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Dave's Comicbook Capsules for November 2018 [message #376824] Tue, 27 November 2018 23:51
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Dave's Comicbook Capsules Et Cetera
Intermittent Picks and Pans of Comics and Related Media

Standard Disclaimers: Please set appropriate followups. Recommendation does
not factor in price. Not all books will have arrived in your area this month.
An archive can be found on my homepage, http://www.eyrie.org/~dvandom/Rants
Weirdly, nothing actually shipped for me in the last week.

Items of Note (strongly recommended or otherwise worthy): Nothing.

In this installment: Spider Force #2 (of 3), Ms. Marvel v2 #36,
Deathstroke #37, Catalyst Prime Astonisher #12, The Wrong Earth #3, Kaijumax
Season 4 #3 (of 6), Real Science Adventures: the Nicodemus Job #5 (of 5), My
Little Pony Nightmare Knights #2 (of 5), My Little Pony Friendship is Magic
#72, Transformers Unicron #6 (of 6), Optimus Prime #25 (of 25), Transformers
Lost Light #25 (of 25), Star Trek vs. Transformers #2 (of 4).

Current Wait List (books either Diamond didn't ship or my store failed
to order): None this month, although Kaijumax didn't ship on the first try
and it took a few weeks for it to show up.


"Other Media" Capsules:

Things that are comics-related but not necessarily comics (i.e.
comics-based movies like Iron Man or Hulk), or that aren't going to be
available via comic shops (like comic pack-ins with DVDs) will go in this
section when I have any to mention. They may not be as timely as comic
reviews, especially if I decide to review novels that take me a week or two
(or ten) to get around to.

Nothing this month. I did quite like the new She-Ra, though.


Digital Content:

Unless I find a really compelling reason to do so, I won't be turning
this into a webcomic review column. Rather, stuff in this section will be
full books available for reading online or for download, usually for pay. I
will often be reading these things on my iPhone if it's at all possible.

Nothing this month.


Trades:

Trade paperbacks, collections, graphic novels, pocket manga, whatever.
If it's bigger than a "floppy" it goes here.

Nothing this month. (A couple of things I get outside of comic shop
channels did release, but I ordered them online and won't get them until
December.)


Floppies:

No, I don't have any particular disdain for the monthlies, but they
*are* floppy, yes? (And not all of them come out monthly, or on a regular
schedule in general, so I can't just call this section "Monthlies" or even
"Periodicals" as that implies a regular period.)

Spider-Force #2 (of 3): Marvel - Huh...I thought we hadn't yet caught up
to the "I've killed them all" bit at the start of #1, but I guess we did?
Lots of introductions and telepathic gleaning of backstories while the
villain of the piece gets on with her villainy, and Kaine shows he doesn't
really know how freefall works. A bit on the disjointed side, maybe trying
to fit a few too many set pieces into a story that needs to service a
different story's plot. Mildly recommended. $3.99

Ms. Marvel v2 #36: Marvel - A pseudo-historical story, in which
present-day characters take on the roles of figures in an old tale that may
or may not have happened. Not a common trope, and when it does get used it's
more often in TV than in comics. In this case, it's framed as Bruno making
suppositions about how Kamala could have Inhuman ancestry, but it's played
straight enough that the reader is maybe expected to think it's what did
happen? Bruno had a bunch of cross-time visions during the previous arc,
after all, so his "wonderings" might just be his brain reassembling pieces of
the truth that overwhelmed him earlier. Still ended up feeling kinda forced,
though. Mildly recommended.

Deathstroke #37: DC - We don't actually get to see what happened after
the end of #36, because even the reader is not supposed to be sure whether it
even happened. This is very much a gaslighting storyline, in which everyone
involved is very familiar with the concept but also used to dealing with
multiple layers of buried intrigue. In fact, for most of the issue we don't
see Slade at all, the focus shifts to Rose/Willow and Jericho. As with most
such wheels within wheels planetary gear plots, it's hard to evaluate how
well it worked until it has finished spinning though. Provisionally
recommended. $3.99

Catalyst Prime Astonisher #12 (vol 3 #3): Lion Forge - Speaking of
wheels within wheels, we do get a few more answers to "what's the deal with
Astonisher's fake city?" here, but most of the other dangling questions go
unanswered or are answered by more questions. The main fight scene resolves
the rescue mission started in present day last issue, at the risk of dragging
the title even deeper into solipsism. Still perhaps more convoluted than it
needs to be, though. Mildly recommended. $3.99

The Wrong Earth #3: Ahoy Comics - Not really a lot to say that I didn't
say last month. Things tick forwards, various characters start to adapt to
what's going on, neither protagonist much likes the other's world but that's
to be expected. The story came out of the gate pretty fast, but there's a
certain amount of, "Well, now what?" to it. The characters may have plans,
but the reader finds out that most of those plans are already scuttled,
lending an air of futility to things. The faux-golden age backup is pretty
flat, and the text pieces seem to focus on weird for its own sake, rather
than weirdness to tell a story or make a point. Mildly recommended. $3.99

Kaijumax Season 4 #3 (of 6): Oni Press - The various alliances of both
convenience and inconvenience firm up here as the three main arcs move
along. However, while the Black Goat's bit gets the cover and may be the one
that ultimately incites the climax, Xian's arc hits its climax NOW. But not
climax in the "the rest is resolution," sense, more of the Shakespearean
tragedy act 3 deal, where we can expect things to fall apart over the next
three issues. She may even be headed for a Heroic Sacrifice, although the
rule for prison dramas do work differently than regular dramas.
Recommended. $3.99

Real Science Adventures: the Nicodemus Job #5 (of 5): IDW - The main
job ties up suspiciously easily, but when did a heist movie ever come
together that well? Never, and this is no exception. This was pitched
initially as a sort of origin story of an earlier team of Action Scientists,
albeit one that will have to take their act on the road pretty soon no matter
how things shake out on their inaugural mission, and in that respect it did
pretty well. I wouldn't mind seeing them get another miniseries down the
line, perhaps a really big caper to get people out of The City before it
falls to the Crusaders.... Recommended. $3.99

My Little Pony Nightmare Knights #2 (of 5): IDW - And now for the part
of the heist movie where the team is assembled. Specifically, Capper,
Tempest (who is where we left her in the comics), and Trixie (who disputes
any claims that she was ever a villain). Or, in the parlance, the cat
burglar/smooth operator, the muscle, and the distraction. (Technically, Luna
is the Client, and Stygian is the Mastermind.) Some good interactions and
discussions along the way, but the actual heist doesn't get underway until
the final pages. Recommended. $3.99

My Little Pony Friendship is Magic #72: IDW - An interesting twist on
the old chestnut about "the secret ingredient is love." Recommended. $3.99

Transformers Unicron #6 (of 6): IDW - So, in the end, it's all about
forgiveness. Of self, of others. It's the magic of friendship. Lots of
short scenes here and there as things go to hell in a giant handbasket, and
with four line artists involved it does get more confusing than it needed to
be. You can see in here a bunch of little resolutions to arcs that were
probably going to be allowed to unfold more gradually, such as Slide's
redemption, and several characters get Heroic Sacrifices in place of
finishing their face turns more naturally, but hey, better than no
resolution. Recommended. $7.99

Optimus Prime #25: IDW - For most of the issue, the left-side pages are
Optimus Prime's life flashing before his optics, while the right-side pages
catch up on everyone else in the wake of Unicron's assault on the galaxy.
The characters who got to share the spotlight each get at least some "where
are they now?" in the months that followed, and if the timeline doesn't go as
far forwards in that as Lost Light #25 does, it gives most of the cast some
sort of new status quo. If anyone fails to get a real resolution, it's
Optimus himself. But that's to be expected. No matter how definitively dead
Optimus Prime may be at any point, you can't count him out. Even with the
entire universe cancelled, he's just waiting to return when he's most
needed. The jerk. There's very little cross-talk with Lost Light, but the
one bit we do get is vital to finally putting a bow on the repairs Barber
(and other writers) has been putting on Arcee's character. Definitely stuck
that landing. (Interestingly, the scene that flashes back to Unicron #5
doesn't actually happen on-screen in Unicron #5, Optimus just went from
faceplate to no faceplate without explanation, but it's a whole dramatic
thing in Optimus #25.) Recommended. $3.99

Transformers Lost Light #25: IDW - Having this come out before Unicron
#6 and Optimus Prime #25 was a bit of a spoiler, since even focusing mostly
on the Lost Light crew meant giving away some of who and what survived
Unicron's assault. Basically, life goes on. Happy for some, unfulfilling
for others. It's like having everyone actually show up to a reunion, not
just the ones who never moved that far away. MtMtE would be like high school
hijinks, and then the core group of friends all went to college together,
along with the jerk top dog from the rival high school and a bunch of new
guys. More hijinks ensued, more romance and self-discovery, slightly more
planet-sized threats than the average college experience, but in the end...a
lot of people end up peaking in college. They either never recapture those
glory days, or the lack of external structure is too much for them and their
lives mostly fall apart. The guy you always suspected would be in and out of
prison did end up doing just that. The quarterback who led the team to
divisional championship is a drunk who gets by as a delivery driver. The
scam artist is still scamming, just on a bigger scale. But the people who
actually took the opportunity to grow the heck up? They're mostly doing
pretty well. Maybe not as much fame and glory as they seemed headed for, but
quiet success is nice too. Of course, when you've had as many plot devices
pass through your hands as the Lost Light crew has, maybe college never has
to end.... Recommended. $3.99

Star Trek vs. Transformers #2 (of 4): IDW - Meanwhile, in another
continuity that the Lost Light has not visited (yet?), the initial
misunderstandings are dealt with (by means of a few more fight scenes) and
the predictable alliances are formed, and not to the benefit of the
Enterprise and its crew. The unremembered presence of Transformers on 20th
Century Earth is briefly explained away as something lost in the noise of the
various world wars (oddly, they use the soldier design from Encounter at
Farpoint to illustrate this, rather than showing Khan). Given the two shows
involved, that's enough continuity to deal with the issue...neither is
exactly an indexer's dream. As one might expect from the middle of a series,
things look pretty bad for the heroes at the end, but with a willingness to
take some risks it might just turn around. And we all know whose business
risk is, yes? Recommended. $3.99


Dave Van Domelen, "You still don't see. Soundwave believes in a higher
power, sure. But guys like you and me -- we don't have to. All we need to
believe in is the inherent good of doing good...and that someday, ultimately,
that will be enough to stop evil. [...] Faith is just one path to the
ultimate trick: confronting the evil in ourselves...and defeating that." -
Prowl, Transformers Unicron #6 (of 6)
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