rivkat: Rivka as Wonder Woman (catwoman)
([personal profile] rivkat Aug. 19th, 2004 10:30 pm)
Z's wonderful anniversary gift (along with wonderful-in-other-ways chocolate) was a bunch of comics recommended to him as interesting takes on the superhero thing; [livejournal.com profile] geekturnedvamp also gave me a large number at Vividcon, so I thought I'd do a comics-only review this time.

Brian Michael Bendis & Michael Avon Oeming, Powers: I read Who Killed Retro Girl? a while back, and enjoyed it. Then I read the more recent books, and I rediscovered cops Deena Pilgrim and Christian Walker – and how much do I love those last names? "Pilgrim" is definitely in the John Wayne tradition, a woman who likes to hit first and curse later, while Walker is a seeker – after what, who knows? As non-powered cops in a world of superheroes, they investigate various crimes, from the slaughter of college kids dressing up in costumes (Role Play) to the gory death of two out of three members of an elite team sponsored by the military-industrial-entertainment complex (Supergroup). There are hate crimes against superpeople (Anarchy) and plenty of intergroup tensions; the Justice League would never make it in this world. One of the later volumes, a dialogue-free "Quest for Fire"-type exploration of violence in protohumans, is a big fat failure, but points for trying something new.

Steve Darnall & Alex Ross, Uncle Sam: This is the ringer of the bunch, without much relation to superhero comics (though maybe, by invoking the power of icons, it's closer than I first thought). An old homeless guy, smelly and disoriented, wanders the streets outside a political convention, shifting between pasts he couldn't possibly have experienced and a present no one would want to – is he really Uncle Sam, the embodiment of America, or just a delusional old man? He travels through America's worst mistakes and a few of its better hopes, offering a searing indictment of America's behavior from the perspective of a believer in its dream. I can't say I enjoyed this an awful lot, but I cried at the end.

Brian Michael Bendis, Alias: Jessica Jones is a PI in the Marvelverse, one with superpowers who put away the cape and mask. Both of those attributes – PI and freak -- make it somewhat difficult for her to get along with the cops; her bad attitude and barely-functional alcoholic status don't help either. Like Powers, Alias focuses on the stresses of mutant/human interactions, and contains a lot of graphic violence and intense but not graphic sexual situations. In the first volume, Jessica comes across an explosive secret about Captain Marvel which ends up putting her morals in danger and her life in question, or maybe it's the other way around. In the second book, Come Home, she investigates the disappearance of a maybe-mutant girl from a small town in which the dominant church preaches anti-mutant hatred. The Underneath brings Jessica back to NYC, where publisher Jonah Jameson has a strange connection to the Spiderwoman who breaks into her apartment, then disappears, leading Jessica into a perverted underworld dependent on the exploitation of superpowered people. The Secret Origins of Jessica Jones explains why she's not a caped crusader any more, and the story is much darker than anything you probably expect. Jessica's self-hatred and consequent self-destructiveness are wrenching, but I rooted for her and I'll be following her further adventures in the subsequent title The Pulse.

Garth Ennis et al., The Pro.: What if an alien/otherdimensional something-or-other gave superpowers to a broke prostitute with a mewling infant in tow? I think the point was that superheroes don't have much to do with the problems people face in real life, but I didn't really need all those exposed nipples and curses to believe that, nor did I think that sodomizing an abusive john so severely that he needed a colostomy and ripping his lower jaw off was a good way to use those new powers. And sure, it's not particularly heroic to go up against Big Evil when you're invulnerable – big shocker there – but the narrative undercuts that argument when it makes some of the "good, clean" superheroes vulnerable enough to die. Indeed, comics have been making heroes defeatable for a long while without the need for this type of lecture. If you want sex with your superheroes, read Niven's "Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex," instead, or maybe just check out the SSA.

Warren Ellis et al., The Authority, Book One: Relentless: This time, the twist is that the superheroes are determined to change the world for the better, rather than letting humanity make its own decisions when not threatened by supervillains. At least that's the announced twist, but most of the book is occupied by the superteam going after villains their own size, so I can't say much about how that's going to work out yet. Jenny Sparks, a British blonde who controls electricity, is the team leader; Apollo is a sun-powered Superman stand-in; Midnighter is his Batman-esque lover (yay!); the Engineer is a woman with nanorobots for blood, who apparently doesn't mind showing her nipples in her fighting costume of liquid metal skin but draws the line at labia (um, so to speak); the Shaman/doctor is a mythic figure of what seems to be Earth magic; Jack Hawksmoor is an urbanist – really, he gets his power by connecting to cities; and Swift is a flying woman whose precise powers remain unclear to me. They call Sparks "the spirit of the twentieth century" when they introduce everybody's epithet, but like Twentieth Century Fox that now seems a bit dated, so I'm going to ignore it unless future volumes give me evidence that she's really stuck in an earlier era's mentality. Fun, worthy of further reading, but I'm reserving ultimate judgment to see if they really do start interfering with normal human governance, which I'd find extremely interesting.

Mark Millar et al., The Ultimates, vol. 1: Super-Human: This was the disappointment of the bunch, I'd have to say, though my lack of knowledge of Marvel canon assuredly hampered my appreciation. The story follows a new government-sponsored superteam, including Bruce Banner as the no-longer-Hulk who's in charge of trying to create more soldiers with Captain Marvel's powers. Betty Ross was a shrew – I thought her portrayal was frankly misogynist – and this, along with the other team members' harassment of Bruce for continuing failure in his project, lead Bruce to make a really, really bad decision (three guesses as to what it is, and the first two don't count). Thor's cameo as hippie environmentalist was engaging, and the volume ended with a very disturbing fight between Jan and Hank Pym, a married couple who can shrink and grow, respectively – and gee, aren't the gender politics of that a total surprise? If I'd liked the characters more, I would have been desperate to find out what happened next with the Pyms, but as it was, I've discovered something much better.…

J. Michael Straczynski et al., Supreme Power: Contact: Now this is the good stuff. More extreme than any DC Elseworlds, this Marvel title asks a great series of "what if" questions: What if the government, showing a modicum of sense, took young Kal-El from the humble farmers who found him and raised him up to serve his country under the focus-group-chosen name Mark Milton? What if Bruce Wayne were black and lost his parents to a hate crime? What if the Flash really did have corporate sponsorship? (Okay, that last one is not as interesting, but I'm all about the Dark Knight and the Man of Steel, so it's all good. [ETA: Te explains that the other main character is a redo of Hal Jordan.] I see from my research that this is actually an update of Marvel's Squadron Supreme, which explains a bit.) I adored this. Just the expression on young Mark Milton's face, wrapped in the American flag, every instinct striving for good but also telling him that the world isn't exactly the way his masters tell him – I'm in heaven. The next collection is due in October, and it can't come too soon. The one complaint I have is that I think it's stacking the deck a little to have Kyle Robinson's parents killed in a hate crime. It would be narratively better, I think, if it were even ambiguous why the white killers acted. However, I'd have a lot of sympathy for his racially focused patrolling anyway; maybe he's more broadly appealing if his protect-black-people-only stance comes from a clear instance of deadly racism.

From: [identity profile] thete1.livejournal.com


Your tastes and mine coincide neatly. :D

Re: Supreme Power -- Joe is the Green Lantern clone. A version of Hal Jordan. :D

Also... man. I recommend not waiting for the next SP trade. No spoilers, but they do a *lot* with the race issues. I'm just saying.

From: [identity profile] rivkat.livejournal.com


Duh! That explains a lot. I am very GL-deficient in my knowledge.

Maybe I'll have to go to the comics store this weekend ...

From: [identity profile] londonkds.livejournal.com


I haven't read it, but from reviews I think The Pro was meant to be a satire on the dubious attitude to sexuality in relation to superheroines (liking sex or having lots of it =evil, and the Bad Girl always has to die or be an emotional wreck at the end).

From: [identity profile] rivkat.livejournal.com


Hmm. Yet the Pro didn't seem to like sex all that much -- it was a crummy job she hated, according to her. So I'm not sure that the critique part came through all that well, though the sexual hypocrisy of the Superman figure (she made him have sex; he didn't want to) was highlighted.

From: [identity profile] accommodatingly.livejournal.com

nice roundup (there's more)


Everyone told me I'd like Powers, so I read Role Play. Not bad, but I didn't like the dialogue: I had the sense that Bendis comes up with great plots but writes the details in too much of a hurry. Alan Moore's TOP TEN is a far superior, to my mind, superheroes-as-detectives story-- set in a near-future sf city where EVERYONE has some sort of superpower, it's a police procedural (think Hill Street Blues, NOT Law & Order) with interdimensional, and very funny pratical angles. The update of SQUADRON SUPREME sounds better than the original, which was pretty narrowly focused on the political implications of superheroes (what if the Justice League imposed a world government) and which, like Watchmen, used an obscure company's old characters rather than rewriting famous ones. But my very favorite realistic-superhero comic series is certainly Kurt Busiek's ASTRO CITY. Read it already?

From: [identity profile] rivkat.livejournal.com

Re: nice roundup (there's more)


I've read and enjoyed Top Ten, but is it active any more? And I'm impressed you've actually read Squadron Supreme -- if you have a copy, may I borrow it?

I haven't heard of Astro City, but next trip to the comic book store I will keep an eye out.

From: [identity profile] accommodatingly.livejournal.com

Re: nice roundup (there's more)


I read Squadron Supreme WHEN IT CAME OUT, as individual issues. Yes, that was a while ago. I believe I still have many, but not all, of them, and yes, you can borrow them once I figure out where they are; you may prefer to pick up the trade edition, though:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/078510576X/qid=1093092243/sr=ka-1/ref=pd_ka_1/104-2833505-2027935


I should have known that you knew Top Ten. Apparently it's over-- there were two graphic novels (twelve issues).

Yard sales are exhausting.

From: [identity profile] rivkat.livejournal.com

Re: nice roundup (there's more)


I bow to your comics cred. (My only comparable history is that I have Matt Wagner's Mage in individual issues.) Is Squadron Supreme worth $25? That's the big question.

You had a yard sale? Love to hear the story behind that.

From: [identity profile] accommodatingly.livejournal.com

Re: nice roundup (there's more)


It's not worth $25 for me, because we're trying to limit our spending fairly drastically at the moment, but it might be worth $25 to you, and I'll see how many issues I can dig up from our comics files-- definitely less than the full print run, alas. I had a student do a report on it when I taught my superheroes course-- he chose to buy the trade collection for himself; I wish I had bought it for our library, which I will do if I teach the course again.

Yard sale: we have lots of furniture we don't actually want or need anymore, so we sold some of it! More on Jessie's lj. We sold all the large items we most wanted to sell, and some friends from the Twin Cities came by (incl. one we hadn't seen for a year), so definitely a success.
.

Links

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags