09 December 2009

Batman: The Cult

Jim Starlin truly takes Batman to the edge in back in Batman: The Cult. Investigating a mysterious cult that has taken Gotham by storm, particularly its homeless population, Batman winds up captured and brainwashed in a fight that he barely escapes a live.

What really carries this story is Wrightson and Wray's art. Although the writing is truly incredible, as is typically the case with legend Jim Starlin at the helm, the art in this comic is really unlike anything I have ever seen before in the world of comics.

There is one scene in particular, when Batman, freshly starved, tortured and brainwashed, escapes from his captors and reemerges in Gotham. A three panel spread illustrates his deluded vision of himself: at first a slowly rotting corpse, literally deteriorating to the part of collapse. When we return to Batman, following an interlude, the sequence is repeated with Batman's willpower creating a new vision of himself as a shining knight emerging from the depths. This scene has stuck with me ever since I read this comic and really is something special.

Additionally, this comic, like a select few others, closely examines Batman at the verge of collapse. The visual representation mentioned above is a neat summary, but what really speaks to this notion is the conclusion of this comic. Batman, forced to face down more than half of the population of Gotham, all indoctrinated by the same cult, resorts to a tank like version of the Batmobile equipped with a twin gatling guns firing rubber bullets.

Here we have Batman going against his tenet to never use firearms, but I guess if there's no other way...

Batman: Ego and Other Tales

Darwyn Cooke's soft pencils and muted coloring can't lighten the intesnity of Batman: Ego and Other Tales. Opening with an intense internal conflict between Batman and his "inner demon", Batman, the reader is immediately given insight into Batman's heavily troubled psyche.

The notion of something of a duality between Bruce Wayne and his inner "Batman" is not necessarily new to DC Comics. But perhaps what is so chilling about Cooke's retelling is the innocence and gentle nature of his drawings. Seeing Batman's demonic side is just plain eerie when viewed in this light.

Also of note in this collection is a story that actually does not focus on Batman but rather on Catwoman. Providing the audience with a background not only to Catwoman, but the man who trained her, this story is nothing if not a wild ride through the world of Batman's loveliest supper villainess and only professional love interest.

Batman: A Death in the Family

The death of Jason Todd, chronicled in Jim Starlin and Jim Aparo's Death in the Family, is bizarre. Published in the late 80's, this comic goes from strange to the downright weird -- even for an 80's comic.

Jason Todd, Batman's second Robin, following Dick Grayson who went on to become Nightwing, is in search of his birth mother. Following several possible leads, the brash young teen heads off to Africa and the Middle East without informing his mentor and friend, Batman.

Ironically, Batman is following the Joker to the same locales that Jason is searching for his mother. Coincidence? I think not.

As they gradually eliminate their leads, Batman agrees to aid Jason in his quest, the two come to the final woman. In a surprise twist, she is revealed to be working with the Joker, who has forced her to deliver his infamous Joker Gas to unsuspecting refugees.

After a fitting showdown, Jason shields his mother from an exploding bomb and loses his life. This story is something of a bizarre letdown -- or more realistically, a blatant decision by DC to assassinate one of its characters.

Even more bizarre than the story is the fact that Joker winds up becoming the Iranian ambassador to Iran -- but I won't even get in to that. I think it suffices to say that this bizarre tale is a clear cut moment when a publisher makes a decision to remove a character -- why they chose this completely outlandish scenario though, is something I'll never know...

Batman Gothic

DC superstars Grant Morrison and Klaus Janson team up for this dark look into Batman's past and even more disturbing present.

The seemingly unkillable "Mr. Whisper" is prowling the streets of Gotham City and ruthlessly murdering mob bosses. Although he would never admit it, this doesn't seem like it should be a problem for the Dark Knight Detective -- someone is doing his dirty work for him!

But a little digging into the true identity of the elusive Mr. Whisper takes the Caped Crusader somewhere he could never have expected this mystery to lead him: his past! In a cruel twist of fate -- Grant Morrison's specialty -- Mr. Whisper is revealed to be none other than Bruce Wayne's exceedingly cruel headmaster from boarding school. But knowing Morrison, the story can't merely be that simple.

And true to form, it isn't. Mr. Whisper is further revealed to be an occultist who converted a monastery of God fearing men to evil hundreds of years ago, making a deal with the dark lord in exchange for immortality. Although this aspect of the story is truly amazing and a wild adventure into the past and the world of mysticism, it is actually Whisper's seemingly benign headmaster days that raise the most interesting questions about this story.

In a flashback sequence, it would seem as though Morrison implies that while young Bruce Wayne is enrolled in Whisper's boarding school, he is in fact sodomized by Mr. Whisper. This allegation, highly plausible given the context and Whisper's tendency toward extreme perversion, is an anomaly. Never before in all the comics that I have read have I ever read something this controversial. The closest DC has come to something like this is the rape of Sue Dibny in Identity Crisis. Regardless, it added a powerful and unique element to the story that brought a new level of intensity to the usually super intense character of Batman.

Final Crisis: Legion of Three Worlds

DC superstar creative minds Geoff Johns and George Perez join forces for this epic tale of everyone's favorite superhero team from the 31st century: The Legion of Superheroes!

Pit against Superboy Prime, a nearly unstoppable, younger version of Superman from an alternate universe, the Legion of Superheroes from three worlds unite under a single banner to fight this seemingly invincible foe.

Aside from the nonstop action masterfully delivered through Perez's classic art and Johns' humorous and powerful writing, this work explains one of the oldest mysteries in the DC Universe: the identity of the Legion of Superheroes oldest foe, the Time Trapper.

In a wild twist only Geoff Johns could imagine, the Time Trapper is shockingly revealed to be none other than Superboy Prime himself. Whoa, talk about a head trip!

The ever self destructive Superboy Prime proves his own undoing, literally, and winds up defeating himself -- a fitting exit for one of the DCU's most obnoxious characters. But beyond the inherent humor in his downfall, this story takes an intense look at the various incarnations of the Legion throughout the ages and additionally, a deeply personal look, which seems impossible given his vanity, at Superboy Prime.

Cosmic Odyssey

Jim Starlin and Mike Mignola deliver a seminal piece of DC continuity with Cosmic Odyssey. A pivotal tale for all involved - the truly all-star cast includes New Gods Highfather, Orion, Lightray, Forager, Metron and Darkseid; Justice Leaguers Batman, Superman and the Martian Manhunter - this epic tale of the forces of good pitted against evil is perhaps most impactful on John Stewart, the Green Lantern of Earth and all of Sector 2814.

A defining moment in Stewart's career, he makes a brash decision that costs the lives on an entire planet. Sent to Xanshi alongside the Martian Manhunter, the pair must defuse a bomb created by the Anti-Life entity that threatens all of reality. As the planet begins to erupt around the two heroes in enormous spurts of magma, Martian Manhunter is paralyzed -- the direct result of his race's fear of fire. John Stewart creates a protective construct for the Manhunter, using his power ring, and decides to leave him behind and pursue the threat on his own.

Blinded by his own confidence, John Stewart streaks towards the bomb, arriving moments before its detonation only to find his worst and perhaps never considered fears come true: the bomb is yellow, the only weakness to his power ring and Stewart is rendered completely ineffectual.

Shielding himself - as well as the Martian Manhunter - from the blast using his power ring, the population of Xanshi is not as fortunate. With Xanshi utterly decimated and billions of lives extinguished, there is only one direction to point the blame: directly at John Stewart. Ironically, the Martian Manhunter, who, following the blast informed Stewart that he would never forgive him, later dissuades him from committing suicide, and in essence, saves not only his life, but one of the most important heroes in the DCU.

This defining moment in Stewart's career is the direct cause of a marked shift in his character. Gone is the happy go lucky "ring slinger", his carefree attitude replaced by what seems like perpetual sincerity and stoicism. To this day, Stewart remains the most intense of all four of Earth's Green Lanterns and the loss of Xanshi plagues him still.

03 December 2009

HEAVY LIQUID

Heavy Liquid is awesome. Paul Pope, renown underground comic artist / writer, delivers an amazingly original, honest and beautifully drawn story as both writer and illustrator.

The story is, in a word, wild. Paul Pope takes the reader on what seems like a nonstop chase through futuristic New York / Paris and beyond. At first a bit difficult to grasp, the story follows a man known only as S, who is in possession of a mysterious substance called Heavy Liquid. Throughout the story, details about the nature of the liquid are revealed, though mostly obscured and only one thing is immediately clear: everyone wants Heavy Liquid. The only context the reader understands it in is as a drug, which S indulges in rather frequently, but the reality is something much more.

As S is pursued by all manner of characters, gangsters, artists, the government, it eventually becomes clear that Heavy Liquid is much more than a drug. The big reveal is that Heavy Liquid is an extraterrestrial being, that arrived on earth on a meteor. The question becomes: how has S been taking a drug, that is in actuality an animate life form?