Comics @ MindSay



 

   
Comics: Lanterns, Deadpool, and others.
I've been reading through some comics lately.  More than I ever have in my life because of this Geoff Johns business with the Lanterns arc(s).  The central three comics (Blackest Night, Green Lantern, and Green Lantern Corps) are all good.  The first two of that set are central and necessary, and really provide the most interesting hits of any of the comics coming out in that line.  The last one is possibly skipable if you don't have much interest in spacey weird stuff and don't mind missing out on some of the other spectrum colors.  I pick it up and enjoy it every month though.  I mean, it's like $3.

Then there's the real extracurricular reading: The three issue arcs for Blackest Night.  The first arc was Tales of the Corps.  It was phenomenal and probably something everyone should pick up (especially since any newcomers to the storyline can catch up on the colors with those three stories).  Currently, DC's running Superman, Teen Titans, and Batman.  The Superman is ignorable, unless you really want to see Smallville tortured so Superman can invariably save the day with little-to-no personal turmoil.  They've made him just as overpowered in the war of light as they have in all the other comics.  Teen Titans however, that's actually looking good.  The first issue links to a second mini-series that will come out in the next four month phase: Hawks.  If this issue is a reference, Hawks is going to be amazing.  There's a lot of comic lore that seems to play in, and more and more the DC heroes are touching a level of mythological characterization that makes you question whether the gods of Greece and Scandinavia were entertainment for their people.  I think Titans could easily branch so that each issue leads into a separate, later mini-series. And Batman, well, Batman is stellar.  Deadman comes into play as someone trapped between the rebirthing powers of the black rings and the separation from his body.  Good stuff.

Deadpool's just finished up Suicide Kings, which was a pretty damn solid Deadpool comic and only a five issue investment.  Even made you feel good for the guy at the end.  And somehow, Marvel's starting a third on-going comic series called Deadpool Team-Up.  I'm historically a huge fan, but I've decided to hold off on all this ongoing series junk until I can pick up the graphic novels.  Since a) they look better, and b) I'm not so sure about all the really obscure characters Deadpool runs up against every other storyline.

The really interesting thing Marvel's doing is New Mutants.  The first story run pit the sundered X-teens against Legion, one of the most interesting villains in Marvel's entire history.  The second arc apparently resurrects Warlock.  Not the bastard-child Douglock, but real Warlock.  The techno-organic, shape-shifting pile of weird thoughts and bizarre jokes that turned into a replica of the freaking Starship Enterprise to fight Norse gods in comics damned near as old as me.  I have high hopes.

Oh, and Solomon Grundy's about to finish, but that's been mediocre, and unless he ends up as a super-crazy-evil Black Lantern (or maybe something twisted like what's going on with Deadman), then I think it might have been a waste to buy.
 
 
   
 

Happy valentine's day!

 

-Kristal

P.S. comics are from www.nataliedee.com

 
 
 

   
Casey thanks for the new year's storyline!
tequilatoon.gif hosted for free by ImageShack


Round two!  Here is Casey's new year's cartoon -- you can find her blog at: awakinglife.blogspot.com.  Are you round three...come on... fess up with a story and I'll get drawing...

 
 
   
 

Review: _Hard Boiled_ by Frank Miller and Geof Darrow



Furthering my study of popular culture that's actually good, if not edifying, I read the graphic novel Hard Boiled by Frank Miller. I'm surprised that the wikipedia entry on it is so slight. The three episodes are put together into one book, separated by black pages.

If you liked Sin City, you'll like Hard Boiled even more. The pictures remind me of my brother Paul's unpublished work, Death Toll, which he wrote and illustrated in fourth grade. Death Toll was a difficult-to-follow, nonsensical nightmare vision of murder and mayhem, and Hard Boiled gives an adult sheen and narrative around this very juvenile inclination to imagine a complete, hellish dystopia.

If they make Hard Boiled into a film, I doubt it will be popular. I can't imagine a film that would be more of a bloodbath -- 300 and Sin City included. Those films at least followed ostensible people; Hard Boiled follows a robot-assassin in a Los Angeles overcome by futuristic pleasure-drugs and near-total social degeneration, all seemingly engineered by a diabolical, Jabba the Hut-esque CEO of a sprawling corporate monopoly.

The plot, like my brother Paul's master work Death Toll, is ludicrous. The story's effect is to take one aback. How low can the hearts of men go? Hard Boiled suggests what American dystopia would look like: decayed, hateful, murderous, corrupt, and cyborgian. In other words, Fritz Lang's Metropolis with sex, drugs, and ultra-violence (some of the visual frames recall the 1927 film).

But consider: Hard Boiled is playing out in the Congo, Sudan, and has played out in other historical epochs. Frank Miller's work creates a fantasy vision of a world gone wrong, that, in its vision of a terrible Babylon, gives us a taste of what the purveyors of genocide have already done.




 
 
 

   
Good Evening MindSay...
Security Level: Low (Public / Everybody)  


...and I just woke up. I had a dream about being back in high school.  But this time, many of the people in my dream, I'm glad I don't see anymore.

I'm going to start working on the comments now (and reading your blogs).

While I'm doing that, I'm going to start copying the anime CDs that was lended to me.

I'm not sure if I've already posted this one. I know I used to post cartoons from Stivers. But here, I'm sure many of you can relate.



First comment came from justjames, faster than the speed of __________________!!! (fill in the blanks for me)
 
 
   
 

Showing 1 - 5.   [ Next ]
 
Latest Comment
Re: help: how do i tell if my house is haunted? - sounds interesting. Where I work we see a shadow cross past...

Read...


 
© 2005-2007 MindSay Interactive LLC
| Terms of Service
| Privacy Policy
My Account
Inbox
Account Settings
Lost Password?
Logout
Blog
Update Blog
Edit Old Entries
Pick a Theme
Customize Design
Modify Plugins
Community
Your Profile
Wiki Pages
MindSay Tags
Video & Photos
Geographic Directory
Inside MindSay
About MindSay
MindSay and RSS
Report Spam
Contact Us
Help