ALL NEW ALL STAR RECOMMENDS #3
FCBD PRESENTS STAY AWAY COMIC BOOK DAY 2021 BONANZA!
Cameron Ashley
Welcome to the
kickoff to the 20th anniversary of Free Comic Book Day!
The aim here is
to help you in choosing your selection from the large list of comics on offer this
Saturday, May 14th. They are all reviewed below and, as always, titles are
listed alphabetically with ratings where provided by the publishers. Those
ratings are:
(A) All Ages (T) Teen (M) Mature (NR)
Not Rated
Although you
won’t be able to line up outside the store and choose and pick up your books in
person on the day, as you did back in the Olden Times before the plague, never
fear - just head on over to the webstore and have make your Stay Away Comic Book Day
selections from there.
Unfortunately,
the DC books arrived too late to be included below. Sorry about that, I was
looking forward to them too. However, there’s a really strong cohort of titles
below from all other publishers geared towards all age ranges. I’ll get you next
year, DC!
Choose wisely,
stay safe and I hope the following helps you! Enjoy.
ALL STAR JUDGE
DREDD
(Rebellion) (NR)
We begin with
one of the best offerings of the year, All Star Judge Dredd. The resurgence of
the character and the quite obvious uptick in both story quality and creativity
of recent years should be unsurprising. If there’s ever a time for Judge Dredd
to make a more visible resurgence, the last few years have practically felt
like Dredd’s future may well be inevitable. There’s always been a sharp punkish
edge to Dredd comics - stories written and drawn by politically-savvy leftists
demonising fascists and conservatives via sharp four colour satire - and the
three stories collected here in All Star Judge Dredd exemplify the best of this
attitude and create a free comic of superb quality top to bottom.
The mighty Al
Ewing scripts and Caspar Wijngaard illustrates “The Lawyer,” a supremely clever
little Judge Dredd short focussed on a judge whose gone undercover as a Lawyer
hoping to sniff out criminal intent and then bring Dredd in to make an arrest.
It’s a clever, twisty little number, attractively drawn by Wijngaard, that lays
out the world of Dredd perfectly for new readers - it’s funny, it’s cruel, it’s
got a wonderfully hyperbolic opening caption and it’s the perfect little
showcase for both character and creators. Great stuff.
“Hershey” is up
next by writer Rob Williams, formerly of Suicide Squad and Unfollow (which I
liked quite a bit) and drawn by Simon Fraser. Former Chief Judge Hershey,
battling a mortal illness, has decided to clean up global corruption and
criminal activity masterminded by former Judge Smiley under Hershey’s watch.
Mortally ill, Hershey jets off to clean up an enormous mess she finds herself
responsible for and she’s going to start in the country formerly known as
Columbia. The cliffhanger here is great, the set up is really well executed and
Fraser’s art, particularly the limited colour palette he employs, is striking.
Hershey is off to a really intriguing start.
“Dreadnoughts”
rounds the issue out. Written by Michael Carrol with art by the legendary John
Higgins (who has not lost a step), we travel to 2035 to an America just around
the corner and witness just how the Judges, as appointed judge, jury, and executioner,
got started. There’s a lot to set up here and Carroll does a strong job.
Higgins, as I mentioned is turning in some rally solid work, adding a layer of
realism to his cartooning that perfectly suits this very near future.
Clearly, the
Dredd books are in terrific hands currently. The stories are presented
perfectly here, with recaps and blurbs provided along with well placed
advertisements for a range of top shelf Dredd-related books. This is a must
get.
ALLERGIC
(Graphix/Scholastic) (A)
(PART OF THE ALL STAR KIDS PACK)
Rather expertly
managing to both educational and genuinely affecting, Megan Wagner Lloyd and
Michelle Mee Nutter’s Allergic arrives from Scholastic. Maggie is a little girl
with two siblings and another on the way. While far from neglected (this is a
very warm family unit), Maggie is acutely aware of how little time her parents
have for her these days due to the always encroaching Life Stuff.
Thankfully, the
family has finally decided to get a dog, something Maggie has had her heart on
for as long as she can recall. Maggie’s also doubly excited because she knows
that, almost by default, she will be the primary caregiver to their new pooch
and thus technically its owner. The family goes to adopt and Maggie quite
quickly falls for an adorable little puppy. The two bond but just as the family
is ready to sign the paperwork, Maggie’s eyes swell shit, she breaks out in
hives and is taken immediately to the hospital. She is of course severely
allergic to furry critters and her dreams of owning a dog are crushed.
If you’re not
moved by scenes of Maggie utterly heartbroken at this development you might
have something wrong with you. Nutter’s art may be a bit bare bones but her
characters are wonderfully expressive - as showcased in scenes depicting
Maggie’s heartbreak. As a crash course in allergic reaction and how and why it
happens, Allergic is terrific. Dramatically it also works and readers are left
with a quiet but effective little cliffhanger as Maggie decides to turn a
negative into a positive.
Good stuff.
ARCHIE: PAST,
PRESENT AND FUTURE FUN
(Archie Comics) (A)
Archie
celebrates 80 years (!) of comics with a really fun FCBD special that’s
self-aware in all the right ways and features a great line up of creators.
“Crisis On The
Riverdale Earths” by writer Bill Golliher, Pat and Tim Kennedy and Jim Amash
opens things up, colliding all sorts of alternate Archies into one story. Fun
and attractively cartooned, it’s a great way to kick things off. Archie himself
walks us through 80 years of history next in, “Happy Anniversary” by Angelo
DeCesare and the Kennedy Brothers who again turn in some crisp art in another
story colliding alternate Archies together.
Fred Van Lente
and legendary Archie artist Dan Parent give us a slice of a classic Archie
escapade in a sample of their series, Everything’s Archie and a one- page
Jughead gag strip closes things out for a very solid FCBD offering. I’m
particularly impressed by the Kennedy Brothers (inked by Bob Smith throughout)
who are turning in some really good looking Archie work. Thumbs up.
AVENGERS/HULK
(Marvel) (T)
Look, can I just
start by pointing out how nice it is that there’s a full page ad in this comic
for the What If…? Omnibus? I know there’s an animated series coming but the
comics landscape and habits of readers have changed so much over the decades
that it might be surprising to some younger readers to hear how much these
comics broke brains in the 70s and 80s (myself among them). There’s an amazing
issue (#39), possibly never to be reprinted, where Thor and Conan fight (I will
dig this out some time for an All Star Instagram Page of The Week). These kind
of bizarre team-ups are so commonplace nowadays it might be hard to imagine
just how surprising some of these issues could be, especially considering the
talent that worked on them. It warms the dark back issue bin of my heart to see the original series return in such a
format. Anyway…!
Hulk’s up second
in this book, but we’re starting here because it’s pretty ace. I’ve been on
record over the years about how frequently these little,
multiple-property-filled sampler issues fail because they are basically all
sizzle, no steak. It’s not the fault of creators (except for that *awful* Civil
War II FCBD comic a few years back) it’s just not a friendly format to debut
new story directions outside of showcasing a few splashy pages.
I’m not the
biggest Donny Cates guy around (he’s okay) but I have to say, this, THIS is how
you do it. Not only does the terrific Ryan Ottley get to bust out some
energetic, attractive and kinetic artwork, Cates solidly lays the groundwork
for his follow up to Al Ewing’s genuinely great, redefining run on the title
and leaves us with a clear indication of where his tenure on the title is going
and exactly why you should read it. I mean to have double-page spreads of Hulk
throwing trains AND build in a quick little cliffhanger in such a short span of
pages is pretty admirable stuff. It’s not the most shocking new direction, but
it’s smartly moving Hulk away from the (awesome) cosmic horror space Bruce and
friends inhabited for Ewing and artist Joe Bennett’s run. It’s also a clear
statement of creative intent, which so, so many of these (mainstream) FCBD
comics lack and I think is absolutely necessary for a crowded market of
expensive super-hero comics being plonked on top of one another for prime shop
shelf space. Kudos to either Cates for crafting this as is or editor Tom
Breevort for perfectly slicing an issue in half. There’s 10 pages here, with
one double-page spread and four splash pages. The art is so good and the intent
so clearly stamped upon the story, it’s not just a great looking comic, it’s an
excellent example of maximising the format to your creative advantage.
But hold the
phone! I flipped this review unnecessarily because for some silly reason, I
doubted writer Jason Aaron. Coming up with endless credible cosmic threats to
the Avengers month after month must be difficult at the best of times but
something is coming for all the worlds of the multiverse and this time their
faces might look a little familiar.
I’ve not read
much at all of Aaron’s now fifty issue deep Avengers run, but if Hickman’s
Avengers was prog rock, Aaron’s is
stoner metal - still high concept but heavier, groovier. We don’t get the most
original idea ever here but concepts like an Avengers tower built on a God
Quarry which exists at the heart of a black hole, not to mention a team of
Avengers populated by interuniversal versions of Deathlok should have one
reaching for their Sabbath LPs, a hopefully clean bong and perhaps some copies
of The Offical Handbook of The Marvel Universe before it’s all said and done.
Artist Iban
Coello is riding high these days and good for him. Personally, I think the guy
needs a kick ass inker to put the work over the top but that’s just my own
personal distaste for the scratchy superhero finishes of someone like Danny
Miki which has become so prevalent. It all looks like Tony Daniel to me and if
you like Tony Daniel, hey great, do I have an Avengers book for you. I’m overly
mean - there’s some cool stuff here. This Avengers tower built upon the God
Quarry looks terrific and Coello’s layouts are consistently great.
In short:
Avengers/Hulk is a pretty solid package, truly one of the better and more
compelling Marvel FCBD offerings I can recall reading.
BLACK/CALEXIT
(Black Mask) (T)
Long live Black
Mask. Really. In a world full of upstart comics publishers that seem solely
geared to getting some ideas to the screen *coughAWAcough*, Black Mask continue
to push forward with slick, very LEFT of centre comics frequently populated by
characters of colour and fuelled by, among other things, a punk rock aesthetic
and, well, anger. Anger at the world, at its politics, at conservatives, at
racists, at…shitty people essentially.
I’ve been
curious to check out Black, the series armed with the premise that only black
people get super powers (taking X-Men’s “hate and fear” to a far more literal
but realistic level). I admire the premise, the choice to render this in
monochrome (at least in the case of “Interlude” as presented here) and its
characters. In execution though, Kwanza Osajeyo’s script is a little clunky.
It’s smart, the characters are great, it’s just not executed as well as it
could be. However, considering this is literally an interlude to the main
series, slight clunkiness is certainly forgivable . Yasmin Flores Montanes
turns in some decent work also, but Jean-Paul Csuka’s tone work really lifts
the whole package, Man, white people look extra white in a monochrome world
with a large cast of black people - a brilliant creative choice. Whiteness is
“othered” here to a terrific degree. A fairly solid intro all in all.
In 2017, 32% of
Californians supported Calexit, essentially meaning they would vote to secede
from The United Sates. This is actually *true* so it’s no wonder that writer
Matteo Pizzolo cooked up this comic named after the movement, tweaked the
dystopia dial up to eleven and went for it. We don’t get a whole lot of plot in
“Calexit: Our Last Night In America,” it’s all set up and cliffhanger, but
these pages just fly past. Pizzolo runs the risk of being too dialogue heavy
but never steps over the line and, make no mistake, this is largely talking
heads but the patter is snappy, the characters fleshed out and the time is
wisely taken to, you know, create some humans as opposed to exposition
machines. Carlos Granda is the artist for this FCBD intro to the series and he
does a really good job with young people being young and talking a lot. I’m not
being flippant - this is a really, really good introduction to the series, the
kind of storytelling so assured that, yeah, here’s two young people on the eve
of succession with a one panel cliffhanger at the end. There’s some comic book
swagger here on the page and I like it. Also: new writers, please note how much
smoother everything reads when you’re aren’t putting every second
word in bold!
A few pages of
Calexit spinoff Emmie-X, also by Pizzolo and Granda, are sprinkled in the back
of this book that amps the political anger right up.
In short: Get
this.
Oh! there’s an
ad for Australian writer and all around good dude, Ryan K Lindsay’s Everfrost
at the back of this. Get that too. Ryan! I owe you emails. So sorry.
BLADE RUNNER
2029/ORIGINS
(Titan) (M)
Solidly crafted
SF-noir awaits in Titan’s Blade Runner FCBD special, giving readers a glimpse
into two of the publisher’s efforts based on one of the greatest SF films all
time. Blade Runner: Origins comes to us from writers K. Perkins and Mellow
Brown with art by Fernando Dagnino. Blade Runner 2029 is written by Mike
Johnson with art by Andres Guinaldo.
Origins, as the
title suggests, takes us back to the beginning, an alternate 2009 with an LAPD
Detective tracking down the presumed killer of a Tyrell Corporation
bio-engineer (I assume the first murder committed by a replicant?). There’s
some crisp art and the story does enough to set the table. 2029 is more my speed, however, with
Johnson’s noirish captions setting the tone. Focussed on Aahna “Ash” Ashina, a
Blade Runner with tendencies to save as many replicants as she kills, this is
again a decent taste of Titan’s take on the property. Ridley Scott’s film was
set in 2019, meaning we have Origins set a decade prior and 2029 a decade
later. The intrigue here comes more from just how the creators of these various
books (there is also another title set in 2019 - the year of the film) build
out their respective eras and join the plot dots together between not just the
comics but bridging out to 2049, the year of the second film. Titan helpfully
includes some text pieces for each of their comics, allowing new readers to
find their footing easily. Absolutely worth a look.
THE BOYS:
HEROGASM
(Dynamite) (M)
Dynamite wisely
brings The Boys to FCBD 2021, easily the highest profile thing they have in
their arsenal. Unfortunately, Chapter One of “Herogasm” is on offer which makes
me wonder if the third season of the TV show will adapt the story arc next. I
don’t really need to explain much about The Boys, right? It’s an enduring comic
with surprising crossover appeal and a quite successful streaming show on
Amazon Prime; you’re on top of it. Scripted by Garth Ennis and drawn by a few
artists, co-creator Darick Roberston chief amongst them, the series focusses on
a covert team trying to bring down superheroes, who are all horrible and juiced
up with corporate chemicals, any way they can.
The series has
it’s high points, and when it’s good, it’s really good. It also has some
superfluous fatty parts. Herogasm suggests that when all the superheroes team
up to take on some massive intergalactic threat, they are actually all
buggering off to a private island for an extended drug-fuelled orgy. It’s a
good gag, constant crossover cataclysm as an excuse for a bacchanalia ,but one
that gets pretty drawn out and one I actually found quite dull by the end of
the arc, the kind of juvenile shock-for-shock’s sake nonsense that peppers the
otherwise lengthy and stellar resume of its writer. Ennis’ old Hitman
collaborator, John McCrea is on deck to draw this arc and he has some fun with
proceedings.
While this might
not be a highpoint of the series in my opinion, curious readers get the full
first issue, chockablock with full nudity and superhero rumpy-pumpy, and are gently pointed in the direction of
more Boys (in the form of the 6 recently-released omnibus editions), with
advertisements for this and Ennis’ other Dynamite work up back.
CRITICAL ROLE:
THE MIGHTY NEIN ORIGINS/THE WITCHER
(Dark Horse) (M)
Okay, so I had
to look this up. Apparently, Critical Role is “an American web series in which
a group of professional voice actors play Dungeons & Dragons.”
Seriously?
Like I’m sure
that’a actually pretty fun to watch but do we really need this spun off into a
comic? I try not to let my frustrations at the amount of licensed comics
clogging up FCBD offerings cloud any actual enjoyment of the material but Dark
Horse has two FCBD offerings again this year and both of them are 100% licensed
fare (as does Titan). Doesn’t Jeff
Lemire have a new creator-owned book coming out from Dark Horse really soon?
Isn’t there *literally anything else they publish?*
Hoo boy. Okay,
having said that, if you like fantasy fare, you could do a lot worse than this.
Jody Houser scripts and and Tyler Walpole illustrates “Home”, a story of a
little boy named Luc fretting that his warrior mother, part of a group called
The Mighty Nein, might not return from her adventures one day. It doesn’t do a
whole lot of world building, but it does use it’s short space well, giving
readers a taste of some colourful derring-do afoot in these pages.
The Witcher
“Once Upon A Time In The Woods” closes us out, a short little number by writer
Bartosz Sztybor and art by Nil Vendrell. This is actually good fun, with some
really nice Tim Truman/Sam Glanzman inspired art from Vendrell. The Witcher
refuses to kill a pig-thieving monster but he’s not the only monster hunter
around…
Despite my
griping, this is a pretty solid affair with The Witcher absolutely worth your
time.
DUNGEON
(NBM)
(NR)
I’ve not read
Lewis Trondheim and Joann Sfar’s Dungeon before - there’s quite a bit of it and it’s broken up
into major sections with a number of artists involved - so this is a bit of a
treat. In fact, my only real exposure to Trondheim’s fairly large body of work
was a volume of The Spiffy Adventures of McConey which didn’t do too much for
me.
Trondheim’s in a
kind of semi-retirement, I believe, but his Dungeon epic (spanning a wide range
of volumes and time periods) endures, and looks better than ever with the
terrific Boulet illustrating. Honestly, this is one of the best drawn FCBD
comics of the year and also one of the
most generous in content - a whole chunk of the upcoming volume 7 is included
an Boulet’s work is cracking throughout.
Functioning
largely as a satire of epic sword and sorcery tropes, Sfar and Trondheim set up
their gags beautifully here. Not only that but the adventure is a compelling
one. Sent to recover the magical “fungus purit” with which they can oust the
usurpers of their dungeon, Marvin (a dragon), Herbert (a duck) and Isis ( a
cat) undertake their quest with gusto. Along the way there’s stops at taverns
and brawls and discussions as to the nature of true love. The “fungus purit”
doesn’t quite work the way our heroes hope, however, to comedic results. As
imaginative as it is funny, Dungeon’s a clear work of enthusiasm by its
creative team and NBM wisely let you know how and where to start should you
fall in love with this world. Highly recommended.
ENTER THE HOUSE
OF SLAUGHTER
(Boom!) (T)
Having sold over
a whopping 500,000 copies, it was only a matter of time before the world of
Something Is Killing The Children was expanded. An unlikely franchise player
upon launch, perhaps, creators James Tynion IV and Werther Dell’edera’s horror
story about monster hunter Erica Slaughter saving kids from “monsters that only
she can see” has so far spanned three trade paperback collections and an
upcoming hardcover, becoming a bona fide hit in the process.
I’ve hemmed and
hawed about dipping my toes into this world so the arrival of BOOM! Studio’s
FCBD special, Enter The House of Slaughter, means I’m all out of excuses.
Promising to extensively world-build upon …Children’s foundation, The House of
Slaughter launches in October. This FCBD special is a little
confusing for newbies such as myself - a text page or intro by Tynion on the
*blank* inside front cover laying out just a little story would have been a
welcome inclusion for readers who want to immediately dig a little deeper (I’m
always a little surprised, year after year, about how such little basic things
are missed that can make all the difference in really elevating a book for the
scores of new readers publishers hope to hook with their offerings). Enter The
House of Slaughter makes for a dense, slightly obtuse introduction for
newcomers. I have no doubt, however, that the already converted will hit the
ground running and love this and the curious will find much to grab onto.
So what’s going
on here? I’m not entirely sure. Erica Slaughter’s out hunting down a nest of
monsters in the town of Archer’s Peak (presumably right before the kick off of
the main series as that’s where …Children is set) and there’s all sorts of
factional business going on at The House of Slaughter involving Erica’s
handler, the black-masked Aaron Slaughter, and his superior, the white-masked
Cecelia Slaughter, and the nuances of these relationships are probably way more
transparent to regular readers. Days skip at the rate of one a page for parts
of the comic, again I assume the timeline slots in perfectly with issues of
Something Is Killing The Children, and we are left with a conclusion that again
(sorry) might not resonate particularly with many new readers as a must-read
hook.
If this all
sounds a bit harsh, I have some good news - despite what I’ve written above,
Enter The House of Slaughter largely works. Dell’edera turns in some pretty
terrific pages here - great action shots, great body language during tense
conversations between characters, creative with the talking heads his writer
gives him. Tynion IV is clearly steeped in this world, keen to expand it out
and unafraid to do it in a more complicated manner than you’d expect. It’s
dense but it moves; unwilling to rely on the crutch of narrative captions that
would bog down its motion. Puerto’s colours are lush and painterly, the palette
fittingly moody and dark. And look, I’d rather my head was spinning a little
than bored or frustrated (we’ll get to there later).
The intrigue is,
well, intriguing and while this issue gives no real indication of The House of
Slaughter’s actual premise (From the solicits: “You know Aaron Slaughter as
Erica’s handler and rival. But before he
donned the black mask, Aaron was a teenager training within the House of
Slaughter. Surviving within the school is tough enough, but it gets even more
complicated when Aaron falls for a mysterious boy destined to be his
competition..”) it’s done the job for me and I’ve already hassled the store
about ordering the upcoming hardcover collection of …Children.
In short,
existing readers will likely be thrilled at what appears to be the creators
slotting both “halves” of their story together. New readers may well end up
like me, scratching their heads a little but returning to this comic more than
once. In selling the main title of this world, Enter The House of Slaughter
does a good job. How it impacts its soon-debuting sister title, which sounds
not unlike a kind of queer horror Deadly Class more than a straight tie in
to…Children, remains to be seen but horror fans shrugging their shoulders at
most current attempts at horror comics and looking to sink their teeth into
something expansive should certainly give Enter The House of Slaughter their
attention. Thumbs, after some deliberation, well up for this.
Oh! one last
point. This doesn’t bother me in the slightest, but it might some: there are a
lot of F-Bombs dropped for a book with a Teen rating. Just putting it out
there. Wertham’s about to claw his way out from the grave.
FUNGIRL: TALES
OF A GROWN-UP NOTHING
(Silver Sprocket) (M)
Mature readers,
rejoice! Here’s another one for you, Silver Sprocket’s offering, Fungirl: Tales
of A Grown-Up Nothing by Elizabeth Pich.
Appealing to fans of Lisa Hanawalt, Adult Swim’s more stonery offerings
and really anyone who enjoys their cheeky comics in vignette-sized bites,
Pich’s Fungirl should be read right to its last page to fully appreciate as it
takes a few strips to fully sink into this work. Join Fungirl as she
masturbates, interrupts her roommates having sex, wipes out horrifically on a
skateboard and perhaps most shocking of all, gets a job!
Everything here
sharpens as the pages turn - the jokes get better, the situations more
ridiculous - it’s more than just a reader getting to know a group of
characters, it’s Pich also getting better. I can only imagine how much sharper
the strips get in the full volume. Fans of quirky alt-comics should definitely
check out Fungirl.
INVESTIGATORS:
ANTS IN OUR P.A.N.T.S.
(First Second) (A)
(PART OF THE ALL STAR KIDS PACK)
Look, to be
frank I didn’t get too much out of this. It’s very wordy but not particularly
witty, dumps new readers into book four of a series, is not very funny and not
particularly appealingly drawn. Investigators creator John Patrick Green is a
New York Times Bestselling author, however, and I imagine his readership for
this series about Alligator secret agents is made up of masses kids not unlike
my four year old, Edgar, who is obsessed with crocodilians. Seriously, Edgar
LOVES this. He wants me to smash out this review so he can take the comic and
put it in his collection. So I shall do just that. I’m not surprised this works
at all as conceptually it’s all there but, man it could be so much better.
Still, With villains made out of waffles and Houdino the triceratops,
Investigators: Ants In Our P.A.N.T.S is a suitably silly funnybook for the
little animal lover in your life. Okay, I have to hand mine over now.
LADY MECHANIKA
(Image) (T)
This is the
fourth time in five years I have had to write about this comic.
Why do this to
me Joe Benitez, why?
I promised Mitch
that I’d try and find a new angle on this thing, but I’m sorry…I’m just too
tired. It’s Lockdown 6, man. Everything feels like groundhog day. Reading
comics shouldn’t. Benitez has moved his creator-owned title away from his own
Benitez Productions and over to Image and, look, the title’s a good fit for the
publisher. Resembling a steampunk Witchblade in aesthetic, we all know there’s
an appetite for this kind of art…just not in my house.
Lady Mechanika
is a Victorian-era P.I. who’s “the sole survivor of a mad scientist’s
experiments which left her with mechanical limbs.” The steampunk-inclined
amongst you should give this a look, as Benitez does a great deal of visual
world-building and if you do find this resonating with you, Image leaves you in
no doubt as to where to start with this series, about to enter its seventh
volume at its new publishing home. See you next year, Lady Mechanika. I’ll try
and find something else to talk about your pages then.
THE LAST KIDS ON
EARTH: THRILLING TALS FROM THE TREEHOUSE (Viking/Penguin) (A)
Massive
congratulations to local artist Doug Holgate, illustrator of Max Brallier’s
highly successful The Last Kids On Earth series of books. There’s toys, a
Netflix show and endless opportunities for this fun all ages property to only
continue its momentum. Good for you, Doug. Described by publishers Penguin as
“Diary of a Wimpy Kid meets The Walking Dead,” these are the action-packed,
highly colourful adventures of a group
of kids surviving a monster apocalypse. And it’s way more fun than that
slightly disturbing synopsis would indicate.
Brallier and
Holgate, along with fellow artist Jay Cooper and others, showcase the creative
team’s latest effort, “Thrilling Tales From The Treehouse,” a graphic novel
containing six stories starring our treehouse-residing crew for FCBD 2021.
Cooper’s the artist of this and he and Brallier craft a rollicking caper
featuring characters Quint Baker and Jack Sullivan, with Baker’s latest
invention, the Bad-Day-Away, running amok. This one’s a good time.
THE LEGEND OF
KORRA/AVATAR THE LAST AIRBENDER
(Dark Horse) (A)
(PART OF THE ALL STAR KIDS PACK AND REGULAR PICKS)
Charming stuff
here from Dark Horse’s all ages sampling of Nickelodeon properties The Legend
of Korra and Avatar The Last Airbender. It’s a pair of cartoons I’m not
familiar with outside of what seems like annual FCBD inclusion, but newcomers
will likely be as won over as I was by a good first opener and a really sweet
closing story.
Kiku Hughes
writes and Sam Beck illustrates the Korra tale, “Clearing The Air” a little
story that takes readers back to Tenzin’s youth as he tries to teach his young
charges about peaceful conflict resolution. It’s well made stuff.
Avatar’s tale,
“Matcha Makers” functions much better as a stand-alone and features some great
art from Nadia Shammas. Written by Shammas and co-writer Sara Alfgeeh, “Matcha
Makers” sees old Uncle Iroh’s reluctance
to find a new fame companion being helped along by some “strange spirit
activity.” There’s some lovely work by Shammas here including a beautiful,
elegant yet economical little sequence of tea being brewed that’s really worth
taking a look at. No prior knowledge is needed to enjoy this one.
Overall, with
this release Dark Horse provides some calm in the storm this FCBD with a pair
of peaceful, well made comics that may cleanse your palate for more high
concept, action driven comics on offer this year. “Matcha Makers,”
particularly, gets the thumbs up.
LIFE IS STRANGE
(TITAN) (M)
From the
apparently super popular “series of primarily episodic graphic adventure games”
(??), Life Is Strange is the second of two offerings from publishers Titan this
year. There are, thankfully, character bios and a complete rundown on the
multiple volumes that lead up to this particular comic about, among many other
characters, Max, a girl who can not just rewind time but travel to alternate
timelines. While clearly I am old and have literally zero frame of reference
for this property, I couldn’t really understand, from this sampler anyway, why
anyone would be interested in reading this. Despite a recap that involves out of
control time-warping powers, a destroyed city and teens with *other* powers,
this FCBD contains none of that and is instead 20-odd pages of talking heads
and what they are talking about is both A) confusing and B) rather dull.
I shouldn’t
really have to assume any of this is my fault. I shouldn’t have to be a gamer
to follow a comic book, but it’s a shame that Titan didn’t showcase something a
bit more dramatic by the team of writer Emma Vieceli and Claudia Leonardi, who
both seem more than competent at their respective tasks. I dunno. You’re on
your own with this one, sorry.
ONI PRESS SUMMER
CELEBRATION!
(PART OF THE ALL STAR KIDS PACK)
As far as what I
am now going to call the “catalogue” approach to FCBD goes (essentially a bunch
of differing content stuffed under the same cover with little helpful
explanation about any of it) One Press Summer Celebration is about as good as
it gets. Four all-ages titles get the sample treatment here and whilst I’m
always grumbling about this kind of approach to FCBD, it’s impossible to deny
the sheer quality of this content.
Pages from The
Tea Dragon Tapestry, Jonna and The Unpossible Monsters, The Sprite and The
Gardener and Mooncakes are all on offer here and I’m practically certain that
one or more of these is going to land with practically any comics reader who
picks this up. I’m a
little disappointed that there’s no
introduction to the titles, but Oni does an okay job of adding short intro and
outro blurbs to each and, look, when the content is this strong, it’s fine. It does, however, make things difficult to
review.
I have little
idea about what’s going on in K. O’Neill’s The Tea Dragon Tapestry, but if I
remember correctly this is a bit of an All Star fave and it’s not hard to
figure out why. O’Neill’s pages are luminous and broadly appealing, fantastical
but gentle, with young female friends at the story’s centre. Unfortunately I
have no idea what’s happening here but before briskly moving on I’m going to
add that this is not O’Neill’s fault. There’re friends and magic and blacksmithing
and cute animals and a coal spite named Brick. Greta has been scouted to
apprentice for a certain master smith and she’s understandably apprehensive.
Her friend, Minette (I had to look that up - there shouldn’t be unnamed major
characters in these things) attempts to put her at ease. There’s clearly a
colourful, gentle rites of passage story at the heart of this and I’m genuinely
sorry I can’t spruik this as I’d like. This is (again, I looked this up) from
the upcoming final book in a widely-acclaimed series by a clearly talented
creator. At least Oni gives me that much to hype and, as the closing blurb
suggests, “Ask your local comic shop retailer how to continue the adventures of
the Tea Dragons!” I might just cheekily suggest, before moving on, that new
readers should need NO suggestion and understand exactly where and how to start
from this very FREE PUBLICITY COMIC, but hey, what do I know? Retailers do
enough, Oni, they shouldn’t have to be your permanent PR people too…
But oh my
goodness, shut up Cam, it’s former Daredevil, Black Widow and Thor artist Chris
Samnee and he is absolutely going for it in these preview pages of Jonna and
The Unpossible Monsters, co-created with co-writer Laura Samnee and coloured by
Matthew Wilson. Geez this is good, so very, very good. Samnee’s pages are
consistently lovely, his art just feels quintessentially “comics” to me, with
hints of everything from Mignola to classic bandes dessinees but somehow it’s
all still him. Oddly, although the concept is absolutely nothing alike, I get
Leave It To Chance (the classic all ages title written by James Robinson and
illustrated by Paul Smith and, at its artistic peak, inked by George Freeman)
vibes here. Everything here is so lush and juicily inked - this is comics art
as comfort food.
Jonna’s a wild
little girl whose older sister is trying to find as Jonna runs, leaps and
bounds through the fantastical jungle landscape they live in. Jonna stumbles
onto a monster in one of the best double-page spreads you’ll see this year and
we’re off to the races here, all calling All Star Comics, or emailing because
the phone is engaged because everyone is trying to order the first collected
volume out a week after FCBD. Okay, probably not but I’m absolutely getting a
copy and if you get the chance to read this comic, the odds are good you will
also. Absolutely gorgeous work, flawless visual storytelling, sumptuous
drawing. My God. If there’s ever to be a successor to Jeff Smith’s Bone,
judging from the few pages readers are treated to here, Jonna and The
Unpossible Monsters might just be it.
Joe Whitt and
Rii Abrego’s The Sprite and The Gardener has the totally unenviable job of
following Samnee’s work, but the duo holds its own in this pretty charming
sample. As a set up for a new reader, this is possibly the best - largely the
result of narrative captions, hey they do serve a pretty fundamental purpose at
times - and it’s a unique one at that. In a pre-agricultural revolution age,
sprites were “the caretakers of life.” When humans came along and farmed and build homes and gardens and
such, they became the “creatures of gardens.” The sprites still exist and
Wisteria is one of them, freshly arrived and trying to fit in amongst the other
sprites of Sylvan Trace. Wisteria comes from Meadowgreen, an example of “bad
gardening” as far as the other sprites are concerned but what happened there
and why did Wisteria leave? Conceptually and somewhat aesthetically, this feels
like manga - it’s quirky, it moves, it has a large cast of cute sprites to keep
up with and it’s bouncy, fun, intriguing stuff with cute, expressive characters
inhabiting a fairly distinct
environment.
Mooncakes by
Wendy Xu and Suzanne Walker rounds us out here. Much like the opener, I have no
idea what is going on, but Oni tells us this is a “best-selling” comic that’s
about to get a hardcover collection, so I guess I’m the idiot. Nova is a
hearing-impaired witch who works in a cafe/bookshop that has a secret backroom
filled with book on magic and witchcraft. There’s a wolf roaming around, and,
geez, I don’t know. The problem with these (generally terrific) quieter stories
is that readers given four or five pages can’t make heads or tails out of many
of them without a little assistance. Xu’s art is fine but, visually, this is
the weakest of the four for my money and unfortunately, much like The Tea
Dragon Tapestry, I’m not given much to either promote or endorse.
HOWEVER, come
for Jonna and The Unpossible Monsters, stay for everything else and you’ve got
yourself a freebie that might just have you filling in your own knowledge gaps
on all stories presented within. Grab this.
RED ROOM
(Fantagraphics) (M)
The one person
who reads my ramblings regularly is probably like, Oh God, Cam’s reviewing and
gushing about another Fantagraphics book and they’d be right. Yeah, I am. And
really, right here is the reason I constantly talk about how Fantagraphics is
the best publisher in the game because, whether the Red Room’s content is to
your taste or not, if you can’t objectively put this as one of, if not the
most, successful FCBD offering of the year, I think you’ve got rocks in your
head.
If you are going
to do a Free Comic Book day offering, do it right. Fantagraphics delivers big
time in this regard in 2021 with a book that ticks all the things I look for
every year in every title:
- Brief introduction/editorial that
sets up both creator and story
- Brand new material that (for the
most part) gives new readers a solid, clear entry into the product and
functions, largely, as an Easter Egg for existing ones
- Functions both as a stand-alone and
an appetiser for more
- Generous in content
- If a reader wants more, it’s extremely
clear how much more there currently is, where to start and what’s to come
Tick, tick,
tick, tick, tick.
According to the
aforementioned editorial, over 50,000 copies of Ed Piskor’s Red Room #1 were
sold. That’s a pretty staggering number considering this is a dirty, grimy
revival of the Outlaw Comics philosophy of violent excess. The craft though,
man, Piskor’s going for it with this series about a bitcoin-funded economy of
dark web snuff film and if you’re not one of the 50,000 already reading the title
this is as good a time as any to check it out. If you ARE already reading the
title, Red Room FCBD contains possibly the best story in the series to date, or
at least one of them. That would be “Juniper,” one of five varied shorts Piskor
and Fanta cram in here. But we’ll get to that. Piskor’s toned the content down
somewhat for FCBD, but the stories presented here (and the series as a whole)
are better for such a varied and playfully executed creative exercise.
We open with
“Alabama Dracula,” the weakest story here featuring one of Red Room’s costumed
killers in his day to day life. I wouldn’t be surprised if this was a scene
excised from Red Room #1 actually, given how this plays out and segues directly
into issue #1 of the series. We meet Mr. Miller, creepy crossing guard, happy
and willing to converse with the kids he sees everyday but struggling to talk
with their mothers. He is, according to local scuttlebutt, the richest man in
town thanks to “bitcoin” but we know he’s the Thelema Clan’s Hazzard Paleface,
doped up, placed in a crate and carted off to murder for fun, profit and dark
web fame.
“Poker Face’s
People’s” is up next, showcasing Red Room killer Poker Face and those people,
from all walks of life, who pay to watch his work. This is a great little FCBD
bonus - something that wouldn’t quite work as part of the monthly comic but
perfect as a bonus whilst also functioning as a sneaky bit of world building.
Piskor’s love of Bissette and Vigil are on clear display here artistically and
the tones, throughout the book actually, are just terrific.
“#clickbait” is
story number three, a very clever history of the dark web in Red Room’s world
told exclusively through smart phones, monitors and tablets. This is a total
info dump, but it’s so creatively executed and again highlights how flexible
Piskor’s concept can be structurally. It also leads directly into Red Room #3
so regular readers look out for that.
“Donna Butcher’s
Legacy of Brutality” is up next, focussing on Red Room killer Donna Butcher,
her copycat killers, her enduring, Manson-esque Pop Cultural cachet and tying
directly into the upcoming Issue #4 due later this month. Piskor’s lettering
goes all E.C typeface at the end of this one, a hint perhaps at Red Room #4’s
influences.
Closing
proceedings off is, as mentioned at the top of this review, “Juniper,” which
mashes up classic kid’s comics with classic horror comics - specifically Bruce
Jones and Berni Wrightson’s classic, enduring “Jenifer” which has to be one of
the most brilliantly demented comics ever made. I’m not going to say too much
about this, but Piskor dropping the tones and going full colour is a clever
touch, not only suiting the story perfectly but also further demonstrating the
creative flexibility at play throughout the series. Let’s hope Piskor can keep
it up.
Needless to say,
I found Red Room FCBD essential. It’s conceptually, to me anyway, the complete
FCBD package in presentation and it’s one of the few titles on offer that feels
truly special, unique and complete as a result. Kudos to all involved.
THE RESISTANCE:
UPRISING/MOTHS/NOT ALL ROBOTS
(AWA) (T)
Oh my Lord. Here
it is. This is where I lose it.
Let’s start with
the positive: Not All Robots by writer Mark Russell and artist Mike Deodato is
pretty wonderful. It’s a tragedy that we only get six pages of this comic,
about a world where humans are obsolete and robots do all the work, because it
is quite clever and very, very funny. It’s odd to see Deodato’s photo-realistic
work on something so seemingly low-key, but it works, adding to the whole
sitcom vibe (which given the whiff of “let’s spin this off into TV LAND!” that
I get from everything AWA publishes is not surprising).
Why is there not
twenty pages of Not All Robots and six, or better yet no pages at all from
two J. Michael Straczynski projects, The Resistance: Uprising and Moths, both
of which, subjectively, I find visually ugly, horribly dialogued (STOP BOLDING
EVERYTHING! NOBODY TALKS LIKE THIS!), and overly bloated with their own stale,
super-powered wind. Objectively, surely we can all agree these are both very,
very boring.
This is more
“let’s just put out some high concept bullshit, press some Hollywood flesh and
spin these off into other media” crap from the revenge vehicle that AWA could
well be for Bill Jemas and Axel Alonso, I’m sorry, but it is. Millarworld books
are more authentically Comics at this point, and that’s now owned by Netflix.
Ugh. Sorry. I can’t love ‘em all, folks. Not All Robots, thumbs up! Let’s
pretend this FCBD comic is six pages long.
Moving on.
THE SMURFS TALES
(Papercutz) (NR)
(PART OF THE ALL STAR KIDS PACK)
Well I’ll be
smurfed! Free Peyo! Okay, so there’s no way I really need to talk much about
The Smurfs, right? Those kind of annoying but wonderfully cartooned creations
of Peyo, the late, great Belgian artist
are getting the FCBD treatment and I really could look at some of this art and
those hand-lettered sound effects for ages.
American
publishers of the adventures of The Smurfs, Papercutz, provide a solid sampling
a short Smurfs tales - unfortunately there’s no date Peyo produced these works
included - with three Smurfs stories included.
Where this gets
interesting, for me anyway, is that right up the back there’s a short Johan and
Peewit story (Peyo’s other notable work in which The Smurfs first appeared).
“The Hanged Man’s Inn” is the highlight here and I suspect it might be the
first time Australian readers get a taste of Peyo’s earlier work. I’ve
certainly not come across it before. Recommended.
SONIC THE
HEDGEHOG (IDW) (NR)
What a year: 20
years of Free Comic Book Day, 80 years of Archie, 35 years of Dark Horse Comics
and 30 years of Sonic!
Two Sonic tales
are included here and props right off the bat to the team behind “Amy’s New
Hobby,” writer Gale Galligan, artist Thomas Rothlisberger and colourist
Nathalie Fourdraine knock their little opener out of the park. Amy’s started
drawing comics based on her adventures with Sonic and friends. She’s convinced
they aren’t very good. Tails discovers them and starts showing them around to
equal enthusiasm from the crew. We get pages of Amy’s comics intercut with the
main story (which is incredibly candy coloured by Fourdraine) and then its time
to finally show Sonic himself…I can’t wait to put this in my son’s hands. He
enjoys drawing immensely but his confidence took some building. Reading this
with him would have been a big help not that long ago and will still provide
some nice positive reinforcement going forward.
“Race To The
Empire” follows. Functioning as a pretty thorough recap of characters and
events in the Sonic comics to this point and giving a clear indication of where
the series is headed next and how you can follow along, this is a great little
feature marred only by the fact that the multitude of artists who drew panels
clipped and stitched in here are all uncredited. Poor form, that. Still, this
comes heartily recommended.
SPIDER-MAN/VENOM
(Marvel) (T)
Marvel brings
more big guns out for its second FCBD offering of 2021 which primarily focusses
on Spider-Man and Venom. Zeb Wells and Patrick Gleason kick us off with *a*
Spider-Man taking on Bushwacker. Wells is cramming in as much as he can here
and Gleason’s art is typically slick. He’s inking himself these days but I have
to say his pages here don’t look quite as good as they did when the superlative
Mick Gray put the pens and brushes to Gleason’s pencils back in the Batman and
Robin days. A minor quibble that only total dorks like me would probably
notice. This is a perfectly fine prelude to an upcoming Spider-Man story.
Sorry, not trying to be obtuse or even snarky - I can’t say too much more than
that without going too plot-heavy and we are too short on Spidey pages for me
to do that without ruining it. It’s not executed with the creative verve of the
earlier Hulk story (see above) but Spidey fans will, as usual with FCBD
offerings, want this to see in which story direction the web-slinger(s) firing
webs this time around.
Venom is up next
and I personally find it kind of goofy that the character is now in space and
apparently going to have a lightsaber fight with Kang but, hey, my admiration
for Al Ewing’s work is noted above and I’ve heard a lot of good things about
co-writer Ram V. so let’s put in pin in this, eh? Interestingly, Bryan Hitch is
back at Marvel for the art chores. Not a name we might associate with Venom,
but the perfect choice (along with regular inker Andrew Currie) to depict both
the grandeur of…err….cosmic Venom and the grittier, but still bombastic
adventures of earth Venom which appear to be escalating once again to
universally cataclysmic levels. Venom! Not just eating street thugs anymore!
Bonus! Look, I’m
never going to complain about getting any Greg Smallwood art but it is a little
strange that sandwiched in the back of this comic are a few pages of an
untitled, unrevealed Daredevil (or Kingpin, more likely) epic drawn
(beautifully) by him and scripted by Chip Zdarksy. Four short pages of this are
thrown in here and despite how random this feels, it’s easily the best, most
intriguing part of the whole package. Make Mine Smallwood! Goddamn, he is good.
Almost feels like it’s included by accident, but much like the Hulk sorry
above, this is a sample to pay attention to.
STAR WARS: THE
HIGH REPUBLIC ADVENTURES
(IDW) (NR)
With not one,
but two Star Wars: The High Republic comics being given away this year (from
separate publishers, no less), you might find yourself wondering…what the hell
is The High Republic?
If you are as
clueless as I, click here for more detail, but in short - it’s
a period of time roughly 200 yers before The Phantom menace movie and finds the
Jedi at the peak of their powers. Right, okay, basically it’s a huge chunk of
time that allows for a whole bunch of new stories (including, apparently the
upcoming Star Wars: The Acolyte TV show), characters across all mediums without
stepping on the toes of the roughly 70 years spanned by the existing films. There’s a really helpful timeline on the
inside front cover of this, with some classic Star Wars info dumping on the
facing page, getting us (somewhat) up to speed.
Writer Daniel
Jose Older and artist Nick Brokenshire open IDW’s effort up with the
self-contained “Attack On The Republic Fair,” a short, flashy number,
thankfully low on plot points and high on lightsabers. Basically cantered
around several young Jedi saving a city from invaders known as Nihil, this is a
perfectly fine comic for younger readers, giving a taste of the regular series
action without bogging proceedings down with expository information. An
advertisement for the the first collected volume of the series informs us that
the Padawan we’ve just seen are students of Yoda, so we’ve already got our through
line to a more familiar time.
Rounding us out,
Older returns with artist Harvey Tolibao in tow this time for a sampling of the
very first issue of Adventures. If “Attack On The Republic Fair” brings the
action, this sample brings the exposition as Padawan Lula Talisola takes
control of the story, laying some backstory out along with Master Yoda and a
selection of other young Jedi on a potentially “world-ending” adventure. Solid
stuff all round for the younger Star Wars fan in your life.
STAR WARS: THE
HIGH REPUBLIC - THE EDGE OF BALANCE/GUARDIANS OF THE WHILLS
(Viz) (T)
Although IDW’s
High Republic offering will likely be in higher demand, Star Wars fans
shouldn’t sleep on this manga take on the period, particularly as a major event
in IDW’s offering also plays a part here. So we have Star Wars comics at
Marvel, IDW and Viz with IDW and Viz sharing the same time period and the same
major happenings. That has to be a first in comics, right?
Anyhow, writers
Shima Shinya and Justina Ireland along with artist Mizuki Sakakibara are the
team on The Edge of Balance which features a young Padawan named Lily Tora-Asi
resettling refugees to the planet of Banchii. This gets bonus points for Master
Arkoff, Lily’s wookiee trainer and is solid Star Wars fare filtered through a
shonen manga sensibility.
Jon Tsuei and
illustrator Subaru present a taste of “Guardians Of The Whills,” which features
two Jedi Knights, Baze Malbus and Chirrut Imwe, who look after the Cyber Temple
on the planet of Jedha. They are also peacekeepers, of a sort, and are called
into reluctant action as the Storm Trooper presence in their mining town
increases. Subaru’s art is a little…lean and fairly generic but may well shine in action sequences we don’t
yet see in this preview. In terms of story, it’s good to see the space opera
jettisoned here in favour of Star Wars other main plot inspiration, the samurai
movie. If I was collecting one of these, my money would be on Guardian of The
Whills for that very reason.
All in all, this
is satisfactory stuff and it’s fascinating to see IDW and Viz playing in the
sandbox with such highly different approaches to comics.
STRAY DOGS
(Image) (T)
A fairly buzzed
about book, Stray Dogs gets the FCBD treatment from Image which is quite the
statement on how confident the publisher is about the product. Coming armed
with breathless superlatives from comics heavyweights like Jason Aaron, Brian
Michael Bendis, Scott Snyder and Kieron Gillen, the first reprinted issue of
this odd little mash up is not as strong as the hype train suggests, but really
what could be? Written by Tony Fleecs with art by Trish Fornster and colours by
Brad Simpson, Stray Dogs walks a fine line in balancing very cartoonish,
Disney-esque art with a dramatic, horror-infused narrative. If you’re
unfamiliar with the title, I’m not sure just how much I should say as watching
the incongruity between art and plot unfold rather devilishly is a main part of
this comic’s engine.
Hmm. Okay. I’ll
just say this. Dogs are disappearing everywhere and there is one culprit, a
collector of sorts. There is no animal harm, for anybody worried about that,
our criminal is something of a dog lover. Grouped together in our dognapper’s
home, the large group of dogs have begun to think of themselves as one big
happy pack, with one master who treats them well. This is all until a scared
little dog named Sophie arrives who has scant, but existing, memories of her
old life and her real owner.
In a really
clever creative choice, only human face you see is in the background on the
front cover. Humans are constantly framed in long or mid shot with their heads
chopped off, or in close as hands or a pair of legs walking away. The focus
throughout is firmly on the canine characters and Fornster’s expressive art
captures her pack’s individuality perfectly. Sophie’s burgeoning friendship
with Rusty, the presumed leader of this ragtag group of dogs, unfolds quickly
but cleverly and readers will likely find themselves pretty quickly charmed by
it all. Fornster’s art is disarming and the extra dark turn the story takes
works as well as it does precisely because it’s belied by the cute factor. With
a second arc on the way, it's smart by Image to focus this year’s efforts on
something this different and cleverly crafted.
Good stuff.
STREET FIGHTER:
BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL
(Udon) (NR)
Another year,
another free Street Fighter comic. You’d think that having read one of these
almost every year for the last five or so years I’d have some idea about Street
Fighter stuff but….nup. HOWEVER: if you like me are utterly clueless, you can
head over to https://www.streetfightercomics.com/ where the publisher is uploading a page a
day…for free! Wow, it’s free Street Fighter Comic Book Day EVERY day.
Anyhoo, Street
Fighter regular Elena is at school in Japan and she has to choose a college.
She’s leaning to returning to her native Kenya, but decides to explore her
options at the College Fair, a kind of expo for local colleges. There, she is
wooed…with fights! As colourful, cheesecakey and cartoonishly violent as ever,
I might not have much of a clue as to who is who here but (as with every year
it seems), I give a passing grade to Street Fighter Back To School Special.
These are always goofy but inoffensive comics, coloured like cells clipped from
an anime, they have their own weird, hyper-coloured aesthetic, all roundhouse
kicks and none-more-bright colours and weapons moving so fast they blur like a
photoshopped, computery whirligig and I kind of admire them for that, which is
bizarre I know because these comics are the comics equivalent of looking at the
sun, plus I have a habit of crapping over comics that are likely objectively
better. Still, if you ripped a page out of this and handed it to me, I’d put
down my wine glass, have a good look and say, “Hey this looks like a Street
Fighter comic, is this a Street Fighter comic?” and you would then nod and hand
me my black belt in comics. Look, Udon’s endless marriage to a riotously garish
aesthetic for this property has won me over.
Matt Moylan,
Genzoman and Edwin Huang are the creators here. I’m not sure who did the cover,
but it’s a pretty eye catching effort. It’s Street Fighter! Wa-Pow! Want more
do you need to know?
VALIANT 2021
There is
possibly no greater incongruity this FCBD than to behold Tyler Kirkham’s pretty
awful Ninjak cover for Valiant 2021 and then opening the thing up and finding,
of all people, Javier Pulido drawing the character’s actual adventures. What an
interesting experiment this is. I feel pretty confident in saying that there’s
not a superhero title on the shelves that looks anything like this. Pulido
(colouring himself here also), working from Jeff Parker’s scripts, has taken
his art to possibly its stylised peak. It’s attractive and supremely playful
work, lots of clean lines and bursts of colour and dynamic layouts. I can see
this being a turn-off for some but most should appreciate how fresh and
uniquely energetic this feels. I’ll say no more - pick this up for the
curiosity factor alone.
X-O Manowar is
back, yet again, in two stories, a prologue to…the series (I guess) and a
preview of the upcoming issue #5. In the creative hot seats this year are Dennis Hopeless, scripting, with suitably
flashy art from Emilio Laiso and Raffaele Forte. This is perfectly serviceable,
modern superhero stuff but hardly a stand-out and only reinforces just how
unique the preceding Ninjak pages are. This is not a knock - in fact, overall
this is easily the most focussed and coherent Free Comic Book Day comic from
Valiant that I’ve seen (I’ve been rough on their efforts over past years) - but
there’s a hook lacking here.
An interview
with writer Cullen Bunn about his work on Shadowman is our penultimate feature.
Bunn’s working with artist Jon Davis-Hunt and colourist Jordie Bellaire on the
book and it’s a real shame we don’t actually get much art at all as that’s a
cracking illustrative team.
Before we leave,
it wouldn’t be a Valiant preview without another feature crammed in the back.
Some very attractive Robbi Rodriguez Harbinger pages close us out. Between
opening with Pulido’s colourful, stylised work and closing with Robbi’s,
coloured by Rico Renzi, with its neon pinks and lime greens, you have to wonder
(and hope) that this is a sign of the direction in which Valiant is moving.
EVERYONE has a superhero universe. The trick may well be to make your titles
stand out aesthetically. I would read a line full of books illustrated as
creatively and energetically as these Rodriguez and Pulido’s pages and, despite
the fact that the package comes wrapped in a cover that looks like it was found
on the floor at Extreme Studios, I’m optimistic that Valiant may at least be
thinking about taking a bit of an aesthetic left turn. There’s some interesting
work in here and, for the first time, I actually solidly recommend checking
Valiant’s offer out.
WE LIVE: THE
LAST DAYS/RAINBOW BRIDGE
(Aftershock) (T)
Ah, well now,
this was a pleasant surprise. Functioning as a prequel of sorts to We Live by
The Miranda Brothers (Inaki and Roy), We Live: The Last Days is an all-new
chapter in a series that’s broken out enough to earn second volume. As a new
reader (I’ve literally never heard of this before), I thought it worked really
well. It’s self-contained, sets up the world of the series and puts a new cast
of characters front and centre. There is no narrative baggage, no need for
newbies like me to play catch up, just open it up and get reading. A great
example of what invested publishers can actually do to maximise their FCBD
efforts, it’s also clear to see why We Live has resonated. It’s
post-apocalyptic, filled with kid characters, but it’s the stakes are very real
- life and death - for our four youngsters. It’s a bit like Brallier and Holgate’s
earlier mentioned Last Kids On Earth given a gritty reboot.
Here’s the
(slightly convoluted) set up: In a ruined Earth of 2081, there are 5000
bracelets containing survival tips and a way to find an “extraction beacon”
which are obviously highly sought after. The bracelets are intended for
children, but a whole economy has sprung up around their discovery. Enter four
children searching for a bracelet of their own. Their search takes them
into the deadly “Broken Lands” where
they encounter a hunter who might just not have their best interests at heart.
We Live: The
Last Days works best when it stays solidly focussed on our four young friends
and their relationships with one another. Personally, I could do without the
purple mutant rhino thing that beefs the action up midway (that really took me
out of this) but overall this is pretty strong, affecting stuff from co-writers
Roy and Inaki and while Inaki does a lot of that scratchy Danny Miki style inks
(particularly on backgrounds) that I find a bit of a turn off, his characters
are terrific and storytelling strong - it’s hard to not get invested in this
little foursome.
Confoundingly, a
few pages of Rainbow Bridge, Aftershock’s first real YA graphic novel project,
function as our back up feature. Steve Orlando and Steve Foxe write and Valeria
Bracanti and Manuel Poppo illustrate. It’s kind of shocking how well Last Days
is handled compared to Rainbow Bridge. We are presented, completely out of
context, with a handful of very well drawn pages of a dog who has somehow ended
up…elsewhere… It’s very cute but I’m not sure how many will rush to pick this
up based on what’s presented. I hope I’m wrong and I’m so annoyed by this that
I’m once again going to do the heavy lifting for the publishers. Rainbow Bridge
is about a young boy who visits the grave of his much loved dog and ends up
accidentally summoning The Rainbow Bridge, the gateway to the pet afterlife.
There you go.
Anyway,
hopefully We Live: The Last Days has piqued your interest; this is well worth a
look.
ZOM 100: BUCKET
LIST OF THE DEAD/DEMON SLAYER
(Viz) (T)
Yes, more
zombies. But, hey, wait this is good!
Written by Haro
Aso and illustrated by Kotaro Takata, Zom 100 focusses on Akira, a miserable
salaryman living an incredibly dreary existence of work, work and more work.
When he awakens one morning to find himself at the centre of the zombie
apocalypse, Akira’s initial terror quickly subsidies as he realises that he doesn’t
have to go to work anymore. This is pretty great fun overall and the premise is
great - the apocalypse as a means to finally do the 100 things you always
wanted to. The gags land, the art is dynamic, the zombies look great, the only
question mark here is how deeply the creators can mine their concept. But I
guess we’ll have to start reading the series to find out, eh? It’s interesting
that Japan has kind of reinvented the zombie. From I Am A Hero’s “Voltron”
zombie to the excellent film, One Cut Of The Dead (See this if you haven’t!
It’s incredible) and now Zom 100, there’s more life in zombies than you’d think (sorry couldn’t resist). Thanks, Japan!
Koyoharu
Gotouge’s Demon Slayer brings this pretty generous and smartly conceptualised
FCBD comic home. There’s only a few volumes of Zom 100 currently out, so Viz
including a property currently 23 volumes strong is a savvy move. Tanjiro
Kamado’s entire family was slaughtered by a demon…except his sister who has now
become a demon herself. To save her, Muzan Kibutsuji, the demon responsible for
his sister’s change, and obtain the cure from him. While nowhere near as
polished as Zom 100, Demon Slayer brings the shonen goodness - the speed lines,
the fluid fight scenes and the banging high concept - and could well end up on
your pull list after this. This comic gives you all the info you need should
you choose to do so.
That’s it! We
did it! Have a wonderful Free…err…Stay Away Comic Book Day and I’ll be back in
October with something suitably spooky for the season.
Stay safe.