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Dave's Comics Capsules for July 2018 [message #371299] Thu, 26 July 2018 18:11
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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
IDW is really playing catch-up this month.

Items of Note (strongly recommended or otherwise worthy): My Little Pony:
Friendship is Magic #67-68.

In this installment: Ant Man and the Wasp, Luke Cage Season 2 (the
rest), The Princess Who Saved Herself, Ms. Marvel #32, Marvel Rising:
Squirrel Girl & Ms. Marvel #1, Deathstroke #33, Future Quest Featuring
Frankenstein Jr. #12, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: The Tempest #1
(of 6), Smoketown #8 (of 8), Mystery Science Theater 3000 The Comic Free
Preview, Empowered and Sistah Spooky's High School Hell #5 (of 6), Real
Science Adventures: the Nicodemus Job #1 (of 5?), My Little Pony Ponyville
Mysteries #3, My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic #67-68, Transformers
Bumblebee #1-2, Transformers Lost Light #19-21, Optimus Prime #20-21,
Transformers Unicron #1-2 (of 6).

Current Wait List (books either Diamond didn't ship or my store failed
to order): Nothing this month, woot.


"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.

Ant Man and the Wasp: Marvel - This was basically a string of macguffin
hunts rather than a strict "caper" film. Sometimes the protagonists are
after the macguffin, sometimes the antagonists are, sometimes the antagonists
have a different macguffin and the protagonists need to get it back, etc.
All against the backdrop of "Scott has two days left on his house arrest and
can't afford to get caught doing anything shady." Aside from the in-credits
and post-credits scenes, it's all set before Infinity War Part 1, so it gets
to stay pretty light-hearted. If I have a significant complaint about the
movie it's that Jimmy Woo runs a little too much towards comic relief,
although it would be amusing to see this version of Jimmy find out he's heir
to the leadership of the Agents of Atlas. Recommended.

Luke Cage Season 2: Marvel/Netflix - I liked the full season quite a bit
more than I expected to, based on the slow start. It probably would have
worked better as a tight 8 episodes (something that can be said for almost
every Marvel Netflix season), but overall I give it a solid Recommended.
http://www.thefifth.world/2018/07/sweet-christmas-in-july.ht ml expands
significantly on this, with plenty of spoilers.


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.

The Princess Who Saved Herself: Worldbuilders - This actually came out a
few years ago, but when Greg Pak held a fundraiser for RAICES (legal help for
refugees, notably helping with the whole "stolen children" thing), I picked
this up. It's an illustrated version of the Jonathan Coulton song of the
same name. 32 pages long, usually with a single illustration and two or
three lines of text per page, but Pak breaks it up with some two page spreads
and some pages with two illustrations. I haven't actually heard the song
until I went looking for it while writing this review, and there's actually
not a lot of lines from the song in this book. Maybe four or five pages
match up, Pak wrote a new story using elements from the song (and Takeshi
Miyasawa drew it). Very good art, decent kiddie story. Recommended. $20
pricetag.


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.)

Ms. Marvel v2 #32: Marvel - The basic premise of this issue is that
Kamala and Bruno are trying to...not "fix their relationship," really, but
find some new way they can be friends without it being emotionally weird.
Other kinds of weird are kinda inevitable, though. So they try bonding
through science, as implied by the cover art...and naturally things don't go
quite as planned. Recommended. $3.99

Marvel Rising Squirrel Girl & Ms. Marvel #1: Marvel - In my review of
Alpha #1 I called this a four-issue miniseries using four number ones, but it
turns out it's really a six issue miniseries. This issue has a Squirrel Girl
story by Ryan North (and guest-starring Ms. Marvel), and then a Ms. Marvel
story by G. Willow Wilson (guest-starring Squirrel Girl), with Devin Grayson
doing the arc-stitching-together work. In the process, they slowly build up
the team that will be featured in the upcoming cartoon, both calling in help
on purpose and running into the "hey, superheroes gotta go to school
SOMEWHERE, right?" concidences that kicked off this teamup in the first
place. Recommended. $5.99

Deathstroke #33: DC - In which Damien Wayne spends an issue trying to
troll Deathstroke, who just mentally sighs and goes along with it. The whole
deal of this arc is that pretty much everyone with a speaking role knows that
the apparent plan is not the real plan, that it's all a ploy of some sort,
but no one is entirely sure what the real plan is, whose plan it is, or if
it's even worth finding out. I mean, at some point one of Batman's or
Deathstroke's plans is going to acquire memetic sentience (no, not like
Brother Eye, I mean the plan itself with no actual computer running it
becomes self-aware) and no one's going to have any idea what the deal is.
Heck, that might even be what's happening here. Recommended. $3.99

Future Quest Presents: Frankenstein Jr. #12 - A done-in-one story
catching up on what Frankie Jr. has been up to since the climax of the
maxiseries. FEAR has developed a sort of kaiju critter, and (most of the)
upgrades to Frankie are ready (more or less) in time to deal with it. The
main question asked by this story is, "Why does a thinking-machine giant
robot need a Johnny Sokko type anyway?" Giant Robo had no independent
thinking ability, Frankenstein Jr. does, so why should Buzz be anywhere near
the site of a fight? The answer is a touch contrived, but so are giant
robots in the first place, so I'll allow it. Recommended. $3.99

The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: The Tempest #1 (of 6): Top
Shelf/Knockabout - So, the overt storyline is that this is a pastiche of The
Tempest, one of the main Shakespeare works I have neither seen nor read. But
I suspect that just knowing the very basic outline is more than enough, since
the obscure bits are all add-ons...such as extensive James Bond lore, or
1950s British comics, or social satire of a hundred or so years ago. The
plot, shockingly, seems pretty straightforwards: the trio from Century is
regrouping and trying to get their bearings while a time-traveler from an
oppressive 30th Century (with its own just-off-camera version of the LSH)
finally remembers her mission and it brings her across Mina's path. Lots of
style changes and flashbacks/forwards and so forth, and the usual inundation
of direct references and "serial numbers filed off" references (Jess Nevins
has already annotated the issue). Based on past performance, I'm guessing
that this will not end with the liberation of the oppressed future in any
sort of way that the inhabitants would have wanted (more like massive
destruction and death and insanity), but Mina will survive. Recommended
mostly for the reference-catching, too soon to tell if the story itself will
have been worth reading. $4.99/$6.99Cn

Smoketown #8 (of 8): Scout Comics - I'll also be covering the series as
a whole, because I decided a few issues back that this really wasn't meant to
be read as a serial. So, speaking of Shakespeare, this definitely has the
general arc of one of his tragedies. There is a great injustice at the
start, it slowly looks like things might get better, and then almost everyone
dies in the final act, bringing justice of a sort. In some ways the serial
nature did help in the sense of giving readers time to speculate before being
proven right or wrong, and if it had actually managed a monthly schedule the
dislocation from the series moving around in the timeline wouldn't have been
so bad, but it definitely makes for a clearer read all at once. In some
ways, this story is like one of those songs about being stuck in a dying
small town ("Allentown," "They Always Come Home," etc) but with more
killing of the actual people. Appalachian Gothic, small towns have their
secrets, and no one can really ever escape. Recommended, but maybe wait for
the trade and read it all at once (some of the individual issues are no
longer available). $3.99

Mystery Science Theater 3000 the Comic (free preview): Dark Horse -
Riffing on comics is intrinsically difficult, because even in badly done ones
the flow of the art is important. If you just slap a Shadowrama under every
panel, it messes with that, something pointed out in the extra pages found in
the online version of this free comic (I got the hardcopy, but also looked at
the online one). I vaguely recall Marvel trying to do a MST-style book back
in the 90s, maybe as a feature in something else, but it never really worked
out. So they're taking the hard way: redrawing everything to put Jonah and
the bots into an old teen comic, and relettering it so that both the original
dialogue and the snide asides have room (and can be told apart). Todd Nauck
draws the framing story, while Mike Manley redraws the teen reporter comic.
Loads of people are listed on the writing credits, basically a regular
riffing team. I'm not sold on the comic, though, as it feels like they're
overexplaining some of the jokes, afraid that readers won't Get It.
Something to keep an eye out for the trade paperback, perhaps, in the hopes
that they find their groove after a few issues.

Empowered and Sistah Spooky's High School Hell #5 (of 6): Dark Horse -
This issue is dominated by vignettes of all the other ideas Warren had for
set pieces, but which would have pushed this to a very draggy 12 issue series
if they'd all played out at the same pace as the first few issues. It ends
up feeling like, "Yeah, we're tired of this too, on to the main fight scene."
Mildly recommended. $3.99

Real Science Adventures: the Nicodemus Job #1 (of 5?): IDW - It's a year
before the first set of Crusaders tries to take Byzantium, and a disgraced
former Advocatus is hired to steal back some stolen property...and the thief
in this case has legal backing, and was the many who destroyed the life and
reputation of the former lawman. So, it's your basic Ethical Caper Movie
plot, in which rogues go after the real villains, etc. This issue is
basically the "get the team together" part, with a flashback or two that
establishes how some of them know each other. At the time the issue saw
print, all the installments had been posted on atomic-robo.com, but I still
like having these in hardcopy form. Recommended. $3.99

My Little Pony Ponyville Mysteries #3: IDW - A spot of arson in an old
folks' home, fairly by the numbers story. Mostly notable for featuring
Scootaloo's "aunts" who take care of her while her parents are out of town
(which they usually are). Unsurprisingly, fanon holds that one aunt is an
aunt by marriage (to the other aunt), but this is not something addressed in
any form in the comic. In fact, it's not even made clear until later in the
issue that Scootaloo lives with them. And yeah, the fact I'm rambling about
them rather than the actual story should be a clue how engaged I was by the
actual story. Mildly recommended. $3.99

My Little Pony Friendship is Magic #67-68: IDW - Well, both issues came
out this month, and it's a two-part story, so fair enough to review them
together. This is the story of what became of Tempest Shadow after the
movie, as she wandered the world trying to find a place for herself. Lots of
good snark as Tempest criticizes various elements of Equestrian society, and
grumpy Tempest on the cover of #68 really needs to be made available as a
poster. Very strong finish to the story, which despite taking plenty of
opportunities to mock the ideals of friendship and the like ends up showing
Tempest that those ideals are still important. They don't take the same form
for everyone. And if her face turn in the movie felt abrupt and contrived,
Whitley and Price do a great job of justifying it here. Strongly
recommended. $3.99 each.

Transformers Bumblebee #1-2 (of 4): IDW - The official prequel to the
upcoming movie definitely puts the "reboot" into "soft reboot" here, since
1960s Bumblebee can talk. And does. A LOT. It's essentially a spy movie
spoof/homage (it's never quite sure if it's being serious or not), featuring
Bumblebee working with not-James-Bond and not-Emma-Peel for MI6 while
Decepticons work with the KGB. Well, use them and discard them. Anyway, if
this were an "Elseworlds" like Hearts of Steel (before they retconned it into
being part of the main timeline afterall), I'd probably have enjoyed it more
for what it was. But not only does this not feel like it fits into the
movieverse (and that's hard to do, given how loosely the five movies fit with
each other in the first place), it doesn't really feel like any version of
Bumblebee. And there's been a lot of versions of Bumblebee. Mildly
recommended. $3.99 each.

Transformers Lost Light #19-21: IDW - Yes, THREE issues came out this
month, as I expected would need to happen for the final issue #25 to come out
around the same time as Unicron #6. A different artist pencils each issue,
but at least there's a single artist throughout the whole issue each time,
rather than a mishmash. These issues form parts 1-3 of The Crucible arc,
even though #18 ended on a cliffhanger. I suppose The Crucible really
started a few pages before the end of #18, after they'd figured out they
broke the afterlife but before the sparkeaters popped out of a spatial rift.
Anyway, this arc is about the last chance to wrap up danglers before finding
some way to get the crew involved in the Unicron event, and there's no
guarantee they'll even get to that party on time if this is a 7 part arc. :)
Anyway, lots of run and gun. #19 has them purely on the defensive, falling
back and trying to find a moment to catch their breath, #20 is the
counterattack and boss fights, #21 is "Oh, you thought THAT was the boss
fight? Here's the actual boss!" but not yet fighting. Rodimus gets a nice
bit of dialogue in #21 about how much weird cosmic stuff they've already
dealt with as a team, and how he's finding it increasingly hard to feel
particularly threatened by the next "oh, this is the final boss" encounter.
It's all a bit frantic, thanks to the need to wrap it all up on someone
else's timetable, so there isn't room to let some of the bits breathe
properly, but it's still pretty good. Also, fairly clever fake-out in #21
regarding the Grand Architect's plans. Recommended. $3.99 each.

Optimus Prime #20-21: IDW - Only two issues here, but this title wasn't
as far behind. But where Lost Light is pretty much its own thing, Unicron #1
comes out of the end of Optimus Prime #21, so kinda bad ordering anyway. And
there's still signs of being pressed for time, with the Maximals being thrown
around as mindless goons with no real chance to be used as CHARACTERS. I
mean, Optimus Primal and T.rex Megatron are on the cover of #20, but they're
just random goons. Optimus and Bumblebee need to get out of their
predicament, but since we've already seen them in Unicron #0 we know they get
out (hey, this is Transformers...in any other year, they could have both been
left in the black hole for a while or just assumed dead, it's not like
neither has been dead before). Oh, and on the topic of covers, Zama's art on
#21 makes it kinda unclear who is rescuing whom, but it turns out to be a
pretty important moment in the issue, and one much-discussed among fans. On
the insides, the art is a mishmash of multiple pencilers as they try to get
on schedule, rather than giving each issue wholly to one person like Lost
Light did. Zama, Pitre-Durocher, and Ramondelli take turns being kinda
confusing. Mildly recommended. $3.99

Transformers Unicron #1-2 (of 6): IDW - And here it is, the big
slobberknocker that's supposed to put a bow on the IDW continuity before
going on to whatever the next continuity is. Lots of running battles and
losing planets to Unicron, evacuating refugees, etc. Starscream decides to
take advantage of the confusion and rallies the Decepticons to his literal
banner once more, claiming he has a plan that can stop Unicron. Since it's
only #2, it's not remotely a spoiler to say that his plan fails in probably
the worst possible way. But hey, give him credit for a sincere effort.
Visually, #1 is a jumbled mess on purpose, to give the feeling of chaos and
desperation, with lots of big battle scenes. #2 slows down a bit, with more
of the conflict being of personalities as everyone debates what to do now.
Each issue has a backup feature in which one of the other properties (Rom in
#1, GIJoe in #2) gets to deal with the events of Unicron's passage. Barber
writes and Milne draws the main stories in each issue, while the backups are
done by other creative teams (probably ones who worked on those books, but I
didn't really get either series). There's also text features in which
various IDW creators look back on their work. Recommended. $4.99 each.


Dave Van Domelen, "Could it be there are no true monsters? Are they all
just hurt children trying to regain something they've lost?" - Tempest
Shadow, My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic #68
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