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The Bum’s Rush #17
Breach Contained … Unfortunately
There’s a comic book that I’ve talked about (or at least
mentioned) several times in this column. It’s called
Breach, published by DC Comics, and it’s one of my
favorite new series of the year. At least it was. A few
weeks ago it was cancelled and the final issue, number 11,
is scheduled to ship in November. I thought I’d take this
column and talk about this comic book, why it was such a
favorite of mine and why I’m going to miss it. (Click images
to see full size in a new window)
In 1983 Major Tim Zanetti tucked his son into bed, kissed
his wife goodbye and headed out to work. His job? Head of
security for the super-secret Project: Otherside, an
experiment that was supposed to open doors into other
dimensions. Unfortunately something went terribly wrong and
the entire project was destroyed when the dimensional breach
they had opened became unstable. Everything surrounding the
breach was torn apart and sucked into the void before the
portal itself erupted in a massive explosion.
Cut to twenty years later and Zanetti, who was found alive
(but somehow changed) mere hours after the explosion, is
suspended in comatose state within the confines of the
still-active Project: Otherside. The arrival of a dark and
sinister being in Africa triggers a reaction inside Zanetti
who explodes violently from his confinement. After a time
Zanetti is informed of his condition by Dr. Campbell
Chambers. Zanetti’s body now emits a type of dimensional
distortion effect that means death to anyone who were to
touch him without proper shielding. In essence, Zanetti’s
touch can kill.
As Zanetti struggles to come to grips with his amazing and
terrible powers he is plagued by visions of twisted alien
visitors that have begun to arrive on Earth. These beings
are invaders from the dimension that Project: Otherside tore
a doorway into. There is nothing benevolent about their
presence, they merely seek to destroy the “weak things”
(i.e. humanity) and teach their ways to Zanetti, whom they
call kin. Over the course of the first several issues of the
serious Zanetti’s mental limits are pushed to the breaking
point by powers he cannot comprehend, a lost family that no
one seems interested in helping him find, and a alien
malevolent presence in his mind that urges him to kill.
Sounds cool doesn’t it? That is the story behind Breach and
it’s only part of the reason I love reading the book on a
monthly basis. Writer Bob Harras weaves an unbelievable tale
populated by some of the most real and honest characters
you’ll probably find in a modern day mainstream superhero
(though I hesitate to say “superhero” when it has it’s foot
firmly planted in the pure science-fiction genre) comic.
From the cursed Major Zanetti, always teetering on the edge
of a breakdown, to his former best friend who is now married
to Zanetti’s widow and continually lies to Zanetti for his
own selfish reasons (though it’s hard not to sympathize with
the guy). There’s also Zanetti’s son who has no idea that
the man in the containment suit who has saved his life twice
is actually his father, but feels a strong connection to him
nonetheless. And of course the core members of Project:
Otherside, Dr.’s Paul and Campbell Chambers, Zanetti’s only
real friends since his emergence from the coma, as well as
the take-no-crap military man assigned to the project,
Captain Yoshiba. All of these characters feel like real
people. All have their flaws, their fears and insecurities
and certainly none of them could be called truly heroic.
They are just real people reacting to an extremely bizarre,
dangerous and complicated situation. And man, the bad guys
are scary as all hell, frequently killing wherever they go,
mutilating whole families of innocents in their quest to
dominate the world they’ve arrived in.
Maybe the bad guys wouldn’t even be half as scary without
the extremely talented Marcos Martin, who presents the
aliens as bizarre and frighteningly twisted versions of the
human hosts they have possessed. Martin knows how to tell a
story and portrays the drama and emotion in a way that
appears almost effortless. At the same time he can create
scenes of mind-blowing action, spine-chilling terror and
gore, and fantastic sci-fi spectacles with the same seeming
ease.
So maybe now you see why I love this book. It’s got a great
story, intriguing characters and some of the most impressive
art on the rack today. Everything a great story needs.
Except one thing – readers.
There simply aren’t enough people reading comics who are
willing to give new books a chance. I’ve talked about this
before in a
previous Bum’s Rush article. This mostly effects
new books put out by the big two publishers, Marvel and DC,
who require a book to sell a certain number of units to be
considered successful. The smaller companies are able to
publish and maintain new books more easily than the big two
because their print runs don’t have to be quite as high.
There’s a mentality among the readership today that I don’t
quite understand. It’s the “wait-for-the-trade” mentality.
Rather than shelling out a few more bucks to try out a new
series some readers will merely wait for the book to be
collected into a trade paperback. I can understand this line
of thought when it comes to mini-series. It’s a finite
number of issues and chances are that when the book is over
and the publisher is behind the book it will be collected
together. But when a new series comes out, one that is not
an X or Super or Bat or Spider-something, well the chances
of the book surviving long enough to be collected into a
trade depend heavily upon how many people show an interest
in the book from the onset.
It’s too late for Breach. It’s also too late for another,
recently announced casualty of low sales, Joe Casey’s The
Intimates. But it’s not too late for the next new series
that comes out. Don’t wait for the trade. Give a new comic a
chance. Don’t have the money? Ditch one of your X-Men books.
Ditch one of your Batman books. I can guarantee you that
those books will be collected into a trade sooner or later.
But that new comic might not be so lucky.
So, go ahead and do it. Give a new book a chance. If not for
yourself then do it for me. You love me right? Do you really
want to see me go through this again?
Quick Bits

Click images to see full size in a new window
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Not a lot of Quick Bits this week …
- The Dark Horse Comic Solicits came out last week and
the first issue of Perhapanauts (Todd Dezago and
Craig Rousseau) was featured.
- DC Solicits should be out on Monday afternoon, you
can check
here.
- Marvel Solicits will probably follow on Tuesday.
- Speaking of DC Solicits … check out the awesome Jim
Lee cover for Infinite Crisis #2!
- Expect a whole slew of new titles coming out of DC
when (and just before) the Infinite Crisis
mini-series wraps up.
- And we’re already seeing a bunch of new books coming
out of Marvel following the aftermath of their own
universe-shattering mini-series House Of M.
- Wanna see what I’d look like as a Muppet? Check it
out
here.
NEXT WEEK: You think if anyone knew it’d be me
right? Wrong.
Send me hate mail at
thesuperleezard@yahoo.com
Read more stupid crap I write at
www.livejournal.com/users/superleezard
Check out my (semi) daily comic, Der Wundervolle Bean,
at
www.livejournal.com/users/der_magic_bean
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