alternate reality, Nick Fury’s Secret War, and bringing the original 1960s X-Men to the current time period.

The Pulse #12-13 has plenty of emotional payoff for the characters of Jessica Jones and Luke Cage as they overcome discrimination and just the usual fears of bringing a child into the world with the help of their superhero friends. And in the B-plot, Bendis and Gaydos continue to show why Ben Urich is one of the most underappreciated supporting characters in the Marvel Universe as he uses his skills as journalism to not only tell the truth about the world around him, but also to create empathy for his fellow human beings even smelly, homeless Z-list superhero dropouts, who happen to be people with dreams, aspirations, and ideals too.

Feeling the Pulse #1

ThePulse1Feeling the Pulse is a weekly issue by issue look at the follow-up series to Alias featuring Jessica Jones and a team of reporters at the Daily Bugle, who investigate and report on superhero related stories.

In this installment of Feeling the Pulse, I will be covering The Pulse #1 (2004) written by Brian Michael Bendis, penciled by Mark Bagley, inked by Scott Hanna, and colored by Frank D’Armata and Brian Reber.

In The Pulse #1, Jessica Jones goes from being the through and through protagonists of her own series to a co-protagonist with embattled Daily Bugle city and crime reporter Ben Urich, who was a scene stealing supporting character in writer Brian Michael Bendis’ work on Ultimate Spider-Man and Daredevil as well as making a couple appearances in Alias so the two aren’t strangers. And like Alias, The Pulse isn’t a superhero comic, but something like The Newsroom set square in the center of the Marvel Universe. For over 50 years, the Daily Bugle and its denizens, like J. Jonah Jameson, have been supporting characters of Spider-Man, and now they get the spotlight. And they shine for the most part with some quick hitting conversations that would make Aaron Sorkin or David Mamet proud even though the “hook” for the next issue is a little conventional with a floating dead body and an ID of a random person. Also, it is entertaining to see J. Jonah Jameson talk out of both sides of his mouth as he pitches “The Pulse” newspaper section to both Jessica Jones and Ben Urich.

PulseIntroThe Pulse #1 opens slowly and cinematically with a full page spread from artists Mark Bagley and Scott Hanna of reporter Ben Urich looking at a Daily Bugle newspaper with a typical anti-Spider-Man headline while his crime story about a Yakuza uprising is pushed to the back page. Perhaps this is a comment on traditional superhero tales continuing to dominate comics sales while compelling crime and noir stories are more middling, and no one wants to read about journalists. (In February 2004, Ultimate Spider-Man #53 sold 92,514 copies whereas Bendis’ crime meets superhero story in Daredevil #57 sold 54,629, and The Pulse #1 sold 51,116 and dropped to a little over 27,000 towards the end of its run.) It’s a compelling character introduction with a medium brown color palette from Frank D’Armata and Brian Reber

The first issue shows a dead body just rotting in a lake in Central Park for a whole issue while Jessica Jones prepares for her interview with the Daily Bugle in an attempt to find stability (and health insurance) for her and her boyfriend, Luke Cage. J. Jonah Jameson tells her that because his paper’s circulation numbers are down in the age of TV and Internet news that he is trying something new and deciding to give superheroes a positive spin in the new weekly “The Pulse” section, which will feature in-depth features about them. Ben Urich will write the stories while Jessica Jones acts as a “vigilante analyst” or consultant and will even be part of the story once she announces her pregnancy. Jameson tells a very different thing to Ben Urich telling him that even though “The Pulse” is meant for admirers of superheroes that he should be tough on superheroes if he catches them doing something wrong. This section is Jameson’s attempt at trying to shake off his lethargy and get him breaking big stories. Presumably, his and Jessica’s first piece will have something to do with the random body in Central Park that was dropped by a superhero or supervillain.

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Before delving into the excellent characterization of J. Jonah Jameson or Bagley’s use of double page spreads to give letterer Cory Petit an opportunity to let Bendis’ long stretches of dialogue breathe, there is one main negative that will make you wish Michael Gaydos was still the artist. Mark Bagley is terrible at drawing adult women. He does an okay job with the teenagers in Ultimate Spider-Man, but his facial and anatomy work with Jessica Jones shifts rapidly as she goes from looking like a 17 year old when she’s cuddling with Luke Cage to a middle aged woman when she enters the Daily Bugle offices. Hanna’s inking gets more consistent during the “interview” scene between her and Jameson, but she does look like a brunette version of Ultimate Mary Jane Watson.

Bendis really seems to get a kick out of writing J. Jonah Jameson and even though Ben Urich and Jessica Jones are nominally the protagonists of The Pulse, he steals the entire issue kind of like J.K. Simmons stole the entire Sam Raimi Spider-Man trilogy from Tobey Maguire, Kirsten Dunst, James Franco, and company. He builds off Jameson’s characterization in Alias where he is grateful to Jessica for finding his missing foster daughter, Mattie Franklin, and creates a turning point for him as a character as he goes on about giving superheroes a fair shake if only to increase readership. But there’s always a catch with him, and the catch is the Daily Bugle getting the exclusive on her pregnancy as his tabloid headline grabber side reveals itself. Jameson likes good, hard news as evidenced by his keeping Ben Urich on the staff, but he also wants to make a buck and if he has to say nice things about superheroes, so be it.

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Bendis and Bagley create a study in parallels between Jameson’s chat with Jessica Jones about The Pulse, and his chat with Ben Urich at the local watering hole. Bagley uses a stricter grid when Jameson and Jessica speak as she tries to keep it as businesslike as possible and is willing to compromise a little bit to support her family. But with the Jameson, Robertson, and Urich conversation, D’Armata evokes the smell of a respectable, but not too respectable tavern with brown wood tones and just enough shadow to keep it from being noir. Jameson also uses a similar manipulative technique on Urich that he did with Jessica by portraying each of them as “washed up” in some way or another. Jessica as a superhero and P.I., Urich as a reporter. Starting out, he dictates the narrative and dynamic between them. And teaming up an ex-superhero, who has a low opinion of them with a journalist, who respects their power to inspire, and an editor, who hates them is bound to lead to some great drama and disagreements along the way.

For being a first issue, The Pulse #1 doesn’t have the greatest final page hook. It is kind of interesting that there’s been a dead body in the lake for an entire issue in a city the population of New York, and that no one has noticed. Perhaps some kind of mind control is involved. But, whether it’s because of lack of visual distinctness in Bagley’s faces for women or just a plain, bad ending, the cliffhanger of the police looking at a faded I.D. falls flat. But the concept of a supervillain murder mystery from a journalist and possibly police perspective has some genre bending potential, and the interference and role of the press always spices up mystery and crime stories. (See The Wire or more recently BBC America’s Broadchurch.) Plus it’ll give Jessica a chance to do her private investigator thing.

The Pulse #1 has a unique concept and the makings of a compelling ensemble in Jessica Jones, Luke Cage, J. Jonah Jameson, Ben Urich, and Robbie Robertson, who have been liberated from playing second fiddle to Spider- Man.Some of the execution is lacking, such as Bagley’s inability to draw adult women and a half-assed murder mystery plot, but Bendis’ dialogue was built for walk and talk newsroom environment. (He used to work as a cartoonist for the Cleveland Plain Dealer, and this is evident in his development of Jameson’s philosophy for the Daily Bugle and its Pulse section.)

Investigating Alias #20-21

Alias_Vol_1_20Investigating 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 #20-21(2003) written by Brian Michael Bendis, drawn by Michael Gaydos, and colored by Matt Hollingsworth with dream sequence art from Mark Bagley, Al Vey, and Dean White in Alias #21.

“The Underneath” wraps up in Alias #20-21 as writer Brian Michael Bendis puts the meat of the plot in these issues as well as humanizing J. Jonah Jameson and showing that Jessica Jones can be pretty damn heroic as she has a real connection with Mattie Franklin, the third Spider-Woman, who has been drugged and used as a source of mutant growth hormone (MGH) by her skeezy, wannabe Kingpin boyfriend Denny Haynes. Alias #20 opens up with Jessica Drew going all Emperor Palpatine on Jessica Jones with bio-electric venom blasts, and then our protagonist repays her in kind with a right hook. They bond over the fact that they hate the Avengers and costumes and meet with J. Jonah Jameson and his wife Marla, who formally hire them to find Mattie after an emotional plea. A database search and phone call later, they end up at Denny’s hotel room where another young superhero and former New Warrior Speedball is losing control of his very colorful force field powers. Between this and Civil War where he’s involved in the deaths of hundreds of school children in Stamford, Connecticut, I feel really bad for him.

Alias #21 concludes this arc and starts off with Matt Hollingsworth’s most colorful palette yet with the primary colored energy bursts causing Jessica Jones to lapse in a dream state. This completely silent three page sequence is drawn by Mark Bagley and Al Vey with colors from Dean White and is the first time Killgrave (aka the Purple Man) has appeared in Alias as he is shown kissing and manipulating Jessica before the Defenders led by Doctor Strange show up. It’s a harrowing look at Jessica’s dark past and features many Marvel Universe cameos. After this, Jessica Jones takes out Denny Haynes and with an assist from Jessica Drew and various hotel room furniture dispatches the rude, sexist guy, who was hopped on MGH and beat her up in the club when she was looking for Mattie a couple issues back. They then find out that Speedball has been working with the police to bust Denny’s MGH ring, and Jessica Jones has to fly across New York City with a barely conscious Mattie to avoid Jameson’s enemies using her against him.

The story skips six weeks forward, and a now clean Mattie thanks Jessica Jones for saving her, gives her a newspaper story from J. Jonah Jameson that portrays her as a hero taking down a drug ring, and Marla Jameson says an offer to work as a P.I. for the Daily Bugle is still on the table. Jessica rejects the offer and ends up having an awkward chat/apology with Scott Lang, who hasn’t talked to her in six weeks, but professes his love for her in a manner worthy of a Cameron Crowe film. She reluctantly agrees to another date.

Alias #20 and #21 are pretty big issues in the scope of the series as a whole with the first appearance of Purple Man setting up the series’ final arc featuring his return into Jessica’s life. There is also Jessica having her first kind of “superhero team-up” (in a non-traditional manner) with Jessica Drew, having her longest “flight” yet, and Bendis kind of setting up the sequel series he did to Alias called The Pulse where Jessica worked for a special section of the Daily Bugle focused around superheroes. But beyond these pivotal moments, Bendis and artist Michael Gaydos show the emotional connection that Jessica Jones has created with the Mattie Franklin case because both she and Mattie were young superheroes and orphans, who were manipulated by older, evil men to do things that they didn’t want to.

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This is really captured in the closing of Alias #21 when Jessica is perfectly understanding and empathetic with Mattie. She loves smoking and drinking excessively, being snarky, and punching out her fellow ex-superhero P.I.’s, but also helps Mattie recover from her rape at the hands of Denny Haynes. Visually, Gaydos and Hollingsworth ditch the dark stylized noir of the New York, hotel room, and even earlier office scenes for a neutral palette and a simple nine panel grid as Jessica supports Mattie through the line, “Actually, I know exactly what you mean.” Jessica Jones is truly heroic because she doesn’t just punch out the rapists, but helps the victim recover by listening and just being there for Mattie Franklin

This conversation is followed up by an uncharacteristically positive superhero related story about Jessica Jones and Jessica Drew’s actions from J. Jonah Jameson, who Bendis had given some depth in Alias #20. First off, he has Jameson (through Ben Urich as a go-between) contact Jessica Jones first about helping him find Mattie after threatening her earlier arc, and after she scammed him and used his money to help charities instead of Spider-Man’s secret identity. This is a big step for him, and it’s because he is close to Mattie. Gaydos shows this emotion in his artwork with two close ups of Jameson’s sad face on an uncharacteristically silent page. If you remember, Bendis and Gaydos turned Alias #10 into an illustrated screenplay because Jameson talks so much.

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A quiet J. Jonah Jameson is a big deal, and Bendis and Gaydos show this through the words and facial expressions of Marla Jameson. The scene is framed in the usual little square, big rectangle interview layout that’s been used throughout Alias, but Gaydos continues to zoom into Marla’s face and show how she partially feels responsible for Mattie going missing because of her and Jonah’s busy job. The final close-up shows her fear and the reason why she wants to hire Jessica Jones (and Jessica Drew) because the editor of a newspaper that attacks superheroes having a superhero foster daughter with drug issues could end Jonah’s career and ruin her family’s reputation. But Jonah’s motive isn’t entirely to save his own cigar chomping self, and Marla says that he truly cares for Mattie and wants to be a good father for her to make up for his mistakes with his son, John. Through this conversation and Jonah having to excuse himself earlier, Bendis and Gaydos show a more vulnerable, human side of the tabloid publisher. This is just a man, who wants his daughter to be okay and happens to mistrust masked heroes in an extreme way.

The most fun in Alias #20-21 comes from Jessica Jones and Jessica Drew teaming up. Bendis created Jessica Jones and revived Jessica Drew as a character putting her in the Spider-Woman costume for the first time in over 20 years in New Avengers and giving her own solo book in the Spider-Woman Origin comic in 2005. It’s safe to say he loves both characters and makes them equals in this adventure as they find common ground in their hatred for the Avengers and costumes. Bendis doesn’t have Jessica Drew come up with a huge reason for hanging up the Spider-Woman threads just that it made her “ass look fat”, and this sets up a perfect opportunity for Jessica Jones to quip about the leather The Matrix-inspired costumes that had been proliferating in the Marvel Universe since Ultimate X-Men. They both find a key piece of evidence to the whereabouts of Denny Haynes, and Jessica Drew gives Jessica Jones grief for using the Internet. This is because she doesn’t have an international network like Jessica Drew that pays for month long trips to Istanbul and has to make ends meet any way possible. However, Jessica Drew doesn’t come across as rich and annoying, and her venom blasts are really handy for getting inside locked doors. Hollingsworth uses harsh blue-white coloring for them to make them really jarring against the shadowy backgrounds of the hotels, streets, and apartments that Jessica Drew and Jessica Jones search for Mattie in. She is confident in her abilities, and it seems like Bendis is gunning for Jessica Drew to come back full time as a superhero, which she would two years later in New Avengers. (She was a Skrull though, oops.)

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Gaydos and Hollingsworth make a rare artistic misstep in the scenes featuring Speedball’s powers towards the end of Alias #20 and at the beginning of Alias #21. The Dippin’ Dots-style colors for his forcefield abilities are really fun, and it’s like he wandered off the set of a kid-friendly Disney Channel show into an HBO drama. However, the yellow, blue, and green balls everywhere obscure the action when Jessica Jones takes out Denny Haynes and his high-on-MGH goon with Jessica Drew and lessens the catharsis of this beatdown. But even if the action is less clear to follow, Gaydos, Hollingsworth, and letterer Cory Petit create an aura of chaos with his powers going everywhere and show that Speedball, who is having problems controlling his powers, is unsuited for this kind of delicate work like secretly infiltrating a drug ring to get MGH of the street. It’s like a darker 21 Jump Street situation, but with superheroes.

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Speedball’s colorful abilities do have one visual upside. They create enough of a trippy environment for Jessica Jones to fall into a kind of dream state for three pages, and the brightness of his costume and abilities is kind of a segue between rough hewn noir meets realism of Gaydos and the traditional superhero work of Bagley in the flashback scenes. The first page Bagley draws in a nine panel grid is the most powerful and unsettling as the shrouded, purple form of Killgrave has Jessica (in her Jewel costume) completely under his control. His appearance in the margins of the panel reminds me of early on in the Jessica Jones TV show where he just appeared in Jessica’s head or manipulated people from barely offscreen. His name isn’t mentioned in this issue, and the dream sequence is obscure foreshadowing, like the all-dream episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer “Restless”. The classic Defenders lineup of Hulk, Silver Surfer, Doctor Strange, Namor, Nighthawk, and Valkyrie showing up casts this dream even more into the realm of the weird. But Bendis and Bagley are wise to not let the cameo overwhelm the sequence and end with a close-up of Jessica Jones in her civilian clothes terrified and wielding some kind of energy weapon. It’s the first real visual taste of Jessica’s past mental manipulation at the hands of Killgrave, and Bendis keeps things extremely mysterious for now.

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Even though there is an epilogue I mentioned earlier with Jessica Jones comforting Mattie six weeks after her incident and yet enough horrible conversation with Scott Lang, who calls Jessica crazy and then that he loves her, the full page spreads of Jessica flying with Mattie through the air are the true climax of “The Underneath” arc. It’s been mentioned earlier that Jessica can fly, but never figured out landing so it’s an ability she rarely uses. And in keeping with this, Gaydos’ flying pose for Jessica is pretty awkward, and she even crash lands in a random empty room saying the very Jessica Jones one-liner, “The shit I gotta do” before finding a taxi. But the opposite of Superman flying skills aside, this is one of the most heroic things Jessica Jones has done in Alias. She sympathizes with Mattie so much that she uses an ability that she is still uncomfortable with to make sure that Mattie gets home safe without the police and media using her as a tabloid headline. And unlike the beginning of the arc where she hesitates to stop a convenience store robbery, Jessica just jumps out of a window with Mattie. Even though she isn’t particularly inspirational and makes plenty of mistakes, Jessica Jones is a true hero.

Some visual issues with Speedball’s powers aside, Alias #20-21 is a real highlight reel for the series so far. There’s some banter and ass kicking with Jessica Drew and Jessica Jones taking down the men, who have been manipulating, drugging, and raping Mattie Franklin and some character growth as J. Jonah Jameson trusts and writes positively about superheroes who have touched his life personally. Brian Michael Bendis and Mark Bagley also give us our first look at Killgrave and hint at the horrible things in Jessica Jones’ past, which she has used to empathize with Mattie in a powerful way. And finally, we get to see Jessica Jones fly in her own unique way with Michael Gaydos using a full page spread, but rejecting the iconic poses of superheroes in flight for Jessica struggling to carry Mattie. This scene is a real visual climax for the series so far and shows that Jessica Jones is a hero on her own terms and despite her self-doubt and lack of traditional superhero qualities.

Investigating Alias #16-17

 alias_16_cover_marvel_february_2003Investigating 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 #16-17 (2003) written by Brian Michael Bendis, drawn by Michael Gaydos, and colored by Matt Hollingsworth.

Alias #16 starts a new story arc called “The Underneath” where Jessica Jones looks for Mattie Franklin, who stumbles around Jessica’s apartment in costume and then jumps out the window while cursing her out. Jessica is freaked out and spends the night at Scott Lang’s apartment, who she started dating last issue.There, she calls Agent Quartermain, her contact at SHIELD, who gives her grief for sleeping with Ant-Man and gives her information on Mattie’s whereabouts and known associates. The issue ends with Jessica confronting J. Jonah Jameson, who she had previously scammed out of money while he wanted her to find Spider-Man’s secret identity.

Alias #17 uses a non-linear narrative structure with Scott and Jessica starting to have sex, but they stop when Jessica tells him that she’s had a horrible day beginning with “J. Jonah Dickface”. (Scott’s words, not hers.) Writer Brian Michael Bendis bookends the story of her day with Jessica and Scott’s observations on these events and offers insight into their relationship while furthering the mystery plot and also hinting at her dark backstory. After Jessica tells J. Jonah Jameson being missing and asks about his relationship with the girl that he and his wife raised and cared for, he gets angry in his typical, superhero hating way and promises to destroy her if she doesn’t find Mattie.

She does some online digging and finds out she was connected to Jessica Drew, a more prosperous Marvel private investigator, who doesn’t pick up her call because she’s in Istanbul for the month. Then, Malcolm, who is much more annoying in the comic than the Jessica Jones TV show, bursts in and is his irritating self. However, Jessica is so desperate than she enlists his encyclopedic knowledge of superheroes and possible connection to help find her offering him a job if he finds any information on Mattie. Then, she meets the cryptic, telepathic, clairvoyant, and quite creepy Madame Web, who babbles about Mattie possibly meeting a horrible, violent end. The climax of the issue is Web reading Jessica’s mind without her permission and seeing her horrible past (Killgrave still isn’t mentioned by name.), which causes her to run out in anger. The comic ends with Jessica silently remembering.

The opening scene of Alias #16 where Jessica Jones thwarts a convenience story in a not very superheroic way. I read this scene as Bendis along with artist Michael Gaydos and colorist Matt Hollingsworth deconstructing his more straightforward superhero work on Ultimate Spider-Man with artist Mark Bagley. Whereas Spider-Man would have swung in on a double page splash page and had some kind of a Clerks joke at the ready, Jessica opens up by throwing shade on a women’s magazine and its obsession with thinness and pleasing men. The hold-up happens as she is reading, and it’s never in doubt that Jessica is going to help, but she saves the day in her own special way starting out by throwing a can of soup at the robber and then just tackling him while referring to Spider-Man’s jokes as “shit”. However, the situation almost gets more horrible when the clerk is about to shoot the robber, and Jessica has to talk him down. The little incident doesn’t end with the typical, “Yo *insert superhero name here*, you’re the greatest and New York loves you”, but with Jessica having to pay full price for cigarettes. There is a sad, yet all too true kind of realism in the worker’s ungratefulness.

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This sequence encapsulates both Jessica Jones and Alias’ relationship to the superhero genre. Sure, she’s cool with helping people as seen in her previous cases, including an assist to Captain America, but superheroes are both a nuisance and a stress to her. Gaydos and Hollingsworth do an excellent job showing the stress part by quickly cutting from Jessica to the robber and now gun-wielding clerk with a blood red background showing she’s barely in control of the situation to go along with rambling dialogue like “El speako Englisho.” Gaydos shows the chaos of the situation by losing his usual panel grid and jumbling panels together as Jessica tackles the robber and tries to get everything squared away before the police officers come. And her fear of the police isn’t the silly “They’ll reveal my secret identity.” reason, but that the fact that police officers held her in an interrogation room and accused her of murder in the first arc of Alias and she’s afraid that they’ll do a similar thing and ask her continuous questions about quitting her superhero gig. The mistrust is well-placed, but kind of bites her in the ass when she doesn’t go them when Mattie Franklin shows up in her apartment and goes missing.

Along with setting up the P.I. plot, Alias #16-17 examines the burgeoning relationship between Scott Lang and Jessica Jones. Even though he has a criminal past, Scott is a decent guy, who cares about Jessica and invites her over to stay at his apartment for her safety, not a booty call. In fact, he’s snoring on the couch while Jessica does some work on her laptop with his adorable Avengers mug and Ant-Man helmet on his kitchen table. It’s a nice moment of domestic tranquility while Jessica freaks out about the missing, mysterious superhero, who showed up at her apartment, cursed her out, and literally bounced off the walls outside her place. Scott and Jessica also share some fun, sarcastic banter like Scott letting Jessica stay because he want “future boyfriend points”. But most of their conversation is about more serious topics.

Scott is a pretty good listener and stops having sex with Jessica in Alias #17 when he realizes that something is the matter with her. (Gaydos does an excellent job differentiating between emotionally vacant and pleasured fill faces in this scene.) However, he can get a little judge-y at times like when he inserts a completely unnecessary “I told you so” when Jessica says she should’ve called the police about Mattie after being verbally threatened by J. Jonah Jameson and getting a preternaturally eerie phone call from Madame Web just before she was about to dial Web’s number. And maybe his being an ass about her choices in a difficult situation is why she is silent in the final pages of the issue.

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In Alias #17, Bendis thinks of something clever to do with the annoyance that is Malcolm. Malcolm is definitely a stand-in for teenage fanboys, who picked up Alias for its sex, use of “fuck”, and perceived edginess instead of Hollingsworth’s noir color palette, Gaydos’ ability to convey fear, paranoia, and negative feelings through facial expressions and switch-ups in panel layouts, and Bendis’ ear for dialogue. He is just plain mean and makes fun of Captain America for revealing his secret identity and calls Daredevil a “pussy” for suing the tabloid that outed him as Matt Murdock in some kind of insane, proto-hipster way of telling Jessica that she’s cool for going public with her superhero identity way before them. But instead of throwing him through a plate glass window, but with her sass firmly intact, Jessica puts Malcolm the “geekboy” to work trying to find evidence on Mattie Franklin. And she gets to throw him the mother of all side eye when he asks for a cell phone to go with his purely theoretical part time job. Malcolm doesn’t get the robust manipulated addict to altruistic helper arc that the Malcolm played by Eka Darville in Jessica Jones did, but at least, he’s slightly useful to the plot in this issue instead of just being target practice for Jessica’s snark.

Jessica’s meeting with Madame Web towards the conclusion of Alias #17 is one of the most emotionally draining scenes in the series up to this point. Gaydos is an artist who conveys feeling through the eyes so he makes Web a character divorced from it by showing her either wreathed in shadow or just a panel of her glasses for close-ups. However, she isn’t completely removed from empathy and bows her head when she talks about seeing Jessica’s past while saying, “I’m so sorry.” This is the first straightforward thing she’s said in the comic, and her dialogue up to that point reads like possible ways this story arc could be concluded as Bendis doesn’t want to give away anything major at this point in the game. And then she does something that Killgrave did years ago (and we’ll learn more about later) and reads Jessica’s mind without her consent earning a well-deserved earful of anger from Jessica.

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Telepathy and mind control has been one of the most problematic elements in both superhero and science fiction from Obi Wan Kenobi using it to get past a Stormtrooper in Star Wars to Professor X’s shenanigans in various eras of X-Men comics to Ms. Marvel being brainwashed, raped, and impregnated in 1980’s Avengers #200. I believe that reading someone’s mind without their permission is the psychic equivalent of rape because it’s a violation of consent and should be treated as such in sci-fi and superhero stories. Bendis handles it pretty well in Alias #17 by having Jessica tell Madame Web what she did was wrong in her signature foulmouthed way. Again, Gaydos goes away from the grid and uses big slashing style panel layouts to go along with Jessica’s accusatory gestures and Hollingsworth’s red and black palette. I don’t know much about Madame Web beyond the fact that she was extremely weird in the 1990s Spider-Man and Spider-Man Unlimited cartoons, but she comes across as a character, who lacks any kind of moral compass and idea of consequences. And she triggers memories of Jessica’s past that she would rather keep buried down deep as seen in the dark grey coloring of the final pages of the issue as she lays in bed.

Alias #16-17 opens with an exploration into Jessica Jones and Alias’ relationship with the superhero genre showing that it encroaches upon Jessica’s goal of just moving on with her life and job as a private investigator and also looks at her partially sweet and empathetic and partially strained relationship with Scott Lang as she tracks down D-List teen hero Mattie Franklin, the third Spider-Woman. Brian Michael Bendis’ writing, Michael Gaydos’ art, and Matt Hollingsworth’s colors are full of emotion as Jessica battles the pressure of J. Jonah Jameson accusing her of ripping him off in this situation along with being forced to relive past trauma when Madame Web reads her mind without consent. Jessica is really in a dark, lonely place by the end of Alias #17 even though she’s in bed with Scott Lang.