Dave's Unspoilt Capsules and Awards
         The Week's Picks and Pans, plus Awards of Dubious Merit

Standard Disclaimers: Please set appropriate followups.  Recommendation does
not factor in price.  Not all books will have arrived in your area this week.
An archive can be found on my homepage, http://www.eyrie.org/~dvandom/Rants 
     I had an opthalmic migraine last week, it turns out.  Sparkly!

     Items of Note (strongly recommended or otherwise worthy): Avengers
Academy #2

"Other Media" Capsules:

     Things that are comics-related but not necessarily comics (i.e.
comics-based movies like Iron Man or Hulk), or that aren't going to be
available via comic shops (like comic pack-ins with DVDs) will go in this
section when I have any to mention.  They may not be as timely as comic
reviews, especially if I decide to review novels that take me a week or two
(or ten) to get around to.

     Nothing this week.


Time-Shifting:
     Sometimes I get a comic a week or two late because of Diamond's
combination of neglect and incompetence.  If it's more than a week late,
though, I won't review it unless it's very notable.  Additionally, I will
often get tradepaperbacks long after publication or even sometimes before
Diamond ships them, and those will go here.  If I'm reasonably sure I'm
reviewing something that didn't ship this week, this is the section for it.

     Nothing this week.


New Comics:
     Comics and comic collections that I got this week and were actually
supposed to be out this week, as far as I can tell.  These reviews will
generally be spoiler-free, but the occasional bit will slip in.

     The Transformers #9: IDW - The timeline skips ahead a few months, to let
any aftermath of Wreckers happen in the gap.  Despite opening with several
pages of combat, it's mostly another talky issue with the biggest threat to
the Autobots being not the Combaticons but instead Stupid Politicians HUR
HUR.  Takes a promising, if slow, start and rather dampens it, as if Costa
regrets having ended the "Autobots in hiding" plot element and wants it back
NAO.  Very mildly recommended.  $3.99

     The Brave and the Bold #35: DC - The Inferior Five and the Legion of
Substitute Heroes, I had to give it a try (and hope JMS didn't mess either
group up too much).  And...it's okay.  The Subs come off as more petty than
they were in the original stories, and the I5's breaking of the fourth wall
meshes poorly with the Silver Age Subs we see here.  The Giffen-ized Subs
would have fit a lot better.  Mildly recommended.  $2.99

     R.E.B.E.L.S. #18: DC - Mind you, Vril regained control of
L.E.G.I.O.N. several issues ago, so the title doesn't really make sense
anymore.  I suppose it could again soon, if Lyrl has his way.  The main plot
is a sort of family reunion of Doxes, but the only member of the family who
doesn't actively want at least one of the others dead is Brainiac 1...because
he really doesn't care about his offspring enough to bother.  But he'll still
give it a go if it looks like he might benefit from the results.  The Captain
Comet/Starfire subplot bumps along, ably demonstrating that not all societies
equate love and sex.  Recommended.  $2.99

     Booster Gold #34: DC - Set before Maxwell Lord returned to being known
to the world, I suppose, I'm not following enough other parts of the event to
really be sure.  But Booster gets sidetracked into a "JLBWAHAHA" adventure
involving Ted, Scott and Barda along with a villain straight out of those old
days.  But Giffen and DeMatteis don't make the mistake of trying to pretend
like those days didn't end, and a LOT of Booster's internal monologue
concerns how much he's changed since then, and as nice as it might be to
wallow in nostalgia, it's not really who he is anymore.  Fortunately, it's
less of a heavy-handed indictment of the comics industry than my summary
makes it sound like.  :)  Recommended.  $2.99

     Adventure Comics #516: DC - "Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes the
Early Years" as the lead story, the Atom as backup.  Strictly speaking, the
lead story takes place in the "current" Legion time, but with young Clark
Superboy along to watch a message from beyond the grave from R.J. Brande.
Yep, it's time for the latest round of retcons on Brande's origins.  The
art's kinda wobbly and it's rather talky, but a decent story under the
surface flaws.  The Atom backup is very short, and notable to me only because
the art is by Mahmud Asrar of Dynamo5.  I don't even know what the Atom's
current status is...it's Ray Palmer, but is he de-aged, rebooted,
whatever...dunno, don't really care, story doesn't make me interested in
finding out.  Mildly recommended.  $3.99

     Astro City Special: Silver Agent #1 (of 2): DC/Wildstorm - Most of this
issue fleshes out the origin of the Silver Agent, told in flashback from the
future that he was pulled forwards to save.  (The less said about the menace
he saves it from, the better.  Sometimes hokey retro-cliche archness falls
utterly flat.)  The setup for his backwards journey of The Dark Age is
established, but it's implied that his execution at the end of that trip
isn't actually the end...or at least, that we didn't see the whole trip.
It's...okay.  I can't really say that I've been eagerly awaiting this and
that my high expectations have been unmet, because the story never really
grabbed me anyway.  And it's still just sort of...there.  Mildly
recommended.  $3.99

     The Amazing Spider-Man #637: Marvel - Grim Hunt part 4 of 4.  Several
characters get their "dead/not dead" status flags flipped this issue, some of
whom just had them flipped already during this arc.  This isn't to say
there's no permanent changes as a result of the arc, nor that all the changes
are as trivial as Arana's costume change (making Young Allies #1 set after
this arc, as if that wasn't already clear).   The Kaine backup's art combines
with excessively symbolic storytelling to make a muddied mess,
unfortunately.  Recommended.  $3.99

     Avengers Academy #2: Marvel - Heroic Age banner.  Finesse gets the focus
this issue, and does the narration.  And Gage does a very good job of making
her one scary young lady...a regular Villain's Apprentice.  It's not that
she's evil, per se, but rather she's the classic "my morality isn't your
morality" villain type.  She has her goals, she will attain them, and while
she won't go out of her way to hurt anyone along the way, neither will she
hesitate to do so if she thinks it's necessary.  Unless she finds a reason to
stay firmly on the side of the good guys (and, to be anything but treacly,
it'll have to be a REASON, not some sort of emotional breakthrough), she has
the potential to be one of the most dangerous villains in the Marvel
Universe.  Why?  Because she not only has the talent to do just about
everything, she's able to look at the world coldly and pierce the genre
conventions and societal blinkers.  Being genre savvy is usually played for
comedic effect, but it can be pretty chilling as well, and Finesse is running
that angle.  The story itself clunks a bit in places, but the character study
is very good.  Strongly recommended.  $2.99

     Marvel Adventures Super Heroes #4: Marvel - Nova on the cover and his
logo meant my store (like may others, no doubt) shelved this in N rather than
M.  Not that this is a Nova focus issue, mind you.  Not that this seems to
matter to whoever's been in charge of picking the covers for this series.
Anyway, it's far more of an ensemble issue than most of Tobin's Avengers
stories, with the focus (and plots) split pretty evenly among the
characters.  It IS kinda weird seeing Kraven as "jerkwad bounty hunter" here
right after reading Amazing Spider-Man, though.  Recommended.  $2.99

     Gorilla-Man #1 (of 3): Marvel - I greet this with mixed feelings, having
found out that Parker is ending Atlas at #5 rather than submit to another
round of crossovers and sales stunts to keep it alive.  Anyway, Parker writes
a rollickin' tale with a good mix of 50s weirdness and modern "things should
probably make SOME sense" sensibilities.  There's a Bond-movie-ish opening
teaser fight before getting into the main plot, which is itself interrupted
by some flashbacks of Ken Hale's youth.  Caracuzzo's art has some of that EC
Comics feel to it (and more than a little Joe Staton flavoring, especially in
the women) and once I got used to it I could see it was a pretty good fit for
the story as well.  There's two backups.  In the first, Ken twitters with
fans, while the second is a reprint of the cover story of Weird Wonder Tales
#7, which itself was a reprint of a story from Mystery Tales #21 from 1954
(where it wasn't the cover story, so they used the reprint so they could have
the cover too), the origin story of Arthur Nagan of the Headmen.  I guess it
never sank in for me that Nagan was an expat from the horror comics, I
thought he was just another weird Defenders creation.  (Yes, all the original
Headmen were horror transplants, with their origins reprinted in Weird Wonder
Tales #7...Ruby Tuesday was a 70s creation to give them their pink ranger.)
Recommended.  $3.99


Gone Missing:

     Stuff that came out some places this week and that I wanted to buy, but
couldn't find for whatever reason, so people don't have to email me asking
"Why didn't you review X?"  (If it's neither here nor in the section above,
though, feel free to ask, I might have forgotten about it!) 

     Current list as of 7/14/10: Invincible #72, Prince of Power #2, Marvel
Adventures Super Heroes #3, Legion of Super-Heroes #2, Tom Strong and
the Robots of Doom #2, the Thanos Sourcebook.  Brody's Ghost vol 1 was listed
by Diamond as shipping, but Mark Crilley tells me Dark Horse just got their
copies from the printer today, so for once it's not Diamond's fault.

Awards:

"North Korea Is Ruled By A South Korean Actor, Apparently" Award to The
     Transformers #9 (Kim Jong-Il has many kids, none of whom are named
     Kim Jong-Du)

"Dots And Dox" Award to R.E.B.E.L.S. #18

"But Does Scott Free Have A CD Full Of Designs Using Swing Sets?" Award to
     Booster Gold #34

"In Soviet Durla, Shape Changes YOU!" Award to Adventure Comics #516
     
"If Only They'd Thought To Grab It With Their Left Hand!" Award to Astro City
     Special: Silver Agent #1 (of 2)

"To Be A Dentist, You Need A Talent For Causing Pain" Award to The Amazing
     Spider-Man #637

"Tigra Obviously Doesn't Check The Right Dating Boards" Award to Avengers
     Academy #2 (or the really, really WRONG ones, I suppose)

"Maybe Reed's Right To Worry" Award to Marvel Adventures Super Heroes #4

"There's Inbred, There's Redneck, And Then There's Borgia Omega" Award to
     Gorilla-Man #1 (of 3)


   Dave Van Domelen, "But I LIKE complex death traps!" "I KNOW you do, dear. And I'm SURE we'll find ourselves stuck in one before the day's OVER." - Mister Miracle and Big Barda, Booster Gold #34

   Bonus Quote: "I liked it when she was just HOT. Hot and mysterious is gonna be trouble." - Spider-Man
Tags:

From: [identity profile] querldox.livejournal.com


Atom got his retcons on in last week's Atom Special. The whole bit about Jean having done an "As told to..." book revealing Ray's id while he was thought dead in the jungles? Gone. It's specifically said that only Professor Hyatt (who was last seen as senile, but has apparently grabbed a spare retcon) and the Atom's "colleagues" know Ray's dual id. He suddenly has an alive father and brother and mysterious (likely time travelling) uncle who've never been seen or mentioned before.

On the other hand, Jean's not mentioned at all. The origin is mildly retconed to both remove Jean from it and remove Ray's "most passive super-ability of all time" ability to not blow up when he size changes, unlike everything else, to now being a property of his suit.

Still a silly bit about how grad student Ray was so known to be working on getting things to shrink he was known as "Shrinking Ray"...but no one puts two and two together when the shrinking Atom shows up. (the silly bit is that the latter isn't addressed at all).

Otherwise, Ray' still appears to be a late 30sish Ivy University professor. No mention of Ryan Choi either.
.

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