Eden: It’s An Endless World! Vol 3

Eden: It's An Endless World! Vol 3

By Hiroki Endo (Titan Books)
ISBN: 978-1-84576-501-9

Following a worldwide pandemic, society has fragmented into warring factions. The Closure Virus decimated the global population, leaving religious society Propater in a position to conquer the remains of humanity. Young survivor Elijah Ballard is searching for his mother in South America when he becomes involved with a group of resistance fighters using the most modern tech and the most ancient tactics to halt Propater’s advance. Led by the ruthless Colonel Khan, the group are making their way to Cuzco City when they encounter a heavy Propater force, including a detachment of seemingly invincible cyborg Aeon Soldiers.

Starting with a pitched battle this tense volume is one long engagement that escalates into all-out war. As Kachua, an Indio girl, and the cybernetically augmented spotter Wycliffe try to make their way to safety through the ancient Inca tunnels, Propater forces run wild above them. Elijah’s devoted robot bodyguard Cherubim is the group’s only advantage but even he is outmatched in the carnage that follows.

The bigger story is largely sidelined in this volume as the all-consuming combat takes its toll on the cast. This cyber-punk, post-apocalyptic tale is by turns viciously graphic and deeply philosophical, but this book is all action as the bleak and brutal, terrifyingly savage saga moves toward a harder look at the politics of survival and the value of ideologies.

These Titan volumes are printed in Japanese format – reading from back to front and right-to-left, but don’t let that deter you. You’ll easily adjust and the minor effort is worth it. Blending beautiful drawing with breakneck action and strong characterisation, this series will appeal to fans and casual readers alike – as long as they’re over 18.

© 2007 Hiroki Endo. All Rights Reserved.

Green Lantern: Emerald Dawn

Green Lantern: Emerald Dawn

By Keith Giffen, Gerard Jones, Jim Owsley, M.D. Bright & Romeo Tanghal (DC Comics)
ISBN: 978-0-93028-988-1

I tend to disparage reworkings of classic characters as a modern evil, but it’s been going on for a very long time, and often the results aren’t as bad as they might first feel, once the dust has settled and the scabs have healed. Case in point is this retrofit of DC mainstay Hal Jordan, whose career as Green Lantern to this point had spanned thirty years and two cancellations, as well as some of the most iconic moments in American comicbooks.

The updating of honest, fearless test pilot Jordan into a troubled drunk with father-issues upset many fans but this 1989 miniseries reinvigorated the character, spawning a second six-issue miniseries and a new regular title.

The story, though, was not too dissimilar from the classic origin. Dying Green Lantern Abin Sur crashes on Earth and wills his power ring to seek out a worthy individual to take his place. The tribulations of Jordan meeting his fellow law-enforcers and their haughty bosses the Guardians of the Universe, and his first glimmerings of greatness when facing the deadly entity Legion was overshadowed by a subtle character readjustment into a less stiff-necked know-it-all than readers had ever seen before, and it struck the appropriate chord for the times.

Nearly twenty years later, looking at the tale on its own merits, it still holds up. Callow, shallow Hal becomes a great man in a tale of grit and determination with sharp dialogue and rocket-paced action. The pages fly by and the result is an excellent, pure feeling of a job well-done. Definitely one for the fans and the open-minded casual browser.

© 1991 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.

Oh My Goddess! Vol 5

Oh My Goddess! Vol 5

By Kosuke Fujishima (Titan Books)
ISBN: 978-1-84576-506-4

This is a classic example of a Japanese story genre which uses a fantasy framework and derives humour from embarrassment and loss of conformity. Nerdy student Keiichi Morisato dials a wrong number one night and connects to the Goddess Technical Help Line. Beautiful and powerful Belldandy materialises in his room, offering him one wish, and he geekily asks that she never leave him. This traps her on Earth, and in fact she is even unable to move too far from his physical proximity.

The college society he pledged to – the Nekomi Institute of Technology Motor Club – are a bunch of maniacs, always spending his money and getting him into trouble, his little sister is always nosing around, the campus queen, Sayoko, inexplicably has the hots for him, and to top it all, Belldandy’s sister Urd – an even more powerful goddess – has decided to make him her pet project.

This volume sees yet another milestone in Keiichi’s inevitable descent into madness, ulcers and baldness when not only the demonic and sexy Mara but Urd too attempts to sabotage Belldandy’s Valentine gift. Then the obnoxious younger sister Goddess Skuld moves in, almost ending the World with her Celestial programming glitches and accidentally turns the hapless boy into a Black Hole.

But nothing could prepare him for the cataclysmic events when wicked Urd turns full-on EVIL…

When you’re a lazy slacker who just wants a hassle free life, you should be careful what you wish for. This fifth collection of Kosuke Fujishima’s brilliant and beautiful comedy of errors is a frantic yet gentle miracle of quality entertainment that can’t fail to bring a smile to a jaded comic palate.

This book is printed in the ‘read-from-back-to-front’ manga format.

English language translation © 2007 Dark Horse Comics, Inc.

Time2: The Epiphany

Time2: The Epiphany

By Howard Chaykin, with Ken Bruzenak & Steve Oliff (First Comics)
ISBN: 0-915419-07-6

Do you like a challenge? Does superb art and design push your buttons? Can you fall in love with style even if the content is obscure, truncated or even possibly absent? Then you should track down Time2

Howard Chaykin has his own personal version of Wonderland. It’s usually night-time there, looks like New York circa 1955, is powered by magic and super-science and there’s Jazz music everywhere. There Gangster-Chic rubs expensively tailored shoulders with Corporate carpet-baggers. It’s always hot and so are all the characters who smoulder with Passion and Style. There’re hookers and bagmen and politicos and bible-thumpers. And then there are the Guys we’d like to be…

This is total-immersion comic-bookery. As Chaykin moved from producing his landmark American Flagg! series to explore other projects, he ended his run with a one-shot special that saw the jaded future-cop transported to another time and place just in time to celebrate a truly extraordinary Holiday. The concepts and characters of that special resurface in this unbelievably dense and intense thunderbolt of graphic bravado that is best inhaled rather than read. It is Chaykin’s ultimate personal expression of his interests to date. In an interview he called it “a magic realist-fantasy fiction of my life” although he might regret that now. It is utterly mesmerising, but it’s not an easy read.

In that up-tempo other place a serial killer is loose. He stalks the streets murdering the sex-robots known as Taxi-dancers. The human model for the pleasure-droids is that formidable Bitch Shalimar Hussy – who isn’t nearly grieving enough at the suicide of her latest husband Cosmo Jacobi, a nightclub owner with a secret stake in the super-profitable R.U.R. robotics company. Feisty reporter Pansy Matthias smells a scoop, but is startled to find missing gadabout Maxim Glory is back in town. When Cosmo was the hottest Sax-man alive, Maxim was his wing-man and her boyfriend, but now he claims he’s the executor of Jacobi’s estate with a Will no one knew existed. There’s going to be trouble…

In this super-charged world everybody and thing has an angle. Death isn’t permanent with Deja-Voodoo or Reincarnimation, and Good and Evil battle daily on the streets. Just ask the Demon Abshalimeth, currently occupying the fuselage of taxi-dancer #869, or even bog-monster homicide detective Chief Inspector Bon Ton MacHoot if you don’t believe me…

The pace is relentless with pictures and facts coming at you like bullets but beneath it all is the slick, sly skill of a cynical master story-teller at play, not work, and the result, if you’re prepared to go for it, is gratifyingly pleasing. Not the easiest of books to find; I live in hope of a collected edition (American Flagg! Special, this, and the sequel The Satisfaction of Black Mariah are less than 150 pages between them) and possibly one day, that fabled third volume. Still, if you are persistent and lucky you won’t regret seeking this out.

© 1986 First Comics, Inc. and Howard Chaykin Inc. All Rights Reserved.

World War III

World War III

By Keith Champagne, John Ostrander & various (DC Comics)
ISBN13: 978-1-84576-653-5

From the pages of 52 (specifically Volume 4 – ISBN: 978-1-84576-624-5 – and exactly between weeks 49 and 50) comes this all-out action blockbuster, originally released as a four-part miniseries. Each chapter is by a different creative team and depicts a gathering of heroes as the super-powered despot Black Adam, at the very brink of finding peace and redemption, loses his beloved family and descends into all-consuming genocidal rage.

Decimating an entire country, he seems incapable of stopping himself. His grief-fuelled destructive rampages threaten the entire planet. Then the super-heroes gather to stop him, by any means necessary…

‘A Call to Arms’ is by Keith Champagne, Pat Olliffe and Drew Geraci, ‘The Valiant’ by Champagne, Andy Smith and Ray Snyder, ‘Hell is For Heroes’ is by John Ostrander, Tom Derenick and Norm Rapmund and ‘United We Stand’ comes from Ostrander, Jack Jadson and Rodney Ramos.

The miniseries fed right back into the greater 52 storyline, and Week 50 is included here to round off the tale. It is by Geoff Johns, Grant Morrison, Greg Rucka and Mark Waid, with breakdowns by Keith Giffen, pencils by Justiniano and inks by Walden Wong.

There’s very little to critique here: All the emotional build-up and investment in the characters occurs in 52 itself and that story easily stands without this aside. Regrettably though, the reverse is not true. WWIII is pretty but impenetrable without the grounding of the greater series to support it. If you’re an art or action lover, however, there are lots and lots of pretty explosions and much hitting…

© 2006, 2007 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.

Superman: The Dark Side

Superman: The Dark Side

By John Francis Moore, Kieron Dwyer & Hilary Barta (DC Comics)
ISBN: 1-56389-526-9

I’ll make this short and sweet. This book collects a three part miniseries from the Elseworlds imprint, wherein DC properties are extracted from regular continuity for radical and extraordinary tales. The basic premise is simple.

When baby Kal-El’s rocket is sent to Earth from doomed Krypton it is intercepted before arrival and lands on Apokolips, the world of Evil New Gods. The Last Son of Krypton is personally raised by the ultimate dictator Darkseid, and on reaching his majority, irrevocably changes the universe. And then he reaches Earth and meets a reporter named Lois Lane…

For any fan of Jack Kirby’s Fourth World, and the original Superman, this is a loving and powerful homage to magnificent concepts, mercifully free to reach a natural conclusion, unencumbered by the publisher’s need to keep all commercially viable characters alive and adventuring forevermore.

Written with wit and enthusiasm and magnificently illustrated Superman: The Dark Side packs an epic punch for all fans of high fantasy.

© 1988, 1989 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.

Superman: Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?

Superman: Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?

By Alan Moore, Curt Swan, George Perez & Kurt Schaffenberger (DC Comics)
ISBN: 1-56389-315-0

Superman first appeared in Action Comics #1, sometime in April 1938 (the date on the cover was June, but that was, by custom, the date by which unsold copies had to be returned – and hard it is to imagine that there were any!). An instant sensation, the Man of Steel promptly spawned a veritable infinitude of imitators, and gave birth to a genre, if not an industry. The Original outlived most of them, growing and adapting, creating a pantheon and a mythology, delighting millions of readers over the generations.

In the 50th anniversary year of DC Comics, editors decided that modern readers had moved beyond the old style and continuity, and consequently re-imagined the DC universe and everything in it. Crisis on Infinite Earths unmade that universe, and remade the greatest heroes in it. The editors have spent the intervening years since trying to change it all back again.

None of which is particularly relevant, except that in the lead-up to the big change, departing Editor Julius Schwartz turned his last issues of Superman and Action Comics (#423 and #583 respectively) into a gift of closure for the devoted fans who had followed Superman for all their lives – if not his. With them all concerned said goodbye to a certain kind of hero and a particular type of story. They made way for a tougher, harder universe with less time for charm or fun.

This slim tome collects the contents of those two issues, and was released to commemorate the passing of artist Curt Swan, who had drawn the vast majority of Superman family tales for more than three decades.

‘Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?’ is a glorious ending to an era and a sensibility, written by Alan Moore, stunningly drawn by Swan, and inked by George Perez and the hugely underrated Kurt Schaffenberger. In it, Moore parades for one last time the characters and concepts that made Superman special, and shows the reader just how much will be lost when the World changes.

He manages to instil modern narrative values into the most comfortably traditional scenarios, making the tale work in modern terms whilst keeping the charm, whimsy and inherent decency of the characters. It is a magical feat, a genuine Gotterdammerung; full of tragedy, nobility and heroism but with a happy ending nonetheless. I’m not going to tell you the plot, other than to say it details the last days of the World’s Greatest Superhero. Be prepared to cry when you read it.

This is a story every comic fan, let alone DC reader, should know, and even works as an introduction as well as a grand farewell.

© 1986, 1997 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.

Manga Sutra – Futari H, Volume 1: Flirtation

Manga Sutra - Futari H, Volume 1: Flirtation

By Katsu Aki (TokyoPop)
ISBN: 978-1-4278-0536-2

If you are offended or embarrassed by graphic cartoon nudity and sexual situations, or if you have any problems at all with the oddly coy forthrightness of manga, skip this review and move on. Otherwise this peculiar blend of soap opera and sexual self-help manual might pique your interest…

Billed as “the best-selling sex guide from Japan” this is more accurately a sweet but explicit soap-opera love-story – albeit related in a staggeringly clinical-yet-chatty manner.

Makota and Yura are just married and unbeknownst to each other, both virgins. In short narrative episodes we see their stumbling first steps to a healthy sex-life, peppered with diagrams, statistics and a disturbingly jolly commentary. The act and techniques themselves are almost of secondary importance to the telling of a RomCom story, with vamping co-workers, interfering, know-it-all siblings and inquisitive parents always making an embarrassing situation worse…

There’s lots of nudity and oddly graphic-yet-(self)-censored copulation on show (neither male nor female primary sexual organs are ever depicted – it’s assumed you already know what they look like; moreover, the Japanese consider them to be in poor taste) but in no way does this resemble the Western style of manual where the emphasis is on dispassionate, clinical education and task-oriented elucidation (of course I’m just guessing here – I’ve never needed a manual or even a map in my life, no, not me, nope, Nuh-Uh…)

Seriously though, this isn’t so much a “how-to” as much as a fascinating and beautifully drawn insight into the acceptable face of Japanese sexuality, and as such has lots to recommend it. Which I do, as long as you’re old enough and promise to stop sniggering…

© 1996 KATSUAKI. All Rights Reserved. English text © 2008 TOKYOPOP Inc.

Diana Prince: Wonder Woman

Diana Prince: Wonder Woman

By Mike Sekowsky, Denny O’Neil & Dick Giordano (DC Comics)
ISBN: 978-1-84576-776-1

It’s about bloody time!

I hope you’ll forgive me that heartfelt outburst, but at last DC Comics have collected one of the most appealing and memorable sequences in the long history of the most famous female comic character in the world, and I’m delighted!

In 1968 superhero comics were once again in decline and publishers were looking for ways to stay in business as audience tastes changed. Back then, with the entire industry dependent on newsstand sales, if you weren’t popular, you died. Handing over the title to Editor Jack Miller and Mike Sekowsky, the bosses sat back and waited for their eventual failure, and prepared to cancel the only female superhero in the marketplace.

The superbly eccentric art of Sekowsky had been a DC mainstay for decades, and he had also scored big with fans at Gold Key with Man from Uncle and at Tower Comics with the T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents and war comic Fight The Enemy! His unique take on the Justice League of America had contributed to its overwhelming success, and now he was stretching himself with a number of experimental, youth-market directed projects.

Tapping into the teen zeitgeist with the Easy Rider-like drama Jason’s Quest proved ultimately unsuccessful, but with the Metal Men and the hopelessly moribund Wonder Woman he had much greater impact. He would ultimately work the same magic with Supergirl in Adventure Comics.

This first volume (which collects issues #178-184 of the comic book series) shows just how bold were those changes to the Amazing Amazon’s career. With young scripter Denny O’Neil on board for the first four tales, we see the old Amazon one last time as she clears long-time boyfriend Colonel Steve Trevor of a murder-plot before everything changes.

When the Amazons are forced to leave our dimensional plane, taking with them all their magic – including Wonder Woman’s Super Powers and all her weapons such as the Invisible Plane and Golden Lasso – she decides to stay on Earth. Effectively becoming her own secret identity of Diana Prince she resolves to fight injustice as a mortal. A meeting with the blind Buddhist monk I Ching shows her how and she begins to train as a martial artist, quickly becoming embroiled in the schemes of would-be world-conqueror Doctor Cyber. And then Steve Trevor is branded a traitor and disappears…

When Sekowsky took over the writing himself (with the fifth tale ‘A Time to Love, A Time to Die’) the adventures moved into some wildly diverse directions including high-fashion and high fantasy as Diana and Ching travel to lost dimensions to join her sister Amazons in final battle against the monster army of the God of War…

With apparently nothing to lose, the switch to espionage/adventurer in the fashionable footsteps of such popular TV characters as Emma Peel, The Girl from Uncle and Honey West, not to mention our own ultimate comic strip action-heroine Modesty Blaise, seemed like desperation, but the series was brilliantly written and fantastically drawn. Steeped heavily in the hippie counter-culture and the Mod-fashion explosion, the New Wonder Woman quickly found a dedicated fan-base. Sales may not have rocketed but they stopped dropping and the character was one of the few re-fits of that era to avoid cancellation.

Eventually, as times changed, the magical Amazons returned and Wonder Woman once again became a super-powerful creature, but that period of cool, hip, bravely human heroism and drama on an intimate scale stands out as a self-contained high-point of quality in a largely bland career. That modern readers can at long last experience this most enjoyable reading experiences is a truly wonderful thing. It means that when you all buy and adore these fabulously with-it and deliciously addictive adventures I can shout “I told you so!”

© 1968, 1969, 2008 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.

Doll

Doll

By Guy Colwell (Rip Off Press)
ISBN: 978-0-89620-114-9

Guy Colwell is an artist and cartoonist whose works are deeply personal and passionate. As such they have often been controversial. As an Underground Comix creator his output was graphically sexual and subtly anti-establishment, and with his three issue miniseries in 1989 he switched that critical focus to the basic drive of aesthetic attraction.

Wiley Waxman is a hyper-realist sculptor whose sexy statues are a sensation, both in the Art world and in the skin-mags of sleazy pornocrat Mal Murphy. When the ugliest man he has ever seen approaches him at an exhibition his disgust turns to fascination as Evergood Crepspok begs a favour. Hideous, malformed and covered with tumours, Crepspoks has never had sex with a beautiful woman – and sees no chance of ever doing so. He wants Waxman to construct the most perfect replica woman imaginable for his personal gratification. Initially revolted by the concept Waxman becomes obsessed with the notion. Enlisting the financial aid of Murphy he assembles his team and begins to work…

But the creative challenges are nothing compared to the human dramas when he succeeds, because his finished work is utterly irresistible. No man is able to resist the lust she/it inspires. And then Murphy decides to keep her for himself…

Sly and allegorical, this exploration of beauty and desire is compelling and sadly resigned in its assessment of male drives, but has valid points to make. With its matter-of-fact graphic sexuality it risks becoming itself just another “stroke-book”, but the disciplined adherence to the core premise means that any licentiousness is pretty much in the eye of the beholder.

This is a brave book about an issue that affects us all. After all, have you ever wondered why girl heroes most often fight crime in G-strings and spike heels?

© 1989 Guy Colwell. All Rights Reserved.