Showing posts with label superior. Show all posts
Showing posts with label superior. Show all posts

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Review- AMAZING SPIDER-MAN VOL. 2: SPIDER-VERSE PRELUDE



AMAZING SPIDER-MAN VOL. 2: SPIDER-VERSE PRELUDE (Marvel, First Printing, 2015; Softcover)

Collects Amazing Spider-Man #7, 8, Superior Spider-Man #32, 33, and the Spider-Man story from Free Comic Book Day 2014: Guardians Of The Galaxy #1 (cover dates May- December, 2014)

Writers: Dan Slott with Christos Gage
Artists: Giueseppe Camuncoli with Cam Smith, John Dell, Humberto Ramos, Victor Olazaba, Adam Kubert, and M.A. Sepulbeda
Colorists: Antonio Fabela with Edgar Delgado, Rain Beredo, and Richard Isanove

This is another book that my 9 year old son checked out of the local library and wanted to read with me. I enjoy not paying for comic books and wish that I would have thought of this ages ago, as most comics are worth one read only. Endless relaunches and renumbering have made wanting to own a complete run of anything meaningless to me.

Morlun is back, and this time he has company in the form of his family, who come from Universe 000 and once battled the Master Weaver of the Web Of Life. The whole Multiverse angle is so DC. While Alan Moore and later Chris Claremont had fun with it with Captain Britain, the whole thing reeks of the same thing that has made DC's continuity such a hodge-podge clusterf**k. Morlun and his family are chasing the various “Spider-totems”, going to each universe and killing him/her/it, taking their energy and growing stronger. Doctor Octopus, occupying Spider-Man's brain and acting as the Superior Spider-Man, recruits endless variations of Spider-Man from across the multiverse in hopes of defeating Morlun and his relatives.

This whole book is basically a set up for the Spider-Verse crossover, along with a quick team-up with the new Ms. Marvel. The artwork is better here than it was in the last book since it was not by Humberto Ramos. Slott is a solid writer. I said my piece on what I think of him in my review for Volume 1, so I see no need to go through with explaining all of that again.



My son's take: It was okay. (I liked) That they went from dimension to dimension and that you got to see a bunch of different Spider-Mans. I liked that there was rarely (any) swearing in it. He disliked the new Ms. Marvel. Because I am used to the older Ms. Marvel, like they had in the olden days (referring to the 2000s).

So this was fun bedtime reading to my son over a few nights. He enjoyed it so much that he asked me if we could check out Volumes 3 and 4 from the library. My hold on them finally came in and we will be reading them together shortly.
Junk Food For Thought rating: 3.5 out of 5.

The OCD zone-
Paper stock: Good weight coated stock with a slight sheen.
Binding: Perfect bound trade paperback.
Cardstock cover notes: Laminated cardstock cover.

Friday, December 13, 2013

Review- MORBIUS THE LIVING VAMPIRE: THE MAN CALLED MORBIUS


MORBIUS THE LIVING VAMPIRE: THE MAN CALLED MORBIUS (Marvel, 2013; Softcover)

Collects Amazing Spider-Man No. 699.1 and Morbius The Living Vampire Nos. 1-9 (cover dates March- November, 2013)

Writers: Joe Keatinge with Dan Slott ( Amazing Spider-Man #699.1)

Artists: Richard Elson (#1-5, 8, 9), Valentine De Landro, Carlos Rodriguez, Felix Ruiz, and Marc Checchettio

Colorist: Antonio Fabella

This was the first series that I followed via monthly installments since late 1989 or early 1990 (hard to remember exactly when I quit buying monthly comic books). This felt radically different in a marathon reading session when compared to the monthly fix. In some ways it was better, in other ways it lacked the anticipation that I felt waiting to see what would happen next. Binge consumption of entertainment is a respectable pastime here in the 21st century, so luckily for me I don't have to enjoy comics responsibly. It was a nice experiment reading single issues again, but I don't see me ever going that route over trade paperbacks. 

 
Things start out with Dr. Michael Morbius escaping from the Raft, the superhuman prison in New York. We see his early life in a series of flashback sequences. Morbius ends up hiding out in Brownsville, a depressed urban area not unlike my local major population centre, Detroit. Brownsville is every bit as desolate and poor as the worst parts of Detroit, and so when I read this I imagined Morbius living near Van Dyke and 7 Mile or something. Morbius immediately, if inadvertently, causes trouble by way of crossing local crime lord Noah St. Germain.

Things go from bad to worse for our poor Living Vampire. Morbius is like the Charlie Brown of the vampire set, trying to do the right thing and running to kick that football, only to have it always yanked away from him at the last minute. The Rose enters the picture, and just when Morbius thinks that he's got that figured out, another layer is revealed. Morbius is played for a sucker and loses everything, only to find out that he already has everything that he really needs. Think of this as It's A Wonderful Life for the vampire set. 

Morbius has much appeal...to me.
This series was about the man called Morbius. Now that we have established that, we need to have another series about the monster called Morbius. We need balls to the wall Horror, with Morbius teaming up with the Living Mummy and Brother Voodoo to fight...well, whatever, some monster or demon or something. Morbius could team up with Werewolf By Night to try and stop some faux-Satanic cult from using the statue from It! The Living Colossus to transport some demon entity into it, resulting in a triumphant return of It. It would be sweet to see It in comics again. We got to see a bit of the Manphibian in this series, which was cool, because you can never have too many monsters. 


With the holiday gift giving season upon us, you might find yourself wondering what to get that certain special someone for Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, the Winter Solstice, or Festivus. May I recommend getting them a copy of this book? If enough people give the gift of Morbius this holiday season then we might get more new Morbius comics. If this book moves some 3-4,000 copies like Hawkeye or Saga trades then this could happen. It's all up to you, folks. I've already bought my copy...
Junk Food For Thought rating: 4.5 out of 5.

The OCD zone- Variant covers not included as part of the extras: The 2nd printing to issue 1 with the blue colored logo. The #1 blank cover variant. You might say that I am being a bit too anal, but this is The OCD zone for chrissakes. It's what we do.

DVD-style Extras included in this book: All are one full page.
#1 variant cover by Ed McGuinness and Marte Gracia.
#6 Wolverine Through The Ages variant cover by Patrick Zircher.
#1 variant cover by Skottie Young.
#2 variant cover by Marcos Martin.
#3 variant by Tomm Coker.
Marvel AR (Augmented Reality) legend. Has anyone actually gotten this stupid app to work? I downloaded it and followed the instructions and...nothing. Waste of time if you ask me.

Paper rating: 4 out of 5. This book has a good weight coated stock paper with a slight sheen to it. It's nicer than the paper used in the floppies. It has that stupid wavy effect that many recent Marvel trade paperbacks suffer from.

Binding rating: 4 out of 5. Standard perfect bound glued binding.

Cardstock cover coating rating: 4.5 out of 5. The waxlike lamination seems cheaper. Also, it is one of those covers that is slightly narrower than the pages inside, resulting in a really minor ding on the corners of the front and back pages, all of which could have been avoided if the cover were a millimeter wider. I guess that the printer saved .000000000008 on it or whatever. It's like the self cover of trade paperback covers. The cardstock cover itself was marginally thinner as well.

Decontenting is the death knell, babe. Vinyl records were made cheaper and cheaper throughout the '80s. My first print of Kiss Asylum on vinyl was 80g weight, which would actually wobble when you took it out of the sleeve. As demand for paper shrinks and paper mills try to maximize profits, books are going to be made more and more with inferior materials. Then once it hits bottom they will reintroduce physical books as novelty deluxe items, not unlike vinyl is today, and charge top dollar for them.


http://www.instocktrades.com/TP/Marvel/MORBIUS-LIVING-VAMPIRE-TP-MAN-CALLED-MORBIUS/AUG130886

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Review- AGE OF ULTRON


AGE OF ULTRON (Marvel, 2013; Hardcover)

Collects Avengers No. 12.1, Age Of Ultron Nos. 1-10, 10AI, Avengers Assemble Nos. 14AU, 15AU, Fantastic Four No. 5AU, Fearless Defenders No. 4AU, Superior Spider-Man No. 6AU, Ultron No. 1AU, Uncanny Avengers No. 8AU, and X-Men No. 27AU (cover dates June, 2011- August, 2013)

Writers: Brian Michael Bendis (Avengers No. 12.1, Age Of Ultron Nos. 1-10), Matt Fraction, Cristos Gage, Rick Remender, Mark Waid, and others

Artists: Pencilers- Bryan Hitch (Avengers No. 12.1, Age Of Ultron Nos. 1-5, 10), Brandon Peterson (Age Of Ultron Nos. 6-10), Carlos Pacheo (Age Of Ultron Nos. 6-10), Butch Guice (Age Of Ultron No. 10, Avengers Assemble Nos. 14AU, 15AU), Paul Neary (Avengers No. 12.1, Age Of Ultron Nos. 1-5, 10), Roger Bonet (Age Of Ultron Nos. 6-10), Tom Palmer ( Age Of Ultron No. 10, Avengers Assemble Nos. 14AU, 15AU), Phil Jimenez, and others

Colorists: Paul Mounts (Avengers No. 12.1, Age Of Ultron Nos. 1-10), Jose Villarrubia (Age Of Ultron Nos. 6-9), Richard Isanove, Antonio Fabela, and others.

2013's big crossover has been percolating for years, ever since the Free Comic Book Day 2011 giveaway Avengers #12.1 set up a most promising scenario. I have been a sucker for Ultron since I was a kid, and the lure of a big Ultron attack outweighed my disdain for crossovers and my reluctance at reading anything by Brian Michael Bendis. Things started out really strong here. In fact, for the first two issues, I was thinking Wow, this may well be Bendis' finest hour. This feeling didn't last very long.

The core series is filled with problems, including but not limited to the following scenes: Hawkeye casually killing The Owl's goons when he rescued Spider-Man, which was a bummer. I liked the olden days when nobody but the Punisher (and once in a great, great while, Wolverine) killed bad guys. Now everyone kills villains, and it makes me sad. It would be nice if I could share this Avengers with my 6 year old son, but I cannot. I know, the company line is that Marvel has an all-ages line for kids, but even my son knows that those are not the real Avengers.

Wolverine going back in time to change history is, of course, completely retarded. Haven't we all read enough time travel stories to know that this will only create a divergent timeline or something? Then we get the tired (not tried, tired) and true everything you know is a lie, this is reality Age of Apocalypse-esque altered present. These are usually just lazy mash-ups, with the most recent one being the Age of Apocalypse retread House Of M. So we have Colonel America, basically Captain America with an eye patch. Calling him Colonel makes about as much sense as calling Brother Voodoo Doctor Voodoo when he took over for Doctor Strange as the Sorcerer Supreme. Then again, it's Bendis! I guess that we should be thankful that half of the first issue wasn't a conversation between S.H.I.E.L.D. Agents.


This panel is where Bendis Tourette's kicks in. The Thing says “What the damn Hell!” First off, what does that even mean? Second, can anyone explain to me why this line makes the book a better read than if the Thing said “What the heck?”, “What in Sam Hill?”, “What in the name of Sweet Aunt Petunia?”, or any of the other more characteristic lines that the Thing is wont to say. Worse still, Age of Ultron is the title of the forthcoming Avengers sequel. 

Let's assume for a moment that the inevitable softcover of this book is on the shelves of a mainstream bookstore like a Barnes & Noble. Let's go a step farther and say that some 8-12 year old kid convinces his parents to buy him this book. Do you see the problem here? If the kid's parents don't outright confiscate this book then they will, at the very least, look down on the medium and discourage their child from becoming a potential lifelong reader. I am not a fan of censorship, but I am a fan of self censorship. Stop writing for middle aged basement dwellers, Bendis. Lines like “What the damn Hell!” make me embarrassed to read this stuff, and if anybody can't see why this line is stupid then you are part of the fanboy* problem. (*Term used in the original pejorative.)

The brightest spot in this book is Mark Waid reviving Henry Pym as Ant-Man. There has been way too much Pym hate going on for the past few years, and I am glad to see things coming full circle and Pym assuming the heroic mantle once again. I hope that we see more of the real Ant-Man in action.

The artwork and coloring are all really good throughout the book. Colorists never get much in terms of props from me, but that is not because I don't appreciate their work. Quite the opposite, a good colorist is like the electric company or cable- you don't notice it unless they're not working properly. 

Oh look...a character who was dead for five minutes makes a clever dead joke. Haven't seen one of those for a while, and they just get funnier every time.
The predictable Bendis fumble occurs toward the end of the mini-series. I've said this many times before but it bears repeating: Bendis has some good ideas but he always fumbles the ending. Why? If he can map out a long, structured story, why do his endings always come up short? It's even more maddening than some of his dialogue. Who is Angela, and why should we even care? This is not explained in the story, and it is assumed that you should know that she is a Neil Gaiman creation from Spawn. Come on!

This isn't the worst thing that you could read, but it certainly could have been much, much better. If a civilian asked me to recommend an Ultron story, I would steer them toward the Kurt Busiek and George Perez arc Ultron Unlimited from Avengers #0 and 19-22, originally published in 1999. That remains the gold standard for Ultron stories as far as I'm concerned. I wanted this to be the be all, end all of Ultron stories, I really did. It just wasn't.
Junk Food For Thought rating: 3 out of 5.

The OCD zone- While I am thrilled that the digital code is longer on a piece of cardboard glued into the book block, it is now behind a sticker which you have to peel to access. This leaves the sticker looking bent once you are done, and, as such, is an OCD fail. The book comes shrinkwrapped, so there is no need to “hide” the code behind a sticker. I don't know, there might be more to the digital code process than I am aware of, I am just speaking as a consumer.

DVD-style Extras included in this book: Age Of Ultron #1 Variant by Marko Djurdjevic
Age Of Ultron #1 Variant by J. Scott Campbell & Nei Ruffino
Age Of Ultron #1 Variant by Skottie Young
Age Of Ultron #1 Variant by Mike Deodato & Morry Hollowell
Age Of Ultron #1 Variant by Ed McGuiness & Marte Gracia
Age Of Ultron #2 Variant by Jung-Geun Yoon
Age Of Ultron #3 Variant by In-Hyuk Lee
Age Of Ultron #4 Variant by Fenghua Zhong
Age Of Ultron #5 Variant by Adi Granov
Age Of Ultron #6 Variant by Carlos Pacheco, Roger Martinez, Jose Villarrubia, John Buscema & George Roussos
Age Of Ultron #6 Variant by Greg Land & Gurihiru
Age Of Ultron #7 Variant by Leinil Francis Yu & Frank Martin
Age Of Ultron #8 Variant by 7th Orange
Age Of Ultron #9 Variant by Jorge Molina
Age Of Ultron #10 Variant by Mark Brooks
Age Of Ultron #10 Variant by Salvador Larroca & Laura Martin
Age Of Ultron #10 Variant by Joe Quesada, Klaus Janson, & Richard Isanove
Age Of Ultron #1-10 Variant by Rock-He Kim
Page of Marvel AR codes along with digital code.

Paper rating: 4.25 out of 5. Good weight coated stock paper. It has that shriveled effect which pisses me off, though. American paper mills tend to use really green trees and do not allow them to properly cure. The result is a book where the paper gets all shriveled and wavy once you crack the cellophane. My house is a 100% climate controlled environment. There are no humidity issues in it. My other collected editions not made in the United States or Canada do not have this problem, so stop it, US printers!

Binding rating: 5 out of 5. Sewn binding on a US made hardcover? Yes please! Marvel had some problems with US made books with sewn binding 5-6 years ago, so I am thrilled to see the bugs all worked out. The book lays perfectly flat. The book block doesn't appear to flex within the squared casing, but I don't mind, so long as it lays flat!

Hardback cover coating rating: 3 out of 5. Gone are the foil stampings and faux leather grainy textures of the hardbacks of yore, in are the dull matte finish hardbacks with images printed on them. This wouldn't bother me if I didn't scuff it. I handle my books gingerly, and for it to scuff with reasonable handling sucks, especially on a book with a $75 MSRP. It might not even bother you, but it bothers me and anyone else who would bother reading this far down in The OCD zone.


Thursday, June 27, 2013

Review- Morbius The Living Vampire #6


Morbius The Living Vampire #6 (Marvel, cover date August, 2013)

Writer: Joe Keatinge

Artist: Valentine De Landro

Colorist: Antonio Fabela

I apologize for the tardiness of my review, but I was at Disneyworld in Orlando with my family when this was released last week, and I couldn't find time to hit the comic shop until yesterday. While I'm always late (sometimes years) with my reviews of collected editions, in the single issue comic book review world each day late is like a week late in Internet time.

This is a bit of a letdown after the first arc, with the dreaded “guest star” forced in to help boost lagging sales. If it were Werewolf By Night or the Living Mummy it would Rock; instead, it is the so-called “Superior” Spider-Man. The very notion of (SPOILERS) Doctor Octopus as Spider-Man still pisses me off, and I refuse to buy that title anymore. So being forced to read a story with the inferior Spider-Man annoyed the piss out of me.


So the Rose is trying to build an Ultimate Nullifier? I've never known the Rose to be that level of power player before. I'm not crazy about the developments in this issue, nor am I crazy about De Landro's artwork. It really took me out of the story when compared to Richard Elson's excellent artwork in the previous issues. This wasn't a bad issue as much as it didn't Rock my socks off. There's three issues of Morbius left folks, and I'm in it for the long haul.
Junk Food For Thought rating: 3.5 out of 5.

On a somewhat unrelated note, the new issue of Previews has a Morbius T-shirt available for pre-order. A classic '70s image without the faux overly distressed print = sold. I can't stand distressed screen prints on apparel. It's such fake bullshit. Back when I was a concert shirt wearing young man I wore my shirts until they were threadbare and the image had cracked and flaked through natural wear and tear and love. Nowadays we can't expect our special little snowflakes to wear a shirt long enough to get that beautiful vintage look the hard way, by living it. No, it's better to fake it and buy some lameass distressed fake concert shirt at Target. We manufacture nostalgia.

Like I mentioned above, my family went to Disneyworld for our vacation this year. I walked through umpteen gift shops, and looked at lots of screen printed shirts. I laughed at the ones that were vintage designs with fake distressed prints on them. It basically says I want to be overly nostalgic and reminiscent of the vacation now, not five or ten years from now. So lame.