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The Bum’s Rush #30
Anticipation
This week I thought I’d talk about a few of the comics
coming out over the next couple of months that I’m really
looking forward to. This is by no means a complete list of
every new series I’m excited to see. No, that would take
forever. Last week’s column was plenty long enough.
Down
(Top Cow/Image) – Written by Warren Ellis, Art by Tony
Harris and Cully Hamner. Five years ago a cop went
undercover in the criminal underworld. Unfortunately he
never came back. Instead he’s now head of one of the biggest
drug gangs in the city. Now it’s up to another police
officer, Detective Deena Ransome, to retrieve him, dead or
alive. Will she be able to get the job done or will Ransome
follow the same path as the man she’s been sent to pull out?
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Down is a series that I never thought would see the
light of day. It was first announced by Top Cow a couple of
years ago, back when Warren Ellis could do no wrong as far
as I was concerned. Unfortunately the book fell apart and
the creators moved on to other projects. I was disappointed
because the premise had hooked me immediately. Now, years
later, with the help of Cully Hamner, the book appears to be
back on track. The original artist for the series, Tony
Harris, had already completed most of the first issue when
the book was originally scrapped. He will finish up the
first issue but because of his commitment as the regular
artist for Ex Machina, Harris will be unable to
complete the rest of the series. Hamner comes aboard to
finish out the rest of the series. Normally I’m not a big
fan of switching artists in the middle of a story,
especially a mini-series, but Hamner is an amazing artist
and his regular projects are few and far between. It will be
a treat to see his work on this book.
All-Star
Superman (DC Comics) – Written by Grant Morrison, Art by
Frank Quitely. This is the latest book from DC’s All-Star
line, which promises the biggest creators working on the
biggest characters. Morrison and Quitely begin a 12-issue
story arc that will focus on some of the most classic
elements of the character, pitting him against Lex Luthor,
Bizarro World and even death itself.
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This is the book that Superman fans and Grant Morrison fans
alike have been waiting to see. Ever since rumors slipped
out several years ago that Morrison and a number of other
high-profile writers would be taking over the Superman line
of comics (a deal which quickly ended before it even began)
I have been waiting to see what Morrison would do with a
Superman title. Finally the day has arrived and Morrison is
unbound by continuity restraints and accompanied by his
frequent collaborator, and one of the best artists in the
field, Mr. Frank Quitely. With a boundless imagination, the
continuity shackles off and a great artist this title looks
to be one of the best and most unique presentations of the
Big Blue Boy Scout in years. Heck, this could be Superman’s
own version of the classic Dark Knight Returns, a book that
redefined Batman in the 80’s. All I’m really hoping is that
it’s better than the awful All-Star Batman book
X-Factor (Marvel) – Written by Peter David, Art by
Ryan Sook. Spinning out of Peter David’s sleeper hit from
last year, Madrox, this new team of mutants is an
investigative agency operating out of New York’s District X,
also known as Mutant Town.
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Not long after I started reading comics regularly one of my
favorite books was X-Factor by Peter David and Larry
Stroman. It was probably one of the best X-titles ever and
definitely the funniest. Last year David wrote a mini-series
centering around one of the main characters from his 90’s
run on X-Factor, Jamie Madrox, the Multiple Man.
Madrox was probably one of my favorite mini-series of
2004 and featured the Multiple Man acting as a detective in
the slums of District X, with the help of a few pals from
his days with X-Factor, Guido and Wolfsbane. The series
ended in a way that was a definite set up for more stories
but I wasn’t sure enough people had picked up the book to
warrant a continuation. I was wrong. The story of Madrox
and crew (now joined by a few other lesser known mutants,
Rictor, Siryn and Monet) continues in this new X-Factor
title that looks to be very different from the original, but
just as entertaining. Add to this the gorgeous art of Ryan
Sook and there’s no way I’m not buying this book.
Seven Soldiers: Frankenstein (DC Comics) – Written by
Grant Morrison, Art by Dough Mahnke. The final of seven new
mini-series written by Morrison as part of the Seven
Soldiers line, Frankenstein also sounds like the
most bizarre. It’s Frankenstein’s monster like you’ve never
seen, carrying guns and battling fantastic and unusual
threats from another world.
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I’ve been enjoying all of the Seven Soldiers books
immensely but this is the one I’ve been most eager to read.
Mostly because of artist Doug Mahnke, who draws some of the
best monsters and the best action in the industry. The guy’s
a workhorse, with the regular Batman book, Team Zero from
Wildstorm and this mini-series. This book looks to be dark,
twisted, bizarre and hugely entertaining.
Rival Schools (Udon Comics) – Written and drawn by
Corey “Rey” Lewis. The Rival Schools comic adapts the
awesome Capcom game of the same name.
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At this point I will purchase pretty much anything that has
Corey Lewis’ name on it, as that assures some damn good
comics. Sharknife was great, PENG! was better
and the 40-page black and white issues of the Rival
Schools book will probably kick even more butt. This is
the kind of comic Rey was made for, crazy combo arcade
action, humor and faced paced storytelling. Up till now he’s
been working on purely creator-owned projects so it will be
interesting to see how well Rey works with someone else’s
toys. But considering he is a self-proclaimed Capcom video
game fanatic (and given that his style was hugely influenced
by Capcom) I can’t see how it will be anything but great.
Perhapanauts (Dark Horse) – Written by Todd Dezago,
Art by Craig Rousseau. When horrible monsters manage to slip
through the thin walls between dimensions it’s up to the
Perhapanauts, agents of an organization known as Bedlam, to
send them back where they came from. But the Perhapanauts
themselves, with agents like aliens, ghosts and Bigfoot, are
just as bizarre as the creatures they fight.
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I am in love with
Craig
Rousseau. I’m not ashamed to say it. I’ve been visiting
his website for years, looking at all the gorgeous artwork
and hoping that someday I might be able to work with the
guy. On his site I also read about the little book he put
together with writer Todd Dezago. Initially a self-published
venture, Perhapanauts was picked up by
Dark
Horse earlier this year and I can’t wait to see it.
Aliens, monsters, faeries, ghosts, all kicking butt and
taking names? This might be the next Hellboy.
Nextwave (Marvel) – Written by Warren Ellis, Art by
Stuart Immonen. Crazy explosion OMG action! Nextwave, made
up of b-list superheroes like Photon, Machine Man, Meltdown,
Bloodstone and The Captain, were put together by H.A.T.E.
(Highest Anti-Terrorism Effort) to destroy Bizarre Weapons
of Mass Destruction. But when the group learns that H.A.T.E.
is nothing more than another terrorist cell, they go AWOL,
bent on revenge against the organization that put them
together. And they blow stuff up.
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One of the taglines for this book is: “If you like anything,
you will love Nextwave!!” That alone might have persuaded me
to pick up the book and give it at least a glance. What
makes me really want to buy it is the creative team of
Warren Ellis, who is back on top of his game, and Stuart
Immonen, who has recently gone from good artist to super-frikkin’
badass artist. This book just looks and sounds like pure,
kick-splode fun. And fun books are the best. More comics
should sound this freakin’ exciting.
Batman: Year One Hundred (DC Comics) – Written and
drawn by Paul Pope. It’s the year 2039 (that’s one hundred
years from the debut of Batman, kiddos) and the grandson of
Commissioner Gordon is a detective with the GCPD on the
trail of a murderer. All roads lead Gordon to the most
unexpected of suspects, the outlaw known as Batman.
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All hail the Pope of Comics! Lord it’s been way too long
since Paul Pope’s last epic work, 100%, hit the
shelves. But Pope is one of those comic artists you’d wait
an eternity to see new work from. His comics are full of
emotion, life and an energy that is infectious. Comics that
make you want to dance. Batman is one of the only mainstream
characters that Pope has worked on multiple times outside of
his creator-owned work. Each story seems better than the
last and now he’s got four giant (48 pages each) issues in
which to weave a tale about the dark and mysterious Batman
of the future. Joy!
More books to look forward to:
The Thing (Marvel) by Dan Slott and Andrea DeVito
The Exterminators (Vertigo) by Simon Oliver and Tony
Moore
Team Zero (Wildstorm) by Chuck Dixon and Doug Mahnke
X-Statix Presents: Dead Girl (Marvel) by Peter
Milligan, Mike Allred and Nick Dragotta
Iron Man: Inevitable (Marvel) by Joe Casey and Frazer
Irving
GLX-Mas Special (Marvel) by Dan Slott, Georges Jeanty,
Paul Grist, Mike Kazaleh and Mike Wieringo
Quick Bits
- Not with a bang, but with a whimper, the last issue
of Breach, one of my favorite new series of the
year, came out last week. A beautiful, if not totally
satisfying end, to a great series.
- Infinite Crisis #2 was great. For anyone who
was lost reading the first issue and had never read
Crisis on Infinite Earths, this issue of Infinite
Crisis featured a great explanation regarding the
Multiverse and the events in Crisis on Infinite Earths.
Not only that, but the entire sequence was drawn by
George Perez and Jerry Ordway, the original artists on
Crisis on Infinite Earths.
- The price for DC’s weekly series *52, a
fifty-two issue series (duh) that fills the gap between
Infinite Crisis and the “One Year Later…”
event that will effect all comics in the DCU, has been
announced. $2.99. For a weekly series? I was kind of
hoping the price would be a little lower, somewhere in
the $1.50 to $1.99 range. Whatever, I’ll still get it.
- Lots of DC series will be ending during and after
the Infinite Crisis series. Some of the books
include Wonder Woman, Gotham Central,
Batman: Gotham Knights and The Flash. Rumors I’ve
heard indicate that Wonder Woman will relaunch with
Young Avengers writer Allan Heinberg at the helm.
I’ve also heard whispers that Gotham Central will
be relaunched as Streets of Gotham. A new Batman
book, Batman Confidential, will probably replace
Gotham Knights. As for The Flash, I’d say
it’s a safe bet that there will be a new Flash book
somewhere on the horizon.
- TV Guide reported that there will be an Aquaman
TV series, likely a spinoff from the recent
Smallville episode featuring Aquaman, portrayed by
Alan Ritchson.
- Joss Whedon will be writing a new Buffy comic
book series for Dark Horse, which will pick up
where the TV series left off. He also feels confident
that the long-anticipated Spike movie may soon
become a reality.
- DC Solicitations for February right
here! More than a few final issues are listed.
- Probably one of the most talked about subjects in
comics at the moment has nothing to do with big events,
new series or exclusive contract signings. It’s about
the explosion of advertisements littering most comics on
the stand right now. The worst offender seems to be
Marvel Comics, with 28 pages of ads to 22 to 24 pages of
story. It’s distracting. That’s like watching your
favorite hour-long drama and seeing 35 to 40 minutes of
commercials. At least TV is free though. If advertising
is meant to lower production costs (which is why we
get free television) then why am I seeing more ads
than story and still paying $2.99 for most regular comic
books? Bleh.
NEXT WEEK: The best comics for kids!
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