Showing posts with label Artists: Simon Bisley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Artists: Simon Bisley. Show all posts

Friday, 13 January 2012

Books: Global Frequency

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Global Frequency
Vol 1: Planet Ablaze
Written by Warren Ellis
Art by Garry Leach, Glenn Fabry, Steve Dillon, Roy Martinez, Jon J. Muth and David Lloyd

2004



Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

Global Frequency
Vol 2: Detonation Radio
Written by Warren Ellis
Art by Simon Bisley, Lee Bermejo, Tomm Coker, Jason Pearson and Gene Ha

2004



Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/


Tagline: If the world is always Doomed, then why hold out for a hero? What's stopping us from saving ourselves? Answer: not a damn thing.

Cue: title music!

Back when I first started writing this blog my descriptive powers were a little - well - shabby. Thankfully they've become a little more honed [1] over time - but still I wasn't ready for the shudder that went through my body when I read that I had described Global Frequency as "James Bond meets The A-Team meets Web 2.0." (urg - who writes like that [2]?  - major minus points for using the phrase "Web 2.0" (which I think was outdated halfway through the 00s) and "James Bond meets The A-Team" doesn't even come cross to describing what this book is even like [3]). 

Of course the first time round I tried to write about Global Frequency Anonymous (the "hacktivist group" See: V for Vendetta) weren't really a thing. But re-reading these two issues - they're the people who sprung to mind (in fact I wouldn't be surprised if they were fans). So - if I was rewrite what I wrote back then - I'd go for "it's Anonymous meets Thunderbirds meets please shut up and just read it already."  

But yeah: I was put off from reading this series for a long long time by the moody, dark Brian Wood covers that made it look like somekind of boring, everyday life kinda thing. Plus the fact that it had so many artists working on it made me think it somekind of hodge podge series: messy, inconsistent and whatnot. I'll say now don't make the same mistake as me: it's pretty everything that I thought it wasn't: exciting, taut and gripping. Designed like a television series [4] where each episode can stand alone (and each issue is handled by a different artist) Global Frequency is 12 stories about an underground crowd-sourcing spy/rescue network that spans the entire world - hundreds and hundreds of members all liable to be called into action at any time. With few reoccurring characters and all types of science-fiction threats and outlandish crazy scenarios - this is story-writing that administers it's giddy pleasures as small sharp shocks: BLAM. BLAM. BLAM. BLAM. BLAM. BLAM. 

Name-checking both Borges and Buffy and with characters who can always be relied upon to sum themselves in three sentences or less - it's the sort of comic that I guess might be a little bit too low-brow for some of you. With most people calling them "graphic novels" it's expected for comics to behave themselves and act presentable and keep the same artists running throughout an entire run so that you get a consistent tone [5] but what's nice about Global Frequency is the way it's designed to have a different artist take over each issue and then attack it with their own special brand of whatever craziness (and I would love to know how much collaboration the artists got to have with Warren Ellis - because I'm nosey like that). 

Plus (and I don't know if anyone else gets this): but I really love how they put the credits on the last page. Somehow for me - that just makes it feel a great 80s American tv show (like how the last shot would be a freeze-frame and then flash up by saying: "Produced by Johnny Whathisname"?) - but yeah - maybe it's just me - but I thought it's a really nice touch. 

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[1] I would compare them to a knife - but truth is - it's more a spoon. A dangerous spoon - but - well - yeah - still a spoon.

[2] Well - me - obviously - but that's still no excuse.

[3] In fact "James Bond meets The A-Team" would be a pretty good description for The Losers comic and/or film - but hey - let's not go there. 

[4] In fact they tried to make a Global Frequency TV series back in 2005 - but only got as far as the pilot. Oh well. I'm sure it couldn't have been as nifty as the comics anyhow - unless they managed to secure themselves a big enough budget - because a lot of the fun of these books is how it goes big with it's concepts - jetpacks, zombies from space, indestructible killer cyborgs, space catapults etc. And that's not the sort of thing that you wanna go cheap with.

[5] And hey - I'll put my hands up - and say that most of the time I'll complain when that doesn't happen (I'm looking at you Grant Morrison).


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Links: Shaking Through Review of Vol 1,  Comics Should Be Good ReviewComics Worth Reading ReviewComics And...Other Imaginary Tales Review of Vol 1.

Further reading: 
The Avengers: Secret Avengers: Run the Mission, Don't Get Seen, Save the WorldQueen & Country, Desolation Jones, FreakAngels, Sleeper, Planetary, The Complete Future Shocks, Supergod, Anna Mercury.

Profiles: Warren Ellis.

All comments welcome.

Thursday, 15 December 2011

Books: A.B.C. Warriors: The Black Hole

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A.B.C. Warriors
The Black Hole
Written by Pat Mills
Art by Simon Bisley and SMS

2005



Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

Hell yes. Or maybe I should say (even better): "BIG JOBS!"

I was not expecting to enjoy The Black Hole. It was one of those books that I picked up to read more out of dutiful necessity for the Islington Comic Forum rather than something I expected to enjoy. And the first third of seemingly mindless robot destruction with an extra heaping muscles and guns (which kinda bordered on the fetishistic) and a story that begins halfway through and makes several reference to other books that I'm tempted to say that I haven't read (but the truth is rather that I had read them a long long time ago and can't quite remember - so the feeling of not really knowing what's going on is pretty much the same).

But then - I dunno - I was reading it with a feeling like I was just trudging through and then suddenly it all started clicking into place and the fun started kicking in - and instead of feeling bored (in that special kinda of way you only get from too much robot action - which is different to say watching paint dry or whatever) a smile started to creep across my face.

Starring the motley crew that is the A.B.C. Warriors (for those that don't know: it stands for 'Atomic' 'Bacterial' and 'Chemical' - and it's the type of warfare they're designed to take: so think Transformers - but without the Transforming and with more (a lot more) of a psychotic edge: crazy killer berserker robots basically - but "A.B.C. Warriors" sounds a little nicer) and taking in plenty of big ideas - this is a book designed for all sort of cheap thrills - even as it sneaks in a few grand philosophical ideas on it's underbelly. The artwork is by the legend that is Simon Bisley and SMS (???) can be very noisy at parts and Bisley (who I reckon was probably just starting out) is a little over the place in parts - but it is kinda cool how the black ink gushes everywhere slightly out of control and it all helps to add to the chaotic nature of the script.

Also - I would be remiss not to mention that it features "The Greatest Robot Ever Created" (who felt like he'd stepped out from the pages of a Douglas Adams book - which I'd say is high praise indeed).

Don't be taken unaware by the form - originally published in 2000AD in short little 5 or 6 page gos way back in the 1980s - it tends to shift it's style around a bit in order to keep the readers (teenage boys mainly) on their toes: but then that magpie sensibility that keeps it hopping from one idea to the idea is a big part of what makes it all so very thrilling...

Meknificent!

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Links: Are You A Serious Comic Book Reader? Powerful Panels: ABC Warriors, 2000AD Review Review.

Further reading: Sláine: The Horned God, The Adventures of Luther Arkwright.

All comments welcome.

Tuesday, 13 December 2011

Books: The Batman/Judge Dredd Files

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The Batman/Judge Dredd Files
Written by Alan Grant, John Wagner
Art by Simon Bisley, Carl Critchlow, Glenn Fabry, Jim Murray, Jason Brashill

2004




Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/


Mega City One's fiercest Law-Man meets Gotham City's Dark Protector! That's the level you need to pitch yourself at coming into this book - a collection of three individual stories: Judgement on Gotham, The Ultimate Riddle and Die Laughing (sadly neglected is Vendetta in Gotham - a story that is referred to in Die Laughing - yet has sadly not been included here - what gives?).

Of the two leads - I've always preferred Dredd over Bats (which is probably a Britsh thing) which I think leaves me a little disadvantaged: as good as Batman can be (Frank Miller and all that) - most of his stories tend to be cookie-cutter fighting the bad guys stuff and although Dredd has more than his fair-share of being a "hero" and saving the day action type cases - I've always enjoyed him more when he's just being a grumpy future policeman and butting heads and coming up against weird far-out future crimes and disturbed craziness. Or to put it another way: Batman is always the star of Batman and always the main attraction while Dredd (when he's done right) is always better when he's side-lined slightly and used as a window to take in all the amazing sights and sounds of the not too distant future... Thus: The Batman/Judge Dredd Files always leaves me a little bit disappointed and slightly unsatisfied as it's the action heroes taking on the bad guys flavor rather than subtle satire of whatever. Which is obviously how it should be (Batman's character is too big to really do anything else) - but it does mean that by-and-large Dredd is just an uptight lawman.

The best stories are Judgement on Gotham and Die Laughing (and in fact - you'd be bets of avoiding The Ultimate Riddle altogether - which is just boring and awful and half-baked) - and continuing what I said above - the best bits of those are the Dredd-related jokes ("Subdue him" and "You can't hit me like that" respectively) with the rest being generic race-against-time/stop the bad guys evil plan fluff. Saying that - it's always nice to have a little bit of The Mean Machine and Judge Death and the rest plus the fully painted artwork by Simon Bisley (probably the first comic book artist I ever knew by name) is worth checking out as is the Glen Fabry stuff in Die Laughing (although they switch artists halfway through - which I think is because Glen takes so long to paint stuff).

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Links: 2000AD Review Review.

Further reading: Judge Dredd: The Complete Case Files 05Judge Dredd: The Complete Case Files 06Judge Dredd: The Complete Case Files 07, Sláine: The Horned God, The Complete Future Shocks, Joker, Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere.

All comments welcome.

Tuesday, 13 September 2011

Books: Sláine: The Horned God

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Sláine: The Horned God
Written by Pat Mills
Art by Simon Bisley

1989




Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

Torn from the pages of 2000AD (Britain's best loved long-lasting weekly science-fiction comic - obviously) Sláine: The Horned God is a stone cold classic of savagely seductive swords and sorcery. Full of tasty pagan goodness with extensively researched details on things like - oh the three weapons of the Earth Goddess (The Flaming Spear of the Sun, The Silver Sword of the Moon and The Cauldron of Blood - obviously), Dragon Ghosts and how to have a perfect Warp Spasm (amongst many other things): this is ancient historical legends with the bloody bits left in - and then extra bloody bits thrown in for good measure. Because everyone loves bloody bits.

Starring Slaine - (England's answer to Conan the Barbarian) - a good-looking honourable berserker lug type: who's always to make quips and axe up all the bad guys and his trusty (or should that be untrustworthy) dwarf Ukko - who's constantly conniving and scheming ways to rustle up gold and riches (in which he is always thwarted - obviously) it's fairly standard stuff. The main thing about this book - the reason it's a comics classic and still revered amongst so many - is the resplendently fully painted artwork by Simon Bisley. If you've never had the pleasure: then your eyes are in for a feast (ouch! all those reds and oranges!) . Reading this as a kid was like being raised on caviar and quail eggs and left my palate permanently skewed to expecting comic books to look as pretty as they can (which is basically why I used to find (still find) Marvel and DC so hard to get into). Every page - hell every panel - is lovingly and tenderly executed to achieve maximum effect. Seriously - even if ever page was in French or Japanese you'd still be able to enjoy the hell out of this: it's that good.

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Links: Comic Book Resources Review, Den of Geek Review, Cy's Matters Review, The Tearoom of Despair Article: Biz.

Further reading: Judge Dredd: The Complete Case Files 03, Nikolai Dante: The Romanov Dynasty, A.B.C. Warriors: The Black Hole, 300, Northlanders, Mezolith, Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere.

All comments welcome.

Tuesday, 18 January 2011

Books: Lobo: Portrait of a Bastich

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Lobo: Portrait of a Bastich
Written by Keith Griffen and Alan Grant
Art by Simon Bisley

2008




Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

An interstellar mercenary and bounty hunter who enjoys nothing better than mindless violence and intoxication. and whose name translates as "he who devours your entrails and thoroughly enjoys it" Lobo is one of the DC Universe's most popular characters. Quote: "I have no idea why Lobo took off I came up with him as an indictment of the Punisher, Wolverine, hero prototype and somehow he caught on as the high violence poster boy. Go figure." This book contains two stories that are long out of print: The Last Czarnian and Lobo's Back. Of the two the first is the best - the second a little bit too meandering for my tastes... But both feature plently of hijinks, fragging and evil little jokes to tickle the fancy of jaded readers. With lots and lots of juicy Simon Bisley artwork. Like it says on the back: "WARNING: This book is not recommended for Geeks, Wimps, Dweebs, Weenies and those with a delicate constitution!"

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Links: The Tearoom of Despair Article: Why I love Lobo (and you probably shouldn't) by Max Zero.

Further reading: Kick-Ass, D.R. and Quinch

All comments welcome.