|
The Bum’s Rush #61
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!
The Amazing(ly Stupid) Spiderman
I’d warn that there are potential spoilers ahead but if you
don’t read comics, watch the news, read the newspaper or
have the internet, then 1) you wouldn’t (or couldn’t) be
reading this column in the first place and 2) you probably
live in a cave and have no idea about indoor plumbing, let
alone Spiderman*. So if you are reading this then you
probably already know that in Civil War #2
Spiderman revealed his true identity as Peter
Parker to the world in a show of support for the Superhuman
Registration Act that all the heroes are getting their
panties in such a bunch over. It doesn’t make a whole lot of
sense but it sure as hell made the news.
Just so you know that I’m not bashing something based solely
on what I’ve read on the Internet, I did actually read Civil
War #2. I also read the comics that led up to Spiderman’s
monumental decision including Civil War: Frontline #1 and
Amazing Spiderman #532. Even so, after all of the
discussion, the reasoning and the explanations I still
cannot see a single solidly logical motivation for Spiderman
revealing his identity for everyone to see. If I had been
presented with one I doubt I’d have a problem with this.
What we got instead were flimsy excuses slung together in an
effort to make sense out of something that was obviously
going to happen regardless of whether it made sense or not.
I absolutely don’t buy that Peter Parker would do something
like that out of loyalty to Tony Stark (a.k.a. Iron Man, who
has recently taken Peter under his wing and given him those
awful new duds he’s been trudging around in) because his
first loyalty is to his family. I do believe that he would
do it to keep Mary Jane and Aunt May from going to jail
because they were accomplices. But at the same time, no
matter how many times they tried to sell that one, I didn’t
see it as a valid or realistic consequence of his actions.
The only explanation that even came close to making sense
was brought up in a recent episode of
New Joe Fridays
in which Peter David said “If he openly
defied the Registration Act, then he would have verified
once and for all the worst things that had ever been said
about him. I don't think he wanted that to happen.” But I
don’t remember this one ever being brought up in any of the
actual comics.
It goes back to what I talked about last week and the
current trend of the big “OMFG! Can you believe we did
that?” events that supercede the logical and/or natural
progression of the story. For the sake of garnering
nationwide (and likely worldwide) media attention Marvel has
done something that, at least to me, seems to fly in the
face of some 40 years of storytelling. But, according to Joe Quesada, there are other benefits from
this revelation, not the least of which is that it opens up
a whole new world of possible stories to tell with the
character. Why, just look at what they’ve got lined up –
In Sensational Spiderman Peter will deal with consequences
at the school where he works and an attack from Dr. Octopus,
followed by a bunch more villains attacking him.
In Friendly Neighborhood Spiderman Peter will deal with
consequences at the school where he works when Mysterio
attacks him there! And probably some more villains will
attack him.
Wow… the possibilities.
Seriously though, my biggest problem is not with the fact
that Spiderman revealed his identity. I totally agree that
it does make for some surprising comics and some interesting
possibilities. What I have a problem with is the execution
of the story itself, which in the end seemed more about
creating a lot of noise and fireworks than telling a really
good story that made sense.
*Sincere apologies to anyone who lives in a cave that
happens to actually have internet access
Third Time’s Amazo?
First announced over two years ago, Kid Amazo was a 96-page
hardcover written by Peter Milligan
with art by
Rob Haynes. The story involved a
college student who learns that he is actually an experiment
created by the JLA’s android adversary, Amazo and Amazo’s
creator, Professor Ivo. The hardcover never materialized but
the story itself recently resurfaced in the JLA Classified
series as a five-part arc starting in August’s issue #26,
with artist Carlos D’Anda replacing Rob Haynes.
Now, for the second time in two years Kid Amazo has
been delayed for unspecified reasons. DC has announced that
they are replacing the Kid Amazo with Sacred Trust, a six-part
story written by
Howard Chaykin, with
art by Kilian Plunkett and Tom
Nguyen. Sacred Trust will focus on a rift that is created
between members of the League when they are forbidden by the
UN from interfering with the metahuman activities of foreign
nations.
Now as jazzed as I am to read any comic drawn by Kilian
Plunkett I am massively disappointed that
Kid Amazo will
fail to see the light of day once again. It’s something I’ve
been looking forward to since it was first announced as a
hardcover back in 2004 and something I was even more excited
about with the inclusion of the awesome Carlos D’Anda on art
chores. Hopefully it’s merely been delayed rather than
abandoned completely. Cross your fingers. Or better yet,
send me a check for six million dollars so I can finish work
on my own android that will attack the DC offices and force
them to publish the story. I eagerly await your generous
donations.
Welcome To Warriors
Howard Chaykin is a busy man. Not only is he writing the
aforementioned JLA Classified story, he’s also working on a
mini-series starring Green Lantern Guy
Gardener which he will write and draw! The mini, entitled
Guy Gardener: Collateral Damage will consist of two 48-page
issues and will revolve around the damage inflicted by the
Rann-Thanagar War on neighboring planets. Chaykin says that the series will also serve to completely
remove Gardener from his Giffen-DeMatteis
Justice League era characterization in which he was played
mostly for laughs as a somewhat moronic, ill-tempered,
chauvinist pig. Guy’s bar, Warriors (which has always been
one of my favorite story elements) will also be
reintroduced.
You Obviously Do Not Know Who You Are F***ing With!
As if all of that stuff wasn’t enough, Chaykin was just
announced as the regular artist for the upcoming
Blade ongoing series! The series is written by
current
Wolverine scribe Marc Guggenheim
and will be released in September. Given that the character
has not had much success maintaining a regular comic book
series in the past I was a little perplexed as to why Marvel
would try an ongoing again (even factoring in the upcoming
TV series on Spike) without first seeing how the fans would
react to a mini featuring the character. But now that Chaykin has been announced as the artist it’s obvious that
this is more than just a shot in the dark. Marvel is putting
some serious weight behind the comic and I wouldn’t be at
all surprised to see it pay off.
Shhh, It’s A Secret
For almost a year the existence of a Superman Confidential
and Batman Confidential series has gone from hot rumor, to
almost certainty, to being flatly denied by DC bigwig Dan Didio and back again. Now the rumors and cover-ups have come
to an end as DC has announced that the two series do in fact
exist and are being prepped for release in November. The
books will feature rotating creative teams focusing on the
early years of Superman and Batman, specifically on
important character-defining moments from their past.
Writer Andy Diggle and artist Whilce Portacio will tackle the debut
Batman Confidential arc in which Batman first faces of
against Lex Luthor. The initial story-arc on Superman
Confidential, written by
Darwyn Cooke
and illustrated by Tim Sale, will detail
Superman’s first encounter with Kryptonite. Didio said that
the books will maintain A-list creators at all times,
something which has been promised time and again on books
such as these but usually fizzles after about a year or so.
It’s a nice thing to say and all but the truth is there are
only so many A-list creators out there and half of them are
probably under exclusive contracts with Marvel.
Nevertheless, I’m still looking forward to both series.
At Least They’re Soliciting On The Net And Not Some Dirty
Street Corner
DC Comics Solicitations for September 2006
Marvel Solicitations for September 2006
Image Solicitations for September 2006
The Only Comics That Matter
Last Week –
Ex Machina Special #2
by Brian K. Vaughn and Chris Sprouse
Umbra #1 by Murphy and
Mike Hawthorne
This Week –
Flash: The Fastest Man Alive #1
by Paul DeMeo, Danny Bilson and Ken Lashley
Eternals #1 by Neil Gaiman and John Romita Jr.
Casanova #1 by
Matt
Fraction and
Gabriel Ba
Next Week –
DCU: Brave New World
by lots of people
Young Avengers #12 by
Allan Heinberg and Jim Cheung
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
|