Extra Sequential Podcast #65-Chuck Dixon

62 mins. In short, Chuck Dixon is an underrated writer who writes a lot, and writes very well.We dissect the prolific output of this mercenary comic book writer, and delve into the controversial issues and personal politics which led to his blacklisting at both Marvel & DC. Also, Whoopi Goldberg’s love life and Billy Connolly as Dr. Who.

LISTEN TO IT HERE

DOWNLOAD IT HERE

GET IT ON iTUNES HERE

1:54 NEWS 

Ted McKeever’s Mondo

The Walking Dead creator Robert Kirkman on TV show The View

6:53 THEME – CHUCK DIXON

Dixon is a master world builder and wrote a multitude of mainly Batman related titles in the ’90s and early 2000s. He expanded the lives of Tim Drake and Dick Grayson, co-created Bane and made an all-female series a huge success in Birds of Prey.

 

Extra Sequential Podcast #64-Forgotten DC #1s

69 mins. We thought we’d turn back the clock to the some old debuts from DC Comics and compare them to the current blast of new series premieres, and discuss the trouble of new superhero concepts and the business of such. Also, Beauty and the Geek, Family Matters and Bruce Willis.

LISTEN TO IT BELOW, DOWNLOAD IT HERE OR ON iTUNES

You can email us at kris (at)extrasequential(dot)com and befriend us on the NEW ES Facebook page.

1: 58 NEWS

Batman: Arkham City fan made costume

The new Punisher TV series

Superman’s co-creator’s auction

Watchmen 2 gets some movement

Sydney Zombie Walk, and a great zombie print from Silver Fox Comics

13:45 THEME – FORGOTTEN DC #1s

The Highwaymen. It’s like Red, but with added Bill Clinton and more innocent deaths.

Lab Rats from John Byrne. It’s like The Matrix, or tries to be. It fails.

Suicide Squad – old and new.

Hawk and Dove – old (hard rocking!) and new (zombies on airplanes!).

Firebrand featuring exploding mechanical legs.

How the storytelling and marketing approach varies between the old DC #1s and the 2011 versions.

 

The Unexpected #1 Review

The Unexpected #1 is a one-shot from DC Comics/ Vertigo. Under that irresistible cover from Rafael Grampa (look at it! a woman in bloody stilettos, with dead birds strapped to her about to go psycho on some ’50s lovers at a skull screening drive-in!) are some great stories, in the vein of Twilight Zone. As with all mixed bags like this, there’s bound to be some losers amongst the winners, but the strike rate here is pretty good and I hope they publish another one.

The Great Karlini by Dave Gibbons is the first tale. It’s about a cheating escaplogist who eventually gets his comeuppance. It’s all told in 8 panel pages and his narration which lends a certain weight.

Dogs by G. Willow Wilson and Robert Rodriguez is frankly, awesome. It’s a simple story but looks great with Rodriguez’s slightly sketchy and expressive visual style. Set in a small country town filled with pet canines who get fed up with the stupid and violent humans around them, they suddenly start walking upright and take revenge. It’s an entertaining “tables are turned” story in just 8 pages.

Look Alive by Alex Gracian and Jill Thompson is about a woman who’s a zombie in a world full of them who pretends to be normal with constant drug use and lots of makeup, but can’t speak as she still sounds like one. She manages to survive with her crafty ways tough.

The dark humour continues with A Most Delicate Monster by writer Jeffrey Rotter and artist Lelio Bonaccorso which centres on a cloned caveman who’s unleashed upon the world to experience its sin and excess.

There’s a tragic muder drama in The Land by Joshua Dysart and Farel Dalrymple, violent survival in Mat Johnsons’s and David Lapham’s Family First and the blurring of real and online life in Joshua Hale Fialkov’s and Rahsan Ekedal’s Alone. The last two short comics are Americana by Brian Wood and Emily Carroll and a preview of DC’s upcoming Voodoo Child #1 by Selwyn Sefu Hinds and Denys Cowan. They both look good, but don’t really fit in with the thematic link of the previous tales.

If you grabbed the recent Strange Adventures anthology which used sci-fi as a template, this should entice you, if you also like supernatural stuff that is. I hope DC produce more of these grab bags, as not only are they a good “in” for newbies, but they give both veteran and up and coming creators an audience.

Extra Sequential Podcast #63-Manga for Beginners

70 mins. Prepare for our mammoth manga episode filled with more astounding examples of Eastern comics that you can shake a katana at! Mladen teaches Kris all about manga and how it relates to, and differs from, superhero comics, plus lots, lots more. Also, naked pirates and 40 year old teenagers.

LISTEN TO IT BELOW, DOWNLOAD IT HERE OR ON iTUNES 

You can email us at kris (at)extrasequential(dot)com and befriend us on the NEW ES Facebook page.

 

1:00 NEWS

Frank Miller on more Sin City

Mark Hamill retires as Joker’s voice

Writer Brian Wood (DMZ, Demo, Northlanders) to do Conan, and Wolverine!

Geoff Darrow brings back the whacky Shaolin Cowboy

Live action Akira film greenlit Die Hard 5 with a bad premise and worse title

Doco on Yoshihiro Tatsumi

Dexter comics written by its creator

Lots of new Dark Horse Star Wars series next year

13:10 THEME – MANGA FOR BEGINNERS

Genre diversity, cultural and thematic differences, pace and action, and the problems with art similarities. Relating them to western comics.

Manga artists of a different style:

Yuichi Yokoyama, Motofumi Kobayashi, Taiyo Matsumoto, Naoki Urasawa, Seiichi Hayashi, Akira Hiromoto, and Tsutomu Nihei

Shorter Manga:

Tekkonkinkreet (aka Black and White), Ghost in the Shell, Uzumaki (aka Spirals), Me and the Devil Blues

Action manga:

Akira, Battle Royale, Gantz, Basilisk, Vagabond

(bonus: Crying Freeman, Shaman Warrior, Fist of the North Star, Blade of the Immortal, Shigurui)

For fans of Vertigo (mix of action and thinking, high concept, intense, supernatural horror etc)

Dragon Head, 20th Century Boys, Ikigami,

(bonus: Monster, Billy Bat, MPD Psycho)

Science fiction manga:

2001 Nights, Saturn Apartments, Planetes, Blame!, Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind, Astro Boy

(bonus: 5th Dimension Treatment, Stardust Memories)

Historical or period manga:

Vagabond, Lone Wolf and Cub & Path of the Assassin, Motofumi Kobayashi’s war comics, Joan of Arc by Yoshikazu Yasuhiko

Everyday topics:

Real, Prince of Tennis, Firefighter, Initial D, Oishinbo, Yakitate, Iron Wok Jan

Literary and Oddball comics:

New Engineering (Yuichi Yokoyama), The Drifting Life, The Push Man, Bury the Old in Tokyo (Yoshihiro Tatsumi), Human Clock (Tokunan Seiichiro), Tekkonkinkreet, Paranoia Star (Maruo Suehiro), Red Colored Elegy, Me and the Devil Blues

(bonus: Ooku, Sexy Voice and Robo, GoGo Monster, Gon, The Drifting Classroom)

Phew!

    

   

Orchid #1 Review

Musicians writing comics is nothing new and here’s the latest to do so. Guitarist Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine, and Audioslave has just launched his dystopian mini-series Orchid from Dark Horse.

Read my review of it here at Broken Frontier.

DC #2 Reviews

Most of the Dc #1s I picked up last month will not have me grabbing their follow up issues. However, last week hit me with three pleasant surprises.

Batman and Robin #2. When Grant Morrison first introduced Damian (son of Bruce) Wayne, he was a proud brat who saw Batman as weak. He was awesome. He eventually softened, but now we have the more hard edged Damian back in the Robin costume. In the first four pages here, writer Peter J. Tomasi does a fantastic job of explaining Damian’s origin and the entire Batman/Robin relationship. Bruce is hesitant to praise Damian’s work in the field, while the boy soldier is retreating further into his inner darkness. This series could turn into a great character study, while an old acquaintance of Bruce (and enemy of Batman) surfaces. Patrick Gleason’s art is fluid and dynamic and this is the kind of series that newbies and us oldies will find irresistible.

Preview here.

Green Lantern #2. Another series putting a new twist on a classic partnership is this emerald beauty. Geoff Johns and Doug Mahnke know exactly what they’re doing and kicking things off last month with a green power ring back on the hand of former Lantern and Hal’s mentor, Sinestro is a great way to shake things up. Here Hal gets his desperate desires answered by Sinestro creating a power ring for him, but it comes with a tight leash. The bulk of the issue deals with the tumultuous relationship between these two space faring warriors, while one of Sinestro’s old, ugly comrades from the Sinestro Corps shows up claiming betrayal and promptly gets beaten, well, killed actually. With Sinestro demanding Hal assist him in taking the fight to his old Corps, the action will only ramp up from here on.

Preview here.

Grifter #2. Not as epic (yet) as the above two, but just as entertaining. A character I never cared for until now, Cole Cash is a grifter and former black ops soldier who now wears a groovy mask and tries to explain to his partner in crime (and the bedroom) that he can now see aliens, known as Daemonites, although only the cover refers to them as such. Aliens who follow him, disguise themselves as humans, and want him dead that is. A fight with a cop in a diner and a look at a shadowy military presence, which involves Cash’s brother, makes this a kind of Bourne in the DCU, with effective action staging from artist Cafu and some tight plotting from Nathan Edmondson.

Preview here.

The Frontiersman #28 Out Now

Out on Grpahicly for only $1.49 is the latest issue of digital comics mag, The Frontiersman. Within it’s 66 full colour pages you’ll find a bunch of reviews, interviews and articles, and even 8 pages written by me. Yay!

Grab it here.

 

Jake Ellis and Dark Age Reviews

Now at Broken Frontier are a couple of my reviews of two very impressive comics.

The latest issue of the entertaining spy series Who is Jake Ellis? and the indie debut American Dark Age. Both should be bought.

 

My Star Wars Thoughts

3 weeks ago we did a Star Wars special for the Extra Sequential podcast. Well, I saw ‘we’ but I was sick, so my usual co-host Mladen was joined by fellow Perth podcaster Luke Milton. They did a great job talking about all things Star Wars-y, but since I already prepped my notes I thought I’d put them up here. They are a bit ramshackle though, and Mr. Milton has some great thoughts on the Star Wars Blu-Ray at his blog. Ok, here we go…

I’ve only seen the original trilogy and most of the extras on Blu-Ray, but the films look awesome. They’re the best looking SW films I’ve ever seen. In fact, they could be the best looking films I’ve ever seen. From the first second you notice how different they look. This is a great visual upgrade and worth the price just for that. When R2-D2 and C-3PO first appear, they look dirty, lived in – real. The extras are OK, but there’s not  a lot of new ones made specifically for this release. In fact, the extras on the DVDs, particularly on the prequel trilogy, are much better. It is very exciting to see the mythical deleted scenes on the original films though, even if they’re not the best quality. Some introductions from George Lucas as to why they were left out would’ve been good, although it’s kind of obvious to anyone who’s seen the films a few times that they would’ve slowed the pace. The three major changes that have received the loudest complaints aren’t actually that bad in the context of the films. Obi-Wan’s weird noise in scaring off the sand people, Vader’s “NOOOO!” cry and the blinking Ewoks are OK. In fact, I think only Wicket now CGI blinks, but it looks fine. Yes, Vader’s cry as he kills the Emperor was unnecessary, as we don’t need his inner turmoil spelled out for us. His original silent reaction was enough, but his first “NOOOO!” in Revenge of the Sith is much more annoying.

HOW I FEEL

Star Wars was the first film I ever saw (on VHS) and one of the first films I saw at the cinema was the Ewoks film Caravan of Courage. The original trilogy are so magical because they comfortably cover so many genres. It’s funny, mainly thanks to Han’s dialogue, ie, “Who’s scruffy looking?”, “We’re all fine here, how are you?” after he blasts the communication panel, and of course there’s healthy elements of adventure, sci fi and fantasy. When Luke swings across the chasm with Princess Leia at his side, and John Williams’ magnificent theme swells – ah, what’s not to love?

A FEW FACTS

The first film debuted in 1977 on 32 screens.

It made over $307 million and held highest grossing film title for next 5 years.

6 films over 18 years, making $4.5 Billion in movie ticket sales, and over $13.5 Billion in merchandising sales.

“I’ve got a bad feeling about this,” and variations thereof has been spoken in every SW film, and even in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.

Lego SW games have sold over 20 million copies.

WHAT IF?

As I begun compiling my notes and thoughts, I began to wonder, “What if the first film wasn’t a huge success and it was just another forgotten ‘70s film? Where would George Lucas be today?’

No-one expected SW to be a success, even Lucas bet 2.5% of film’s profits against Spielberg that his Close Encounters would make more money, so Spielberg still gets proceeds from the first film.

EXPANDED UNIVERSE

This year is 20th anniversary of the Expanded Universe, which really kicked off with Timothy Zahn’s novel, Heir to the Empire. There have been dozens since in the intervening years and I’ve read a few which feature Luke’s family, and Han and Leia’s kids battling the cruel Yuuzhan Vong, which are now featured in the Invasion series of comics by Tom Taylor and Colin Wilson, which are awesome.

Lucasfilm has to authorize everything, but there’s still continuity errors like Chewie in Episode 3, as he shoulda been a baby, not  an adult.

If you like SW, you must read the comics and books of the Expanded Universe. They range form being set 25000 years before Ep. 4 until abt 50 years after, which is the best period.

COMICS

Tag & Bink are Dead in 2001, written by Kevin Rubio (Troops from 1997). The pair caused all the major events in the films via their stupidity. The last one was 2006’s prequel Revenge of the Clone Menace.

Star Wars Infinities – 1 for each of the original films. 4 ish mini done in 2001 and 02. Alternate realities of the film’s events. The first one is written by Chris Warner, with art by Drew Johnson and Al Rio. Opens with the assault upon the Death Star, and Luke’s 2 torpedoes go in the shaft, but malfunction and blow up too early, meaning the Death Star doesn’t blow up and destroys the rebel base on Alderaan. Luke thinks Leia is dead and goes nuts. He goes to Dagobah and continues to wrestle with his anger. 5 years later he learns Leia is alive and has been brainwashed and is now a representative for the Empire. The Emperor wants Vader’s heir to replace Vader as his apprentice, so if he can’t have Vader’s son, he’ll have Vader’s daughter.  Yoda uses Force suggestions against Admiral Tarkin, who uses the Death Star to destroy the Empire fleet. C3PO was reprogrammed for the Empire, but he and Leia are eventually redeemed.

Empire Vol. 2 Darklighter – collects issues 8-12 and 15 of Star Wars: Empire. Written by Paul Chadwick with art by Doug Wheatley. It focuses on Biggs Darklighter (seen in the Ep. 4 deleted scenes), his acceptance into flight school in the Empire, forming a small rebellion, and his sacrifice during the Death Star battle. It’s very Star Wars – familiar characters, vehicles, planets. Luke’s not in it much, but we do see their friendship. We also see a Womp Rat (perhaps for the first time?). Superb, dynamic art. A must have for SW fans.

Dark Empire 1. Been 3 volumes so far. Tom Veitch and Cam Kennedy. The TPB collects 6 ish mini. Set 6 years after Return of the Jedi. Luke, Han, Leia, and the usual gang are all in it. Light, almost ‘80s art, kinda like Bill Sienkiewicz. It was OK, but I preferred Darklighter. It was first published in 1991 and 92, and is the first Dark Horse series after they got the SW rights. Palpatine is back as a spirit and lives on in a series of cloned bodies. Han, Leia, and Chewie rescue Lando and Luke who were shot down. All pretty intense and epic.

Invasion. As I mentioned, the thirds series of Invasion (subtitled Revelations) is out now, and Trades of the first 2 series are out. Dark Horse pump out some high quality SW comics and you can find them all right here. Their newest one is called Agent of the Empire-Iron Eclipse. It’s a 5 ish mini-series by John Ostrander and Stephane Roux. It’s set inside the Empire and has a James Bond vibe to it. Sold! The first 40 page ish comes out on December 14 and can be ordered form your LCS (local comic shop) now.

Some Quick DC #1 Reviews

After all the talk of the DC reboot, this is the week that the second issues begin trickling out, and it’s also the first step to see if this huge experiment will pay off.

At first thought I’d do something fancy like do a video review, with as many of DC’s #1s as possible in 5 minutes and 20 seconds, then I thought I could do a summary of each ish in 52 words or less. Then I realised how time consuming both of those options would be, so here’s my quick thoughts after a month of being bombarded with DC’s grand plans. I’m going by memory and quick rereads on these, but I’d suggest visiting Greg Burgas’ mightily impressive review of all 52 issues for a very complete lowdown.

Really the only ones I’d continue to buy would be Aquaman, Batman, Green Lantern, Grifter, Batman and Robin and maybe Action Comics.

I’ve been a diehard DC’er for literally 20 years, but very little about this whole scheme has me excited. I get the why, but the how just doesn’t cut it for me. Yes, sales are off the charts, but let’s see how long it lasts. I’ll be sticking to back issues and trades, as I have many fond memories of reading DC stuff in those 20 years. I just wish they incorporated their newbie friendly desire into OGNs, like the hugely successful Superman: Earth One, and just left us old fans alone to continue to enjoy the complex tales that have been built up over years. For me, this feels like a step backwards. However, if it really does bring in new comics readers, I’ll be a happy man.

Superman

For the world’s most famous superhero, and the most tooled with version in DC’s plans, this ish disappoints. With its grandiose captions, and lack of a cliffhanger, it’s an unfortunate old school standout. Plus using, “twittered” instead of “tweeted” is just embarrassing.

Superboy

Man, what a different Superboy series this is, though it does retain the bulk of his origin from his ‘90s debut, ie, he’s still a clone of Superman (and possibly Lex Luthor), and have powers that Supes doesn’t possess. This isn’t a fun series though, despite it’s jumping form lab, to imaginary Mid Western teen life to cameos from Lois Lane and the Teen Titans. Like Nightwing, it makes me miss the ‘90s series.

Action Comics

The idea of seeing Superman 5 years before he became the Superman we all know andlove is agood idea, but we’ve seen it before in Birthright, and more recently Secret Origin. Having 2 Superman titles, with one in the here and now and one when he was younger, more arrogant and didn’t have a proper costume, just seems confusing for an approach that’s supposed to be simple and accessible. It looks great though thanks to Rags Morales, and the usual characters make their presence known (Lex, Lois, and her dad General Sam Lane, and Clark’s “best friend” Jimmy), though Clark struggling for money, and as a superhero and living in a dodgy apartment all just screamed Spider-Man 2 to me. This is a Marvel Superman, and I can see why Grant Morrison thought the DC higher ups would reject this pitch. It does have a certain charm to it, but Supes’ origins have been dealt with before. Seeing him as a struggling superhero feels out of place and unexpected, although it may be realistic in this context.

Batman and Robin

Batman and Green Lantern are the most unchanged in the New 52, which makes sense, as the groundwork for their recent success was laid by writers Geoff Johsn, and Grant Morrison, who have held the keys to the DC kingdom for a few years now. This looks great, has awesome action and great characterization. A superb jumping on point, plus Bruce and Damian sliding down poles to the Batcave (corny, but it works) and Bruce reminding us why he set the password to the Cave as 10:48 on the grandfather clock entrance (that was the time his parents died).

Batman: The Dark Knight

This is kinda what a Batman book should be like, and it has an Arkham Asylum video game feel to it. Bruce Wayne should be the James Bond of the superhero world, with nice suits, pretty girls everywhere he looks and dangerous threats, all while looking good. This does that.

Batman

Greg Capullo’s art looks differently than what I remember from the brief Spawn art I’ve seen form him, but it does have a lively, fresh approach. Batman comics always work best when they include the greatest supporting cast in superhero comics, and here we have all the Bat lads with some great characterization, plus a double page spread of the Batcave, Someone wants to kill Bruce Wayne, and Dick Grayson (Nightwing) could be a killer. That’s enough of a hook.

Nightwing

Having fond memories of Nightwing from when Chuck Dixon wrote this original Robin’s first solo series, this looks good, thanks to Eddy Barrows. I’m doubtful over how entertaining the Dick revisiting his circus roots angle will be, and the red replacing the usual blue in his costume just reminds me of Chris O’Donnell in 1997’s Batman and Robin film. Not a good thing.

Detective Comics

DC’s longest running series now seem s like the ill-fated All Star Batman and Robin series, with agruff, unlikeable Dark Knight. Tony Daniel has improved greatly as both a writer and artist, and this issue is purposely dirty and grimy. It reminds us that Gotham is a dark, scary place. Batman’s relationship with Joker and Commissioner Gordon are handled well, but the extreme facial surgery of the Clown Prince of Crime seems a bit over the top, though I’m sure many will be back to see what happens next.

Batwoman

This series has been a surprising hit for both readers and critics. No-one really expected a new, red headed, lesbian Batwoman to make a splash, but most of that is thanks to artist J.H Williams III. He along with writer Greg Rucka gave Kate Kane the biggest impression in the 2009-10 Elegy series. Williams is back here, now co-writing with W. Haden Blackman. It’s still the most eerie, and stylistically brave of the Batbooks, and Williams continues to impress with his unique art style, or art styles, as his more lush and fluid approach with Batwoman, and standard approach with her alter ego, works a treat. Plus, it’s good to see Agent Chase return to the DCU.

Red Hood and the Outlaws

Arsenal, the former sidekick of Green Arrow just seems to attract contoversy. From former drug addict to now starring in the issue that has received the most boos and hisses of all the 52. That’s not his fault though, as the female alien and former Teen Titan Starfire is reinvented as a sexual dynamo, who likes to sleep around, and can’t even remember all the men with whom she has. DC shouldn’t have been shocked at the huge backlash this new characterisation received, even if they try and explain it away as an alien unfamiliar with human sexuality, Plus, blaming shocked readers for not reading the T for Teen rating on the cover doesn’t help. It’s the smallest text on the cover! However, with Red Hood (the former bad boy Robin Jason Todd) teaming up with Starfire and Arsenal – now that’s an interesting trio, and Kenneth Rocafort’s art is dynamite. I’m dubious to give this another chance, but the art might just win me over.

Catwoman

And here we have another mis-step of handling a much loved female character. We hardly see Selina Kyle fully clothed in these pages, but like the series above, the art is a winner, thanks to Guillem March. Catwoman has always been an interesting character, but having her rubbing spandex with Batman in the final scene sets a bad precedent for DC superheroines.

Birds of Prey

The series that was always awesome back in the day (ie, in the ’90s) still has Black Canary, but now she’s joined with Katana, Posion Ivy, and Starling. One of the original Birds, Barbara Gordon shows up and has a chat with Canary and there’s an intriguing mystery with a Gotham Gazette reporter which weaves throughout a sort of origin of the group, although the gang’s not all here in this debut. A good mix of action and characterisation, and finally, some mostly covered supergals done right.

Batgirl

This title also proves it and having fan fave (and long running Birds) writer Gail Simone wnet a huge wya to helping fans accept that Barbara Gordon was no longer the crippled, super hacker Oracle and was returning to her Batgirl persona. I’m not  a fan of this new costume, but this is an obvious push to see Babs in her own life, with a new apartment, new supporting cast and new villains. Babs mentions her crippling at the hands of the Joker (seen in the classic The Killing Joke by Alan Moore and Brian Bolland) so it’s good to see that it’s still in continuity and that it effects the psychology of her character. Her dad, the Gotham commish shows up, there’s a great action scene in a hospital cliffhanger and you jsut know she’s going to have a future run in with her new roomie, an “activist.”

And now for a few random ones…

The Flash

It’s kind of good to see artists doing their own writing at DC now (apart from the embarassing Batman: Odyssey from Neal Adams), so here we have Francis Manapul doing both. I’ve never been a huge fan of the Silver Age Flash Barry Allen, but this is largely unchanged since Geoff Johns revived him a few years ago. Like Batwoman, there’s great page design and sense of kinetic energy, and Barry’s new ring that fits the red costume onto him in pieces is cool. I do miss Wally West though.

Justice League

The first cab off the rank in late August. Geoff Johns and Jim Lee are the main guys who spearheaded this whole thing, so putting them both on DC’s best known superteam makes sense. Us fanboys have seen it all before though and it’s just another good looking origin story.

Wonder Woman

There’s lots of blood and chopped up mythical creatures and Wonder Woman changes in to her awful costume in front of a starnger. Another misfire.

Aquaman

DC’s most mocked hero in our world and his apparently. Geoff Johns and Ivan Reis brought the magic to Green Lantern and here they do their best to make the Atlantean king a bored superhero who doesn’t care what us silly land walkers think about his supposed lameness. This vaguely reminded me of Peter David’s defining run on the character in the ’90s in that its making him one tough superhero, and it makes me happy to see him with Mera again, because even superheroes/undersea rulers need love too. Hopefully this series will turn Aqua-doubters into Aqua-fans.

Teen Titans

Embarassing costumes, unappealing art. Bland.

Green Lantern

There’s a slew of GL titles for your fave ring slinger, but this series focuses on Sinestro, who is now begrudgingly a Green Lantern (not a yellow one) again, and a ring-less, earth bound and frustrated Hal Jordan. Both men want answers, and so do I. With that Johns guy again and one of my fave artists Doug Mahnke, I’m on board for this one.

Men of War

The struggle of living up to the huge legacy of his relative Sgt. Rock, and ordinary soldiers fighting the supervillains of the DCU are two cool concepts for a series. Sadly, this debut doesn’t do much with either idea. It’s filled with lots of military (and explained) acronyms though, so it probably fills the gap of ‘Nam and Semper Fi. War comics aren’t really made anymore, so this could act as a good “in” for those who prefer soldiers to spandex.

I, Vampire

A good thumbs up to diversity is this horror title, forgotten from its debut years ago. Joshua Hale Fialkov’s script gets to the undead heart of the complicated relationship between Andrew and Mary and Andrea Sorrentino’s art is a thing of gothic beauty, which looks like Jae Lee’s spooky renderings. Yes, there’s still some life in vampire tales.

The Deep in The West Australian

This was a happy accident. We get the newspapers delivered everyday at work, so during brekkie I was reading the arts pages, as I’m a highly cultured and sophisticated individual, and found something of a rarity – a review of a comic in The West Australian newspaper.

Perth publisher Gestalt has been increasing their diversity and output this year and The Deep by Tom Taylor and James Brouwer is one of their best works.

You can read the whole review at The West’s site (although they give it the wrong name), but do give it deserved praise.

To have captured the feel of a slick animated adventure so successfully in a graphic novel is not just impressive but a delight.

The Deep: Here Be Dragons introduces the Nekton family – cool mum, smart dad, crazy brother, canny sister (and Jeffrey the fish) – who explore the deep sea in their futuristic submarine.

Their adventure is absorbing and intriguing but what we really follow is this multiracial family and the bonds that keep them together and alive. They are involving and charming, subtle but quick-witted and all captured equally well in Tom Taylor’s tight writing and James Brouwer’s superb draftsmanship.

This adventure ends with the promise of more – making the ending even better.

Zorro #2 Review

New Australian publisher Silver Fox Comics is quickly getting noticed with their radical interpretation of the classic, blade swinging avenger Zorro. Read my review of the second ish here at Broken Frontier, and keep an eye out for it your LCS, or a newsagent near you if you’re in Australia.

While you’re at Broken Frontier, you must check out this great list in Joe Keatinge’s latest One You Want column which gives shoutouts to a diverse array of 52 different comics. It’s not that long and is definitely worth a read if you’re stuck for something new to check out.

Also have a read of this examination of DC Comics’ 1997 experiment called Tangent, which saw familiar characters such as Green Lantern and Superman reinterpreted in bold ways, long before DC’w New 52 did.

Extra Sequential Podcast #59-Donald Duck & DuckTales

55 mins. Don’t cry fowl, but we discuss the whacky and funny Fantagraphics collection of Carl Barks’ much loved 1940s Donald Duck stories, and compare them to BOOM! Studios’ current DuckTales…tales. Also, Ninja Turtles, Mythbusters and capitalism.

LISTEN TO IT BELOW, DOWNLOAD IT HERE OR ON iTUNES 

 

 

 

 

You can email us at kris (at)extrasequential(dot)com and befriend us on the NEW ES Facebook page.

2:53 NEWS

Amanda Waller gets retconned to a thin woman!

Marvel is no longer publishing any of French publisher’s Soleil’s great comics

Batman: Year One animated clip

 

John Dies at the End cast pics

9:43 THEME – DONALD DUCK AND DUCKTALES 

We tell you why creator Carl Barks is loved for his storytelling prowess and surprisingly funny and absurd humour in his Donald, Scrooge, etc tales and compare it with the modern equivalent in BOOM! Studio’s latest DuckTales mini-series.

You can get Fantagraphics’ Donald Duck in Lost in the Andes in November.

The 4 issues of BOOM!’s DuckTales series, Rightful Owners, are available now.

48: 02 A FEW QUICK THOUGHTS ON THE DC #1s WE’VE READ

 

Some Marvel Reads

It’s been a rather hectic week, but here’s a few quick mentions of some Marvel issues I’ve enjoyed over the last 2 weeks.

Spider Island: The Avengers is a great one-shot that doesn’t have Spidey have in it, but does feature Hawkeye, Jessica Jones and Ms. Marvel teaming up with Frog-Man, one of Marvel’s greatest D listers. Meanwhile Squirrel Girl is looking after Luke and Jessica Jones’ baby as she too (along with the rest of Manhattan) gains spider powers. Amongst the great action in the U.N as the Avengers fight Flag Smasher and his cronies, there’s some awesome humour. From Chris Yost and Mike McKone. Grab it as an entertaining respite from all the serious, epic action form Fear Itself.

Wolverine: Debt of Death is another one-shot, though blood and ninjas replace humour here. I’m not a huge Wolvie fan, but  David Lapham and David Aja are a great creative combo. Set in the ’60s (I think) Wolvie is about to leave Japan before he gets involved with Nick Fury, some Japanese cops, robo suits and the son of an old friend. Frankly, it’s awesome and is filled with great examples of action and timing, such as:

X-23 #14 follows Wolverine’s daughter/clone and thankfully has a “Previously…” page for irregular readers like me. Again, I only picked this up thanks to the creative team. In this case writer Marjorie Liu and artist Phil Noto. Part 2 of the Chaos Theory story arc, it made sense and has no action in it, but rather focuses on some very well crafted dialogue. Laura (that’s X-23) is hanging out with the Fantastic Four , or the Future Foundation as they’re known, in their swanky, hi-tech New York pad for most of the ish, and yakking about a mystery and getting to know each other a little more. It also features Gambit, looking the most normal he’s ever looked hanging out with Dr. Cecilia Reyes, who I haven’t seen in an X-Men comic since the ’90s. There’s some great tension between X-23 and the untrusting Thing, and Susan Storm’s caring nature comes to the fore. It all looks so clean and attractive, as Noto does so well.

Oh, and Punisher, and Black Panther are two of Marvel’s best series at the moment, which is a nice surprise.