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Hugh Likes Comics: Avengers Vs. X-Men #1

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Written by:  A whole bunch of Writers, Art by John Romita Jr. (pencils)  Published by Marvel.

Available via Comixology or your local comics shop.

Let me begin by saying I don’t like ‘event’ comics. They’re a black hole of pointless continuity, distorting the plots of all the books for the characters that take part for little dramatic payoff. The last big crossover I really liked was “Infinity Gauntlet,” or maybe “Secret War,” although I really only liked that one because it was clear to me that most of the characters were having sex between the panels. My point is, a big crossover event comic has to work damn hard to impress me, and this one just isn’t very good.

I read this on my iPad via Comixology, and it clocks in at a thick 99 pages. And in all that space, nothing really interesting happens. The comic itself opens with a splashy five-page spread of a giant firebird (The Phoenix, naturally,) destroying a planet. Cut to Ms. Marvel flying around New York. The Avengers are standing around on a rooftop being dicks to each other, and she lands to join in. This scene just sets the tone for the whole comic. This is a story about superheroes being unheroic. This issue feels like a successor to a previous big status-quo changing crossover, “Civil War.” That was a story about Iron Man having all his friends arrested because a Connecticut housewife spit on him.

But before the heroes can bicker or stand around anymore, a fireball starts falling through the sky, striking the wing of an airplane and the Empire State Building on its way to earth. This gives the heroes who can fly something to do, and they spring into action. This is a good sign that you aren’t going to see anything new in this comic, with ‘Stoping a Plane Crash’ sitting just behind ‘Punching a Guy’ on the list of things a superhero does with his day. The Avengers use their flashiest powers to save the day before the comic forgets this ever happened.

The art in this is kind of strange. It is clearly New York City, but aside from the Avengers standing around looking like action figures, the city seems deserted. Spider-Man catches some people, or rubble, or something, in a net. (It must be people, as one of them claims they are leaving the city) Two people are seen in a window being shocked at something awesome Iron Man does, and that’s about the whole population of this comic.

The Avengers that don’t have the privilege of cool powers to display investigate the fireball, and find out it’s Nova, whose name can only be spoken with via a flashy logo that takes up about a quarter of a page. He wants to warn them about something, presumably the big fiery avian that’s eating planets somewhere, but he passes out instead. For those counting at home, we are fifteen pages into this comic.

In case you’re worried that those weren’t the good guys, we spend the next five pages watching Cyclops beat up a teenage girl. Then she had phoenix powers, but I’ll fast-forward. Despite the fact that he didn’t actually tell them anything, the Avengers figure out that the falling guy was running from the Phoenix, and that it is therefore totally coming here to destroy the Earth, and the Avengers have decided that they are going to stop that from happening. Which would be fine premise for a comic, except that the thing has been showing up at regular intervals and trying to mate (or something) with psychic ladies in the X-men books for YEARS and the Avengers haven’t cared, nor has the world burned to a cinder. But its a good thing they are interested this time, because Cyclops has some vaguely defined plans for the Phoenix. This is also problematic because the thing has killed his wife, several times. You’d think he’d know better.

Also, Cyclops and the X-men live on a rock in San Francisco Bay now. This is a historical allusion so obtuse that it is shooting not just over the heads of this book’s target audience, but I’ll bet good portions of the writing and editing staff are missing it, too. And it makes the Avengers showing up and telling them to hand over the girl in a big flying fortress problematic to say the least. The issue ends with Cyclops shooting Captain America and pretty much holding the girl hostage.

Fin.

The story makes little to no sense, the art is blocky and unpleasant, and the rest of the 99 pages of the comic are a self-indulgent recap of Nova hitting New York again. This is a pricey, plodding prelude to a story about beautiful people punching each other. It’s poorly put together even if that’s your thing. Give it a pass.

Hugh Likes Comics: Edison Rex #1

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Written by Chris Roberson, Art by Dennis Culvur, Colored by Stephen Downer, Lettered by John J. Hill, Edited by Allison Baker. Published by Monkeybrain Comics. Available from Comixology.

“Edison Rex” is a thinking person’s goofy superhero comic. The flagship of the Monkeybrain line of creator-owned digital comics, it is written by publisher Chris Roberson. Like the rest of the line, it is a short, periodical comic designed to be published around other commitments.

Roberson recently worked on a short and controversial run of Superman comics. Perhaps it is unsurprising that his new work focuses on the death of a Superman-like hero at the hands of his arch nemesis, the eponymous “Edison Rex.” What is surprising is that the climax of their relationship isn’t a titanic brawl. It is a conversation, and it is handled with subtlety and craft.

The hero Valiant arrives at the hideout of the criminal Rex, ready to bring him to justice. Rex doesn’t want to fight, he wants to talk. Roberson and Culvur guide us through the villain’s lair, the two characters’ personal history, and a few interesting science fiction ideas along the way. The dialog feels natural, without getting too deep into ‘as you know’ information dumps, and Culvur’s art prevents the issue from feeling like a talking head sequence. I especially liked the evolving design of Valiant’s costumes, and the expressiveness of his faces. It becomes clear that Rex is seeing the culmination of a plan he didn’t really think would work. These characters really feel like they might be ending decades of comic-book confrontations, rather than appearing in their first issue.

The comic ends with an implied question, which is going to be the backbone for the series: What do you do once you’ve reached your life’s goal? And if that goal is the destruction of the world’s mightiest defender, there might be some problems. It falls to our criminal genius to take up the cause of saving the world.

Edison Rex is a comic that perfectly balances the crafts that have gone into it. The writing, art, and design all compliment each other in a way that would fall flat otherwise. This is the kind of comic that shows just how and why comics work as their own medium, rather than the lesser sibling of film or prose. Rex is a standout comic, with a flawed protagonist that is thought-provoking while still being loads of fun. This is a series to watch.

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Hugh Likes Comics: Bandette #1

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Bandette #1 written by Paul Tobin, art by Colleen Coover published by Monkey Brain Comics and available via Comixology.


Disclaimer: I recently interviewed Ms. Coover and Mr. Tobin on The Way of the Buffalo Podcast. They were delightful.

Also: For the month of November, Monkey Brain Comics will be donating its portion of sales to The Hero Initiative.

Bandette” is my kind of comic: a fun, light, bite of adventure and atmosphere available at a discount price as a digital download. One of the launch titles for Chris Roberson’s Monkey Brain line of creator-owned digital comics, “Bandette” is the story of a faux-french thief whose exploits occasionally put her on the right side of the law. In the opening pages, she explains her dubious legal philosophies to a puppy she meets in the mansion of one of the ‘bad guys’ she steals from. “This is called justice. Or larceny, one of the two.”

Bandette” is refreshingly light hearted, with beautiful ink washed art and cartoonish character designs that reinforce the timeless, child-like frivolity of the comic. It feels both modernly hip, with a heroine who is smart, resourceful, and just a touch immoral, but with the delightfully retro style of “The Pink Panther” and “Lupin III.”

Coming in with a scant 13 pages of story, issue one is a quick jaunt of a tale, both quaintly familiar and unique. In a comics market where the major publishers are rushing to embrace grim and gritty, the charm and wit of Bandette #1 makes a perfect remise en bouche.

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