|
The Bum’s Rush #60
WARNING! None of the news or rumors you see here in The
Bum’s Rush should be considered FACT until it actually
happens. It might never happen. How do you know I’m not just
making all this crap up? I could, you know. You’ve been
warned!
A Man of My Word… When I Remember To Be
Okay, yes… I screwed up. You caught me. I said for a while
that I was going to talk about Infinite Crisis and
Civil War, but I never did. I’d like to say that it just
slipped my mind, but that’s not true. How could it slip my
mind when, wherever I go, Bum’s Rush readers hound me about
it! I can’t even walk from my car to my apartment without
someone yelling out, “Hey, when you gonna talk about how
much you hated Infinite Crisis, jerk!?” Okay, it was
just that one time, but still… it haunts me. So for the sake
of you, the loyal reader, and for my own peace of mind,
allow me to briefly discuss these two mega-events of
wallet-draining proportions.
Infinite Crisis (a.k.a. Maybe It Was A Good Book On
Earth-2?)
First, let’s address
Infinite Crisis which was indeed an epic. Much
like a fifty-car pile-up on the freeway could be considered
epic. By that I mean to say that it was a gigantic, horrific
mess, strewn with dead bodies and cries for help, a disaster
from which one could hardly avert their gaze. I do applaud
DC for their ability to get me to spend my money on just
about every lead-in, tie-in and special associated with the
series. Seriously. I’m not blaming them in any way for my
purchasing their comics nor am I saying that I was tricked
out of my cash. Not at all. But I do wish that the end
result of purchasing and following such a massive, and
entertaining mind you, build up to Infinite Crisis
would have actually paid in an equally entertaining book and
not just a great big collection of loosely connected, mostly
boring vignettes and poorly tied up loose ends.
Perhaps it was a case of too many cooks in the kitchen, too
many people with too many fantastic ideas for one single
writer to ultimately tie together and translate into a
coherent and smoothly flowing story line. That certainly
sounds likely. Having about six billion different artists
working on the series didn’t help much either. If any one
comic in the history of comics could have benefited from a
single artistic vision, surely this was it.
But maybe I was expecting too much? Is this
The Phantom Menace all over again? Years of
anticipation building into a frenzy of excitement that could
not possibly be satisfied by any story, no matter how well
it was told? I’m sure there are some people that believe
this to be the case. I am not one of those people. In my
view Infinite Crisis was a poorly handled mess and an
utterly terrible pay-off to what could have been a fantastic
story. Hmmm, just like The Phantom Menace.
Civil War (a.k.a. Ah, Cynical “Reality”… That’s What My
Comics Have Been Missing)
Maybe it’s because I’m just bored with these big event
crossovers. Maybe it’s because I’m bored with realism in my
superhero comics that usually just translates into dark and
depressing. Or maybe it’s because I read this right after I
finished Infinite Crisis #7. Whatever the reason, the
first issue of Civil War just didn’t do it for me.
For one thing, I wasn’t thrilled with the way the New
Warriors, especially Speedball, were treated and made into a
joke. Okay, maybe they’re not everyone’s favorite
characters. I understand that. But they do have fans, don’t
they? I can’t be the only one who read and loved that series
back in the day. But it seems to be a trend these days that
if a character doesn’t sell comics then they’re ripe for
crapping all over. If a character doesn’t appear on
lunchboxes and t-shirts then they don’t deserve any respect,
right? That’s certainly seems to be the consensus view at
the Big Two (rhyme!). And the idea that the New Warriors are
some sort of inexperienced newbies with no regard for
placing innocent life in danger is just ridiculous.
Speaking of ridiculous, if the main thrust of the series is
that superheroes need to be held responsible for the lives
the place in danger then how is it even a remotely viable
solution to say, “We are too responsible and trustworthy!
And to prove it… LET’S GO TO WAR WITH EACH OTHER!!” That
doesn’t even make any sense. And neither does the way the
heroes, friends in most cases, resort to infighting,
name-calling and, in the end, outright betrayal of one
another. Listen, when
Captain America thinks something is a bad idea, so much so that
he’s willing to go against S.H.I.E.L.D. and the U.S.
Government, then it’s time to stop and say, “Hey, you know
what? Let’s all just chill, go down to Starbucks, have a
latte and figure this thing out.” But Iron Man’s response
is, for all intents and purposes, “F*** Captain America!”
Nice.
Now I’m not about to go completely condemning a series based
on the single issue that has hit the stands so far. They may
well pull this out and turn it into a spectacular story. If
nothing else I’m sure it will be far more linear and
cohesive than Infinite Crisis was. As I’ve explained above
I’m just not really digging what I’ve read so far. One or
two things have calmed me at least a little bit.
Particularly when Dan Slott
redeemed Marvel’s treatment of the New Warriors to a degree
in the recent
She-Hulk #8. I’m
vaguely intrigued, but far from excited, to see where the
story goes.
In Summation (a.k.a. Dammit, I’m Too Young Too Be Such A
Grumpy Old Man!)
I’m getting pretty of bored with the current and seemingly
endless cycle of one event leading into another, where
one-upmanship is king and everyone’s favorite quote is “if
you thought that was crazy… wait till you see what we do
next!” And what is next? More confounding retconning of
character history in an attempt to spin it off into some
previously unrevealed “dark secret” that returns to wreak
havoc on the present?
I can see it now – “Remember that time Superman got, like,
nasty sick with Kryptonian flu and the Swamp Thing had to
save him? Well, man, you’ll never guess who he totally
nailed in his delirious trek out to the swamp… and now
they’re back! With his baby! And he possibly raped Swamp
Thing when you weren’t looking?”
Come on, man… this is where Spider-Clones and Parallax’s
come from people! I’m all for reading a good story, that’s
what it’s all about, but how about instead of trying to cram
all this super-secret soap-opera history into these events
you use a little logic and, heaven forfend, some respect and
come up with a good story that’s a little new and different?
Is that so hard? And if someone says to me “but Paul, it’s
all been done” then sir, I suggest you look at the myriad of
unique and completely awesome works coming from creators
like Corey Lewis, Warren Ellis, Grant Morrison, Bryan Lee
O’Malley, Benito Cereno, Matt Fraction and tons more and
tell me that there’s nothing new or original out there to
blow your socks off! It’s not all iterations of who some
superhero’s girlfriend was screwing between the panels back
in the 70’s!
Phew… okay, maybe I’m getting a little carried away now, but
I think I’ve made my point.
Wait… what was my point?
Oh yeah… frikkin’ Speedball is dead!? What the hell kinda
crap is… huh… what? He’s not dead? He’s alive?
Oh… well, nevermind.
Prodigal Son
Connor Hawke, the son of Green Arrow, returns to comics in
November in a six-issue mini-series by Chuck Dixon and Derec
Donovan. The series, called Connor Hawke: Dragon’s Blood,
involves Connor takes part in a competition to find the
worlds greatest archer. But, of course, the competition
takes a bloody turn thrusting Connor and his friend Eddie Fyers, into a deadly adventure involving ancient prophecies,
martial arts and dragons! I was a huge fan of Connor as
Green Arrow (back when the original Green Arrow was dead… he
got better) so I’m pretty psyched about this series. Plus,
as I’ve said before, not many people can write a straight
forward, ass-kicking action story like Chuck Dixon.
Talent Pays
After just one issue,
Boom!
Studios’ new series, Talent has been picked up by Universal Pictures
for adaptation into a major motion picture. The series, by
Christopher Golden, Tom Sniegoski and Paul Azaceta, features
the sole survivor of a plane crash who appears to have
inherited the talents and memories of the passengers who
died. Apparently there were about five movie studios vying
for the rights to produce the film version until Universal
won out. I actually read the first issue of the series,
which was pretty damn good, and it would definitely make one
hell of a movie.
The Only Comics That Matter
Last Week –
Wonder Woman #1 by
Allan Heinberg and Terry Dodson
Cannon God Exaxxion Stage 5 by Kenichi Sonoda
Hector Plasm: De Mortuis One-Shot by Benito Cereno and Nate Bellegarde
(check out my
review
of
Hector Plasm)
This Week –
Ex Machina Special #2
by Brian K. Vaughn and Chris Sprouse
Green Lantern Corps #1 by Dave Gibbons and Patrick Gleason
Umbra #1 by Murphy and
Mike Hawthorne
Next Week –
Flash: The Fastest Man Alive #1 by Paul DeMeo, Danny Bilson and Ken Lashley
Eternals #1 by Neil Gaiman and John Romita Jr.
Soon –
Emily Edison by
David
Hopkins and
Brock Rizy
If you know of any interesting news, rumors, lies, etc.
about comics and think I should know about it too just email
me at thesuperleezard@yahoo.com.
Read more dumb crap written by me at
www.livejournal.com/users/superleezard.
My semi-daily webcomic, Der Wundervolle Bean, will be coming
to an end soon. But you can still check it out here
www.livejournal.com/users/der_magic_bean.
End of Line
|