Showing posts with label trade review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trade review. Show all posts

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Trade Review: Batman Earth One


Writer: Geoff Johns

Artist: Gary Frank

Earth One is a series that does re-interpretations of DC heroes origins. Superman and Batman have both gotten the treatment, and Wonder Woman's is due soon.

Everyone knows the story of Batman.  His mother and father are murdered right before Bruce Wayne's young eyes, and from that day forward he dedicates his life to fighting crime.

The story opens with Batman pursuing a man in a tuxedo across the rooftops of Gotham City. Batman tries to fire a grappling hook over to the next roof, but the gadget fails.  He hastily attempts a jump and falls short, catching himself on a wobbly air conditioner before crashing to the streets below.  Limping away from the alley, Batman sees a crime in progress and does nothing about it. This lets us know that he's still a little rough around the edges.

We are brought back in time to Wayne manor, where a party is being thrown by Thomas and Martha Wayne in anticipation of Thomas being elected Mayor of Gotham City.  We are introduced to Alfred Pennyworth, who is Thomas's friend from a war or something, but definitely not there to be a butler.  Thomas tells Alfred that he doesn't trust anyone, and that is why he brought him all the way to Gotham City.  Lil' Bruce runs through announcing that, "THEY'RE GOING TO BE LATE!" and now Thomas has to go, leaving this party and Alfred, who is NOT a butler, to continue to rage on at Wayne manor.

The Wayne family goes to the theater to watch a movie.  As soon as they get in, the power goes out. A theater employee enters letting everyone know that because of the outage, the theater is closed.  He asks for everyone to come through the front of the theater.  Bruce tells his parents that they should stay.  His parents tell him they'll try another day, but Bruce wants his Oompa Loompa now, and runs out the emergency exit into the alley.  Typical rich kid stuff.

In the Alley, Bruce runs into a hoodie wearing tough who tells him to "watch where he's going."  Bruce tells that dude he doesn't have to do anything, because "My parents are the richest people in Gotham City!"  Thomas and Martha run into the alley where hoodie Joe Chill is now holding a gun to Bruce's head and demanding money from them.  For whatever reason, he impatiently throws Bruce to the ground, lunges toward them, and then murders them.  This was a dude who was just walking by.  I'd hate to live in Gotham City, but you'd think rich people would be able to arrange a screening of Zorro at a much better theater.  It is supposed to be a "modern telling" and all.

So there you have it.  A brooding Dark Knight is born.

We learn that Alfred has been named Bruce's legal guardian, even though he'd literally arrived right before they were murdered.  Martha had never even met him.  Thomas was amazed that he had actually come to visit.  This was probably Alfred's worst vacation.  He sits down with Bruce to console him, but Bruce is having none of that.  He demands to know why he should even listen to Alfred, which is met with one simple reply, "I'm your butler."  What?  He wouldn't even listen to his own mother and father, who cares about a guy claiming to be a butler?

Batman has begun. It seems that the man he was chasing at the beginning of the book was a corrupt cop who worked on his mother and father's murder, and then retired a few weeks later to live the good life.  There were some discrepancies in the police report, and Bruce needed answers.  Was the defining moment in Bruce Wayne's life actually an assassination?  Were the radical politics of the Wayne family a threat to the corrupt system that was currently running Gotham?  Batman has emerged from the shadows to expose it all.

I really wanted to like this book, but I had some real problems with it.  For me, it was basically the CW TV pilot equivalent of an origin story.  Johns really tries to pack in as many Batman nods as possible, and it is very distracting.  There are nods to Arkham, Batgirl, and The Riddler for little to no reason.  The Penguin is the Mayor, and was the man Thomas Wayne was trying to dethrone.  Harvey Dent makes a brief appearance, and in this story has a twin sister.  Harvey Dent becomes Two-Face, so now he has a twin.  Get it?  Yeesh.

This is just a lot of added stuff for a book that really needs to show us Batman learning to be Batman.  Not the worst thing I've ever read, but not great either.

I'd say skip it, and if you are interested in a Batman origin story, go read Batman: Year One by Frank Miller.

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Trade Review: The Thunderbolts! The Andy Diggle Arc



Writers:  Andy Diggle, Daniel Way, Rick Remender

Artists:  Roberto De La Torre, Carlos Magno, Scott Hanna, Paco Medina, Bong Dazo, Miguel Sepulveda, Pop Mhan, and Carlos Rodriguez.

I will be reviewing 3 Thunderbolts trades for this post: Burning Down the House, Dark Reign: Deadpool/Thunderbolts, and Widowmaker.

The Thunderbolts is probably the most interesting Marvel series for a book with very little name recognition. This series started when all of the Avengers die saving the world from the evil Onslaught, and a new super hero team rises from the ashes to fill the void left in their absence.  This was a group of unknowns, who are revealed at the end of the first issue to be the super villains The Masters of Evil in disguise.

Friday, February 7, 2014

Trade Report: Superior Spider-Man Vol. 1


The trade I read this week was:

The Superior Spider-Man Vol. 1:  My Own Worst Enemy

Writer:  Dan Slott
Artists:  Ryan Stegman and Giuseppe Camuncoli

This version of Spider-Man has an interesting twist. it's Peter Parker's body, with Otto Octavius's (Doctor Octopus) consciousness running the show.

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Trade Review: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2012) Vol. 1


The trade I finished this week was:

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles vol. 1:  Change is Constant

Story by: Kevin Eastman and Tom Waltz
Script by: Tom Waltz
Layouts by:  Kevin Eastman
Art by:  Dan Duncan
Published by: IDW

So, what's up with these new Turtles?

I had heard a lot about this new TMNT (the cool kids use initials) book.  Mainly that it was a hot title, with single issues and reprints selling out everywhere.

My kids are currently going through their TMNT phase, so I picked up this update last April at C2E2 (Chicago Comics and Entertainment Expo.  2 C's, 2 E's).  I finally got around to reading it this week.

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Trade Review: The Manhattan Projects Vol. 1


I read a lot of comic books week to week, so I figured, why not write about it?

This week I finished, The Manhattan Projects Vol. 1:  Science.  Bad. Published by Image Comics, written by Jonathan Hickman, and art by Nick Pitarra.