Moon Knight


By Gregg Hurwitz & Jerome Opeña & various (Marvel)
ISBN: 978-0-7851-4106-8 (TPB/Digital editions)

Moon Knight is probably one of the most complex and convoluted heroes in comics. There’s also a lot of evidence to support the in-world contention that he’s a certifiable loon…

He first appeared during the 1970s horror boom: a mercenary Batman knockoff hired by corporate villains to capture lycanthropic Jack Russell (AKA Werewolf by Night). Catching the readers’ attention, he then spun off into two trial issues of Marvel Spotlight and an exceedingly mature (for the times) back-up slot in TV-inspired Hulk Magazine before graduating to a number of solo series.

His byzantine origin eventually revealed how multiple-personality afflicted CIA spook-turned-mercenary Marc Spector was murdered by his best-pal and comrade Raoul Bushman, and apparently restored to life by Egyptian deity Khonshu: god of the Moon and Justice, or perhaps simply Vengeance…

Over many years the solitary avenger and a select band of hand-picked helpers battled darker threats more flamboyant superheroes neglected or avoided, ever-vacillating between pristine white knight and bloodthirsty killer-with-a-good-excuse…

At the time of this rocket-paced riot of action and suspense, resurgent villain and American Security Czar Norman Osborn was de facto ruler of America, using Federal clout to wage war on heroes who refused to sign The Superhuman Registration Act. Those he couldn’t coerce or crush, he smeared…

As Moon Knight became more obviously frenzied and manic, Osborn framed the outlaw hero for murder and numerous ferocious atrocities and – in response to seemingly overwhelming opposition – the “out-of-control” hero faked his own death, moved to Mexico and went about cleansing his ravaged mind and troubled soul.

The first and hardest part of the remedy was eradicating every vestige of Marc Spector from his wardrobe of personalities…

Re-presenting Vengeance of the Moon Knight #1-6 (November 2009-May 2010), this spectacular breakneck thriller opens with the return of ‘The White Knight’ to New York City; (mostly) clear-headed and determined to reclaim his name and sullied reputation. That begins with an extremely public foiling of a brutally violent bank robbery, where, despite utmost provocation and the watching citizenry’s fervent expectations, the silent Avenger kills absolutely no one…

Astonished observers – including the hero’s former lover and confidante Marlene Alraune – would have been even more astonished to learn that throughout the shocking struggle, a little godling had been whispering in Moon Knight’s ear…
Khonshu is displeased. He wants his chosen agent exacting full and final vengeance and grows increasingly impatient over this sacrilegious “no killing” peccadillo…

Nights pass and Moon Knight, hunted by cops and Osborn’s agents alike, prowls the streets, quietly thinning out predators feeding on society’s weakest members. His diligent pruning is interrupted when the most powerful of Osborn’s super-operatives appears…

‘The Sentry’s Curse’ is that he is nigh-omnipotent, truly crazy and utterly unpredictable. As an old comrade, the golden giant grants Moon Knight a measure of leeway and one last chance, but Osborn is less sanguine about being defied: ordering mystic minion The Hood and telepathic snoop Profile to find and decisively deal with the returned rebel.

Now favouring his Jake Lockley and Steven Grant personas, the repentant paladin is visiting old associates and comrades whilst using vast financial resources to upgrade Moon Knight’s armoury. Moreover, as an outlaw, he has no problem employing the best criminal scientists money can buy…

The first felonious monster to fall to his renewed crusade is grotesque sin-peddler The Slug, and once again the cataclysmic clash is punctuated by his divine passenger screaming in his ear for blood. That distraction might be why the hero doesn’t notice Profile taking a reading and extracting the one secret that could end his ceaseless war on crime…

After tolerating years of appalling atrocities, Moon Knight eventually killed his greatest enemy and, in a fit of madness, cut off his fright-mask of a face. Now, thanks to the psychic’s reading and The Hood’s dark magic, the one foe Spector could never handle is dragged howling from his grave to pick up where he left off in ‘The Bushman Cometh’…

The resurrected psychotic hits the ground scheming and whilst Moon Knight wastes time trying to convince Spider-Man that’s he’s back – but is also better – Raoul orchestrates a bloody raid on horrific psychiatric sin-bin Ravencroft Asylum.

With fellow maniac Scarecrow, Bushman turns an institution full of criminal madmen into murderous slaves: even augmenting his army of the living damned with autonomous, atrocious menaces such as Herman the German and The Great Wall…

Never reticent, Bushman then unleashes his foul forces on sleeping Manhattan in the sure and certain knowledge that unremitting carnage and slaughter is bound to bring Moon Knight running…

With the city under siege even Spector’s oldest – and most betrayed – friend sees the need for action, and with “Frenchie” Du Champ once again piloting the awe-inspiring Moon Copter, the resurgent Knight takes on the entire legion of loons with devastating if non-lethal force under an unforgiving ‘Full Moon’…

The battle enters overwhelming overdrive in ‘Past is Prologue’ as Bushman at last confronts his ultimate antithesis. Chaos escalates and the screaming of Khonshu for his chosen one to cross back over the line and fulfil his blood-letting destiny is almost too much for any mortal to resist.

…And even after resoundingly defeating his physical foes and restoring some semblance of sense to the city the gory god still calls and, at last, ‘Knight Falls’…

With covers by Leinil Francis Yu and 8 stunning variants by Alex Ross, David Finch, Yu and Francesco Mattina, this explosive all-out psycho-thriller is compellingly scripted by Gregg Hurwitz and captivatingly illustrated by Jerome Opeña, Jay Leisten & Paul Mounts who collaboratively create one of the most memorable and enjoyable reboots ever.

Fast, dark and savagely entertaining, Shock and Awe is pure electric entertainment for testosterone junkies and Fights ‘n’ Tights fanatics – and a relatively uncomplicated introduction to the character currently bewildering TV streaming service viewers…
© 2009, 2010 Marvel Characters, Inc. All rights reserved.

CSI: Dominos

CSI: Dominos 

By Kris Oprisko, Gabriel Rodriguez & Steven Perkins (Titan Books)
ISBN: 1-84576-056-5

The fourth adventure of the crack forensic team takes them on a whirlwind of slaughter as the survivor of a mob hit goes on a rampage of vengeance that leaves a stack of corpses littering the glitzy, tawdry environs of Las Vegas.

The previous volumes, written by novelist and crime comics heavyweight Max Allan Collins seem to have proven a hard act to follow, as scripter Kris Oprisko delivers a competent yet lacklustre story devoid of twists or surprises and which often descends into actual predictability.

However, the dual illustration approach of Gabriel Rodriguez and Steven Perkins adds a much needed frisson of tension to the proceedings.

All things considered, this series still provides solid entertainment value for comics fans with a soft spot for hard men and big scores.

© 2000-2005 CBS Broadcasting Inc. and Alliance Atlantis Productions, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

CSI: Demon House

CSI: Demon House 

By Max Allan Collins, Gabriel Rodriguez & Ashley Wood

ISBN: 1-84023-936-0

The third compilation from Collins, Rodriguez and Wood featuring that infallible band of criminalists takes them to the peculiarly American venue of a spooky “Inspirational” theme park run by a Fundamentalist, Conservative/Family Values group attempting to scare misspending youths back onto the straight and narrow.

When a robbery and suspicious gun death impinge on each other on the park grounds, the team is faced with a unique challenge. And how does an ongoing convenience-store robbery spree connect to these crimes at the eponymous ‘Demon House’?

This is a compelling and entertaining thriller that is worthy of the attention of any crime fan as well as fans of the TV show it’s derived from.

© 2004 CBS Broadcasting Inc. and Alliance Atlantis Productions, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

CSI: Bad Rap

CSI: Bad Rap 

By Max Allan Collins, Gabriel Rodriguez & Ashley Wood (Titan Books)
ISBN: 1-84023-799-6

The real world Sin City of Las Vegas is as much about show biz as it is gambling, so when a hot new Rap star kills a kid, but is himself murdered before he can be arrested, it’s a criminal matter, but is it also all about money and prestige?

The creative team once again puts the ensemble cast through its paces in an intriguing plot-driven whodunit, rife with twists and turns and, of course a mounting pile of fresh corpses. Fan of the TV show will welcome the cool efficiency of the protagonists, as do I, since it’s a welcome antidote to the overly emotive histrionics prevalent in many comics today.

Good to see crime comics in such a healthy condition, and this is a sharp argument for more licensed properties going the four-colour route.

© 2004 CBS Broadcasting Inc. and Alliance Atlantis Productions, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

CSI: Serial

CSI: Serial 

By Max Allan Collins, Gabriel Rodriguez & Ashley Wood (Titan Books)
ISBN: 1-84023-771-6

Comics based on “Hit TV Shows” have long been a staple of the industry, but the quality, let alone resemblance to their live action progenitors, has always been a variable factor.

Assuring the former with this initial miniseries is crime-writer extraordinaire Max Allan Collins, probably best known to us for Road to Perdition, Batman or even the Dick Tracy newspaper strip – although his credits as a novelist are even more impressive to the outside world. The artists for Serial are Gabriel Rodriguez, whose subdued, matter-of-fact illustration exemplifies the down-beat, procedural nature of the work undertaken, and he can capture the likenesses of the very large ensemble cast (of itself a rare ability in this genre of comics), and Ashley Wood, whose painterly exuberance handles the flashbacks, special effects and theoretical reconstructions which are such a large part of the TV show.

The plot itself deals with a copycat killer using a Jack the Ripper convention to restage the Whitechapel murders of 1888 in Las Vegas, but since nothing is ever as it seems there are still surprises and thrills for the fans as this tight, complex tale unfolds.

This is a great read that the TV producers would be proud to screen. If you love that you’ll love this.

© 2004 CBS Broadcasting Inc. and Alliance Atlantis Productions, Inc. All Rights Reserved.