31 Aug 2010

Incoming... 01/09/2010

New comics are released Wednesday (in the States at least; we have to wait until Friday in the UK thanks to the August Bank Holiday Weekend!). Here's a brief look at our expectations for the books we're picking up this week.



Matt C: A slight change to the regularly scheduled programme. Normally it’s Stewart R working away into the early hours on a weekly basis to deliver his thoughts on the imminent selection of comic book goodness that will be taking up shelf space over the next couple of days. Unfortunately for you, Stew is still in the midst of moving house and lacks the required broadband connection to get a new edition of Incoming… together, which means you’ll just have to make do with me this time. He sends his apologies.

My highlight of the week is Scarlet #2 from Brian Michael Bendis and Alex Maleev. Bendis’ mainstream superhero work has been a real turn-off for me since he left Daredevil so I was more than a little surprised at just how good the first issue of Scarlet turned out to be. I’ve heard rumours regarding where the story may be heading and I’m really hoping Bendis builds on the promise of the debut and reminds us of when he used to be one of the best writers in the business rather than the hack who churns out shallow, ham-fisted Avengers books.

The crime genre is what I’m drawn to above all others when it comes to popular entertainment, so you’d think I’d be chomping at the bit to see Stumptown #4. Unfortunately, while it started off so well, the delays the title’s experienced have really put a dampener on my enthusiasm for the project. It’s now being listed as #4 of 4, but if there are any further issues down the line I may need real convincing before signing on again. This week also sees the third and final issue of Last Days Of American Crime, another book beset by delays. I didn’t bother reading #2 because when it finally arrived as I couldn’t recall what happened before, so decided to wait until all three where in my hands before going diving in. The first issue was impressive and it’s even garnered the attention of charisma-vacuum Sam ‘Avatar’ Worthington, so chances are we may see a movie at some point in the future. I'll throw in Choker into this trilogy of crime books that have been hampered by delays, but it's not been that long since the last issue of this Ben McCool/Ben Templesmith collaboration, so I'm hoping I'm not left scratching my head by the end of #3.

Next to Jeff Lemire’s Sweet Tooth #13, and it's a series that j
ust keeps getting better and better. When you consider how great it was to begin with, well you probably get an inkling of how highly I rate the title. DC’s Vertigo imprint is currently responsible for some of the best books on the market with the likes of Scalped, The Unwritten, Daytripper and Northlanders. Sweet Tooth easily holds its own amongst such distinguished company. Perusing the list, it’s also the only book from DC I’m picking up this week.

As well as the aforementioned Scarlet (on the Icon imprint) Marvel appear to be trying to flood the market again when you consider the amount of comics due in on Wednesday/Friday. The only thing that really springs out is Jason Aaron’s relaunch of Wolverine (because you demanded it?!) but while his Weapon X series had its moments it didn’t really live up to the expectations I had for it. I may give it a look, but it’ll be a decide-on-the-day situation. Heroic Age: One Month To Live #1 piqued the interest of several of my Paradox colleagues when it appeared in Previews, and if I’m feeling like taking a risk on a new title, this mini - with its look at a regular guy who gains superpowers but only has 30 days to live - may fit the bill. It’s a five-issue series and is due out every week in the month of September with a new creative team tackling the story each week. That last point puts me off a bit as I can’t see it retaining a consistent tone or feel, so it’s looks like it’ll be yet another decide-on-the day choice come Friday.

Those are my picks, but I’m probably missing something. What looks good to you this week?

29 Aug 2010

Mini Reviews 29/08/2010

While we may not always have the time to review all the comics we get every week, we do try and provide a snapshot of the latest releases, mixing the good with the not so good.


This week also sees the next instalment of Matt C's Buscema Avengers Project.


SUPERMAN: SECRET ORIGIN #6
Writer: Geoff Johns
Art: Gary Frank & Jon Sibal
DC $3.99

Matt C: A bit of a wait for this last issue to appear but once you crack open the pages it instantly becomes worth it. Gary Frank (with able support from Jon Sibal) really knocks it out of the park here; the artwork is phenomenal. He renders Kal-El with a potent mix of power and humanity; scenes where the tension is generated by verbal duelling carry equal dramatic weight to those driven by physical action thanks to Frank’s instinctive command of anatomy and expression. Johns matches the quality of the visuals with an exceptional understanding of not only Superman himself, but also the essential, near mythical, supporting cast, providing a textbook example of how the characters should be written. This mini may have been telling us things we already know but it has done so in a way that felt fresh and relevant. The only drawback I can find is that this isn’t an ongoing, and this creative team, who’ve proven themselves to be perfectly suited to the Man of Steel, are done for now. 9/10

Tom P: The last issue of Secret Origin is much like every other issue of this series: a superbly written, good-looking comic with excellent characterisation and a strong grip on Superman and his supporting cast. That said, it didn't grab me like All Star Superman, but that is, in my opinion, a modern classic and a very different take on Superman. Secret Origin hasn't tried to reinvent the wheel, but then it doesn't have too. If you asked me to introduce Kal-El to a new reader this would be one of the books I would pick. It explains who he is and where he comes from brilliantly. This was the kind of thing I was hoping we might get from J. Michael Straczynski when he took over the reigns of the Man Of Steel, and perhaps it unfair to compare his few first couple of issues, but he’s got his work cut out to match this truly wonderful read from this incredibly strong creative team. 8/10


FANTASTIC FOUR #582
Writer: Jonathan Hickman
Art: Neil Edwards & Scott Hanna
Marvel $2.99

Matt C: Ideas start to pile on top of each other as Hickman ups the ante and begins making his end game a little clearer. There’s still plenty of mystery, plenty to keep readers on their toes, but you can sort of see which direction he’s heading with all this as the complexity of the overarching narrative becomes increasingly more impressive. As it zips back and forth from past to present to future, penciller Edwards acquits himself with aplomb with the venerable assistance of the venerable Hanna on inking duty. Paul Mounts’ colours are excellent too, especially the use of blues he employs during the conversation between Sue and Valeria. Having said that, I can’t deny the anticipation I have for seeing Steve Epting take over on artistic duties. As good as this is, with the following issue I think we’ll see things taken to the next level. Can’t wait. 8/10

Tom P: DOOM! "Even Immortals tremble at my name!" How great is that? You have to love the arrogance as a young Victor going around exploding heads and beating people to a pulp. I've enjoyed Hickman's work on the Fantastic Four so far and with the exception of #579 it’s been really solid work as he builds towards his grand plan for Marvel’s First Family. Its mostly a lot of fighting this issue with some high concept setting-up for the next arc when Steve Epting takes over on artistic duties (and who, on his blog, recently admitted "it probably won't surprise any of you to hear that I LOVE drawing Doom, and look forward to doing a lot more of it.") Hickman and Edwards have well and truly whet my appetite and I can't wait to get hold of the next issue. 8/10


SCALPED #40
Writer: Jason Aaron
Art: R.M. Guera
DC/Vertigo $2.99

Matt C: This month sees Dashiell and Carol taking different approaches to kicking their drug habits, while elsewhere Dash’s long-absent dad turns up to confront Red Crow. That may sound like this issue is overflowing with dramatic fireworks but it’s actually told in a fairly low key manner. Relatively speaking, of course. I guess that just shows the kind of harsh tone associated with this book when you find yourself describing one of the central characters going through cold turkey induced hallucinations as ‘low key’. Stellar work as always from Aaron and Guera and Scalped remains a cut above just about every other comic book currently being published. 8/10


DRACULA: THE COMPANY OF MONSTERS #1
Writers: Kurt Busiek & Daryl Gregory
Art: Scott Godlewski
Boom! Studios $3.99

Matt C: What’s this, more vampires? When it comes to saturation point for the bloodsucking undead some may argue we’ve yet to reach it, some will argue we’re already there, while others will have you believe we’re way past it. Me, I like to think that while there’s probably too much of this stuff out there right now (seriously, vampires have never had it so good!) it doesn’t preclude the possibility that there’s more, er, life in the genre. Dracula: The Company Of Monsters brings the granddaddy of the undead, the vampire formally known as Vlad the Impaler, into play. The twist here is that the CEO of a multinational company has discovered Dracula’s remains and intends, for reason unbeknownst to both the reader and our protagonist (who also happens to be the CEO’s nephew), to resurrect him. It’s a good start, differentiating itself enough from the current zeitgeist of moody teen vamps looking at each other to capture my interest, but whether I stick with it depends on where it goes from here. Although Busiek only gets a ‘created and story by’ credit he’s proven himself repeatedly as a dab hand at weaving a compelling narrative, so odds are this will be good enough to even appeal to folks who’ve had a gutful of vampires at this point. 7/10


ULTIMATE MYSTERY #2
Writer: Brian Michael Bendis
Art: Rafa Sandoval & Roger Bonet
Marvel $3.99

Tom P: Woah! Rafa Sandoval turns it up to 11 this issue giving you some serious bang for your buck. S.H.I.E.L.D agents be warned, it was a bad day to come to work but if you gotta go you might as well do it in style! I could rave for hours about this guy’s art and credit must also go to inker Roger Bonet and colourist Matthew Wilson: from massive explosions to Spider-Man swinging around New York the imagery’s a real joy to look at. I loved the sudden change in direction for one of our heroes and it makes me want to pull out the previous issues of Ultimate Enemy to spot any clues to who the last attacker might have been. The fact that Fury has disguised himself further from his 616 counterpart is a lot of fun. Fantastic work all round. 9/10


AVENGERS #283
Writer: Roger Stern
Art: John Buscema & Tom Palmer
Marvel $0.75

Matt C: More Olympus-based brilliance as the Avengers exit Hades and attempt to round up some allies to try and convince the temperamental Zeus that he’s got the wrong end of the stick. Plenty of action as some of the Olympians the Avengers try to get on side take a bit of convincing. There's some relentlessly exciting visuals from the Buscema/Palmer combo and I think I’ve figured out why gods look so awesome when rendered by Buscema’s pen: the man could really draw beards! Rarely has facial hair looked so magnificent on the printed page! The Masters Of Evil arc (aka 'Under Siege') is more often than not considered the highlight of Stern’s run on Avengers, but revisiting them all now, to my mind at least, this Olympian story is certainly giving it a run for its money. 9/10

26 Aug 2010

Screen Time: SCOTT PILGRIM VS. THE WORLD

By Matt C



SCOTT PILGRIM VS. THE WORLD
Cast: Michael Cera, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Kieran Culkin, Chris Evans, Anna Kendrick
Director: Edgar Wright
Runtime: 112mins
Certificate: 12A
Release Date: 25 August 2010

Since Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World didn’t even come close to meeting box office expectations when it opened in the States a couple of weeks ago, the word ‘failure’ has been bandied about ever since by various cultural commentators. In a year that’s seen Kick-Ass and, to a lesser degree, The Losers ‘underperforming’ there are those saying we’ll soon see the end of movie adaptations of more quirky, leftfield comic books that don’t feature bankable icons like Batman and Superman. That’s unlikely considering the wealth and diversity of material available (is anybody not convinced The Walking Dead will be the next breakout TV show?) but ‘failure’ is just the wrong noun to apply to Scott Pilgrim.... Maybe it didn’t make its money back in its opening weekend but I can guarantee it’ll take off once it hits DVD/Blu-ray, and anyway, calling it a ‘failure’ gives the impression it’s purely a product, ignoring any artistic value it may have. That’s the key point here, because no one in their right mind can watch Edgar Wright’s dazzlingly inventive adaptation of Bryan Lee O’Malley’s series of graphic novels and call it a failure.

I was a latecomer to the joys of the Scott Pilgrim books but as soon as I picked up the first volume their appeal became immediately apparent. Basically, if you grew up on a diet of video games, comics and indie rock then you are the intended audience for Scott Pilgrim... (which may partly explain why Mr & Mrs Joe Average might not connect with the film). Scott is a jobless slacker who plays bass in an unlikely-to-succeed indie band and sets his sights on hipster chick Ramona Flowers, but before they can ever truly become an item he must first fight and defeat her seven evil ex-boyfriends. And there’s your basic plot: boy meets girl, boy must prove himself to win girl’s heart. Pretty standard stuff, but on top of that Wright showers layers of wit, visual brilliance and a restless, unstoppable energy that makes the entire enterprise utterly irresistible. Of course, a lot of this comes directly from the comic book source, but Wright ups the ante considerably, taking O’Malley’s black and white illustrations and adding a three-dimensional, hyperactive dose of inspired genius to them. It works so well because it takes a familiar story and then bends it into new, unexpected shapes, repeatedly surprising us with comic (in both senses of the word) invention.

Wright first two feature films often felt like love letters to Hollywood, so it’s ironic that his first ‘Hollywood’ movie feels like a love letter to his roots (from Spaced through to Hot Fuzz): Scott Pilgrim... is a big-hearted ode to irreverence and pop culture. It’s certainly his most accomplished picture to date, and places him right up at front of the Brit director pack. He appears to have a great knack for assembling a brilliant cast too, from his leads right down to some hilariously memorable cameos. Michael Cera may get stick in some quarters for “always playing the same role” but he’s far more subtle a comic actor than a lot of people give him credit for, and his unlikely candidacy for action hero status is a particularly effective element of the film’s success. Winstead plays the cool, aloof hipster chick with flashes of genuine emotion and makes it seem perfectly understandable why seven of her exes would deem it necessary to fight to the death for her. Amongst the supporting players, Chris Evans and Brandon Routh make the most of their limited screen time, although to be fair just about everybody brings their A-game to their roles.

You can take Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World as simply a wonderfully delirious romantic (action) comedy, and that’s what it is to all intents and purposes on the surface. Dig a little deeper and it’s a resonating fantasy that anyone who grew up spending a lot of time in their rooms playing games, reading comics and listening to loud music can relate to. When a girl comes into that scenario, the imagination runs riot, and what better way to woo a fair maiden then busting out some Street Fighter moves on competing suitors while some righteous tunage plays in the background? Scott Pilgrim… will easily sustain repeat viewings with it’s ‘extra life’ video game logic, and while it sadly may not bring hordes of people into the cinemas it will take on a life on its on once it becomes available for home viewing. It’s about as far away from ‘failure’ as you can possibly get. You remember when you were a kid, pulling silly faces, and your parents used to tell you if the wind changed direction you’d stay like that? If the wind changed while you watched Scott Pilgrim…, you’d be stuck with a stupid grin for the rest of your life. In a rather lacklustre summer blockbuster season, it’s crept on in, instantly attained cult status, and positioned itself as a contender for movie of 2010. My advice? Don’t wait around for it to reach the small screen. See it now. 10/10

25 Aug 2010

Incoming... 25/08/2010

New comics are released Wednesday (in the States at least; we have to wait until Thursday in the UK!). Here's a brief look at our expectations for the books we're picking up this week.



Stewart R: Wow, what a stroke of luck! After weeks and weeks of hefty comic orders I’ve finally managed to find a Thursday where I’ll only be picking up 5 new issues which shall be something of a small relief as I’m due to move this very weekend. Despite all the upheaval and hours of packing I’m still looking forward to those odd moments when I’ll be able to sit down and relax with 22 pages of lettered and coloured awesomeness.

One title sticks out from the crowd this week and has me a little torn, the stupidly long title certainly not helping matters! X-Men: Curse of the Mutants - Storm and Gambit #1 ties into the storyline running in the recently launched X-Men title which focuses...*insert groans aplenty here*...on the mutants coming under attack from the various vampire hordes of the world and as a result having to attempt to resurrect the biggest and baddest blood-sucker of them all. In this one shot written by Chuck Kim the X-Men’s two best thieves are charged with infiltrating the enemies stronghold in order to get their hands on the one thing that could possibly end the conflict.

Of course those that read this blog often will probably know that I have a major soft spot for the pencil and ink work of two artistic collaborators and this title has them doing their thing for Marvel once more. Yes, that’s right ladies and gentlemen, Chris Bachalo and Tim Townsend have worked their collective magic again and I simply cannot wait to see what they turn out. I think some of Bachalo’s best work was seen in his brief stints on the old X-Men (now X-Men Legacy) title - Supernovas and Red Data being two arcs well worth checking out - and I suspect that my eyeballs are in for a pleasure-fest.

The rest of my stash is somewhat Marvel heavy with Captain America #609 probably being the next comic of note. Ed Brubaker finally seems to be steering the ship back towards the golden waters that previously saw the Paradox Comic Group consistently putting the title in their top ten lists and with Bucky remaining as Cap the potential for more Winter Soldier-related misery and tension could make this an unmissable story over the coming months.

While on the subject of ‘unmissable’ I think it’s fair to say that with Brubaker’s Secret Avengers title throwing up plenty of Nick Fury queries and questions, Jonathan Hickman’s Secret Warriors #19 has possibly stepped across into ‘must have’ territory as we edge ever nearer to the events that set Fury on his current course. Hickman has been building and building this storyline over the past two years and I am really excited to see just how everything is going to tie together. There is certainly a chance that it could all fall flat at the last moment but SW has been consistently entertaining and I’d be surprised to see any drop in quality here.

To round off the Marvel side of things I’ll also be picking up Spider-Man Presents: American Son #4 but mostly to complete the set rather than any huge feeling of overwhelming anticipation. Unfortunately, like many other Spider-Man tie ins, I already have the feeling that this will all be for nothing and that no permanent changes will befall Peter Parker’s life as a result of this American Son scenario. A shame really as there was promise for a title such as this.

Finally, I’ll be picking up Action Comics #892 written by Paul Cornell. I really did enjoy #890 as it showed Lex Luthor really being in his calculating and dominating element and though the following issue wasn’t quite as accomplished it’s quite clear that Mr Cornell is a writer who grasps just how intelligent and how determined Lex is in his motives and pursuits. I’m hoping that this latest issue may give the bald brain box some real competition to go up against but I guess that, as always, we shall just have to wait and see!

22 Aug 2010

Mini Reviews 22/08/2010

While we may not always have the time to review all the comics we get every week, we do try and provide a snapshot of the latest releases, mixing the good with the not so good.


This week also sees the next instalment of Matt C's Buscema Avengers Project.


EX MACHINA #50
Writer: Brian K. Vaughan
Art: Tony Harris
DC/Wildstorm $4.99

Matt C: It's a few years ago now, but its impossible to forget the jaw-dropping impact of the first issue of Ex Machina, unquestionably one of the finest debuts of any series in the last decade. It continued along as a gripping read for a long while, but somewhere along the way - maybe during the last 20 odd issues? - it lost me. Perhaps it was the delays that saw this 'monthly' title appear on a less frequent basis, perhaps it was Vaughan taking a step back from the business of writing comics (at one point he was highly prolific, but recently Ex Machina has been his sole ongoing project). Or - and I think this is the reason I'm more inclined to go with - perhaps it's because the focus has shifted away from the political side of Mayor Mitchell Hundred's everyday dealings and settled more on his mysterious powers and their origins. That may sound strange coming from someone who laps up superheroics on a regular basis, but the book worked best for me when it concentrated on Hundred navigating the political minefield his new job presented him with. It didn't always hit the mark - particularly when Vaughan’s own political views swamped the more even-handed approach he normally took - but it was regularly thought provoking and usually intelligently handled. The 'super powers' aspect didn't really gel with everything else as the story progressed and eventually led up to this unsatisfactory concluding issue. There's one particular character revelation that jarred and felt utterly contrived, and the twist at the end came across as nothing more than a cheap gag. There's still some smart writing - Vaughan has a great ear for dialogue - and Harris' distinctive artwork ensures the entire series retained a consistent, pumped up visual appeal, but Ex Machina lost its spark long before now. In stark contrast to Vaughan's excellent Y: The Last Man, this series wound up being a disappointment. Unfortunately it's not the kind of disappointment I can get riled up about because my interest dropped off a while ago and I only continued picking it up out of a need for closure rather than anything else. 5/10

James R: When it comes to the final issue of a series, the temptation is not just to review the issue, but the run as a whole. It's difficult as this issue mirrors what I thought of the entire series: moments of genius and originality mixed in with frustration at ideas half-developed. The adventures of Mitchell Hundred come to a close with an epic double-sized issue that ties up the arc, and then gives us a glimpse of the Great Machine’s future. As with the series (and as you'd expect from Vaughan) there are sublime moments, from the opening statement that "Happy endings are bullshit - there are only happy pauses." to the dark & ambiguous final pages. Inbetween there are some frankly bizarre twists, from the surprise reveal of a supporting character's sexual orientation (I have no problem with him being gay, but when there has been no suggestion of this in 49 previous issues and it turns out to be the character's coda, my eyebrows did raise a tad!) to the redevelopment of the semi-Ground Zero, which seemed awkward to me. Vaughan's other creator-owned series Y: The Last Man, ended with one of the best last issues ever, but sadly he can't repeat the trick here. A salute to Vaughan and Harris for seeing this through, and making it a stand-out series that mixed politics with super-heroics, but this is a title that shouldn't seek re-election. 6/10


SWEETS #2
Writer: Kody Chamberlain
Art: Kody Chamberlain
Image $2.99

Matt C: Cover of the week, no contest – the detectives working a case, walking towards a building, ignorant of the horrors they’re about to uncover. Perfect. Inside we find more astutely written cop drama, as our protagonist with the requisite emotional baggage digs deeper into the investigation of a possible serial killer. Chamberlain’s writing and art isn’t concerned with flash or pizazz (the brief visual deviations fit naturally); there’s plenty of substance to back up the style, and he produces the kind of well-crafted storytelling that gets right under the skin. He’s not breaking any new ground here, but then the crime genre isn’t in need of a revamp because it’s sustained itself for years on the endless, vicarious fascination folk have with tales of bad men doing bad deeds. Chamberlain understands he doesn’t need to reinvent the wheel and instead focuses on character and story, and it pays off, brilliantly. 8/10


THUNDERBOLTS #147
Writer: Jeff Parker
Art: Kev Walker
Marvel $2.99

Stewart R: A slight look of concern crossed my face when I saw the Avengers Academy involvement with this issue’s cover but thankfully Marvel have played the smart card and rather than mashing the two titles together for a *shudder* crossover the AA link is tenuous and that comic only needs to be read if you’d like an alternate view of the events that transpire aboard the Raft. Parker is truly excelling himself with this team, really socking home the uneasy team dynamic and how these characters can work in unison when the chips are down. Then, with neat touches of scripting, he really shows us where each member’s individual motivations lie and how they’re developing. The work that he and Kev Walker put into the Raft lockdown is tremendous with US Agent’s involvement being the true standout. This could have easily turned into Luke Cage and The Thunderbolts, but what we actually have is a comic that every single one of you should at least be sampling. Simply Marvel-ous! 9/10

Matt C: Well, sometimes you just have to pay attention to what’s being said. The only time I’ve ever picked up this book was during Warren Ellis' electrifying stint (where he – unintentionally - laid the groundwork for Dark Reign and Siege, no matter what Bendis likes to think). That was obviously down to the writer rather than the book itself, and once he was gone, so was I. But I’ve not turned a blind eye to what my colleagues have been saying these last couple of months regarding Jeff Parker’s revamp of the team. Their constant enthusing rubbed off so I picked up all the post-Siege issues, and you know what? Stew and Tom were right. This is damn fine comics. As much as I'm getting a kick out of Secret Avengers I have to agree that this is the best team book to spin out of the Heroic Age. Parker’s proven himself as a writer who’s adept and handling a multi-character cast on the various Agents Of Atlas titles, and it feels like he’s really hitting his stride here. He’s pulled together a fascinating selection of misfits fronted by ex-Hero For Hire, Luke Cage, and it’s a joy to see another writer get to utilize Cage in such fine style after a long period of time when he appeared to be off limits to anyone bar Bendis (two digs at Bendis in one review! I’m on a roll!). This particular issue features a thrilling sequence where the Thunderbolts quell a prison break at the Raft, written with wit and intensity by Parker, and illustrated with gleeful vigour by Walker. Everything you’ve previously read about this book has been bang on the money and I’m pleased to join in the chorus of praise; Thunderbolts well and truly gets the Paradox Comics Group’s Seal of Approval. 8/10


DV8: GODS AND MONSTERS #5
Writer: Brian Wood
Art: Rebekah Isaccs
DC/Wilstorm $2.99

Matt C: DV8: Gods And Monsters is like a Stealth Bomber zipping across the landscape of superherodom, dodging all the clichés that spring up in its path and delivering a payload that feels fresh and unique. This wouldn’t work with a team like the Teen Titans, but DV8 are relatively unknown quantity, so Wood can take risks with the characters and push them to extremes without worrying over whether he’s tarnishing a publisher’s major cash cow. At this point in the series it’s clear that the team are falling into two factions and the build up to a final confrontation starts here. It’s still not been made clear why they were deposited on the planet, but my guess is it was some kind of social experiment (especially when you consider the whole thing is framed by Gem’s interrogation in a carrier). Isaacs bold, expressive art style constantly impresses – she gets to the emotional core of the characters and situations in a such way that you couldn’t imagine anyone else illustrating this series. Credit to Carrie Strachan’s colours too, as she senses the shift in tone and atmosphere of the script and responds accordingly. An infectious miniseries that goes from strength to strength. 9/10


SECRET AVENGERS #4
Written by: Ed Brubaker
Art by: Mike Deodato
Marvel $3.99

James R: In a short space of time this series has established itself as my number one guilty pleasure. I shouldn't like it - I don't normally like team books, and cosmic stuff in comics often leaves me cold - but if anyone can win me round, it's Ed Brubaker. This issue sees Steve Rodgers take on the Nova force in order to stop the Serpent Crown unleashing a force that will destroy the Universe. Sounds preposterous, but as you'd expect from the man who turned bringing Bucky Barnes back from the dead into one of the best comic tales of the decade, it reads brilliantly. He balances the team elements perfectly, and Deodato is a superb artist when it comes to drawing action. I'm also impressed that the first arc is done in four issues as opposed to a decompressed six or seven. The next arc features Nick Fury (or does it?) and so if you're one of the people who have been underwhelmed by Bendis' take on the Avengers, I heartily recommend you get on board with this - a blast from first page to last. 8/10



CHEW #13
Writer: John Layman
Art: Rob Guillory
Image $2.99

Matt C: This issue proudly displays the legend ‘Best New Series’, a deserved Eisner Award win for this deliciously off-the-wall comic. It seems like once the narrative parameters of the chicken-free world were firmly set in place, Layman now allows his imagination run wild, with any bonkers idea he thinks will work getting its chance to strut its stuff. This month’s example: Fricken. Read it and you’ll know what I mean. This kind of thing could easily fall flat on its face, but Layman’s writing is genuinely inventive and funny, and the comedy is given extra oomph by Guillory’s exaggerated, mischievous illustrations. Layman reckons his aim is to get to issue #60 – if he can keep Chew as fresh as it has been up to this point then it’s going to be a hell of an enjoyably quirky ride. 8/10


UNCANNY X-MEN #527
Writer: Matt Fraction
Art: Whilce Portacio
Marvel $3.99

Stewart R: Well, this is a little strange and I’m not sure I like where it’s heading. With the arrival of Hope we knew things were going to get uncomfortable for Emma Frost with Scott’s attention would be drawn elsewhere, but Fraction seems to have stomped on the gas pedal for some reason propelling Emma into some weird, accelerated change where she’s moody, pouting and dropping a ‘Darling’ moniker on anyone coming across her path. She had grown into something of a compassionate female lead for the X-Men but that appears to be on the way out in double time and it makes for quite a jarring read. Worse still is that such a development is hindered completely by Portacio’s bizarre inability to draw two characters actually looking at each other. I don’t mean to be nasty but almost every single facial expression in this comic makes the character look like a freak-show and the strange facial morphing ability is really, REALLY off-putting. The brief scene with Scott and Logan is, however, well realised, but it’s a lone light of quality in a darkness of mediocrity and crap. I’m still eager to see where this ‘Five Lights’ storyline takes us but this issue is a serious fly in the ointment. 4/10


SIXTH GUN #3
Writer: Cullen Bunn
Art: Brian Hurtt
Oni Press $3.99

Matt C: Bunn and Hurtt successfully applied a supernatural element to the gangster genre in the two Damned minis from Oni and they seem to be repeating the same trick here with the Western genre for The Sixth Gun. If I’m honest, it’s not quite on a par with Damned, but that could be down to my preference for hoodlums over cowboys. That said, it’s still tremendous fun with a diabolical Civil War general returning (well, almost) from the dead to get his hands on his sixth supernaturally charged pistol, while our protagonist, Drake Sinclair, pursues it for his own, as yet unknown, reasons. If there’s a flaw, it’s that Sinclair’s personality hasn’t fully manifested itself – he seems too elusive to latch onto considering he’s the central character to all intents and purposes. Hurtt’s artwork is fantastic, occupying the middleground between realism and a more catoonesque approach, and he captures scenes of spooky malevolence with style. Both creators seem ideally suited to each other – they understand each other’s instincts – and The Sixth Gun is developing into something rather special. 7/10


AVENGERS #282
Writer: Roger Stern
Art: John Buscema & Tom Palmer
Marvel $0.75

Matt C: Neptune erupts from the depths to snatch Namor in front of his startled Atlantean followers, and then whisks him away to Hades where Pluto has plans for the regal mutant half-breed. The legendary Sub-Mariner isn't one to be subdued easily and he's soon on his way to rescue the other captive Avengers. The pace doesn’t let up for a second as Earth’s Mightiest Heroes battle against the minions of Pluto. Thor could probably clean up here normally, but the curse Hela put on him has him at a severe disadvantage, his brittle bones being kept in place by his new armour. Non-stop action, the excitement levels not dropping… this is exactly what you want when you pick up a book with 'Avengers' in the title. 9/10

18 Aug 2010

Incoming... 18/08/2010

New comics are released Wednesday (in the States at least; we have to wait until Thursday in the UK!). Here's a brief look at our expectations for the books we're picking up this week.


Stewart R: Ok, let me just kick things off with something of a goodbye. Deadpool, you’ve been a fun title for most of your run so far and Daniel Way, Paco Medina and Carlo Barberi can be proud of what they’ve put together over the past two years but I’m afraid this is where I get off the Merc With A Mouth train. Deadpool #26 offers up a chance at redemption for Wade Wilson as Ghost Rider makes and appearance and I’m afraid to say that the series, while admittedly bat-shit crazy half of the time, has lost it’s focus and seems to be floundering a little too badly. The best was to be had when Wade was going up against Skrulls in the Secret Invasion, the Thunderbolts during the Dark Reign and who could forget his ultra-funny face off with Bullseye/Hawkeye?? Since then we’ve seen Deadpool drift away from main, important Marvel continuity and I think the title has been suffering as a result. This comic used to act as a nice alternative commentary for events in the Marvel Universe and if it ever returns there I may well come back to it’s warm, schizophrenic embrace.

Recently on my ‘Hello’ list though was The Sixth Gun from writer Cullen Bunn, artist Brian Hurtt and publishing house Oni Press and The Sixth Gun #3 is high on my ‘to read’ list this week after a very promising first two issues. It seems that comics set in the late 19th century Wild West are having a little bit of a flourish what with Scott Snyder and Stephen King’s American Vampire visiting a similar period and setting through its first five issues and Bunn and Hurtt’s book is oozing a similar level of quality. There should be plenty of gun-slinging awesomeness as the difficult yet likeable Drake Sinclair tries his hardest to keep himself and poor Becky alive and out of the clutches of General Hume and his otherworldly posse.

Secret Avengers #4 should feature more of the ‘off-worldly’ rather than ‘otherworldly’ this week as Ed Brubaker and Mike Deodato continue the team’s perilous Martian mission with Richard Rider and his Nova Force having been overwhelmed and controlled by the Serpent Crown. This is now the only Avengers title that I have put my faith in and what has come before has been tightly written by Brubaker and delivered with some panache by Deodato. What has been refreshing to see has been Brubaker’s ability to keep this feeling like a team book with a handful of very different characters who you wouldn’t necessarily have put together in a team in the first place. I’m still not 100% happy with the Nick Fury angle in this comic as I feel that I can’t take his actions and motives here to be understandable until the events in the Secret Warriors title are finally wrapped up by Jonathan Hickman in a few months time. That of course is a small gripe and I’m sure the pay-off in the end will be justified.

The Heroic Age to date hasn’t been spectacular in this previewer’s opinion but there have been some highlights in these early days and the brightest of all of these has surely got to be Jeff Parker’s tinkering and toiling on Thunderbolts. Luke Cage’s team of reforming criminals and super-powered misfits were really in a spot of ‘bother’ last time out as the Terrigen Mists and a healthy dose of radioactive material had put our heroes into a deadly situation with a group of mutated S.H.I.E.L.D agents. In Thunderbolts #147 I’m certainly looking forward to seeing how Ghost, Crossbones and especially Man-Thing take the fight to monstrous aberrations that are out to feast upon their incapacitated team mates. Kev Walker’s artwork has been a revelation with this series and I’m incredibly excited to see what he’s bringing to the page this time.

Amazing Spider-Man #640 will continue the slow plod through One Moment In Time as Peter Parker and Mary Jane continue to dissect the events that led to their eventual separation and into the Brand New Day. For all of Marvel’s advertising and talking up of this particular Spidey ‘event’ it has to be said that it’s been pretty lacklustre thus far and has me looking a little further up the road to The Origin of the Speicies storyline which leads into Dan Slott’s eventual writing takeover and the change to a bi-monthly format. Charging an extra buck for each ASM issue at the moment is also sticking in the throat a little when the quality of the comic and story isn’t of the highest caliber. Fingers crossed that things pick up in this week’s instalment.

Adam Beechen has been doing a fine job of throwing us readers some 10 years into the future as Terry McGinnis has been coming up against Batman villains old and new after donning the cape - well, futuristic crime-fighting suit! - and being mentored by the pensionable-age Bruce Wayne. Batman Beyond #3 takes us to the halfway point of this latest miniseries focusing on Terry and Bruce’s attempts to stop a killer from mowing his way through Batman’s aging rogues gallery. Beechen has very quickly shown that he knows just how precarious a line Terry and Bruce’s partnership can walk and this series has been carrying on the feel of the gone-but-not-forgotten animated show with aplomb so far. Long may it continue!

Sooo that’s nearly time up but I best I should also give some mentions to the other titles out this week! Chew #13 from Layman and Guillory brings the mysterious Savoy back into the fold which is sure to have lasting repercussions for Tony Chu and should set the direction for this series’ next few issues. Atlas #4 has the well-loved (but not enough it would seem - Damn you Marvel!!) Atlas guys up against shape-shifting invaders intent on bringing the Atlas Foundation to its knees in its very home. Finally, in Green Lantern Corps #51 the mighty and noble Hannu may be the only Lantern able to help Kyle Rayner and Ganthet escape from Cyborg Superman’s clutches. I’m yet to discover what this particular Lantern is about but it appears that he doesn’t like to use his Green Power Ring as a weapon which should make for an interesting rescue mission to say the least!

Phew, that’s it, done for another week. Happy reading guys and gals!

15 Aug 2010

Mini Reviews 15/08/2010

While we may not always have the time to review all the comics we get every week, we do try and provide a snapshot of the latest releases, mixing the good with the not so good.


This week also sees the next instalment of Matt C's Buscema Avengers Project.


GREEN LANTERN: EMERALD WARRIORS #1
Writer: Peter J. Tomasi
Art: Fernando Pasarin & Cam Smith
DC $3.99

Stewart R: I was quite disappointed to see Peter J. Tomasi leave the Green Lantern Corps title as he’d sucked me into the world of the Lanterns and the desperate situation the Blackest Night had posed rather deeply. Luckily he hasn’t strayed far and this new series keeps the same terrific feel that was to be found in his run on GLC. Guy Gardner was put through the wringer during that dark event and has come out of the other side wrapped up in a troubled pact involving the Red Lantern leader Atrocitus. Tomasi does an excellent job of covering all of the bases in this first issue, from Guy’s particular brand of law-enforcement to his and Ganthet’s secretive actions, and from Atrocitus’ nefarious scheming to a mysterious individual who is sure to add an extra twist further down the line. And speaking of lines, Pasarin’s pencils are superb with the initial action-packed scene really highlighting the level of detail this artist can deliver. I’d dismissed this title when seeing it turn up in Previews a few months ago; I couldn’t have been more wrong to do so. Sterling stuff! 9/10


STEVE ROGERS: SUPER-SOLDIER #2
Writer: Ed Brubaker
Art: Dale Eaglesham
Marvel $3.99

Matt C: Bar the somewhat dodgy cover where Carlos Pacheco gives Rogers a baby face (!) this a quality read once again. Brubaker mixes up the former Captain America’s wartime past with some full-on espionage activity. He’s not breaking any new ground here but the writer displays such confidence handling this character that the relatively formulaic nature of the plot is not even an issue. I’d go as far to say the he writes Rogers better than anyone has since maybe Mark Gruenwald back in the ’80s and he has a deeper understanding of what the man represents than anyone else working at Marvel today. He may have handed over the Captain America title to Bucky, but it’s Rogers that fits him like a glove. Eaglesham gives Steve the requisite clean cut, squared-jawed 'man’s man' look and handles the action well. If you enjoyed those early issues of Brubaker’s Captain America where it had the whole spy vibe going on then you’ll love this. 8/10


DAYTRIPPER #8
Writers: Fabio Moon & Gabriel Ba
Art: Fabio Moon & Gabriel Ba
DC/Vertigo $2.99

Stewart R: Well, this puts me in something of a predicament review-wise. Up to this point the series has been a terrific example of single, individual chapters that carried a similar theme and gave the series its emotional backbone. This penultimate issue appears to focus on Bras’ dreams about his life, his past and his future, but I have to say after two read-throughs I’m still not certain what is going on and what these writers are trying to say. There does seem to be a philosophical message about appreciating life as a whole, from the beginning until the very end, and there’s a part of me that wonders if this chapter is actually set at a point close to Bras’ actual death. There’s an interesting change in artist midway through with Ba picking up the pencilling duties to add an extra level of mystery/confusion and ... you know what, I’ve just flicked through again and I think I get it now! Of course, divulging my thoughts could spoil your read so I will refrain from doing so. That’s been the great thing with this series; we readers have been constantly guessing what the twist or hook is all the way through and even now, on the cusp of enlightenment, we still don’t know. 8/10

Matt C: The penultimate issue of this excellent miniseries goes off on an unexpected tangent, taking us into Bras’ dreamscape and even planting the suggestion that Bras isn’t the character we’ve previously familiarized ourselves with. It’s difficult to know how to take this particular instalment because, while the previous eight issues had a sort of self-contained quality to them, this one requires prior knowledge of the story that's come before. It’s still a fantastic read but I think everything now hangs on how Ba and Moon wrap this tale up. It’s unarguably been an excellent series but depending on how satisfying it is, the denouement will decide whether this stands a chance of fitting the classification of ‘masterpiece’. 8/10


THANOS IMPERATIVE #3
Writers: Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning
Art: Miguel Sepulveda
Marvel $3.99

Stewart R: When Abnett and Lanning brought Galactus and his giant cosmic abstract pals to this fight in only the second issue I was wondering where the heck they could possibly be taking this concept with four further instalments to come. Well, in this issue they show just how precarious a position the Marvel Universe finds itself in and in doing so they really have me wondering just how this event could end and what it could mean for the giant cast of characters in play. DnA have made this world their own and know who they need to speak up and when to get the best drama and action out of a story such as this. It’s clear that they favour Nova and Star-Lord as the main protagonists, each offering a different type of heroic leadership as they do, but the supporting cast are so vibrant, developed and damn interesting that this is simply the best ensemble comic out there today. Sepulveda is once again responsible for a ‘YES’ moment from this reviewer with his double-page spread of heroic awesomeness, and that surprising ending should make for some further fun next time out. 9/10


UNWRITTEN #16
Writer: Mike Carey
Art: Peter Gross
DC/Vertigo $2.99

Matt C: There’ve been stories of fictional characters crossing over into the ‘real’ world in comics before but rarely have they been presented with such confidence and ingenuity as in Carey and Gross’ The Unwritten. At its heart it’s a a fairly profound meditation on the power of stories that uses a Harry Potter analogue for contemporary relevance. This issue answers some of the questions that have been lingering since the series began, but of course Carey leaves plenty of mysteries unexplained to ensure we come back for more. Gross employs some powerful visual ideas to show how the written word can leap off the page to be used as a weapon and gives us a grand representation of a more ‘mature’ Potteresque world where the violent methods utilized by the bad guys are as brutal as they are ugly. A series that goes from strength to strength and one that is arguably Carey’s finest comics work to date. 8/10


ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN #13
Writer: Brian Michael Bendis
Art: David Lafuente
Marvel $3.99

Tom P: Peter Parker has been missing since issue #11 after being overpowered by a shapeshifter who was curious to find out why this apparently normal teenager was so quick and strong. Before you know it, he's wreaked havoc on Pete's personal life and discovered his Spider-goodies! The opening page is terrific as the phoney Peter pulls Spider-Man's mask down, grinning, with the words "I am not Spider-Man", branding Peter an idiot for not exploiting his gifts as he swings face first into a skyscraper! Before long, as the cover suggests, the mutant growth hormone addict is up to no good. This is another great issue from the USM team and I'm completely in love with Lafuente's artwork. Pick up the first trade (the premier hardcover is very tasty) - you really should be reading this. 9/10


DAREDEVIL #509
Writer: Andy Diggle & Antony Johnston
Art: Roberto de La Torre
Marvel $2.99

Tom P: So far the only Shadowland books I’ve purchased have been Shadowland itself along with Daredevil. Its been solid work so far from both titles but Daredevil is the better of the two so far and that’s mostly down to the appearance of Elektra, always one of my favourite women in Marvel comics. She's currently on a mission to save Matt from the darkness that’s been slowly corrupting him since he became leader on the Hand. The fact that she looks foxy always helps and De La Torre's artwork is fantastically dark and moody. Throw in an entertaining fight between a few ninja, Luke Cage and Iron Fist and you have a great comic book that sets up the events in Shadowland in style. 8/10


SUPERMAN #702
Writer: J. Michael Straczynski
Art: Eddy Barrows & J.P. Mayer
DC $2.99

Matt C: The last issue showed a hell of a lot of promise but this month’s instalment has me wondering whether Straczynski is taking this title down a path I want to follow. I can deal with Kal-El walking across the States, observing the common man and reacquainting himself with his adopted home, and I’m obviously expecting him to help folk out along the way, but there have to be limits. Here he manages to pretty much reinvigorate a formerly flourishing industrial city (with some ‘outside’ assistance) and it makes it look way too easy. And it shouldn’t be that easy for him to ‘fix’ things because if you follow that through then hasn’t he got the potential to turn America into a Utopia? And then the world? So, there have to be limits, and there should be more of a struggle to his journey. I’m not at a stage where I’m ready to write this off because I can’t believe Straczynski would have the Man of Steel stroll across the States performing miracles left, right and centre without any real resistance. Let’s just say I’m not as optimistic as I was at the end of last issue. 6/10

Stewart R: Straczynski hit a high note with #701 but this issue doesn’t quite measure up in comparison as the story drifts into ‘repeat’ territory a little as Superman arrives in Detroit. The basketball scene is pure cliché and grates a little that none of the characters involved can see what has transpired. What comes next is an entertaining look at the subject of immigration and the affect that the death of industry can have on a community but in a story where Superman is walking across the States I’d like to maybe go one issue without the Man of Steel having his durability tested (or having to use powers at all if it came to it). That may of course happen further down the road and while this isn’t perfect it’s still good enough to keep me interested for further issues. I like Burrows’ and Mayer’s artwork but I do get the feeling that Mayer’s inks combined with too rich a palette from colourist Rod Reis sometimes leaves the linework a little overpowered. 6/10


ULTIMATE AVENGERS 3 #1
Writer: Mark Millar
Art: Steve Dillon
Marvel 3.99

Tom P: After the bombastic concluding issue of Ultimate Avengers 2 finished off Leinil Yu's run with this black ops team we get to the third chapter and now it’s Steve Dillon's turn on the book. I’m not a big Dillon fan; his artwork is good but just not my thing. Millar keeps me onboard though, introducing some interesting new twists and turns. I’m not convinced by the new Daredevil yet and when you think how much plotting and character development there was in just one issue of The Ultimates not a lot actually seems to happen here. Vampires seem to be in vogue at Marvel at the moment, but I was quite surprised by the Ultimate Vampires' addition to their ranks. All said and done I'm still interested in this comic but it has a tendency to be either great of just average. 6/10


X-FORCE: SEX & VIOLENCE #2
Writers: Craig Kyle & Chris Yost
Art: Gabrielle Dell’Otto
Marvel $3.99

Stewart R: Why, oh why do these great writers have to leave X-Force behind when they’re clearly at the top of their game?? This is a terrific ‘explicit content’ read from Marvel as Wolverine attempts to pull Domino’s ‘fat’ - or should that be svelte figure? - out of the super-hot fire she’s managed to find herself in. The violence is on the gory side but works with these characters who excel at maiming and occasionally forcing death onto the odd individual here and there. The animal passion between Neena and Logan is not excessive and is very well handled by Dell’Otto who impresses immensely with his high level of detail and washed colours. The writers guarantee there are plenty of elements all heading for a glorious collision in the finale which I dare say is likely to be unmissable. 8/10


AVENGERS #281
Writer: Roger Stern
Art: John Buscema & Tom Palmer
Marvel $0.75

Matt C: Skipping an issue for the first time in my Buscema Avengers Project as #280 – Jarvis in a hospital bed reminiscing about the past (kind of like a TV 'clip' show) – was put together by a guest creative team (Bob Harras, Bob Hall & Kyle Baker) and therefore doesn’t really fulfil the criteria. Issue #281 has the regular creative team back onboard, ready to crank up the action for a new story arc. After Hercules was beaten into a coma by the Masters of Evil it was only a matter of time before his family would get wind of it. And if you know your Marvel history (or, indeed, your classical Greek mythology) you’ll know that Herc’s kin are Olympian gods, and they’re not best please that the Avengers have let one of their own get trounced so soundly. Whereas the Asgardian gods always have a regular opportunity to hog some limelight in the Thor title, appearances of the Olympians are relatively few and far between, so it’s always good to see them do their thing, particularly when rendered with a nod to Kirby by Buscema and Palmer. The issue’s a hell of a lot of fun: not only does Doc Druid exclaim “Egad!” (a vastly underused word, methinks!) but She Hulk gets to say “Laugh this off, fat boy!” whilst punching out Dionysus! Far more entertaining than the recent Clash Of The Titans remake, that’s for sure. 8/10

12 Aug 2010

Four-Colour Yesteryears: The Magus - Adam Warlock and the Birth of COSMIC Comics, Part II

In Four-Colour Yesteryears we delve back into the past to look at the periods, events and creators that helped shape the medium.



By Rob N

Click here for Part I.

The Magus story began with a brooding and soul-searching Adam Warlock reflecting on his recent experiences, having exiled himself to a desolate planet out in the fringes of known space. His moment of introspection is savagely interrupted when a young girl appears, hunted by a small group of assassins. Adam intervenes but fails to save her life. Using the power of his soul gem he reanimates her corpse long enough to learn that the killers were loyal foot soldiers belonging to the Universal Church of Truth, a baroque theocracy that controls a vast empire of planets. Adam listens to the dead woman as she describes the activities of the Church that resembles a futuristic Spanish Inquisition regime. At the head of the church is their God – the Magus – a mysterious Wizard of Oz-like figure who speaks only through his high priests. Swearing to avenge the girl’s life, Adam is once again given a purpose as he flies through deep space in search of this mighty empire.

It doesn’t take him long before he encounters a battleship belonging to the church that easily overpowers him. Inside are thousands of prisoners – alien life-forms who don’t conform to the approved standard of this religion (that being the human bipedal form made in the image of the Magus). Adam helps them break free and in doing so gains a companion for the remainder of his quest – a light-hearted, wise-cracking troll called Pip – and learns that the gemstone on his forehead possesses the power to drain a man’s soul. This it does when Adam fights the ship’s Captain, Autoclycus, who turns out to be a noble man that sincerely believes he is bringing peace and order to the universe. Adam is horrified to learn that having unwittingly ‘killed’ the man, the essence of his victim’s soul now lives on inside his vampiric gemstone. Sadly for Adam, as time goes on, the stone forces him to kill more and more people in order to feed itself.

Jim Starlin was undoubtedly a fan of Michael Moorcock’s Elric of Melniboné stories as the similarities are hard to ignore. Adam’s brooding intensity and his symbiotic relationship with his soul-stealing gemstone mirrors Elric’s own fatal destiny with his sword, Stormbringer. Like Elric, Adam grows to despise the stone set into his forehead (another Moorcock similarity, as Moorcock’s Dorian Hawkmoon character also had a sentient gemstone set into his forehead), but is unable to rid himself of it. When, eventually sickened by the way the stone uses him as a vessel to kill people, Adam does try to remove it, but finds that the stone has absorbed part of his own soul as a safeguard and that he cannot exist without it. Warlock’s brooding and doomed manner is counterpointed by his companion, Pip, in much the same way that Elric’s intensity is lightened by his supporting character, Moonglum of Elwher.


By now Adam has learnt the truth about the Magus. The God of the Universal Church of Truth is in fact Adam’s future self who travelled back in time to found the religion 5,000 years ago. Not only that, but the Magus has manipulated events to ensure Adam will try to confront him, for it appears that Adam is doomed to follow a path that is already set in stone. He will attempt to stop the Magus, but in trying will set in motion the events that will ultimately create the Magus and establish his 5,000 year legacy of conquest. Adam comes to realise also that the Magus has created a peace of sorts. The empire stands for order and life, a point that will weigh heavily on his conscience very soon.

Having made his way to the capital of this Theocracy, Warlock encounters the Matriarch – a sexy femme fatale who runs the church in the Magus’s name. She tries to tempt Adam into supporting her ambitions, pointing out that they could replace his future self and rule a vast empire together. Adam resists and incurs her wrath. He is captured again but this time his enemies try to brainwash him. Hallucinating, he undergoes a psychedelic fantasy, infamous in the history of Bronze Age comics for being a less than subtle satire of Marvel itself. In a memorable sequence, Adam finds himself in a Ditko-like universe populated by miserable clowns modelled on writers and editors who worked for the House of Ideas. They toil unceasingly, building huge piles of stinking rubbish because that’s the way things are always done at the publishing company. As Adam watches, the mountains of garbage eventually collapse, undermined by a few diamonds in amongst the muck. “Someone keeps putting it in there when we're not looking,” says one of the editorial clowns, obviously annoyed that Marvel’s quality control can’t totally eradicate originality and good writing from its drone-like processes. The story goes that the satire was obvious to anyone who worked within Marvel, but that Jim Starlin used to deliberately submit his finished pages so close to the deadline each issue that there simply wasn’t time for the editorial department to tell him to change anything. By the time the likes of Roy Thomas noticed, the comic had already been printed.

Eventually Adam’s own force of will overloads the brainwashing machine and, combined with the intervention of Gamora – a slinky, sexy, green skinned assassin, dressed in what can only be described as a skin tight, fishnet body stocking, and looking all the better for it – he is free. Gamora has been sent by her master, an enemy of the Magus who shares Adam’s wish to destroy the God. Her orders are to decide whether Adam stands a chance of preventing himself from becoming the Magus. If he can, she is to help him. If not, she is to kill him. Her master turns out to be Thanos – Starlin’s arch-villain from the Captain Marvel series. Thanos is in love with Death, quite literally, and his opposition to the Magus adds a complexity to Adam’s dilemma. For despite all the horror and suffering the Magus has inflicted over the last 5,000 years, he has, or (more importantly) will stop Thanos from committing universal genocide. Again we see the similarity with Moorcock’s Eternal Champion saga, as the Magus and Thanos represent the polar opposites of Law and Chaos and Life and Death. It is no longer as simple as stopping the villain, for the villain it appears is preserving the life of the universe from an arguably greater threat. Should Adam defeat the Magus if in so doing he gives free rein to the nihilistic ambitions of Thanos?

Now the Magus shows himself for the first time, confronting and taunting Adam and his allies. Everything is pre-ordained claims the demigod, as he has seen all this happen before when he was still Adam Warlock, struggling vainly against his future self. As the stakes grow more serious, and as all the dominoes seem to fall into place, Adam begins to suspect that the only way he is going to break this cycle is to do the unthinkable, and kill his (near) future self before he can become a world conquering monster. But that of course will mean his own death. What happens next is that rare thing in comics – a satisfying conclusion that plays out beyond the confines of the Magus story, to the end of Starlin’s short-lived run. Due to the changing fortunes of the title, the last two parts of Starlin’s epic appeared in the guise of an Avengers annual and a Marvel Two-In-One annual (see the checklist at the end of this piece).

Starlin’s run was unusual as it was an early example of a proper ‘auteur’ work in Marvel comics. As both writer and artist, and with minimal editorial control exercised by others, Starlin had a degree of creative freedom that other writers and artists could only envy. The series was to establish his reputation as an author of cosmic storylines that he carries with him to this day.

Jim Starlin’s Warlock saga (the central Magus story begins with Strange Tales #178 and concludes with a coda of sorts in issue #12 of Warlock, though arguably the entire run should be read as a whole for reasons that only become clear with issue #11 of Warlock):

Strange Tales #178 to #181
Warlock #9 to #15
Marvel Team Up #55 (of minor, inconsequential interest)
Avengers Annual #7
Marvel Two-In-One Annual #2

The complete collection is available as a reassuringly expensive Hardback reprint: Marvel Masterworks Warlock Volume 2 (RRP £45.00), for those who sneer at the possibility of a double dip recession.