This week's stack, part two

I’ve got the rest of this week’s comics. While they’re a fairly middling lot, I’ll still take a crack at them. Comments contain spoilers, so be warned.

DISTRICT X 2: This issue builds on the strengths of the last, revealing more about the setting and the characters in satisfying and interesting ways. Officer Ortega takes Bishop on a tour of his beat, meeting more of the citizenry and circling around what may be a budding gang war. The mutations continue along the same vein, more grotesque than useful, giving the neighborhood sadness and a strange resilience at the same time. There are moments of pathos (a promising athlete turned aquatic exotic dancer), horror (a mother addicted to her mutant son’s narcotic perspiration), and genuine pain (the moving revelation about Ortega’s home life). Bishop remains something of a peripheral figure, but that isn’t really a problem. It’s wonderful to see a comic create a genuine sense of place and to explore the dynamics of an unusual community.

EMMA FROST 12: “Mind Games,” the second major arc of the book, comes to a conclusion as Emma extricates herself from her kidnapping predicament. In doing so, she demonstrates what seems like a heretofore unseen level of control over her telepathic abilities. In previous issues, she’s shown as having only marginal control over her powers. Here, she’s intruding in a half-dozen minds, planting telepathic illusions, and exhibiting not a hint of strain. Maybe the peril and adrenaline of the situation is giving her a boost, but that isn’t really made explicit, and it leaves me wondering when she picked up such mad psi skillz. Still, it’s satisfying seeing her pull her own fat out of the fire, and it’s pretty a great device to have the protagonist pretty much immobile throughout. This title is solidly entertaining if nothing special, and the cover is probably the best Greg Horn has done to date.

IDENTITY CRISIS 1: I can’t possibly comment on this title with any objectivity. The driving event of it strikes me as so crass and misguided that there’s no way I can make any kind of qualitative evaluation. I will say, though, that the subset of Justice League members starring in this book (Atom, Black Canary, Elongated Man, Green Arrow, Hawkeye, and Zatanna) have always defined who the League is for me. They were the core of the group when I started reading it, more than the big guns. To have them spotlighted in a story I find empty and repulsive only compounds the aggravation. I won’t be buying the rest of this series.

INVINCIBLE IRON MAN 84/428: The fanboy in me couldn’t resist the “Disassembled Prologue” teaser on the cover. Iron Man finds his roles as Secretary of Defense and member of a United Nations strike force in conflict, which is a perfectly reasonable premise for this title. He is asked to retrieve something from Avengers Mansion for the government without alerting his allies. Since the Avengers aren’t stupid (in this title if not their own), they catch on fairly quickly. Mayhem ensues, and there’s sure to be fallout in future issues. The conflict is explored on a couple of different levels, including an anti-U.N. protest outside the mansion. The protestors are played for laughs, so it doesn’t really add anything to the theme. For a millionaire superhero cabinet member here, Iron Man seems too subject to the whims of the government, with underlings scolding him at just about every turn. There’s nothing seriously wrong with this comic, but I don’t really have any desire to pick up the next issue. I think it’s inoculated me to future tie-ins. Oh, and I would be remiss if I didn’t take note of the Wasp’s terrifying body thong and giant breasts. Is this some side effect of her recent dabbling in growth powers? She looks like a pornographic version of Tinkerbell.

ULTIMATE X-MEN 47: And my interest in this version of Xavier’s mutants comes to a screeching halt with the Ultimate Universe introduction of some villains who soured my enjoyment on the Marvel Universe version. It’s nice to see writer Brian K. Vaughan pick up on some of the themes and developments his predecessor put in place, and he’s making progress towards giving the rather large cast distinctive personalities. Art by Brandon Peterson serves the book well, too, and I’m pleased by the fact that none of the women resemble auto-show hostesses. They’re attractive but realistically proportioned, which is always nice. Still, when Apocalypse enters the building, I start looking for the door.

This week's stack, part one

I’ll be going through the stack in two parts this week, as one of the shops I use didn’t get their shipment in yesterday. Still, plenty of books to make it worth an entry.

AQUAMAN 19: This title has improved vastly since the end of the incomprehensible and overlong Waterbearer/Thirst arc. While this issue is basically a chat with the architect of San Diego’s destruction, it offers some twists to that formula. The antagonist of the piece views his actions as a necessary evil, difficult choices serving a heroic aim. He’s also clearly withholding a lot of details, and it’s nice to see the protagonists figure that out fairly easily. It’s nothing revolutionary, but it is a solid chapter in the ongoing story. And the Alan Davis/Mark Farmer cover is predictably gorgeous.

BATMAN, DEATH AND THE MAIDENS 9: Maybe it’s the extended gap between this issue and last, but the concluding chapter of this story is somewhat anticlimactic. It seems more like an epilogue than a finale. Still, the story as a whole has been an interesting character study while shaking up the status quo of Ra’s al Ghul, his daughters, and his organization. It also positions Nyssa as a promising new addition to Batman’s roster of enemies, vastly more interesting than Hush (not that that’s saying a great deal, but I mean it as a compliment). When time permits, I’m going to have to read these issues at once, as I suspect they’ll work better as a collection.

FABLES 26: The citizens of Fabletown try to fend off the attack of an army of disturbingly polite wooden soldiers. Essentially an issue-long battle sequence, it’s a lot richer than other stories of its kind. Filled with character moments, plot twists, politics, and sacrifice, it’s a standout entry from a consistently fine title. There’s also a preview of THE WITCHING included in this issue, which didn’t do anything to make me want to pick up that title. It looks competent, but the characters aren’t particularly vivid, and the art is kind of a queasy blend of cartoon and titillation.

FALLEN ANGEL 12: Peter David heads back in time to the first meeting of the Angel and Doctor Juris. Angel tracks a criminal to New Orleans and runs into Juris on his yearly day off. It’s a perfectly competent story, but I didn’t really learn anything new about either of the protagonists. It’s a decent stand-alone issue, though, and if you’ve been curious about the book, this would be a good chance to give it a try.

GLOBAL FREQUENCY 12: This is the last issue of the series of stand-alone action stories written by Warren Ellis and illustrated this time around by the very talented Gene Ha. The lack of any ongoing narrative from issue to issue doesn’t really make for much analysis, and the formula – mysterious threat to the public, creative and aggressive response by Global Frequency agents – is solidly in place. It’s been a good title, finely crafted entertainment. If it’s all a bit inconsequential, there’s nothing really wrong with entertainment for its own sake.

GREEN ARROW 39: The crisis in Star City concludes in a grimly predictable manner. The point, once again, is that Oliver is a success as a hero and a failure as a person. That’s been established pretty well by now, and perhaps we could move on to some slightly different subject matter? No? Okay, just asking.

IDENTITY DISC 1: I’m a big fan of Robert Rodi’s novels, and I want to like his work in comics, but he still doesn’t seem to have found his stride in the medium. His novels (particularly Fag Hag and What They Did to Princess Paragon) are tightly plotted screwball comedies that are grounded in very recognizable human emotions. You’d think that skill set would translate better to comics than it does. While he manages to humanize some of his characters – a mixed bag of villains blackmailed into pulling off a convoluted caper – it doesn’t hang together very well. (Continuity buffs will also wonder how the events square with any number of other Marvel titles, too.)

NIGHTWING 94: The spotlight is still locked on the truly repellent Tarantula, as Nightwing continues to be completely ineffectual. This book is grim far beyond the point of dramatic, and this is the last issue I’ll be buying for a while.

More to come tomorrow.

This week's stack

From the comic shop:

AVENGERS/THUNDERBOLTS #4: This mini seems longer than it needs to be. The first four issues have consisted mostly of internal philosophical arguments on the nature of heroism and trust and some impenetrable pseudo-science about an energy draining… thing. Maybe it’s the pending AVENGERS relaunch that’s making this all seem rather quaint, or it could be the fact that Fabian Nicieza’s take on the Thunderbolts doesn’t really work for me, but the title has become something of a slog.

DETECTIVE COMICS #795: Oh, goody. The Tarantula, who has vaulted to the very top of my “least favorite characters” list, brings her violent and irresponsible shtick to another comic on my pull list. DC surely can’t consider her a reasonable long-term property, can it? I have to admit that I’m not sure why this title is still among my reserves. I’ve been meaning to drop it since Greg Rucka left, but laziness and the general competence of the stories have prevented me from making the cut. Must do something about that.

ULTIMATE FANTASTIC FOUR #6: This isn’t holding together very well. Largely a chaotic fight sequence (appropriate enough given the protagonist’s inexperience), the character development seemed shoved in with a crowbar. The chatty but fragmented dialogue was actually grating rather than endearing. It’s suddenly become kind of coy, though I’ll stick around to see what the new creative team does.

ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN #60: Wow, the cover managed to be generic *and* misleading. Nicely done. This is a perfectly good book, though it falls squarely into the “empty calories” category of comic books. Engaging characters, clever action sequences, but very little seems to happen in the average issue. Of course, it seems like it comes out every week, so I guess the frequency of publication makes up for low narrative calories. Or not.

UNCANNY X-MEN #445: The Alan Davis art is gorgeous, and I like Chris Claremont’s script a lot better than just about all of his other recent work. Still, there was an unpleasant clenching feeling in my stomach when the issue kicked off with a very retro “Muties suck and aren’t to be trusted” set piece. A similar but unrelated cramping took place at the prospect of another Captain Britain story, given current events in AVENGERS. (That’s hardly Claremont’s fault, of course, but nobody said fandom was fair.)