Wolverine Legends, vol. 3: Law of the Jungle
by Frank Tieri, Sean Chen & Tom Palmer, Terry Dodson & Rachel Dodson
Collecting Wolverine #181-186, in which Wolverine gets involved with the mob. People die, and bad guys get their comeuppance. It's not a terribly deep plot, but Tieri makes it work well enough. This is almost a textbook example of modern decompression and writing for the trade; the story is stretched out longer than it needs to be, but reading it in one package makes it seem not so bad. The art by Chen & Palmer works well for the story, showing a few echoes of Romita Jr. The final collected issue, featuring Wolverine facing off in an issue-long throwdown with The Punisher, is meant to serve as a denouement but is just monotonous, and the art seems out of place, clashing with the rest of the book and not up to the usual high standards of the Dodsons.
Rating: 2.5 (of 5)
What's Michael, vol. 5: Michael's Favorite Spot
by Makoto Kobayashi
What's Michael often gets compared to the American comic strips Garfield and Heathcliff, but those are really poor comparisons. The only thing What's Michael has in common with those is that it features an orange-haired cat. So how is What's Michael different? For one thing, it's often funny, with much more regularity than the afforementioned strips. Kobayashi writes short stories (usually eight pages or so) in which a cat name Michael is either central or peripheral. Although the cats look the same and have the same name, they're different cats in different situations; in other words, there's no real continuity from story to story (so no need to start with volume 1--just pick one and dive in). Also, Kobayashi's art, while a bit cartoony, is very good. He especially does a good job at rendering cats which manage to show human-like expressions while still looking more or less like real cats. Never a deep experience, What's Michael nevertheless provides a quick dose of feline-related humor.
Rating: 3 (of 5)
Canvas
by Alex Follows
Canvas is a typical alt-comic teenage girl having typical alt-comic teenage girl experiences, like meeting a kind of creepy guy at a party and going to a campground with her parents where she experiments with booze and sex. It's made slightly surreal by the fact that her parents are anthropomorphosized animals, but other than the fact of that oddity nothing is never made of it. That's fairly typical of this story as a whole: every time it threatens to get interesting, it backs away and returns to the clichéd path. A Xeric award winner, Follows shows some talent, but he needs to let go of the conventions and follow his instincts.
Rating: 2.5 (of 5)
Thursday, 16 July 2015
Quick Ultimate Reviews
Ultimate Spider-Man #68
by Brian Michael Bendis, Mark Bagley & Scott Hanna
Bendis is at his best when focusing on Peter & Mary Jane and their friends, and except for the cover there's nary a Spider-Man costume in sight in this issue. Johnny Storm (aka the Human Torch, for those of you living in caves) has to finish a last semester of high school, so he comes to Peter's school in Queens. Lots of teenage angst, and lots of word balloons. If you like Bendis-logue, you'll like this.
Rating: 3.5 (of 5)
Ultimate Fantastic Four #12
by Warren Ellis, Stuart Immonen & Wade Von Grawbadger
After a couple of s-l-o-w moving issues, Ellis picks up the pace for the conclusion. The FF use a combination of smarts & fighting to take on Doom and his minions. Doom starts to get the better of them until, descending from the sky in their machines, the U.S. Army arrives to save the day. It's not really an ending so much as it's a stoppage of the action. Sure, the FF weren't going to defeat Doom and bring him to justice, but after six issues we deserve a little finality. One other thing that confuses me: is this Ultimate Doom not wearing armor, has his body been transformed into metal? Anyway, this is my last issue of Ultimate Fantastic Four; if I decide to continue following it, it'll be in the trades. I've got seven or eight months to make up my mind...
Rating: 2.5 (of 5)
by Brian Michael Bendis, Mark Bagley & Scott Hanna
Bendis is at his best when focusing on Peter & Mary Jane and their friends, and except for the cover there's nary a Spider-Man costume in sight in this issue. Johnny Storm (aka the Human Torch, for those of you living in caves) has to finish a last semester of high school, so he comes to Peter's school in Queens. Lots of teenage angst, and lots of word balloons. If you like Bendis-logue, you'll like this.
Rating: 3.5 (of 5)
Ultimate Fantastic Four #12
by Warren Ellis, Stuart Immonen & Wade Von Grawbadger
After a couple of s-l-o-w moving issues, Ellis picks up the pace for the conclusion. The FF use a combination of smarts & fighting to take on Doom and his minions. Doom starts to get the better of them until, descending from the sky in their machines, the U.S. Army arrives to save the day. It's not really an ending so much as it's a stoppage of the action. Sure, the FF weren't going to defeat Doom and bring him to justice, but after six issues we deserve a little finality. One other thing that confuses me: is this Ultimate Doom not wearing armor, has his body been transformed into metal? Anyway, this is my last issue of Ultimate Fantastic Four; if I decide to continue following it, it'll be in the trades. I've got seven or eight months to make up my mind...
Rating: 2.5 (of 5)
Quick All-Ages GN Reviews
GoGirl! vol. 1: The Time Team
by Trina Robbins & Anne Timmons
Science geek girl Doc, cheerleader Heather, and teenage super-heroine Lindsay (aka GoGirl!) are accidentally transported back in time to the Cretaceous Era, where they have to overcome their differences and work together to stay safe from the rampaging dinosaurs and out of the clutches of alien zoo keepers. While lessons are learned and it threatens more than once to go off into sugary afterschool special territory, Robbins keeps the story under control and doesn't let it get too serious or self-important. It's hard to go wrong with aliens and dinosaurs! Timmons' art is breezy and moves the story and action forward; with no more than three panels per page it doesn't seem cramped in the small format. It makes for lighthearted, all-ages fun.
Rating: 3 (of 5)
Emily & the Intergalactic Lemonade Stand
by Ian Smith & Tyson Smith
Emily is a ten-year-old girl with a lemonade stand. And a powerful robot who can juice lemons and instantly transport across interstellar distances. Life would be hunky-dory, except for rich neighbor girl Daisy who wants to put Emily out of business, and the approaching alien invasion force. It's a fun little book, highly reminiscent in story and art of what you might find on an original show on the Cartoon Network. The best part of the story is Pheef, the ultimate warrior of his people, who just happens to resemble a cute tiny pink Japanese toy, and his internal monologues. Pheef livens up the story and gives it an edge.
Rating: 3 (of 5)
by Trina Robbins & Anne Timmons
Science geek girl Doc, cheerleader Heather, and teenage super-heroine Lindsay (aka GoGirl!) are accidentally transported back in time to the Cretaceous Era, where they have to overcome their differences and work together to stay safe from the rampaging dinosaurs and out of the clutches of alien zoo keepers. While lessons are learned and it threatens more than once to go off into sugary afterschool special territory, Robbins keeps the story under control and doesn't let it get too serious or self-important. It's hard to go wrong with aliens and dinosaurs! Timmons' art is breezy and moves the story and action forward; with no more than three panels per page it doesn't seem cramped in the small format. It makes for lighthearted, all-ages fun.
Rating: 3 (of 5)
Emily & the Intergalactic Lemonade Stand
by Ian Smith & Tyson Smith
Emily is a ten-year-old girl with a lemonade stand. And a powerful robot who can juice lemons and instantly transport across interstellar distances. Life would be hunky-dory, except for rich neighbor girl Daisy who wants to put Emily out of business, and the approaching alien invasion force. It's a fun little book, highly reminiscent in story and art of what you might find on an original show on the Cartoon Network. The best part of the story is Pheef, the ultimate warrior of his people, who just happens to resemble a cute tiny pink Japanese toy, and his internal monologues. Pheef livens up the story and gives it an edge.
Rating: 3 (of 5)
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