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	<title>PopCultureShock :: Comics : Games : Movies : Lifestyle &#187; Picks, Pans &amp; Scans</title>
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	<managingEditor>chanzero@gmail.com (Comic Book Club)</managingEditor>
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		<title>PopCultureShock :: Comics : Games : Movies : Lifestyle</title>
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	<itunes:subtitle>The live, weekly talk show about comic books!</itunes:subtitle>
	<itunes:summary>Comic Book Club is a live weekly talk show about, you guessed it, Comic Books, featuring the best comic book creators, and the best comedians around, just hanging out and chatting, with your hosts, Alex Zalben, Justin Tyler, and Pete LePage. This is the audio podcast of that live show, recorded in a theater, in front of an audience, with guests, on a microphone, uploaded to a computer, totally awesome. The show was named a Best of New York 2007 by The New York Press, has been featured in The New York Times, and was nominated for Best Variety Show at the ECNY Awards. The show has welcomed dozens of guests weekly, including: Joe Quesada, Andrew W.K., Bill Hader, Seth Meyers, Scott Adsit, Perry Moore, Timmy Williams, Brian Michael Bendis, Ed Brubaker, Klaus Janson, Greg Pak, Mike Oeming, Dan Slott, Alex Robinson, Cecil Castelluci, Jimmy Palmiotti, Bill Willingham, and many more. Check them out live every Tuesday at 8:00pm!</itunes:summary>
	<itunes:keywords>comic books, comics, comic book club, comedy, justin tyler, pete lepage, alex zalben</itunes:keywords>
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		<item>
		<title>Picks &amp; Pans for June 25, 2008</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-for-june-25-2008/43815/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-for-june-25-2008/43815/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 30 Jun 2008 23:27:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Ernie Estrella, Albo of Geekanerd, and David Uzumeri hit us with a few quick reviews and a gang of surprises&#8211; a Split Decision on New Avengers, a B on Ultimates 3 #4, and&#8211; wait, Ultimates 3 #4 gets a B? PICK! Avengers: The Initiative #14 Writer: Dan Slott &#038; Christos Gage Artist: Stefano Caselli Colorist: [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ernie Estrella, Albo of <a href="http://www.geekanerdblog.com">Geekanerd</a>, and <a href="http://www.funnybookbabylon.com">David Uzumeri</a> hit us with a few quick reviews and a gang of surprises&#8211; a Split Decision on New Avengers, a B on Ultimates 3 #4, and&#8211; wait, Ultimates 3 #4 gets a B?</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/aveninit14.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="init" id="init">PICK! Avengers: The Initiative #14</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Dan Slott &#038; Christos Gage<br />
    <strong>Artist</strong>: Stefano Caselli<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Daniele Rudoni<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Albo:</strong> This has been a &#8220;pick up and scan in the store&#8221; book for me for months now, along with Amazing Spider-Man and anything that looks a little sexy. But I swear, once I started seeing what was going on within these pages I had no choice but to buy it. Dan Slott takes what could have been a pretty ordinary *COUGH*mightyavengers15*COUGH* Hank Pym-is-a-Skrull story and turns it into a hilarious situation comedy. The issue starts with some flashbacks that show Pym Skrull having to using his hidden extra powers to escape particularly tough scrapes, and then attributing his miraculous survival to &#8220;shrinking a lot.&#8221; Needless to say, Pym Skrull thinks the gullibility of Earthlings is hilarious. There are many more standout moments, such as an Initiative cadet&#8217;s &#8220;discovery&#8221; of Pym as a Skrull based on his choice of lunchables and a very Twilight Zoney ending that will make your heart sink. Highly recommended read!<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/cap39.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="cap" id="cap">PICK! Captain America #39</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Ed Brubaker<br />
    <strong>Penciller</strong>: Rob de la Torre<br />
    <strong>Inker</strong>: Rob de la Torre<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Frank D&#8217;Armata<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> I think the current theme in Cap is duplicity. Double agents, politicians and elections, two men posing as Captain America, Aleksander Lukin sharing his mind with the Red Skull and on and on. As a result whenever someone new pops up we have to wonder where he/she will fit into the grand scheme Brubaker is laying out. The second guessing and suspicion is making this real dense blueprint worth deciphering. I like the scenes with Bucky and Falcon who appear more as equals than when Steve Rogers was around to look up to. I like that Cap is still independent of what is going on in Secret Invasion and I can&#8217;t help but enjoy the Skull&#8217;s daughter everytime she&#8217;s on page because there&#8217;s always mayhem that ensues. There are good pieces here each month and Cap&#8217;s supporting cast is settling in, but its unclear if there will be a clear lead anytime soon so it still feels like it&#8217;s running off the strong vapors of the first three years. Keep hanging in there.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/b.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/finalcrisis03.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="fc" id="fc">DOUBLE PICK! Final Crisis #3</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Grant Morrison<br />
    <strong>Penciller</strong>: JG Jones<br />
    <strong>Inker</strong>: JG Jones<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Alex Sinclair<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Upon closing this book I&#8217;m beginning to feel like Grant Morrison is actually writing this book. That means high concept ideas conjured in some unexplainable brainstorming process, expert understanding of the vast library of DC characters at his hand, and unexpected, major happenings. If we got anything from the rather pedestrian first issue, it was the death of Martian Manhunter who went away much too easy, and more fan-favorites are threatened. I&#8217;ve never seen the JLA so easily infiltrated and compromised like they have in these first two issues. There&#8217;s definitely plenty going in present time DCU. Rather than dwelling on the past, the introduction of new faces or re-thinking of old ones still makes Final Crisis some twisted Who&#8217;s Who book. But by halfway major players get into the mix and at issues end, prime timers REALLY get involved. Final Crisis doesn&#8217;t have the same luster that Identity Crisis had but I&#8217;d say it&#8217;s on par with   I&#8217;m not going apeshit for this, nor am I willing to throw shit at it, but I don&#8217;t think you can walk away from this book thoroughly satisfied just yet.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/b.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> Throw away any expectations you had coming into this comic, throw away the past year of disappointing DC continuity, don&#8217;t make the mistake of deciding it&#8217;s a zero-sum game with Secret Invasion, prepare to have to reread multiple times and concentrate, and you&#8217;re in for one of the best superhero book experiences in recent years. It&#8217;s a lot to ask, but the rewards are there, and unlike what Internet pundits claim, this book isn&#8217;t confusing because it relies on continuity &#8211; it&#8217;s confusing because it&#8217;s complex and layered and consists of multiple different crisscrossing timelines, sometimes moving in different directions. I&#8217;m struck by the thematic similarity with Secret Invasion, even if the narrative is completely different &#8211; it&#8217;s about that growing, unknown terror lurking beneath the facade of everyday life that you don&#8217;t recognize, or don&#8217;t want to, until it explodes. Recommended less to DC fans than to fans of Grant Morrison and his signature time-vaulting style &#8211; this is The Filth with superheroes.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/ironfist16.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="iron" id="iron">PICK! Immortal Iron Fist #16</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Matt Fraction<br />
    <strong>Artists</strong>: David Aja<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Matt Hollingsworth<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> Matt Fraction caps off his seminal run on this book with what is, unquestionably, his best issue so far, possibly of his career. It&#8217;s a treat to finally get an issue that&#8217;s all David Aja, and Fraction&#8217;s script is funny, thoughtful, intriguing, mysterious and capped off with a cliffhanger that&#8217;s practically a giftwrapped present to upcoming writer Duane Swierczynski. I&#8217;m sure you&#8217;ve heard about how excellent this book is over the past few months, and this issue cements that this run on Iron Fist will be a much-requested huge hardcover for years to come.<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/jackoffables23.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="jack" id="jack">PICK! Jack of Fables #23</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Bill Willingham &#038; Matt Sturges<br />
    <strong>Artists</strong>: Tony Akins, Andrew Pepoy &#038; Jose Marzan<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Daniel Vozzo<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Since war broke out in flagship Fables, Jack of Fables has dialed it up as well. Part 2 of a Wild Western throwback   pits Jack against Bigby. It&#8217;s Jack being elusive as always but seeing Bigby in action never gets old. He goes against the grain of what a &#8220;hero&#8221; is supposed to look like, and for me, that&#8217;s his biggest appeal. Willingham and crew prove once again that even though these characters are familiar in our minds in their legendary fable tales, they are versatile in any type of story. Western, capers, war tales, or romance, the clever situational comedy and drama that unfolds never finds a drought of entertainment.<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/newavengers42.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="newav" id="newav">SPLIT DECISION! New Avengers #42</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Michael Bendis<br />
    <strong>Penciller</strong>: Jim Cheung<br />
    <strong>Inker</strong>: John Dell<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Justin Ponsor<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> And&#8230; THIS is what we&#8217;ve been waiting for for nearly 4-5 years. The issue that ties everything together, shows where all the chaos began and although we&#8217;ve still gone nowhere with Secret Invasion, this was a good read. Cheung and Bendis flexed their muscles by revealing how far the Skrulls have been plotting their takeover on Earth and just who is working Spider-Woman&#8217;s puppet strings once and for all. House of M, Civil War, Avengers Disassembled–this is the crossroads and exposes how easy it was for the Skrulls to get in and how fortunate they were that Scarlet Witch went cuckoo a few years back. Reading this will make the fanboys feel good for sticking it out on New Avengers and Mighty Avengers, both of which are as uneven Bendis ever gets with his otherwise taut superhero writing. With the variety of artists paired with Bendis on the Avengers titles, Cheung tells these story best. Big moments appear bigger than life and details are not lost on over penciled pages. Anyone catch those implants set to be shoved into Jessica&#8217;s bare body? A strong single issue with meaningful information that doesn&#8217;t take place in an event comic. Rare indeed.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Albo:</strong> As mentioned above, I am so sick of reading these scenes of standing around in a warehouse talking about their strategy to destroy the humans. There are invariably a few Skrullettes who look exactly the same and I&#8217;m not sure who&#8217;s who and I&#8217;m so bored I can&#8217;t even muster the energy to figure it out. Yes, we know Jessica Drew is a Skrull. Yes, we know she&#8217;s working for Hydra and Fury and S.H.I.E.L.D. Why don&#8217;t you tell me something new, BMB?<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/d.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/ultimates304.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="ultimates" id="ultimates">PICK?! Ultimates 3 #4</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jeph Loeb<br />
    <strong>Artists</strong>: Joe Madureira<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Christian Lichtner<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> I have a lot of problems with this comic, but I&#8217;m not sure if they&#8217;re necessarily the comic&#8217;s problems. I try, with every review I write, to grade a book based on how well it does what to look to set out to do. Ultimates 3 is out to be a slam-bang brainless Bruckheimer movie, and it&#8217;s not especially bad in that department. If your idea of a great superhero comic is a nonstop run-on sentence of fighting and one-liners, with no letup or characterization, then this comic will gladly fulfill your needs. Ultimates, like Loeb&#8217;s recent work, isn&#8217;t <em>about</em> plot or consistency or character development or theme or mood, it&#8217;s about giving Joe Madureira some cool splash pages to draw. And, you know, at that, it pretty much succeeds. It is what it is. This book is difficult to review in that it doesn&#8217;t conform to the narrative structures or logical constraints of modern superhero comics; however, despite the possible ignobility of its aspirations, Ultimates 3 #4 reaches a solid B on its own goals.<br /><img src="/scores/b.gif"></p>
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<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/strangers-in-paradise-rip-sip/41960/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">R.I.P. SiP</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/quentin-tarantine-robert-rodriguez-grindhouse-hits-theaters/41506/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Quentin Tarantine &#038; Robert Rodriguez&#8217; Grindhouse Hits Theaters</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/first-pictures-of-robert-downey-jr-as-tony-stark/41511/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">First Pictures of Robert Downey Jr. As Tony Stark</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/marvels-skrull-conspiracy/42154/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Marvel&#8217;s Skrull Conspiracy</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/gca-2008-best-comic-strip/43633/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">GCA 2008: Best Comic Strip</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Picks &amp; Pans for June 18, 2008</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-for-june-18-2008/43802/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-for-june-18-2008/43802/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Jun 2008 23:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Comic Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Reviews]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Ernie Estrella, Albo, David Uzumeri, and Carissa Koo came out of the gate swinging. Wolverine ended up being a triple pick, Amazing Spider-Man #546 was very well received, My Inner Bimbo #5 caught some of what we call &#8220;critical acclaim,&#8221; and SI: Fantastic Four #2 managed to score some newbie love. Well done, comics! PICK! [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ernie Estrella, Albo, <a href="http://www.funnybookbabylon.com">David Uzumeri</a>, and Carissa Koo came out of the gate swinging. Wolverine ended up being a triple pick, Amazing Spider-Man #546 was very well received, My Inner Bimbo #5 caught some of what we call &#8220;critical acclaim,&#8221; and SI: Fantastic Four #2 managed to score some newbie love. Well done, comics!</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/asm563.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="asm" id="asm">PICK! Amazing Spider-Man #563</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Bob Gale<br />
    <strong>Penciller</strong>: Mike McKone<br />
    <strong>Inker</strong>: Marlo Alquiza<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Jeromy Cox &#038; Antonio Fabela<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> I was initially very skeptical of another Bob Gale arc, since I wasn&#8217;t a huge fan of his original Freak story or the one-shot follow-up in #558. To my considerable surprise, I found myself enjoying the hell out of this two-parter, which concludes this week in #563. The art is clean and clear, as you&#8217;d expect from McKone, and Gale turns in a genuinely funny and smart script that really feels like a good Spider-Man story. A surprising gem.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/anna02.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="anna" id="anna">PICK! Anna Mercury #2</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Warren Ellis<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Facundo Percio<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Avatar Press</p>
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<p><strong>Carissa:</strong> Don&#8217;t let the cheesy spy-girl covers fool you. It&#8217;s only issue #2, and I already know that this is one of those series I&#8217;m going to be attacking the racks for. For one thing, I dig the plot concept. It&#8217;s brilliantly future-tech sci-fi, with enough explained about the imaginary worlds to understand the setting of the book and what&#8217;s happening, but not too much so that I constantly want to know more. In fact, Anna Mercury reminds me of a good RPG video game, with its carefully balanced breakups of action and exposition, iconic characters, heavy plot lines, and the potential for huge &#8220;say-what?!&#8221; plot twists. There&#8217;s also a strange interactive quality to this series, perhaps due to the static setting of LaunchPad and its anonymous characters, which almost makes me feel like I am LaunchPad, monitoring Anna Mercury’s health levels and telling her what to do. I highly recommend re-reading #1 after reading this issue. There’s a great, satisfying &#8220;I see now!&#8221; feeling after doing so.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/dmz32.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="dmz" id="dmz">PICK! DMZ #32</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Wood<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Riccardo Burchielli<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Jeremy Cox<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Remember picking up a grasshopper as a kid and holding one leg and then pulling the other until both ripped out? What&#8217;s left of that carcass is how Matty Roth feels. He&#8217;s in the middle of a tug-of-war battle between his parents and like many children would do he does his best to appease both of them. And the winner in all of it could be Parco Delgado, the man Matty and the people of the DMZ are hoping to give them real representation in this civil war. But that&#8217;s hard to do when you&#8217;re in a coma. So as the situation escalates, what does Matty do? What would you do? Yeah, I&#8217;d keep reading, too.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/dock05.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="dock" id="dock">PICK! Dock Walloper #5</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Ed Burns &#038; Jimmy Palmiotti<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Siju Thomas<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Siju Thomas &#038; RC Prakash<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Virgin Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Of all the Virgin Comics Director&#8217;s Cut comics, Dock Walloper really does work well as a movie storyboard. When read, you can imagine a big set, feel the romance of prohibition New York, the dialogue spoken, and the action on screen. But this works also really well as a comic. There are larger-than-life characters, attention to detail, the thrill of the chase and the reality of consequence. Walloper&#8217;s a title that will most likely go unnoticed but I like that titles like this exist. It&#8217;s an attempt to do something different in a comforting and familiar format. After coming out of the blocks ahead, DW settled into a confident groove. The closing issue mimics the entire story as a whole, by having a great first act, a slow second act and a real nice finish that&#8217;s sure to leave your buds with the taste of tasty hops and barley. I hope that Burns, Palmiotti and Thomas collaborate again. Two of the three are relative newcomers to comics. Each brings their own brand of storytelling to the table and it shows in the end result. Many cheers to an enjoyable mini-series.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/ghostrider24.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="ghost" id="ghost">PICK! Ghost Rider #24</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jason Aaron<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Tan Eng Huat<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Jose Villarubia<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> After kicking the shit out of nurses and zombie ghosts,  Blaze is looking at another angle to get to Zadkiel, the angel who created him. Where do some people find religion? In solitary confinement, or bigger yet, behind the cold hard steel of prison bars. Aaron&#8217;s Ghost Rider is like remembering fondly of escaping hot saturday afternoons in the summer by going to the local grindhouse double features minus the popcorn on the floor and silhouettes of roaches in the theater; you&#8217;d tolerate the filthy environment because the feature was so entertaining. Aaron is playing to Ghost Rider readers who have been around for the long ride with his vast knowledge of the character&#8217;s legacy, but he&#8217;s brought the newcomer in ripping and gearing to go as long as the story keep kicking down doors and punching guts. Huat&#8217;s art is a change over Roland Boschi and is more detailed and intricate, so let&#8217;s give Villarrubia a warm round of applause in work in this arc, too!<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/hellblazer245.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="hell" id="hell">PICK! Hellblazer #245</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jason Aaron<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Sean Murphy<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Lee Loughridge<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Constantine is one of the best characters in comics, wanna know why? The mere mention of him, or the presence of him lurking around the panels is enough to carry a story. In the first of two issues written by Scalped creator, Jason Aaron, American filmmakers want to tell the story of Constantine&#8217;s brief but memorable stint as a rock star. They travel to where it all happened and realize that sex, drugs and rock &#038; roll can be a dangerous combination. Aaron is the just the second American writer to take the Constantine reigns and takes a bit of America–obnoxious and all–across the pond and makes for a fun read. It&#8217;s a two-issue distraction and then we get back to the regularly scheduled Andy Diggle madness. I also dug Murphy&#8217;s fill-in art who I have never seen before. His art had a fresh mix of punk &#038; graffiti, 90&#8242;s Wildstorm art, and Tomm Coker/Ashley Wood giving off an underground, modern aesthetic that fit what the music was at that time.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/jla22.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="jla" id="jla">PICK! Justice League of America #22</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Dwayne McDuffie<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Ed Benes<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Pete Pantazis<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> It&#8217;s wonderful to see McDuffie getting back to this title&#8217;s grand arc and finally wrapping up plot threads that have been hanging since Brad Meltzer left; unfortunately, due to no fault of his own, it&#8217;s come so late that most people kind of forgot about Vixen and Red Tornado. This would be overcome with a smart script, which McDuffie provides, but it&#8217;s disastrously dragged down by some truly incongruous art that transforms a coherent story into a series of disconnected pin-up shots. A step forward narratively, but seriously, can&#8217;t you put <em>anyone</em> else on this book&#8217;s art?<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/bminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/bimbo05.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="bimbo" id="bimbo">PICK! My Inner Bimbo #5</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Sam Kieth<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Sam Kieth<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Oni Press</p>
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<p><strong>Albo:</strong> This book is Sam Keith at his absolute rawest. The pages feature some of his best looking art in years and are densely packed with an incredibly personal story the likes of which I&#8217;ve never read before. Make no mistake, the book is slow going, but it is supremely rewarding. The story follows a sixty-something man who has spent his whole life looking for female approval and whose &#8220;femmy&#8221; side manifests herself as a &#8220;Bimbo,&#8221; who starts as a sex slave but is always transforming into more mature forms, many of which are decidedly antagonistic. This is the last issue of the series, and I&#8217;m not sure if it was popular enough to collect in a trade, so I can&#8217;t recommend strongly enough that you get out there and try to find some back issues. If you like Sam Keith at all, or are just looking for something completely different from every other book on the shelf, you really shouldn&#8217;t miss this.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/rasl02.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="jla" id="jla">PICK! RASL #2</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jeff Smith<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Jeff Smith<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Cartoon Books</p>
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<p><strong>Carissa:</strong> Even with all the dark, gritty details of RASL’s world, there’s something really magical and charming about this comic that shows in this issue. The characters, in particular Rasl, are well defined and have believable personalities. Rasl’s internal battle with hope, faith, and what he should do versus what he thinks he needs to do give life to the story, even in those pages where he simply stands there and says nothing. I should actually say especially in those pages, since part of the charm of RASL comes from the excellent scripting. Instead of packing action, dialogue, and motion into every single panel like many comics do, RASL’s exciting moments are interspersed with stillness and silence. There are entire pages where nothing is said, and nothing much happens, and these pages are beautiful. They’re almost haunting, and they force readers to be interactive, imagining the scene in their own minds, putting thought bubbles into that empty space beside the characters. When there is dialogue, it’s also well scripted and doesn’t sound unbelievable or cheesy, even with all the talk of alternate dimensions and lizard men taking place. I particularly enjoyed that conversation Annie had with Rasl about the maze. Oh heck, I enjoyed every conversation they had and everything that happened in this issue. I am very eagerly awaiting the next one!<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/scalped18.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="scalped" id="scalped">PICK! Scalped #18</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jason Aaron<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Davide Furnò<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Giulia Brusco<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> After Dead Mothers, readers needed a much-deserved break from the power and intensity. With a very cool Tim Bradstreet cover, the shift was apparent. For one issue, we get the story of Falls Down, the good cop in Red Crow&#8217;s law enforcement. He&#8217;s an old-fashioned sonofabitch and captures that scary moment when you notice that the whole world has passed you by; when your actions are second-guessed and you can no longer relate to how the world works. When it happens, it can be frightening. The way it&#8217;s played out in Scalped can be downright haunting.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/siff02.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="siff" id="siff">PICK! Secret Invasion: Fantastic Four #2</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Roberto Aguire-Sacasa<br />
    <strong>Penciller</strong>: Barry Kitson<br />
    <strong>Inker</strong>: Barry Kitson, Mick Gray, Scott Hanna<br />
    <strong>Colorist</strong>: Chris Sotomayor<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Carissa:</strong> I’ll admit it. I don’t read too much Fantastic Four and I’ve been generally disappointed in the Secret Invasion titles, but I kind of liked this comic. Oh sure, there were parts where I grimaced at the utter cheesiness, (see Johnny Storm and Lyja overcome a life-long Skrull/Human war and fight Cthulhu of the Negative Zone through the shining power of LOVE) but it was, in all, an entertaining, cute little issue. Reed Richard’s kids were adorable in their giant robot suit, trying to fill in the shoes of the two missing Fantastic Four members. The characters were all portrayed accurately, and there was great, believable family dynamic between all of them. Johnny Storm’s narrative at the beginning was pretty funny. The part where Lyja reveals her master plan to Johnny was cliché and annoying, but I can overlook that. There’s nothing ground-breaking about this issue in relation to the Secret Invasion storyline, and nothing that will leave you on the edge of your seats, but sometimes, cute is all you need when taking a bathroom break.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/bminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/supermanbatman49.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="supes" id="supes">PICK! Superman/Batman #49</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Michael Green &#038; Mike Johnson<br />
    <strong>Penciller</strong>: Shane Davis<br />
    <strong>Inker</strong>: Matt Banning<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Pete Pantazis<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> When Green came onto this title, I was initially highly skeptical &#8211; TV-to-comics migrants tend to have some stumbling blocks, especially ones recommended by Jeph Loeb. His previous assignment, a six-issue <em>Batman Confidential</em> arc that retold the Joker&#8217;s origin, was pretty much a can&#8217;t-win assignment because giving the Joker a definitive origin is largely considered a mistake in the first place. Still, he did his best. Then he got this title. And, uh, as of this sixth issue, it&#8217;s one of my favorite DC books. It&#8217;s funny without being irreverent, it&#8217;s self-aware without being contemptuous &#8211; it&#8217;s just a fun, well-written, on-the-nose superhero comic. I&#8217;m looking forward to more from this run and more from Green, and I&#8217;d really recommend this book (the concept is almost unimportant &#8211; Superman and Batman are cleaning up Kryptonite, but the pleasures are all in the detail and art) to any general DCU superhero fan.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/trinity03.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="trinity" id="trinity">PICK! Trinity #3</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Kurt Busiek<br />
    <strong>Penciller</strong>: Mark Bagley<br />
    <strong>Inker</strong>: Art Thibert<br />
    <strong>Colorist</strong>: Pete Pantazis<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Carissa:</strong> Once more, our heroes appear in only four pages of their own series. Batman should really get himself a new lawyer if he plans to have money to lavish on his lady friends and boy wonders. I was impressed with the appearance they made though. Seeing Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman suddenly floating there in the middle of the battlefield, owning over 3/4 of the page, brought back some of that old charm the Big Three had been missing in the first two issues. &#8220;Fall back, Canary. You&#8217;ve done a fine job. But you need a breather.&#8221; Classic lines, Superman.</p>
<p>    After their initial appearance though, the trinity engaged in the same uninteresting fight scene from issue #2. It also looks like the fight is going to continue past issue #3 into #4, in which case I&#8217;m going to start vaccinating against Secret Invasion Slow-Mo Sydrome. I love gratuitous violence as much as the next person, but I don&#8217;t see the point in dragging out the same kind of gratuitous violence for that long. Even with all my whining, it was nice to see the power dynamics between Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman in this battle. Not many battles I see with these three shows them falling into the roles of leader/subordinate that they would only have when teaming together.</p>
<p>    As usual, there was a little side story unrelated to the trinity in this issue. This side story is what turns issue #3 from &#8220;eh&#8221; into &#8220;not bad!&#8221; It&#8217;s the return of tarot girl from issue #1, and hey, her story is actually interesting. Being a new character, her personality is actually visible and fleshed out, which is something every other character in this series lacks. We also find out through Rita&#8217;s story a lot of what future issues of Trinity may be about, but we do so by using our own heads rather than having a jabber mouth villain tell us his master plan. (cough issue #1 cough) I like to feel some semblance of smart while reading a comic.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/bminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/wolverine66.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="wolv" id="wolv">TRIPLE PICK! Wolverine #66</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Mark Millar<br />
    <strong>Penciller</strong>: Steve McNiven<br />
    <strong>Inker</strong>: Dexter Vines<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Morry Hollowell<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Albo:</strong> Awesome! The first issue in the &#8220;Old Man Logan&#8221; story, this book takes place fifty years after the villains finally won. Almost all of the heroes are dead, and the United States have been split into regions controlled by supervillain factions. Logan lives the quiet life of a farmer with a wife and kids (one of whom is named Scotty&#8230; Awwww), getting by and paying rent to a gang of the Hulk&#8217;s descendants who ride around in the old Fantasticar. It&#8217;s a cool post-apocalyptic world, and while it certainly shares the Mad Max aesthetic touchstones that no post-apocalypse can get away from, there are a few cool little touches that separate it from what you&#8217;ve seen before. Anyway, the problems arise when pacifist Logan can&#8217;t make rent and gets his ass kicked by the gang. His healing factor isn&#8217;t what it used to be, which introduces some tension that most Wolverine stories don&#8217;t have&#8211;finally the man isn&#8217;t unbeatable. He has to accept a proposition from Hawkeye to go on a delivery mission for some cash, leaving his family behind. As long as they don&#8217;t all get slaughtered, thus slinging this story down a cliched path we&#8217;ve all seen before, it should be a fun ride. Oh, did I mention Steve McNiven is a goddamn stunning artist?<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Welcome to the Mark Millar Circus of Hype. For the next year we get the Civil War creative team and a futuristic apocalyptic story that is WOLVERINE&#8217;S ALL-TIME GREATEST ADVENTURE! Bold statement, given that there&#8217;s like 8 new Wolverine stories. Wolverine went through some traumatic battle, so much that he goes into hiding for 50 years. He&#8217;s made a new life for himself, he&#8217;s a father, a husband, and the claws have remained beneath the skin since that day. How far in the future are we? Does this fall in line with the X-Traitor storyline? We don&#8217;t know. It&#8217;s been long enough for Bruce Banner to have grandchildren. Even long enough for the United States to have been overrun by villains and conquered by Marvel&#8217;s worst. So &#8220;Old Man Logan&#8221; comes out of retirement and after reading the Ultimates, we know Millar is heavily influenced by movies and this story smells of Unforgiven and Mad Max. Will this be what the cover claims to be? Who knows, but it&#8217;s a good start.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> Millar returns to Wolverine for a sort of hyperkinetic Mad Max-inspired postapocalyptic take on the Marvel Universe, and like many Millar comics, it&#8217;s an idea (and result) that&#8217;s simultaneously utterly ridiculous and completely awesome. Millar&#8217;s made a solid career out of writing dumb comics for smart people, and this continues the trend, with a bunch of cool ideas thrown at you every second (The Hulks Have Eyes! Pacifist Logan! Return of the Spider-Buggy!) tempered by the fact that sometimes it feels like those ideas are just there to be cool rather than serve any narrative purpose. Of course, I&#8217;m on issue one of eight, so I&#8217;m open to eating my hat. If you&#8217;re reading comics reviews, you know Millar&#8217;s style; if you like Millar&#8217;s style, you will probably enjoy this comic. Smart dumb fun.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/quentin-tarantine-robert-rodriguez-grindhouse-hits-theaters/41506/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Quentin Tarantine &#038; Robert Rodriguez&#8217; Grindhouse Hits Theaters</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/strangers-in-paradise-rip-sip/41960/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">R.I.P. SiP</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/first-pictures-of-robert-downey-jr-as-tony-stark/41511/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">First Pictures of Robert Downey Jr. As Tony Stark</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/knight-rider-car-auctioned/41507/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Knight Rider Car Auctioned</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/halle-berry-gets-star-on-hollywood-walk-despite-catwoman/41512/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Halle Berry Gets Star On Hollywood Walk, Despite Catwoman</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Picks &amp; Pans for June 11, 2008</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-for-june-11-2008/43791/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-for-june-11-2008/43791/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Jun 2008 21:03:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>David Brothers</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Comic Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Reviews]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-for-june-11-2008/43791/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Ernie Estrella and Carissa Koo hook us up with a few quality reviews this week. Check our dual review of Secret Invasion: Who Do You Trust here, courtesy of P&#038;P regulars David Uzumeri and Gavin Jasper. PICK! 100 Bullets #92 Writer: Brian Azzarello Art: Eduardo Risso Colorist: Patricia Mulvihill Publisher: DC Comics/Vertigo Ernie: Trying to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ernie Estrella and Carissa Koo hook us up with a few quality reviews this week. Check our dual review of Secret Invasion: Who Do You Trust <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/double-review-secret-invasion-who-do-you-trust/43789/">here</a>, courtesy of P&#038;P regulars <a href="http://www.funnybookbabylon.com">David Uzumeri</a> and <a href="http://www.4thletter.net">Gavin Jasper</a>.</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/100bullets92.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="100" id="100">PICK! 100 Bullets #92</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Azzarello<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Eduardo Risso</strong><br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Patricia Mulvihill<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Trying to predict the last eight issues is like trying to drive a rear-wheel truck on black ice. You have no control. You just let go of the wheel and hang on for dear life. With alliances deteriorating, our favorite players are reaching the end of the plank and we have no one to fault but ourselves for liking these guys and gals. Don&#8217;t try to take it out on Azzarello and Risso they knew it all along and we were hooked, line and sinker. These Minutemen were trouble from the start and Agent Graves sees the sharks circling but that don&#8217;t mean he&#8217;s dead in the water, I don&#8217;t think he&#8217;s even begun to fight. But the power of these final issues, so far, resides in the subplot of the children &#8220;dealing&#8221; in life and death. It not only sings a tragic tune but resembles too many real streets and corners to count. Mulvihill&#8217;s genius is in coloring these scenes in hues where an excess darkness exists contrasting the game played under the lights. While the main plot dances around the trigger, these kids are actually pulling them.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/boostergold10.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="booster" id="booster">PICK! Booster Gold #10</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Geoff Johns &#038; Jeff Katz<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Dan Jurgens &#038; Norm Rapmund</strong><br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: tbd<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Carissa:</strong> Scouring the net, I’ve read a lot of complains about Booster Gold’s tenth issue. It doesn’t make sense in the DC continuum. That wouldn’t be possible in real time traveling science. &#8220;What?!&#8221; &#8220;Yeah right.&#8221; &#8220;Meh.&#8221;</p>
<p>    I personally loved it. I understand how it doesn’t make too much scientific sense, but I don’t read about time savvy superheroes for the sense they should make. In the genre of kitschy, 1970’s sci-fi, Booster Gold’s tenth issue scores high on the groovy scale. It’s got those great family values. (Father vs. Son, death match!) It’s got those great friendship values. (Two men, completely, platonically, in love) And the revealing of the ultimate bad guy and what happens to him? Comedic brilliance. (Team America, anyone?) The best part though, was the ending, starting with Blue Beetle’s perfect one-liner on the bottom of the fourth to the last page. They were identical to every apocalyptic/armageddon movie I saw in the 90’s, and they broke my heart just like every one of those movies did. On a semi-related note, the cover of this issue also gets a high groovy rating.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><em><strong><a name="locke" id="locke">PICK! Locke &#038; Key</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Joe Hill<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Gabriel Rodriguez</strong><br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: IDW Publishing</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Sam has made his way into Lovecraft and is determined to finish the job he started. With minimal resistance, he marches right onto the Locke estate and terrorizes them once again. Bode&#8217;s discovery down the well proves to be resourceful when he meets her eye to eye and is faced with the dilemma of trusting her. So many horror films are about shocking viewers with a cadre of ghastly sequences or thrusting an orgasm of gore in our face that it becomes a test of patience and sometimes comical. Reading a horror novel allows the author&#8217;s words to guide our imagination, but is it ever as scary as it is intended? That depends on the reader. But Locke &#038; Key gives enough to realize the reality of the situation. Our mind fills in the rest that goes on between panels and off. Hill and Rodriguez have managed create something that will infiltrate your fears and creep the fuck out of you–even violate you. Rarely have I felt the type of genuine fear and suspense when turning the pages of Locke &#038; Key. Highly, highly recommended.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/punisherlbb.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="pun" id="pun">SEMI-PICK! Punisher: Little Black Book</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Victor Gischler<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Jefte Palo</strong><br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Lee Loughridge<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics/MAX</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Turning Punisher into a Max title is one of the best things done to the character since hiring Garth Ennis to write him. And as Ennis preps us with his final story, I can say with this one-shot, Marvel&#8217;s found a suitable artist for the next era of Frank Castle if they&#8217;re looking. Little Black Book is a little ditty told from the perspective of a powerful and professional call girl who winds up being Frank&#8217;s easy way to his next target. Palo got a great blocky style and heavy brush that&#8217;s sure to remind longtime Punisher readers of a young Whilce Portacio or Bill Seinkiewicz back in the day but Gischler writes Vette, the call girl as a narrator in noir fashion. At times though, it&#8217;s borderline cliché and predictable. As a one-shot diversion or collected with other short stories it works, especially if you favor stories like Spider-Man&#8217;s Tangled Web but it&#8217;s hardly ground-breaking material for Punisher.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/cplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/redmass01.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="redmass" id="redmass">PICK! Red Mass for Mars #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jonathan Hickman<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Ryan Bodenheim</strong><br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Jonathan Hickman<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Image Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Carissa:</strong> Red Mass for Mars already looks like it’s going to be an interesting new series. I like the post-apocalyptic slash superhero slash alien parasite thing it’s got going on, and the few characters we meet are intriguing. (Even the alpha male superhero we barely get to see) Lightbender especially looks like he’s going to play a very convincing, evil, EVIL bad guy. That shot with him sitting there talking about his genocide plans while the parasites fly all around him? Psychotic brilliance.</p>
<p>    The art is also well planned in this issue. The backgrounds are detailed and never skimped on, giving us readers a clear idea of what future-earth looks like in all its sci-fi glory. The art is dabbled out in a unique fashion, with a certain color palette being used depending on the location and mood. (For instance, the soft sepias of the Halidome scenes, and the burnt reds of Lightbender’s scenes) Finally, look at that last page. The angle. The colors. The expression on &#8220;alpha male’s&#8221; face. &#8220;Oomph,&#8221; I say.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/skaar01.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="skaar" id="skaar">PAN! Skaar: Son of Hulk #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Greg Pak<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Ron Garney</strong><br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Paul Mounts<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> With the Incredible Hulk movie revamp, we also get the release of a Planet Hulk spinoff where the Hulkspawn runs amok with monsters. I was hoping to see a much slower growth unfold in these pages, perhaps every five issues we see Skaar in a great physical adventure at one age, and then with the next arc, be older with his powers further developed. Part of me wanted to see this title to be like watching an egg hatch in an incubator. Instead we get abrupt jumps in age, size and ability with the start of a story shoehorned near the end. The whole issue reads as if it were rushed. Conceptually, Hulk&#8217;s baby is more interesting than what&#8217;s being done here and like the Star Wars prequels, my expectations were not met with the results. One moment we see toddler Skaar slaying some big nasty, and soon after he&#8217;s nearly as big as his daddy. There&#8217;s not much captivating being built here–at least for me–and I&#8217;m going to guess we&#8217;ll see him in the Marvel Universe before too long. Sigh. The Hulk family now has THREE titles. Too much to be made of a character that&#8217;s been done well in his own original title only a handful of times (Peter David era, Bruce Jones, and Planet Hulk come to mind right away). The pleasurable thing about Planet Hulk was that for a year, we got a great fish-out-of-water story and then he returns to deliver comeuppance. Skaar dilutes that and tries to capitalize on that spirited year that Pak took Hulk to a new height instead of finding a natural way to bring Skaar&#8217;s story to front row. Honestly, how long could they really draw this out before it gets old? On the bright side, Ron Garney&#8217;s art and veteran colorist, Paul Mounts have never been bad to look at. But hardcore Banner readers will likely prove me wrong and find enough other good reasons to support this much Hulk. I&#8217;m just not going to be one of them.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/dplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/trinity02.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="trinity" id="trinity">SEMI-PICK! Trinity #2</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Kurt Busiek<br />
    <strong>Penciller</strong>: Mark Bagley</strong><br />
    <strong>Inker</strong>: Art Thibert</strong><br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Pete Pantazis<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Carissa:</strong> I’m waiting for Trinity to prove itself, but it still just chugs in its second issue. It’s not the set-up of the big story I have a problem with though. I understand that will take some time, and a few issues will have to be spent introducing the villains and showing the tests they throw at the Big Three. If this is going to happen though, I’d at least like the set-up action to be more interesting. I don’t just want to see Superman pushing a sun for two pages or Batman disappating a mental attack in one page. I want to see them kicking ass, then maybe being foiled for a little bit, and then kicking ass again through some ingenious plan or revelation. Just because there are three big players in this series competing for screen time doesn’t mean that the three big players have to only get bit parts in each issue. One easy solution would be to not waste lots and lots of important pages on boring, not-so-important fights like Green Lantern vs. Big Monster and his DC Version of a Chaos Mite. What was the point, really, of Green Lantern’s honking 11-page smash-crash scene? (Kind of like the pointless Flash and his Tykes fight scene from the previous issue) This is what I say. Less unimportant, boring side stories + more pages devoted to the important, interesting characters of this series = interesting first issues of Trinity, even with all the tedious set-up.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/cplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/xforceaint.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="xforce" id="xforce">PICK! X-Force: Ain&#8217;t No Dog</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Charlie Huston &#038; Jason Aaron<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Jefte Palo, Werther Dell&#8217;Edera &#038; Antonio Fuso</strong><br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Lee Loughridge &#038; Andrew Crossley<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> I need to preface this review a bit. I avoided the relaunch of X-Force and felt that the title&#8217;s high point was the spastic parody by Peter Milligan and Mike Allred. I was a big fan of that and the much-talked-about darker take on Rob Liefeld&#8217;s creation + Wolverine (in yet another superhero team and yet another costume) was NOT enough of a draw to be sucked into yet another mutant spinoff. However, similar to Punisher: Little Black Book I was willing to take a leap on a one-shot, half-drawn by Palo. Here he draws a blood-drenched tale of &#8220;berzerker&#8221; Wolverine in excellent form, torturing a guy for half the book and taking breathers to pile up ninja carcasses. The money shot climax may be worth the cover price alone. I was sucked into this easily, but I still didn&#8217;t get the essence of this new X-Force, which is fine, I just wanted to see Wolverine go off, and got off I did. The second story, scribed by Aaron (Scalped) took a rather natural assignment to write Thunderbird or whatever he&#8217;s become in this new X-Force. It&#8217;s a quiet and introspective into a character that&#8217;s often underused. It also responds to the nay-sayers who think that modern-day comics are filled with characters looking for senseless killings. Two contrasting tales with two very different characters. I was skeptical going in but in the end I may have convinced myself on catching X-Force in trade.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/b.gif"></p>
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<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/quentin-tarantine-robert-rodriguez-grindhouse-hits-theaters/41506/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Quentin Tarantine &#038; Robert Rodriguez&#8217; Grindhouse Hits Theaters</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/strangers-in-paradise-rip-sip/41960/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">R.I.P. SiP</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/knight-rider-car-auctioned/41507/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Knight Rider Car Auctioned</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/first-pictures-of-robert-downey-jr-as-tony-stark/41511/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">First Pictures of Robert Downey Jr. As Tony Stark</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wizards-of-the-coast-recruits-dd-players-from-college/41510/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Wizards of the Coast Recruits D&#038;D Players From College</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Picks &amp; Pans for June 04, 2008</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-for-june-04-2008/43776/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-for-june-04-2008/43776/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Jun 2008 07:53:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-for-june-04-2008/43776/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Got a heaping helping for you this week. Ernie Estrella, Gavin Jasper of 4thletter!, and Carissa Koo break it down with a gang of reviews. PICK! Abe Sapien #5 Writer: Mike Mignola Art: Jason Shawn Alexander Colorist: Dave Stewart Publisher: Dark Horse Comics Ernie: Abe&#8217;s solo adventure comes to a close and if you&#8217;ve been [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Got a heaping helping for you this week. Ernie Estrella, Gavin Jasper of <a href="http://www.4thletter.net">4thletter!</a>, and Carissa Koo break it down with a gang of reviews.</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/abesap05.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="abe" id="abe">PICK! Abe Sapien #5</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Mike Mignola<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Jason Shawn Alexander</strong><br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Dave Stewart<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Dark Horse Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Abe&#8217;s solo adventure comes to a close and if you&#8217;ve been following like a good soldier, you&#8217;re hoping Abe goes on more adventures, at least as long as Alexander is willing to draw him. This is just a fun, spooky tale spotlighting Sapien&#8217;s green and unseasoned missions where he comes into his own. Mignola&#8217;s occult fantasy entices and lures us in while raising the hairs on our necks. The distant places with too many dark corners to count are familiar whether we&#8217;ve imagined them in our nightmares, walked through our cemeteries, or explored the deep depths of our soul. Like Abe, we struggle and investigate, survey our surrounds until we are able to overcome fear and escape our own drownings.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/amsplendor03.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="splendor" id="splendor">PICK! American Splendor Season Two #3</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Harvey Pekar<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Darwyn Cooke, Rick Geary, Chris Samnee, Warren Pleece, Dean Haspiel, John Cebollero, Josh Neufeld</strong><br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Reading American Splendor is always a refreshing visit back home for me,  Cleveland native and now a resident San Diegan. The blue collar ideals. The working man’s mentality. The dreary outlook. I think when you grow up in that town you make no apologies for being a realist, a pessimist, or a skeptic. It’s the lack of sunshine that Clevelanders see on a day-to-day basis that makes you all piss and vinegar. With all of the sun I get now, I’m just not used to it, I’m homesick at times, and American Splendor grays up my day up just fine. From the black and white (and inkwashed) art, to Pekar’s groucho demeanor, there’s enough in here to get you down and kicking the dirt. It’s warranted though, given our world, and life in general and this issue shows off how well-versed and well-read Pekar is. From politics, global warming, the history of Russian and Jewish immigrants in Cleveland to avant-garde jazz, there’s a lot on his mind. The hundreds of hours spent in Zubal’s bookstore tailor a well-read man. Whether you’re from Cleveland or not, you personally care about these observations or not, you’re still drawn to what HE thinks about them. Why? He captures everything that’s beautiful and equally ugly about living today, growing old, and simple pleasures in a few panels with his honest words–and that’s as American as you can get.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/aveninv02.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="aviv" id="aviv">SEMI-PAN! Avengers/Invaders #2</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jim Krueger &#038; Alex Ross<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Steve Sadowski<br />
        <strong>Colors</strong>: inLight Studios<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> Well, the art certainly looks better than the last issue. The Human Torch stuff looks especially nice. No, wait. I just saw that panel of Namor catching the axe again. It&#8217;s kind of a mix bag. In fact, that&#8217;s how I see the writing. Both Avengers teams can easily see that this is a time travel thing and get past the imposter accusations, but how long can every one of the Invaders go on convinced that every single guy in tights they come across is a Nazi? I&#8217;d think Steve Rogers is smarter than that. I&#8217;m also a bit confused by Iron Fist&#8217;s one line towards the end, which seems to miss the point about what the Secret Avengers team is all about. I&#8217;ll give this another issue, but I&#8217;m not expecting miracles.<br /><img src="/scores/cminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/criminalv203.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="criminal" id="criminal">PICK! Criminal Vol. 2 #3</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Ed Brubaker<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Sean Phillips</strong><br />
    <strong>Colorist</strong>: Val Staples</strong><br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics/Icon</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> If comics were cuts of meat, there&#8217;s a lot of bacon and sausages out there. Fatty, tasty morsels of meat that are quick to satisfy but in the end aren&#8217;t the best bang for your dollar. As you move up to the sirloins and the strip steaks, you begin to get more quality, larger cuts of quality meat, and I can think of a select group of comics that would qualify. Criminal? Criminal is the filet mignon class of comics, kobe even, because you get a big slab of tender meat, and for that expense, you get every single penny back. 32 Pages, stand-alone stories, and some of the most tragic, memorable crime stories done in the comic format. It&#8217;s Brubaker &#038; Phillps&#8217; redesign of what a comic should be: Total satisfaction. And if this don&#8217;t satisfy you, become a vegetarian. The first two issues of the year we met Sebastian, Jake and the girl that came in between them, Danica. Sweet Danica. Watch out boy, she&#8217;s a man-eater. Her story is filled with men that have treated her wrong, and in turn she&#8217;s treated them just as bad. The layers built up over the years have made this fine woman tough, made her heart diminish, and turn her veins cold. Our ma&#8217;s and pop&#8217;s have taught us not to be like this, and perhaps that&#8217;s why we want to know so much about them, their motives, their irrational decisions. That&#8217;s why we can&#8217;t get them out of our heads, and why we root for them when we inherently know–things will go bad.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><em><strong><a name="dandare" id="dandare">PICK! Dan Dare #6</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Garth Ennis<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Gary Erskine</strong><br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Gary Leach<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Virgin Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> If we must turn to one of Britain&#8217;s science fiction heroes to feel patriotism then we must do what we must do. Actually it&#8217;s more like idealism which is one of  Ennis&#8217; many strengths. Whether it&#8217;s the full-throttle vigilantism of the Punisher or the leadership of Dan Dare who stares death in the eye for his country, Ennis&#8217; heroes are the quintessential idealists. It difficult to believe that Ennis&#8217; imagination has real world counterparts, but even if they did exist, would people be able to shake the numbing effect of the negative and paranoia-filled bombing spewed by mainstream media? Ennis and Erskine are not trying to undo that, but they are trying to create a world where people believe in their leaders and the people who lead their soldiers through dangerous waters. Where we can drop all the suspicion and follow by pure trust. I realize this if fiction, sadly, but it inspires one even if just for a couple dozen pages worth. Dan Dare isn&#8217;t so much about one man as it is the effect of that man on others.<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/tec845.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="tec" id="tec">PICK! Detective Comics #845</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Paul Dini<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Dustin Nguyen<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Derek Fridolfs<br />
        <strong>Colors</strong>: John Kalisz<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> Dini built up the Riddler&#8217;s credit as a legal-friendly detective over the last year or so only to damage it hard with this issue. Perhaps it ties into <i>Trinity</i>. Either way, it feels somewhat forced. Really, what the issue is about is the highly entertaining chatroom segment. It starts off as something you groan at. Then as you continue on, you smirk a little. Soon you find yourself snickering at the truth about certain aspects of the chat. This one scene takes what could have been a passable issue and makes it far more worth checking out. Though it does water down the cover&#8217;s hyped up cameo, which adds little interest in the scheme of things.<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><em><strong><a name="duostar" id="duostar">PAN! Duostar Racers</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: TP Louis<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Ashley Wood<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: IDW Publishing</p>
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<p><strong>Carissa:</strong> This whole issue hurts. The art, typical of Ashley Wood, is pretty but confusing. The storyline looks like it was purposely intended to be ambiguous in this first issue, but it is really just completely indecipherable. This is what I’m guessing: People racing each other on gigantic robots? (I only figured this out after looking at the sketchbook pages) And wait! There is a nefarious plot underhand. But I can’t tell what, because I can’t understand a damn thing that is happening in this comic. The author tries way too hard to be cryptic about what’s going on. The dialogue is uninteresting, the characters have no names or distinguishable personalities, and the entire setting is shot to hell. There is absolutely nothing in this comic that would make me come back to the second issue. Hardcore Wood fans may like it. Looks like there’s going to be gratuitous Ashley Wood boobies and ass in the next one.<br /><img src="/scores/d.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/house02.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="house" id="house">PICK! House of Mystery #2</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Matthew Sturges &#038; Bill Willingham<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Luca Rossi &#038; Jill Thompson</strong><br />
    <strong>Colorist</strong>: Lee Loughridge</strong><br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> I described this this title last month as a satisfying &#8220;different&#8221; read and the second issue holds up. Each story contains an uninterrupted short story, a twisted tall-tale if you will, and it&#8217;s told in a stage that&#8217;s part of a bigger story. In this second issue the larger story stuck out more–reversed from the debut–and that&#8217;s important for the title because that&#8217;s what will keep readers coming back no matter how good those little tales are. Fig&#8217;s found her way to the House of Mystery, and appears to have a special connection to it that the other permanent members don&#8217;t. This dynamic of the newcomer and the longtime residents are interesting ingredients brought to the pot. Jill Thompson provided this issue&#8217;s escape and seeing her work is always an enjoyable trip, even if it&#8217;s only for five pages. Thompson just keeps getting better and better as the years go by and her gray ink-wash look fits this book like a silk glove because it takes you out of the main story smoothly and grabs you through each panel. I can imagine this book building momentum each month and an anticipation of what kind of bar story we&#8217;re going to get. Keep an eye on this.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/invironman02.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="iron" id="iron">DOUBLE PICK! Invincible Iron Man #2</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Matt Fraction<br />
        <strong>Art</strong>: Salvador Larroca<br />
        <strong>Colors</strong>: Frank D&#8217;Armata<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> Fraction&#8217;s take on Iron Man continues to work with a style I&#8217;ll call &#8220;sensible decompression.&#8221; So many times since <i>Extremis</i>, we&#8217;ve seen Iron Man go on about all the things going on in his helmet. All the sensory overload that he&#8217;s able to absorb because he&#8217;s freakishly smart and part computer. The comic in question isn&#8217;t so much a story being told as it is a documentary of Tony Stark&#8217;s busy, busy life that happens to tie into itself. He&#8217;s all over the place, but he anchors us in a way that it doesn&#8217;t matter how many subplots we&#8217;re forced to sit through.</p>
<p>    I also enjoy Fraction&#8217;s take on Iron Man meeting with the resurrected Thor for the second time. Considering what a botch job JMS did with the first meeting, it&#8217;s nice to see that this time it&#8217;s Thor who comes off as the complete ass. How about them apples?<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> For the first time, Marvel actually has a comic in its main universe that people can be referred to hot off the heels of the success of a film. You don&#8217;t need to read anything before, or be prepped that this story takes place in an alternate universe. It&#8217;s clear that this title is tailored to readers who loved everything about the film and wanted more. There&#8217;s more Rhodey here, more Pepper, more Armor Wars and Tony just being Tony; juggling being a leader of technology and the weapons race, leader of S.H.I.E.L.D. and being a playboy. Hey, Modok&#8217;s in this too. My mind&#8217;s made up. Marvel&#8217;s best character isn&#8217;t Spider-Man anymore.<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/northlanders06.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="north" id="north">PICK! Northlanders #6</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Wood<br />
    <strong>Art</strong>: Davide Gianfelice</strong><br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Dave McCaig<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Great stories have great conflict and Northlanders is wealthy with it. Transplanting you to a far off but familiar place–where situations appear to be black and white but are steeped in gray–you&#8217;ll gladly allow combatants Gorm and Sven free rent in your mind. With every issue, they get more settled. The former allows you to role-play a bully, while any aggression you&#8217;ve pent up can be let go in Sven. With two more issues to conclude the opening arc, Sven finally gets some much needed support and some more added incentive. In a land full of two-faces and hidden causes, it&#8217;s wise not to let your guard down and you&#8217;d be wrong if you think you can catch your breath. Readers are beginning to cash in the benefits for investing in Wood&#8217;s blueprint and Gianfelice and McCaig&#8217;s palatial art. Rather than being an action comic filled with splash pages, each act of violence in Northlanders has purpose. Each player wears a stone-faced visage, but reveal much more when blood is spilled. From verbal stabs to the swing of the axe, or the quenching of Sven&#8217;s sexual desires, momentum always seems to roll towards the last page. This is fiction constructed at its best.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/omega09.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="omega" id="omega">PICK! Omega the Unknown #9</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jonathan Lethem with Karl Rusnak<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Farel Dalrymple<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Farel Dalrymple<br />
        <strong>Colors</strong>: Paul Hornschemeier<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Carissa:</strong> So far, Jonathan Lethem’s Omega Unknown has been one of the most amazing indie superhero comics. This issue lives up to the success of all the ones before it. The dialogue and art is deadpan perfect. The existentialist narration from Omega’s talking head friend gives us an insight into themes the comic explores, while still remaining light, humorous, and everything that is the opposite of wanky. There is so much wonderful craziness in this issue. The Mink fighting his dearly departed robotic hand! Alex donning the suit and fighting throngs of infected deliverymen and hamburger shop employees! The best part is, while everything that happens is ridiculous and over-the-top, it’s so deadpan, I don’t even notice. I just want to find out what happens in the last issue.<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/si03.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="invasion" id="invasion">SPLIT DECISION! Secret Invasion #3</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Michael Bendis<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Leinil Francis Yu<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Mark Morales<br />
        <strong>Colors</strong>: Laura Martin<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> I can&#8217;t believe the difference a colorist can make. Yu, always get somebody to color for you. Jessica Drew actually looks pretty attractive here, rather than the hag that Wolverine spied on in the shower back in <i>New Avengers</i>. I&#8217;m not sure I can really review <i>Secret Invasion #3</i> correctly. I feel like I need to wait for the series to finish before I know what I <b>really</b> think of this issue. For the time being, I thought it was fun stuff. Bendis is trying to balance his subplots by focusing on specific ones longer than other writers would. This unfortunately shortchanges some of the more interesting stuff, like Agent Brand&#8217;s situation in space and Marvel Boy&#8217;s enigmatic appearance in the first issue.</p>
<p>    I will say this, with five more issues left to go, I have no idea where this is going. It feels climactic despite not even being halfway done. We&#8217;ll see if the momentum carries it anywhere.<br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> (Before reading this issue, start a bag of microwavable popcorn. Got it started? Good.) One of the many reasons I dislike superhero events is that there is so much care given to every corner of the universe–to show just how encompassing it all is–that you just don&#8217;t get enough story. Bendis does his best to update us on seemingly everyone&#8217;s situation for the first half of the book rendering it for the most part useless. Which brings us to Savage Land. (Take out the bag of popcorn and let it cool a bit&#8230;and start eating it in a few minutes) If you&#8217;ve been keeping up with all of the Avengers titles, it feels like we&#8217;ve been on Savage Land forever! So can a good second half redeem the fluff before it? It comes real close but not quite. There&#8217;s plenty of BIG popcorn moments packed in those final pages but I just wish that we didn&#8217;t have to wait so long. Some people might be happy others, not so. I&#8217;m also convinced after a few years of writing Avengers titles that Bendis just isn&#8217;t a big fan of androids. So yes a handful of money shots shoved in after all the fluffing. After a good head start, this event has stalled in the jungle with just as much good stuff happening outside the pages of Secret Invasion as there is inside. It&#8217;s not very consistent though. More to come I imagine but realize that this is a $4 book–and only 22 pages, Marvel, give us our full money&#8217;s worth (and give me a reason to eat my popcorn at the beginning of the story.)<br /><img src="/scores/c.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/trinity01.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="trin" id="trin">PICK! Trinity #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Kurt Busiek &#038; Fabian Nicieza<br />
        <strong>Art</strong>: Mark Bagley &#038; Scott McDaniel<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Art Thibert &#038; Andy Owens</strong><br />
        <strong>Colors</strong>: Pete Pantazis &#038; Allen Passalaqua<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> In the weekly comic game of late, DC has one triumph and one tragedy. As <i>Countdown</i> failed because it was just a pale shadow of <i>52</i>, <i>Trinity</i> decides to instead be the antithesis of <i>52</i>. Instead of a year without Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman, we&#8217;re getting just that. With the talent involved and the timeless dynamic of the Big Three, it has a great chance at success. The initial storyline shows much promise, especially Busiek&#8217;s interactions between the three heroes out of costume. In fact, the opening meeting feels almost like picking up where <i>Infinite Crisis</i> left off in terms of those three. The secondary story, while perhaps a little too long compared to the first, lays down some of the early groundwork for what this series will truly be about. I&#8217;m interested. Let&#8217;s see where it goes. <br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/ultorigins01.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="ultorigins" id="ultorigins">SEMI-PAN! Ultimate Origins #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Michael Bendis<br />
        <strong>Art</strong>: Jackson Guice<br />
        <strong>Colors</strong>: Justin Ponsor<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> There&#8217;s something happening here. What it is ain&#8217;t exactly clear. There&#8217;s a man with a gun over there&#8230; Sorry. The Ultimate world takes a step closer to being more in tune to ours as compared to the 616 reality with the story that keeps all the fantastic aspects of Earth&#8217;s superhumans stuck together, all dependent on just one decision. With guys like Hulk, Spider-Man, Green Goblin and Doc Ock, the idea that Captain America&#8217;s very existence has led to a brave new world isn&#8217;t new. But how far does this go? We get the beginnings of some storyline spider webs that may pay off, but outside of the cliffhanger reveal, there isn&#8217;t much that keeps this issue engaging. It&#8217;s fairly dull, all in all, and doesn&#8217;t feel like it&#8217;ll be more than a trivia list for a dying continuity. Prove me wrong, Bendis. <br /><img src="/scores/c.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/wolverinedg.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="wolv" id="wolv">SEMI-PAN! Wolverine: Dangerous Game</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Simon Spurrier &#038; Rick Remender<br />
        <strong>Art</strong>: Ben Oliver &#038; Jerome Opena<br />
        <strong>Colors</strong>: Michelle Madsen<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> We&#8217;re given two different stories here. The first is about Wolverine hanging out with some hippies and going up against some pompous fox hunters. Considering how simple it is for Wolverine to deal with the likes of them, there&#8217;s obviously something more going on. Unfortunately, Simon Spurrier&#8217;s story goes back and forth all over the clock to the point of confusion, only to end abruptly. That&#8217;s a shame, since it had a nice piece of originality to it.</p>
<p>    Rick Remender writes the second story, which feels like more of a classic Wolverine adventure. It doesn&#8217;t have enough space to make the plot twists any less predictable, but in the dialogue, he injects some good personality into Logan. Jerome Opena&#8217;s art also helps this, adding lots of expression in Wolverine&#8217;s facial gestures. I just feel that these two stories shouldn&#8217;t have been stapled together. Both would have been better with more pages instead of having to share.<br /><img src="/scores/cplus.gif"></p>
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<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/quentin-tarantine-robert-rodriguez-grindhouse-hits-theaters/41506/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Quentin Tarantine &#038; Robert Rodriguez&#8217; Grindhouse Hits Theaters</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/strangers-in-paradise-rip-sip/41960/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">R.I.P. SiP</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/first-pictures-of-robert-downey-jr-as-tony-stark/41511/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">First Pictures of Robert Downey Jr. As Tony Stark</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/knight-rider-car-auctioned/41507/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Knight Rider Car Auctioned</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/halle-berry-gets-star-on-hollywood-walk-despite-catwoman/41512/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Halle Berry Gets Star On Hollywood Walk, Despite Catwoman</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Picks &amp; Pans for May 29th, 2008</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-for-may-29th-2008/43755/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-for-may-29th-2008/43755/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 02 Jun 2008 17:13:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://348467870</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This week the Picks &#038; Pans team is Gavin Jasper of 4thletter!, AHR of Geekanerd, and newcomer Carissa Koo! Last week was a big week, and I think we covered all the highlights. PICK! All-Star Superman #11 Writer: Grant Morrison Art: Frank Quitely Colors: Jamie Grant Publisher: DC Comics AHR: There are many things about [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This week the Picks &#038; Pans team is Gavin Jasper of <a href="http://www.4thletter.net">4thletter!</a>, AHR of <a href="http://www.geekanerdblog.com">Geekanerd</a>, and newcomer Carissa Koo! Last week was a big week, and I think we covered all the highlights.</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/ass11.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="ass" id="ass">PICK! All-Star Superman #11</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Grant Morrison<br />
        <strong>Art</strong>: Frank Quitely<br />
        <strong>Colors</strong>: Jamie Grant<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>AHR:</strong> There are many things about this book I don&#8217;t understand.  I don&#8217;t know if it&#8217;s because I forget things from month to month, or if I&#8217;m not as up on DC History as Historian-of-the-Obscure Grant Morrisson is, or if the book is intentionally cryptic.  Whatever the reason, this book reads like a dream that keeps shifting and introducing new elements, and whether or not you understand everything, watching it unfold is thrilling.  Even if the details are hard to keep up with, the impact of the moments are indelible; Lex Luthor on death row, a hands-on fight with a red sun, and an overarching feeling that Superman is saying goodbye to hard, good life.  And even if you don&#8217;t buy the &#8220;Superman is Dead&#8221; teaser on the front cover, the feeling of acceptance and nostalgia that Clark carries throughout this issue makes me like him more than I have since, well, ever.  <br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/angel01.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="angel" id="angel">PICK! Angel: Revelations #1</a></em></strong><br />
   <strong>Writer</strong>: Roberto Aguire-Sacasa<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Adam Pollina<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Adam Pollina<br />
        <strong>Colors</strong>: Matt Hollingsworth<br />    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Carissa:</strong> Here’s an interesting take on the origins of X-Men’s Angel. I personally really enjoyed this. Far more than I thought I would. The art is beautiful—true, the characters all look like they need to eat a sandwich, but it’s got that great mix of fantasy and Goth, Like a dark fairytale. The art also matches the story concept and writing style well. The story is dark and religious. It’s not self indulgent in that way though. We still get real personalities and a good amount of high school drama. We all know the basic idea of what’s going to happen next to Warren, but the ending is a cliffhanger none-the-less. There’s nothing superhero about this issue though, and it makes me wonder how Warren Worthington is going to become an X-Men team member, or if the series will end before he joins. Either way, I’m curious.<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/fc1.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="fc" id="fc">DOUBLE PICK! Final Crisis #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Grant Morrison<br />
        <strong>Art</strong>: JG Jones<br />
        <strong>Colors</strong>: Alex Sinclair<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>AHR:</strong> The DC event series is over, long live the DC event series.  I loved 52, hated Countdown, and the first issue of Final Crisis is&#8230;.pretty good.  A thematic opening sequence that takes place in prehistoric times looks amazing as drawn by J.G Jones, and it feels kind of like a palette cleanser after the continuity nightmare that&#8217;s been going down for the last year.  Grant Morrison includes some excellent villain banter in the first half of the issue, between both the Secret Society (&#8220;I am not adverse to the taste of human flesh, sir!&#8221;) and a &#8220;blindingly obvious&#8221; team-up between Doctor Light and Mirror Master (including jokes about Light&#8217;s infamous sexual deviancy, and some good mucky Scottspeak for Mirror Master).  It&#8217;s fun and funny, but soon it&#8217;s down to business, and business means plot-points a-go-go.</p>
<p>    Morrison spends much of his time organizing plots involving the New Gods, The Green Lantern Corp, and the Monitors.  Oy.  Three of DC history&#8217;s most convoluted groups, all fighting for space in a seven issue series?  And even though I appreciate that Morrison is trying to foist some humanity on to the intensely boring Monitors, I&#8217;m nervous.  When a multi-thread series hinges on factions instead of individuals, there&#8217;s a huge risk of falling into history-lesson territory, all names and places with no personality.  Still, no other comic writer balances complicated ideas and character development as well as Grant Morrison, and I&#8217;m hoping by next week he&#8217;ll prove he&#8217;s got it under control. <br /><img src="/scores/bminus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> How can I hate a comic that begins with a caveman hearing, &#8220;I am Metron&#8221;? Grant Morrison is here to fight through one of his greatest challenges. After <i>Countdown</i> and <i>Death of the New Gods</i>, he has to funnel their aftermaths into a story that&#8217;s joined by remnants of <i>Seven Soldiers</i> and likely a few pieces of <i>52</i> while going in its own special direction. Thankfully, it feels big without being as chaotically epic like the first issue of <i>Infinite Crisis</i>. I&#8217;m not too sure what&#8217;s going on or where this is going, but at least the opening issue keeps me interested in where this could possibly be going. That, and the JG Jones art is absolutely fantastic.</p>
<p>    Morrison or not, I&#8217;m sure I can&#8217;t be alone in groaning whenever the Monitors show up. There&#8217;s too much stigma from <i>Countdown</i>, so that&#8217;s going to take me a while to get over. <br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/gsaxm.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="axm" id="axm">PICK! Giant-Size Astonishing X-Men</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Joss Whedon<br />
        <strong>Art</strong>: John Cassaday<br />
        <strong>Colors</strong>: Laura Martin<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> Here it is. The finale to not just one of the best <i>X-Men</i> runs of all time, but as far as I&#8217;m concerned, one of the best comic runs in general. Whedon and Cassaday say goodbye to their 25-issue epic take on the X-Men and I couldn&#8217;t have imagined a better issue for it. Except for Danger and I guess Lockheed, every single member of the series&#8217; main cast finds a place to shine here. Everyone from Armor to Kitty to the mighty Colossus himself. There&#8217;s a subplot involving what Earth&#8217;s heroes are doing during this threat which works in two ways. One, to show why they&#8217;re taking the backseat to the X-Men in terms of the giant bullet threat. The other is so Spider-Man can give us one of the absolute best set-up lines of the series.</p>
<p>    Emma Frost is totally right. The latter pages of the story are indeed nothing short of <b>astonishing</b>. <br /><img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/ironfist15.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="iron" id="iron">PICK! The Immortal Iron Fist #15</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Matt Fraction<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Khari Evans<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Victor Olazaba<br />
        <strong>Colors</strong>: Jelena Kevic Djurdjevic &#038; Paul Mounts<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Carissa:</strong> Instead of starting a new Iron Fist storyline, Fraction starts us off in an unlikely place, right near the end of Bei Bang-Wen’s story. We don’t know him, but we find out all we need to know in the first few pages. We also don’t get to find out all the great, heroic deeds Bei did as the Immortal Iron Fist, as we join him near the end of his story. It’s like picking up issue number #7 of a ten parter. We dive in right after the climax, catch Bei self-flagellating, and wave our arms around shouting, “Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do? You’re running out of time!”</p>
<p>    Fortunately, Bei is led by the hand of God (Fraction) to become best buddies with another self-flagellating character, and together, they go on a fabulous odyssey towards more ass-kung-fu-ing, a final battle, and self-realization. Friendship, duty, and Buddhist overtones abound.</p>
<p>    I like the story. A lot happens, but it’s paced in such a way that we don’t feel overwhelmed. We get a clear look at Bei’s personality and we see it believably evolve in just 22 pages. The ending is a touch over dramatic, true, but it ties off the story nicely. The art is sharp, clean, and reminiscent of previous art for the Immortal Iron Fist series.  My only complaint about the art is that the fight scenes seem disconnected and posed. They lack the fluidity of previous Iron Fist art, and I almost imagine a cameraman making the characters stand in their poses for three minutes, while he readjusts his lens and they try not to think about picking their crotch. It’s a little complaint though. Teeny-tiny.<br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/na41.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="newav" id="newav">PAN! New Avengers #41</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Michael Bendis<br />
        <strong>Art</strong>: Billy Tan<br />
        <strong>Colors</strong>: Justin Ponsor<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> I&#8217;m totally down with <i>Secret Invasion</i> and I&#8217;ve loved <i>New Avengers</i> since the first issue. That&#8217;s what makes it so hard to say that I just plain didn&#8217;t like this one. This issue is, sadly, <i>Secret Invasion</i> filler based on the least interesting piece of the Skrull invasion. An obvious revelation is showcased throughout an issue when it only needed a page or so of explanation. It&#8217;s told with two guest characters who really don&#8217;t fit here. Bendis has pulled the trick of taking non-Avengers and giving them the keys to his issues, but I honestly couldn&#8217;t care less about what Ka-Zar and Shanna have to say about anything. At least it gives us a vaguely interesting cliffhanger. <br /><img src="/scores/dplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/speak06.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="speak" id="speak">SEMI-PICK! Speak of the Devil #6</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Cartoonist</strong>: Gilbert Hernandez<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Dark Horse Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Carissa:</strong> Speak of the Devil’s final issue was a disappointment to me. I can accept that Gilbert Hernandez was trying to create a town where the people in it are all bat shit crazy fetish-freaks and completely accept bat shit crazy fetish-freak logic, but this was way over the top. Butter knives and blood abound. The women are no longer endearingly nutty and sexy, but raving mad. I do have to thank this issue for giving me one of the best laughs of the day though, even if it probably wasn’t supposed to make me laugh. That scene where Val kung-fu kicks her mother and the blood that’s spraying out her mother’s nose looks like chopsticks rammed up there—priceless.</p>
<p>    The story makes little sense. The ending is predictable. The art is unique and pretty in typical Gilbert Hernandez style, but the fight scenes are disastrously scripted and drawn. I had higher hopes for the direction this story could have taken, but, oh well. At least it’s over.<br /><img src="/scores/cplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/zombietales.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="zombie" id="zombie">SEMI-PAN! Zombie Tales: The Series #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writers</strong>: Joe R. Lansdale, Steve Niles, Kim Krizan<br />
        <strong>Artists</strong>: Eduardo Barreto, Daniel Lafrance, Jon Reed<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Boom! Studios</p>
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<p><strong>Carissa:</strong> Here’s another bunch of short stories about a particular horror genre from Boom! Studios. As usual, one story is pretty good, and the other two are just ho-hum. The first story, “The War At Home,” just didn’t grab me. It starts the way every other zombie film/comic starts, with a guy waking up in a hospital room and realizing the world has gone to hell. I can’t tell if Lansdale was trying to be original and serious, or trying to do a Sean of the Dead spoof thing. There are parts which look like an attempt to be funny, like the zombie tripping over the IV unit, but it was more of an “eh” than a “hardy ha-ha” for me. “Three gimp vets to defend a hostile zombie beachhead,” as the narrator says right before the “to be continued” sign. Right. Good luck gimps. I’ll pass on part two.</p>
<p>    &#8220;People Person&#8221; by Steve Niles was uninspiring too. Talking zombies! Sexy talking zombies! Boom! Bye bye sexy talking zombie. Wait, sexy talking zombie lives. But we already knew that, because the narrator told us so before we actually were surprised by it. The end.</p>
<p>    &#8220;Spring 2061&#8243; was the only story that I found interesting. It’s a cute spin on Planet of the Apes. The zombies are in charge, the humans are caged and eaten with cereal. But wait, is that a secret human uprising I sense? The dialogue is cutesy and witty and the art isn’t bad. The story ends too soon though, without a &#8220;to be continued&#8221; sign. What happens next? What happens next?! We’ll never know.<br /><img src="/scores/c.gif"></p>
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<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/quentin-tarantine-robert-rodriguez-grindhouse-hits-theaters/41506/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Quentin Tarantine &#038; Robert Rodriguez&#8217; Grindhouse Hits Theaters</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/strangers-in-paradise-rip-sip/41960/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">R.I.P. SiP</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/first-pictures-of-robert-downey-jr-as-tony-stark/41511/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">First Pictures of Robert Downey Jr. As Tony Stark</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/knight-rider-car-auctioned/41507/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Knight Rider Car Auctioned</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/halle-berry-gets-star-on-hollywood-walk-despite-catwoman/41512/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Halle Berry Gets Star On Hollywood Walk, Despite Catwoman</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Picks &amp; Pans for May 21, 2008</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-for-may-21-2008/43737/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-for-may-21-2008/43737/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 May 2008 19:24:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-for-may-21-2008/43737/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Your Picks &#038; Pans come this week courtesy of Ernie Estrella and David Uzumeri of Funnybook Babylon! SEMI-PAN! Amazing Spider-Man #560 Writer: Dan Slott Penciller: Marcos Martin Colorist: Javier Rodriguez Publisher: Marvel Comics David U: I&#8217;m not even sure if this thing can be reviewed as a comic book anymore, as a pure story separated [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Your Picks &#038; Pans come this week courtesy of Ernie Estrella and David Uzumeri of <a href="http://www.funnybookbabylon.com">Funnybook Babylon</a>!</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/asm560.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="asm" id="asm">SEMI-PAN! Amazing Spider-Man #560</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Dan Slott<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Marcos Martin<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Javier Rodriguez<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U:</strong> I&#8217;m not even sure if this thing can be reviewed as a comic book anymore, as a pure story separated from its context. The last page of this issue has been described by Dan Slott as a sort of Rorschach blot test, that you can read anything you want into it; I don&#8217;t really think it&#8217;s that vague, as this issue and storyline seem to be more about their metatextual role in Spider-Man canon than the actual, like, story and comic. The script is typical Slott Spider-Man, not much different from last issue, and Marcos Martin&#8217;s art is utterly gorgeous, even better than he was pulling off in <em>Doctor Strange: The Oath</em> &#8211; really, if there&#8217;s one thing you can&#8217;t say about the <em>Brand New Day</em> initiative (which, past the &#8220;initial four months&#8221; that were only supposed to get that branding, seems to be continuing indefinitely) it&#8217;s that it has weak art. If you enjoy Slott&#8217;s tongue-in-cheek writing style, then you&#8217;ll probably enjoy this comic; but that said, be warned that this story almost seems as much about fucking with the readers as it is about a good Spider-Man story.<br /><img src="/scores/c.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/capam38.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="cap" id="cap">DOUBLE PICK! Captain America #38</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Ed Brubaker<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Steve Epting &#038; Mike Perkins<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Frank D&#8217;Armata<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> A solid issue that moves all of the pawns forward in Brubaker&#8217;s chess game. Sharon&#8217;s stares back at a familiar face, while Bucky and and the Falcon get closer to Dr. Faustus and the Skull, all the while it is, an election year, and that lays heavily into Red&#8217;s plans. If you&#8217;ve seen promos for future issues of Captain America you&#8217;ll know why you&#8217;ll be seeing double. Cap has always been a much more grand, so this feels awfully small in the bigger landscape of what&#8217;s coming up in future issues. Epting, Perkins and D&#8217;Armata turn in their usual high level of work and it goes largely unsaid how good of an art team this is. Expecting much more next issue&#8230;<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/bminus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> This is probably the weakest issue of Cap since the assassination; thankfully, that&#8217;s still a pretty high standard. It&#8217;s also probably an unfair statement regarding the comic, since this is the second part of the third act of Brubaker&#8217;s Death of Cap epic; the man&#8217;s allowed some exposition and setup time. The issue hinges off of a major reveal, which didn&#8217;t completely work for me; I know it&#8217;s not TOTALLY out of the blue, but the resolution of the mystery hinted at at the end of #37 still seems rather out of left field within the strict confines of Brubaker&#8217;s run. (Within the overall tapestry of Cap&#8217;s history, it&#8217;s rather obvious). However, this is a weak complaint.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/echo03.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="echo" id="echo">PICK! Echo #3</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Terry Moore<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Terry Moore<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Abstract Studio</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Terry Moore doing superhero-like stories has drawn me into the bear trap. Characters are being fleshed out a nice pace, the story surrounding our protagonist gains more intrigue as we continue to pan outward. But something big has to happen soon because something that Moore was able to do in Strangers in Paradise was give readers something memorable in nearly every issue. I respect the pace at which Moore wants to unfold Echo, but I&#8217;d be lying if I didn&#8217;t want something more. I did get a better feel for what Julie is going through, outside of the mysterious suit. She confronts two very important people in her life and these scenes really build a mystery of who Julie is. She&#8217;s more than just some random character, she&#8217;s human, she&#8217;s full of complexities, and emotions and dreadful situations. It&#8217;s Moore at his best and is displayed especially in the last half of this issue.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/flash240.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="flash" id="flash">PICK! Flash #240</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Tom Peyer<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Freddie E. Williams II<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Tanya &#038; Richard Horie<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> The management of this property since Geoff Johns and Howard Porter&#8217;s departure in 2005 has probably been DC&#8217;s biggest continuing mistake in recent years, from the incredibly poorly-received Bilson/DeMeo run to the controversial killing off of Bart Allen, to Mark Waid&#8217;s abortive attempt to reimagine the book as DC&#8217;s Fantastic Four (which I really liked but simply did not find an audience at all), to this. This is a long preamble for such a short review, I know, but the fact that Tom Peyer basically got tossed a ticking time bomb is incredibly important to understanding this book&#8217;s context. This is a strong issue, with some nice Final Crisis/Dark Side Club moments intermixed with solid Wally/Jay/family character interaction and solid art from Freddie E. Williams II, but I&#8217;m worried about this book&#8217;s longterm plan and future largely because I&#8217;m not sure if it will <em>get</em> a future. While Peyer is turning in solid work here, it&#8217;s solid work towards a direction that&#8217;s established as not working, and at this point Flash is so close to being a radioactive character that despite Mark Waid&#8217;s claims of creative bankruptcy, a &#8220;stunt&#8221; might be just what this franchise needs. Solid comics, but again, it&#8217;s hard to recommend a book with such a vague place and future.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/bminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/grider23.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="ghost" id="ghost">PICK! Ghost Rider #23</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jason Aaron<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Roland Boschi<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Dan Brown<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Hell-Bent &#038; Heaven Bound comes to an explosive and gruesome close, so let&#8217;s talk about what Aaron was able to accomplish with this first arc. I didn&#8217;t know much about Ghost Rider, his rogues, his supporting cast, or even his appeal. I&#8217;ve picked up enough over the years of reading comics to vaguely understand who&#8217;s who in this world. After one completed story, I&#8217;ve gathered enough to keep me for the whole year, I know why he&#8217;s had his faithful readers, and I know why Ghost Rider&#8217;s going to have many more. While there&#8217;s much ado in the rest of the Marvel universe with Secret Invasion, the real excitement for Marvel resides on the roads still left ablaze and decorated in demonic (or is it angelic) corpses and sweet vengeance. The grindhouse approach to this title has made it fun enough for the casual reader, and brought a wickedly tasteful over-the-top appeal to it. Why this title wasn&#8217;t written like this all the time, I don&#8217;t know. The concepts, the scenarios are all a little out there, but that&#8217;s cool because it works. Boschi&#8217;s done a terrific job of branding a particular visual style that&#8217;s easy on the eyes while encapsulating the supernatural aspects in a happening way. It should be interesting to see what Tan Eng Huat brings for this next story (as he and Boschi will rotate art chores each arc). Speaking of that next story, zip up your leather and strap your boots, it&#8217;s going to be one helluva ride!<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/jla21.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="jla" id="jla">PICK! Justice League of America #21</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Dwayne McDuffie<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Carlos Pacheco<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Jesus Merino<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Pete Pantazis<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> Despite the fact that Dwayne McDuffie&#8217;s run on this book has been riddled with unfortunate editorially mandated tie-ins, from #16&#8242;s Tangent story to the Salvation Run tale in #17-19 to, now, this &#8220;Sightings&#8221;-labeled <em>Final Crisis</em> prelude is probably McDuffie&#8217;s strongest issue since the Wedding Special. Maybe Pacheco&#8217;s emotive art contributes to this phenomenon; McDuffie&#8217;s talking heads are certainly more interesting to look at when Ed Benes isn&#8217;t drawing the same face in every panel. Despite McDuffie&#8217;s creative distance from the main event, this issue does a solid job not only setting up the roles of Libra and the Human Flame in <em>Final Crisis</em> (or, at least, I assume what their roles will be, as FC1 is still kept under lock and key) but also succinctly recapping previous events and leading into both <em>Final Crisis</em> and McDuffie&#8217;s next arc. Strong character work, intelligently written action, a sense of forward motion &#8211; I really hope Benes&#8217;s return in a month doesn&#8217;t kill everything I liked about this issue.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/b.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/jsa15.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="jsa" id="jsa">PICK! Justice Society of America #15</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Geoff Johns &#038; Alex Ross<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Dale Eaglesham<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Prentis Rollins<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Alex Sinclair<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> The final part of &#8220;Thy Kingdom Come&#8221; is really the midpoint in Johns and Ross&#8217;s 13?-part Kingdom Come prequel/sequel (it&#8217;s kind of both). At this point in the story, we&#8217;re getting past the &#8220;Oh man it&#8217;s Kingdom Come Superman!&#8221; part of the story and into the meat of Alex Ross&#8217;s original Kingdom Come mythology; the origins of Gog and Magog, why the world became the way it did on that Earth, et cetera. It&#8217;s solid superhero work, well-established in continuity, well-characterized and gorgeously drawn, but at the end of the day last issue and this issue have basically been one really, really long slugfest after like five issues of no action. However, the last-page spread of this issue (which they clearly just reversed in Photoshop &#8211; man, you think people won&#8217;t notice?) promises a more interesting thematic underpinning to the next arc, and a more unique hook, which will hopefully bring this book back up to the impressive quality it displayed in its first arc.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/b.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/mightyav14.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="mighty" id="mighty">SPLIT DECISION! Mighty Avengers #14</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Michael Bendis<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Khoi Pham<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Danny Miki<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Dean White<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> The Sentry is a big part of the Avengers-Secret Invasion connection as he can turn the tide with Superman-like powers but is self-destructive with his 5-year-old mind. It presents a mildly interesting study in a capes and tights book. I&#8217;ve never really grasped Bendis&#8217; treatment of the Sentry. He&#8217;s got the super-powered guy down, but his jumbled mind and his wrestling match with the Void, a figment of the Sentry&#8217;s mind, has never gelled for me. I realize that the ability of the Skrull nation to mimic the Sentry&#8217;s powers and Jarvis&#8217; role in Secret Invasion would be a major plot points, and this book may have more in the background that will come to be something much more in the coming months but as a stand-alone issue, it falls flat. I don&#8217;t know why but Mighty Avengers runs hot and cold with me. Perhaps it&#8217;s just because I&#8217;m not that big of a Sentry fan but this was one of those so-so issues. Too much was revisited of the Sentry/Void one-shots some years ago. One month MA is good, one month it&#8217;s&#8230; just ordinary. New Avengers doesn&#8217;t seem to have this type of inconsistency but a bright spot this month was Khoi Pham&#8217;s art which has a Jim Lee/Jim Cheung quality to it. Miki&#8217;s inks really stand out as well. Oh well, we&#8217;ll see how next month will fair.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/cminus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> I don&#8217;t think I&#8217;m alone when I say that, at least in this stage in the overall story, the Avengers tie-ins have been a more satisfying payoff for longtime readers than Secret Invasion itself. I don&#8217;t think this is a mistake; Secret Invasion is an ostensibly standalone story, and, for instance, New Avengers #40&#8242;s Jessica-Drew-is-the-Skrull-Empress reveal means very little to people picking up Secret Invasion as a standalone story and far more to those who&#8217;ve been following this big story since New Avengers #1. This is the Sentry issue, and it contains not only a large amount of interesting and intriguing flashback materal regarding the Skrull infiltration but also pushes Rob Reynolds&#8217;s personal story far forward as well. Also, Marvel, for God&#8217;s sake, stop putting Danny Miki on every penciller alive &#8211; look at the faces on the last page, show them to friends, and ask them what it looks like. I&#8217;ll tell you: the ugly, fucked-up inking on One More Day where every single pencil mark was inked rather than used as a rendering guide. This test has worked, like, four times in a blind test and they all say this. I&#8217;m serious.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/scalped17.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="scalped" id="scalped">PICK! Scalped #17</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jason Aaron<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: R.M. Guera<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Giulia Brusco<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> If you haven&#8217;t been keeping up with Scalped monthly, allow me to place my hand on your face and push you back a few steps. Go back starting with issue 13 then come back here. Aaron writes a wonderfully tragic single-issue arc within the &#8220;Dead Mothers&#8221; conclusion. Red Crow continues to grow as a character and is one of the biggest centerpieces in the book. I&#8217;m not sure if it&#8217;s genuine sympathy by the reading experience or just the gravity of work, but we as readers are pulled emotionally from all sides when it comes to Crow. He&#8217;s bad, folks but this issue shows there&#8217;s worse.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/strangers-in-paradise-rip-sip/41960/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">R.I.P. SiP</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/quentin-tarantine-robert-rodriguez-grindhouse-hits-theaters/41506/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Quentin Tarantine &#038; Robert Rodriguez&#8217; Grindhouse Hits Theaters</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/knight-rider-car-auctioned/41507/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Knight Rider Car Auctioned</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-for-june-25-2008/43815/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Picks &#038; Pans for June 25, 2008</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/first-pictures-of-robert-downey-jr-as-tony-stark/41511/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">First Pictures of Robert Downey Jr. As Tony Stark</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Picks &amp; Pans, May 7th, 2008</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-may-7th-2008/43702/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-may-7th-2008/43702/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 May 2008 20:08:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Picks &#038; Pans for May 7th! Tons of Reviews! Samantha of Neither Doormat Nor Prostitute! Ernie Estrella! Gabe Mariani! Gavin Jasper of 4thletter! David Uzumeri of Funnybook Babylon! And last, but definitely not least, AHR of Geekanerd! Need I say more? PICK! Abe Sapien #4 Writer: Mike Mignola Art: Jason Alexander Publisher: Dark Horse Ernie: [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Picks &#038; Pans for May 7th! Tons of Reviews! Samantha of <a href="http://norprostitute.blogspot.com/">Neither Doormat Nor Prostitute</a>! Ernie Estrella! Gabe Mariani! Gavin Jasper of <a href="http://www.4thletter.net">4thletter!</a> David Uzumeri of <a href="http://www.funnybookbabylon.com">Funnybook Babylon</a>! And last, but definitely not least, AHR of <a href="http://www.geekanerdblog.com">Geekanerd</a>! Need I say more?</p>
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<p align="left"><em><strong><a name="abe" id="abe">PICK! Abe Sapien #4</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Mike Mignola<br />
        <strong>Art</strong>: Jason Alexander<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Dark Horse</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> The first three issues of this fine mini-series rush out the gates dropping hints of why Abe should be hunting down this latest mystical and nocturnal artifact. That fast pace is taken down several notches because here Abe gets the complete 411 and by the end of it, it&#8217;s not pretty. Dig out the earlier issues and re-read them all and get committed by reading these by either a single candle-light or a single dimmed lamp and read out loud–especially the incantations. Enjoying Mignola&#8217;s work is all about moody stories void of any sunlight. They&#8217;re an adventure, a horror show, and a mystery bundled in a sarcastic wrap. Alexander&#8217;s renderings of Abe Sapien though, are a joy.<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/action11.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="action" id="action">PICK! Action Comics Annual #11</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Geoff Johns &#038; Richard Donner<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Adam Kubert &#038; Stephane Roux<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Edgar Delgado &#038; Karine Boccanfuso<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> At this point, the drama behind this issue&#8217;s creation has probably captured more hearts and minds than the story itself. That&#8217;s a shame, because Johns&#8217;s first <em>Action Comics</em> arc ends, although definitely belatedly, very appropriately, with an excellent extended action sequence that, although it partly falls play to Johns&#8217;s fight dialogue tics, is very well-structured and diverse and, at times, even very funny. Kubert&#8217;s art is sharper than ever &#8211; I like the effect created by the clearly uninked backgrounds with the characters inked over them &#8211; although Dave Stewart&#8217;s loss is definitely felt. Edgar Delgado does a good job filling in, but at the end of the day he&#8217;s unfortunately just not Dave Stewart. That&#8217;s really my only quibble, though.<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><em><strong><a name="buffy" id="buffy">PICK! Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season 8 #14</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: tbd<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: tbd<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: tbd<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: tbd<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Dark Horse</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> This issue was a pleasant surprise. With a few obvious exceptions, namely the Faith issues, I&#8217;ve generally found season eight to be a disappointment. They haven&#8217;t been horrible, by any means, but while there are certainly worse comics published every month, Buffy Season Eight hasn&#8217;t for me, been particularly memorable, either. Their biggest problem has been the complete lack of any discernible emotion. The characters, with few exceptions, seemed to be going through the motions and none of the complex interpersonal relationships shined in the way that made Buffy special in the first place.</p>
<p>    This issue pulled through, however. Not only do the characters have emotions that are in character for who they are supposed to be, in true Buffy fashion, the emotional punches are highlighted by the quirky,  offbeat humor.  Only in the Buffy world would we get several panels of Buffy carrying the body of a dead slayer followed by a quip from Dracula about eating the body. Unlike previous efforts, neither the humor nor the dramatic scenes seem forced, and the result was an enjoyable read that makes me hope issue 15 follows this one&#8217;s example.<br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/cable03.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="cable" id="cable">PICK! Cable #3</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Duane Swierczynski<br />
        <strong>Art</strong>: Ariel Olivetti<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> While Olivetti&#8217;s art still looks more than a little bit ridiculous (especially the truck on the first few pages), Swierczynski&#8217;s script picks up in pace, finally starting to move the book towards territory that wasn&#8217;t given away by solicitations weeks before the book&#8217;s release. While it&#8217;s certainly not a comic book writer&#8217;s job to sacrifice the story for the sake of providing shocks, the first two issues of Cable have, for a new, continuity-central series, been remarkably uneventful. This issue begins to change that, and hopefully it&#8217;s a trend that will continue both in this book and in Swierczynski&#8217;s other upcoming work on <em>Punisher</em> and <em>Immortal Iron Fist</em>.<br /><img src="/scores/bminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/tec844.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="tec" id="tec">PICK?! Detective Comics #844</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Paul Dini<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Dustin Nguyen<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Derek Fridolfs<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>AHR:</strong> When it comes to Paul Dini&#8217;s run on Detective, I tend to run the risk of damning the series with faint praise.  Each issue has been supremely solid with frequent laughs, but the impact of the short and sweet storylines never seemed to go beyond the closing of the book.  This issue, however, hits hard enough to leave an mark, due to the fact that it resolves the mystery of the new Ventriloquist, a loose thread Dini&#8217;s been dangling for almost a year now.  Whether or not you were wrapped up in the mystery of where Scarface&#8217;s new blonde-bombshell sidekick came from (I was), this issue fills in her backstory with the kind of sympathy Dini used to show so regularly to his villainous characters in the glory days of Batman: The Animated Series.  It&#8217;s a revenge tale that hits all the right notes; good intentions, violence, and only the faintest trace of redemption.  There&#8217;s a little coda at the end about Bats and Zatanna, but as is often the case, the trials of the righteous take a backseat to the more interesting and F&#8217;ed up lives of the bad guys.<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> This second half of a story about Zatanna and the new Ventriloquist mostly works as a way to explain the backstory of Arnold Wesker&#8217;s voluptuous replacement. Considering how much of an afterthought Wesker&#8217;s death was in the <i>Face the Face</i> storyline, the story for how Sugar took the Ventriloquist mantle isn&#8217;t a bad one. The great thing about the storytelling and the art is that even though we know that Scarface is just a dummy, there&#8217;s still the benefit of the doubt due to his expressions and the tension between him and Sugar.</p>
<p>    Once the origin flashback ends, the story rushes towards the finale. The action sequence and the epilogue zoom by so fast that you wonder if Zatanna was really needed in this story. Sure, she was there to save Bruce at one point, but it isn&#8217;t like we haven&#8217;t had enough of her in that Joker two-parter a few months back. As one of those characters this writer loves to shoe-horn, Zatanna just felt really unnecessary. <br /><img src="/scores/bminus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Gabe:</strong> The issue consists of an enormous amount of exposition &#8211; done &#8220;info dump&#8221; style through flashbacks, the most boring way to tell a story ever – about a character created a year ago that I still haven&#8217;t found a reason to care about. Dini&#8217;s Zatanna obsession crops up again as well, and by the end of the comic she is basically begging Bruce to love her. We get an unsatisfying conclusion to two story arcs I can&#8217;t imagine anybody cared about anyway. I&#8217;m growing tired of the inconsistency between issues and story arcs on this comic; issues randomly vary from excellent (his Joker/Robin issue) to boring (this arc). Ah, well. At least Dustin Nguyen is making it pretty to look at.<br /><img src="/scores/d.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><em><strong><a name="dock" id="dock">PICK! Dock Walloper #4</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Ed Burns &#038; Jimmy Palmiotti<br />
        <strong>Art</strong>: Siju Thomas<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Virgin Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Ever since the fantastic debut issue, Dock Walloper has been a solid read–not mind blowing–introducing more characters and the complete story taking shape. In the latest issue though, everything converges and it&#8217;s done in a tragically beautiful way. John &#8220;The Hand&#8221; Smith is plotting against his boss because he&#8217;s got the plan, the backup, and the dame. But he&#8217;s in for a rude comeuppance. Tear that main character down, I say. There&#8217;s great chase scenes and escapes but the Grade A beef behind the story continues the nice balance that keeps you interested and involved. These characters have firmly made a home in the bank of stories I want to share, perhaps not to the seasoned superhero reader, but the Walloper drives home the limitless possibilities and levels of storytelling that can be done well in sequential form.</p>
<p>    I know there are a bigger crime stories with bigger names in comics, but Dock Walloper really has a complete feel to it. Thomas&#8217; art and colors really make this world created by Burns and Palmiotti, believable and makes the journey back to the Depression a fully imaginable experience. Despite his more expressive style and loose scribbly lines, there&#8217;s a lot of detail and thoughtful design which goes unmentioned in most books but the little things that make this a big time book.<br /><img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<td><em><strong><a name="house" id="house">PICK! House of Mystery #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Bill Willingham &#038; Matt Sturges<br />
        <strong>Art</strong>: Luca Rossi &#038; Ross Campbell<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Lee Loughridge &#038; Ross Campbell<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Vertigo&#8217;s hoping the Fables writer combo of Sturges and Willingham are enough to draw you into the undefinable corner of the Vertigo selection of books. This comic starts out in the house of Cain and Abel but visits many more houses. Five people are stuck in the House of Mystery and have converted it to a bar where visitors can drink for free–as long as they have a story to tell. The premise is simple and allows for stories to be told within stories. For people with the gift of gab or can dominate a party with an anecdote, Vertigo may have created this book just for you. It&#8217;s a title with no genre attached, or explained, it&#8217;s a title that can encompass everything, really, twisted that is. And the House of Mystery may be a way to have an anthology of sorts work, but not be an anthology book in the truest sense. See, even that sounds as unexplainable as the actual book. The story told within this issue, is enough to twist your stomach into a shroud knot while leave your mouth gaping long enough for devious things to crawl into it. If a mixed drink was comprised of the TV show Cheers, the variety of stories told in Fables, or you&#8217;re in search of something really different, feast away.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/infinityinc09.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="inc" id="inc">PAN! Infinity Inc #9</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Peter Milligan<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Pete Woods<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> Last issue rejuvenated my interest in this title, but now I&#8217;m feeling lost again. I&#8217;m still very confused as to what this team&#8217;s purpose is, why it exists, and why suddenly people in the DC universe are suddenly fearful of superpowered heroes with questionable backgrounds. I understand where Milligan was going with this book, and a psychotherapy-themed superhero comic certainly sounds intensely interesting, but I don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s really hit it off anywhere near as much of Milligan&#8217;s previous work has (<em>X-Statix</em>, anyone?) and the catastrophic sales numbers certainly don&#8217;t distract from that view. I really can&#8217;t place my finger on why this book doesn&#8217;t work &#8211; Fiumara&#8217;s jolting scene transitions in the first few issues certainly didn&#8217;t help &#8211; but there&#8217;s a disconnect somewhere between concept and execution that&#8217;s hurting this book&#8217;s quality. <br /><img src="/scores/cminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/invironman01.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="inv" id="inv">PICK! Invincible Iron Man #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Matt Fraction<br />
        <strong>Artist</strong>: Salvador Larocca<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Frank D&#8217;Armata &#038; Stephane Roux<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Yes, there are now two titles starring Tony Stark, yes he&#8217;s present in Avengers and Secret Invasion, and yes, he&#8217;s becoming a risk of being overexposed more than Wolverine–okay that&#8217;s a bit too far, but the aftermath of Civil War has elevated Stark into a more interesting read and seeing the Marvel Universe through his perspective is the balance I enjoy reading. Let it be known, I&#8217;m a Cap guy, too. In all the years I read Iron Man, I wish he was written AND drawn this good all the time. It may be redundant for me to gloss on about how great the film is but Marvel is capitalizing greatly on the fine work done by the film and backing it up with a great new Iron Man title. It&#8217;s contemporary, relevant and addresses all facets of Stark&#8217;s life: The playboy, the industrialist, the mechanic, the new director of S.H.I.E.L.D., and the Marvel&#8217;s future forefather of THE weapon of mass destruction which has evolved into something out of his control. As far as first issues go, this has it all and proves that Iron Man can be done so well that he belongs in the same breath as Captain America by Ed Brubaker. Matt Fraction outdid himself and if Iron Fist has to suffer some, or Punisher War Journal, then so be it because I love this creative team. Larroca&#8217;s art was the only thing positive in the Brand New Day debacle and I thought, &#8220;Damn, this guy needs a regular book!&#8221; and oh glorious prayers have been answered. If you saw this guy drawing X-Men books back in the day then you know what a beautiful evolution his style has become, and the look and the weight of the style of the Iron Man film is present in the pages of this comic. Great creative team, even better story.<br /><img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/imviva01.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="iron" id="iron">PICK! Iron Man: Viva Las Vegas #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jon Favreau<br />
        <strong>Artist</strong>: Adi Granov<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Favreau just couldn&#8217;t get enough of Granov&#8217;s design work on Iron Man. Can&#8217;t blame the man, because Granov draws and colors, the coolest looking Iron Man I&#8217;ve ever seen, and as a longtime reader and admirer of Tony Stark&#8217;s mythology, that&#8217;s a firm statement and I have the &#8220;marvelous&#8221; film to back me up. So these two guys get to have a little fun and go wild with Stark playing up the playboy millionaire and attempt to make Fin Fang Foom cool. The first part&#8217;s easy, the second&#8230; not so much. But they take a real fun stab at it, and we&#8217;ll see in the subsequent issues if there&#8217;s enough meat on this rib to enjoy or if it&#8217;s going to be just another  great portfolio piece for Granov. I&#8217;m not skeptical with my grade so much as I am just patient for what&#8217;s to come.<br /><img src="/scores/bminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/jonahhex31.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="jonah" id="jonah">PICK! Jonah Hex #31</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Justin Gray &#038; Jimmy Palmiotti<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Paolo Siquiera<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Amilton Santos<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> This was my first Hex comic in a while, but the beauty is that you can pick up just about any issue and go from there. This issue deals with Hex hunting down a mysterious man in a red mask that has been robbing a town dry. The identity of the masked man is more obvious than a Scooby Doo rerun, but that&#8217;s not what this is about. This is about various parties trying to prove who is the smartest by attempting to screw each other over. Of course, there&#8217;s a lesson to be learned in this little adventure: even if you are smarter than Jonah Hex, telling him that makes you an idiot.</p>
<p>Paulo Siqueira&#8217;s pencils and Amilton Santos&#8217; inks do a beautiful number. This is definitely one of the better issues of the series I&#8217;ve read.<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/logan03.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="logan" id="logan">PICK! Logan #3</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian K Vaughan<br />
    <strong>Artist</strong>: Eduardo Risso <br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Dean White<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> I thought by the end of this series I would have walked away with a satisfying slice of Logan&#8217;s past. I don&#8217;t know if I got that. This three issue jaunt down memory lane seemed almost like an exercise to work the Hiroshima bombing into Wolverine&#8217;s past rather than a real reason as to why he was in Japan in this moment of time. I think Vaughan captured Logan&#8217;s voice, and Risso defined a great new visual take on him, but perhaps his relationship with the villain just wasn&#8217;t as compelling as his relationship with Atsuko. Call me crazy but I think I&#8217;d rather see a whole story on just him and Atsuko, or perhaps I&#8217;m just professing my love of Japanese films about life, but I was often distracted at the conflicts with Lieutenant Warren. I&#8217;m overall underwhelmed by the series as a whole, but glad to have some new black and white art by Risso.<br /><img src="/scores/c.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/mighty13.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="mighty" id="mighty">QUADRUPLE REVIEW! Mighty Avengers #13</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Michael Bendis<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Alex Maleev<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Matt Hollingsworth<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> I&#8217;m torn on this one. Fury&#8217;s little gang of caterpillars seem fun and likable enough (much more so than say, the Teen Titans, which is sad.) But more than one aspect of the story stretches my imagination to its breaking point.</p>
<p>    In the first place, all of the kids get their powers through heredity, yet no one but Fury knew about them? That makes the Initiative seem even lamer than before.  Also, powers of a god or not, one of the kids is ten years old, and despite how otherwise enjoyable he might have been, that one sticking point is enough to make me roll my eyes.</p>
<p>    The issue itself was hard to judge, as it was mostly just filler. But I did like the characters and wanted them to succeed. And possibly go beat down the Teen Titans.<br /><img src="/scores/cplus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> Once again, Bendis gives us a neat background issue for <i>Secret Invasion</i>, but at the cost of what <i>Mighty Avengers</i> is about. I mean, granted, this one has Ares in it for a couple panels, but could it have killed Bendis to have made these past couple issues into a double-sized annual or special of some sort? We should be getting scenes of Sentry punching a hole in a giant robot walrus or something instead.</p>
<p>    Anyway, past that it&#8217;s a pretty cool introduction to Nick Fury&#8217;s new crew. We get enough personality from each member, though one slips through the cracks when it comes to explaining where he comes from and what he does. It adds to several mysteries, including one that lends itself to the X-Men side of the world. But like I said, I&#8217;m not really interested in reading this comic for the sea of new blood. I want Ares decapitating an evil Santa Claus with Doc Ock metal arms.</p>
<p>    Also, I have to say this just so I can get it off my chest: Ghost Rider wasn&#8217;t even supposed to be here today. <br /><img src="/scores/bminus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Gabe:</strong> As a reader who just got into Marvel comics through Civil War, I don&#8217;t know much about Nick Fury&#8217;s history in the mainstream Marvel universe. This short arc is a good introduction to the character and what he&#8217;s capable of. Fury continues to prepare for the inevitable conflict with the Skrulls by assembling a team of &#8220;caterpillars:&#8221; superpowered adolescents and young adults (though judging by Maleev&#8217;s artwork on some of the new characters, you&#8217;d be hard pressed to tell) that neither SHIELD nor any government has a record on.</p>
<p>    Bendis has done a great job creating interesting characters right off the bat. I hope we get more time with Fury&#8217;s team before they explode onto the pages of Secret Invasion. There was one misstep, in my opinion: the way Ares interacts with his son is very different from the original Ares miniseries. Oeming made Ares a loving, sensitive father to contrast with his godly persona. Here, Areas acts like he does when he&#8217;s fighting Ultron. I hope the trend doesn&#8217;t continue, but I&#8217;m willing to give Bendis a pass on this considering the current atmosphere in the Marvel U. Maleev knocks the book out of the park, as usual.<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> There&#8217;s a bit of comic magic that occurs when this team of creators collaborates on something. For years it was Daredevil, and they reunite to expose what Nick Fury&#8217;s been up to in his absence from the Marvel Universe. This issue features absolutely no Avengers activity, just Fury playing Cerebro and finding the youngest bunch of super-powered punks on the planet, and who will inevitably become major players in the Secret Invasion. It&#8217;s a formulaic type of story, but it&#8217;s a formula that always seems to work. After all of this Secret Invasion stuff is done, I would hope Marvel has plans for a Bendis-scribed Nick Fury title because he knows how to write him well, heck, attach Maleev and Hollingsworth while you&#8217;re at it. C&#8217;mon Marvel, this is a monthly I want to see! If anyone else feels the same, let&#8217;s hear you! As for Mighty Avengers, ever since Secret Invasion started, all of the Avengers titles have stepped it up to the point where I feel I am going to miss something if I don&#8217;t pick them up–so this is an easy recommendation from me.<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/nightwing144.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="wing" id="wing">PICK! Nightwing #144</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Pete Tomasi<br />
        <strong>Art</strong>: Don Kramer, Rags Morales, Christian Alamy, Michael Bair<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> Every month I open up Nightwing expecting that Tomasi will slip up and this issue won&#8217;t be as wonderful as the month that came before. I don&#8217;t really have a reason to believe this about Tomasi, but I consider it Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder from the first 124 issues of the Nightwing title, which were frankly all crap.</p>
<p>    But this was yet another month in which I wasn&#8217;t disappointed. Everything, from the fast paced action the interactions with Deb to the confrontation with Talia was perfect, and excellently characterized.</p>
<p>    Two very significant things stick out in this issue. One, the sheer confidence with which Nightwing moves in every panel &#8211; as it should be for the man who led the Titans since he was a kid. Sorry, Devin, but this is how the boy should behave. Not moping in the shadow of the Bat.</p>
<p>    Also, it is very obvious from the fun that Dick is having with the new girlfriend that if DiDio did nothing else right, the man needs a medal for keeping Dick and Babs apart. Dick is relaxed and happy with Deb in a way he never was with the woman he supposedly wanted to marry. I&#8217;m fond of them together, and I&#8217;m fond of Deb in her sheer non-Battiness. I hope she sticks around for a while.<br /><img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/punisherwj19.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="punisher" id="punisher">PICK! Punisher: War Journal #19</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Matt Fraction &#038; Rick Remender<br />
        <strong>Artist</strong>: Howard Chaykin<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Edgar Delgado with Jesus Alberto<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> Fraction understands that there is more to tossing Frank Castle into the 616 world than just having him fight supervillains and evade Daredevil. It&#8217;s the little things, like tossing in a pair of jet boots into a chase sequence. Also, Fraction isn&#8217;t afraid to make Frank more likable than the grizzled monster from Ennis&#8217; MAX series. A good chunk of the issue involves Frank going through a social routine, meeting up with people who he&#8217;ll respond to with more than an annoyed grunt. It may not be the best use of comic space, but considering how sparingly Frank has been used in the past few issues, it&#8217;s a welcome sight.</p>
<p>The Jigsaw plot comes into effect and while the media and government are shown to be made of short bus passengers in their reactions, it&#8217;s par for the course. Jigsaw himself finally acts despicable in this storyline, at least in the way that shows him as a worse human being than Frank. And good going for Fraction introducing a new character to the main cast who has found a way to counter Chaykin&#8217;s face-drawing. Hell, Chaykin&#8217;s stuff has been fairly easy to handle for most of this run.<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/secretinv02.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="secret" id="secret">TRIPLE PICK! Secret Invasion #2</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Michael Bendis<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Leinil Francis Yu<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Mark Morales<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Laura Martin<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> Honestly, this is the first issue out of any of the overwrought New Avengers-Mighty Avengers conflicts where I actually felt sympathy for characters on both sides of the conflict.</p>
<p>    Also in the issue&#8217;s favor, Clint&#8217;s reunion was also extremely well done. Very touching, as it should be given the history between the two characters.</p>
<p>    On the other hand, the material between Iron Man and Ms. Marvel was pretty unimpressive.  Carol acted as though this was her first day as a superhero, and Tony is apparently going to build a shiny new costume to be next issue&#8217;s plot device. Yawn.</p>
<p>    All in all, not a complete waste of time, but far from the highlight of my week.<br /><img src="/scores/bminus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Gabe:</strong> A lot of people are going to complain that nothing happened in this issue, and a lot of people are wrong. While the rapid-fire shocking plot reveals of the first issue made for a great opening chapter, there was no reasonable way to keep that up while telling a complete story. In this issue, Bendis takes a moment to examine (through a beautifully illustrated fight scene – no talking heads here!&#8230; well, ok, a few talking heads) the characters&#8217; perspectives on the situation. It serves as a great introduction to the current Avengers rosters for new readers, as we get a notecard-version of their personalities without bogging down the pace of the comic.</p>
<p>    Bendis also sets up a number of future plot threads to tantalize the reader: What exactly is Iron Man up to? What is the motive behind the Skrulls&#8217; latest moves?  What&#8217;s going to happen with the Sentry? Just how much more awesome can Yu&#8217;s artwork get?? I&#8217;d imagine it can&#8217;t get much better because it is already pretty fucking amazing. Ingredients: Leinel Yu, just add inker!<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> I&#8217;m prepared to eat some crow because I was one of the ones who really was not excited about Secret Invasion. Tired from all of the major crossovers, I was apathetic to pick this up and two issues in, I&#8217;m glad I&#8217;m not left behind on all this. The sheer size of this story and the possibilities of who is and who isn&#8217;t a Skrull has the fanboy in me itching to release. So to have the Avengers, already split in half against each other, and Skrull counterparts facing them, we&#8217;ve got a knuckle-to-knuckle brawl in the Savage Land. Good superhero writing and Yu continues to be one of great talents born out of Marvel&#8217;s late 90&#8242;s talent search. Not as juicy as the first issue, but the gears in the head keep turning on the magnitude of the series.</p>
<p>    Will this fix everything by the end? by the holidays, we&#8217;ll find out, but the hope that some of the Marvel convolution and rash decisions made over the years have been all part of the Skrull master plan schemed up from scraps of the original Kree-Skrull War and Secret War? Well it&#8217;s damn genius. In any major event there are must-haves and must-have-nots. More must-haves are the recipe for a crossover event that leaves a good taste, and will place Secret Invasion on the bookshelf or in the garbage.<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/supergirl29.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="girl" id="girl">PICK! Supergirl #29</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Kelley Puckett<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Drew Johnson &#038; Ron Randall<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Ray Snyder &#038; Ron Randall<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Kanila Tripp<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> This is rapidly becoming one of my favorite DCU books, because it takes the <em>spirit</em> of Jeph Loeb&#8217;s take on Supergirl &#8211; confused, somewhat naive, angry, more adolescent and rebellious &#8211; and plays with youthful idealism instead of nihilism, which makes for a much more interesting and sympathetic character. This current arc, where Supergirl is trying to save a young boy&#8217;s cancer, is smartly written not only in how it deals with the totality of the DCU attempting to find an answer but also with regards to Kara&#8217;s reasoning for this Promethean task that significantly unsettles her mentors and compatriots. It&#8217;s complicated, it&#8217;s smart, it&#8217;s got characters coming into logical conflict from opposing but still valid viewpoints &#8211; I really hope it sticks around to realize its potential. <br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/tboltsreason.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="tbolts" id="tbolts">PICK! Thunderbolts: Reason in Madness</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Christos Gage<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Ben Oliver<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Ben Oliver<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Jose Villarubia<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> It&#8217;s a radical way to do comics, but I rather enjoy the way <i>Thunderbolts</i> is currently handled. Ellis writes his arcs and gets them out every two months because that&#8217;s his usual speed while Gage fills in the gaps with one-shots that work as character spotlights. He does a great job with it, especially in this month&#8217;s issue, starring two Spider-Man villains (well, more like three) in a comic that doesn&#8217;t even mention the webslinger. In this story about Venom being asked by other villain regulars to turn on the Thunderbolts and join them, we&#8217;re given two things that we never get a chance to see in Ellis&#8217; run nor any of the special Thunderbolts appearances in other comics.</p>
<p>For one, Venom actually gets time to shine. Other comics just show him off for the sake of sales and then relegate him to the background. Even <i>Avengers/Invaders</i> just has him say something badass about God and tosses him aside in a comic where he&#8217;s fighting his top nemesis. The other is that Norman Osborn gets to actually be something more than a crazy guy behind a desk. It&#8217;s awesome. When the post-Civil War Thunderbolts roster was announced, this was exactly the kind of comic I was hoping for. <br /><img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/quentin-tarantine-robert-rodriguez-grindhouse-hits-theaters/41506/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Quentin Tarantine &#038; Robert Rodriguez&#8217; Grindhouse Hits Theaters</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/strangers-in-paradise-rip-sip/41960/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">R.I.P. SiP</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/first-pictures-of-robert-downey-jr-as-tony-stark/41511/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">First Pictures of Robert Downey Jr. As Tony Stark</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/knight-rider-car-auctioned/41507/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Knight Rider Car Auctioned</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/marvels-skrull-conspiracy/42154/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Marvel&#8217;s Skrull Conspiracy</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Picks &amp; Pans &#8211; April 30, 2008</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-april-30-2008/43683/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-april-30-2008/43683/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 04 May 2008 23:31:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-april-30-2008/43683/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Let&#8217;s get it in! Samantha of Neither Doormat Nor Prostitute, Ernie Estrella, Gavin Jasper of 4thletter!, and David Uzumeri of Funnybook Babylon! PICK! Action Comics #864 Writer: Geoff Johns Penciller: Joe Prado Inker: Jon Sibal Colorist: David Curiel Publisher: DC Comics David U.: I think this issue is the single best thing Geoff Johns has [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Let&#8217;s get it in! Samantha of <a href="http://norprostitute.blogspot.com/">Neither Doormat Nor Prostitute</a>, Ernie Estrella, Gavin Jasper of <a href="http://www.4thletter.net">4thletter!</a>, and David Uzumeri of <a href="http://www.funnybookbabylon.com">Funnybook Babylon</a>!</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/action864.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="action" id="action">PICK! Action Comics #864</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Geoff Johns<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Joe Prado<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Jon Sibal<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: David Curiel<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> I think this issue is the single best thing Geoff Johns has ever written, playing perfectly to all of his strengths and working over his flaws. It lays its roots in a common dilemma &#8211; you know, when your best friend from high school meets your best friend from college and they each think the other dude is a total prick. In this case, Clark&#8217;s stuck between Lightning Lad and Batman, and the interactions are insanely natural. There&#8217;s also some stuff about Legion of Three Worlds, and a reuse of Geoff Johns&#8217;s new favorite narrative trick of a mysterious narrator who&#8217;s revealed on the last page, but the Clark/Bruce/Garth interactions are what really<br />
shine. <br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/beetle26.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="beetle" id="beetle">DOUBLE PICK! Blue Beetle #26</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jai Nitz<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Mike Norton<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Trevor Scott<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Guy Major<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> This issue was definitely filler between writers, and the overall plot lacked the energy of the previous 25 issues.  That being said, the basics of what made Blue Beetle work for the past 25 issues were still there. He still had a loving family, was a generally upbeat and fun kid, and his interactions with both the Scarab and his supporting cast were witty and clever.  I can only hope that Pfeifer can do as well when he takes over the helm next month.<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> No matter how good a fill-in issue is, it could never really follow up on <i>Blue Beetle #25</i>. Luckily, this issue has a gimmick working for it. #26 here is written in mostly Spanish, other than several English exchanges involving Traci and Milagro. For a guy who has a faded memory of a couple years of high school Spanish under his belt, the whole thing almost comes across as one of Marvel&#8217;s &#8216;Nuff Said issues. It says a lot that without being able to understand most of the dialogue, I was able to understand the story Nitz and Norton were trying to tell. Thankfully, there&#8217;s a script at the end of the issue that translates the whole thing to English.</p>
<p>    Getting past the gimmick, it&#8217;s still a fill-in issue. Not a horrible fill-in issue, but it is what it is. At the very least, the aftermath of Beetle&#8217;s fight with Parasite shows a panel that can definitely hold its thumb down on Jaime&#8217;s future. Or not. It&#8217;s up to Pfeifer what he wants to do<br /><img src="/scores/bminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><em><strong><a name="dcu" id="dcu">SEMI-PAN! DC Universe #0</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Grant Morrison &#038; Geoff Johns<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: George Perez, Doug Mahnke, Tony S. Daniel, Ivan Reis, Aaron Lopresti, Philip Tan, Ed Benes, Carlos Pacheco, JG Jones<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Scott Koblish, Christian Alamy, Tony S. Danie, Oclair Albert, Matt Ryan, Jeff de los Santos, Ed Benes, Jesus Merino, JG Jones<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Alex Sinclair, Tom Smith, David Baron<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha.:</strong> I&#8217;m of two minds about this story. On one hand, the actual &#8220;story&#8221; (or<br />
stories, or advertisements, or whatever you would like to call them)<br />
are bloated and unfullfilling. It&#8217;s questionable that anyone actually<br />
needs to pay money for what boils down to teasers for additional<br />
stories.</p>
<p>On the other hand, the end page is almost worth the price of<br />
admission, and not just because of the fun that will come in listening<br />
to people whine about how death doesn&#8217;t mean anything in comics, and<br />
not just because the arrival&#8217;s comeback should have happened years<br />
ago.  It&#8217;s worth it, because reading those final words sent a shiver<br />
down my spine.</p>
<p>And the fact that the lightning struck behind a stripper joint makes<br />
it all the better, really. <br /><img src="/scores/c.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/na40.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="na" id="na">PAN! New Avengers #40</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Michael Bendis<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Jim Cheung<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: John Dell<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Justin Ponsor<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha.:</strong> I suppose every big event has to take time out to lecture the readers about what exactly happened in their top secret past, and with Secret Invasion it was inevitable. But I&#8217;m not sure it should *feel* like a lecture, as this one unfortunately does. </p>
<p>    Worse yet, the big build up at the end just fell flat. I&#8217;m well aware of Spider-Woman&#8217;s complicated past, but to indicate that, out of all the heroes on the planet, impersonating her would do the biggest amount of damage&#8230;I just don&#8217;t buy it. The Skrulls can lecture about the need for secrecy and intrigue in the person&#8217;s past, but it still makes me roll my eyes and cry foul. </p>
<p>    My impression in going into Secret Invasion is that ultimately it wouldn&#8217;t matter, because no one of any importance would be affected. I was willing to set aside my pessimism when the first issue of Secret Invasion came out, because I was intrigued, but this issue? Has brought me right back to square one in my belief that the entire &#8220;event&#8221; is going to be a colossal pile of blah. <br /><img src="/scores/d.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/order10.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="order" id="order">PICK! The Order #10</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Matt Fraction<br />
    <strong>Breakdowns</strong>: Barry Kitson<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Javier Saltres<br />
        <strong>Finishes</strong>: Scott Hanna, Victor Olazaba, Nelson<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Sotocolor&#8217;s J. Roberts &#038; Wil Quintana<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong>I believe I echo the sentiment of many when I say that I&#8217;m sorry I got into this comic so late – or more accurately – too late. This issue, while by no means the best of its ten-issue run, shows in its portrayal of the team&#8217;s ultimate failure in staying power what it has ultimately succeeded to do. Yes, the series is canceled. Yes, the characters in the story realize that their adventure was nothing but a lead-in to an upcoming Iron Man adventure. Still, I believe that <i>The Order</i> will be remembered for being a launch pad for future Marvel mainstays. Sure, some characters will be forgotten about, but I can tell that it&#8217;s only a matter of time before a talented writer decides that he really enjoyed someone like Anthem and revitalizes the character the same way Bendis has taken a shining to the Hood. Just watch, someone on the team will be an Avenger within ten years. </p>
<p>    Funny thing is, within the last couple issues, I believe Fraction has done away with the two least usable characters. While Obadiah Stane&#8217;s son is a complete bastard and has a fun little scene with Iron Man towards the end of the issue, I&#8217;m still not totally convinced that he has what it takes to become a regular rogue. I feel that this issue was slightly rushed in storytelling and could have used another handful of pages to really get a better sense of closure. Here&#8217;s hoping Fraction&#8217;s <i>Iron Man</i> series keeps the quality but surpasses the success.<br /><img src="/scores/b.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/titans58.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="titans" id="titans">PAN! Teen Titans #58</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Sean McKeever<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Carlos Rodriguez<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Bit, Rebecca Buchman, Jimmy Palmiotti<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Rod Reis<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> It seems to me that a very basic strategy in writing a team-focused book is that you would focus on why that team works together as a group. Since Geoff Johns left the title, Teen Titans has defied that logic by showing instead why this group of characters completely fail as a group. The last couple of issues, and 58 in particular have reinforced that theory by not even bothering to focus on the team, and instead just show how the Titans individually fail as heroes. It&#8217;s an interesting approach, I suppose, though I&#8217;d like it much more if the McKeever could pull it together and actually show why I, or any reader, should care about these people. </p>
<p>    As for M&#8217;gann, I&#8217;ll start to care about her storyline and all of its angst when it stops being a bad rehash of the Raven/Trigon storyline. You know, the one that is also being retold once again in the grown-up Titans title? </p>
<p>    The only standouts in this story &#8211; and I don&#8217;t mean that in a positive way &#8211; are the completely gratuitous attempted rape that served absolutely no purpose to the storyline, and the bizarre characterization of Robin. Apparently the kid that stalked Batman when he was barely out of diapers is suddenly shocked and horrified at the idea of a little forgery to get his alien teammate an identity. Which is not only bizarrely out of character for a kid that worshiped Batman and fanboyed Oracle, it makes no sense in the world in which he lives.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/d.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/titansyo04.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="titansyo" id="titansyo">PICK! Teen Titans Year One #4</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Amy Wolfram<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Karl Kerschl<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Serge LaPointe<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: John Rauch<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> Reading this title, particularly next to the current Teen Titans, was such a breath of fresh air. Sure, the kids are still going through growing pains, but unlike the overdone melodrama in the regular title, the problems amongst the team in Year One actually make sense for them to have. Of course Kid Flash is jealous of Robin. Why wouldn&#8217;t he be? But he handles it by sulking to himself, not by throwing a hissy fit and proclaiming that he doesn&#8217;t need to be a Titan, or by trying to get Robin &#8220;fired&#8221; from the team. As a result, despite how wonderful it is to see Robin rush in and save the day (ah, if only Dick Grayson could be portrayed that competently in all his appearances) Wally&#8217;s problems are understandable, too.</p>
<p>    The only problem I have is with Donna. I know the kid&#8217;s full of hormones and has just came off an island full of women, but she really doesn&#8217;t need to fall in love with every boy she meets at first sight. It stopped being cute two issues back.<br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><em><strong><a name="xmenl" id="xmenl">PICK! X-Men: Legacy #210</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Mike Carey<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Scot Eaton &#038; Greg Land<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: John Dell and Andrew Hennessy &#038; Jay Leistin<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Frank D&#8217;Armata &#038; Brian Reber<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> This book has been an odd duck so far, which pretty well fits with Mike Carey&#8217;s sensibilities. Professor X having a solo book was an inevitable turn of events considering his central role in the mythos, but this is a different book due to the whole self-rediscovery angle Carey is going for. It&#8217;s a smart book by a smart writer about a very smart but very flawed man, and I&#8217;m really looking forward to seeing where it goes.<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/quentin-tarantine-robert-rodriguez-grindhouse-hits-theaters/41506/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Quentin Tarantine &#038; Robert Rodriguez&#8217; Grindhouse Hits Theaters</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/gca-2008-best-comic-strip/43633/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">GCA 2008: Best Comic Strip</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/strangers-in-paradise-rip-sip/41960/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">R.I.P. SiP</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/knight-rider-car-auctioned/41507/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Knight Rider Car Auctioned</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/first-pictures-of-robert-downey-jr-as-tony-stark/41511/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">First Pictures of Robert Downey Jr. As Tony Stark</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Picks &amp; Pans &#8211; April 16-23, 2008</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-april-16-23-2008/43660/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-april-16-23-2008/43660/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 25 Apr 2008 22:22:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-april-16-23-2008/43660/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We&#8217;re getting a combined Picks &#038; Pans this week&#8211; New York Comic-con managed to put the PCS gang out on its feet. So, enjoy these reviews of this and last week&#8217;s books, courtesy of Samantha of Neither Doormat Nor Prostitute, Ernie Estrella, Gavin Jasper of 4thletter!, David Uzumeri of Funnybook Babylon, and AHR of Geekanerd. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We&#8217;re getting a combined Picks &#038; Pans this week&#8211; New York Comic-con managed to put the PCS gang out on its feet. So, enjoy these reviews of this and last week&#8217;s books, courtesy of Samantha of <a href="http://norprostitute.blogspot.com/">Neither Doormat Nor Prostitute</a>, Ernie Estrella, Gavin Jasper of <a href="http://www.4thletter.net">4thletter!</a>, David Uzumeri of <a href="http://www.funnybookbabylon.com">Funnybook Babylon</a>, and AHR of <a href="http://www.geekanerdblog.com">Geekanerd</a>.</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/bop117.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="bop" id="bop">PAN! Birds of Prey #117</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Sean McKeever<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Nicola Scott<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Doug Hazlewood<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Hi-Fi Designs<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> Well&#8230; at least Barbara got over herself enough that no one was forced to call her &#8220;Miss Gordon,&#8221; I guess? That&#8217;s honestly the only positive thing I have to say. Well, that and the art was pretty. The story? Was dreadful. Look, when you have to build up your heroes by proposing that Superman is a big, bad meanie who bullies people, it&#8217;s not the best foundation.</p>
<p>The characters are worse than the story itself. &#8220;Miss Gordon&#8221; is a hysterical creature who needs external validation for all her actions, lets her ego get in the way of helping her team, and is generally the last person any sane adult would follow.  She acts like a completely newbie and her &#8220;epiphany&#8221; makes no sense based on either her actions or the storyline as it was told to us. On top of it all, she can&#8217;t even do her job correctly. Her cohorts give off a similar air of &#8220;why should I care about these people?&#8221; In the end, one of them is in the hospital, and Helena and Zinda don&#8217;t even pause long enough to pretend to care before shrieking about how mean Miss Gordon was to them.</p>
<p>Honestly, the only decent person in this storyline was Misfit, and that&#8217;s pretty sad.<br /><img src="/scores/d.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/capam37.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="cap" id="cap">PICK! Captain America #37</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Ed Brubaker<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Steve Epting<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Steve Epting<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Frank D&#8217;Armata<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p> <strong>Samantha:</strong> One of the things that makes Brubaker&#8217;s Captain America worth reading is that the tension between the characters &#8211; and there is plenty of it to spare &#8211; is always balanced by very human reactions driving those tensions.  In the hands of a lesser writer, the Red Skull&#8217;s plot would seem very staid and overdone.  But even the Red Skull&#8217;s actions are tempered by the very human motivation of revenge and hatred, not mere cartoonish superiority that drives some supervillains.</p>
<p>On the hero side of things, the emotions are equally as complex.  Both Sam Wilson and Clint Barton have reasons to not be happy with Bucky wearing the Captain America costume, albeit for very different reasons, and their reactions to the news allow Brubaker to reveal even more about Bucky, Cap, Clint, Sam, and Tony.  All five men may not agree on the same path, but their reasoning is done so well that none of them can really be faulted for their reasoning, which is a pure love of the man they&#8217;ve lost.</p>
<p>On a purely shallow note, anyone yelling for Cap to &#8220;look out for the internet&#8221; made me laugh out loud.<br /><img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/catwoman78.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="cat" id="cat">SPLIT DECISION! Catwoman #78</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Will Pfeifer<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: David Lopez<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Alvaro Lopez<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Jeremy Cox<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p> <strong>David U.:</strong> This review is, unfortunately, colored by the recent news that Catwoman is ending with August&#8217;s #82 (not July&#8217;s #81, apparently, according to Will Pfeifer). This is really sad, because Catwoman is a damn good comic, and despite the covers &#8211; especially the utterly ridiculous one for this issue, with actual lip-biting &#8211; it&#8217;s a solid example of how to portray a female character, and females fighting females, in ways that seem less like exploitation and more like natural character conflict. I&#8217;ll miss this book hardcore, and hopefully the replacement? on DC&#8217;s solicitation page, &#8220;Bad Girls of Gotham&#8221;, will&#8230; uh&#8230; fill the gap&#8230; maybe?<br /><img src="/scores/b.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> You know what would be really sad? If I picked up a Superman comic and realized that Jimmy Olsen was far more competent and interesting of a character than Superman himself.  Which is kind of how I feel about picking up a Catwoman comic and seeing that Slam Bradley is more competent than Catwoman.</p>
<p>Also, &#8220;My god, girl. I hope nothing happened. I know you&#8217;re a match for anyone, for anything. But a kid&#8230;A kid changes everything.&#8221;</p>
<p>So, it&#8217;s Helena&#8217;s fault that Catwoman has sucked since Pfeifer took over? Huh. And here I was, blaming the author for bad characterization and ridiculous plots.</p>
<p>On a final negative note, while the art inside the issue is gorgeous, the cover is awful.  Catwoman isn&#8217;t Mike Tyson. She doesn&#8217;t have to bite her opponent to win. No, not even if her opponent is a girl, and the artist can imply some wink-wink-nudge-nudge lesbianism in the shot. I&#8217;ll be willing to change my mind on this stance if they ever do a cover of Superman where Clark is biting Lex&#8217;s lip passionately.<br /><img src="/scores/dminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><em><strong><a name="cdown" id="cdown">PAN! Countdown #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Paul Dini, Keith Giffen<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Tom Derenick<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Wayne Faucher<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Pete Pantazis<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> Well, I&#8217;m glad that&#8217;s over.</p>
<p><i>Countdown</i> is the Goofus to <i>52</i>&#8216;s Gallant, regularly doing wrong what the other series did right. The final issue of <i>52</i> gave us a real reason to check it out. Other than the epilogue stuff, we had a major climax to deal with and enjoy. <i>Countdown</i> is just a handful of quick scenes to show us where our characters have ended up. Some of them aren&#8217;t bad and I really like how one of the Atom&#8217;s first actions when entering his home is to stare at the Justice League group shot that they used as a cover for <i>Identity Crisis</i>. Great touch. </p>
<p>Other than shoving most characters back to the status quo and another character getting a new power set, the only thing of note that happens isn&#8217;t exactly very exciting. I&#8217;m not even looking forward to where it&#8217;s going. I&#8217;m sure it&#8217;ll feel like a piece of this series refuses to die once it shows up in other books.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/dplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/dmz30.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="dmz" id="dmz">PICK! DMZ #30</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Wood<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Riccardo Burchelli<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Riccardo Burchelli<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Jeremy Cox<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> The power of an election and the change brought by that change can be staggering. If you don&#8217;t believe that statement, look at how the world has changed four years ago, then look back four years from that. A candidate speaking for the common person promising change can be many things to many different people. It gets a rise out of people. Those who are in control, don&#8217;t like to lose it and in this second installment of Blood in the Game, Matty Roth understands how many people will listen if the right person is speaking. If jumping into a title nearly three years old deters you, then that&#8217;s a shameful reason not to be reading DMZ. Wood&#8217;s fast-paced storytelling brings newbies and regulars up to speed with an urban paradise napalmed by the world of control and greed. The roots of this story branch out to more than the passionate readers of grit and gristle. It&#8217;s is a universal story that will and should affect any reader who&#8217;s wise enough to suspect the world around them or to those who have ever felt lost. The DMZ is not a monthly posting of propaganda; it&#8217;s a blaring alarm clock to the sleepy and subdued readers who are numb with being fed the same costumed rhetoric month after month after month.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/flash239.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="flash" id="flash">PICK! Flash #239</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Tom Peyer<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Freddie E. Williams II<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: n/a<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Tanya &#038; Richard Horie<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p> <strong>Samantha:</strong> Any comic where Roy Harper saves the day is a good one, although I am saddened to see more &#8220;Titans as a family&#8221; vibe in The Flash than I am in Titans thus far.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m a little iffy on the characterization of the JLA here, as a whole. Roy&#8217;s the only one that seems to have any sense, the others are apparently too afraid to be &#8220;policing&#8221; Wally to step in when they think he is having problems.  But that minor characterization flaw aside, I&#8217;m continuing to enjoy Peyer&#8217;s Flash.</p>
<p>In this issue, Wally and his family continued to struggle with the demands of Wally not being employed, and both Wally and Jay Garrick dealt with the repercussions of mind control. What I loved most about this is the fact that, as opposed to genuinely pitting the two Flashes against each other, Peyer allowed Wally to be smart enough to know that something was wrong with Jay when he was under duress.</p>
<p>For the second month in a row, I&#8217;m actually looking forward to the next Wally-as-Flash comic&#8230; this is a new and confusing thing, but one I could grow used to.<br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/hack11.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="hack" id="hack">PICK! Hack/Slash #11</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Tim Seeley<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Emily Stone &#038; Courtney Via<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Devil&#8217;s Due Publishing</p>
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<p><strong>AHR:</strong> This issue centers loosely around a done-in-one plotline; a sharp, simple revenge tale with some occasional gore thrown in for color.  Around this self-contained story, writer Tim Seeley blends in updates on what the various members of the book&#8217;s cast are up to, all of whom are interesting and appealing enough to keep this issue from feeling like an in-betweener.  Emily Stone and Courtney Via (pencils and colors, respectively) do a fantastic job as usual, with some particularly good facial expressions for lead character Cassie, who has quite a lot of acting to do in this issue.  The more personal thread of this book deals with Cassie&#8217;s two most pressing non-slasher-releated problems; the absence of her father and her feelings of sexual immaturity.  While that first problem is nothing new in the pantheon of female asskickers, you rarely see sexual inexperience dealt with much in mainstream comics (there&#8217;s irony in there, somewhere).  Female heroines tend to wield their sexuality as a weapon, in that faux-feminist sex-equals-power kind of way.  This issue frames Cassie as someone who has never been in love, who doesn&#8217;t know who she desires, and this comic doesn&#8217;t make her out to be any less human for it.  Complex, subtle stuff for a horror comic about hacking up zombie serial killers, but good writing cares not for genre restrictions.  BONUS: The return of Pooch, the world&#8217;s ugliest (yet most adorable?) horse-dog monster. <br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/hulk03.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="hulk" id="hulk">PAN! Hulk #3</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jeph Loeb<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Ed McGuinness<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Dexter Vines<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Jason Keith<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> It&#8217;s a good thing Loeb&#8217;s comics depend on so many splash pages because it makes reading them that much faster. I tried to give him the benefit of the doubt on this one, but all I see is the potential realized in Greg Pak&#8217;s run being tossed away for Loeb&#8217;s usual masturbation. A-Bomb fights Red Hulk – who is either going to be Doc Samson or someone completely out of left field – and a bunch of robots show up for no other reason than to remind us of an older, better Hulk storyline. McGuinness&#8217; art remains pretty, but still screws a couple things up. Like despite only having Iron Man&#8217;s helmet in two panels, he still can&#8217;t get it straight of what it&#8217;s supposed to look like. And why does Agent Hill look like she&#8217;s 12?</p>
<p>I can&#8217;t wait for the next issue where there&#8217;ll be one page of talking, followed by a TOTALLY KICK ASS two-page spread of the two guys from the cliffhanger fighting. Then Bi-Beast will probably show up because who doesn&#8217;t like pointless throwbacks? Oh, and bad one-liners. I&#8217;m predicting something stupid like, &#8220;PAPA HULK&#8217;S GOT A BRAND NEW BAG!&#8221;<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/dminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/herc116.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="herc" id="herc">PICK! Incredible Hercules #116</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Greg Pak &#038; Fred Van Lente<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Rafa Sandoval<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Roger Bonet<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Martegod Gracia<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> Well, it&#8217;s good to see this title&#8217;s high standard being maintained after the initial arc. I had a feeling this team on Hercules might make for a good comic, but I don&#8217;t think anybody predicted just how good or well-received this comic would be. What&#8217;s truly remarkable about this issue is how good it is while serving so many masters &#8211; it continues the plot of Hercules, serves as both a tease and a reminder regarding the upcoming Eternals series, and sets up Hercules&#8217;s role in the Secret Invasion. Top notch work.<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/jla20.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="jla" id="jla">SEMI-PICK! Justice League of America #20</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Dwayne McDuffie<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Ethan Van Sciver<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Ethan Van Sciver<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Brian Miller (Hi-Fi)<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> This issue was devoted to The Flash, and even though I am loving Wally over in his own book, and even though the Diana in this book was fantastic, this story just didn&#8217;t do it for me. The League&#8217;s dependence on the Flash is cute, but not really very believable. They already have a Superman, and this story told us that Wonder Woman was more than capable of keeping up with Wally &#8230; so why, exactly, does the League need Wally? Mostly, throughout Diana&#8217;s whole recruitment lecture, all I could think was &#8220;pity the League didn&#8217;t care that much about the Flash when Bart Allen was Flash. If they had, the boy might not be dead.&#8221;</p>
<p>Which is probably not what I was supposed to be thinking.</p>
<p>Overall, the story gets high points for making Diana every bit the great warrior and icon she should be to the rest of the League but gets very low points for Wally being overly smug and for having a rather boring story. The combination is enough to land it square in the middle of mediocre territory. Not horrible, but not memorable in any way, either.<br /><img src="/scores/cplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/mighty12.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="yap" id="yap">PICK! Mighty Avengers #12</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Michael Bendis<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Alex Maleev<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Alex Maleev<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Matt Hollingsworth<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Hey, now we&#8217;re getting somewhere. For the first time reading The Mighty Avengers did I feel like I was holding a classic Bendis story. Great espionage, great character study of Nick Fury shortly after he lost his seat in SHIELD, and you felt the weight of Secret Invasion ever-present in the air. He&#8217;s clearly defined as a major player and Bendis, who has a knack for writing him, will no doubt cement him as one of the baddest Marvel Mofos this year. One thing&#8217;s for sure though, I never knew he and Star Trek&#8217;s Capt. Kirk shared something in common. Maleev&#8217;s pencils took you back to the fan-favorite Daredevil run with Bendis where the art and script were so equally in synch. There&#8217;s a neat bit of visual cool bottled with Fury&#8217;s cloaking in and out of people&#8217;s lives, and fact-finding. This issue really stepped it up, which is good, because it really needed it.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> Nick Fury makes his long-awaited return, showing us what he&#8217;s been up to since the end of <i>Secret War</i>. Shortly into the issue, we smile as good ol&#8217; Nick reminds us of why we love him in the first place. The dialogue and characterization are top notch and the final pages will have people speculating for months, but what annoys me is that this isn&#8217;t right for the book. Nick Fury talking for twenty or so pages isn&#8217;t what <i>Mighty Avengers</i> is about. I mean, something like <i>Blue Beetle #25</i> is awesome no matter how you cut it, but if that particular issue had been labeled part of  <i>Green Lantern Corps</i> instead, I&#8217;d still have to call bullshit on it.</p>
<p>Maleev screws up by putting Spider-Woman in <i>Secret War</i>. Probably nitpicking on my part, but when the storyline is partly about dissecting each panel and discussion, it&#8217;s somewhat annoying.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/north05.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="north" id="north">PICK! Northlanders #5</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Wood<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Davide Gianfelice<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Davide Gianfelice<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Dave McCaig<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> In all good stories of revenge, knowing what fuels it is half the enjoyment. This flashback story fills readers in with plenty to chew on about Sven&#8217;s transformation into the warrior we&#8217;ve all come to revel in. To become an accomplished man, requires the conditioning of the boy. And behind every good man is woman of equal or greater stature. Sven&#8217;s has two women in his past that come to inspire what he has become and what was a forgettable weakling is now a man of great potential. This bloody march takes a brief but crucial stop in defining our protagonist, giving color to the pale and supplying readers with the satisfaction of what should be sweet revenge. If you value a story with calculated drive, bitter deceit, salty blood and guts, Brian Wood has bestowed you a gift.<br />
<br /><img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/salvrun06.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="salv" id="salv">PAN! Salvation Run #6</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Matthew Sturges<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Sean Chen<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Walden Wong<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: John Kalisz<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> Wow, this is such an amazingly huge waste of a solid concept. Supervillains on Lost &#8211; how do you screw this up? Well, first, by writing the most mindbendingly dull depiction of the Joker I can remember in recent memory. Not only is the Joker painfully unfunny, he&#8217;s not even sufficiently crazy &#8211; he&#8217;s just a standard shit-disturber, which is a pretty boring representation of the character considering the possibilities and avenues available. Sturges&#8217;s Luthor is alright, I guess, but the Vandal Savage let&#8217;s-all-fuck-forever plan is just distracting and the entire series seems like it&#8217;s going to end with a Countdownesque deus ex machina from another series.<br /><img src="/scores/d.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/superman675.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="superman" id="superman">SPLIT DECISION! Superman #675</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Kurt Busiek<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Renato Guedes &#038; Jorge Correa, Jr.<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Jose Wilson Magalhaes &#038; Jorge Correa, Jr.<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: David Curiel<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p> <strong>David U.:</strong> Adios, Kurt Busiek. It was a good run, although I kind of wish you hadn&#8217;t done that Insect Queen thing. Regardless, although it got cut short, this final issue makes at least a halfway satisfactory attempt at resolving the ongoing moral quandry Superman was being faced since Camelot Falls, and it sort of ties up this story and Busiek&#8217;s take on Superman in a very cool way. He says this was a filler arc he wrote in a weekend, but honestly, I think this two-parter has probably been his strongest work on the book. Great stuff.<br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> Kurt Busiek&#8217;s Superman has been mind-numbingly boring since the start and while in this issue Clark finally managed to remember that things matter outside of his little nuclear family with its cookie-cutter Superboy &#8220;son,&#8221; it did not save the story from being ridiculously dull.  Even the shots of Superman fighting are interspersed with Lois holding Chris tight and promising that it was going to be okay.</p>
<p>Of course it will, Lois. It&#8217;s Superman. Those panels are completely unnecessary and add absolutely nothing at all to the story. What new development did it shed on Superman&#8217;s character? That his wife loves him and his kid wants to join him in battle? We already knew that. In fact, since &#8220;Up, Up, and Away,&#8221; both those messages have been hammered home with all the subtlety of the average anvil.</p>
<p>All the right parts are present for this to be a good story.  Superman says all the right things, the battles show both his might and his heart, and for two whole panels Busiek actually remembers that Lois has a real job outside of being Chris&#8217; mom. But they&#8217;re just pieces put together with very little passion. As a result, the story is flat and lifeless.  Quite frankly, the only actual redeeming quality of this story seems to be the art, which is gorgeous.<br /><img src="/scores/cminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/wolv24.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="wolv" id="wolv">PICK! Wolverine Origins #24</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Daniel Way<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Steve Dillon<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Steve Dillon<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Avalon&#8217;s Matt Milla<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> Over the weekend, Daniel Way was announced as the new writer of the next solo Deadpool run. This entire story arc has been his audition for the role and as much as I&#8217;ve had problems with him over the years (I will point at <i>Venom</i> and shake my head at it for years to come), knowing that he won&#8217;t have Dillon with him on the book makes me optimistic. In this issue, after all the non-stop Warner Bros. action between Wolverine and Deadpool, we settle down for some simple discussion between the characters. You know, I don&#8217;t know if I recall seeing that ever. Logan and Wade have so much baggage with each other from over the years, but this is the first time I recall seeing them not stabbing each other for more than two minutes.</p>
<p>Way shows he has a grasp on Wade Wilson, incorporating backstory from Nicieza&#8217;s <i>Cable/Deadpool</i> to great effect. Deadpool has become old hat over the last couple years, but Way introduces a couple subtle ideas to breathe fresh air into him. While I suppose they were saving something for the next issue, I feel that the Wade/Logan discussion could have gone slightly deeper. Still, it&#8217;s promising.<br /><img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/yap04.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="yap" id="yap">PAN! Young Avengers Presents #4</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Paul Cornell<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Mark Brooks<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Jamie Mendoza<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Christina Strain<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> I&#8217;ve been enjoying Young Avengers presents, more or less.  It&#8217;s had some parts where it fell flat, but overall has been true to the Young Avengers as they were presented in their series.  This issue completely failed on that level, making Cassie so completely out-of-character that it&#8217;s hard to believe Paul Cornell read so much as one issue of Young Avengers before writing some stereotypically witchy blond teenager that is usually more DC&#8217;s cup of tea than Marvel&#8217;s (see Wonder Girl and Supergirl for example.)</p>
<p>While it&#8217;s feasible that her complete change in personality is due to the high amount of stress that she&#8217;s endured, it doesn&#8217;t change the fact that it&#8217;s hard to like stories where one half of the leads is completely unlikeable.  I also don&#8217;t like being lectured to by comic book characters, and Cassie ranting about people who didn&#8217;t support &#8220;the right side&#8221; of the Civil War was in bad taste in both length and wording of the diatribe.</p>
<p>The only redeeming virtue this book has is learning that Vision has been on a quest to &#8220;discover&#8221; himself, but honestly, that&#8217;s not enough to save the story.<br /><img src="/scores/dminus.gif"></p>
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<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/quentin-tarantine-robert-rodriguez-grindhouse-hits-theaters/41506/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Quentin Tarantine &#038; Robert Rodriguez&#8217; Grindhouse Hits Theaters</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/strangers-in-paradise-rip-sip/41960/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">R.I.P. SiP</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/gca-2008-best-comic-strip/43633/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">GCA 2008: Best Comic Strip</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/first-pictures-of-robert-downey-jr-as-tony-stark/41511/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">First Pictures of Robert Downey Jr. As Tony Stark</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/halle-berry-gets-star-on-hollywood-walk-despite-catwoman/41512/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Halle Berry Gets Star On Hollywood Walk, Despite Catwoman</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Picks &amp; Pans, April 09, 2008</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-april-09-2008/43608/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-april-09-2008/43608/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Apr 2008 22:10:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-april-09-2008/43608/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Criminal gets four reviews this week and three out of four dig it! Our team this week: David Uzumeri of Funnybook Babylon, Ernie Estrella, Samantha of Neither Doormat Nor Prostitute, AHR of Geekanerd and Jason Michelitch of Jason Michelitch. PICK! Amazing Spider-Man #556 Writer: Zeb Wells Penciller: Chris Bachalo Inker: Tim Townsend Colorist: Chris Bachalo [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Criminal gets <strong>four</strong> reviews this week and three out of four dig it! Our team this week: David Uzumeri of <a href="http://www.funnybookbabylon.com">Funnybook Babylon</a>, Ernie Estrella, Samantha of <a href="http://norprostitute.blogspot.com/">Neither Doormat Nor Prostitute</a>, AHR of <a href="http://www.geekanerdblog.com">Geekanerd</a> and Jason Michelitch of <a href="http://jasonmichelitch.blogspot.com/">Jason Michelitch</a>.</em></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/asm556.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="asm" id="asm">PICK! Amazing Spider-Man #556</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Zeb Wells<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Chris Bachalo<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Tim Townsend<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Chris Bachalo &amp; Antonio Fabela<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong>Again, nothing groundbreaking, but much like last week it&#8217;s still the best arc of Brand New Day yet. Bachalo&#8217;s art is utterly gorgeous, using sparse linework to communicate Peter&#8217;s sense of isolation and frustration in the snowstorm. It still remains to be seen how compelling the overarching storylines in this book will be, but this particular arc is plenty of fun.<br />
    <img src="/scores/b.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/boostergold08.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="booster" id="booster">DOUBLE PICK! Booster Gold #08</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Geoff Johns &amp; Jeff Katz<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Dan Jurgens<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Norm Rapmund<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Hi-Fi<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> Our friends Blue and Gold continue their adventure in the apocalyptic alternate present, this time as members of Green Arrow and Hawkman&#8217;s resistance. And wow, what a resistance. If you thought Booster Gold&#8217;s pallbearers were laughable, wait until you see the bottom of the barrel scraped here. Johns has always done a good job of making the whole Max Lord/OMAC threat seem as dangerous as it should be. The OMAC situation from <em>Infinite Crisis</em> wasn&#8217;t something the readers could hang onto for too long, but going back to it every now and again like this shows what kind of giant bullet the DC Universe dodged without overfeeding it to us.</p>
<p>If you&#8217;re expecting much from what the cover suggests, you will likely be disappointed. That said, there&#8217;s a very interesting Superman moment in the middle of the issue that makes you wonder who that is off-panel. There are two different people that come to my mind and both make Max Lord seem like a seriously evil bastard. The Rip Hunter subplot continues to move very, very slowly, as for three issues all he&#8217;s done is repeat to Daniel Carter that they really have to go into action.<br />
        <img src="/scores/b.gif">
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> I suppose someone might be upset at the portrayal of Green Arrow and Hawkman as bickering incompetents, but as I&#8217;ve always hated Hawkman and Winick has me wishing Ollie would die again, I didn&#8217;t mind it. Besides, it&#8217;s an alternate timeline. There&#8217;s no telling how dealing with the stress may have affected them for the worse. On the other hand, Booster and Blue Beetle surviving and coming up with a plan to reunite their Justice League was great.
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<p>This book manages to be what Countdown should have been. It shows us an alternative possibilities than the current mainstream DCU and does so with snappy, fun banter between the characters.  It makes me both love this book and hate Countdown further.<br />
        <img src="/scores/a.gif">
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/criminal02.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="criminal" id="criminal">SPLIT DECISION! Criminal 2 #3</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Ed Brubaker<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Sean Phillips<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Sean Phillips<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Val Staples<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics/Icon</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> There&#8217;s a shortlist of modern day comics that could be a complete package, and Criminal sits firmly near the top. Each issue stuffs you in the trunk of a heist or a score. Some gone good, others gone bad. But like being stuck in the trunk, you won&#8217;t know where the twists and turns are coming, you&#8217;re just taken for a ride that will inevitably rattle you. Take Teeg for example, straight up guy, served his country but got in a bit of bind. Everyone can relate to that, but what a desperate man will do to get out of a bad situation is unimaginable. Brubaker and Phillips pull off score after score, and like the legendary good guys, they out do themselves time again. Everyone who&#8217;s not reading Criminal should re-evaluate their monthly harvest and toss out the bad apples because this is the type of entertainment that feeds you again and again. You don&#8217;t have to have the books that preceded it, because it&#8217;s redesigned for the new and casual reader. All you need is $3.50 and guts to pick this up once. Trust me, you won&#8217;t be a casual reader for long, you&#8217;ll be hooked.<br />
      <img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>AHR:</strong> Technically this book is great- the art is masterful and the writing is smooth.  But where&#8217;s the kick?  &quot;A Wolf Among Wolves&quot; is a self-contained story that ties into past storylines as well.  Set in the 1970s, the issue follows a Viet Nam vet going through tough times, and at the start Brubaker seems to be angling the story as a look at Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome.  Despite this promise of thematic goodness, the story that follows is strictly by the numbers; a debt to the mob, a treacherous woman, a heist gone wrong, and murders aplenty.  Whether these elements feel like cliches or classics probably depends on how much you enjoy the crime genre, because nothing happens that you wouldn&#8217;t expect, and there&#8217;s a lack of energy moving the story forward.  Sean Phillips&#8217; sharp art keeps this book&#8217;s stoicism from feeling completely tired, but it&#8217;s disappointing that that&#8217;s even a risk when you have two talented people working in a genre they obviously love.<br />
      <img src="/scores/cplus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Jason:</strong> There are no more kind words for Criminal. They&#8217;ve been used up. If you haven&#8217;t yet gotten the word and started reading this book, I simply cannot help you. If you have not yet been convinced by the veritable tonnage of praise heaped on this book from all corners, nothing I say will get you to go pick up the best mainstream comic book on the shelves. Truly, if this is the case, I pity you. All around you, people are standing, smiling knowing smiles to one another and recounting favorite scenes, lines of dialogue, plot twists, debating who the best characters are. Your co-workers have Frank Kafka strips taped up to their cubicles, while you just have Dilbert, and you just don&#8217;t understand why they don&#8217;t want to sit with you in the building&#8217;s cafeteria. You probably dress poorly, and have bad breath. Are you getting enough of the right food? You look malnourished. Here&#8217;s the card for my therapist &#8211; he probably can&#8217;t help you, but you should give it a try. You never know. Maybe you can turn it all around &#8211; pull yourself out of this pit of despair, put a shine on your shoes. Don&#8217;t like pamphlets? Go pick up the book collections Coward or Lawless. What&#8217;s that? You go to the comic book store every week and buy the 22-page magazines? Well, then, sitting right there on the shelf is a perfect stand-alone jumping on point. It&#8217;s called Criminal #2. See it there? With the blond guy with the broken nose, smoking a cigarette? No, I know, it&#8217;s a little scary. No, I don&#8217;t think he has a special costume that he puts on. But that&#8217;s ok. Give it a try anyway. Come on. It&#8217;s never too late to try to get help.<br />
      <img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>David U:</strong> This book is almost reviewproof at this point, because it&#8217;s always really, really fucking good. What can I say about Criminal that hasn&#8217;t been said everywhere else? If you&#8217;re on the fence and have even a passing interest in really well-executed crime comics, grab this issue. It&#8217;s a one-off, it&#8217;s a good starting point. If you like it, go back and grab the Coward TPB. Everything about this issue works &#8211; although I miss the hand lettering from the first volume, Brubaker&#8217;s script is authentic and involving as usual, fully establishing Teeg Lawless as a truly terrifying motherfucker, on a physical and psychological level. Sean Phillips is on top of his game with some downright masterful layouts and design work (and a really, really good visual representation of your friend and mine, the bender blackout). Val Staples&#8217;s colors are moody and complementary, focused purely on storytelling. Great comics, but really, you didn&#8217;t need me to tell you this.<br />
      <img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><em><strong><a name="dock" id="echo">PICK! Dock Walloper #3</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Ed Burns &amp; Jimmy Palmiotti<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Siju Thomas<br />
        <strong>Publisher</strong>: Virgin Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> The cover is misleading as I was hoping to see Ring-A-Ling kick some more ass, instead this was a lot of seeds planted that are sure to bloom come the following issues. &quot;The Hand&quot; is settling into his role as Mad Dog Madden&#8217;s big right hand man by asserting himself the boss man with a major opium deal. And while Madden contemplates the opportunity, someone tries to put a hit out on the Dock Walloper. DW balances a palette of the chess game between John Smith and Madden and his mistress, Cora with action sequences filled with Ford Town Cars edging on two wheels and Tommy guns blazing out the windows. There&#8217;s a definite cinematic vibe from Dock Walloper, more so than any other Virgin Comics release. Character details like Bootsy not liking to swim, to the little bell on Ring-A-Ling&#8217;s ankle make this a straightforward pleasure to read. In its careful and vivid recreation of prohibition New York City, Burns, Palmiotti, and Thomas manage to bundle a smart, savvy, and sexy little tale that&#8217;s suitable for readers seeking a sharp period piece or those looking to broaden the scope of their weekly pull. <br />
    <img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/echo002.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="echo" id="echo">PICK! Echo #2</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Terry Moore<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Terry Moore<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Terry Moore<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Abstract Studio</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> For those who have never read or seen Terry Moore&#8217;s work should know that he knows how to write people. Full, three-dimesional, emotional, real people. Now while most people have never had a goopy super suit of armor stuck to their body, readers will empathize with Julie Martin because Moore snaps his finger loud enough to turn your head and notice this woman and her problem. It&#8217;s simple, really, as part of a secret government weapon has permanently attached itself to Julie and in the middle of trying to figure out what it is, she&#8217;s dealing with a pending divorce and paying her bills. Moore gives you enough visually to fill in the blanks and let your imagination go in what seems like a basic story that slowly reveals to be much more. There&#8217;s plenty of good black and white comics but Moore&#8217;s in a class in his own. <br />
    <img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><em><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/ff556.jpg" alt="" align="left" /><strong><a name="ff" id="ff">PICK! Fantastic Four#556</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Mark Millar<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Bryan Hitch<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Bryan Hitch &amp; Andrew Currie<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Paul Mounts<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> Now, this is getting a little ridiculous. I understand you want to establish your new villain as a badass &#8211; as someone who can take on all comers. I thought everything else about this issue was very enjoyable (although the standard Mark Millar disclaimer applies &#8211; if he&#8217;s annoyed you before you won&#8217;t be won over now), but the method of villain badassery establishment bugged me a lot, as did the fact that the science doesn&#8217;t even seem to conform to its own internal rules &#8211; Reed just, you know, does shit. Which is cool, but it doesn&#8217;t do much to kill his reputation as a deus ex machina (the role he certainly fulfills here).<br />
    <img src="/scores/b.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/gabc07.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="gabc" id="gabc">PICK! Green Arrow/Black Canary #7</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Judd Winick<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Mike Norton<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Wayne Faucher<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: David Baron<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> Mike Norton jumps on as regular artist while Winick turns out one of his more lighthearted issues of this book. He&#8217;s talented at this family dynamic, and it&#8217;s one that works well; Ollie, Dinah and Mia are a fun trio in a fun adventure book. To be honest, despite flagging sales, this book is turning out to be a lot better than I expected and kind of the shot in the arm the Green Arrow character needed.<br />
    <img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/glcorps23.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="glc" id="glc">PICK! Green Lantern Corps #23</a></em></strong><br />
        <strong>Writer</strong>: Peter J. Tomasi<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Patrick Gleason<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Prentiss Rollins<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Guy Major<br />
        <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> First of all, DC? Stop it. Stop doing this with cover text. Lord of the Rings jokes on a Green Lantern cover with a bunch of rings isn&#8217;t funny or clever, it just looks hideously dorky. That said, this finally picks up the &quot;RingQuest&quot; arc Tomasi was doing before he was interrupted by I guess Patrick Gleason&#8217;s drawing schedule and that quick Sterling/Nelson Boodikka two-parter. It&#8217;s nice to get back to the main characters and see things develop, there&#8217;s some good Guy and Kyle stuff, but it&#8217;s still mostly setup for the longterm stuff Tomasi&#8217;s clearly planning for his run. It&#8217;s a good Green Lantern comic, but nothing truly special. Yet.<br />
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<p align="left"><em><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/goon23.jpg" align="left" /></em></p>
<p align="left"><em><a name="goon" id="goon">PICK! The Goon #23</a></em></strong><br />
        <strong>Writer</strong>: Eric Powell<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Eric Powell<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Eric Powell<br />
        <strong>Publisher</strong>: Dark Horse Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong>The current storyline keeps escalating more and more to the point that I can&#8217;t help but wonder where Powell can go with the comic once this arc is done. It&#8217;s that huge. While the last issue was more Goon-centric, this one plays on more of the supporting cast, giving Norton, the Little Unholy Bastards and Willy times to shine. There&#8217;s another supporting character who makes a return, but all I can say about it is that you really need to have read the &lt;i&gt;Goon: Chinatown&lt;/i&gt; graphic novel to understand the gravity of the situation.</p>
<p>Things continue to go to shit, storywise, including one three-page sequence involving a cauldron that is without a doubt one of the creepiest moments I can recall in recent comics. Still, there&#8217;s a semblance of hope shown towards the end and even without a real cliffhanger, you still can&#8217;t wait for the next month&#8217;s issue to see where things are going. </p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/jsa14.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="jsa">SPLIT DECISION! Justice Society of America #14</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Geoff Johns &amp; Alex Ross<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Dale Eaglesham<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Prentiss Rollins<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Alex Sinclair<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong>This issue converges the two plotlines that have been going on this arc, namely &quot;Who the fuck is Gog?&quot; and &quot;Wow, this team is too goddamn big.&quot; These plotlines are, as people who are paying attention (and who read Kingdom Come) probably already figured out, more related than they seem at first due to Earth-22 Superman&#8217;s role as doomsaying prophet. I keep hearing the complaint that this book is a &quot;Kingdom Come circlejerk&quot;; it&#8217;s not altogether inaccurate, but that seems kind of unavoidable considering the book is, uh, a sequel to Kingdom Come. It&#8217;s nothing revolutionary, but it&#8217;s fun. . <br />
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<p><strong>Samantha: </strong>On one hand, the characterizations are great, and the interactions make me love the characters more.  The fight scenes were particularly well done, and watching Amazing Man grab Gog&#8217;s staff and transform was gorgeous.</p>
<p>On the other hand…I really, really don&#8217;t care about this third/fourth world nonsense. I don&#8217;t care about the New Gods, and their deaths do not affect me even remotely.  So while all the pieces for a great comic were there…I just don&#8217;t care about the reason for the action taking place on the page.</p>
<p>Also, on the plus side, we got to see Alan Scott and Obsidian both in action. But on the negative side, the team&#8217;s so big that it amounted to approximately two panels.</p>
<p>So I enjoyed the comic, but it&#8217;s not one I&#8217;d honesty recommend anyone else read.</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/lockekey03.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="locke" id="locke">PICK! Locke &amp; Key #3</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Joe Hill<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Gabriel Rodriguez<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: IDW</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie.:</strong> Every now and then there&#8217;s an indie title within a specific genre that can crossover to mass appeal. If horror or dark fantasy, or in this case, some hybrid of it is comic you would typically look for or you just want something to touch that nerve that tickles every spot in your mind, this title does it. There&#8217;s the horror of murder, there&#8217;s the dark fantasy of leaving your body and traveling everywhere you go, there&#8217;s the hunt of a sick maniac, and the drama of growing up in a town that knows the worst thing you ever experienced. Books that excel not only propel you into the mind, but the body of the focal characters. Issue three walks along when you stack it up to the first two issues, but those two issues were nearly flawless, so every now and then you need to rest. There&#8217;s still a bit of shock and awe here but it&#8217;s better left to your own personal experience with it. Issue 3 shifts to Kinsey, the fifteen-year-old sister of Bode who clutched her younger brother while hiding on their roof as her father was brutally murdered below. It&#8217;s been a year later since that day and she has her own issues coping with the past year. Readers will discover she may be carrying a key to something as well&#8230; Joe Hill does an incredible job greatly advancing one character in each issue while keeping others moving forward, or making you aware of what&#8217;s going on in every corner.<br />
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/nova12.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="nova" id="nova">PICK! Nova #12</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Dan Abnett &amp; Andy Lanning<br />
    <strong>Penciller</strong>: Paul Pelletier<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Rick Magyar<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Guru eFX<br />
        <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> I&#8217;m kind of surprised this didn&#8217;t carry an Annihilation: Conquest banner, and readers of that series might want to pick this issue up else they&#8217;re likely to be a bit confused next week in that book&#8217;s conclusion. Nova&#8217;s been an underdog book since its announcement, spinning out of an underdog event, starring a character that&#8217;s always been an underdog. So twelve issues with a bunch of momentum still behind it is pretty damn good. Nova is filling a seriously empty niche in the Marvel Universe right now (although he&#8217;ll soon be joined by the upcoming &lt;i&gt;Guardians of the Galaxy&lt;/i&gt; by the same writing team), so hopefully with a bit more time and possibly promotion this book can continue on its groove.<br />
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/punmax56.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="punisher" id="punisher">PICK! Punisher MAX #56</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Garth Ennis<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Goran Parlov<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Goran Parlov<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Lee Loughridge<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics/MAX</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> Much better than last month&#8217;s. While much of it centers around guys who aren&#8217;t Frank, at least we&#8217;re shown the point of view of enemies who aren&#8217;t simply evil villains we know for sure will be slaughtered by the end of this storyline. One of the main characters heading the attempt to bring Frank in is shown to be a good guy, but at the same time shows us his own reasoning as to why he believes Frank Castle needs to be stopped. Now that the storyline is beginning to get momentum, you do get the feeling that Ennis is writing something fresh with the character. That&#8217;s incredibly hard to do, especially with the down-to-earth MAX Punisher. Even having Frank mass murder a bunch of criminals is portrayed in a way that shows both how much of a calculating psycho he is and lets us into the head of his military predators.<br />
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/titans01.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="titans" id="titans">SPLIT DECISION! Titans #01</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Judd Winick<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Ian Churchill<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Norm Rapmund<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Edgar Delgado<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> This is basically Judd Winick&#8217;s Outsiders, minus the &quot;espionage&quot; stuff, so it&#8217;s full-on soap opera about characters who&#8217;ve thrived in that setting forever. It&#8217;s not bad. It&#8217;s certainly confectionary, but it succeeds at the goals it sets for itself &#8211; I laughed, I was entertained, I want to read the next issue. It&#8217;s by-the-numbers soap opera superheroes, but it&#8217;s done well enough. <br />
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> I wanted to love this, I really did, and I tried.  The Titans have always been my favorite characters in comics, above the Justice League and beyond the Avengers. But between the sleazy cheesecake art and the dreadful characterizations, I just can&#8217;t do anything but feel completely disappointed that of all the people DC could and should have chosen to bring back this iconic group of characters &#8211; a group that could stand to make DC a very good profit &#8211; they chose Judd Winick.</p>
<p>The Nightwing here shows none of his post-OYL character growth, and is the same incompetent little boy that needs Daddy Bats&#8217; help that he was in Judd&#8217;s Outsiders.  I don&#8217;t want Batman in my Titans, thank you very much. Beyond Nightwing, Starfire has no purpose other than to be naked and fondling herself and Raven has had yet another personality switch so that everyone is a &#8220;bitch&#8221; that she doesn&#8217;t like. Donna, Wally, and Gar&#8217;s introductions simply bored me.</p>
<p>Winick tries hard, in the same old way that he always tries, with lots of &#8220;contemporary,&#8221; references (complete with social commentary, of course, about sexuality) that I&#8217;m sure are supposed to be very &#8220;adult,&#8221; but come across as mature as a seventh grader trying to curse when he&#8217;s angry &#8211; awkward, pathetic, and almost deserving of pity.</p>
<p>As for the &#8220;plot&#8221; itself, by the end of the book, I&#8217;m standing knee-deep in metaphorical glue as I watch the characters and Winick beat their ground-chopped-and severely beaten dead horse into the ground.<br />
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/wolverine64.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="wolverine" id="wolverine">DOUBLE PICK! Wolverine #64</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jason Aaron<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Ron Garney<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Ron Garney<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Jason Keith<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> I&#8217;d say it&#8217;s borderline imperative Marvel bring Aaron back to this book when Mark Millar&#8217;s run is over, because he really gets how to do a fun, straightforward Wolverine story in 2008. No extended conspiracies, no fucking invincible swords or furry family reunions, it&#8217;s Logan on a revenge kick that coincides with a neat story from his past. Just play him straight, folks, stop trying to reveal more layers. It&#8217;s time to move Wolverine forward, and these are the kinds of stories that do it. He needs to take an active role in the <em>current</em> Marvel Universe; I&#8217;m tired of hearing about how important he was seventy five years ago or what fucking ever.<br />
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> This flashback tale of Wolverine and Mystique has been a great diversion from what is going on with the major Marvel storylines. It&#8217;s just a great classic revenge story done in the way of classic martial arts films of the 1970&#8242;s. But I love the set designs Garney&#8217;s throwing together showing this odd couple in the wild west in one issue, and as dapper flappers and small time crooks in another. Aaron gets creative with Wolverine&#8217;s mutant healing factor. I do believe he enjoys torturing the little guy because we see there hasn&#8217;t been one issue of any Wolverine story Aaron&#8217;s written that doesn&#8217;t involve a major healing period. In each issue, Logan gets more pissed and is steamrolling into next issue&#8217;s bloody conclusion to both why he&#8217;s got it in for Mystique from the past and whether or not she&#8217;s going to get her comeuppance in the present. Bring it on, already!<br />
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/wonderwoman19.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="wonderwoman" id="wonderwoman">PICK! Wonder Woman #19</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Gail Simone<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Bernard Chang<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: John Holdridge &amp; Bernard Chang<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: I.L.L.<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> This month was a large improvement over last month. Whereas Wonder Woman 18 was ruined with Diana&#8217;s out of character attempts to court a man undeserving of her, this issue focused on Diana the warrior, and Diana the friend, through her interactions with the Green Lantern and Etta Candy.  Simone is at her best as she shows Diana defeating a Green Lantern not through physical combat &#8211; though she does hold her own there &#8211; but through mental warfare.  This is the woman who at one time was the champion of the goddess of wisdom, and at one time was the goddess of truth, herself.  That she should be able to best a Green Lantern in a mental battle makes perfect sense.<br />
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/youngliars02.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="youngliars" id="youngliars">PICK! Young Liars #2</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: David Lapham<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: David Lapham<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: David Lapham<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: tbd<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Jason:</strong> Now THAT&#8217;S what I&#8217;m talking about. Lapham comes back from what was (for me) a slightly disappointing first issue and delivers a solid, enthralling, and properly skewed story, making much better use of page layout, story pacing, captions, dialogue &#8211; everything in this second issue worked like gangbusters for me, usually in exact opposition to the ways the first issue didn&#8217;t work for me. I dunno, maybe I was just in a bad mood last time around. But not having the story delivered to me in blatant narrative captions was a real plus in this issue, and replacing those captions with lyrics to a song the main character is writing, (has written?) slowly paced-out over an alternately frustrating and thrilling and horrifying episode of his life, was a pitch-perfect mood choice. I&#8217;m a little confused as to how this series is going to be organized &#8211; this second issue does not flow directly from the first issue at all, but rather jumps to a completely different point in time. Is this going to be akin to Stray Bullets, where each issue is a discrete episode, with all of episodes weaving together into an oblique narrative tapestry? Or are we going back to what seemed to be a specific set-up for a larger story from last issue (the scheming trust fund kid and the &quot;buried treasure&quot;)? At this point, I don&#8217;t care, so long as Lapham keeps serving up more atmospheric experiences like this one.<br />
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<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/quentin-tarantine-robert-rodriguez-grindhouse-hits-theaters/41506/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Quentin Tarantine &#038; Robert Rodriguez&#8217; Grindhouse Hits Theaters</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/strangers-in-paradise-rip-sip/41960/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">R.I.P. SiP</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/gca-2008-best-comic-strip/43633/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">GCA 2008: Best Comic Strip</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/knight-rider-car-auctioned/41507/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Knight Rider Car Auctioned</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/first-pictures-of-robert-downey-jr-as-tony-stark/41511/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">First Pictures of Robert Downey Jr. As Tony Stark</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Picks &amp; Pans, April 02, 2008</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-april-02-2008-2/43591/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-april-02-2008-2/43591/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 05 Apr 2008 21:04:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-april-02-2008-2/43591/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[P&#038;P 04/02!]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>We&#8217;re getting going a little late this week, but we still have David Uzumeri of <a href="http://www.funnybookbabylon.com">Funnybook Babylon</a>, Ernie Estrella, Samantha of <a href="http://norprostitute.blogspot.com/">Neither Doormat Nor Prostitute</a>, and Jason Michelitch of <a href="http://jasonmichelitch.blogspot.com/">Jason Michelitch</a>. Jason even hooked us up with a <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=43589">lengthy review of Ganges #2</a>. Read on.</em></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/abesapien03.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="abe">PICK! Abe Sapien #3 of 5</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Mike Mignola<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Jason Shawn Alexander<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Jason Shawn Alexander<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Dave Stewart<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Dark Horse</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Mike Mignola and Jason Alexander collaborating together should be enough of a draw for this series. If not, perhaps the lure of an early solo adventure with Abe Sapien in a dark, occult story told in the Indiana Jones vein in a quest for a fabled artifact that&#8217;s proving to be more difficult to retrieve. It&#8217;s fun, it&#8217;s ink-black, and Alexander&#8217;s opening action sequence is one of those memorable scenes you&#8217;ll be talking amongst fellow Hellboy fans.<br />
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/action863.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="action">PICK! Action Comics #863</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Geoff Johns<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Gary Frank<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Jon Sibal<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Dave McCaig<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> This was pretty awesome, and a quite satisfactory payoff to this popular arc. Johns is giving himself a hell of a task here by trying to reenergize the original Legion, and it was probably a smart move to reintroduce them through the context of Superman in this way. Much like most Johns books, the arc has a definite theme to it meant to shine light on the main character, but it&#8217;s not executed very subtly. Still, a lot of fun and the teaser at the back should get some people excited (and more than a few annoyed).<br />
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/anna01.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="anna">PICK! Anna Mecury #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Warren Ellis <br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Facundo Percio<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: <br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: <br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Avatar Press</p>
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<p><strong>Jason:</strong> This is a promising if not completely barn-burning first issue. Ellis and Facundo present us with a neo-pulp scenario &#8211; silver dirigibles float over a Scientifictional Art Deco city which our protagonist, Anna Mercury, swings through like Spider-Man in a black leather outfit with big pistols on her hips, resembling Doc Savage re-imagined as dominatrix. There&#8217;s mysterious spy skullduggery, technological war-intrigue between such futuristic sounding geographies as &#8220;New Atraxia&#8221; and &#8220;Sheol City&#8221;, and a last-page twist which points the book in what I think is going to be a pretty interesting direction. It&#8217;s very Ellis-y, which is a plus for me, but I know not everyone shares my predilection for British anti-heroes being generally unpleasant to each other with clever dialogue while juggling violence and high-tech crises like so many chainsaws. And I know that Avatar&#8217;s trade-dress and recognizably similar production values can make you feel like every time you buy one of their books, you&#8217;re buying Lady Death, but, really, they&#8217;re giving Ellis and Ennis and Delano free rein to write what they want, which is what people who like mainstreamy genre comics but want more diversity and more creator control should really be supporting. You can bitch about skrulls online anytime you want &#8211; why not take the four bucks you were going to spend on Secret Invasion and give a book like this a try instead?<br />
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/asm555.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="asm">PICK! Amazing Spider-Man #555</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Zeb Wells<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Chris Bachalo<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Tim Townsend<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Chris Bachalo/Antonio Fabela<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> Get rid of the other three guys, put Wells on full-time. Seriously, this is the first issue that really capitalized on the promise of the BND concept for me. The dialogue&#8217;s witty, the art is gorgeous, Peter isn&#8217;t completely incompetent and the story is going in an interesting direction. Also, the great continuity fuckup with Strange&#8217;s house is now the subject of a No-Prize competition. Easily the best part of the new direction so far.<br />
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<p align="left"><em><strong><a name="cable">SEMI-PICK! Cable #2</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Duane Swierczynski<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Ariel Olivetti<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: n/a<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Ariel Olivetti<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> Pick up the pace. We&#8217;re at the end of issue two and we don&#8217;t really know anything more than could be inferred from Messiah CompleX and a cover. I&#8217;m really interested in this storyline, but Swierczynski really needs to start dropping some hints as to what&#8217;s going on. I&#8217;m hoping this is just a new writer finding his footing &#8211; it&#8217;s not <i>badly</i> written, it&#8217;s just very drab so far. Also, Ariel Olivetti&#8217;s computer-generated approach to backgrounds just looks *awful*, especially on the last page where Cable is apparently attacked by an untextured Quake III model brought to life. I really want to like this book, but they aren&#8217;t making it easy so far.<br />
      <img src="/scores/cplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/countdown04.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="countdown">PAN! Countdown #4</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Paul Dini, Sean McKeever, Keith Giffen &#038; Scott Beatty<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Jamal Igle &#038; Cliff Chiang<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Keith Champagne &#038; Cliff Chiang<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Tom Chu &#038; Cliff Chiang<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> I mostly don&#8217;t bother commenting on this one week to week, because the title took a nasty turn around week thirty or so in which it has almost consistently been a waste of time and money and there&#8217;s only so many ways I can say that the plot is boring and the heroes unworthy of their titles before I start to repeat myself.  Yet this week, it almost received a pick for three  reasons. One, Jason told Donna and the rest of the hypocrites to go screw themselves, something I would have done the first week.  Two, mere panels after Donna gives the craziest, most nonsensical lecture in the world to Jason about being selfish (oh, Donna, the mirror is calling your name) Mary Marvel came back more evil than ever to further prove how hypocritical Kyle and Donna are (apparently Jason is selfish, but Mary can take power from Darkseid and still be a poor little dear that needs help.) Karma, it is gorgeous. Three, no one mentioned the god awful virus that turns people to rats that someone thought would make an interesting storyline but is the only apocalypse story that made me actually laugh as people died off.</p>
<p>    All of these were good points, but ultimately, it gets a pan because the narrative makes it clear that we are actually supposed to think that the &#8220;challengers&#8221; are good and decent people instead of the horrible creatures that they actually are.<br />
      <img src="/scores/cminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/tec843.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="tec">PICK! Detective Comics #843</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Paul Dini<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Dustin Nguyen<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Derek Fridolfs<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: John Kalisz<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> People looking for Dini&#8217;s disconnected stories to start fitting together would do well to pay attention to this issue &#8211; I haven&#8217;t pored over previous ones yet, but this one makes clear there&#8217;s some kind of conspiracy behind it all. Nguyen&#8217;s art continues to impress, and my only real complaint with this issue is that, as fun a character as Zatanna is, turning her into a full-time supporting character in this book might be a questionable idea. Still, good.<br />
      <img src="/scores/b.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><em><strong><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/ganges02.jpg" align="left" /><a name="ganges">PICK! Ganges #2</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Kevin Huizenga<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Kevin Huizenga<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: n/a<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Kevin Huizenga<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Fantagraphics</p>
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<p><strong>Jason:</strong> Ganges #2 (&#8220;Pulverize&#8221;) is astonishing in how deftly it blends together its disparate story elements &#8211; it starts out artistic and conceptual, an extended visual abstraction of the notion of combat, which then shifts a story of everyman Glenn Ganges&#8217; past, focusing on, of all things, video games, and the modern male camaraderie that can be found within them, which in turn blends into an examination of both video games as a human experience and the confused dot-com corporate culture of the late 90s. Huizenga&#8217;s semi-cartoony style and monochromatic color scheme manages to convey everything in an intimate, quiet tone, while never being stiff or stilted. <br />
    Check out Jason&#8217;s full review of Ganges #2 <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=43589">here</a>.<br />
      <img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/infinityinc08.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="infinity">PICK! Infinity Inc. #8</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Peter Milligan<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Pete Woods<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Pete Woods<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Brad Anderson<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> Man, this is like a whole new comic. Pete Woods&#8217;s art gives everything a fresh new look, and Milligan&#8217;s fairly complex script becomes significantly more readable as a result. This issue also finally really defines the membership and the mission statement, which is a relief. Still, it&#8217;s almost definitely too little too late, as this book&#8217;s sales numbers are dangerously (I&#8217;d say almost irredeemably) low, but we&#8217;ll see what happens. <br />
      <img src="/scores/b.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/kickass02.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="kickass">PICK! Kick-Ass #2</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Mark Millar<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: John Romita, Jr.<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Tom Palmer<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Dean White<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics/Icon</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> Man, this is pure, undiluted Millar, and if that&#8217;s your thing,  you are going to fucking love this comic and laugh for 22 pages. If it&#8217;s not, you&#8217;re going to think this is the most obnoxious thing ever printed. I thought it was hilarious, but it&#8217;s not because it&#8217;s taking potshots at its main character anymore; you can kind of feel this rare Mark Millar optimism behind all the cursing and ultra-violence and semi-cliched badassery.<br />
      <img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/logan02.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="logan">SPLIT DECISION! Logan #2</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian K. Vaughan<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Eduardo Risso<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Eduardo Risso<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Dean White<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> The action really picks up in this fine Eduardo Risso showcase. In fact, Risso tells a story so well with his art, Brian K. Vaughan is even stepping aside a bit and letting Risso &#8220;tell&#8221; the story in the panels instead of in the balloons. It&#8217;s a crazy World War II story in the lovable, voodoo Logan doll-type story but I&#8217;m beginning to wonder just who this war soldier who&#8217;s got a bone to pick is. That and the pretty pictures are enough to get me to that final issue.<br />
      <img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Jason:</strong> Am I the only one who found the second issue of Logan to be a faintly embarrassing disappointment? The first issue wasn&#8217;t Shakespeare, but it was pretty decent &#8211; a straightforward war story (Wolverine/Logan in WW2 breaks out of Japanese POW camp) with a little battle-torn love/lust thrown in (meets Japanese woman whose father has died in the war) and a tragic curve ball at the end of it (it&#8217;s all taking place in Hiroshima in 1945). That first issue was evocative enough that readers were probably writing the rest of the story themselves &#8211; un-killable Logan gets caught in the atomic bomb blast and is haunted by it in the future, which ends up with him fighting whatever the demon-ghost thing is in the present-day intro to the first issue. I figured the demon-ghost thing was going to be something a little bit more abstract or poetic, but now it seems that it&#8217;s a random mutant who was also caught in the blast and lived on as a giant burning skeleton with special powers, which is infinitely more boring in a book which takes itself this seriously. And the woman Logan meets just sticks around long enough to boff him and then die in a very poorly choreographed fight scene (she jumps at him with a sword, but then he takes the time to attach the bayonet to his rifle before she actually lands? And then she&#8217;s suddenly very far away from him but still inside the small house? And then&#8230;I&#8217;m not sure. Awful.) Oh, and the bombing of Hiroshima turns into an awkward metaphor for Logan sort of losing his virginity, or at least &#8220;becoming a man&#8221;. Classy! Maybe Vaughan will pull this all together in the last issue, but I can&#8217;t say this is giving me much incentive to find out.<br />
      <img src="/scores/d.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/nightwing143.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="nightwing">PICK! Nightwing #143</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Peter J. Tomasi<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Don Kramer<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Christian Alamy &#038; Mark McKenna<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Nathan Eyring<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> It&#8217;s possible that this one issue has more  character development (of the positive nature) in it  than both the runs of  Chuck Dixon and Devin Grayson combined. Nightwing manages to tease his  kid brother, share with us his thoughts on coconuts and Stark Trek, and  show us that all the nasty wounds Judd Winick imposed upon the Grayson-Harper friendship are healed while simultaneously freeing  a group of enslaved minions. Dick is both smart and smart-alecy, and it&#8217;s a combination that works to show just how much the character has grown since his days in short pants, especially with Robin next to him. There&#8217;s  a very casual teasing  between Dick and his cohorts that makes him even more of a  lovable and relatable character than he already was.</p>
<p>    The panels between Dick and Roy were my favorites, mostly because I hated what was done to them during Outiders.  I do hope this is the kind of characterization that Judd Winick will  use in his Titans, particularly between Dick and Roy, though  given his past performances and love for drama between team members, it is unlikely. That&#8217;s too bad,  because those  few panels in this comic showed how Titans should treat each other, something that has been missing for some time in the actual Titans title.<br />
      <img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/scalped16.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="supergirl">PICK! Scalped #16</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jason Aaron<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: R.M. Guera<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: R.M. Guera<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Giulia Brusco<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> This is fast becoming my favorite monthly grind because of well-paced story that sucks you in from the first page and doesn&#8217;t let you go until the last. The characters of the Rez are three-dimensional, and as they carousel in and out each month, I think back to the last time I had this same sense of character intrigue was back in the pages of Preacher when it originally came out. Certain players will crawl under your skin while others you want to stand in front of you in street brawl. In this latest issue we Dash has just as much brains as he does brawn, and we get to see who the big man in town really is. Seemingly a shuttle issue that gets us point C to point D, we really get to peel the layers back on Dash and Red Crow. And for those waiting for trades on Scalped, don&#8217;t. Jason Aaron and R.M. Guera give you an episodic comic so brutal that it&#8217;s best taken in bites. For your health, pick up this comic. <br />
      <img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/secretinvasion01.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="secretinvasion">PICK! Secret Invasion #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Michael Bendis<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Leinil Francis Yu<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Mark Morales<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Laura Martin<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> I was actually fully expecting not to like this story, so it had a long, long way to go to make me be interested  and it actually delivered.  There are certainly parts that make me shake my head, such as when Iron Man is trying to arrest people for violating a stupid law when he should be far more worried about the invasion, and Reed Richards should be smarter than to fall for the trap he falls prey to at the end of the story. But overall, the story sets a very appropriate tone. There is a scene in which Iron Man calls for the Avengers to assemble, and it comes across as a very joyless command, in contrast to the rallying battle cry it has been in the past. Likewise, when Luke Cage is expressing his frustration  at the world he lives in, I was nodding my head right there with him. Those are the kind of character moments that make a large scale crossover worth the effort, and why, for now, I&#8217;m  on board to see where the Secret Invasion takes us.<br />
      <img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/supergirl28.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="supergirl">PICK! Supergirl #28</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Kelley Puckett<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Drew Johnson &#038; Ron Randall<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Ray Snyder &#038; Ron Randall<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Brad Anderson<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> This is completely great, and finally Puckett&#8217;s run is starting to pick up, really rolling with the premise of Supergirl trying to make a more positive and proactive difference in the lives of everyday citizens. A lot happens in this issue, and it&#8217;s all both highly amusing and completely unexpected, while also carving out a unique niche for this book in the DC Universe. I hope it gets the attention it deserves, but after the borderline abrasive beginning of Puckett&#8217;s run people might just not care anymore. I hope I get the chance to see this story through to its conclusion, though &#8211; it&#8217;s quirky and different and I&#8217;m worried the market won&#8217;t reward it for that.<br />
      <img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/youngavengers03.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="youngavengers">SEMI-PICK! Young Avengers #3</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Alina Urusov<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Alina Urusov<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Alina Urusov<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> Oh, how it hurts me to say anything negative about this story at all. I love the Young Avengers, and I love Wiccan as a character. Moreover, I really wanted to see a story in which they actually go and search for their &#8220;mother,&#8221; the Scarlet Witch, and that&#8217;s exactly what this promised to be.</p>
<p>    But that&#8217;s not what this is.  This is page after page of background that anyone  who read Young Avengers and Avengers already knew, with a few extra panels of filler  where we learn that Billy has a really great boyfriend, which again, we already knew.  The dream sequence at the beginning is interesting, but it&#8217;s a plot point that is hastily dropped.</p>
<p>    The overall result is a very frustrating read. The characterization is great, but  nothing actually happens in this story and in a superhero comic, I want something to <i>happen.</i><br />
      <img src="/scores/cplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/youngxmen01.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="youngxmen">SEMI-PICK! Young X-Men #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Marc Guggenheim<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Yanick Paquette<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Ray Snyder<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Rob Schwager<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> Also a disappointment, as Guggenheim plays everything by the numbers except for a mildly interesting (read: almost definitely temporary) last page reveal. Paquette&#8217;s art looks great, but there just wasn&#8217;t much in this issue to grab me &#8211; again, it wasn&#8217;t bad by any means, just fairly mediocre with some truly awful &#8216;urban&#8217; dialogue from one new character. I&#8217;ll stick with it for a while to see if it improves, but this first issue just didn&#8217;t grab me.<br />
      <img src="/scores/cplus.gif"></p>
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<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/quentin-tarantine-robert-rodriguez-grindhouse-hits-theaters/41506/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Quentin Tarantine &#038; Robert Rodriguez&#8217; Grindhouse Hits Theaters</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/gca-2008-best-comic-strip/43633/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">GCA 2008: Best Comic Strip</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/strangers-in-paradise-rip-sip/41960/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">R.I.P. SiP</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/first-pictures-of-robert-downey-jr-as-tony-stark/41511/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">First Pictures of Robert Downey Jr. As Tony Stark</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/knight-rider-car-auctioned/41507/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Knight Rider Car Auctioned</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Picks &amp; Pans &#8211; March 26, 2008</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-march-26-2008/43533/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-march-26-2008/43533/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 29 Mar 2008 00:36:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-march-26-2008/43533/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The line-up: David Uzumeri of Funnybook Babylon, Ernie Estrella, Gavin Jasper of 4thletter!, and AHR of Geekanerd. The big winners: All-Star Superman #10, Blue Beetle #25 The reviews: DOUBLE PICK! All-Star Superman Writer: Grant Morrison Penciller: Frank Quitely Inker: n/a Colorist: Jamie Grant Publisher: DC Comics Ernie: Grant Morrison stories have a way of leaving [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>The line-up: David Uzumeri of <a href="http://www.funnybookbabylon.com">Funnybook Babylon</a>, Ernie Estrella, Gavin Jasper of <a href="http://www.4thletter.net/">4thletter!</a>, and AHR of <a href="http://www.geekanerdblog.com">Geekanerd</a>.<br />
The big winners: All-Star Superman #10, Blue Beetle #25<br />
The reviews:</em></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/allstar10.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="allstar">DOUBLE PICK! All-Star Superman</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Grant Morrison<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Frank Quitely<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: n/a<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Jamie Grant<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Grant Morrison stories have a way of leaving your mind shattered in pieces. Everything he&#8217;s done in this series has been a fabulous trip down memory lane of what makes Superman, well, super. So what Superman does in this issue, knowing he is dying will&#8230; well, blow your mind. My only wish is that each of these issues contains enough material for dozens more to explore and DC would be justified in publishing each one. Leave us wanting more, right? I won&#8217;t say more about the contents of the story but will say that this has a good argument to be Morrison&#8217;s greatest mainstream work to date!<br />
      <img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> The quality of this book shouldn&#8217;t come as a surprise at this point, but somehow, I didn&#8217;t think it&#8217;d be <i>this</i> good. I&#8217;ll admit it kind of started having a downturn for me with the Bizarro arc, but this issue was nearly perfect. This is a short review because it&#8217;s almost redundant &#8211; everyone knows how good this book is. This might be the best issue.<br />
      <img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/panther35.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="panther">PICK! Black Panther #35</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Reggie Hudlin<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Cafu<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Francis Portela<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Val Staples<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> Finally, it&#8217;s a Black Panther comic again, dealing with characters, themes and concepts you&#8217;d expect to find in a Black Panther book. In other words, Hudlin is doing his best full-on Priest impression here, and much like it did during the World Tour arc, it elevates the book. After almost a year now of bizarre (and, in my opinion, poorly written) sci-fi action, we&#8217;re back to the intrigue, scheming and politics that made Priest&#8217;s run so great. It&#8217;s still an imitation, but a huge improvement.<br />
      <img src="/scores/b.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/beetle25.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="beetle">DOUBLE PICK! Blue Beetle #25</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: John Rogers<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Rafael Albuquerque<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Rafael Albuquerque<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Guy Major<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> This is the best kind of comic issue. Blue Beetle has already been an unbelievable series, filled with fantastic action, humor, art and characterization. It&#8217;s been consistently good for its first two years. This issue is one of those that tie everything together as a the main Jaime vs. Reach plot finally comes to a close. Closure is handed out all over like it&#8217;s Halloween, laced with crazy style. The cover acts as a bit of a spoiler, but you&#8217;ll be so enthralled that you forget about most of it until it happens. Had this been the final issue, I would be content on seeing it go. The fact that it&#8217;ll keep moving on is just the icing on the cake.<br />A little touch that pushes this issue over the edge is that Jaime&#8217;s had to deal with being a cog in the Beetle legacy. Not only has he proven himself by now, but this issue has his series surpass Ted Kord&#8217;s solo series in longevity. That&#8217;s cool.<br />
      <img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>AHR:</strong> The title of this issue indicates it&#8217;s the conclusion of a four part story arc.  Not so.  This is the conclusion of a story that began twenty-five issues ago; the transformation of teenager Jaime Reyes into the third Blue Beetle.  Over the last two years John Rogers has given readers a nuts-and-bolts look into the makings of a young superhero, and in this climatic issue you can see past adventures reflected in every decision Jaime makes. It&#8217;s Continuity Heaven.<br />Rogers and artist Rafael Albuquerque flip smoothly between two massive action set pieces; a land battle between alien invaders and the book&#8217;s huge supporting cast, and a suspenseful escape as Jaime and the Scarab struggle to destroy The Reach&#8217;s space fleet from the inside out.<br />Rogers&#8217; writing of the Scarab as a thinking, feeling character has never been more emotionally charged, and this issue expands on the artifact&#8217;s origins in a way that is both surprising and completely appropriate.  We&#8217;re left with no doubt that this book is really about the transformation of <i>two</i> heroes, who by working together have realized who they are and what they&#8217;re capable of.  Here&#8217;s to a long career of hero-ing for both of them.<br />
      <img src="/scores/aplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/dandare05.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="dare">PICK! Dan Dare #5</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Garth Ennis<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Gary Erskine<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Gary Erskine<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Parasuraman A.<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Virgin Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> The Prime Minister has sold our planet out to the Mekon and his plan has been discovered. Dare&#8217;s lost his last best friend and the Mekon has his fleet outnumbered and control a black hole that&#8217;s just swallowed up Pluto and its moons. Now Dare&#8217;s going to turn himself over to the Mekon? Think Dare&#8217;s finished? No way.  I don&#8217;t know how the earlier incarnations of Dare were when Garth Ennis read them, but I do know that he&#8217;s writing a modern-day space/war hero I can get behind. Trust me if you&#8217;re not looking for a pair of boots to strap on and are ready to die for your country, hell, your planet after reading this, you have no pulse. These are ballsy guys doing ballsy things and there&#8217;s a rush of adrenaline in these types of Ennis adventures. Each issue you get the sense of patriotism, and heroism at its finest, if but just for 15 minutes each month.<br />
      <img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/fredd06.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="fred">PAN! Freddy vs Jason vs Ash #6</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jeff Katz/James Kuhoric<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Jason Craig<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: n/a<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: <br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Wildstorm</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> This entire miniseries is a comic adaptation of a film script never meant to see the light of day. I tried to be excited about it, but it looks like the concept just doesn&#8217;t work like it should. I liked Freddy vs. Jason and I liked the Evil Dead movies, but Ash doesn&#8217;t seem to fit with his slasher brethren. When you have two unkillable monsters fighting each other, the only real enjoyment you&#8217;re getting is from the cool visuals. Those seem to be lacking here, with our sloppily-drawn main characters slugging it out in front of a bland, blue background in every panel. It&#8217;s a final encounter that doesn&#8217;t meet the build-up. Another problem is that Ash&#8217;s narration is really, really bad. I know Ash is supposed to be one of the coolest badasses to ever exist, but not every single sentence he says is meant to sound overly hip, especially when he has 17 narration boxes over the course of two pages.<br />
      <img src="/scores/d.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/gl29.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="gl">PICK! Green Lantern #27</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Geoff Johns<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Ivan Reis<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Oclair Albert<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Randy Mayor<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> In a very well-timed change of pace for the series, we now go back to Hal Jordan&#8217;s pre-Green Lantern life and lay out a lot of the background material Johns has been hinting at since the start of this volume. After a long few issues of nonstop action, the pace shifts completely to a down-to-earth family drama, and it&#8217;s kind of remarkable how well Johns and Reis keep the reader&#8217;s interest regardless. Reis is just as talented at everyday life as he was with cyborgs blowing up gods, and the last page promises that despite the change of pace Johns isn&#8217;t losing sight of what brought everyone to the book in Sinestro Corps War. Great stuff.<br />
      <img src="/scores/aminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/jack21.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="jack">SEMI-PAN! Jack of Fables #21</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Bill Willingham/Matthew Sturges<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Tony Akins<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Tony Akins<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Daniel Vozzo<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> English Literature hounds beware, this issue&#8217;s for you. The Pathetic Fallacy puts a Shakespeare play together, but like many of William&#8217;s plays, this one&#8217;s a tragedy. It&#8217;s a fun filler issue but in the end doesn&#8217;t hold up to issues past. I would have liked to have seen it stretched out to a two-story arc because it felt really rushed. The crowd reactions to the play work as a running gag and Jack&#8217;s weakness seems to prove time and time again to lie in his pants. More of the literary jokes will be bonuses for those who&#8217;ve been around a stage or two but it may also go over some heads. <br />
      <img src="/scores/c.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/ma11.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="mavengers">SPLIT DECISION! Mighty Avengers #11</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Michael Bendis<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Mark Bagley/Marko Djurdjevic<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Danny Miki with Allen Martinez<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Justin Ponsor<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> When this series initially started, I wasn&#8217;t all that into it. This whole Doctor Doom adventure brushes those thoughts away. I love Doom and I love Bendis. Having Bendis write Doom is the comic equivalent of someone getting peanut butter in your chocolate. When you get right down to it, he doesn&#8217;t even seem to do all that much in this issue, yet he steals the show. I gasped when Doom snapped and ranted at Ms. Marvel, then laughed my ass off. I don&#8217;t care if it&#8217;s misogynistic, it was so over-the-top that I couldn&#8217;t help but lose it. When Doom slapped Ares, I had to think that no matter how top tier Doom is, he may had just signed his death warrant. When you look back at that scene and look at the ending, the old gypsy got off lightly.<br />Also in this issue, we finally see the Sentry get the rub he&#8217;s needed for a while to truly establish himself as the king of the superhero mountain. <br />
      <img src="/scores/a.gif"></p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> I&#8217;m one reader who sided with Captain America in the whole Civil War shebang, so perhaps that sours my disposition a bit on Mighty Avengers which is lead by Tony Stark. Ms. Marvel, Wonder Man, Spider-Woman, it all reminds me of the days of the West Coast Avengers which wasn&#8217;t necessarily a bad title in its day but it wasn&#8217;t great either. Bendis plays with the narrative in this series with the thought balloons and it&#8217;s a novel idea, but I don&#8217;t really need to know what everyone is thinking while they&#8217;re saying something else. It gets a little cumbersome at times. This is the conclusion of the Dr. Doom arc and in all of the great Doom stories you almost see his side, you feel the passion with which drives him and you almost feel like jumping on his side, but not here. There is a great finish but the problem of knowing what the next few weeks will bring in Secret Invasion is that you just want to get to it already. <br />
      <img src="/scores/c.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/na39.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="navengers">PICK! New Avengers #39</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Michael Bendis<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: David Mack<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: David Mack<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Jose Villarubia<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Brian Bendis and David Mack have collaborated before with the character of Echo in the pages of Daredevil and they get to do a little two-step dip back in showing how close Echo and the Skrulls got. The relationship and history of Echo and Logan is flirted with too but who hasn&#8217;t Wolverine had history with? I mean, really? Like I said above, knowing that Secret Invasion is looming this is a brief 4-way stop before getting there. What&#8217;s notable though is to just how much the Skrulls have adapted in way of their powers and abilities. Also by the end, one can wrap their heads around every possibility on who&#8217;s a skrull and who isn&#8217;t to the point of insanity. <br />
      <img src="/scores/bminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/ppd01.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="pack">PICK! Power Pack Day One #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Fred van Lente<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Gurihiru<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Gurihiru<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Gurihiru<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> I&#8217;m not a Power Pack fan, nor am I really the intended audience of Power Pack Day One, but this is a good comic for Marvel Zombies in training wheels. At $3 for a comic it&#8217;s childish fluff but for that transition from story books to comics, it&#8217;s still a fine price for keeping a kid motivated to read. The risk though is the draw of the Power Pack origin enough to get someone to try it cold? Well that&#8217;s for readers to determine but there are young comic readers out there, and those who still find it troubling to be inspired to read in school. Comics have always been a useful tool in encouraging reading. Most comic buyers will pass or you may have to beg your retailer to stock this, but for those searching for new, regular titles for their young ones, this is not a bad start.<br />
      <img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/spirit15.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="spirit">PICK! The Spirit #15</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Sergio Aragonés/Mark Evanier<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Paul Smith<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Paul Smith<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Lee Loughridge<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Sergio Aragonés and Mark Evanier do a wonderful job keeping Will Eisner&#8217;s Spirit as a fairly light, new-reader friendly, all-ages read. The cast of colorful Eisner characters move each story forward with personality and charm until the crime is solved, or the bad guy is caught. Even though the story is self-contained, there&#8217;s enough to each story that one feels like it&#8217;s a cliff notes version of the story; you really do get a complete story. Unfortunately unlike the first year of this contemporary turn of the Spirit and DC&#8217;s other reader friendly title, Jonah Hex this lacks a bit of teeth and ever-so-slight edge to it that it once had. Does everything have to have that edge, no, but my preferences tend to lean towards ones that do. <br />
      <img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/wolverinefc01.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="wolv">PICK! Wolverine First Class #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Fred van Lente<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Andrea di Vito<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Andrea di Vito<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Laura Villari<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> If there weren&#8217;t enough mutant titles at Marvel, we revisit the early days of the X-Men and look into &#8220;untold secrets&#8221; of days past. For the debut, Wolverine is forced to take Kitty out on her first mission as an X-Men on a classic recon mission to fetch a mutant in distress. Almost like an episode of X-Men Animated, Wolverine: First Class is a brisk, light history treading that&#8217;s perfect for younger readers or those nostalgic for the fan-favorites in their most revered time period. The story, mostly told in Kitty&#8217;s point of view, is light on substance but captures everything that was fun about those early X-Men tales. (I never get tired of the X-Men playing sports on the manion.)I&#8217;ve read a lot worse X-Men titles. But my question is: does the modern day reader have enough money or care to revisit this time period, yet again? Why wouldn&#8217;t they pick up a trade paperback written by Chris Claremont? How much are we really going to learn? Questions aside, Fred Van Lente and Andrea Di Vito do a nice job on this niche title, but it may be too much back-stepping for hardcore X-Men zombies.<br />
      <img src="/scores/bminus.gif"></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/xmen209.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="xmen">PICK! X-Men Legacy #209</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Mike Carey<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Scot Eaton/Billy Tan<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: John Dell/Billy Tan<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Frank D&#8217;Armata/Brian Reber<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.</strong> What I find so remarkable about this comic is how together it feels despite the fact that by all accounts everything involved should feel thrown together and poorly constructed. It&#8217;s a book that revels in, rather than denying, the quirks of X-Men continuity, while also managing to make depictions of past events general enough that anybody could follow along. For old readers, it exposes and explores twists in what they new (that are logical, and don&#8217;t seem like retcons); for new readers, it gives them reconstructions of iconic X-Men events. Carey&#8217;s understanding and analysis of X-Men history is deft and pointed, cutting through the layers of artifice and bullshit to the core of these characters and the history of their conflicts. Way better than it should be.<br />
      <img src="/scores/bplus.gif"></p>
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<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/quentin-tarantine-robert-rodriguez-grindhouse-hits-theaters/41506/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Quentin Tarantine &#038; Robert Rodriguez&#8217; Grindhouse Hits Theaters</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/strangers-in-paradise-rip-sip/41960/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">R.I.P. SiP</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/gca-2008-best-comic-strip/43633/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">GCA 2008: Best Comic Strip</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/first-pictures-of-robert-downey-jr-as-tony-stark/41511/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">First Pictures of Robert Downey Jr. As Tony Stark</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/knight-rider-car-auctioned/41507/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Knight Rider Car Auctioned</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Picks &amp; Pans &#8211; March 19, 2008</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-march-19-2008/43492/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-march-19-2008/43492/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 21 Mar 2008 22:06:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.popcultureshock.com/?p=43492</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Whoops! We&#8217;re running a little behind schedule today, mostly because I got the great idea to try a new P&#038;P design. It lists more info, but it&#8217;s also a little longer. Give us some feedback on it! Does it look good? Awful? Too much, too little, too late? Let us know. However, our Picks &#038; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Whoops! We&#8217;re running a little behind schedule today, mostly because I got the great idea to try a new P&#038;P design. It lists more info, but it&#8217;s also a little longer. Give us some feedback on it! Does it look good? Awful? Too much, too little, too late? Let us know.<br />
However, our Picks &#038; Pans gang is in full effect, with Samantha of <a target=_blank href="http://norprostitute.blogspot.com/">Neither Doormat Nor Prostitute</a>, <a target=_blank href="http://jasonmichelitch.blogspot.com">Jason Michelitch</a>, David Uzumeri of <a href="http://www.funnybookbabylon.com">Funnybook Babylon</a>, Ernie Estrella, and Gavin Jasper of <a href="http://www.4thletter.net/">4thletter!</a> talking about this past week&#8217;s comics. There were a number of big winners&#8211; Captain America #36 and Incredible Hercules #115 being particularly well-reviewed. Ernie even managed to say everything I wanted to say about 100 Bullets, too. Jason&#8217;s got a full review of War Is Hell #1 <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=43478">up here</a>, if&#8217;n you&#8217;re interested.</em></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/100bullets89.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="100">PICK! 100 Bullets #89</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Azzarello<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Eduardo Risso<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Eduardo Risso<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Trish Mulvihill<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Location, location, and location. One of the endless &#8220;bullet&#8221; points as to why this book is so good, is the locations. Every place this epic takes place whether it&#8217;s Vegas, Chicago, New York, Rome, Paris, Miami, Atlantic City, border towns, hell even Cleveland and takes the best of each to romanticize this world but each location has its own mystique, dark corners and hidden past. These spots are where the characters in 100 Bullets are born, bred, and play. The beginning of the end starts here, in the beginning of what will likely be the last two stories in the series. Pick this up with the trades that build to this point and see where the lines in the sand are drawn and who steps behind them. <br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  A</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/bop116.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="bop">PICK! BIRDS OF PREY #116</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Sean McKeever<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Nicola Scott<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Doug Hazlewood<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Hi-Fi<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> This title&#8217;s been languishing for a while, certainly since McKeever took over, and arguably, since OYL began.  But, while a long way from perfect, it regained some of its lost momentum in this title. First and foremost, Helena&#8217;s personality came back! As she was fighting with Zinda in attempt to get Zinda to overcome the brainwashing, she sounded like the old feisty Helena.  No spouting off about anyone being &#8220;pure of spirit,&#8221; as she was doing last issue.  Her battle cry this time was one of a woman who doesn&#8217;t want to hurt her  friend, but will commence butt-kicking if necessary &#8211; and frankly, with Helena, that should always be on the menu.  That Zinda overcame the drugging of her own free will also rang very true to the type of women who brought me to this title in the first place, back when it was Dinah and Babs.  That point is further driven home when Barbara tells Misfit that Zinda and Helena can take care of themselves.<br /> Yeah, they really can, and it was great to see them do it so competently and well.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  B</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/capam36.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="cap">DOUBLE PICK! CAPTAIN AMERICA #36</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Ed Brubaker<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Butch Guice &#038; Mike Perkins<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Butch Guice &#038; Mike Perkins<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Frank D&#8217;Armata<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong>  Ed Brubaker&#8217;s Cap is like a roller coaster &#8211; no, seriously, hear me out. You can see about five yards in front of you most of the time, and you can always tell what the next twist is going to be. But the overall picture &#8211; and the meticulousness of its construction &#8211; will completely elude you until the end, when you walk off and look at it in perspective. That&#8217;s this run, and that&#8217;s why every &#8216;shocker&#8217; in this book has seemed so fascinating and yet inevitable. This is the last part of &#8220;The Burden of Dreams&#8221;, the second act of the Cap&#8217;s Death Saga, and it ends on a moment of crushing weight for the storyline. God, I love this comic.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  A</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> In this issue, we really see Bucky struggling to live up to the ideals Steve established during his time in the costume.  We see it physically, after Bucky gets thoroughly trounced by Crossbones.  We also see it mentally, as he tries &#8211; and fails &#8211; to deliver the speech that Steve would have given to calm the protesters.  And most gratifyingly of all, we see him struggling as he admits that, as much as he&#8217;s trying to live up to what Steve would have been, he&#8217;s also doing this for himself, to make up for all the years he spent under mind control. Mixed in between all this lovely character development are some excellent fight scenes with Sin and Crossbones, and the best Tony Stark Marvel has produced in years.<br /> The pregnancy plot is still stupid. If anyone at Marvel is a Skrull, I want that baby to be. But despite Sharon&#8217;s annoying presence in this story, it&#8217;s still one of my top picks out of the last month.<br />
          <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  A-</td>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/catwoman77.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="catwoman">PICK! CATWOMAN #77</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Will Pfeifer<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: David Lopez<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Alvaro Lopez<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Jeremy Cox &#038; Guy Major<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong>  When this issue starts, Selina is still trapped inside her &#8220;mental submission&#8221; box on the alien prison planet.  As such, she believes she is in a world in which she can do anything she wants. This, for the reader, has the delightful side effect of letting her go through and kick everyone in the JLA&#8217;s butt. It is sheer gratuitous hero on hero violence at its best.  As the story ends, however, both the reader and Selina realize that this is all just a figment of her mind trying to give her a perfect world to make up for the shambles of a life she has back home, and Selina vows that if she could pick up the pieces and determine her own fate in the fake version of her life, she can do so in real life, too. I hope so, because I would like to have a Selina I can root for again, like I used to pre-OYL and like I did in this issue.<br /> Also, this issue made me care a lot more about the prison planet nonsense than the last two issues of JLA combined have.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  B+</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/dong7.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="dotng">SEMI-PAN! DEATH OF THE NEW GODS #7</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jim Starlin<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Jim Starlin<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Art Thibert<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Jeremy Cox<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U:</strong> This comic is so specifically targeted that I&#8217;m kind of stymied DC has made it the backbone of this whole event cycle; that said, maybe the original idea for Countdown was a more general, &#8216;reader-friendly&#8217; version of this title. (They failed.) My main comment regarding this issue is the cheap trick Starlin plays regarding last issue&#8217;s cliffhanger &#8211; I don&#8217;t want to elaborate, but it&#8217;s a really dirty narrative trick that left me with a bad taste in my mouth for the rest of the issue. Luckily, it improves after that, with solid character moments as everything goes towards a fairly predictable final destination. This book really isn&#8217;t for the average reader, and Starlin&#8217;s distaste for some characters (like Scott Free) makes it somewhat unpalatable for a lot of hardcore Kirby fans, too. It&#8217;s a fun guessing game and Starlin&#8217;s Metron is still great, but it&#8217;s not a great comic.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  C</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/fables71.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="fables">PICK! FABLES #71</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Bill Willingham<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Mark Buckingham<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Steve Leialoha<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Lee Loughridge<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> &#8220;Cinderella Cut it Up One Time&#8230; Let&#8217;s talk about war, bay-bee, let&#8217;s talk about war, bay-bee. Let&#8217;s talk about all the goblins and the dead guys there will be&#8230;&#8221; Like every issue of Fables, you never know what type of story you&#8217;ll get. You just get it all with this series. This time around, Cinder-fucking-rella plays a game of espionage and does so efficiently–and succinctly–I might add. She&#8217;s to obtain an important part for the war against the adversary. Bill Willingham and the boys blue, Mark Buckingham and Steve Leialoha cut up the spy game playing by all the rules when you need to and then knowing just when to break them. It seems like every story that comes up, I say, &#8220;Ooh, this is going to be the big one.&#8221; and that&#8217;s what this crew continually accomplishes nearly every single storyline, topping themselves and building on the massive world they&#8217;ve recreated. <br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  A-</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/flash238.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="flash">DOUBLE PICK! FLASH #238</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Tom Peyer<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Freddie E. Williams II<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: n/a<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Tanya &#038; Richard Horie<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> I don&#8217;t really like Wally West.  I generally think that Barry was a better Flash, and Bart was a better person, so I&#8217;m kind of annoyed that we&#8217;re stuck with Wally as Flash again.  I mostly read his comic because he&#8217;s a former Titan, and I have Titan obligation issues. That bias being in place, I still really loved this issue.  It really brought Wally down off the pedestal he&#8217;s been on &#8211; he&#8217;s not portrayed as the greatest Flash ever, as Waid had a tendency to do too often. He worries about being a good dad, gets a (deserved) lecture from Jay Garrick, and is cranky and irritable, but understandably so considering he&#8217;s an unemployed father of two kids who may wake up older than he is tomorrow.  But on the flip side, he&#8217;s a very good dad and has the only (currently) healthy marriage at DC in which he and Linda are genuine partners.  This issue made me like Wally, and fall in love with his family &#8211; which is important since the title is about all four of them, and not just Wally himself. Also on the positive side, the art is gorgeous, and I look forward to seeing Spin cause some more havoc in Wally&#8217;s life.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  A</p>
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<p><strong>David U:</strong> Iloved Tom Peyer on Hourman, and here he does a pretty good job of keeping up the lighthearted tone Mark Waid set. It really harkens back to the Flash stores of the early &#8217;90s, with silly villains that really only act as catalysts for stories about Wally&#8217;s life and his place in the DC Universe as the perennial working-class hero. Nothing incredibly special, and West-family haters won&#8217;t be swayed, but I enjoyed it.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  B</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/fx1.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="FX">PAN! FX #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Wayne Osborne<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: John Byrne<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: John Byrne<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: John Byrne<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: IDW</p>
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<p><strong>Jason:</strong> I know everybody is pretty much done with John Byrne these days, but I still love his art. There&#8217;s a great energy to his comics, and I always wished he&#8217;d done more things like Danger Unlimited, self-contained bursts of adventure, as opposed to diddling around with the Fourth World or The Demon, trying to prove to the world that he understood how to do Kirby&#8217;s characters better than anyone else, as if being the best Johnny-come-lately was somehow something to aspire to. (Oh, hey, I just caught the pun with &#8220;Johnny-come-lately&#8221;. Completely unintended, but now I love it). Anyway – though I wish he wouldn&#8217;t ink himself, I still like Byrne&#8217;s art, and so for about the first third of FX I was tricked into thinking it was a good comic book. Then I started actually paying attention to the script by Wayne Osborne, and realized just how much of a half-assed early-Spider-Man rip off the whole thing was, only with less believable teenaged dialogue than even Stan Lee was able to muster. There&#8217;s something sort of admirable about how the superpower the main character acquires is basically the ultimate in eight-year-old wish-fulfillment: being able to do any of the things he pretends to do when he&#8217;s goofing around with his buddy (like pointing his finger pretending it&#8217;s a ray gun, only to have it shoot actual rays). And, yes, the kid really does name himself &#8220;FX&#8221; as a superhero, as in, &#8220;wouldn&#8217;t this look great as movie FX?&#8221; I&#8217;m not sure if this book is a blatant try for a movie option, or just nostalgia-heavy for old superhero books, or both. At least there&#8217;s a giant talking gorilla for the hero to fight, so it wasn&#8217;t a total loss. And, y&#8217;know, the art was good.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  D</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/ghost20.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="ghost1">FLASHBACK PICK! GHOST RIDER #20</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jason Aaron<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Roland Boschi<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Roland Boschi<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Dan Brown<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> Ghost Rider is one title that I was never drawn to despite all of the inspired creative teams over the years. But  Jason Aaron is a big fan of the Rider, and he knows these characters back to front. Thanks to the Daniel Way&#8217;s run, Ghost Rider&#8217;s an angel instead of  demon and is hunting down the rogue angel, Zadkiel. I didn&#8217;t know what to expect, but it certainly wasn&#8217;t this. This new direction is something fresh in the Marvel landscape with everything else seemingly involved in a post-Civil War or the Skree Invasion. I was never drawn into the nineties connection with Blade and the Nightstalkers, and the movie did nothing to get me interested but setting churches ablaze, nurses toting uzis, and fire and brimstone battle between heaven and hell–this sounds like fun! And Roland Boschi&#8217;s art reminds me of when an unknown Jae Lee broke onto the scene with Namor, I hope he remains for Aaron&#8217;s entire run and we can see him grow as an artist. Aaron is the reason I picked up Ghost Rider this month but I have a good feeling I&#8217;ll be picking it up for the next couple of years for many more. <br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  A-</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/ghost21.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="ghost2">DOUBLE PICK! GHOST RIDER #21</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jason Aaron<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Roland Boschi<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Roland Boschi<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Dan Brown<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong> In &#8220;Hell-Bent and Heaven Bound&#8221; Jason Aaron is taking a character who in my opinion is in Marvel&#8217;s third or fourth class and taking him close to the top of the second. He&#8217;s taking everything that&#8217;s slick about Johnny Blaze and really emphasizing that by placing him in 70&#8242;s exploitation-type story. I understand the apprehension, people, I am talking about Ghost Rider but here&#8217;s the hook. After taking on the devil, Blaze finds out all this time he&#8217;s been a tool of the baddest-ass rogue angel behind the pearly gates, Zadkiel. So the hunt is on and heaven&#8217;s throwing everything at this guy including a hospital where nurses are packing semi-automatic heat. It&#8217;s a hip premise complete with flesh devouring creatures and corn field fisticuffs. Aaron&#8217;s also answering the question: why is Montana such a large state and so sparsely populated? You can hear the soundtrack skipping, smell the leather burning off the pages, and witness the making of the turnaround of the year. Pick this up!<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  A</p>
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<p><strong>David U:</strong> Jason Aaron mentioned he was going for a sort of grindhouse theme with this comic, and he&#8217;s succeeding without making the story seem fluffy or weightless. In terms of subject matter and tone, this really reminds me of Preacher in all the ways Way (ha) was reaching for but never got, and I hope Aaron fits some time for character development in eventually (but since this is only his second issue, I&#8217;m willing to give him a balls-out-the-gate opening few issues).<br />
          <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  B+</td>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/herc115.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="herc">DOUBLE PICK! INCREDIBLE HERCULES #115</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Greg Pak &#038; Fred Van Lente<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Khoi Pham<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Paul Neary with Danny Miki<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Dennis Calero<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U:</strong> I thought this book was going to be good, but like everyone else, I don&#8217;t think anybody was expecting it to be THIS good. From interviews, as far as I can tell even Pak and Van Lente are surprised by the reaction. They shouldn&#8217;t be &#8211; this is a completely amazing comic that deserves all the praise, a well-constructed surprise hit in the vein of Immortal Iron Fist. This issue wraps up the first arc beautifully, continuing the great mixture of introspection, mythology and humor that marked the first three issues. I&#8217;m really excited for the future of this comic. <br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  A</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> Greg Pak finds characters with potential and makes sure they fulfill that potential. That&#8217;s what he did for Hulk and that&#8217;s what he&#8217;s doing for Hercules. Hell, the guy was able to do it for freaking Johnny Ohm and Brigade, but that&#8217;s neither here nor there. It&#8217;s great that Marvel was able to take the momentum Hercules gathered from <i>Civil War</i> and make it into one of their best ongoing series. The issue is filled with great humor, great character interactions, absolutely fantastic action (the list of badass things Ares has done grows longer) and a really nice moment where Hercules explains the true story of one of the old myths about him. I can&#8217;t say enough good things about this series. Loeb stealing the Hulk for himself and crapping it up is <b>almost</b> worth it.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  A+</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/ironfist13.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="fist">PICK! IRON FIST #13</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Ed Brubaker &#038; Matt Fraction<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Tonci Zonjic, David Aja, Kano<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Tonci Zonjic, David Aja, Kano<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Matt Hollingsworth<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> Part of me never wants this storyline to end. There seem to be like fifty different subplots going on here, but not a single one fails to keep my attention. I&#8217;ve found that Fraction&#8217;s main skill is to make you think the story is going in a certain direction, only to go in a different, more exciting direction. That&#8217;s definitely what I feel with this whole storyline. From the first issue it looked like we&#8217;d be seeing some variation of Iron Fist vs. Davos in the end, yet we&#8217;re getting something infinitely better. The coolest thing about this issue is the flashbacks to Wendell Rand&#8217;s past. The entire thing is a sweet parallel to Danny&#8217;s initial storyline, back in the 70&#8242;s.<br /> Now come on, guys. Give us a Fat Cobra spin-off already! <br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  A</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/invincible49.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="invincible">PICK! INVINCIBLE #49</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Robert Kirkman<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Ryan Ottley<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Ryan Ottley<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Bill Crabtree<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Image Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong>  It&#8217;s the setup for the major shakeup that&#8217;s been hyped for the next issue, as well as closure to the Doc Seismic crossover story. The main story here is the long-teased confrontation between Invincible and Cecil, which is the natural thing to do. After all, the series got off the ground by having Mark learn his father&#8217;s dark secrets and challenge him. Now it&#8217;s the same, but different. The real highlight of issue is Invincible&#8217;s explosion at another hero and the hypocrisy that comes from it. I don&#8217;t mean hypocrisy from what Mark&#8217;s done in an earlier issue, as Cecil brings up, but from what he was <i>going to do</i> in this one. <br />  You can hate on this issue for not being the next, but it delivered everything I could have asked for.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  A</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/jla19.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="flash">PAN! JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #19</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Alan Burnett<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Ed Benes<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Sandra Hope, Mariah Benes, Ruy José<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Pete Pantazis<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> As I sit here trying to express my discontent with this issue, I realize there are a number of problems I could pick. I could complain about bad characterization, for one, and the fact that Cheshire has tried to kill almost everyone Roy has loved at one point or the other and making him be obsessed with her makes me wonder if he&#8217;s having a smack relapse.  Failing that, I could complain about the plot holes from the last issue to this one.<br /> But worst than any other complaint I have about the story is the simple fact that it was boring. For all that it&#8217;s supposed to be dramatic &#8211; government plots! prison planets! lost teammates! two back-up quivers! &#8211; the issue kept trying to whip up my suspense, and delivered no payoff. This may be, admittedly, because I can&#8217;t care about the prison world plot.  Or it may be because none of the writers that keep trying to sell me on it have managed to make it interesting enough to hold my attention.  Whichever the case, I can forgive a superhero comic for a lot of things, but I can&#8217;t forgive it for being boring.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  D+</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/eagle1.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="eagle">PICK! WAR IS HELL: THE FIRST FLIGHT OF THE PHANTOM EAGLE #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Garth Ennis<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Howard Chaykin<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Howard Chaykin<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Brian Reber<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Jason:</strong> WAR IS HELL: THE FIRST FLIGHT OF THE PHANTOM EAGLE is a new WWI aviation comic written by Garth Ennis, and thus is a guaranteed purchase for me. I always thought that WAR STORIES from DC/Vertigo was one of Garth Ennis&#8217;s finest hours as a writer, and apparently someone at Marvel did too. Something about war clearly brings out the best in Ennis, and Howard Chaykin is as worthy a collaborator (if not moreso) than any of the WAR STORIES artists. <br /> WAR IS HELL opens like the crack of a whip. The first two images (1 full page + 1 double-page spread) set the tone so well, it&#8217;s like a great guitar phrase dragging you into a strong drum beat kicking off your favorite single&#8230;<br />
    <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=43478">Click here for a link to Jason&#8217;s full review.</a><br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  A</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/wolv23.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="wolv">SEMI-PAN! WOLVERINE ORIGINS #23</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Daniel Way<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Steve Dillon<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Steve Dillon<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Avalon&#8217;s Matt Milla<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong>  This whole story arc has really just been Daniel Way&#8217;s audition for doing a new Deadpool series. I hold a lot against Way, namely because I read every single issue of his horrendous <i>Venom</i> run, but in terms of writing Wade, he isn&#8217;t all that bad. Therein lies the problem. The last few issues have been the Wade Wilson Show, having very little to do with Wolverine and his Origins. Is it funny? Sure. He even does a good job with depicting Deadpool as being insane instead of simply wacky. But someone is going to buy this trade and get really annoyed when they finish reading it in ten minutes. This entire arc is just one, big decompressed fight scene. That&#8217;s fine when it&#8217;s just one issue, but stretching it this far just doesn&#8217;t fly.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong>  C</p>
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<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/gca-2008-best-comic-strip/43633/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">GCA 2008: Best Comic Strip</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/quentin-tarantine-robert-rodriguez-grindhouse-hits-theaters/41506/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Quentin Tarantine &#038; Robert Rodriguez&#8217; Grindhouse Hits Theaters</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/strangers-in-paradise-rip-sip/41960/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">R.I.P. SiP</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-march-12-2008/43413/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Picks &#038; Pans &#8211; March 19, 2008</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/knight-rider-car-auctioned/41507/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Knight Rider Car Auctioned</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Picks &amp; Pans &#8211; March 19, 2008</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-march-12-2008/43413/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-march-12-2008/43413/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 14 Mar 2008 19:54:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-march-12-2008/43413/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Picks &#038; Pans, March 12]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Whoops! We&#8217;re running a little behind schedule today, mostly because I got the great idea to try a new P&#038;P design. It lists more info, but it&#8217;s also a little longer. Give us some feedback on it! Does it look good? Awful? Too much, too little, too late? Let us know.<br />
However, our Picks &#038; Pans gang is in full effect, with Samantha of <a target=_blank href="http://norprostitute.blogspot.com/">Neither Doormat Nor Prostitute</a>, <a target=_blank href="http://jasonmichelitch.blogspot.com">Jason Michelitch</a>, David Uzumeri of <a href="http://www.funnybookbabylon.com">Funnybook Babylon</a>, Ernie Estrella, and Gavin Jasper of <a href="http://www.4thletter.net/">4thletter!</a> talking about this past week&#8217;s comics. There were a number of big winners&#8211; Captain America #36 and Incredible Hercules #115 being particularly well-reviewed. Ernie even managed to say everything I wanted to say about 100 Bullets, too. Jason&#8217;s got a full review of War Is Hell #1 <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=43478">up here</a>, if&#8217;n you&#8217;re interested.</em></p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/100bullets89.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="100">PICK! 100 Bullets #89</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Brian Azzarello<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Eduardo Risso<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Eduardo Risso<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Trish Mulvihill<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong>Location, location, and location. One of the endless &#8220;bullet&#8221; points as to why this book is so good, is the locations. Every place this epic takes place whether it&#8217;s Vegas, Chicago, New York, Rome, Paris, Miami, Atlantic City, border towns, hell even Cleveland and takes the best of each to romanticize this world but each location has its own mystique, dark corners and hidden past. These spots are where the characters in 100 Bullets are born, bred, and play. The beginning of the end starts here, in the beginning of what will likely be the last two stories in the series. Pick this up with the trades that build to this point and see where the lines in the sand are drawn and who steps behind them. <br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> A</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/bop116.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="bop">PICK! BIRDS OF PREY #116</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Sean McKeever<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Nicola Scott<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Doug Hazlewood<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Hi-Fi<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong>This title&#8217;s been languishing for a while, certainly since McKeever took over, and arguably, since OYL began.  But, while a long way from perfect, it regained some of its lost momentum in this title. First and foremost, Helena&#8217;s personality came back! As she was fighting with Zinda in attempt to get Zinda to overcome the brainwashing, she sounded like the old feisty Helena.  No spouting off about anyone being &#8220;pure of spirit,&#8221; as she was doing last issue.  Her battle cry this time was one of a woman who doesn&#8217;t want to hurt her  friend, but will commence butt-kicking if necessary &#8211; and frankly, with Helena, that should always be on the menu.  That Zinda overcame the drugging of her own free will also rang very true to the type of women who brought me to this title in the first place, back when it was Dinah and Babs.  That point is further driven home when Barbara tells Misfit that Zinda and Helena can take care of themselves.<br /> Yeah, they really can, and it was great to see them do it so competently and well.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> B</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/capam36.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="cap">DOUBLE PICK! CAPTAIN AMERICA #36</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Ed Brubaker<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Butch Guice &#038; Mike Perkins<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Butch Guice &#038; Mike Perkins<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Frank D&#8217;Armata<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U.:</strong> Ed Brubaker&#8217;s Cap is like a roller coaster &#8211; no, seriously, hear me out. You can see about five yards in front of you most of the time, and you can always tell what the next twist is going to be. But the overall picture &#8211; and the meticulousness of its construction &#8211; will completely elude you until the end, when you walk off and look at it in perspective. That&#8217;s this run, and that&#8217;s why every &#8216;shocker&#8217; in this book has seemed so fascinating and yet inevitable. This is the last part of &#8220;The Burden of Dreams&#8221;, the second act of the Cap&#8217;s Death Saga, and it ends on a moment of crushing weight for the storyline. God, I love this comic.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> A</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong>In this issue, we really see Bucky struggling to live up to the ideals Steve established during his time in the costume.  We see it physically, after Bucky gets thoroughly trounced by Crossbones.  We also see it mentally, as he tries &#8211; and fails &#8211; to deliver the speech that Steve would have given to calm the protesters.  And most gratifyingly of all, we see him struggling as he admits that, as much as he&#8217;s trying to live up to what Steve would have been, he&#8217;s also doing this for himself, to make up for all the years he spent under mind control. Mixed in between all this lovely character development are some excellent fight scenes with Sin and Crossbones, and the best Tony Stark Marvel has produced in years.<br /> The pregnancy plot is still stupid. If anyone at Marvel is a Skrull, I want that baby to be. But despite Sharon&#8217;s annoying presence in this story, it&#8217;s still one of my top picks out of the last month.<br />
          <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> A-</td>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/catwoman77.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="catwoman">PICK! CATWOMAN #77</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Will Pfeifer<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: David Lopez<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Alvaro Lopez<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Jeremy Cox &#038; Guy Major<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong> When this issue starts, Selina is still trapped inside her &#8220;mental submission&#8221; box on the alien prison planet.  As such, she believes she is in a world in which she can do anything she wants. This, for the reader, has the delightful side effect of letting her go through and kick everyone in the JLA&#8217;s butt. It is sheer gratuitous hero on hero violence at its best.  As the story ends, however, both the reader and Selina realize that this is all just a figment of her mind trying to give her a perfect world to make up for the shambles of a life she has back home, and Selina vows that if she could pick up the pieces and determine her own fate in the fake version of her life, she can do so in real life, too. I hope so, because I would like to have a Selina I can root for again, like I used to pre-OYL and like I did in this issue.<br /> Also, this issue made me care a lot more about the prison planet nonsense than the last two issues of JLA combined have.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> B+</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/dong7.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="dotng">SEMI-PAN! DEATH OF THE NEW GODS #7</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jim Starlin<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Jim Starlin<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Art Thibert<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Jeremy Cox<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U:</strong>This comic is so specifically targeted that I&#8217;m kind of stymied DC has made it the backbone of this whole event cycle; that said, maybe the original idea for Countdown was a more general, &#8216;reader-friendly&#8217; version of this title. (They failed.) My main comment regarding this issue is the cheap trick Starlin plays regarding last issue&#8217;s cliffhanger &#8211; I don&#8217;t want to elaborate, but it&#8217;s a really dirty narrative trick that left me with a bad taste in my mouth for the rest of the issue. Luckily, it improves after that, with solid character moments as everything goes towards a fairly predictable final destination. This book really isn&#8217;t for the average reader, and Starlin&#8217;s distaste for some characters (like Scott Free) makes it somewhat unpalatable for a lot of hardcore Kirby fans, too. It&#8217;s a fun guessing game and Starlin&#8217;s Metron is still great, but it&#8217;s not a great comic.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> C</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/fables71.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="fables">PICK! FABLES #71</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Bill Willingham<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Mark Buckingham<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Steve Leialoha<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Lee Loughridge<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics/Vertigo</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong>&#8220;Cinderella Cut it Up One Time&#8230; Let&#8217;s talk about war, bay-bee, let&#8217;s talk about war, bay-bee. Let&#8217;s talk about all the goblins and the dead guys there will be&#8230;&#8221; Like every issue of Fables, you never know what type of story you&#8217;ll get. You just get it all with this series. This time around, Cinder-fucking-rella plays a game of espionage and does so efficiently–and succinctly–I might add. She&#8217;s to obtain an important part for the war against the adversary. Bill Willingham and the boys blue, Mark Buckingham and Steve Leialoha cut up the spy game playing by all the rules when you need to and then knowing just when to break them. It seems like every story that comes up, I say, &#8220;Ooh, this is going to be the big one.&#8221; and that&#8217;s what this crew continually accomplishes nearly every single storyline, topping themselves and building on the massive world they&#8217;ve recreated. <br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> A-</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/flash238.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="flash">DOUBLE PICK! FLASH #238</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Tom Peyer<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Freddie E. Williams II<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: n/a<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Tanya &#038; Richard Horie<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong>I don&#8217;t really like Wally West.  I generally think that Barry was a better Flash, and Bart was a better person, so I&#8217;m kind of annoyed that we&#8217;re stuck with Wally as Flash again.  I mostly read his comic because he&#8217;s a former Titan, and I have Titan obligation issues. That bias being in place, I still really loved this issue.  It really brought Wally down off the pedestal he&#8217;s been on &#8211; he&#8217;s not portrayed as the greatest Flash ever, as Waid had a tendency to do too often. He worries about being a good dad, gets a (deserved) lecture from Jay Garrick, and is cranky and irritable, but understandably so considering he&#8217;s an unemployed father of two kids who may wake up older than he is tomorrow.  But on the flip side, he&#8217;s a very good dad and has the only (currently) healthy marriage at DC in which he and Linda are genuine partners.  This issue made me like Wally, and fall in love with his family &#8211; which is important since the title is about all four of them, and not just Wally himself. Also on the positive side, the art is gorgeous, and I look forward to seeing Spin cause some more havoc in Wally&#8217;s life.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> A</p>
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<p><strong>David U:</strong>Iloved Tom Peyer on Hourman, and here he does a pretty good job of keeping up the lighthearted tone Mark Waid set. It really harkens back to the Flash stores of the early &#8217;90s, with silly villains that really only act as catalysts for stories about Wally&#8217;s life and his place in the DC Universe as the perennial working-class hero. Nothing incredibly special, and West-family haters won&#8217;t be swayed, but I enjoyed it.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> B</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/fx1.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="FX">PAN! FX #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Wayne Osborne<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: John Byrne<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: John Byrne<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: John Byrne<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: IDW</p>
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<p><strong>Jason:</strong>I know everybody is pretty much done with John Byrne these days, but I still love his art. There&#8217;s a great energy to his comics, and I always wished he&#8217;d done more things like Danger Unlimited, self-contained bursts of adventure, as opposed to diddling around with the Fourth World or The Demon, trying to prove to the world that he understood how to do Kirby&#8217;s characters better than anyone else, as if being the best Johnny-come-lately was somehow something to aspire to. (Oh, hey, I just caught the pun with &#8220;Johnny-come-lately&#8221;. Completely unintended, but now I love it). Anyway – though I wish he wouldn&#8217;t ink himself, I still like Byrne&#8217;s art, and so for about the first third of FX I was tricked into thinking it was a good comic book. Then I started actually paying attention to the script by Wayne Osborne, and realized just how much of a half-assed early-Spider-Man rip off the whole thing was, only with less believable teenaged dialogue than even Stan Lee was able to muster. There&#8217;s something sort of admirable about how the superpower the main character acquires is basically the ultimate in eight-year-old wish-fulfillment: being able to do any of the things he pretends to do when he&#8217;s goofing around with his buddy (like pointing his finger pretending it&#8217;s a ray gun, only to have it shoot actual rays). And, yes, the kid really does name himself &#8220;FX&#8221; as a superhero, as in, &#8220;wouldn&#8217;t this look great as movie FX?&#8221; I&#8217;m not sure if this book is a blatant try for a movie option, or just nostalgia-heavy for old superhero books, or both. At least there&#8217;s a giant talking gorilla for the hero to fight, so it wasn&#8217;t a total loss. And, y&#8217;know, the art was good.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> D</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/ghostrider20.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="ghost1">FLASHBACK PICK! GHOST RIDER #20</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jason Aaron<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Roland Boschi<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Roland Boschi<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Dan Brown<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong>Ghost Rider is one title that I was never drawn to despite all of the inspired creative teams over the years. But  Jason Aaron is a big fan of the Rider, and he knows these characters back to front. Thanks to the Daniel Way&#8217;s run, Ghost Rider&#8217;s an angel instead of  demon and is hunting down the rogue angel, Zadkiel. I didn&#8217;t know what to expect, but it certainly wasn&#8217;t this. This new direction is something fresh in the Marvel landscape with everything else seemingly involved in a post-Civil War or the Skree Invasion. I was never drawn into the nineties connection with Blade and the Nightstalkers, and the movie did nothing to get me interested but setting churches ablaze, nurses toting uzis, and fire and brimstone battle between heaven and hell–this sounds like fun! And Roland Boschi&#8217;s art reminds me of when an unknown Jae Lee broke onto the scene with Namor, I hope he remains for Aaron&#8217;s entire run and we can see him grow as an artist. Aaron is the reason I picked up Ghost Rider this month but I have a good feeling I&#8217;ll be picking it up for the next couple of years for many more. <br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> A-</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/ghostrider21.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="ghost2">DOUBLE PICK! GHOST RIDER #21</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Jason Aaron<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Roland Boschi<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Roland Boschi<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Dan Brown<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Ernie:</strong>In &#8220;Hell-Bent and Heaven Bound&#8221; Jason Aaron is taking a character who in my opinion is in Marvel&#8217;s third or fourth class and taking him close to the top of the second. He&#8217;s taking everything that&#8217;s slick about Johnny Blaze and really emphasizing that by placing him in 70&#8242;s exploitation-type story. I understand the apprehension, people, I am talking about Ghost Rider but here&#8217;s the hook. After taking on the devil, Blaze finds out all this time he&#8217;s been a tool of the baddest-ass rogue angel behind the pearly gates, Zadkiel. So the hunt is on and heaven&#8217;s throwing everything at this guy including a hospital where nurses are packing semi-automatic heat. It&#8217;s a hip premise complete with flesh devouring creatures and corn field fisticuffs. Aaron&#8217;s also answering the question: why is Montana such a large state and so sparsely populated? You can hear the soundtrack skipping, smell the leather burning off the pages, and witness the making of the turnaround of the year. Pick this up!<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> A</p>
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<p><strong>David U:</strong>Jason Aaron mentioned he was going for a sort of grindhouse theme with this comic, and he&#8217;s succeeding without making the story seem fluffy or weightless. In terms of subject matter and tone, this really reminds me of Preacher in all the ways Way (ha) was reaching for but never got, and I hope Aaron fits some time for character development in eventually (but since this is only his second issue, I&#8217;m willing to give him a balls-out-the-gate opening few issues).<br />
          <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> B+</td>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/herc115.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="herc">DOUBLE PICK! INCREDIBLE HERCULES #115</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Greg Pak &#038; Fred Van Lente<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Khoi Pham<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Paul Neary with Danny Miki<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Dennis Calero<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>David U:</strong>I thought this book was going to be good, but like everyone else, I don&#8217;t think anybody was expecting it to be THIS good. From interviews, as far as I can tell even Pak and Van Lente are surprised by the reaction. They shouldn&#8217;t be &#8211; this is a completely amazing comic that deserves all the praise, a well-constructed surprise hit in the vein of Immortal Iron Fist. This issue wraps up the first arc beautifully, continuing the great mixture of introspection, mythology and humor that marked the first three issues. I&#8217;m really excited for the future of this comic. <br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> A</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong>Greg Pak finds characters with potential and makes sure they fulfill that potential. That&#8217;s what he did for Hulk and that&#8217;s what he&#8217;s doing for Hercules. Hell, the guy was able to do it for freaking Johnny Ohm and Brigade, but that&#8217;s neither here nor there. It&#8217;s great that Marvel was able to take the momentum Hercules gathered from <i>Civil War</i> and make it into one of their best ongoing series. The issue is filled with great humor, great character interactions, absolutely fantastic action (the list of badass things Ares has done grows longer) and a really nice moment where Hercules explains the true story of one of the old myths about him. I can&#8217;t say enough good things about this series. Loeb stealing the Hulk for himself and crapping it up is <b>almost</b> worth it.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> A+</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/ironfist13.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="fist">PICK! IRON FIST #13</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Ed Brubaker &#038; Matt Fraction<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Tonci Zonjic, David Aja, Kano<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Tonci Zonjic, David Aja, Kano<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Matt Hollingsworth<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong>Part of me never wants this storyline to end. There seem to be like fifty different subplots going on here, but not a single one fails to keep my attention. I&#8217;ve found that Fraction&#8217;s main skill is to make you think the story is going in a certain direction, only to go in a different, more exciting direction. That&#8217;s definitely what I feel with this whole storyline. From the first issue it looked like we&#8217;d be seeing some variation of Iron Fist vs. Davos in the end, yet we&#8217;re getting something infinitely better. The coolest thing about this issue is the flashbacks to Wendell Rand&#8217;s past. The entire thing is a sweet parallel to Danny&#8217;s initial storyline, back in the 70&#8242;s.<br /> Now come on, guys. Give us a Fat Cobra spin-off already! <br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> A</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/invincible49.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="invincible">PICK! INVINCIBLE #49</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Robert Kirkman<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Ryan Ottley<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Ryan Ottley<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Bill Crabtree<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Image Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> It&#8217;s the setup for the major shakeup that&#8217;s been hyped for the next issue, as well as closure to the Doc Seismic crossover story. The main story here is the long-teased confrontation between Invincible and Cecil, which is the natural thing to do. After all, the series got off the ground by having Mark learn his father&#8217;s dark secrets and challenge him. Now it&#8217;s the same, but different. The real highlight of issue is Invincible&#8217;s explosion at another hero and the hypocrisy that comes from it. I don&#8217;t mean hypocrisy from what Mark&#8217;s done in an earlier issue, as Cecil brings up, but from what he was <i>going to do</i> in this one. <br />  You can hate on this issue for not being the next, but it delivered everything I could have asked for.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> A</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/jla19.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="flash">PAN! JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #19</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Alan Burnett<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Ed Benes<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Sandra Hope, Mariah Benes, Ruy José<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Pete Pantazis<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: DC Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Samantha:</strong>As I sit here trying to express my discontent with this issue, I realize there are a number of problems I could pick. I could complain about bad characterization, for one, and the fact that Cheshire has tried to kill almost everyone Roy has loved at one point or the other and making him be obsessed with her makes me wonder if he&#8217;s having a smack relapse.  Failing that, I could complain about the plot holes from the last issue to this one.<br /> But worst than any other complaint I have about the story is the simple fact that it was boring. For all that it&#8217;s supposed to be dramatic &#8211; government plots! prison planets! lost teammates! two back-up quivers! &#8211; the issue kept trying to whip up my suspense, and delivered no payoff. This may be, admittedly, because I can&#8217;t care about the prison world plot.  Or it may be because none of the writers that keep trying to sell me on it have managed to make it interesting enough to hold my attention.  Whichever the case, I can forgive a superhero comic for a lot of things, but I can&#8217;t forgive it for being boring.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> D+</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/eagle1.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="eagle">PICK! WAR IS HELL: THE FIRST FLIGHT OF THE PHANTOM EAGLE #1</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Garth Ennis<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Howard Chaykin<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Howard Chaykin<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Brian Reber<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Jason:</strong>WAR IS HELL: THE FIRST FLIGHT OF THE PHANTOM EAGLE is a new WWI aviation comic written by Garth Ennis, and thus is a guaranteed purchase for me. I always thought that WAR STORIES from DC/Vertigo was one of Garth Ennis&#8217;s finest hours as a writer, and apparently someone at Marvel did too. Something about war clearly brings out the best in Ennis, and Howard Chaykin is as worthy a collaborator (if not moreso) than any of the WAR STORIES artists. <br /> WAR IS HELL opens like the crack of a whip. The first two images (1 full page + 1 double-page spread) set the tone so well, it&#8217;s like a great guitar phrase dragging you into a strong drum beat kicking off your favorite single&#8230;<br />
    <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=43478">Click here for a link to Jason&#8217;s full review.</a><br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> A</p>
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<p align="left"><img src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/wolverine23.jpg" align="left" /><em><strong><a name="wolv">SEMI-PAN! WOLVERINE ORIGINS #23</a></em></strong><br />
    <strong>Writer</strong>: Daniel Way<br />
        <strong>Penciller</strong>: Steve Dillon<br />
        <strong>Inker</strong>: Steve Dillon<br />
        <strong>Colorist</strong>: Avalon&#8217;s Matt Milla<br />
    <strong>Publisher</strong>: Marvel Comics</p>
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<p><strong>Gavin:</strong> This whole story arc has really just been Daniel Way&#8217;s audition for doing a new Deadpool series. I hold a lot against Way, namely because I read every single issue of his horrendous <i>Venom</i> run, but in terms of writing Wade, he isn&#8217;t all that bad. Therein lies the problem. The last few issues have been the Wade Wilson Show, having very little to do with Wolverine and his Origins. Is it funny? Sure. He even does a good job with depicting Deadpool as being insane instead of simply wacky. But someone is going to buy this trade and get really annoyed when they finish reading it in ten minutes. This entire arc is just one, big decompressed fight scene. That&#8217;s fine when it&#8217;s just one issue, but stretching it this far just doesn&#8217;t fly.<br />
      <strong> SHOCK VALUE:</strong> C</p>
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<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/gca-2008-best-comic-strip/43633/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">GCA 2008: Best Comic Strip</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/quentin-tarantine-robert-rodriguez-grindhouse-hits-theaters/41506/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Quentin Tarantine &#038; Robert Rodriguez&#8217; Grindhouse Hits Theaters</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/strangers-in-paradise-rip-sip/41960/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">R.I.P. SiP</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-march-19-2008/43492/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Picks &#038; Pans &#8211; March 19, 2008</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/knight-rider-car-auctioned/41507/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Knight Rider Car Auctioned</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Picks &amp; Pans &#8211; March 05, 2008</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-march-05-2008/43364/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-march-05-2008/43364/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 07 Mar 2008 20:28:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.popcultureshock.com/picks-pans-march-05-2008/43364/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Let&#8217;s get right into it! We&#8217;ve got, in no particular order, Jumpin&#8217; Jason Michelitch, Amazing AHR of Geekanerd, Snazzy Samantha of Neither Doormat Nor Prostitute, Groovy Gavin Jasper of 4thletter!, and, as always, Evergreen Ernie Estrella hitting you with Picks and Pans&#8230; check below for a few Scans, too. PICK: Buffy The Vampire Slayer: Season [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Let&#8217;s get right into it! We&#8217;ve got, in no particular order, <a target=_blank href="http://jasonmichelitch.blogspot.com">Jumpin&#8217; Jason Michelitch</a>, Amazing AHR of <a target=_blank href="http://www.geekanerdblog.com">Geekanerd</a>, Snazzy Samantha of <a target=_blank href="http://norprostitute.blogspot.com/">Neither Doormat Nor Prostitute</a>, Groovy Gavin Jasper of <a target="_blank" href="http://www.4thletter.net">4thletter!</a>, and, as always, Evergreen Ernie Estrella hitting you with Picks and Pans&#8230; check below for a few Scans, too.</em></p>
<p><a name="buffy"></a><br />
<h2>PICK: Buffy The Vampire Slayer: Season Eight #12</h2>
<p><img id="image43365" src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/buffy121.jpg" alt="buffy121.jpg" height="195" width="125" class="imageframe" align="left" hspace="8"/> Buffites or Scoobie Snacks of whatever they&#8217;re called need no recommendation to buy this book, but for those like myself who have only a passing acquaintance with the Buffyverse, this <a href="http://news.google.com/news?oe=utf-8&#038;rls=org.mozilla%3Aen-US%3Aofficial&#038;client=firefox-a&#038;um=1&#038;tab=wn&#038;hl=en&#038;q=buffy+vampire+%2312&#038;btnG=Search+News">much</a> talked-about issue represents a tempting chance to get on board.  Spoiler alert if you don&#8217;t read the internet, but this of course is the issue where Buffy hooks up with one of the slayers, and by hooks up I mean lesbian sex, which, as a lesbian, I&#8217;m a fan of.  But this shocking turn of events aside, writer Drew Goddard starts his run on this series by slipping into the ping-pong ball dialogue with ease and a light touch where relationship talk is involved.  The nuts and bolts of the story&#8217;s exposition will be a little hard to grasp for the uninitiated, but that&#8217;s what Wikipedia is for.  once the madcap comedy revs up, the grand design of the plot takes a backseat and the LOLs come free of context.  It’s the funniest comic I&#8217;ve read in several months, bolstered by crisp artwork rich with personality. All this and some casual ruminations on the fluid nature of sexuality &#8211; book of the week, for sure.  <strong>SHOCK VALUE: A+</strong> <em>-AHR</em></p>
<p><a name="crisis"></a><br />
<h2>PAN: Countdown to Final Crisis #8</h2>
<p><img src="/2006/43364/955510_ful.jpg" width="125" align="right" hspace="8"/> You know what would have made this storyline 500 times better? If the characterization was remotely consistent from week to week. Case in point, Jason has managed to go the entire trip and has only killed the Joker during that time. All of the sudden, now he&#8217;s back to being the blood thirsty psycho who kills first and asks questions later? Also, why are all these newbies acting like Ray Palmer has never been a hero (I mean, I know he was cowering and whining for the past two issues, but again, lousy and inconsistent characterization) when he&#8217;s been a member of the League? The best I can say about this story is that at least Kyle wasn&#8217;t a jerk this time around. <strong>SHOCK VALUE: D</strong> <em>-Samantha</em></p>
<p><a name="detective"></a><br />
<h2>PICK: Detective Comics #842</h2>
<p>When fighting alongside the other superheroes against their supervillain opponents on the Beyonder&#8217;s planet, Bruce Wayne tore up his Batman costume to the point that he needed to replace it with a living suit of armor that gave him extra strength and abilities at the cost of making him hunger for brains. Well, maybe not, but that&#8217;s what the story feels like. It feels like what the whole Venom symbiote story would have been like if the host wasn&#8217;t a humongous spaz like Spider-Man. I make fun, but it was quite good and one of the better things I can remember from Peter Milligan in a while.<br />
<strong>SHOCK VALUE: B</strong> <em>-Gavin</em></p>
<p><a name="echo"></a><br />
<h2>DOUBLE PICK: Echo #1</h2>
<div><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/viewer/?p=43357#1"><img width=70 height=110 src="/2006/43357/43357_1-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/viewer/?p=43357#2"><img width=70 height=110 src="/2006/43357/43357_2-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/viewer/?p=43357#3"><img width=70 height=110 src="/2006/43357/43357_3-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/viewer/?p=43357#4"><img width=70 height=110 src="/2006/43357/43357_4-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/viewer/?p=43357#5"><img width=70 height=110 src="/2006/43357/43357_5-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/viewer/?p=43357#6"><img width=70 height=110 src="/2006/43357/43357_6-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/viewer/?p=43357#7"><img width=70 height=110 src="/2006/43357/43357_7-.jpg"></a></div>
<p><em>Excerpted from Jason&#8217;s <a href="http://jasonmichelitch.blogspot.com/2008/03/comics-review-echo-1.html">full review</a>&#8230;</em> I was able to look at [Echo] on its own merits, and it&#8217;s pretty good. Not amazing, but solid work with an intriguing premise, sort of reminiscent of the kind of fun, smart adventure movie Hollywood used to produce when it remembered how. There&#8217;s a shadowy military project with a slightly crazy and ruthless leader, the female innocent bystander drawn into the mix by accident, and a charming park ranger who&#8217;s no doubt destined to become a helping hand or even a love interest (the female bystander/main character is shown to have something of a void in her romantic life). None of the characters really hint at any depth yet, but they seem perfectly likable in the ways their respective roles demand. &#8230; <strong>SHOCK VALUE: B+</strong>  <em>-Jason</em></p>
<p>Woman on the cover pelted by  silver rain? I&#8217;m game. <Waitaminute. Do I allow myself to be step into a quicksand created by Terry Moore? I'm trying to save money, really I am.> It can&#8217;t be that deep. I think I can walk across. Woman in hypersonic flying suit&#8230; <okay...I can walk across this puddle> and jet behind her pointing missiles at her&#8230;<Huh?> Things go boom. <Wait, I'm up to my knees in water!> That&#8217;s not rain&#8230; <Water's up to my neck now... help...> Yeah. I got sucked back in that easy, Terry, hope you enjoyed your break. <strong>SHOCK VALUE: A-</strong> <em>-Ernie</em></p>
<p><a name="newfrontier"></a><br />
<h2>SPLIT VERDICT: Justice League: The New Frontier Special</h2>
<p><img src="/2006/43364/955517_ful.jpg" width="125" align="right" hspace="8"/> I consider New Frontier to be perhaps the best comic I have ever read, so I was fully prepared to enjoy this comic. But no matter how much I wanted to, I couldn&#8217;t because the complexity and characterizations that made New Frontier such a joy to read were completely missing this time around. There are three stories: Batman versus Superman, Kid Flash and Robin team up, and a completely bizarre and offensive Wonder Woman and Black Canary take on feminism story. The first story makes me wonder how Batman and Superman ever developed the deep friendship they supposedly had in New Frontier, the second story is being better<br />
told in Teen Titans Year One, and the last one features Diana protesting against Playboy by stripping her top (because not wearing a bra and going topless are the same thing&#8230;I guess?) and calling men pigs every other panel, something she managed not to do during the original New Frontier storyline. In sum, the entire exercise felt like an insane and unfortunate parody  in which the only thing that matched standard of quality set by New Frontier was the art. <strong>SHOCK VALUE: C-</strong> <em>-Samantha</em></p>
<p>Yes! More tricks in Darwyn Cooke&#8217;s bag! He just couldn&#8217;t stay away and thankfully so, we get three short team-ups featuring the World&#8217;s Finest, Diana and Black Canary, and the beginning of a TITAN-ic friendship, get it? *ahem* Cooke, J. Bone, and David Bullock (storyboard artist for the New Frontier animated movie) pump out a nostalgic reminder of the great maxi-series that preceded it. There&#8217;s a lot of tongue and cheek–Cooke style–and just great chemistry on panel and behind. This is hot off the heels of the fantastic release (get the 2-disc DVD) of the animated film. A perfectly timed one-shot that will have you heading back to your Absolute New Frontier collection or single floppies. Cooke&#8217;s vision of the last heroic age are timeless and definitive imaginations that sometimes the modern age versions fail to recall. Supplements in the back show the storyboards which Cooke raves about in the audio-commentary that he and Bullock do for the film and a breakdown of the Saul Bass-inspired opening credits. <strong>SHOCK VALUE: A+</strong> <em>-Ernie</em></p>
<p><a name="jlu"></a><br />
<h2>PICK: Justice League Unlimited #43</h2>
<p>As much as the cartoon ruled, due to legal mumbo jumbo, we were cheated out of getting any appearances out of Blue Beetle and therefore no Blue &#038; Gold episodes. Even though Beetle and Booster got to show up here and there in the JLU comic, they did very little in terms of interaction. Now with the current reunion going on in Johns&#8217; Booster Gold series, they&#8217;ve allowed Keith Giffen to finally write the JLU Blue &#038; Gold story some of us have been waiting for. Taking place before the team become &#8220;Unlimited&#8221;, our two superheroes attempt to wow the Justice League by helping stop the Demolition Team. This leads to wackiness and a nice little story, but certainly not one worth the wait. As funny as their banter was at times, Giffen&#8217;s story still pales in comparison to the excellent Beetle-centric issue in JLU #5. <strong>SHOCK VALUE: B</strong> <em>-Gavin</em></p>
<p><a name="logan"></a><br />
<h2>PICK: Logan #1</h2>
<div><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/viewer/?p=43358#1"><img width=70 height=110 src="/2006/43358/43358_1-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/viewer/?p=43358#2"><img width=70 height=110 src="/2006/43358/43358_2-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/viewer/?p=43358#3"><img width=70 height=110 src="/2006/43358/43358_3-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/viewer/?p=43358#4"><img width=70 height=110 src="/2006/43358/43358_4-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/viewer/?p=43358#5"><img width=70 height=110 src="/2006/43358/43358_5-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/viewer/?p=43358#6"><img width=70 height=110 src="/2006/43358/43358_6-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/viewer/?p=43358#7"><img width=70 height=110 src="/2006/43358/43358_7-.jpg"></a></div>
<p>Take the man out of the costume and place him in his element: Japan. That&#8217;s what Brian K. Vaughan and Eduardo Risso did in Logan before he became an X-Man. Just a mutant and just a Canuck soldier. Moderately standard action affair compared to Vaughan&#8217;s more complex and creative-owned work. No, folks this is all about seeing Risso&#8217;s draw Logan, soldiers, and sexy Japanese women, and does so in delicious fashion. Dean White&#8217;s the colorist for the series and while there&#8217;s a beautiful water-colored look, the mood&#8217;s not established as well as Patricia Mulvihill&#8217;s work over his 100 Bullets art. He adds texture but no soundtrack to the panels. Besides the last four pages, there&#8217;s a rather pedestrian paint-by-color feel, in fact, you&#8217;re lucky enough, stab the black and white variant with no ads.  <strong>SHOCK VALUE: B-</strong> <em>-Ernie</em></p>
<p><a name="nightwing"></a><br />
<h2>PICK: Nightwing #142</h2>
<p><img src="/2006/43364/955522_ful.jpg" width="125" align="right" hspace="8"/> This issue continued the standard set by Tomasi in his previous issues in making Nightwing the well adjusted, sane, and fun hero he always should have been. We see him working with the JSA, looking out for his little brother, and joking with Bruce about Jimmy Olsen. We also see him moving forward into the romance department, signaling a welcome growing up and beyond his teenage crushes, finally. But most telling of all are the panels working in Bones Gym and his disgust at digging up graves, where he makes it very clear that while he may be an adopted Bat, he&#8217;s still a Flying Grayson at heart, something his previous writers tended to miss completely. It gives the title a sense of fun and enjoyment that it should have had from the very beginning, and it brings me great joy to see Nightwing getting the treatment he deserves.</p>
<p>Also, that he can converse with Mid-Nite scientifically is proof that Tomasi remembers that Bruce&#8217;s training had to include more than just strapping him into some green panties and throwing the kid in harm&#8217;s way. <strong>SHOCK VALUE: A+</strong> <em>-Samantha</em></p>
<p><a name="northlanders"></a><br />
<h2>PICK: Northlanders #4</h2>
<p><img src="/2006/43364/955523_ful.jpg" width="125" align="left" hspace="8"/> His irrational impulses, brass decisions and natural instinct as a warrior have kept him alive, but he&#8217;s plotting and scheming. Something&#8217;s about to break the damn and flood the Orkney Islands. Sven&#8217;s crusade against his uncle&#8217;s men has gone into the winter. The temperature dips below freezing in this issue and the heat needs to be turned up, way up. This series is turning out to be like a savage cross between Rambo, Conan, and Die Hard but at a satisfying slow crawl. I&#8217;m intrigued at Brian Wood&#8217;s pacing and patience in Northlanders compared to the frenetic, almost rhythmic ride that dominates his much recommended body of work. He&#8217;s making us wait and get inside Sven&#8217;s head and the few emotions he chooses to show, and that uncertainty keeps me waiting in line for more.  <strong>SHOCK VALUE: B+</strong> <em>-Ernie</em></p>
<p><a name="warjournal"></a><br />
<h2>PICK: Punisher: War Journal #17</h2>
<p><img src="/2006/43364/955559_ful.jpg" width="125" align="right" hspace="8"/> The last couple issues of War Journal have shown us the real difference between Matt Fraction&#8217;s &#8220;gun that shoots swords&#8221; superhero world take on Frank Castle and Garth Ennis&#8217; &#8220;once upon a time there was a bunch of evil fucks&#8221; down-to-earth take. Fraction is willing to – at least for the moment – develop Frank Castle. Ennis&#8217; run on the MAX series is fantastic and all, but his Frank is a hollow robot. Put some kind of potential character development in that version of Frank&#8217;s way and it&#8217;s the same as suggesting he might get killed in the next issue: nothing will ultimately happen to him and he&#8217;ll just keep on keeping on. Fraction, on the other hand, treats Frank as a character.</p>
<p>Only Frank isn&#8217;t the central character here. Instead, it&#8217;s Stuart Clarke, formerly the supervillain Rampage. For most of the series, Stuart has been shown as a likeable sidekick and decent enough guy. Even as the successor of Microchip, Stuart&#8217;s history adds a very interesting wrinkle to Frank Castle&#8217;s being. Micro and Frank were friends, only for Micro to turn on him and die soon after. With Stuart, it&#8217;s in reverse. He and Frank are buddies, but Stuart&#8217;s done things in the past that will likely make Frank end his life when he feels the time is right. Except Frank&#8217;s also the one hiding his secrets, as by killing Stuart&#8217;s innocent girlfriend several issues back, he&#8217;s tossed a wrench into his own moral code and it&#8217;s straining his relationship with Stuart from another direction. It&#8217;s great stuff. <strong>SHOCK VALUE: A</strong> <em>-Gavin</em></p>
<p><a name="raven"></a><br />
<h2>DOUBLE PAN: Raven #1</h2>
<p><img src="/2006/43364/955511_ful.jpg" width="125" align="left" hspace="8"/> The cover to this comic claims, &#8220;Finally in her own emo series!&#8221; Man, why did I agree to read and review this? Goddamn it&#8230; So Raven lives in this world where everyone is made of shiny rubber and everything is so blindingly colorful that it makes you feel ill. At least it&#8217;s written by creator Marv Wolfman, so it can&#8217;t be too bad.</p>
<p>The story has to do with Raven seeing a vision of a school shooting several days before it&#8217;s set to happen. She somewhat casually deals with that while spending more of her time whining about how she&#8217;s too weird around boys, how she doesn&#8217;t know what a Nintendo Wii is and how she&#8217;s possibly losing control of her powers and making other students crazy. This ties into a sympathetic scientist and potential villain who prepares to experiment on something that&#8217;s reveal would have made for a good cliffhanger if the cover hadn&#8217;t already spoiled it. I feel almost guilty for panning this, but I do like Raven enough to have given this a chance. It&#8217;s just not going to work for me. (And in case you were wondering, New Earth apparently uncreated Raven&#8217;s tramp stamp). <strong>SHOCK VALUE: C-</strong> <em>-Gavin</em></p>
<p>To put it simply, this storyline seems a desperate attempt to merge the best of the Wolfman Raven with the Geoff Johns Raven, and instead winds up missing both by miles. This Raven has all the memories and psychoses of the original Raven, but none of her charm so that when she complains about not being able to love, I have no compassion for her. This Raven also comes full of all the annoying teenager melodrama that seems to be the rage over at DC these days so that when she complains about day to day high school problems, I roll my eyes and wonder why in the world she&#8217;s in high school in the first place. This comic manages to combine the worst of both worlds of a character that deserves better.</p>
<p>But it&#8217;s worth the buy just so that in ten years, you can open it up, point to all the out of date pop culture references, and laugh.<br />
So&#8230;in ten years, it might be worthy of a &#8220;C+?&#8221; <strong>SHOCK VALUE: F</strong> <em>-Samantha</em></p>
<h2>PICK: Scalped #15</h2>
<p> <a name=""></a><br />
<img src="/2006/43364/955524_ful.jpg" width="125" align="right" hspace="8"/> Dead Mothers continues and now there are fifteen reasons to buy this comic. Bad Horse Dashiell starts to shed some of that leather-tough skin in this issue, and just may have a heart as helps a young boy deal with his dead mother, or is it the other way around? Other characters start to unfold and if you&#8217;ve been around from the start, thinking you had characters pegged just get you in trouble because Jason Aaron is proving every month that he steers characters filled with the real complexities right to home. Even though these flawed characters reside in a South Dakota Indian Reservation, readers will be familiar with them. There&#8217;s always a bit of vulnerability in the thickest of walls, you just have to find the weak spot. It&#8217;s a joy to try and find out where we think that weakness is and where it&#8217;s going. But seriously, we all know who&#8217;s behind the wheel. Scalped is a ballet of cold-hearted stabs and jabs of heavyweights, Aaron and artist, R.M. Guera. I&#8217;ve got the bruises and the wounds to show for it. Step in the ring already.  <strong>SHOCK VALUE: A+</strong> <em>-Ernie</em></p>
<h2>PICK: Supergirl #27</h2>
<p> <a name="supergirl"></a><br />
I appreciated the way that this story tried to give a Kryptonian influence on Earth that went beyond just hitting things. I think that it&#8217;s a very realistic problem for Kara to face. My only real complaint was that the storyline seemed pretty rushed, and would have benefited to stay in the future for at least one more issue. The story also does a great job in highlighting the differences between Kara and Superman, while still trying to give them a family bond, which is a nice combination. <strong>SHOCK VALUE: B</strong> <em>-Samantha</em></p>
<p><a name="ttyo"></a><br />
<h2>PICK: Teen Titans: Year One #3</h2>
<p><img src="/2006/43364/955526_ful.jpg" width="125" align="left" hspace="8"/> Honestly, it&#8217;s possible that 1/2 of my love for this storyline may be the art. I continue to be in love with it, even though poor Garth is stuck looking like a zombie. He&#8217;s an adorable zombie, though. But the other half of my love comes from the team dynamics portrayed here. These five team members form an instant bond with one another that is obvious. Also, Robin is portrayed as a natural leader, despite Kid Flash&#8217;s comments to the contrary. Even the flirting with Donna and Roy is handled well, and considering the disaster that they go on to become romance wise, that&#8217;s saying a lot.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s not perfect and does have a few flaws. Noticeably, this version of Batman needs to be smacked a lot, if he&#8217;s not still under the influence of Antithesis at the end of the story. Donna is a little too stereotypical at times, as well. But it still comes highly, highly recommended. <strong>SHOCK VALUE: A-</strong> <em>-Samantha</em></p>
<p><a name="youngliars"></a><br />
<h2>DOUBLE PICK! Young Liars #1</h2>
<p><img id="image43374" src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/young_liars.jpg" alt="young_liars.jpg" height="195" width="126" class="imageframe" align="right" hspace="8"/> David Lapham&#8217;s return to comic long form is a refreshing one in a new ongoing, color-rich, and offbeat series that should congregate the Stray Bullets fans to their local comic shop. Unfortunately like some debuts, this falls into the trap of numerous character introductions. Comparisons to SB are inevitable where each issue was a sprint you were trying to catch up and get your bearings straight before getting tangled in the downward spiral of violence. We meet five people brought together by Sadie Dawkins, all of whom have their own selfish reasons to be connected to her but Sadie&#8217;s a wild cannon and there&#8217;s no telling what she&#8217;ll do. Sadie&#8217;s the classic Lapham character that does as much revolving as the world around her and before you know it, you&#8217;re sucked up in the twister&#8217;s pull. Now that introductions are out of the way, I can&#8217;t wait for this train to leave the station. There&#8217;s even a suggested soundtrack, this is going to be a cool. Though this is a slightly different approach–linear, for one thing–the wacky, ink-black world of Lapham&#8217;s head is worth a lifetime membership of head-trips, devilish grins, mistrust, and oh shit moments served on a dish called violence. One ticket please. <strong>SHOCK VALUE: A-</strong> <em>-Ernie</em></p>
<p><em>Excerpted from Jason&#8217;s <a href="http://jasonmichelitch.blogspot.com/2008/03/comics-review-young-liars-1.html">full review</a>&#8230;</em> I&#8217;ve been a fan of David Lapham&#8217;s self-published comic series Stray Bullets for a very long time now, and the goodwill engendered by that series has carried me into any other project of his that comes down the pike. The latest of these is Young Liars, published by DC/Vertigo, released this week. Unlike his previous Vertigo release, Silverfish, which looks and reads much the same as his self-published work, Young Liars more closely resembles other Vertigo books than it does other David Lapham books. The story and characters are intriguing enough but the style and storytelling are more than a little bland&#8230;. &#8230;All in all, the story is interesting enough that I&#8217;ll be buying the second issue to see what happens. But there&#8217;s no guarantee that the formal and aesthetic problems won&#8217;t drive me away in the long run. <strong>SHOCK VALUE: B+</strong> for story, but a C for execution <em>-Jason</em></p>
<p><a name="zombies"></a><br />
<h2>PICK: Zombies vs. Robots vs. Amazons #3</h2>
<p><img id="image43375" src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/zombiesrobotsamazons.jpg" alt="zombiesrobotsamazons.jpg" height="195" width="126" class="imageframe" align="left" hspace="8"/> The Chris Ryall/Ashley Wood project Zombies vs. Robots can best be described as a story thought up by a hyper 8-year-old who happens to have a really rad imagination. That being said, it was still an action-packed and entertaining downer that didn&#8217;t seem to have much point to it. That pretend storytelling child from two sentences back has just grown old enough to hit puberty and came up with this sequel miniseries. In this, the final issue, the Warbot and a handful of surviving amazons decide to enter a cave and have a final showdown with the zombie horde.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s ridiculous and again action-packed, but doesn&#8217;t feel quite as pointless as the end of the first series. Maybe because we&#8217;ve actually gotten to see Warbot used as a protagonist for more than several pages and play off of human characters. Or maybe it&#8217;s because we actually have a feeling of an overarching storyline now, including the predictable, yet unexpected final page. Either way, at least it&#8217;s a far better way to end a zombie sequel than whatever the hell Kirkman was thinking with Marvel Zombies 2.</p>
<p>Ashley Wood&#8217;s sloppy art fits the bill so well here, always giving that look where it appears like he scribbled it with his left hand while righty, yet somehow you can easily tell what&#8217;s going on. It&#8217;s a strange kind of talent where a comic filled with naked amazon ladies doesn&#8217;t feel so gratuitous and cheesecakian (I just made the word up and it looks like I spelled it wrong), allowing us to instead focus on the craziness of a large robot and a little girl with a slingshot fighting off a horde of battle-skilled zombies. <strong>SHOCK VALUE: A-</strong> <em>-Gavin</em></p>
<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/logan-1-preview/43358/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Logan #1 Preview</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/terry-moores-echo-1-preview/43357/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Terry Moore&#8217;s Echo: #1 Preview</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/fantastic-four-554-preview/43216/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Fantastic Four #554 Preview</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/new-avengers-annual-2-first-look/43092/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">New Avengers Annual #2 (First Look)</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/the-twelve-3-preview/43300/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">The Twelve #3 Preview</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Brendan, Laura &amp; Adan’s Picks &amp; Scans &#8211; September 6, 2007</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-laura-adans-picks-scans-september-6-2007/42574/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-laura-adans-picks-scans-september-6-2007/42574/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 Sep 2007 17:32:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brendan McGuirk &#38; Adan Jimenez</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Comic Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Reviews]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-laura-adans-picks-scans-september-6-2007/42574/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[As promised last week, a very special edition of BLAAPAS, in which we eschew the possibility of snark and mean-spiritedness for the certainty of good comics. This is my last of these columns, at least for a good while, as I will be moving away to Hong Kong in less than two weeks. I wanted [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><i>As promised <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-august-29-2007/42553/">last week</a>, a very special edition of BLAAPAS, in which we eschew the possibility of snark and mean-spiritedness for the certainty of good comics. This is my last of these columns, at least for a good while, as I will be moving away to Hong Kong in less than two weeks. I wanted to end my tenure here on a good note, so Brendan and I decided to invite Laura back in for a special one-shot of comic reviewing goodness (we weren’t sure she’d agree what with being a hotshot <a target=_blank href=“http://www.comicfoundry.com”>magazine writer</a> now). And we all decided to just focus on things we love, so that instead of telling you what new comics are crappy and should be avoided at all costs, we can tell you about the timeless comics that you should read as soon as possible because they’re just that great. So without further ado, BLAAPAS! – Adan</i></p>
<h2><i>Age of Bronze</i> by Eric Shanower</h2>
<p><a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=40842&#038;page=2"><img src="/2006/40842/40842_1-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=40842&#038;page=3"><img src="/2006/40842/40842_2-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=40842&#038;page=4"><img src="/2006/40842/40842_3-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=40842&#038;page=5"><img src="/2006/40842/40842_4-.jpg"></a></p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: This is a book that should be taught in literature classes and art classes as well.</p>
<p>Eric Shanower takes the deep, layered story of the Trojan War and displays it in his lush pencils. It is a difficult thing to recount the entirety of the War, but Shanower is doing his best to do so. And in case you’re ever confused, the two trades currently out have lots and lots of back-up material to keep you straight. Things like a glossary of names, so you know how to pronounce these Greek and Trojan names as well as who all these people are. There are genealogical charts so you who everybody is related to. There’s even a bibliography with all the material he’s read and drawn from (you didn’t think he just used the <i>Iliad</i> did you?) so that the reader can go and find out more for himself.</p>
<p>Yes, there is a long time between issues, but Shanower does everything himself. He researches, he writes, he draws, he even letters. When all is done, this is supposed to be seven volumes long. This might take a decade or two, but it will be totally worth it.</p>
<p>We reviewed this but once back when it was just me and Laura (as that is about how often it comes out), and we disagreed on only one point: whether or not Helen was a right cunt. I still hold that she is, and I think the text agrees (Helen’s first scene in the book certainly portrays her as a selfish whore who will willingly give herself to a man to escape another man she willingly gave herself to years before).</p>
<h2><i>Batman #667 and #668</i> by Grant Morrison and J.H. Williams III</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Morrison got off to a bad start on <i>Batman</i> (I would throttle Damian until he dies, but you know what they say about ideas and genies; you can’t bottle them up once they’ve been released), but he’s recovered quite admirably, with this arc the seeming culmination of that recovery.</p>
<p>It is no secret that I love Grant Morrison’s work with the passion usually reserved for things like pants and Americone Dream ice cream, but he’s really outdone himself here. Morrison takes a forgotten idea and forgotten characters from the Silver Age (who are only give tiny sections in both Wikipedia and the Batman Encyclopedia) and makes something awesome out of them. The Club of Heroes, which amounts to basically a collection of international Batman knock-offs (yeah, I said it Wingman), has been invited to billionaire philanthropist John Mayhew’s island home to catch up. Unfortunately, Mayhew, who originally financed the Club of Heroes, has been killed by the Black Hand, and the island has become a locked room mystery. The body count rises and Batman must solve this before anymore of his acquaintances suffer grisly deaths.</p>
<p>Even more impressive than Morrison’s story is Williams’ art. Little things like black border panels instead of white whenever Batman is present, drawing each member of the Club of Heroes in a different artist’s style, and playing with panel layouts to form new and exciting reading experiences (for example, the Black Hand’s hand forming the borders in the panel depicting the destruction of assembled planes) are what makes Williams the most innovative sequential storyteller currently working in the field. This might his best work since <i>Promethea</i>.</p>
<p>The last issue of the arc is supposed to ship on the Wednesday before I depart for Hong Kong, so let’s hope DC is on time, eh?</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: This arc is everything you&#8217;d hoped Grant Morrison&#8217;s Batman would be. It is as ambitious as it is beautiful, and as Adan says, that is saying something. Adan is putting a lot of faith in the payoff, though. Even the best story can be killed by a poor finale. </p>
<p>Eh, I&#8217;m not worried.</p>
<h2><i>Casanova</i> by Matt Fraction and Gabriel Ba</h2>
<p><strong>Laura</strong>: As Matt Fraction himself said in a recent issue of GQ, his inspiration for Casanova was simple: he wanted to give us all &#8220;the world we were promised from superspy films, where people can just jump out of airplanes with jet packs, and there are giant flying casinos that only the super-rich know about, and we can have lots of fabulous, near-anonymous sex without consequence.&#8221;</p>
<p>Haven&#8217;t we all had that dream, or some version of it? There&#8217;s a little part of all of us that still fantasizes about that world we were promised by so many blockbuster spy movies, where we would be beautiful and bad and effortless, and always, always have a jetpack waiting in the wings.</p>
<p>Casanova is that dream dismembered, and put back together as something stranger and more potent.  It is the mutant cyborg love child of two James Bond movies fucking on acid. And it comes at you pretty goddamn fast, so do your best to keep up.</p>
<p>&#8220;What did I think when I met Casanova Quinn?&#8221; asks the obligatory hot nurse bedded by Casanova. &#8220;&#8216;Surely this was the man who would burn the world.&#8217;  And I loved every second.&#8221;</p>
<p>So will you.</p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: I can&#8217;t say that&#8217;s why I love this book, as frankly, it is just another version of that kind of superspy film that I&#8217;ll never get to live out, but it&#8217;s done so well and so cool, that it makes it all okay. Casanova Quinn is everything that a superspy should be, including a dick and great in the sack. Also, he has a alternate universe evil twin (does he have a goatee?) and he maybe sleeps with his sister.</p>
<p>What&#8217;s not to love?</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: Nothing. There is nothing not to love. If you can&#8217;t get behind pseudo- science super action adventure, you really shouldn&#8217;t read comics. Never mind the ultra-packed paneling. Don&#8217;t worry about the subversive two-tone color scheme. Forget the Zach Morris like fourth wall breaks. Don&#8217;t read this book. It&#8217;s your loss. Jackass.</p>
<p>What were we talking about?</p>
<h2><i>Demo</i> by Brian Wood and Becky Cloonan</h2>
<p><strong>Laura</strong>: &#8220;Hey, you ever get this weird feeling that you&#8217;re different somehow?&#8221; asks the girl in the opening story of Demo.  The answer, of course, is that of course you have, and that&#8217;s always been a huge part of the appeal behind the superpowered hero with a secret identity.  Unless you traversed adolescence via a magical temporal wormhole, you know what it means to feel misunderstood, alienated, and fundamentally out of place, even in your own body, with no idea what to do next.</p>
<p>Comic Book Resources described Demo as &#8220;what The X-Men would be if they were created today.&#8221;  Which is not true at all, because there&#8217;s no way a modern-day recreation of the X-Men would be this good, this dark, or this fearless. Whether we&#8217;re walking through the aftermath of a suicide, watching a romantic relationship unravel from beginning to end, or plumbing the depths of various forms of regret, Demo doesn&#8217;t pull any punches. Rather than twisting the knife, Wood twists your stomach with the subtle, creeping ache that accompanies most of life&#8217;s mistakes—the feeling of things that cannot be undone.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s not to say there are no bright spots, that there isn&#8217;t any humor or redemption possible for the characters, just that none of it is promised, which makes for a far more interesting (if occasionally bleaker) read. Quite frankly, the end of the book disturbs me, but to paraphrase the words of one character, it&#8217;s not its job to make me feel good. It&#8217;s here to tell me the best stories that it can, and it does.</p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: At this point, we all know that I do in fact love B-Wood and I no longer think he is a Communist. Like everything he writes (with the exception of the <i>Couriers</i> stuff, which are awesome for completely different reasons), <i>Demo</i> is the kind of book that can&#8217;t really be pigeon-holed into any one genre. You just read and you laugh, you cry, you get angry, and you end up feeling like you just read your life, only with more superpowers.</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: This book captures the hopelessness of young adulthood. It is a painful read, but an important one. Thinking about this book makes me depressed, but in a positive way, I guess. Either that or it makes me want to hurt myself. I guess I shouldn&#8217;t reread this book too often.</p>
<h2><i>Filler</i> by Rick Spears and Rob G</h2>
<p><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/filler-tpb/24166/2/"><img src="/2006/24166/24166_1-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/filler-tpb/24166/3/"><img src="/2006/24166/24166_2-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/filler-tpb/24166/4/"><img src="/2006/24166/24166_3-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/filler-tpb/24166/5/"><img src="/2006/24166/24166_4-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/filler-tpb/24166/6/"><img src="/2006/24166/24166_5-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/filler-tpb/24166/7/"><img src="/2006/24166/24166_6-.jpg"></a></p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: I love Rick and Rob’s stuff a lot. I’ve never read anything by either one of them that I didn’t thoroughly enjoy. And <i>Filler</i> is the best of their collaborations.</p>
<p>Rick gives us one of the best conceits in comic books ever. John Dough (hilarious) is “the background in other people’s lives.” He’s not a main character. He gets paid to stand up in police line-ups as the filler so that the witness can pick out an actual criminal. But something goes wrong and he becomes the main character in somebody else’s story.</p>
<p>The twists and turns this noir tale takes makes me want Rick to write noir all the time. He’s really good at it, and what could’ve just been another <i>Double Indemnity</i> copy becomes a fully-realized take on the noir genre with an amazing conceit thrown in to make English majors like myself giddy with excitement.</p>
<p>Rob’s art, normally just black and white, gets some red thrown in to show off important plot elements, as well as the copious amounts of blood this sequence of events produces. I also like that most of his people are pretty ugly. There’s exactly one guy who’s decent looking, but there’s a very good reason for that. This is an ugly story filled with ugly people doing ugly things.</p>
<p>This is one of the few trades I’ll be bringing to Hong Kong with me, it’s that fucking good.</p>
<h2><i>Finder</i> by Carla Speed McNeil</h2>
<p><strong>Laura</strong>: I wish I had more volumes of <i>Finder</i> to choose from right now, but unfortunately, I&#8217;ve lent my two favorites out in my continuing mission to spread the gospel of McNeil across the comic-reading world. So I&#8217;ll post an excerpt from a trade that I haven&#8217;t heard too many people talk about—not that hardly anyone talks enough about this insanely underrated series&#8211;<i>King of the Cats</i>.</p>
<p>When the king of Nymian lion-women dies, our protaganist Jaeger says: &#8220;They wept no oily animal&#8217;s tears.  They mourned in a great wickerwork of hard muscle and ragged breath.  The hot smell of their coats; their black lips pulled back over their ivory teeth, stiff sprays of white whiskers; their heavy hair plaited with silver and faience.  Their thick hides shivered, as cattle will shiver away flies.&#8221;</p>
<p>Yeah. She&#8217;s good.</p>
<p>A caveat about <i>Finder</i>, and the reason I do not recommend it to everyone: it is very smart, very subtle, and it does not hold your hand.  I don&#8217;t throw the word &#8220;brilliant&#8221; around, but this series deserves it more than any comic book I&#8217;ve ever come across.  I&#8217;ve read each volume roughly four times each, and I still pull new things out of every one, every time.  The notes at the end of the book are indispensable in that regard; if you&#8217;re skipping over them, you&#8217;re condemning yourself to a surface understanding of the book.  And there are a lot of readers that come to comic books precisely for surface—for a superficial escapist experience, preferably with bright colors and explosions.</p>
<p>This book is not for you.</p>
<p>What fascinates me is not so much McNeil&#8217;s storytelling—which is excellent—but the level of sociological and anthropological awareness that informs it.  This is a book about people, about our tribes (whether they be ancient or ultra-modern), and how they bring us together and separate us from each other in fascinating ways.  The first two trades are not the strongest ones, but there&#8217;s no harm in starting in the middle&#8211;I recommend <i>Dream Sequence</i>, <i>Talisman</i>, or <i>King of the Cats</i>.</p>
<p>To watch McNeil post her current pages online in real time <a href="http://www.lightspeedpress.com/">go here</a>.</p>
<h2><i>Invisibles</i> by Grant Morrison, et al.</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Get ready to get your mind fucked.</p>
<p>I tried to read this once about two years ago, but stopped after only the first issue in the first trade because my head felt like it was going to explode (especially after that John Lennon as God thing). But I recently cowboy-ed up and read the whole series (thanks to Doug Wolk’s essay in <i>Reading Comics</i>), and I’m happy that I did.</p>
<p>After the initial shock of crazy, <i>Invisibles</i> settles down and is pretty easy to understand (up until halfway through the sixth trade anyway; I don’t know what the fuck is going on after that, but I plan to figure it out). There is a cell of anarchist commandos fighting a magical war against those who would lash humanity to a machine created only to serve the Archons. Look, don’t sweat the plot too much as I can’t really explain it without making it sound retarded. It’s not even the most important thing here. Morrison has long been very interested in metafiction and how a reader, a writer, and the fiction between them interact and influence each other. It’s no accident that <i>Invisibles</i> has about ten layers of fiction one on top of the other, and at least one of these layers interacts with real world people like Lord Byron, Percy Shelley, and the Marquis de Sade. Throw in the facts that King Mob is a thinly-veiled stand-in for Morrison himself (KM’s writer alter ego is named Kirk Morrison) who’s had a few of the same experiences that Morrison himself has had, and that <i>Invisibles</i> is a book written by two different people within the framework of <i>Invisibles</i> the comic, and you’ve got so many layers of fiction and reality intermingling and influencing one another, you may start to wonder which layer you’re on (metaphorically speaking, of course; no one’s that crazy, except perhaps Morrison himself). The world the Invisibles inhabit could very well be the real Earth-Prime.</p>
<p>Since reality itself is but putty in <i>Invisibles</i>, it makes sense that the book has about twenty different artists, each one putting his own unique stamps on what the world could conceivably look like at any given moment. The second, third, and fourth-to-last issues, in which the climactic confrontation with the “enemies” takes place, is drawn by a total of fifteen different artists alone (including a page by Morrison himself). Is this a clue that reality is shifting with each blow, physical and metaphysical? And is Morrison’s one page how the world is supposed to look? You’ll have to read it and figure it out for yourself.</p>
<p>And make sure and stick it out. It’s a pretty rewarding experience (that said, you may have to read it multiple times to be able to process it all).</p>
<h2><i>Last of the Independents</i> by Matt Fraction and Kieron Dwyer</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Take an aged ex-drunk, his hot, younger love, and their adopted, slow-witted man-child, mix in a bank robbery and the mob, and you’ve got one of the best pieces of crime fiction ever committed to four-color paper.</p>
<p>Matt Fraction, more famous for his work at Marvel and Image, started out in the minor leagues over at AiT/PlanetLar with <i>Mantooth</i> and this book. This is where he showed the world that he could write, and he could write well. Cole, Justine, and Billy are a strange family with strange habits. And one of those habits has landed them in hot water with a Las Vegas mob boss. They’ve stolen his money and he wants it back. What should have been a routine small town bank heist becomes an all-out war with the mob, full of Ferris wheels, land mines, and pissed off “cooze.” In between all this madness, you find out how they all met, and you get some genuinely heartfelt moments usually missing from crime stories.</p>
<p>Kieron Dwyer’s brown and white art of course fits perfectly for this kind of story. The detail is pretty amazing, down to Cole’s craggy face. Some of the mobsters are hard to tell apart, but who cares? You’re not supposed to be able to differentiate them, as they’re all just part of the same machine. Cole, Justine, and Billy are true independents, and they don’t take shit from any organized institution.</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: This book is the perfect action story. It doesn&#8217;t overreach, but nor does it fail to satisfy. The widescreen format is utilized effectively, and proves to be more than a gimmick. <i>LotI</i> is a crazy adventure with honest human emotion, and that is what makes it great. </p>
<p>(And look, two All-Time great picks by Matt Fraction&#8230; and I didn&#8217;t nominate either of them! Who would have thought?)</p>
<h2><i>Nextwave</i> by Warren Ellis and Stuart Immonen</h2>
<p><a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=40989&#038;page=2"><img src="/2006/40989/40989_1-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=40989&#038;page=3"><img src="/2006/40989/40989_2-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=40989&#038;page=4"><img src="/2006/40989/40989_3-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=40989&#038;page=5"><img src="/2006/40989/40989_4-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=40989&#038;page=6"><img src="/2006/40989/40989_5-.jpg"></a></p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Probably Warren Ellis’ best distillation of the superhero genre is also his funniest.</p>
<p>Monica “Photon” Rambeau, Aaron “Machine Man” Stack, Elsa Bloodstone, Tabitha “Meltdown” Smith, and The Captain, previously known as every captain not America or Marvel, including Captain Fuck. This book is just hilarious and improbable situation after hilarious and improbable situation. Nextwave is a superhero team fighting H.A.T.E. (S.H.I.E.L.D. without the competence) and the Beyond Corporation that controls them. Dirk Anger, leader of H.A.T.E. and a much manlier, yet feminine Nick Fury with severe mental issues, is hunting down Nextwave as they attempt to stop the fiendish plans of the Beyond Corporation.</p>
<p>There is just non-stop madness and craziness in this series, ranging from a Fin Fang Foom with no junk to Broccoli Men to Ultra Samurai to baby M.O.D.O.K.s to a much more intelligent Devil Dinosaur than we’ve ever encountered before. Aaron calls humans fleshbags and Monica reminisces about the time she led the Avengers.</p>
<p>This is probably the most purely enjoyable comic book in ages. You don’t need to know anything except how to laugh. Hopefully, we’ll the promised series of minis soon, because I need more Nextwave and Aaron appearing in <i>Ms. Marvel</i> just isn’t enough.</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: The most brilliant moment of this book was the cover to issue eleven, the non-<i>Civil War</i> <i>Civil War</i> tie-in. &#8220;Please Love Us, We Don&#8217;t Care,&#8221; were the messages on the Nextwaver&#8217;s picket signs, but the doom of cancellation was imminent. Ah well. Good things don&#8217;t last. Good things end too soon, and live on forever in our idealized memories. </p>
<h2><i>Planetary</i> by Warren Ellis and John Cassaday</h2>
<p><a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=40506&#038;page=2"><img src="/2006/40506/40506_1-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=40506&#038;page=3"><img src="/2006/40506/40506_2-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=40506&#038;page=4"><img src="/2006/40506/40506_3-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=40506&#038;page=5"><img src="/2006/40506/40506_4-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/index.php?p=40506&#038;page=6"><img src="/2006/40506/40506_5-.jpg"></a></p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: Warren Ellis, in an essay he once wrote, demanded that superheroes rescind their stranglehold on the comic medium and market. <i>Planetary</i> is Ellis and artist John Cassaday&#8217;s attempt to build something better. Taking cues from all forms of pulped popular culture and entertainment, <i>Planetary</i> explores the mysteries that make the world go &#8217;round. It explores not only what is of interest to the common man, but why. Elijah Snow and his band of information bounty hunters comb the twentieth century for every mystery that ever inspired wonder. Each chapter takes its cue from a different area of disposable entertainment, from <i>Godzilla</i> monster movies to the classic Western. The primary villains, the <i>Fantastic Four</i> riffs known only as &#8220;The Four,&#8221; horde all the information they can, retarding societal progress. This serves as an apt metaphor for superheroes and comics; superheroes are so closely associated with comics that the genre can supersede, or even define, the medium. This sort of idealogical monopoly constrains the potential of the medium as a whole, and as such sacrifices long term literary value for short term market satisfaction. If the Planetary team fails, and the Four control the fate of the world, doom is all but assured. If boundary pushers like Ellis and Cassaday fail in their attempt to engender a diversified comic book market, the world of comics is doomed to a partially realized ghetto of fanboys and girls&#8217; diminished expectations. With all the best aspects of genre present, it is good to know that in this story the good guys win. And so do we.</p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: And top of all of that, <i>Planetary</i> is great commentary on the superhero comics it purports to be better than. It starts with the Victorian heroes and moves on to the actual heroes, as well as touching on &#8220;Mature Readers&#8221; movement of the eighties, exemplified by Vertigo, the &#8220;darkening&#8221; of heroes, of which Ellis took part in, and the pulp heroes, which were the stepping stones between the Victorian stuff and superhero comics.</p>
<h2><i>Preacher</i> by Garth Ennis, Steve Dillon, etc.</h2>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: God is dead, or he might as well be. </p>
<p>That is the pathos of what is clearly my favorite comic book series of all time. With a deliciously allegorical plot lines and killer action sequences, <i>Preacher</i> kicks ass. In fact, it is probably the series most designed to kick ass. Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon pull no punches in their assault on the American ideal, organized religion, manhood, friendship, hate and love. The extreme absurdity of both what happens and who it happens to perfectly contrasts the series&#8217; positive moral spine. Ennis and Dillon do their best to shock and appall us, and in so doing show us what exactly it is we expect from this world, as opposed to what we receive. The characters remain honest and real in the face of a story that is as epic as they come. A hero&#8217;s journey, a love story, a conspiracy-laden thriller, a tale of redemption, and a series of events that leads to bad guys getting hurt a lot, <i>Preacher</i> is for everyone.</p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: While I enjoy the hell out of this two-fisted tale of finding God, I do have on problem: Jesse Custer purports to be an honorable man, but every single time he gets into a fistfight, he kicks a dude in the junk. That&#8217;s not honorable!</p>
<p>Other than that, though, this thing is awesome. It&#8217;s so awesome, I read all nine trades in two nights (it&#8217;s important to note that I get out of work at 9pm).</p>
<h2><i>Scott Pilgrim</i> by Bryan Lee O&#8217;Malley</h2>
<p><img id="image42594" src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/09/scott-pilgrim-1.jpg" alt="scott-pilgrim-1.jpg" height="179" width="120" class="imageframe"/> <img id="image42595" src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/09/scott-pilgrim-2.jpg" alt="scott-pilgrim-2.jpg" height="173" width="120" class="imageframe" /> <img id="image42596" src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/09/scott-pilgrim-3.jpg" alt="scott-pilgrim-3.jpg" height="178" width="120" class="imageframe" /></p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: Sometimes a mere comic book can define a generation. Bryan Lee O&#8217;Malley&#8217;s <i>Scott Pilgrim</i> does so for anyone born after 1980. A perfect potion of equal parts ensemble romantic melodrama, coming of age (a little too late), ADD level kineticism, video-game culture and the subsequent effect on youth definitions of progress, and general awesimeotivity, <i>Scott</i> is the best friend comics ever made. Upon reading, his life will feel like your life, his friends will feel like your friends, his band will feel like your band, and before long you will find yourself battling evil ex-boyfriends to earn the right to be with the girl you sorta like, or are obssesed with, or whatever. While the series is founded on an intricately woven relationship web, it holds the reader&#8217;s attention with unexpected action sequences. Beyond that, this book is also a delightfully realized piece of comic-making. O&#8217;Malley&#8217;s visual style borrows heavily from the Japanese comic tradition, notably in regards to expression. While some comic readers are reluctant to venture into the strange world of imported and digest format comics, <i>Pilgrim</i> proves to be a perfect middle ground, with a cast as familiar as a nuclear family unit. The characters are simple yet emotive, and the frugality in regards to page layout and pacing are pitch perfect. <i>Scott Pilgrim</i> is more important than your next meal. Trust me.</p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: What I enjoy most about this series of graphic novels are the video game bits. They&#8217;re not really references because no actual game is name-checked, but the save spots, the Mythril skateboards, and the coins certainly point to specific games. Ah, to have ridiculous amounts of free time again&#8230; Oh wait. I am. Sweet!</p>
<h2><i>Ultimate Spider-Man #13</i> by Brian Michael Bendis and Mark Bagley</h2>
<p><a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/ultimate-spider-man-13/42589/2/"><img src="/2006/42589/42589_1-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/ultimate-spider-man-13/42589/3/"><img src="/2006/42589/42589_2-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/ultimate-spider-man-13/42589/4/"><img src="/2006/42589/42589_3-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/ultimate-spider-man-13/42589/5/"><img src="/2006/42589/42589_4-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/ultimate-spider-man-13/42589/6/"><img src="/2006/42589/42589_5-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/ultimate-spider-man-13/42589/7/"><img src="/2006/42589/42589_6-.jpg"></a> <a target=_blank href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/ultimate-spider-man-13/42589/8/"><img src="/2006/42589/42589_7-.jpg"></a></p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: This was the issue that took me from a kid who loved comics to a person who appreciated comics. This story, that cemented Brian Bendis both as a trustworthy caretaker for Marvel&#8217;s most accessible version of Spider-man and as a creator who Marvel was willing to build around, did something I thought no comic, never mind a super-hero comic, could. This comic moved me. I was made to feel more mature having read it. It taught me, as a young and naïve reader, that comics could be moving without being grand or earth-shattering. It made a reader familiar with only the emotional range of standard superhero fare, believe that pictures and words on a page could actually bear reflection on the world around. All it did, all it took, was a boy sharing the biggest secret he had with a girl. Some people would deride this work, or the style it heralded, as slow or inconsequential. To me, it showed that &#8220;stuff happening&#8221; was something I had slightly overrated. I could connect with characters in a more personal way through a well executed scene between two characters. This book made me want more from my comics than fights and tights, and it whetted my pallet for more sophistication from the funnybooks I read. And just think, it&#8217;s just two kids sitting around talking. Comics can be great sometimes.</p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: This is in fact my favorite single issue of this series. It&#8217;s sweet, it&#8217;s funny, it&#8217;s heartfelt, and it made me believe that Bendis could do anything. For a little while at least, before Bendis stretched himself out too thin. But we&#8217;re trying to be positive here, so, yes, this is my favorite issue of <i>Ultimate Spider-Man</i>. You know, before the &#8220;Hollywood&#8221; arc&#8230; or Venom&#8230; or Carnage. *shudder*</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: So much for positivity.</p>
<p><i>And that&#8217;s that. I did this (almost) every week for about a year and it was fun. Laura is an ornery lady and Brendan is just plain wrong most of the time, but they&#8217;re good people and they&#8217;re fun people. And they&#8217;re family now.</p>
<p>Now I&#8217;m off to Hong Kong to eat weird food, fly through the air on wires (everybody does that there, right?), and get my ass kicked by Communists on a daily basis. You may nonetheless find me posting features on this site every once in a while. I will have copious amounts of free time, after all.</p>
<p>Stay tuned for how Brendan keeps this column going.- Adan</i></p>
<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/ultimate-spider-man-13/42589/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Best Issues Ever: Ultimate Spider-Man #13</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/laura-adans-weekly-picks-pans-scans-october-25-2006/40513/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Laura &#038; Adan&#8217;s Weekly Picks, Pans &#038; Scans &#8211; October 25, 2006</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/planetary-26-preview/40506/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Planetary #26 Preview</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/laura-adans-picks-pans-scans-february-14-2006/41005/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Laura &#038; Adan&#8217;s Picks Pans &#038; Scans &#8211; February 14, 2007</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/laura-adans-picks-pans-scans-october-18-2006/40464/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Laura &#038; Adan&#8217;s Picks, Pans &#038; Scans &#8211; October 18, 2006</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Brendan &amp; Adan’s Picks, Pans &amp; Scans &#8211; August 29, 2007</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-august-29-2007/42553/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-august-29-2007/42553/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 31 Aug 2007 18:16:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adan Jimenez</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Comic Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Reviews]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-august-29-2007/42553/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Sorry we&#8217;re late kids. Brendan was house-hunting and thankfully found a place (otherwise he&#8217;d have to move back in with his parents!). Unfortunately, all that house-hunting meant he couldn&#8217;t do his thing this week, so I&#8217;m flying solo. Be gentle. Also, I&#8217;m moving to Hong Kong very, very soon, so tune in next week for [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><i>Sorry we&#8217;re late kids. Brendan was house-hunting and thankfully found a place (otherwise he&#8217;d have to move back in with his parents!). Unfortunately, all that house-hunting meant he couldn&#8217;t do his thing this week, so I&#8217;m flying solo. Be gentle.</p>
<p>Also, I&#8217;m moving to Hong Kong very, very soon, so tune in next week for a very special BLAAPAS (and no, that acronym is not a mistake)&#8211; Adan</i></p>
<h2>Batman Annual #26 Head of the Demon</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: I really hate that Damian “Son of the Bat” kid.</p>
<p>It just doesn’t matter what he’s doing, what time period he’s in, or who he’s written by, that kid is just bad news. Every time he shows up, you know you’re in for a subpar issue. And boy was this is ever subpar. Every plot twist is telegraphed about five pages before the “reveal” and the jumps back and forth in time are muddled and confusing. This is touted as the “Origin of Ra’s al-Ghul,” but we learn very little of consequence. So he fought in Waterloo against Napoleon. Who gives a damn? So he was in Whitechapel while Jack the Ripper was doing his thing. Oooh, spooky. None of this matters to the character of Ra’s. In fact, all this “origin” story really does is introduce the documents that contain Ra’s “origin” story. It’s a sort of self-perpetuating MacGuffin that does an awful job of motivating anybody to do anything. And hey, another albino bad guy. Way to be original. What happened to you, Milligan? You used to be awesome. You know what, I’m gonna say editorial got in your way, and fucked you on this. This can’t possibly be your fault.</p>
<p><img id="image42556" src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/08/batman-annual-26.jpg" alt="batman-annual-26.jpg" height="262" width="595" class="imageframe" /><br />
And why is nobody all that afraid of Batman in the Outback? Why’s he even out there as Batman? You’re a little out of your jurisdiction, mate.</p>
<p>At least the art’s pretty cool. David and Alvaro Lopez have a style reminiscent of Darwyn Cooke body types with Gary Frank faces. Regardless, they do share the blame for timejumps as their transitions could have used work (but I did like the panel borders differentiating past from present).</p>
<p>You know, maybe it’s nobody’s fault that this issue sucked.</p>
<p>Maybe it’s just Damian.</p>
<h2>Brit #1</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Even though Kirkman isn’t writing this, it’s still pretty cool. There’s just something about watching an indestructible senior citizen beat the shit out of a bunch of Japanese midgets while two robots beat the shit out of each other right next to them that makes my day fifteen times better. I hadn’t read any <i>Brit</i> before this, but now I’m looking forward to the collected edition when it comes out. This book is quite awesome, so you should just keep reading it until I tell you otherwise.</p>
<h2>Countdown to Adventure #1</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: A la <i>Mystery in Space</i> and <i>Tales of the Unexpected</i>, this anthology series features two completely different stories that may or may not intersect later on.</p>
<p>The first story features my favorite parts of <i>52</i>: Adam Strange, Animal Man, and Starfire. Adam is back on Rann with his family, enjoying life before he goes back to full-time duty as Rann’s defender. Meanwhile, Buddy has been reunited with his family, but they’ve got a houseguest in the unconscious form of Starfire. Now, that sounds like a sitcom (and maybe it is), but at least it’s a sitcom that sounds funny. C’mon, a smoking hot alien princess sleeping in your guest room while your wife tries to get you and your kids out of the house on time? That’s comedy gold!<br />
<img id="image42555" src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/08/countdown-adventure-starfire.jpg" alt="countdown-adventure-starfire.jpg" class="imageframe" /></p>
<p>Eddy Barrows pencils on this are just so damn gorgeous (check out the opening shot of Adam), I’m surprised I’ve never heard of this guy before. A quick search on Google reveals that he drew that <i>Bloodhound</i> series for DC that nobody bought. He’s also done some fill-in work for <i>All-New Atom</i>, <i>Firestorm</i>, and <i>52</i>. Hurm… Either he changed his art style considerably, or I’ve just not been paying attention. Barrows is a guy to watch out for. This just might be his breakout work.</p>
<p>The second story features a really quite nifty origin story for the Forerunner character that was introduced in <i>Countdown</i> a while back. It’s way more interesting than anything that has occurred in <i>Countdown</i> thus far. I assume the rest of this story will deal with Monarch and his plans against the Monitors and what role the Forerunner will play.</p>
<p>The pencils on this story are handled by Fabrizio Fiorentino, and where Barrows in clean and crisp, Fiorentino is jagged and dark. The art doesn’t pop for me, but I will say that his character designs on the various alien races (those he created) are pretty sweet. The Mercurians are especially awesome.</p>
<p>Like most anthologies, one story will probably succeed while the other one crashes and burns. We’ll have to wait and see which is which on this one.</p>
<p>Also, note to Uncle Dan: stop tying everything in to <i>Countdown</i>. That book sucks and it’s just going to drag everything else down with it. You should have called this <i>Sinestro Corps War to Adventure</i> instead, if all you were trying to do was cash in. At least that storyarc is awesome (and don’t think I didn’t notice who the origin back-up in this week’s <i>Countdown</i> was).</p>
<h2>Emily the Strange v2 Death Issue #1</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: This is less a comic book and more a collection of lists. Best ways to die lists. I guess there is one short story in here about re-animating a cat corpse but… Man, this is so not my scene. The art is hard to parse. I just can’t tell what’s going on most of the time.</p>
<p>The writing is difficult to deal with. I can’t tell if this is a book for mature kids or for immature adults. The jokes are pretty simple and would be funny only if you’re ten years old, but a lot of the subject matter is pretty adult (there is a brain on a spike for God’s sake!)</p>
<p>What I do know is that I don’t like it.</p>
<h2>Ex Machina Masquerade Special</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: The Great Machine’s very first adventure!</p>
<p>The very first thing that struck me when I opened this issue of <i>Ex Machina</i> was: “Hey, this isn’t Tony Harris!” Now, I know he didn’t do the previous specials, but still. It’s been so long since the last issue of <i>Ex Machina</i>, I actually thought for a second that this was the next regular issue. I have no issues with John Paul Leon, as I actually like the dude’s art (especially that surprising last shot of Mitchell), but he’s not Tony Harris, and I need me some Tony Harris.</p>
<p>Well, Harris might be MIA, but BKV is still here making my heart all a-flutter. The story is set right after Mitchell gets out of the hospital after a certain explosion, pre-Great Machine. An origin story if you will. This where you find out how he came up with suit and you see him solve his first crime. You also get some hints as to what the junk in his face might be.</p>
<p>All in all, a solid issue of <i>Ex Machina</i>, although now I’m jonesing for a new storyarc.</p>
<h2>Incredible Change-Bots GN</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Oh man, this is hilarious. I’m sure there’s some kind of fable or moral or whathaveyou, but I’m too busy laughing my ass off. The Incredible Change-Bots are obvious Transfomers parodies, but Jeffrey Brown makes fun of all the little things we took for granted when we watched the show as kids: the robots’ bad aim, the fact that the Decepticons always escaped, and the nonsensical humanizing of robots. Again, I’m sure there’s a deeper message, but I’m too busy enjoying the hell out of this book.</p>
<h2>Last Fantastic Four Story</h2>
<p><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/the-last-fantastic-four-story-1-preview/42523/2/"><img src="/2006/42523/42523_1-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/the-last-fantastic-four-story-1-preview/42523/3/"><img src="/2006/42523/42523_2-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/the-last-fantastic-four-story-1-preview/42523/4/"><img src="/2006/42523/42523_3-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/the-last-fantastic-four-story-1-preview/42523/5/"><img src="/2006/42523/42523_4-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/the-last-fantastic-four-story-1-preview/42523/6/"><img src="/2006/42523/42523_5-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/the-last-fantastic-four-story-1-preview/42523/7/"><img src="/2006/42523/42523_6-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/the-last-fantastic-four-story-1-preview/42523/8/"><img src="/2006/42523/42523_7-.jpg"></a></p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Meh… It was alright. Stan Lee deserves a lot for all the awesome things he helped create back in the day, including the FF, but his writing is not so good, especially nowadays. Stan has this uncanny ability to describe exactly what is happening in each panel with caption boxes or characters’ speech. The first three or four pages are especially bad: “Bolts of Flame!” “Melting our weapons!” Yes, I know, terrorist guy. I can see it in the accompanying artwork. And I’m not a big fan of John Romita Jr., so this isn’t really my bag. Nonetheless, I’m sure old-school fans will get a big kick out of this, as it’s classic Stan Lee FF on a grand cosmic scale.</p>
<h2>Mice Templar #1</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: So, is this just another <i>Mouse Guard</i>? Eh… sort of, but who cares? It’s pretty awesome too.</p>
<p>Imagine if the first <i>Mouse Guard</i> mini had ended in a much more grim fashion. <i>Mice Templar</i> is what could have happened a couple of generations down the line. The Templar were an order of mice pledged to defend mousedom from all threats big or small, external or internal. Unfortunately, the Templar had a disagreement over something and had a civil war, decimating them. And that’s just the back story.</p>
<p>The main story is about a little mouse named Karic who idolizes the memory of the Templar, even though most people think they no longer exist. He’s a believable child, playing at being Templar and getting into trouble all the time. Oeming and Bryan Glass have created a rich world with its own mythology, culture, and history.</p>
<p>As for Oeming’s much ballyhooed new art style, I guess it’s alright. However, there are a lot of confusing points in the text. A lot of the mice are difficult to tell apart, some characters appear and disappear with little warning, and it is difficult to tell who is talking sometimes. Hopefully, all these problems will be rectified soon, as I do enjoy the art style.</p>
<p>I’ll keep picking this up assuming those problems don’t get worse.</p>
<h2>Punks the Comic Summer Special</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: What the fuck?</p>
<p>So there’s a dog-man, a Ghost Rider look-alike, a dude with a fist for a head, and Abraham Lincoln, and they all live in an apartment together while fighting off alien invasions and eating dead hookers. So, again, I ask: what the fuck?</p>
<p>This is too absurdist for me. I like Kody Chamberlain’s collage-style art, but even that gets really weird sometimes. Throw in the fact the comic is interrupted a few times by things like the thirteenth page missing, an interview with Rick Remender the fish, and an alien invasions PSA, and this thing is just too damn weird. Fans of <i>The Young Ones</i> will probably enjoy the hell out of this.</p>
<h2>Teen Titans #50</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: This issue is hilarity wrapped in schmaltzy remembrance. But it’s the hilarity that will get you.</p>
<p>To “celebrate Kid Flash’s life,” the Titans get together and remember Bart Allen. Thankfully, this doesn’t turn into “remember when Bart did that awesome thing that time?” Instead, we’re treated to a Geoff Johns and Mike McKone tale of Bart flying the Batplane right through a “Welcome to Smallville” sign and Todd Dezago and Todd Nauck page about all the times Bart screwed up in Young Justice. Unfortunately, Marv Wolfman and George Perez’s short was a schmaltzy story about Wally as Kid Flash, and how he was insecure and blah blah blah. But hey, it’s still Wolfman and Perez, so whatever.</p>
<p>The only complaint I have is that the fight scene from last week’s <i>Blue Beetle #18</i> was reproduced almost <i>in toto</i> (it may have even been the exact same art) for seven pages. Whoever bought that issue of <i>Blue Beetle</i> is going to feel pretty gypped.</p>
<p>Overall, a good anniversary issue of <i>Teen Titans</i> that, if nothing else, has inspired me to go find all those <i>Young Justice</i> back issues. How’s that for salesmanship? Dezago and Nauck do one page of story and art and I’m hooked on a series from ten years ago. Give me some trades, DC!</p>
<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/the-last-fantastic-four-story-1-preview/42523/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">The Last Fantastic Four Story #1 Preview</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-may-2-2007/41671/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Brendan &#038; Adan&#8217;s Picks Pans &#038; Scans &#8211; May 2, 2007</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/felicia-henderson-interview/49494/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Felicia D. Henderson interview</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/oni-reviews-stumptown/54362/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Oni Reviews: Stumptown and More!</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-april-25-2007/41588/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Brendan &#038; Adan&#8217;s Picks, Pans &#038; Scans &#8211; April 25, 2007</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Brendan &amp; Adan’s Picks, Pans &amp; Scans &#8211; August 22, 2007</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-august-22-2007/42508/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-august-22-2007/42508/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Aug 2007 19:10:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brendan McGuirk &#38; Adan Jimenez</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Comic Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Halo]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-august-22-2007/42508/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Hey all. We went up a bit late last week, and as a result missed our opportunity to hotlink off the PCS main page. We got it done, though, and if you missed it check it out at http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-august-16-2007/42461/ And now&#8230; this week. Battlestar Galactica: Season Zero #1 Adan: This new Battlestar series that takes [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><i>Hey all. We went up a bit late last week, and as a result missed our opportunity to hotlink off the PCS main page. We got it done, though, and if you missed it check it out at http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-august-16-2007/42461/ And now&#8230; this week.</i></p>
<h2>Battlestar Galactica: Season Zero #1</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: This new Battlestar series that takes place before the Cylons attacked the Twelve Colonies feels like a harder edged <i>Star Trek: The Original Series</i>, and not in a good way..</p>
<p>There seem to be three different time periods vying for attention, and while one obviously happens before another, I&#8217;m not sure where the third one fits in. Storyline one is Adama and Tigh on the Galactica as Adama goes on a planet mission (thereby invoking <i>TOS</i>) to rescue his previous Commander, Julian Dimarco. Then we get a flashback to when Adama was serving under Dimarco as they did some black ops stuff out on the edge of Colonial space. There is third time period in which Tigh and Adama are with their wives and talking about how they&#8217;re done with black ops stuff, but I can&#8217;t figure out where that takes place.</p>
<p>But even if I wasn&#8217;t having temporal issues, this book still feels like <i>Galactica</i>-lite. Brandon Jerwa just doesn&#8217;t give it the same resonance that the show has (which isn&#8217;t that big a surprise, but still), and I&#8217;m not entirely sure that this book is even an adequate placeholder while the show is on hiatus (until 2008! why!?) Jackson Herbert&#8217;s pencils over Stephen Segovia&#8217;s layouts make it very difficult to figure out who is who, but colorist Adriano Lucas may be equally at fault, as everything is murky and indecipherable, especially on the planetside story and its accompanying flashback.</p>
<p>The regular <i>Battlestar Galactica</i> series by Dynamite hasn&#8217;t exactly wowed me, but it&#8217;s still much better than this. If you&#8217;re a hardcore fan, you&#8217;re not going to be able to help yourself, but everybody else: you can skip this. Just wait a little longer.</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: This was very forgettable. I can&#8217;t even pretend to have a lot to say. The art was less than impressive, and the storyline was too scattered. I had a hard time telling one character apart from another, which is always a sign of doom. The action lacked, and the characters didn&#8217;t look or sound distinct enough to create any real drama. I sort of dig this show, but not enough to want to follow this obscure book.</p>
<p><img id="image42510" src="http://www.popcultureshock.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/08/comic-foundry-1.jpg" alt="comic-foundry-1.jpg" height="258" width="200" class="imageframe" align="right" hspace=8/></p>
<h2>Comic Foundry Magazine #1</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Here is the new comics magazine that purports to be the happy medium between <i>Wizard</i> and <i>The Comics Journal</i>. So, is it any good?</p>
<p>Short answer: Yes. Long answer: Yes and here&#8217;s why.</p>
<p>I got this magazine back when Editor-in-chief Tim Leong and my sister/erstwhile partner-in-reviewing Laura Hudson debuted it at the San Diego Comic-Con. They were obviously really excited about it, and when I bought it, I could only think, &#8220;I hope this doesn&#8217;t suck.&#8221; The next day, as I was waiting in line for a Warren Ellis signing, I read the magazine cover to cover. It is important to note two things here: I had a bunch of other comics in my bag (as well as a copy of Douglas Wolk&#8217;s excellent <i>Reading Comics</i>) and I hadn&#8217;t read a magazine cover to cover since the <i>Wizard: X-men Special</i> back when Grant Morrison was about to start <i>New X-men</i>. That right there is a huge endorsement.</p>
<p>As for the claim that <i>Comic Foundry</i> is a happy medium between <i>Wizard</i> and <i>The Comics Journal</i>? Well, it is and it isn&#8217;t. It certainly covers both mainstream comics and indy comics (though I think this issue skewed more toward the indy side), it doesn&#8217;t come off as either fratboyish (like <i>Wizard</i>) or snooty (like <i>TCJ</i>), but it also does some things neither magazine does, and that&#8217;s the Life+Style section that EIC Tim touts so much. Where else can you learn to Rasterbate, have Kieron Gillen teach you how to fake taste in music, have Matt Fraction teach you how to make love to Kieron Gillen, and learn Michel Kupperman&#8217;s favorite jokes? On top of that you get an interview with two of my favorite people: Kristen &#8220;Veronica Mars&#8221; Bell and Bryan Lee &#8220;Scott Pilgrim&#8221; O&#8217;Malley.</p>
<p>I know what you&#8217;re thinking: &#8220;Of course you love it, your sister&#8217;s writing for the magazine. You have to like it.&#8221; Untrue, dear reader. I don&#8217;t <i>have</i> to like shit (I didn&#8217;t even mention the two great articles she has in here). I like this magazine because it&#8217;s good, and I do have some problems with it. Two, to be exact: one, the Costume section of the magazine could really have used some color, especially the bit on the Voltron shoes (which one&#8217;s the green lion?); and two, the copy editing is really not good. I will let the copy editing slide for two reasons: it&#8217;s their first issue and they&#8217;ll fix it (and they will fix it) and my own copy editing is quite atrocious, so I really have no leg to stand on.</p>
<p>Final word: it&#8217;s good. Go buy it already, my sister writes for this thing, dammit!</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: Who is this &#8220;Laura Hudson,&#8221; and what does she think she&#8217;s doing &#8220;writing?&#8221;</p>
<p>This was a very strong launch issue for the magazine that seeks to fill the void between <i>Wizard</i>&#8216;s thinly veiled infomercial approach and <i>The Comic Journal</i>&#8216;s &#8220;Everything you like is wrong, books haven&#8217;t been good in twenty years,&#8221; insular approach. <i>Foundry</i> takes a lot of different risks in regards to content, with features on comics-influenced adult beverages, LAAPPAS alum&#8217;s article &#8220;Sex and the Superhero,&#8221; (hey, I hear that stuff sells), and Matt Fraction&#8217;s tutorial on how to bag the dude that writes <i>Phonogram</i>. There is more traditional fare also, like the ever important &#8220;Now we interview a blonde,&#8221; article, this time concentrating on <i>Veronica Mars</i>&#8216; Kristen Bell, but even this seems thought-out and worthwhile. I thought there were issues with the structure of the magazine. The heavier content was weighted towards the back, and the &#8220;Life+Style&#8221; section could have been pushed further towards the end, if not shortened. These things will happen with a launch issue, though, and are hardly big enough hiccups to worry. The short story is a refreshing addition, and the piece on &#8220;The Judas Contract,&#8221; gives a sense of history and credibility. </p>
<p>There is tremendous potential in this mag. It feels like a regular, newsstand magazine, which is an accomplishment. The fashion section is original and ambitious, recreating some familiar pages with trendy new digs, and the interviews, notably the final piece with <i>Scott Pilgrim</i>&#8216;s Bryan Lee O&#8217;Malley, are honest and fully realized. </p>
<p>And c&#8217;mon, it&#8217;s one cent cheaper than <i>Wizard</i>. At the very least, you gotta try it out.</p>
<h2>Halo Uprising #1</h2>
<p><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/halo-uprising-1-preview/42504/2/"><img src="/2006/42504/42504_1-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/halo-uprising-1-preview/42504/3/"><img src="/2006/42504/42504_2-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/halo-uprising-1-preview/42504/4/"><img src="/2006/42504/42504_3-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/halo-uprising-1-preview/42504/5/"><img src="/2006/42504/42504_4-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/halo-uprising-1-preview/42504/6/"><img src="/2006/42504/42504_5-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/halo-uprising-1-preview/42504/7/"><img src="/2006/42504/42504_6-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/halo-uprising-1-preview/42504/8/"><img src="/2006/42504/42504_7-.jpg"></a></p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: Comics like this are important. Books like this, <i>Dark Tower</i> and <i/>Buffy</i> offer the unique opportunity to actively grow the comic book market. This book will be actively sought out by a crowd that may not be aware that books are released on Wednesday, or of who Brian Bendis is. This is a rare chance to grab someone who doesn&#8217;t care, and turn him or her into a reader.</p>
<p>That said, this issue is an accomplishment. The insanely talented creative team of Bendis and Maleev deliver a thoughtful, beautiful, action-driven story for hardcore Halo fans and n00bs alike. Matt Hollingsworth&#8217;s disturbing but consistent colors are hugely effective in solidifying the <i>Halo</i> world and look, while Chris Eliopoulos proves to be more than the guy that makes the <i>Franklin Richards</i> books go, and provides pitch perfect lettering. </p>
<p>The opening six page scene lays low any fear that this series would be the typical, dialogue driven storytelling that Bendis is loved and loathed for. This book is about fucking shit up. By the fourth page&#8217;s third panel we are reminded of why we&#8217;re reading this book, with a subtle &#8220;first person shooter cam&#8221; shot. The inclusion of Cleveland, Bendis&#8217; hometown, feels like an ego-stroke, but is forgivable in that it is always refreshing to see somewhere other than New York or L.A. demolished. While the Master Chief story is obviously the driving force for this book, the common man storyline gives a much needed grounding to the world of <i>Halo</i>, and proves to interesting in its own right. </p>
<p>Licensed books, be they <i>Halo</i>, or the <i>Transformers</i>, <i>GI Joe</i>, and <i>Star Wars</i> books of yesteryear, are what get people into comics. While the comic inspired-movie boom has helped grant some mainstream credibility to the world of comics (read: money buys respect), the fact is that people who see the <i>Spider-man</i> movies tend to like the <i>Spider-man</i> movies. It doesn&#8217;t necessarily follow that they pursue the books. But, if you have an audience that clamors for more substance from their obsession of choice, (looking at you <i>Buffy</i> fans), then they will follow regardless of medium. They say comics can&#8217;t compete with video games. Maybe they can&#8217;t, but they can sure as hell help each other.</p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: I don’t know about being an “accomplishment” or even “grow[ing] the comic book market,” but it was enjoyable, in a weird, awful watching-someone-else-masturbate kind of way.</p>
<p>Yes, Master Chief doesn’t say a single word (for two four-page stints, some kind of record for Bendis), but the hotel concierge guy who is in Cleveland when the Covenant attack is really just a better-looking, Indian Bendis. His mouth is potty and his mannerisms are that of a short, troll-looking mother, but the dude’s hawt. Which segues nicely into how awesome Maleev is. I think he could draw Brendan’s face and make it look good, that’s how good he is.</p>
<p>This book is kind of ridiculous, but Halo fans will buy it because whatever. That’ll probably the only thing they buy, but even only one Halo guy picks up a <i>Daredevil</i> trade, I guess it will have been worth it.</p>
<h2>Mouse Guard: Winter 1152 #1</h2>
<p><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/mouse-guard-winter-1152-1-preview/42514/2/"><img src="/2006/42514/42514_1-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/mouse-guard-winter-1152-1-preview/42514/3/"><img src="/2006/42514/42514_2-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/mouse-guard-winter-1152-1-preview/42514/4/"><img src="/2006/42514/42514_3-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/mouse-guard-winter-1152-1-preview/42514/5/"><img src="/2006/42514/42514_4-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/mouse-guard-winter-1152-1-preview/42514/6/"><img src="/2006/42514/42514_5-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/mouse-guard-winter-1152-1-preview/42514/7/"><img src="/2006/42514/42514_6-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/mouse-guard-winter-1152-1-preview/42514/8/"><img src="/2006/42514/42514_7-.jpg"></a></p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: I’ll be honest- the first volume of <i>Mouse Guard</i> didn’t blow me away the way it did some others. I thought it was solid and beautifully drawn, but the story felt a bit stretched. There were points of confusion in the storytelling, and at times it was hard to tell characters apart. Of course, I still think it deserved an Eisner and was eagerly awaiting the beginning of the second volume. I was pleased to see that David Petersen continued to evolve and improve with his work. The art continued to provide stunning portrayals of animal life while still giving insight into the characters and their world. I think Petersen has become more comfortable with his pacing, and has managed to find a story that suits the season in which it is set. These dudes are little heroes, and everyone should pay attention.</p>
<p>Plus, you get a bonus Geof Darrow pin-up.</p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: More awesome mousy action from Eisner-winning David Petersen. It’s winter now, and Midnight’s attack in the fall has left the Guard with little food and medicine. The Guard Mice have to travel to the nearby cities and basically beg for food, medicine, and continued support of the Guard. It’s a hard life, being a Guard Mouse. It’s even harder trying to read Gwendolyn’s script. Good God, could you have chosen a more difficlut script. I mean thanks for not using Wingdings, but man.</p>
<p>Regardless, I love this book. I loved it the first time, and I’m gonna love it this time.</p>
<p>Also, I love Saxon.</p>
<h2>Order of the Stick vol. -1: Start of Darkness TP</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Another black and white prequel for Rich Burlew&#8217;s <i>Dungeons &#038; Dragons</i>-themed online comic <i>Order of the Stick</i>, which is just as hilarious as his strip.</p>
<p>Where the last prequel focused on the heroes, this one focuses on the villains of the tale, Xykon the Lich and Redcloak, his goblin cleric. In his introduction, Burlew says that it is difficult to write a story where the villain is the main character without making him sympathetic. Fear not, for Xykon is an evil, evil jerk who can elicit no sympathy from anybody. Burlew does a good job of fleshing out Xykon&#8217;s character without giving him some kind of tortured past to explain away all his nefarious deeds. Xykon&#8217;s just an evil dick.</p>
<p>Redcloak, on the other hand&#8230; Well, you should read it.</p>
<p>Burlew packs this volume with a bunch of comics in-jokes, from a magical X-men team, to a slightly funnier rendition of that fateful night of Dick Grayson&#8217;s. Even with all the evil and smiting, Burlew makes sure you can yuk it up.</p>
<p>Like in his last prequel, Burlew chooses to tone the bulk of the story in grayscale and not add in color. While I can understand that printing costs would be much, much higher, Burlew&#8217;s stick figure representations of all that is <i>Dungeons &#038; Dragons</i> look a lot better in color.</p>
<p>Regardless, I will be adding this to my collection because I do love <i>OotS</i> very much, and even though Burlew says you don&#8217;t need to read this book to follow the main story arc in his online strips, fans should still check it out. And if you&#8217;re not already a fan of <i>OotS</i>, then by all means, <a target=_blank href="http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0001.html">start now</a>.</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: What if <i>Bone</i> spent most of its energy making D&#038;D jokes with Microsoft Paint graphics? It turns out, you&#8217;d have a lot of fun, and it would be a lot like this. This story was surprisingly serialized, with a plot that managed to move forward. It was generally funny, even to a reader not immersed in a &#8220;Vitality +9&#8243; lifestyle. The balloon layout was confusing at points, and the page size was jarring. The best sequences were rendered in perfect Crayola bit graphics that accidentally carry into the main story. Oh, and cockroaches can breach the fourth wall, much how they can breach any other wall. I would probably not buy this without first being a fan of the web-work, but this does make the web publication more enticing and is a fine volume unto itself.</p>
<h2>Stormbringers #1</h2>
<p><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/stormbringers-1-preview/42483/2/"><img src="/2006/42483/42483_1-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/stormbringers-1-preview/42483/3/"><img src="/2006/42483/42483_2-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/stormbringers-1-preview/42483/4/"><img src="/2006/42483/42483_3-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/stormbringers-1-preview/42483/5/"><img src="/2006/42483/42483_4-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/stormbringers-1-preview/42483/6/"><img src="/2006/42483/42483_5-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/stormbringers-1-preview/42483/7/"><img src="/2006/42483/42483_6-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/stormbringers-1-preview/42483/8/"><img src="/2006/42483/42483_7-.jpg"></a></p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: First off, &#8220;womb energy?&#8221; Seriously?</p>
<p>Second off, five thousand women have been murdered and the cops have <i>no leads</i>? That there is the worst police force in the history of ever.</p>
<p>But back to the womb energy: apparently, there are women in the city of New Frontier (I think Darwyn Cooke and Peter David live there) who have manifested superpowers, &#8220;pregnant with &#8230; inexhaustible sums of energy.&#8221; This womb energy allows them to shoot laser beams, or run fast, or be an honest-to-God angel, apparently. Also, there are men who don&#8217;t have powers <i>per se</i>, but by exerting their wills real hard, they can be more than normal men. This isn&#8217;t the most ridiculous premise in the world, but it comes close. It&#8217;s not helped by the fact that the entire issue is exposition, and clunky exposition at that.</p>
<p>John Stinsman&#8217;s art is serviceable, but not great. Some of his forms are a little off, but overall okay. I really have beef with the colorist Megan Spence. She puts too much shadow on everything, even when it&#8217;s light out or people are in an office building with plenty of light. The area under someone&#8217;s chin should not be that dark in an office.</p>
<p>Also, I&#8217;m all for diversity, but making everyone in this book black is not diversity. I guess it&#8217;s possible that some of these people are Hispanic or something, but man, there&#8217;s like three pale-skinned people. Whatever, it&#8217;s not really a complaint; more of an observation.</p>
<p>The premise is too ridiculous to not keep reading this book, but it&#8217;s definitely not worth five bucks.</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: This book sort of floored me. I thought the packaging was disappointing, and entered with low expectations. All of a sudden, there was womb energy and an Ultimate Nick Fury, modern Luke Cage, and <i>Shaft 2000</i>-era Sam Jackson protagonist. Oh, and after a passable first four pages artist John Stinsman leaps from passable to fucking superstar. It helps that his character work seems to echo that of Mike Mckone, an all time favorite of mine, but what Stinsman achieves is much more. His storytelling is fluid and natural. He is as good looking on the close shots as the full ones. His action is as visually interesting as his character interaction. Best of all, his inking is perfectly saturated to tell the story at hand. Usually, the best way to tell if an artist is ready for prime-time is to see how consistent their work is from page one to twenty-two. People inevitably mail it in on scenes they don’t love, and the result is so uneven an audience will tune out or put the book back down. I think his cover was a bad representation of his skill, and that he turned a corner during this project. </p>
<p>The story was incredibly charged and ambitious. The characters were well-written enough to keep me interested in turning the page. I worry that the allegory here may be laid on a bit thick but didn’t stray too close to feel like a book with an agenda. I don&#8217;t mind not seeing many light skinned folk in this book, because there are plenty of comics with exclusively light skinned casts. This book was a real surprise, and well worth hopping onboard early.</p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: But why can’t I see anybody’s neck!? Even in a brightly lit room, that also has a huge window that lets in natural light, I can’t see people’s necks ‘cause there’s so much shadow. Did Stinsman just spill a bottle of ink or something?</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: Necks are no longer necessary. They have been sacrificed in the name of mood.</p>
<h2>Superman #666</h2>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: Welcome back to <i>Superman</I>&#8216;s issue 666 Satanniversary, (the joke so nice I used it twice). Regular series writer Kurt Busiek teams with industry legend Walt Simonson to bring this tale of a Superman gone wrong. Simonson&#8217;s powerful portrayal of Krypton&#8217;s Last Son is a treat, but the meticulous hand lettering of John Workman is a huge standout. You will never enjoy a good &#8220;THOOM&#8221; as much as one by John Workman. Simonson&#8217;s Superman, like that of fabled studio-mate Howard Chaykin, is not always &#8220;pretty.&#8221; The line work may be jarring to readers with modern sensibilities, but the strength of the work lies in its ability to convey the emotional beats of the story. The composition and style is perfectly realized. There is real power in this Superman, and it feels a great deal like I imagine a Jack Kirby <i>Superman</i> story would feel.</p>
<p>The plot itself is an eerie negative to Kurt Busiek&#8217;s <i>Astro City</i> story, wherein the Superman analog, Samaritan, dreams about his freedom to fly without responsibility. Here, Superman acts without the burden of responsibility he must shoulder, and the results are frightening. The story itself reads like a dream, with jumps in logic and time, but an internal consistency to make it feel real. I thought this story employed interesting narrative tricks, as well as a neat twist to Kryptonian mythology. Timeless and original, this was maybe one of my all-time favorite Superman stories.</p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Of all-time? Lay off the hyperbole, buddy. I’m not saying you didn’t enjoy it, but all-time? C’mon now.</p>
<p>I didn’t like this issue at all. The story was forced and contrived, the art was dense and hard to parse, and the damn book cost $3.99, a full dollar more than a regular (and usually better) issue of <i>Superman</i>. I’m not gonna pay $3.99 for some story about a Kryptonian demon (who didn’t exist before this issue, by the way) who tries to take Superman’s soul and make him into the Beast of Revelation. It’s quite silly and I’m not down at all.</p>
<h2>Tales from the Crypt #2</h2>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: Is the classic <i>Tales from the Crypt</i> cover layout simply the best layout because of the baggage it brings? I think it may be more; I think the composition of it may be the pinnacle of the standard sized comic. Or maybe I just think gross looking shit is cool.</p>
<p>This book is dedicated to all the right people, and I think it is great to have this title back in print. Imagine a world where <i>Tales from the Crypt</i> went on unimpeded. Why, it would be somewhere in the seven hundreds, had it stayed in print. It could have rivaled <i>2000 A.D.</i> as a proving grounds for comics’ best talent. Who knows, maybe some of comics’ most accomplished writers would have been American! </p>
<p>This first of this book’s two tales of horror is the story of the landlord from Hell, or rather the landlord put through Hell. Although this is a <i>Crypt</i> revival, <i>The Tenant</i> is a full on <i>Spirit</i> homage. Everything from the street names, Iger, of Eisner and Iger Studios, and Colt of the Spirit’s alter-ego, Denny Colt, is in honor of the man who brought literature to comics. Even the headstone at the story’s finale gives the gag away with the name “Willis Rensie,” Eisner’s one-time pseudonym. The story echoes the parable-like nature of Eisner’s classic <i>Spirit</i> stories with a morale of social responsibility and compassion. The art is good enough, but suffer when the panels are closer up. In fact, the production value on this book was way off. The entire chapter looks like second rate scans, and really distract from art that has moments of real potential. Artist Steve Mannion provides a spectacularly rendered cover, but fails to carry that level of quality throughout his chapter. </p>
<p><i>The Garden</i> is the issue’s second chapter, and is a chilling story delivered by <i>Action Philosophers</i>’ Fred Van Lente and artist Mr. Exes. The story is a strangely haunting one, with a true perversion of paradise. </p>
<p>Both stories prove to be good enough reads to warrant a look. They are neither children nor adults’ comics, a feat accomplished by telling topical stories with a meaning and a resonance without resorting to stupid fucking things like cursing.</p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Moreso than the individual stories, which were good in their own ways, I enjoyed the Hell out of the framing bits. The puns that Cryptkeeper throws down are hilarious and “What the Wertham&#8211;!” is the best exclamation ever and I have to start using it in my everyday speech.</p>
<p>Brendan is right in that “The Tenant” is just a love letter to Will Eisner, from the art style, to the plot points, to the themes, all the way down to the Easter eggs. Unfortunately, Brendan is also right in that the production value is just awful. “The Garden” was a much more interesting tale to me. It had a pretty sweet twist ending that I will not ruin because then it will cease to be pretty sweet.</p>
<p>Look, you just need to read this book. The Cryptkeeper is hilarious and these puns need to make out into the world.</p>
<h2>Wolverine #56</h2>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: The creative team of Jason Aaron and Howard Chaykin on <i>Wolverine</i> packs so much testosterone you may need a pill to offset it. Grit itself would cower at the grit within these pages. A refreshing change of pace from the incoherent &#8220;Romulus,&#8221; storyline, this is a standalone story of how Logan can destroy a man without touching him. It is actually very reminiscent of Mark Millar and Kaare Andrews&#8217; concentration camp issue (that&#8217;s issue 32 if you like editor&#8217;s notes). It is funny to see Aaron taking the reigns on the world&#8217;s most fearsome Canuck just a week after his pilot issue of <i>Ripclaw</i>, which, as Adan pointed out, is not a wholly *ahem,* original character template, but by delivering, all slings and arrows are left in their upright and locked position. The actual plot, with Logan trapped in a pit while a man guns at him for a full work day, echoes the story of Cassidy and Frankie the Eunuch in <i>Preacher</i>. While I won&#8217;t say the story isn&#8217;t original, it definitely wears its influences on its sleeve.  </p>
<p>I&#8217;m not sure this is a logical follow up to Loeb and Bianchi&#8217;s previous story arc, nor do I understand how this would fit in any sort of current continuity, but I am sure that I do not give a shit. While Chaykin is not in top form, his jagged, bestial portrayal of Wolverine suits this one-and-done perfectly. The blood in this issue, (and oh, is there blood in this issue) practically sticks to your hands off of the page. It isn&#8217;t pretty, but nor should it be.</p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Yes, yes, Jason Aaron is a good writer and Howard Chaykin’s art makes my eyes bleed. And overall, I like the issue, but that’s not what I want to talk about. I want to talk about whether or not a mainstream superhero book can even have a done-in-one story anymore.</p>
<p>Obviously, this book begins a new story that then ends in twenty-eight pages. But is it a done-in-one, really? Most, if not all, mainstream superhero books are too hampered by continuity and a shared universe (not necessarily a bad thing) to be able to tell a done-in-one story. Taking this issue of <i>Wolverine</i> as an example (also because I am ostensibly reviewing it), at the end of the issue, you find out that the mastermind behind Logan’s imprisonment is that Romulus guy Loeb and Bianchi introduced in the last arc. Even the new and leathered Wild Child shows up. A reader completely unknown to comics could not pick this up and understand the whole story. He’d have to ask friends who the leather-boy is, who he is talking to, and why do they hate Wolverine so much? These are, of course, beyond the initial questions of who Wolverine is, why can he be shot a lot and not die, etc. which we don’t count because they fall in the purview of introductory questions (everybody asks these kinds of questions when about to consume new media, especially if they’re joining up <i>in medias res</i>).</p>
<p>And I don’t think even longtime readers can consider this a done-in-one. The entire time I was reading this issue, as narration boxes told me weeks were passing, that Logan was in the pit for about two months, give or take a week, all I could think was, “Where are the X-men or New Avengers? This guy belongs to about twenty teams, and none of them have noticed he’s missing? Maybe there was a scheduling conflict and all the teams think he’s currently with a different team?” I still half expect there to be a <i>New Avengers</i> or <i>Astonishing X-men</i> issue later on where Wolverine chastises Luke Cage or Cyclops for not coming to spring him from the pit.</p>
<p>The age of the one-and-done is long gone for mainstream superhero comics. There is too much continuity for this to be able to happen anymore. Throw in the fact that most mainstream superhero characters regularly appear in more than two monthly titles (Wolverine being the worst offender of the whole bunch), and you have the death of the done-in-one story.</p>
<p>But hey, Jason Aaron did write a good story, and I hope this gets you <i>Wolverine</i> readers out there to pick up his <i>Other Side</i> or his <i>Scalped</i>, both by Vertigo, as they are much, much better.</p>
<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/mouse-guard-winter-1152-1-preview/42514/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Mouse Guard: Winter 1152 #1 Preview</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/halo-uprising-1-preview/42504/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Halo: Uprising #1 Preview</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/comics-for-august-22-and-news/42478/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Comics for August 22 and news</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/stormbringers-1-preview/42483/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Stormbringers #1 Preview</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/halo-uprising-1-first-look/42281/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Halo: Uprising #1 First Look</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Brendan &amp; Adan’s Picks, Pans &amp; Scans &#8211; August 16, 2007</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-august-16-2007/42461/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-august-16-2007/42461/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 16 Aug 2007 15:05:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brendan McGuirk &#38; Adan Jimenez</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Comic Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Reviews]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-august-16-2007/42461/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Hey all, Brendan here. We&#8217;ve hit a rough patch of lateness here at BAAPPAS Central, but we&#8217;re working hard to right the wrongs. I was out of town this week, so chalk the tardy post and the shortened list up to that. Fear not, children, next week we&#8217;ll be back to timely, lengthy normalcy. Booster [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><i>Hey all, Brendan here. We&#8217;ve hit a rough patch of lateness here at BAAPPAS Central, but we&#8217;re working hard to right the wrongs. I was out of town this week, so chalk the tardy post and the shortened list up to that. Fear not, children, next week we&#8217;ll be back to timely, lengthy normalcy.</i> </p>
<h2>Booster Gold #1</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: This was quite an enjoyable experience. Geoff Johns and Jeff Katz seem truly excited about writing this book.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s getting considerably harder to stay mad at Geoff Johns for the train wreck that was <i>Green Lantern #4</i> (but I can hold on to my white hot rage as long as I need to). First he gave me the Sinestro Corps War, and now he&#8217;s giving me Booster as the greatest hero the multiverse has never known. Skeets, Rip Hunter, and Supernova are along for the ride, so we get a nice team dynamic going. I will say that this issue was pretty wordy, like Scrabble tournament wordy. For a guy who&#8217;s supposedly an egocentric moron, Booster sure does have a lot of thought captions. And I mean a lot.</p>
<p>I&#8217;d forgotten how much I enjoyed Dan Jurgens pencils. They just feel like classic superhero pencils (please keep in mind that I&#8217;m an old man born in 1983). And since he created Booster way back when, he&#8217;s probably the only guy qualified to draw his return (Kevin Maguire would also have been acceptable).</p>
<p>The use of the captions with the weeks and days (Week 60, Day 1) as well as the three characters we saw save the multiverse at the end make this feel like the true successor to <i>52</i>, and I can only hope that fans see this and give this book the sales it deserves.</p>
<p>And can DC please put those four vertical bars previewing upcoming plot points at the end of all their books? It was awesome at the end of <i>Justice Society of America #1</i> and it was awesome here.</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: Booster Gold, you rock my world.</p>
<p>The greatest hero the world can never know about gets his much deserved new series here. Creators Dan Jurgens, Geoff Johns and Jeff Katz do the improbable, and find a purpose for Booster, both as a character and for a series. Booster has to fix the time stream, and no one can have any idea. Finally, we have a reason for this character to exist both as a sort of asshole, and as an honorable hero. He is a joke, and he isn&#8217;t. What&#8217;s more, there is no limit to the amount of stories that can be told in between continuity&#8217;s cracks. It could be a strong counter-point to Marvel&#8217;s <i>Exiles</i>, only character-driven. As long as the jokes stay funny, and the creators stay true to the series&#8217; mission statement, this could be one of the most successful relaunches of a character ever. Jurgens&#8217; work looks better than it has in years, which is a testament both to him and his inker, Norm Rapmund. When his work is off, it looks over-posed and dated. Here we can appreciate his strengths, with dynamic superhero work, expressive faces and an ability to draw damn near everything under the sun.</p>
<p>So here&#8217;s to you, you Buzz Cola-shilling, self-aggrandizing, super-suit stealing, time-jumping bastard. You may turn out to be the multiverse&#8217;s greatest hero yet. It&#8217;s a damn shame it&#8217;ll have to be such a secret; I mean, think of how many endorsements 52 universes have to offer!</p>
<p>And dude, that <i>Green Lantern</i> issue was like two years ago. Time to move on, buddy.</p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: You just don&#8217;t know how much that book affected me. I nearly died (literally) because of that book.</p>
<h2>Good as Lily GN</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Could this be better than Mike Carey and Marc Hempel&#8217;s <i>Re-Gifters</i>? I think it just might be!</p>
<p>Grace Kwon has just turned eighteen years old, high school is about to end, and three versions of herself from different time periods come to visit her. Weird? Yes, but it nonetheless works here, and it works really well. Where <i>Re-Gifters</i> drew its drama from the real-life tribulations of a regular Korean girl in LA, <i>Good as Lily</i> draws its drama from the same kind of real-life tribulations, only there is some magic realism thrown in, which is something I usually abhor (magic realism is the easy way out, I&#8217;ve always said). But it felt natural (or as natural as magic gets, anyway) and unforced, unlike the fantasy element in <i>Clubbing</i>, which felt tacked on at the last second. Derek Kirk Kim knocked one out of the park with his first published work <i>Same Difference and Other Stories</i>. With <i>Good as Lily</i>, he showed us that he wasn&#8217;t just a one hit wonder.</p>
<p>I think I like Jesse Hamm&#8217;s art mostly because he reminded me of Kim&#8217;s art in <i>Same Difference</i>. However, he&#8217;s also a good cartoonist in his own right. His facial expressions are quite good (especially the super-cartoony ones when something goes horribly wrong) and his figures are just realistic enough to ground the story in the real world, but cartoony enough to allow the magic realism to happen without missing a beat.</p>
<p>If I had to say anything bad about this book, it&#8217;s that the end is too pat. Everything works out just fine with all the characters involved. Maybe this is a byproduct of magic realism. Regardless, this is fantastic and may beat out its sister <i>Re-Gifters</i> for comic of the year.</p>
<p>I wonder if it says something about something that the best comics so far both feature Korean protagonists in a comic specifically aimed at girls.</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>:It says something about you, at least.</p>
<p>And what do you want? A miserable ending chalk full of tragedy? Again, remember the target audience. This book was genuinely poignant, and very funny. The art wasn&#8217;t my favorite stylistically, but it suited and served the story. I don&#8217;t think all magic needs explanation, and if anything a forced explanation would have distracted from the story. Each iteration of Grace had a clear purpose in being there, and each one gave insight to Grace at eighteen. </p>
<p>If I had a complaint, it would be the title. &#8220;Good As Lily,&#8221; doesn&#8217;t really synch up with what this story seems to be about. Lily is Grace&#8217;s lost sister, and only seems to matter to the child version. Losing a sibling at a young age is a traumatic experience, and from a writing standpoint, should fundamentally change and shape the character. Including the plot point in the title implies importance also, but it doesn&#8217;t seem to come through in the story. The title is more than a little misleading, and if this book weren&#8217;t so damn enjoyable, I would be upset. I&#8217;m not.</p>
<h2>Justice League of America #12</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Well, it&#8217;s not the worst JLA book Brad Meltzer&#8217;s written, not by a damn sight, but it&#8217;s still not very good.</p>
<p>There are some nice character moments (the best one I thought was between Hawkgirl and Black Canary), and some nice set-up for Dwayne McDuffie&#8217;s upcoming &#8220;Injustice League Unlimited&#8221; arc, but overall it was still blah (which especially sucks since the last issue was so damn good). What was the point of Wally and Hal hanging out (especially since Hal was supposed to be on monitor duty)? Why were the secret watchers watching (this isn&#8217;t a plot point, really, I guess I just don&#8217;t want to ruin things if I don&#8217;t have too)? And you&#8217;ve had the Flash for a good two issues now, and have used him not at all.</p>
<p>What can I say about Ed Benes that hasn&#8217;t been said already? The guy draws some purty pictures, but his layouts are kind of bland. Compared to Gene Ha from last month, Benes is just composing the same old superhero layouts with very little deviation. Eric Wight comes along to at least give us something slightly different to look at, but given the choice between Benes&#8217; stale layouts or Wight&#8217;s, I&#8217;m gonna go with Benes. He draws prettier.</p>
<p>I can&#8217;t say that I&#8217;m sorry to see Meltzer go, because I&#8217;m not. At all.</p>
<p>Dwayne McDuffie, come save us!</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: This was supposed to be so much better. Brad Meltzer was supposed to give us a <i>Justice League of America</i> epic. It was supposed to challenge <i>Identity Crisis</i> as a JLA story for the ages. Meltzer, it was said, was waiting his entire life for this job. Maybe he was, but somehow I doubt that the eleven year old Meltzer was dreaming that someday he would write the most superfluous, deliberate, and verbose adventure the DCU had ever seen. This run was little more than a series of conversations about how great the Justice League is or was. First, the Big Three talked about who could be a Leaguer or not, then some villains talked about how doomed the League was, last issue Vixen and Red Arrow talked about how near they were to death, (despite relatively low stakes). Here, two mysterious figures talk about how much the team has gelled with their one and a half adventures over the last year. While the revelation of who is talking is almost a surprise, and the implications add a previously unseen layer to the team dynamic, the lump sum of this &#8220;era&#8221; is wholly underwhelming. This entire run has been obsessed with minutia and faux-character development. Hawkgirl is somehow new because she gets together with the biggest DC slut this side of Nightwing. Superman, Wonder Woman, and Batman have learned to let go of the League, evidenced by the fact that we rarely see them. Vixen is now more than just a filled out Animal-Man rip-off. The Red Tornado is somehow more clueless in regards to the human condition than when he was a robot. Though Meltzer clearly had specific goals as to how to develop each member of his team, the fact that each development had to be driven home so clumsily by unseen narrators seems to imply that either the change is not self-evident, or the audience lacks the sophistication to understand the vision. Meltzer quite obviously has a great affinity for these characters, and the world they inhabit. Even more, he seems to have extracted, from their history, the psychological angles that motivate each character. This series has been a study in those angles. And here I thought it was supposed to be a comicbook about the greatest superheroes of all time.</p>
<p>Eric Wight does provide deceptively sophisticated artwork that evokes the work of the past without blatantly copying any one style. Benes, though, again fails to live up to his potential. If there was one word for his artwork this entire run, it would be inconsistency. The line work jumps from page to page, and has since issue zero. There are times when two consecutive pages seem to have been produced by wholly different artists. This erraticism is forgivable for an issue, or maybe two, as deadlines can come fast in this business. But for the entire run to be plagued by that variation is jarring and unpleasant. The simplistic, straight line work is not the most visually pleasing, but acceptable. The hyper-detailed, ultra-rendered look works, too. But make up your goddamn mind.</p>
<p>The greatest disappointment of this series is the promise it held. I liked <i>Identity Crisis</i>, and loved <i>The Archer&#8217;s Quest</i> before that. I thought that Benes had made great strides in his work on <i>Superman</i>. Perhaps my expectations were too high, but this series felt like a step back for both creators, with the team they brought to life suffering because of it. Bring on Dwayne McDuffie and the Injustice League Unlimited.</p>
<h2>Ripclaw: Pilot Season #1</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: There may be some life left in this shameless Wolverine clone.</p>
<p>This Pilot Season thing is an interesting concept. Top Cow is going to publish six one-shots, and then fans will vote on which two will continue as ongoing series. The inside front cover has the six books listed, and by creative team alone, I’d vote for <i>Ripclaw</i> by Jason Aaron and Jorge Lucas and <i>Velocity</i> by Joe Casey and Kevin Maguire. Luckily, we don’t have to go by only creative teams.</p>
<p>Ripclaw is a character from Marc Silvestri’s original Image offering <i>Cyberforce</i>. There is no question that Ripclaw is a thinly-veiled Wolverine clone: a loner who nonetheless joins a team for the betterment of mankind, he also has claws on his hands (in Ripclaw’s case they’re real claws, cybernetically implanted) and kills a lot of people. He even goes to Japan in this issue and fights yakuza and ninjas. But he’s also a Native American of undetermined specificity, and this is where I had hoped Jason Aaron would shine. His <i>Scalped</i> book, about a present day reservation, is a fantastic read, full of very interesting characters, most of them Native American. I had hoped some of that would bleed over and infuse Ripclaw, but unfortunately, it did not go beyond mentioning a sweat lodge. It’s in this sweat lodge that Ripclaw is contacted by many restless spirits to do their bidding so they can go the world beyond. It’s one of these spirits that tells him to go see Boss Yamamoto in Tokyo.</p>
<p>Every fight scene, every single act of violence without fail, happens off-panel. This is a very interesting thing to relegate to the background, as the issue is about Ripclaw trying to get to the head of the Yamamoto-gumi through many levels of security full of gun-toting Yak, sneaky ninjas, and a martial arts master. Relegating this to the background, though, does allow some pretty cool scenes to be spotlighted instead, including the fantastic conversation between Ripclaw and the aforementioned martial arts master, Number Nine.</p>
<p>Jorge Lucas, forced to draw talking heads for a good portion of the issue, nonetheless does a decent job. Ripclaw gets more and more fucked up after each (unseen) battle, so that at the end he’s wearing pants and a shredded shirt, having lost his hat, a coat, and a jacket. Ripclaw himself, though, still looks too much like Wolverine. I understand that the design of the character is set mostly in stone and can’t be changed too much, but maybe his civilian clothing could be altered so that he doesn’t look like a carbon copy of Logan in his civvies. Lose the cowboy hat, show off the ponytail, maybe put on a black jacket instead of a brown one. At least Ripclaw doesn’t smoke cigars. I will say that the aftermath of the battles we’re not privy to are so full of carnage, that my mind just starts racing with the possibilities of what occurred.</p>
<p>Overall, a good book and one that has a good shot at winning this contest. To be perfectly honest, though, I’d probably vote for this on the promise of things to come rather than the actual strengths of this issue. But who knows, maybe the other books will just blow it totally.</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: If you&#8217;re going to rip someone off, make sure he&#8217;s the best there is at what he does.</p>
<p>I thought this was a very strong &#8220;pilot&#8221; issue. It was well paced, laid out  a conflict and journey that can be extended indefinitely, and made me interested in a character I had no interest in prior. The Tokyo criminal underground can make for pretty cookie-cutter antagonists, but the clever dialogue and characterization manages to avoid tediousness. I did notice that the action went mostly unseen, but there was enough on panel drama to hold my interest.</p>
<p>This series, should it continue, will likely continue to give Ripclaw little face time. I would anticipate each issue, like this one, would delve mostly into the lives of his latest victims, illustrating their sin before penance is paid. Ripclaw himself will only develop as a character in terms of how he responds to the underbelly he avenges. Even if it is formulaic, it should be very interesting.</p>
<p>And with all this voting, I have a funny feeling Jason Todd is going to end up dead. Power to the people.</p>
<h2>Terror Inc. #1</h2>
<p><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/terror-inc-1-preview/42433/2/"><img src="/2006/42433/42433_1-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/terror-inc-1-preview/42433/3/"><img src="/2006/42433/42433_2-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/terror-inc-1-preview/42433/4/"><img src="/2006/42433/42433_3-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/terror-inc-1-preview/42433/5/"><img src="/2006/42433/42433_4-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/terror-inc-1-preview/42433/6/"><img src="/2006/42433/42433_5-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/terror-inc-1-preview/42433/7/"><img src="/2006/42433/42433_6-.jpg"></a> <a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/terror-inc-1-preview/42433/8/"><img src="/2006/42433/42433_7-.jpg"></a></p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: From the early 90s (and from Robert Kirkman&#8217;s underappreciated third arc of <i>Marvel Team-Up</i>), comes the basically forgotten character of Mr. Terror, an ageless zombie who just cannot die.</p>
<p>I wasn&#8217;t too keen on the series only because I remember Terror as a not so interesting character, but David Lapham has convinced me otherwise. The first half of this book is Terror&#8217;s origin story, dating all the way back to 455 AD and the sack of Rome and continuing for hundreds of years. The origin is pretty cool, full of swords and sorcery and a love that could not survive. Flash forward to Los Angeles, 2007, and Terror runs a problem-solving operation. He&#8217;s approached by a man from Homeland Security for some cloak-and-dagger stuff, strictly off the books.</p>
<p>I think the part I like best (and don&#8217;t judge me here) is that Terror has to take body parts from other dead people to keep himself together. He can also take heads and find out what the guy was thinking before his head got &#8220;re-appropriated.&#8221; That in itself presents some pretty cool ideas, never mind the fact that Lapham is a fantastic crime fiction writer. I stress caution, though; Mrs. Primo may steal the spotlight if you’re not too careful.</p>
<p>Patrick Zircher, who has experience drawing hamburger meat for heads in <i>Cable/Deadpool</i>, is an inspired choice for artist. He draws the barbarian/knight-filled origin portion like he was drawing an issue of <i>Conan</i> or <i>Red Sonja</i> (only with less lusty wenches) and the present day stuff like he was drawing an issue of </i>Queen &#038; Country</i>. It’s not that his style changes or anything like that, but the atmospheres of each section are very pronounced in the artwork. Where olden times are kinetic and there’s movement in almost every panel, the present day has quieter moments where a panel could stretch for minutes in the same basic pose. The pace slows down as centuries are no longer flying by (not to say that the present day is completely devoid of action or anything like that). I would have liked to see some more backgrounds during the origin portion, though.</p>
<p>My only real problem is that nobody seems to notice that Terror is a zombie (or whatever). Either there are tons of zombies running around (there aren’t), Terror is really well known (then how can he do all that sensitive black bag stuff if he is?), or Lapham just didn’t want to deal with that (the most likely answer and the laziest).</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: I think the fact that people aren&#8217;t constantly running from Terror is likely due to the hazy continuity in which the MAX titles take place. MAX titles, while outside of the Marvel Universe proper, are Marvel books, and so there is a precedent for the supernatural. Plus, it is all in Los Angeles, so people probably just think Terror is in between nose jobs.</p>
<p>This was much better than I&#8217;d expected. The exposition laden origin is handled beautifully by Lapham, with a narrative tone that both develops the character and illustrates the black sense of humor needed to survive the horrific tragedy that defines this man&#8217;s existence. Zircher, who has also done extensive work on <i>Iron Man</i>, delivers the work of his career. Moody, and just grotesque enough, every frame is fully realized and executed. I thought the second half of this issue dragged a little, but that be because I was more interested in how Terror operated in the chaotic lawlessness of the ancient world than in tame L.A. Then again, he did snap a dude&#8217;s neck just so he could replace his own degenerated skull, so maybe the world of today can be a little badass, also.</p>
<p>Only complaint: where are the obtuse tri-bars that extend from Terror&#8217;s face? They made absolutely no sense, and I demand to see them!</p>
<div id="crp_related"><h3>See also:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/terror-inc-1-preview/42433/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Terror, Inc. #1 Preview</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/dynamite-reviews-robocop-1-alice-wonderland-2/54595/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Dynamite Reviews: Robocop #1, Alice in Wonderland #2, and More!</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/marvel-advance-reviews-cable-amazing-spider-man-and-more/545/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Marvel Advance Reviews: Cable, Amazing Spider-Man, and More</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/didio-plans-milestoners-static/50200/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">DiDio: No plans for Milestoners besides Static</a></li><li><a href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/reviews-rebels-12-secret-17/54441/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Reviews: R.E.B.E.L.S. #12, Secret Six #17 and More!</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Brendan &amp; Adan’s Picks, Pans &amp; Scans &#8211; August 8, 2007</title>
		<link>http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-august-8-2007/42417/</link>
		<comments>http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-august-8-2007/42417/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Aug 2007 17:55:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brendan McGuirk &#38; Adan Jimenez</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Comic Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Picks, Pans & Scans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Reviews]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.popcultureshock.com/brendan-adans-picks-pans-scans-august-8-2007/42417/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Alan Moore: The Complete Wildcats TPB Adan: Back in 1995, Alan Moore was asked to write WildStorm&#8217;s flagship title. He accepted. Alan Moore: The Complete Wildcats TP is how it turned out. The WildC.A.T.s, slightly modified X-Men knockoffs, had been floundering for a little while, and after twenty issues of rather bland stories buoyed only [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Alan Moore: The Complete Wildcats TPB</h2>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Back in 1995, Alan Moore was asked to write WildStorm&#8217;s flagship title. He accepted. <i>Alan Moore: The Complete Wildcats TP</i> is how it turned out.</p>
<p>The WildC.A.T.s, slightly modified X-Men knockoffs, had been floundering for a little while, and after twenty issues of rather bland stories buoyed only by Jim Lee&#8217;s fan-pleasing artwork, Alan Moore was the reins and started his fantastic run on the title. Savant and Majestic believed the rest of the team to be dead, so they built a new team from the ground up. In actuality, Spartan, Voodoo, Zealot, Maul, Void, Warblade, and Lord Emp had traveled to Khera where they saw it for what it really was: factionalized aristocrats that depended on slave labor and ghettoized the unwanted. An allegory, to be sure, but a good action story, too.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, back on Earth, Moore introduced two of the best characters in the WildStorm universe: Ladytron and Tao. Tao, of course, was the driving force of Moore&#8217;s entire run. He was a genetically engineered super genius, able to manipulate anyone into doing anything for him. He plunged the entire city of New York into a gang war all so that he could unite all the super-heroes under him. Tao went on to star in Ed Brubaker and Sean Philips&#8217; excellent series <i>Sleeper</i>.</p>
<p>Ladytron had a much shorter lifespan, unfortunately. She was this crazy cyborg who killed as often as she cursed (which was quite often) and was a nun in the Church of Gort. She showed up in a couple of issues of the second and third <i>Wildcats</i> series (most recently as little more than the Grifter&#8217;s ride, I believe). I hope Morrison brings her back in the fourth series (whenever that comes out again).</p>
<p>There were many artists during Moore&#8217;s run, but the one I most associate with it is Travis Charest, who is just phenomenal. I wish he did more stuff more often, but this guy is ridiculously slow. But just take a look at any of his work and tell me it&#8217;s not something you want to look at tall the time. Sure, he started like many artists before and after him: as a Jim Lee clone, but as he progressed on <i> WildC.A.T.s</i>, he came into his own style (especially the on the covers, where he&#8217;d always looked his least Jim Lee-like).</p>
<p>Even if you hate the Wildcats and everything they represent (which is a lot and you couldn&#8217;t possibly hate it all), you need to read this collection. Hey, it has Alan Moore&#8217;s name on it and when has he ever steered you wrong.</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: This book made me happy that Alan Moore has, for the most part, sworn off work-for-hire. His take on WildC.A.T.S. is more intriguing than the average issue of the Image Jim Lee vehicle, but that don&#8217;t make it Shakespeare. </p>
<p>In fairness, it wasn&#8217;t that the book was bad. The problem I had was that Moore seemed too restrained by the characters and the story, when all I really wanted was to watch him jam out ideas. I thoroughly enjoyed his take on the Kheran homeworld, with their fully realized political scene and class structure, but felt hampered by the story at home. Look, it isn&#8217;t that this book wasn&#8217;t a well written, or well drawn. Moore&#8217;s bar is raised considerably higher than the average writer&#8217;s. I don&#8217;t need every piece to be <i>Watchmen</i>, but I like it when I find a <i>Supreme</i>. Moore didn&#8217;t do enough here to challenge to form, and so I was left unsatisfied. It doesn&#8217;t make it a bad <i>WildC.A.T.S.</i>, but it isn&#8217;t up to par with other great Moore work. But shit, I&#8217;ll probably read it again someday. He&#8217;s Alan Moore.</p>
<p>As a side note, if Alan Moore was still accepting work from the big two, he would probably be writing <i>Final Crisis</i>. Personally, I&#8217;m glad he&#8217;s not.</p>
<h2>Black Adam: The Dark Age #1</h2>
<p><a target="new" href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/black-adam-the-dark-ages-1-preview/42422/2/"><img src="/2006/42422/42422_1-.jpg"></a> <a target="new" href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/black-adam-the-dark-ages-1-preview/42422/3/"><img src="/2006/42422/42422_2-.jpg"></a> <a target="new" href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/black-adam-the-dark-ages-1-preview/42422/4/"><img src="/2006/42422/42422_3-.jpg"></a> <a target="new" href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/black-adam-the-dark-ages-1-preview/42422/5/"><img src="/2006/42422/42422_4-.jpg"></a> <a target="new" href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/black-adam-the-dark-ages-1-preview/42422/6/"><img src="/2006/42422/42422_5-.jpg"></a> <a target="new" href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/black-adam-the-dark-ages-1-preview/42422/7/"><img src="/2006/42422/42422_6-.jpg"></a> <a target="new" href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/black-adam-the-dark-ages-1-preview/42422/8/"><img src="/2006/42422/42422_7-.jpg"></a></p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Hurm&#8230; I&#8217;m not sure what I think here. I have this guttural reaction to the book as pretty cool, actually, because it&#8217;s just Black Adam being all badass (the book opens with him ordering his followers to beat the shit out of him so that he can&#8217;t be recognized), but there are also some characterization issues that I have. Black Adam seems to act more like Vandal Savage than Black Adam in this book. Perhaps this is just desperation seeping into the character, what with his wife dead and his magic word forgotten, but still. Peter Tomasi still puts together an interesting story and I&#8217;m especially intrigued by the cliffhanger ending (which I shan&#8217;t spoil, so don&#8217;t worry).</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve always been a fan of Doug Mahnke&#8217;s art: I just love the way he draws the Superman-looking characters. They always look meaner and dirtier than they really are. While an interesting look for a Superman or a Captain Marvel, it fits like a glove on Black Adam, especially in this story, where he really is meaner and dirtier.</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: Here he is, the breakout star of <i>52</i>. This new miniseries picks up where <i>World War Three</i> left Adam, powerless and shamed. With his homeland in ruins, Adam is operating in secret in an attempt to reclaim his lost glory. Departed DC senior editor Peter Tomasi writes with Doug Manke providing pencils in this harshly portrayed adventure. Black Adam is an old character, but it has been Geoff Johns&#8217; brutal anti-hero depiction that fans have responded to since the <i>JSA: Black Reign</i> arc, which Tomasi edited. In <i>Reign</i>, Adam acted as a liberator to his native country Kahndaq. With a touch of subtlety, Kahndaq serves as a metaphor for the Middle East, or at least the American perception of the Middle East in the post 9-11 world. This makes Black Adam an Arabian analog to the American Superman. His concepts of justice and honor differ drastically from the traditional American values, but his commitment to fighting for what he believes in makes him as valiant as any hero.</p>
<p>Although the subtext of the character has been evident in recent years, this issue seemed to posses a greater political bent than any of the stories prior. Adam is operating in secret as part of a zealous terrorist cell, attempting to infiltrate his homeland. He is a great character, but no Black Adam story would be complete without his naïve JSA teammate, Atom Smasher. Atom and Adam make up one of the most dynamic friendships in the DCU, as Adam&#8217;s sense of vigilante justice matches with Atom&#8217;s sense of proactive heroism. Doug Manke&#8217;s art has moments of greatness, but they all seem to occur early on in this uneven issue. I&#8217;m still undecided as to whether this issue was interestingly topical or overtly heavy-handed, but I will gladly finish the series to figure it out.</p>
<h2>Black Metal v1</h2>
<p><a target="new" href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/black-metal-vol-1-preview/42418/2/"><img src="/2006/42418/42418_1-.jpg"></a> <a target="new" href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/black-metal-vol-1-preview/42418/3/"><img src="/2006/42418/42418_2-.jpg"></a> <a target="new" href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/black-metal-vol-1-preview/42418/4/"><img src="/2006/42418/42418_3-.jpg"></a> <a target="new" href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/black-metal-vol-1-preview/42418/5/"><img src="/2006/42418/42418_4-.jpg"></a> <a target="new" href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/black-metal-vol-1-preview/42418/6/"><img src="/2006/42418/42418_5-.jpg"></a> <a target="new" href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/black-metal-vol-1-preview/42418/7/"><img src="/2006/42418/42418_6-.jpg"></a> <a target="new" href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/black-metal-vol-1-preview/42418/8/"><img src="/2006/42418/42418_7-.jpg"></a></p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: I kind of wish this book was regular-sized so that this would make more sense: &#8220;Too much metal for one hand!&#8221; As it stands, the manga format is small enough for one hand. Do not let that deter you, for this story is too much metal for one <i>person</i>.</p>
<p>Rick Spears writes another enjoyable story (in the interest of full disclosure, I talk to Rick almost every week at the LCS, but I give special preference to no man!) about twin brothers and their hunt for awesome metal, and what dark prophecy said awesome metal unleashes. Reading the twins&#8217; speech patterns is like listening to a metal album, only without the screams and all that noise in the background, and I have to say, reading metal is a lot more fun that listening to metal (as may be apparent, I am not a big metal fan). The foster mother and brother in the twins&#8217; lives, who are about as un-metal as one can get, are hilarious companions (foils?) for the twins, especially the brother, who seems to go nameless except for the many insults the twins hurl at him (their favorite seems to be &#8216;Toad&#8217;).</p>
<p>Chuck BB is someone I&#8217;ve never heard of before, but his art is super cool. It&#8217;s obviously very manga-inspired but still retains that western sensibility. A lot of the common manga markers are missing (things like speed lines and bloody noses to denote lust). They are eschewed for traditional western markers, but one can&#8217;t help but look at the big eyes and the somewhat chibi character design.</p>
<p>And if you like this, you should check out Vasilis Lolos&#8217; <i>The Last Call v1</i>, also out this week and also from Oni Press. Lolos is Rick&#8217;s partner on their <i>Pirates of Coney Island</i> book from Image. That one&#8217;s a bit headier, but still super cool.</p>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: Reagan Junior High?</p>
<p>&#8220;What are you, like twelve?&#8221;<br />
&#8220;Yes, but it feels like millennia.&#8221;</p>
<p>I have seen the light in the darkness, and it resides within the pages of <i>Black Metal</i>. When the great Satan comes, I know he will ride to the tune of this book.</p>
<p>Metal is a state of mind, and no one knows it better than the Brothers Stronghand. Twelve-year-old Metal-fanatics, (not Goths, and woe to he who confuses the two) they were sent to Earth to fill the void in my soul that <i>Scott Pilgrim</i>&#8216;s delayed schedule has left me. What <i>Pilgrim</i>is to video game nostalgia, <i>Metal</I> is to…metal. This, in turn, assures awesometivity. I would disagree with Adan&#8217;s assessment of the manga-influence, if only because to me it spoke to the work of Jhonen Vasquez. This story packs all the sick melodrama associated with metal and youth with a story with a crazy quest. The dialogue reads perfectly with the tone and story, with the twins&#8217; repartee serving as a metronome throughout. This book had it all, but now I&#8217;m left waiting to hear the internet spawn a theme song.</p>
<h2>Blade #12</h2>
<p><strong>Brendan</strong>: Why didn&#8217;t we all just buy this book? Look at this cover! It is so brilliant, I could cry. Look at Blade&#8217;s poor, cancelled face, and tell me you don&#8217;t feel bad. Don&#8217;t we all remember? This is the character that brought superhero movies BACK! We owe it to him, and to Wesley Snipes, to support a <i>Blade</i> book beyond twelve issues. C&#8217;mon, he fights vampires. Buffy fans, anyone?</p>
<p>Personally, I couldn&#8217;t get into this book, so I accept the consequences. Although traditional logic would dictate that going with an industry stalwart like Howard Chaykin for art chores would be a savvy move, I actually found that it kept me away from the series. I have liked the Marc Guggenheim work I&#8217;ve been exposed to, and I do think of Blade as at least a &#8220;C&#8221; level character. But Chaykin&#8217;s rough work kept me away. I offer no excuses. That said, this was a good farewell issue. It wrapped up the storylines that permeated the entire series, and offered closure to this story, even if it did open a big friggin&#8217; casket full of stories for the future. It had cool revelations, ancient artifacts, Daywalking, and Dracula. If that isn&#8217;t enough, Gene Colan stops by to close out the series with a badass sequence and pin-up of the original Blade getup, complete with new justification. This was a good issue, if only a bit exposition-heavy, but you won&#8217;t be disappointed if you buy it just for the first image and the last one.</p>
<p><strong>Adan</strong>: Alright, first of all, that cover is fantastic. Rarely do covers have a speech bubble anymore, never mind a speech bubble that breaks the fourth wall. That&#8217;s just awesome. The inside on the other hand&#8230;</p>
<p>I can see why this book is getting cancelled: it&#8217;s just not very good. Howard Chaykin&#8217;s art is very difficult to look at it without thinking how much better it could be if drawn by almost anybody else in the game (Rob Liefeld and clones need not apply). Guggenheim&#8217;s writing doesn&#8217;t make all that much sense here either. If Blade hates the guy so much, why does he keep calling him &#8220;Dad?&#8221; It&#8217;s not like this guy has been around all that much in your life, plus he&#8217;s a vampire and a dick.</p>
<p>Ugh. The whole thing is just ugh. Hopefully, the next time Blade gets a series (and if Blade on the cover is to be believed, there will be a next time) he&#8217;ll get a much better creative team so that he can stay around a little longer.</p>
<h2>Casanova #8</h2>
<p><a target="new" href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/casanova-8-preview/42425/2/"><img src="/2006/42425/42425_1-.jpg"></a> <a target="new" href="http://www.popcultureshock.com/casanov
